By mid-week issuers and rating agencies must comply with a Securities and Exchange Commission rule designed to encourage more unsolicited opinions on asset-backed securities. The regulator wants to remove the conflicts of interest in the ratings process that led to inflated ratings in the past and contributed to the financial crisis. Among the new requirements, when a firm is hired to rate an asset-backed security, it must notify rivals that did not get the job. The arranger of a security must give all raters - even those it has not tapped - detailed information on the underlying loans, something that previously only the agencies that got the assignment could see. And the agencies will have to rate at least 10% of all deals they inspect, whether or not they are paid to rate them. Government-sanctioned kibitzing could complicate the gradual recovery in the asset-backed market that began last year. "Issuers are not really crazy about getting unsolicited ratings that are going to be lower ones than they obtain," said Steve Kudenholdt, partner and co-chair of the capital markets practice at Sonnenschein Nath & Rosenthal LLP. For one thing, the new requirements may prolong the time it takes to bring deals to market. "It's definitely going to slow things up," said Michael Buttner, Wells Fargo & Co.'s head of residential mortgage-backed securities. "Until you've got all the rules laid out and have worked it through a few times, it's new and it's not going to be as smooth."
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June could be the true test for delinquencies and how many distressed borrowers impacted by a shift in Federal Housing Administration rules will reperform.
3h ago -
The Federal Reserve Board governor is the latest Fed official to embrace the prospect of tighter monetary policy in response to rapidly rising prices that have taken hold in recent years.
3h ago -
All-cash home purchases hit a six-year March low of 28.9%, as a buyer-friendly market reduced the need to use cash to stand out, with sellers outnumbering buyers by a record-near margin, Redfin found.
3h ago -
Property taxes are up 30% since 2019, driven by pandemic-era home value gains. Mortgage borrowers pay more than those without a loan, and experts say relief is unlikely anytime soon.
5h ago -
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. said banks earned stronger profits and expanded lending in the first quarter of 2026, but at the same time margins shrank and unrealized losses have been increasing.
7h ago -
The insurance giant accuses Nationwide Mortgage Bankers of profiting off its branding and of suggesting to consumers that it's tied to the firm.
May 27









