-
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.
October 4 -
A deal to avoid a government shutdown resolves one immediate risk. But a major auto strike, the resumption of student-loan repayments, and a shutdown that may yet come back after the stop-gap spending deal lapses, could easily shave a percentage point off GDP growth in Q4.
October 2 -
Just one class of variable funding notes (VFN), which have an anticipated repayment date of July 2026, will be issued to investors.
September 29 -
On average the receivables have a balance of $971, a WA average percentage rate of 32.88%, and a WA age of 24 months. Also, cardholders might pay an annual membership of up to $75.
September 28 -
The deal will be secured by payments on subprime auto loans and comes shortly after officer Jill Rockwood joined as chief financial officer.
September 28 -
Equify ABS 2023-1 is expected to close on October 11 and will issue three classes of notes secured by revenue from mid- to large-ticket equipment contracts and related assets.
September 27 -
The deal is the eleventh this year for Pagaya AI Debt Selection Trust, and is slated to close by September 29.
September 27 -
Total hard credit enhancement of 37.45% shore up the class A notes, according to Moody's. In the rest of the deal the classes B, C and D notes benefit from total hard credit enhancement of 33.1%, 23.7% and 13.7%, respectively.
September 22 -
Revenue from agricultural and construction equipment will secure the notes, which get a boost from a spread account and overcollateralization.
September 21 -
Credit enhancement to the class A notes includes a non-declining overcollateralization of 4.75% of the initial adjusted pool balance, and a non-declining reserve fund of 0.25% of the initial adjusted pool balance.
September 20 -
Canada's largest bank last month said it plans to cut as much as 2% of its full-time equivalent staff in the coming quarter after a surge in expenses weighed on third-quarter results.
September 20 -
CLOs are turning to another type of debt — junk bonds — for the security packages that underpin the investment vehicles that are sold to insurers and pension funds.
September 19 -
Backed by revenue from point-of-sale unsecured consumer loans, the upsized deal also features expandable notes.
September 19 -
Tractors make up the vast majority of the vehicles in the pool, 92.5%, while trailers, trucks and buses account for 4.1%, 2.3% and 1.1%, respectively.
September 15 -
The SEC could crimp effective investor communications, while IOSCO seeks feedback on 12 proposed "good practices" when operating in the leveraged loan and CLO markets.
September 15 -
Rating agencies say the A, B, C and D notes have about 29.0%, 23.8%, 17.3% and 14.0% in credit enhancement, respectively, while A, B, and C notes enjoy a 15.9%, 10.6% and 4.0% in subordination.
September 15 -
Optimism may be building that the Fed is poised to steer the economy toward a soft landing, but Treasury market has delivered what is widely understood as a starkly different message: The economy is veering toward a contraction.
September 14 -
The notes benefit from a step-up event concerning class D. If an optional redemption does not occur in the expected redemption date, then the interest rate on the class D notes will increase by 3.0%.
September 13 -
The renewed interest in CLOs, which repackage leveraged loans into bonds of varying risk and size, comes after a very slow year for the market.
September 12 -
Virtually all of the attributes in VZMT 2023-5 and 2023-6 are identical, such as the statistical cutoff date (August 7), aggregate principal balance ($23 billion) and weighted average (WA) remaining installments, 26 months.
September 11



















