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Capital One Financial Corp. on Tuesday cleared the final regulatory approval needed to buy ING Direct USA for $9 billion after nine months of talks.
February 15 -
Federal officials and state attorneys general released new documents Tuesday about the $25 billion multi-state servicing settlement, but still have yet to release a final settlement term sheet.
February 15 -
American Credit Acceptance is planning to sell a subprime auto ABS called American Credit Acceptance Receivables Trust Series 2012-1. The 144A securitization rated by Standard & Poor's is worth $150 million.
February 14 -
FICO scores cover a much wider demographic than proprietary models used by ABS issuers to predict collateral performance, according to FICO Senior Director Adem Yilmaz.
February 14 -
The leveraged loan market is hoping to dodge yet another bullet from the Dodd-Frank Act.
February 14 -
The Obama administration is urging Congress to extend a tax provision allowing troubled homeowners that complete a short sale — or benefit from a principal reduction — to avoid paying taxes on the discharged amount of their loan balance.
February 14 -
The growth in demand for multifamily properties will increase future agency CMBS supply, according to an FTN Financial research report released Tuesday.
February 14 -
With its lawsuits hanging by a thread, National Credit Union Administration (NCUA) urged separate federal courts here and in Kansas Friday to allow it to advance its claims and make its case against Wall Street banks who sold faulty MBS that caused the failure of five corporate credit unions.
February 14 -
Litigation consulting firm Analysis Group has hired four new affiliates to the firm, including fixed-income expert John Richard.
February 14 -
Just how hungry is Ocwen Financial Corp. for servicing rights? In a new filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) the nonbank servicer discloses that it is currently reviewing $300 billion of MSRs for purchase.
February 14 -
The bulk of Italian RMBS could withstand a further sharp deterioration in the economy, Fitch Ratings said in a release today.
February 14 -
The Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association (SIFMA) submitted comments to Federal regulators yesterday regarding the proposed Volcker rule provisions on ABS and insurance-linked securities (ILS). The Volcker Rule was added by Section 619 of the Dodd-Frank Act.
February 14 -
The Federal Reserve Board has decided to delay a decision on Capital One Financial Corp.'s $9 billion deal for ING Direct USA, a spokeswoman for the central bank said Monday.
February 14 -
The Obama administration on Monday more than doubled to $61 billion a proposed fee it wants the largest U.S. banks to pay for their role in the financial crisis.
February 14 -
If it weren't for a recent legal settlement with Bank of America, the Federal Home Administration's (FHA) mortgage insurance fund would be in the red.
February 14 -
Brazilian Securities, an agency that specializes in securitizing real estate receivables, is currently in the process of selling two mortgage-backed real estate certificates, or CRIs, with a minimum ticket size of R$1,000 ($582), according to a source close to the deal.
February 13 -
The Federal Housing Administration (FHA) will "soon" increase its annual premium on Jumbo mortgages by 25 basis points, according to government budget documents released Monday morning.
February 13 -
DBRS today published its U.S. Private Student Loan Performance Report for 4Q11. The study contains indices that benchmark loan performance metrics for the private SLABS sector.
February 13 -
Standard & Poor's said in a release Monday that GM Financial's proprietary credit scoring was a better predictor of the performance of their subprime auto ABS than FICO scores.
February 13 -
For the moment, the job of ensuring that the nation's largest banks comply with the terms of last week's mammoth mortgage settlement falls on just one man.Joseph A. Smith, Jr., North Carolina's banking commissioner, is charged with ensuring that the five biggest mortgage servicers — Bank of America Corp., JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup, Wells Fargo and Ally Financial — implement new servicing standards and take other steps that are required by the settlement.
February 13