Neither of the credit-rating industry’s perennial market leaders – Standard & Poor’s and Moody’s Investors Service – managed to claim a top spot during the first quarter of 2015, according to a new Inside MBS & ABS ranking. Fitch Ratings ranked as the top player in rating the bigger non-mortgage ABS market. The company rated 43 ABS issued during the first quarter that represented 64.2 percent of total issuance by dollar amount. The company rated all eight credit-card ABS issued in early 2015, along with most of the student-loan deals. Fitch raised...[Includes two data tables]
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Proposed credit card ABS disclosure requirements from the Securities and Exchange Commission could compromise commercially sensitive proprietary issuer information and prove too burdensome for issuers, according to the Structured Finance Industry Group. The industry group this week unveiled an alternative card ABS format that was endorsed by both its issuer and investor members. The three-part disclosure “would provide more information on more metrics” than either of two options proposed by the SEC. Last year, the SEC adopted...
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The single-family rental securitization business is fueling investor purchases of homes and causing problems for communities, according to a new survey and report by consumer advocates. The California Reinvestment Coalition called for a number of reforms for the single-family rental industry. “This conduct has had a measurable, negative impact on communities,” the CRC said. “It has transferred wealth from homeowners to Wall Street denizens and is transforming America from a homeownership society to a renter-ship society.” The CRC based...
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After just over a year of buying mortgages that don’t meet the qualified-mortgage test, Jeff Lemieux has departed Bayview Asset Management while signaling that a non-QM securitization likely won’t happen any time soon – or even this year. Lemieux, who headed correspondent purchases for Bayview, provided Inside MBS & ABS with a blunt assessment of both non-QM originations and securitizations: “Nothing’s happening.” Lemieux went...
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Investor appetite for insurance risk continues to outstrip demand, prompting an increase in catastrophe bonds among other insurance-linked securities, according to industry analysts. Late last week, Fitch Ratings assigned a BB rating to a $200 million catastrophe bond that will provide re-insurance protection to Hannover Ruck for exposure to earthquakes in California. The deal will push U.S.-related issuance of catastrophe bonds to $3.86 billion in 2015, according to Artemis, a firm that tracks issuance of the bonds. A record volume of catastrophe bonds was issued...
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Ginnie Mae accounted for 40.4 percent of new structured finance deals backed by agency single-family MBS during the first quarter of 2015, making it the top issuer in the sector despite a 3.9 percent drop in volume from the previous quarter. Freddie Mac was the only agency-backed real estate mortgage investment conduit issuer to increase production from the fourth quarter. Credit Suisse saw...[Includes one data table]
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Barclays PLC, Britain’s second-largest bank, is exiting the non-agency MBS market due to growing regulatory pressure in its home country to maintain a capital cushion against the riskier, lower-grade mortgage assets, according to Bloomberg. The move appears to be part of Barclays’ “Project Transform,” a group-wide reorganization plan announced last year, which aims to make sweeping changes to the financial institution’s business model to ensure long-term profitability. Specifically, the plan seeks to reduce Barclays’ investment banking activities as it shifts focus from securities trading to mortgage originations. Resolving legacy conduct issues is...
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Although the big three rating agencies have had a strong hold on rating commercial MBS for most institutional investors, the tides may be changing as bond buyers begin to relax their guidelines. Some of the largest bond buyers have been vocalizing frustration that the big three ratings firms, Moody’s Investors Service, Standard & Poors and Fitch Ratings, are being hired less, resulting in fewer bond offerings to choose from, according to a recent Bloomberg article. That’s good news for smaller ratings agencies like Kroll Bond and Morningstar. “We have proven...
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