There’s got to be a better way for investors in non-agency MBS to communicate with each other than taking out ads in the Wall Street Journal, according to various attendees at the ABS Vegas conference produced by Information Management Network and the Structured Finance Industry Group. Owen Cyrulnik, a partner at the law firm of Grais & Ellsworth who has represented investors in buyback disputes, said non-agency MBS investors that have wanted to force buybacks have been “paralyzed” by the voting requirements in most non-agency MBS. The deals typically require a certain share of investors in an MBS – at least 25 percent of investors in many cases – to approve of actions. “It was literally impossible to find other certificate holders,” ...