The
Expanding Universe of Securitization
2000/12/12
Analysts: Joanne Rose, New York (1)
212-438-6601;
Patrice Jordan, New York (1) 212-438-2501;
Joseph F Sheridan, New York (1) 212-438-2605;
Kurt Sampson, London (44) 20-7826-3535;
Barry Hancock, London (44) 20-7847-7202;
Alain Carron, Paris (33) 1-4420-6664;
Clayton Hunt, New York (1) 212-438-2492;
Calvin R Wong, Hong Kong (852) 2533-3501;
Fabienne Michaux, Melbourne (61) 3-9631-2050;
Rosario Buendia, New York (1) 212-438-2410
As the structured finance business
spreads across the globe, the market is expected to experience numerous
developments and innovations in the coming years. Nations throughout the
world are easing the way for securitization, usually by encouraging home
ownership, which they hope will lead to the development of an RMBS market.
Following that, other consumer assets, such as personal loans and auto
loans, are generally securitized. Indicating growing sophistication among
issuers and investors, CMBS and other, more complex instruments, including
pools of corporate bank loans, are embraced.
Asset securitization
is one of the most significant financial innovations in the global capital
markets, substantially enhancing the management of assets and liabilities
by individuals and corporations, said Joanne W. Rose, executive managing
director of Standard & Poor's Structured Finance Ratings group in
New York. "Structured finance is a very robust market and it is broadening
both in terms of asset classes and the use of securitization techniques
in other forms of financing. Most exciting is the growth occurring outside
the U.S. and the developments that are different from U.S. structures,"
Ms. Rose said.
Issuance of private-label
(non-agency-guaranteed) RMBS reached US$92 billion in the U.S. in 1999,
up from just US$250 million at the market's beginning in 1977. ABS have
grown at a breathtaking rate in the U.S., from a little more than US$1
billion in 1985 to a projected US$215 billion in 2000. And CMBS grew from
a mere US$5 billion in 1990 to almost US$80 billion in 1999. Global securitization
topped US$1.1 trillion in 1999, but issuance in 2000 will be moderately
smaller due to the significant increases in interest rates during the
first six months of the year.
"What started
as true sales of large pools of homogeneous assets-primarily consumer
assets-has spread to allow the technology to be used for more diverse,
unique asset types," said Patrice Jordan, managing director of global
asset-backed securities in Standard & Poor's Structured Finance Ratings
group in New York. "Today's securitizations are an expanding universe
where the 1970s U.S. definition has morphed into a variety of instruments
known as securitizations that differ greatly in terms of asset types and
structures."
Securitization involves
the use of legal structures to separate a pool of assets from the general
credit of the assets' originator. Basically, the structure segregates
the assets from the effects of an insolvency of one or more parties to
the transaction. In these types of financings, also known as structured
financings, investors do not generally have recourse to the transaction's
sponsor. Instead, the deal depends on the performance of a defined pool
of assets. In comparison, corporate financings provide investors with
recourse to the corporation's balance sheet.
The U.S. is the largest,
most sophisticated securitization arena, having been around for 30 years,
and other nations are well on their way to realizing the true potential
of this market. Regardless of the stages at which individual nations find
themselves, the global securitization business is broadening and deepening
year by year.
Europe Provides Best Growth Opportunity
"Europe is the best growth opportunity outside the U.S. today because
the major financial institutions in Europe are starting to embrace securitization
in a meaningful way," said Kurt Sampson, managing director of Standard
& Poor's Europe Structured Finance Ratings group in London. "These
banks have been originating assets for years, pursuing the idea that bigger
is better. Now they are facing challenges, among which are trying to improve
both their returns on equity and shareholder value, and these initiatives
are driving the securitization market."
There are two major
ways that banks can improve their returns on equity: increase the margin
on the loans they are holding, or move assets off their balance sheets.
It would be difficult to increase the interest on outstanding loans, but
it is relatively easy to sell assets and return to the bank a significant
portion of the funds that were previously tied up due to regulatory capital
requirements. In fact, European banks are holding enormous quantities
of loans on their balance sheets-residential mortgages, auto loans, personal
loans, trade receivables, and credit cards, to name a few-which gives
them large potential pools of assets to securitize.
Also spurring securitization
among European banks are the frenzied pace of mergers and acquisitions
(M&A) among financial institutions, and the advent of the euro, which
has eased the way for institutions to invest in assets from a wider variety
of sources. Worldwide announced M&A volume in 1999 surged to a record
US$3.1 trillion, up from more than US$2.6 trillion a year earlier, according
to Barry Hancock, managing director in Standard & Poor's Financial
Institutions Ratings group in London. In Europe, M&A doubled to US$1.2
trillion in 1999, up from US$591 billion one year earlier.
European banks are
also anticipating the changes that could be wrought by the BIS proposal
from the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, which would encourage
securitization by standardizing the amount of regulatory capital required
by banks based on the risk weightings of various holdings.
Mark Bowles, a director
at Bank Austria/Creditanstalt in London, primarily invests in European
ABS. "Although we used to purchase U.S. securities, the vast majority
of our current purchases are European ABS. We now feel the European market
has reached a position where we can concentrate on our local area,"
he said. "And now with the euro, it's an advantage for us. We have
no problems going into Italian or Portuguese deals, for example, whereas
a couple of years ago we might have had problems."
Passage of Laws
Aids Securitization
Not only has the euro prompted growth, there have been a variety of new
laws passed in France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Portugal, Finland, and Luxembourg,
among others, that have eased the way for securitization.
France has benefited
from the passage of two important laws. Since an initial law allowing
the establishment of "fond communs de créances" (FCCs)
and authorizing the sale of MBS more than a decade ago, the country has
updated it to accommodate the growing sophistication of its structured
finance market, said Alain Carron, director of Standard & Poor's Europe
Structured Finance Ratings group in Paris. With its most recent change,
in 1998, the French Ministry of Economics and Finance allowed issuers
to create transactions similar to the credit card master trusts and commercial
paper conduits used in the U.S. The FCC is a French statutory securitization
vehicle similar to special-purpose entities (SPEs) in the U.S.
Yet despite the French
government's efforts, this market's potential has remained largely untapped,
Mr. Carron noted. Cumulative residential mortgage securitizations total
about euro (Eur) 10 billion, and only one approximately Eur1 billion securitization
of loans to local authorities was completed, by Credit Foncier de France.
Last year, the government
passed a law authorizing "obligations foncière," securities
modeled on the German "Pfandbriefe," itself a type of structured
financing that has been around for more than a century, Mr. Carron said.
Obligations foncières are debt instruments collateralized by residential
and commercial mortgage loans, as well as loans to public-sector entities.
Under the new legislation, SPEs called "sociétés de
crédit foncier" will be established as wholly owned subsidiaries
of banks and other financial institutions, and the activities of these
sociétés will be limited to the origination and purchase
of mortgage and local authority debt, and the issuance of the obligations
foncières.
Based on the overwhelming
success of the Pfandbriefe, it is expected that obligations foncières
will also be embraced by the capital markets. As of the first quarter
of 2000, French banking authorities had granted licenses to three "sociétés
de crédit foncier." They are Compagnie de Financement Foncier,
Dexia Municipal Agency, and Crédit Foncier et Communal d'Alsace
et de Lorraine-Société de Crédit Foncier.
Residential Mortgage Securitizations Kick Off in U.K.
The U.K. was the first European country to debut a modern securitization-in
this case, a transaction backed by residential mortgages-in 1987, according
to Karen Naylor, a director in Standard & Poor's Europe Structured
Finance Ratings group in London. The market took off because mortgage
lending companies realized they could use the structured finance market
to obtain funds and, thus, generate new business.
When a recession hit
in the early 1990s, the securitization market all but faded away but it
picked up again when it was over. The first to return to the market were
subprime lenders.
Kensington Mortgage
Co. PLC is a repeat subprime RMBS issuer in Europe with its series of
Residential Mortgage Securities transactions. "We were a low-cost
originator without financial backing from a huge organization so we got
into securitization as an alternative to retail funding," said Tim
Cooley, the head of structured finance at Kensington. "We generally
come to market three times a year-once every four months-and as our volumes
have increased, so have the sizes of our deals."
Kensington began by
issuing notes denominated in British pounds sterling but subsequent transactions
have been denominated in euros and U.S. dollars. "More and more issuers
are coming to market in sterling in this country-our competitors, for
example-so there is the danger that the market will get oversaturated.
Also, it widens our investor base," said Mr. Cooley.
Gradually, high street
banks began to see the benefits of securitization and they, too, entered
the fray in earnest in about 1997. "The market here is becoming very
competitive," said Ms. Naylor, "with lending institutions offering
attractive retail deposit rates. At the same time, new market entrants
aren't traditional branch-based originators but Internet-based banks that
are offering very competitively priced mortgage products."
Abbey National PLC,
Bank of Scotland, and Northern Rock PLC are just a few of the market's
regular issuers. Abbey National Treasury Services was an experienced investor
in ABS and MBS, according to Chris Fielding, its head of treasury advisory
services, so its expertise in those areas helped it to view securitization
as a tool for both balance sheet management and funding diversification.
"We have a massive stock of assets-£60 billion mortgages, which
we regarded as illiquid-and part of the exercise was to prove that there
was liquidity in that market," Mr. Fielding said.
Other markets where
residential securitizations have taken off include Germany, the Netherlands,
and France. In Germany, due to the importance of banking confidentiality,
issuers have adapted existing laws to allow for the securitization of
pools of mortgages using synthetic structures, where a bank securitizes
a reference pool of securities. The actual assets remain on the issuer's
balance sheet and it uses the proceeds from the transaction to buy a pool
of 'AAA' rated bonds to act as collateral but the losses on the mortgages
are allocated to the bondholders. "The real drivers of this type
of structure are capital relief and returns on equity," Ms. Naylor
said, "and, at the same time, it helps ensure confidentiality."
Other Consumer Assets Become Popular
Other types of consumer assets-primarily personal loans-are gaining importance
in Europe as countries in the region develop cultures that are gradually
becoming more dependent on and comfortable with the use of credit. This
"credit culture" is not nearly as widespread in Europe as it
is in the U.S., but the European market is heating up, spurred by entrance
of several American companies, including MBNA International Bank, as well
as units of Capital One and Household Finance Corp..
MBNA International
Bank, a subsidiary of MBNA America Bank N.A., is a fully licensed U.K.
bank. Established in 1993, it completed its first securitization 18 months
later-£207 million (US$312.36 million) of ABS. As of mid-2000, it
has sold 11 credit card securitizations plus one consumer loan securitization,
all denominated in British pounds sterling, totaling more than £3
billion. Its most recent transaction was denominated in euros.
"We view the
European market as having significant opportunities for MBNA in the long
term," said Vernon H.C. Wright, vice chairman and chief corporate
finance officer. "The U.K. is part of the EU so it's very easy for
MBNA International to branch into various European countries. The question
is, what is the right timing? Obviously, that has to do with the development
of the consumer market and the utilization of credit cards or other types
of consumer loans."
The entrance of new
competitors into the European consumer lending market shook it up. Barclays
Bank PLC, through its Barclaycard business unit, issued Gracechurch Card
Funding (No.1) PLC worth US$1 billion. When it hit the market in November
1999, it was the first securitization of consumer credit cards by a U.K
clearing bank, and it also ranked as one of the largest European credit
card backed securitizations.
The mix of assets
finding their way to the market is dependent on the entities issuing the
securities. At this point, the majority of the issuers are large financial
institutions, rather than specialty finance companies, which could bring
different types of assets and credit qualities to the market.
The specialty finance
company hasn't really arrived in Europe quite yet, according to Jack Caouette,
vice chairman of bond insurer MBIA Insurance Co., but it's on the horizon.
"In time in Europe, it's logical that this will happen; but I think
it's going to be some time."
Asset-Backed
Commercial Paper Conduits Increase
As of third-quarter 2000, total asset-backed commercial paper (ABCP) in
European-based conduits was US$71.6 billion, an increase of 12% from the
end of 1999. Today, there are more than 44 conduits based in Europe-which
was about 10% of the size of the U.S. market, although this recent growth
has pushed that up to around 13%, said Perry Inglis, a director in Standard
& Poor's Europe Structured Finance Ratings group in London.
A number of German
banks have set up ABCP conduits, including Deutsche Bank AG, Westdeutsche
Landesbank Girozentrale, Bayerische Hypo- und Vereinsbank AG, and Commerzbank
AG. These conduits have been set up by a number of U.K. banks as well,
including National Westminster Bank PLC, Barclays Bank PLC, and Bank of
Scotland. Spain's Banco Santander Central Hispano has sponsored a conduit,
too, and there are also several French bank-sponsored conduits. Other
recent country entrants have included Belgium, Denmark, and the Netherlands.
ABCP programs are
SPEs used primarily to finance the acquisition of consumer or commercial
receivable pools or securities with the proceeds of commercial paper notes.
Commercial paper usually has a maximum maturity of less than one year.
Assets typically funded
in the conduits include trade receivables, auto and other consumer loans,
and mortgages, along with a range of more esoteric assets, such as rolling
stock, auto rentals, and whole businesses, he added. "The majority
of ABCP is issued by conduits, and a conduit is a way of providing short-term
financing for assets that may or may not be short term," explained
Mr. Inglis. "It's a very flexible financing tool for funding a wide
range of asset types."
Conduits may be set
up for a variety of reasons. Many program administrators have provided
a cost-competitive funding alternative to banking clients, while others
have capitalized on arbitrage opportunities by purchasing longer term
securities and funding the acquisitions with shorter term notes. Investment
banks will often establish one or possibly more than one conduit for arbitrage
opportunities, and these vehicles now account for more than 60% of total
European issuance. Asset sellers, in many cases, have removed the assets
from their balance sheets and freed up capital for other uses.
Many asset originators
like commercial paper conduits because they offer confidentiality. When
a conduit issues ABCP, the investor doesn't necessarily know what types
of assets are in the conduit, nor which companies originated them. "This
is important for many sellers as they do not want the underlying relationships
with their customers to be impacted in any way by the securitization,"
said Mr. Inglis.
Investors are often
drawn to the ABCP market by attractive yields and the risk-reward trade-off
associated with highly rated securities.
Traditionally, European-based
conduits have funded themselves in the U.S. market but, with the advent
of the euro, there is a slow but definite trend to issue European commercial
paper matching the currency of the underlying assets. This negates the
need for hedging and, therefore, reduces the funding costs still further
for a company selling its assets into a conduit.
During the past decade,
the shift in U.S. savings from bank deposits to higher yielding money
market mutual funds has created enormous demand for high quality, short-term
paper. "This demand has far outpaced the growth in the corporate
commercial paper supply, creating an extremely favorable environment for
ABCP program administrators to grow their businesses," said Joseph
Sheridan, managing director of Standard & Poor's North America Structured
Finance group.
ABCP has risen to
48% of dealer-placed U.S. commercial paper from 6% during the past 10
years. "At the end of 1999, the market passed the half trillion dollar
mark. There were 55 new ABCP programs established in 1999, and the number
of programs selling paper in the U.S. is rapidly approaching 250,"
Mr. Sheridan said.
Commercial Mortgages
Spur Innovations
All of the changes taking place in the European financial institutions
sector-increased M&A activity, the common currency, and the new emphasis
on shareholder value and returns on equity-are impacting the ways in which
commercial property is being financed.
The initial approach
to CMBS in Europe involved the securitization of commercial properties-either
single properties or pools of properties located in the same country-by
the properties' owners. Several transactions have been completed in the
U.K. involving securitizations of large single properties, including Canary
Wharf Finance PLC, Morgan Stanley Mortgage Finance (Broadgate) PLC, and
Trafford Centre Finance Ltd.
"The private
bank market-the customary funding source for European borrowers-really
can't handle these large amounts of debt without having to syndicate the
loans, which is cumbersome. The securitization market can offer flexibility
to these property owners that large loan syndicates cannot," said
Clayton Hunt, Jr., director of international CMBS in Standard & Poor's
Real Estate Finance group in New York.
In the past several
months, the European CMBS market has seen two distinct innovations: the
securitization of a pool of commercial properties spread throughout Europe,
and the origination of commercial mortgages with the intention of eventually
securitizing them. Calling it a watershed event, Mr. Hunt pointed to Europa
One Ltd., a Eur1.35 billion transaction from Frankfurt's Rheinische Hypothekenbank
AG, known as Rheinhyp. The first Pan-European multi-jurisdictional CMBS
issued, it consisted of assets or loans the bank had booked in five countries
on the Continent.
As with some German
residential mortgage securitizations, this, too, depended on a synthetic
structure. "There were a few structural changes on the loan administration
and servicing side, but from an accounting perspective, it was not really
difficult. From the time we discovered that we would go the synthetic
route to the time we finalized the structure, it took us six months,"
said George Ruchti, head of structured finance and portfolio management
at Rheinhyp in Frankfurt. When it came to selling the bonds, "we
attracted a lot of interest from the insurance industry throughout Europe-certainly
not limited to Germany-and a small number of banks, as well," he
added.
As a result of the
success of this particular offering, other banks are interested in securitizing
their commercial loans, according to Mr. Hunt. "I think it's likely
we'll see a tremendous amount of activity coming out of Germany. There's
talk that we could eventually see Eur10 billion of securitizations a year
from German banks' commercial loan portfolios alone. I think that's optimistic
but it shows that people are energized by the growth of this marketplace,"
Mr. Hunt said.
The second innovation
in Europe resembles activity in the commercial real estate sector that
has been common in the U.S. for about five years-the origination of commercial
mortgages with the express intent of securitizing them. Essentially, a
company establishes an SPE that originates the loans, warehouses them,
pools them, and uses them as collateral to issue CMBS. In particular,
Morgan Stanley & Co. Inc. has been extremely active in the development
of the U.K. market.
In addition to the
U.K., Italy is a major player in the European CMBS market as a result
of some legislation passed recently that allows banks to write off their
nonperforming loans in return for tax relief. One example is Island Finance
(ICR4) S.p.A., sponsored by Banco di Sicilia S.p.A., which sold Eur420
million of asset-backed notes in March 2000.
Hybrid Securitizations Are High Profile
Despite the growing importance of transactions backed by consumer assets
and commercial real estate, the European market has become known for its
unique deals, which include securitizations of revenues generated by U.K.
pub contracts, U.K. motorway service areas, French champagne inventories,
and the international Formula One car racing organization. Even the Italian
government's delinquent social security contributions have been securitized.
These creative offerings, known as hybrid securitizations or even whole
business securitizations, carry elements of both corporate and securitized
bonds.
Despite their high
profiles, these types of transactions are not the basis of the European
structured finance market, emphasized Mr. Sampson of Standard & Poor's.
While they make headlines, they cannot usually be replicated and they
do not contribute to the growth or liquidity of the market. "Where
do I expect to see real growth? Traditional assets, like residential mortgages,
consumer loans, and commercial real estate," he said.
Asian Markets Operate
Independently
Unlike Europe, where a new law in one country encourages the passage of
a similar law in another country so that banks and other corporations
throughout the region can maintain a competitive advantage, Asia-Pacific
is not a homogeneous region when it comes to securitization. Rather, there
are pockets of activity in nations that function independently, according
to Calvin Wong, the Hong Kong-based managing director of Standard &
Poor's Asia-Pacific Structured Finance Ratings group.
"Japan is a market
unto itself, and the Australia-New Zealand region is a market unto itself,"
he explained, "and there's not much interplay between them, although
there are a few examples of ways the region could become more integrated."
Mr. Wong pointed to
the efforts of Australian investment bankers to structure transactions
in Korea and Singapore that would be sold in Europe. For example, Macquarie
Bank Ltd. is trying to initiate residential mortgage securitizations in
China, he said, and a unit of Societe Generale had securitized a pool
of corporate leases in Korea via its Hong Kong and Tokyo operations.
"Eventually we
may see Japanese assets sold into Australian commercial paper conduits,
or Asian assets sold into Aussie conduits. Or maybe, at some point, we
could see Aussie and Japanese investors buying Japanese securities. But
those things haven't happened yet," Mr. Wong said.
Australia Is Region's
Most Active Market
Australia is the Australasian region's most active market, as well as
its oldest. It is also a fairly conservative arena, according to Fabienne
Michaux, director of Standard & Poor's Asia Structured Finance Ratings
group in Melbourne. Until 1997, nearly all its transactions were backed
by residential mortgages and all of those RMBS deals carried 100% mortgage
insurance, supporting 'AAA' ratings.
Issuance of structured
financings backed by Australasian assets set a new record in 1999, Ms.
Michaux said. Standard & Poor's assigned ratings to 56 transactions
totaling almost A$33 billion (US$19.49 billion) by program size, and A$25.7
billion (US$15.18 billion) by actual securities issued, in 1999. These
new issues brought to A$69.9 billion (US$41.28 billion) the amount of
total securities outstanding as of Dec. 31, 1999, with a total issuance
capacity of A$108.4 billion (US$64.02 billion). Of the securities issued
in 1999, 62.4% were RMBS, 28.5% were ABCP, 8.1% were ABS, and, for the
first time, 0.6% were CMBS.
Residential mortgages
have continued to dominate the issuance landscape in 2000, and there has
also been significant activity in the ABCP sector, as well. While term
ABS have been limited to three transactions, it is encouraging to note
that the diversified asset types finding their way into ABCP conduits
are expanding to include small business loans, margin loans, and auto
and equipment contracts, along with the traditional trade receivables
pools, residential mortgages and repackaged RMBS, and corporate loans
and bonds. While only one CMBS transaction closed through the mid-third-quarter
2000, several others are in the pipeline and at least one is expected
to close before year-end.
Issuers Move Offshore
But Australia is a
relatively small country so its limited population, combined with its
isolation from other capital markets, has encouraged it to move in new
directions in recent years. Because of the limited appetites of domestic
investors, issuers have begun offering their structured financings to
global markets.
There were nine cross-border
issues totaling A$8.9 billion (US$5.26 billion) in 1999, up from five
in 1998. Seven issues were placed in Europe and sold globally-that is,
into both the European and U.S. markets.
In the future, it
seems that some Aussie issuers will be stepping into the U.S. market,
a trend that is already emerging, with four of the seven offshore issues
tapping into the U.S. markets, as of the mid-fourth-quarter 2000, through
global offerings. What's more, there are many more issues expected over
the coming year.
"The main reason
we haven't seen more offshore issues this year is the spreads on the cross-currency
swaps," Ms. Michaux said. "And, for the smaller issuers and
those with limited balance sheet or warehouse capacity, the weakening
performance of the Australian dollar against the U.S. dollar means that
significantly more Australian dollar-denominated assets are needed to
support U.S. dollar offerings."
Concurrently, domestic
investors are becoming willing to move down the credit spectrum to securitizations
rated as low as 'BBB', and they are branching out into securities backed
by consumer assets, including retail credit cards and auto loans, as well
as commercial mortgages. Also, at the short end, Standard & Poor's
is seeing more 'A-2' rated conduits coming to market. Furthermore, in
the past year, the first 'A-3' rated conduit was launched by ANZ Investment
Bank. As investors begin to take on additional risk, their internal organizations
are changing as they hire credit analysts to focus specifically on structured
finance paper.
RMBS Grow Increasingly
Sophisticated
Probably due to its
emphasis on RMBS, Australia's residential mortgage origination business
has become quite sophisticated, noted Paul Burke, a managing director
at Chase Manhattan Bank in Hong Kong. "Instead of having the banks
fund mortgages on their balance sheets, the banks set up vehicles that
generate the mortgages and securitize them directly," he said, pointing
to Macquarie Bank's Puma vehicle as one example.
The Australian RMBS
sector experienced several firsts in the past year. For instance, The
Home Loan Co. Ltd., the captive finance arm of AV Jennings Homes Ltd.
series 1999-1 HLC securitized loans with 100% loan-to-value ratios, meaning
that the amount of the loan was equal to 100% of the home's value. In
place of the customary 100% primary mortgage insurance, investors relied
on a combination of subordination, equity, and excess spread for repayment
of principal and interest.
Citibank Ltd.'s Compass
Master Trust Series 1999-1 was the first to incorporate a master trust
structure that contained innovative payment allocation mechanisms. And
the first Australian subprime deal was issued. Liberty Funding Pty. Ltd.
issued notes backed by A$100 million (US$59.060 million) of loans to borrowers
who generally do not meet prime lenders' underwriting criteria. Investors
were comforted, in part, by partial mortgage insurance on some of the
loans, as well as 10% subordination and excess spread.
Other Assets See Increased
Interest
The emergence of several
ABS transactions in Australia over the past year signals the market's
growing acceptance of securities other than 'AAA' rated, mortgage-insured
RMBS. For example, St. George Bank Ltd.'s Crusade Auto Trust No. 1 of
1999 involved auto and equipment receivables.
A very active investor
class in Australian structured financings is the local ABCP. At the end
of first-quarter 2000, the Australasian ABCP market was composed of 54
conduits that had financing commitments of more than A$50 billion, and
A$21 billion was outstanding. The number of asset sellers in the Australasian
ABCP market stood at 258.
Australia saw its
first three CMBS transactions in 1999, and the first one in 2000 closed
in July. Macquarie Office Trust, totaling A$224 million (US$131.6 million),
is a publicly listed property trust whose corporate and legal structure
resemble a U.S. REIT. The most common form of funding for these trusts
is often unsecured bank loans but the amount of money that can be raised
is limited so they have begun exploring securitization as a means of raising
large amounts of cash that is, in effect, secured by their properties,
according to Mr. Hunt of Standard & Poor's.
Japan Focuses
on ABS
Unlike Australia, where the emphasis is on RMBS, the focus in Japan has
been on ABS. The most frequently securitized assets in Japan are consumer-related,
according to Geoff Durno, chief underwriting officer at bond insurer Financial
Security Assurance Inc. in Singapore. For example, unsecured personal
loans, including those known as shopping loans, have been securitized.
"In the U.S.,
everyone has credit cards, but Japan is a cash economy," Mr. Durno
pointed out. "One means of personal finance is a loan that is received
as cash dispensed from an ATM. Consumers use their bank cards to draw
down on an approved credit card line."
Japanese investors,
who previously focused on high-quality corporate and government bonds,
are beginning to develop a taste for securitizations, possibly motivated
by the transactions' higher yields-including RMBS and CMBS, as well as
ABS transactions. For example, about 90% of the investors in Nikko Salomon
Smith Barney's J-CMBS deal were Japanese, said Michael C. Jaeger, vice
president of the investment bank's real estate structured finance group
in the fixed-income division in Tokyo.
Market Approaches
RMBS and CMBS
Insurance and nonbank
finance companies are viewing RMBS as a possible exit strategy from the
mortgage lending business, while the country's major banks, particularly
trust banks, are seeking direct securitization experience. For instance,
MTBC Housing Loan Corp., from originator Mitsubishi Trust & Banking
Corp. in July, was the first Japanese securitization rated by Standard
& Poor's backed by residential mortgages.
What's more, relevant
laws are expected to be revised to allow Government Housing Loan Corp.
(GHLC), a quasi-governmental organization that carries nearly 40% of the
residential mortgage market in Japan, to securitize its newly originated
mortgages. This could encourage other mortgage originators to approach
the RMBS market.
The growth of the
CMBS market is taking place on two fronts, as well-performing and nonperforming
commercial real estate loans-and Standard & Poor's has rated both
types of transactions. Examples of these include International Credit
Recovery - Japan One Ltd., sponsored by Morgan Stanley Realty Inc., which
was backed by nonperforming commercial mortgages, and J-CMBS-1 Ltd. from
Salomon Smith Barney (Japan) Ltd. which was secured by performing commercial
mortgages.
As more issuers and
investors get comfortable with these sectors, the international finance
community is also doing its best to help the markets develop. Investment
banks are providing their structuring expertise in conjunction with others,
such as credit rating services and bond insurers, to help establish national
standards for securitization.
"The first stage
of our J-CMBS deal involved working with local professionals to establish
global underwriting standards here in Japan," Mr. Jaeger explained.
"The second stage was developing a collateral package that provides
both protection to investors and facilitates global liquidity in the secondary
market. This groundbreaking transparency helped us educate investors about
the risks and benefits of the transaction."
In Japan, CMBS issues
are not typically secured by mortgages. Instead, they benefit from an
assignment of beneficial interests in the trust that holds the commercial
real estate. "Obtaining both a mortgage over the assets and assignment
of these beneficial interests provides superior security over the collateral,"
Mr. Hunt said.
In the area of real
estate equity finance, Japanese corporations and property owners are actively
pursuing securitization as a way to alleviate the effects of the country's
economic recession and to increase property valuations, according to George
von Liphart, managing director of GMAC Commercial Mortgage Japan, K.K.,
in Tokyo. This situation parallels that of the U.S. in the early 1990s,
when the commercial bank lenders encouraged the formation of REITs by
their largest borrowers to increase liquidity in the real estate markets.
"There is increasing conviction in Japanese financial circles that
securitization vehicles of all types are the wave of the future,"
Mr. von Liphart said.
Identifying True Securitizations
Despite the country's
relatively high level of activity, its legal infrastructure for securitization
is still developing. Structured financings have existed in Japan for several
years but the early transactions were not true securitizations because
investors still had recourse to the sellers of the assets, or there was
some type of credit enhancement in addition to the collateral itself.
Investors were likely to buy a transaction because they were comfortable
with the name of the assets' originator rather than the structure of the
transaction.
Two years ago, the
government passed two new laws intended to encourage securitization but,
according to legal experts, the laws did not provide for all outstanding
concerns. "While the Japanese securitization laws help greatly, they
can't override other laws already in place," explained Petrina Dawson,
senior managing director and general counsel in Standard & Poor's
Structured Finance Ratings group.
The Law Regarding
Securitization of Specified Assets by Special Purpose Company, commonly
called the Special-Purpose Company (SPC) Law, allows SPCs to be created
under Japanese laws. But the administrative burden and the cost of setting
up the SPC remains fairly high, making it more sensible from tax, economic,
and administrative perspectives to set up SPCs in places such as the Cayman
Islands.
The second law, the
Law Regarding Special Rules of the Civil Code Relating to the Perfection
of Assignment of Receivables, commonly called the Special Perfection Law,
made it possible to enforce a true sale of assets against third-party
creditors of the seller without obligor notification. Notification is
still required to enforce a sale against the obligors themselves and to
comply with usury laws.
In addition, notification
is still required to perfect such an assignment vis-à-vis the obligors
themselves. Notification can be an expensive and time-consuming process,
and lenders are usually unwilling to notify unless absolutely necessary
because of business considerations. As a result, securitizations of such
assets are still subject to setoff risk. Setoff allows obligors to net
their loan repayments against monies owned to them by the lender, such
as borrower funds deposited with the bank. This risk, which is difficult
to quantify because it can change over time, must be covered by additional
credit support.
For similar reasons,
it continues to be difficult for domestic banks to securitize pools of
their corporate loans and bonds. Called collateralized loan obligations
(CLOs), these securitizations allow banks to move large amounts of assets
off their balance sheets in order to achieve regulatory capital relief.
But Japanese law may still require that all loan and bond borrowers be
notified that their obligations will be sold to an SPC. Moreover, setoff
risk associated with CLOs is even more difficult to quantify because of
the possible existence of derivatives exposures.
Other Asian Markets
Try to Bounce Back
Asia-Pacific's troubles began in October 1997, with Thailand's devaluation
of its monetary unit, the baht, and its closure of 56 Thai finance companies
with burgeoning foreign currency debt and problem credits. Offshore securitization
became more expensive as nonlocal investors and bond insurers pulled out
of Asian markets, local investment in debt securities was underdeveloped,
and regional banks were unable to meet corporations' funding needs as
they had in the past due to high default rates among their own customers.
To make matters worse, swaps between U.S. dollars and Asian currencies
became difficult to obtain, if not impossible, explained Diane Lam, a
director in Standard & Poor's Asia Structured Finance Ratings group
in Hong Kong.
Today, the domestic
bond markets in Hong Kong, Singapore, and Korea are taking off due to
plentiful local liquidity, according to Mr. Wong of Standard & Poor's.
Domestic banks are making corporate loans and, at the same time, regional
investment banks are selling both corporate and structured bonds, which
are being purchased by domestic investors. Korea, in particular, has active
ABS, RMBS, and CMBS markets.
But as with Japan's
early structured transactions, these may not be considered true securitizations
and "name buying" is fairly common. Therefore, it's best for
investors to approach securitizations outside Japan and Australia on a
country-by-country basis because some have more developed securitization
infrastructures than others. "The Asian markets have the potential
to develop securitization markets but reaching that goal is dependent
upon each sovereign's ability to work out its own legal and regulatory
issues," Mr. Wong said.
The passage of two
laws in Korea and the upgrade of Korea's sovereign rating in 1999 have
encouraged cross-border transactions. Two notable offerings last year
were structured as CLOs. Industrial Bank of Korea issued notes via Peak
Funding Ltd., and Export Import Securitisation B.V. was issued by Export-Import
Bank of Korea, or Kexim. (For more information on the importance of the
sovereign's rating, see Latin America Pursues Different Tactics.)
Nations Encourage
RMBS and CLOs
Hong Kong, which had
an active residential mortgage business before 1997, has reinvigorated
its local RMBS market, and taken some steps to develop a CMBS market,
too. There's speculation that Hong Kong Mortgage Corp. (HKMC), a government-sponsored
entity, will eventually securitize its residential mortgages for the first
time, thereby reopening the country's securitization market.
In Singapore, where
there is significant interest in securitization, the first rated asset-backed
deal premiered this year. It was a CLO-type of asset-backed commercial
structure sponsored by DBS Bank. In addition, the Monetary Authority of
Singapore has released its guidelines on securitization of bank assets.
Such transactions have been issued in Singapore dollars and placed domestically.
Furthermore, Standard & Poor's has developed preliminary criteria
for rating Singapore RMBS.
Before the Asian crisis,
there were two offshore ABS deals out of Thailand. The country has an
established residential mortgage system, and government officials there
are considering creating a legal and regulatory framework that could facilitate
RMBS deals. However, complex legal, regulatory, tax, political, and business
issues make it unlikely this will be accomplished soon.
In other Asian countries,
including Indonesia, Malaysia, and the Philippines, securitization is
a possibility but some of the factors essential to market development
are missing. Key elements include positive regulatory environments, proper
legal frameworks, capital markets infrastructures, receptive investor
bases, and prepared originators with high asset volumes.
Developing New Possibilities
To date, the bulk
of the commercial assets in Asia have been securitized by banks, while
consumer assets, such as auto loans, have been securitized by the region's
nonbank finance companies. But as its economic recovery continues, it's
possible that regional banks will begin extending consumer credit in the
form of credit cards and auto loans with a view to eventually securitizing
their holdings, according to Chase Manhattan Bank's Mr. Burke.
"There will be
a handful of non-Japanese Asian deals done in the international capital
markets but they will be unique transactions. Those markets will continue
to develop as local markets with locally distributed securities,"
he said, "until some issuers in each market catch on to the idea
of financing consumer credit, growing it off balance sheet, then accessing
the international capital markets with securitizations."
In this way, with
regular issuers, well-understood securities, well-defined origination
standards, and willing, well-educated investors, Asian nations will be
able to develop a sustainable structured finance market.
Latin America
Pursues Different Tactics
Since its inception less than a decade ago, the securitization market
in Latin America has matured differently than in other regions. In addition
to underdeveloped local bond markets and highly regulated operating environments,
it has had to cope with a most onerous challenge-low-rated sovereigns.
On average, Latin sovereign ratings are lower than those of European and
Asian countries. Therefore, structures were developed to mitigate sovereign
risk, the most worrisome risk in the region, according to Rosario Buendia,
managing director of Standard & Poor's Latin America Structured Finance
Ratings group in New York.
The sovereign's rating
is important because it indicates, in part, the likelihood that actions
by the sovereign government could directly or indirectly affect the ability
of the obligor to make timely payments to bondholders. To partly mitigate
sovereign risk, securitizations of future flow receivables were developed
to decrease a government's ability to interfere with payments to investors.
For instance, a government
can directly interfere with a transaction by enacting foreign exchange
controls or a foreign debt moratorium. Indirect sovereign risk, also called
country risk or economic risk, happens when a government takes steps that
are not specifically intended to modify a transaction but those actions
still affect bond performance, including currency devaluations, interest
rate changes, labor market conditions, taxation, regulation, and infrastructure.
The First Stage:
Future Flows
The best way to mitigate the risk of potential direct sovereign actions
was to build a structure that would minimize the possibility of accessing
the transaction's cash flows. Known as future flow deals, these were cross-border
offerings denominated in hard currencies, mainly U.S. dollars. Instead
of depending on the performance of an existing pool of assets to generate
cash flows that are used to repay bondholders, future flow deals rely
on a company's capacity to supply a particular product, service, or commodity,
and its continued ability to find international buyers for these assets.
The most logical issuers
of future flow transactions are large, well-run, internationally recognized
companies, typically those that are exporters of some type of commodity
or natural resource. In general, companies in this situation receive hard
currencies in return for their products. Notable future flow issuers include
YPF S.A. in Argentina, whose bonds were secured by future flows of crude
oil, and ALCOA Aluminio S.A. in Brazil, secured by future exports of primary
aluminum sales.
The Second Stage:
Local Markets
But as local markets grow through the passage of necessary legislation
and regulations and the development of local investor bases due to the
privatization of nations' pension systems, companies in some countries
have been able to reach the second stage of Latin American securitization:
the issuance of structured financings in local markets in locally denominated
currencies.
This is an attractive
option for smaller companies looking to raise amounts as low as the equivalent
of US$5 million-companies that may not have the same access to international
markets or corporate bank loans as do larger organizations. The assets
that are securitized at this stage are typically consumer assets-residential
mortgages, auto loans, personal loans.
"Argentina is
in the advanced reaches of stage two. We expect, in the near future, that
Mexico, Chile, and Peru will enter this stage, as well," said Ms.
Buendia. "Brazil has the potential to attain this level in the years
to come but, currently, it doesn't have the proper set of conditions to
make securitization viable at this stage."
The Third Stage: Global Issues in Local Currencies
The third stage is the most difficult to attain: issuing local currency-denominated
structured financings in the international capital markets internationally.
It is the most difficult because it requires that investors must be comfortable
taking on the sovereign risk involved in Latin American transactions derived
from the fact that both the companies issuing the securities and their
assets are located in the region. Currently, only Chile and Uruguay and,
to a limited extent, Argentina, would be in a position to ascend to this
level.
Governments Encourage
Securitization
In some cases, governments are doing their best to encourage securitization.
The oldest securitization market in Latin America is in Argentina, where
it has been developing since a key law was enacted in 1995 and important
tax amendments implemented since 1997, according to Jose Ramon Tora, a
director in Standard & Poor's Latin America group in New York. There
have been more than 100 transactions issued in the local market.
In Mexico, the pension
system was reformed in 1997. So today, with the regulatory framework strengthened
and domestic long-term savings increasing, Mexico's local capital market
is deepening, Mr. Tora added.
Although Peru is not
a big player in the international securitization markets, particularly
when compared to larger countries such as Argentina, Brazil, and Mexico,
it's setting a good example by reforming its legal, taxation, and regulatory
efforts to encourage local structured financings. Comisión Nacional
Supervisora de Empresas y Valores (CONASEV), a government agency that
regulates the country's capital markets, is an active proponent of securitization,
according to its general manager, Dr. Gustavo Beramendi.
"The actions
taken by CONASEV have been aimed at promoting the processes of securitization
of assets in the domestic market," he said. "A characteristic
of Peruvian securities market is the increasing needs for instruments
on the part of the institutional investors. The private pension funds
and the mutual funds showed an important growth after their creation at
the beginning of the present decade and they came to be the main national
demanders of securities."
CONASEV is currently
working on two fronts. It is reviewing all tax frameworks that govern
the action of securities market participants, especially in relation to
securitizations, "in order to propose additional actions that will
make this alternative of financing attractive," Dr. Beramendi said.
It is also examining the development of the U.S. residential mortgage
market with a view to making the Peruvian market reflective of the same
transparent environment.
Bond Insurance
and Political Risk Insurance Gain Groun
d In addition to government support, some issuers have received support
from a new source: external enhancement from third parties, such as bond
insurance and political risk insurance, which impact both stage one and
stage three issuers. "A Latin American trend that started in 1995
provides transactions with additional enhancement to make them stronger,
less risky," Ms. Buendia explained. "Because of the difficulties
the market faced in 1998-1999, issuers and bankers saw these types of
insurance as ways to move forward and attract investors."
Bond insurer MBIA
Inc. provided full guarantees to several securitizations. Other entities
ranging from Asset Guaranty Insurance Co. to the World Bank, the World
Bank's Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency, or MIGA, the Overseas
Private Investment Corp. (OPIC), and the Inter-American Development Bank
(IADB) have also provided partial guarantees. These guarantees have become
so popular among investors that, in 1999, there were no international
securitizations sold without external credit enhancement except some classes
of certain issues from Pemex Finance Ltd., Ms. Buendia said.
By Lisa A. Tibbitts
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