Harley-Davidson in motorcycle loan securitization

November 23rd, 2009

Underwriters are marketing a $562 million Harley-Davidson Motorcycle Trust asset-backed sale to investors on Monday to be sold under the Federal Reserve’s emergency loan program, market sources said.

The securities backed by motorcycle loans will be sold under the Fed’s Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility, known as TALF, under its next loan subscription round scheduled for Dec. 3.

Read the whole story @ Reuters

Jump in sovereign CDS volumes

November 23rd, 2009

The volume of activity in sovereign credit default swaps linked to the US, UK and Japan have doubled in the past year because of concerns about their public finances.

Read the whole story @ FT Alphaville

Insight pair add RMBS to fund range

November 22nd, 2009

Insight Investment multi-manager duo Mike Pinggera and Steve Waddington have defended their decision to introduce residential mortgage-backed securities (RMBS) into their multi-asset range.

Mr Waddington said adding a position in Monument Bond fund was justified, despite the very cautious mandate the team runs.

Read the whole story @ FTAdviser

Fed’s Bullard: Keep MBS program alive

November 22nd, 2009

A senior Federal Reserve official said on Sunday the central bank should keep alive a mortgage-backed securities buying program beyond a planned end-date to give policy-makers more flexibility as they help the economy recover from a painful recession.

“I have advocated to keep the asset purchase program open but at a very low level, and wait and see what happens, and as information comes in about the economy we can adjust that program while the federal funds rate remains at zero,” St. Louis Federal Reserve bank James Bullard said in an interview with Dow Jones newswire.

Read the whole story @ Reuters

CIT Bonds Valued at 68.125 Cents to Settle Credit-Default Swaps

November 20th, 2009

Credit derivatives traders settling contracts that protected against a default by CIT Group Inc. set a value of 68.125 cents on the dollar for the commercial lender’s bonds.

The price, the result of an auction by 13 dealers including JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Barclays Plc, means sellers of the swaps will pay 31.875 cents on the dollar to buyers of protection to settle the contracts, according to data from administrator Markit Group Ltd. and broker Creditex Group Inc.

Read the whole story @ Bloomberg