A record number of investors are participating in the vehicle ABS sector and competition is increasing among issuers, prompting issuance and pricing close to pre-crisis levels. However, there are concerns that the strong performance by recent vintages of vehicle ABS will not last as underwriting standards loosen. Robert McDonald, a vice president at Goldman Sachs, said a vehicle ABS with 40 investors was previously considered to be a broadly distributed transaction. He said recent deals have had 60 investors. Were at an all-time high in terms of the number of unique investors for a transaction, McDonald said at the American Securitization Forums ASF 2013 conference. Some $61.00 billion in ABS backed...
Moodys Investor Services ranked as the top rating service in non-mortgage ABS ratings during 2012, according to a new Inside MBS & ABS ranking. DBRS was the leader in rating non-agency MBS transactions last year. In a market that grew by 15.9 percent in 2012, Moodys increased the volume of ABS deals it rated by just 6.9 percent over its activity back in 2011. Still, the company edged past Fitch Ratings with a 64.9 percent market share even though it mostly sat out the booming credit card sector. Moodys had its highest penetration rates in business loan ABS and was well represented in student loan and vehicle finance securitizations. Fitch had...[Includes two data charts]
A major surge in the securitization of student loans helped push overall non-mortgage ABS issuance up 65.9 percent during the fourth quarter of 2012, according to a new Inside MBS & ABS ranking and analysis. Total non-mortgage ABS issuance climbed to $147.0 billion in 2012, up 15.9 percent from the previous year. It was the strongest market for ABS securitization since 2009, but still trailed the levels reached prior to the financial market collapse in 2008. ABS backed by retail vehicle financing were...[Includes two data charts]
Nationstar Mortgage this week priced $300 million of asset-backed notes in what the company called the first ever securitization of collateral backed by agency servicing advances, a sign that nonbanks are beginning to see more liquidity for mortgage servicing rights. The yield on the Nationstar paper is an attractive 1.46 percent. The term is three years. And in another development in the same market, Home Loan Servicing Solutions, which is affiliated with Ocwen Financial, has signaled...
A credit rating agency has agreed to be barred for 18 months from rating asset-backed and government securities issuers, while a former broker-dealer executive has been charged with duping investors in connection with the sale of MBS. Egan-Jones Ratings Co. and its owner/president, Sean Egan, have agreed to the temporary prohibition as part of a settlement with the Securities and Exchange Commission for allegedly making willful and material misstatements and omissions while registering with the SEC to become a nationally recognized statistical ratings organization for ABS and government securities. The SEC discovered...
Federal regulators faced with finalizing controversial rules on risk retention in non-agency MBS, ABS and commercial MBS transactions of the future are considering a fair-value approach instead of the controversial premium capture cash reserve account. Although no details on the proposal are available, the American Securitization Forum recently provided general views on how fair value calculations of an issuers risk-retention requirement could replace the PCCRA. The group said the change could be a significant improvement over the PCCRA, which could have wreaked havoc on the securitization market. The PCCRA, which would have required issuers to hold in reserve any premium they earned in selling assets to a securitization trust, was...
The securitization market generated $1.847 trillion in new residential MBS and non-mortgage ABS in 2012, reversing two straight years of declining volume, according to a new Inside MBS & ABS analysis and ranking. Last years output was up 41.2 percent from total issuance in 2011, and it marked the strongest annual new issuance volume since 2009. Total securitization volume rose modestly, by 2.3 percent, from the third quarter to the fourth quarter, and activity cooled significantly in December. As has been the case since the financial market meltdown in 2008, securitization was dominated...[Includes three data charts]
Staff at the Securities and Exchange Commission this week recommended that the agency do more research before making a decision on how to implement a controversial provision in the Dodd-Frank Act involving random assignments of credit ratings in structured finance. Sen. Al Franken, D-MN, was the major proponent of a requirement that the SEC study the feasibility of creating a government body that would pick which credit rating agency would evaluate new non-agency MBS, non-mortgage ABS, commercial MBS and other structured finance transactions. The provision, Sec. 15e(w) of the Dodd-Frank Act, essentially requires the SEC to implement the new system unless the agency determines that an alternative system would better serve the public interest and protect investors. Although some investors and rating services support the Sec. 15e(w) concept, most securitization market participants oppose...
Standard & Poors, Moodys Investors Service and Fitch Ratings accounted for a combined 96 percent of all credit ratings across all five rating categories, according to the Securities and Exchange Commissions annual report on nationally recognized statistical rating organizations (NRSROs). There were NRSROs registered with the SEC during the year ending in the second quarter of 2012. They were A.M. Best Co.; DBRS, Inc.; Egan-Jones Ratings Co. (EJR); Fitch; Japan Credit Rating Agency; Kroll Bond Rating Agency (KBRA); Moodys; Morningstar Credit Ratings; and S&P. They provided ratings in five credit rating categories: asset-backed securities (including mortgages); corporate issuers; financial institutions; government securities; and insurance companies. The report showed...
The Division of Swap Dealer and Intermediary Oversight of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission has issued an interpretation clarifying commodity pool treatment for certain securitizations and a no-action letter providing additional relief for certain legacy securitization entities. Specifically, the letter explains when exclusion from commodity pool regulation for certain securitization vehicles that do not meet any of the criteria set forth in an October 2012 no-action letter is appropriate. It also provides relief for certain securitization vehicles formed before Oct. 12, 2012. In the October no-action letter, the CFTC spelled out...