Moody's Australia RMBS Review Could Shake Up Some Issuers
26 July 2011 - 12:21PM
Dow Jones News
Moody's Investors Service began a re-assessment of its
methodology for rating Australian residential mortgage-backed
securities Tuesday, a move that could shake up some parts of the
improving market for securitized debt in the country.
The most likely outcome of the Moody's change would be for the
agency to follow Standard & Poor's by asking issuers to have a
higher proportion of subordinated debt on deals to meet higher
insurance requirements and greater protect those investing in top
tranches. To add protection, issuers increase the size of the
higher-yielding, lower-rated tranches, making RMBS issuance more
costly for the issuer.
The S&P change added about 10-15 basis points to the cost of
issuing RMBS -- hurting smaller issuers like Bendigo & Adelaide
Bank Ltd. (BEN.AU), Resimac and FirstMac with shallower
pockets.
Investors and analysts have been split on the change,
acknowledging the benefit of more protection, but noting the move
could add volatility to a market still trying to recover.
"This continues the ratings volatility that will be a permanent
feature of structured finance," said David Goodman, a capital
markets analyst with Westpac. "They're changing the goal posts a
little, but I don't think it will have a big effect."
Even though Australian RMBS performed well during the global
financial crisis, with no rated tranche of an Australian RMBS
defaulting, ratings agencies have felt a reevaluation is necessary
in the wake of a collapse in securitization markets in other
regions around the globe.
Late last year, Standard & Poor's reevaluated its
methodology for rating RMBS in Australia, following a similar move
by the ratings agency in the U.S. and a global review by Moody's
itself in late 2009.
Any impact from the change could be damaging to Australia's
government, which has been trying to improve mortgage competition
by supporting smaller lenders, committing A$20 billion for RMBS
buying. That program was put in place to help securitization
markets recover as regional lenders use these markets as their
primary source of funding and as they have struggled, the country's
four largest banks have seized control of more than 90% of the home
mortgage market.
While the program has helped the RMBS market improve generally,
with Australia on pace to price more than A$20 billion in RMBS this
year, mortgage competition is yet to show any meaningful change,
according to analysts.
-By Geoffrey Rogow, Dow Jones Newswires; +61-2-8272-4686;
geoffrey.rogow@dowjones.com
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