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Treasuries fell, extending a selloff in government securities that has rapidly pushed up yields over the past month and threatens to undercut the economy by driving up borrowing costs.
October 6 -
One in every 123 purchase applications showed indications of fraud in the second quarter, outpacing the first, the report found.
October 6 -
At some point the company hopes to become a full-credit spectrum lender, so funding the Select Program is another step toward that, according to ratings analysts.
October 5 -
Following the end of a long moratorium for federal student loan borrowers, monthly payments are expected to total $18 billion. Much of that money will come from checking and savings accounts, which will put more pressure on banks' deposit bases.
October 5 -
While some observers believe that by year-end, the 30-year FRM would be lower than current levels, chatter about an 8% mortgage exists.
October 5 -
The notes have the same final scheduled repayment date of Oct. 22, 2035, an initial credit enhancement that ranges from 43.85% on the class A notes to 13.15% on the class E notes.
October 5 -
While the selloff abated on Wednesday, traders are on high alert for a resurgence in volatility — especially if U.S. non-farm payrolls data on Friday come in stronger than expected.
October 5 -
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau plans to hire 75 employees in its enforcement division as it boosts investigations against "large market actors," according to an internal email obtained by American Banker.
October 5 -
The deal has a sequential repayment structure and collateral with 168 months of seasoning. The loans are already past their peak default periods, which each typically occur three to five years after a borrower enters repayment.
October 4 -
Notes will repay investors on a sequential basis, S&P said. One of S&P's rationales for assigning its ratings is the available credit support, including excess spread of 49.0%, 44.7%, 37.3% and 31.5% on classes A, B, C and D notes.
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