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CreditWeek
®
The Global Authority On Credit Quality
|
November 2, 2011
Trustee-Like Roles Come
In Many Guises
Covered Bonds’ Role In
Latin American Housing
Issuer Rating Changes And
Covered Bonds
Never Underestimate
Credit Risk
CreditMatters
|
Multimedia Edition
SPECIAL REPORT
Global Demand
For CoveredBonds
Is Growing
Covered Bonds Evolve And Spread
Around The World
By Sabrina Miehs, Frankfurt
Covered bonds—bank-issued debt secured by mortgage loans or public
sector assets—are expanding into new countries to meet growing demand
for long-term funding. We believe that demand in countries that already have
covered bondsisgrowing as new investors shift away from senior unsecured
bank debt, and as insurance and bank regulators give covered bonds
preferential treatment in their tightening capital and liquidity rules.
2 www.creditweek.com
8 Covered Bonds—A Primer On The Top Five
Global Jurisdictions
By Sabine Daehn, Frankfurt
Five countries—Germany, France, Spain, Denmark, and
the U.K.—dominate the covered bond market. In fact,
these countries collectively account for about 80% of
outstanding covered bond issuance in the €2.4 trillion
global market. In this report on the top five countries, we
illustrate some important distinctions between programs
and jurisdictions, highlighting how no two covered bond
programs can be considered the same.
20 Covered Bond Trustee-Like Roles Come
In Many Guises
By Sabine Daehn, Frankfurt
All covered bond programs—whether they are
structured or legislation-enabled—benefit from
trustees or entities performing trustee-like
roles, who are appointed to safeguard
bondholders’ interests. However, the names,
nature, and scope of these roles vary
significantly by jurisdiction. Depending on the
jurisdiction, a covered bond trustee may have
anything from a rather passive to a highly active
role in the operation of a covered bond program.
25 Never Underestimate Credit Risk In
Mortgage Covered Bonds
By Sabrina Miehs, Frankfurt
Over the past five years, issuers from an increasing
number of countries have turned to coveredbonds to
refinance their mortgage
lending, while issuance of
public sector loan-backed
covered bonds has fallen.
The common perception of
mortgage covered bonds
as a homogeneous and
universally low risk
product is misleading. In
fact, the characteristics of
individual mortgage coveredbonds are not only diverse,
but also can change over time.
32 Covered Bonds—Is The Next Stop A Move
Away From ‘AAA’?
By Sabrina Miehs, Frankfurt
The covered bond market is feeling the impact of the
sovereign crisis, the diminishing trust in banks, and bail-
in discussions. Investors in senior unsecured debt are
worried that their potential recoveries could suffer if
banks increasingly use coveredbondsfor funding
because the bank would be using more of its collateral
for covered bonds. Issuers are concerned about the
quality of coveredbonds as certain asset types are
finding their way into the cover pools.
contents
4
November 2, 2011
| Volume 31, No. 42
Special Report
36 Scenario Analysis: How Sensitive Are Covered
Bond Ratings To Changes In Issuer Ratings?
By Andrew South, London
Ratings on covered bond programs are mostly linked
to the underlying issuer credit rating (ICR). But many
covered bonds that we rate ‘AAA’ would keep those
ratings, even if the underlying ICRs were notches
lower. Some would keep their ‘AAA’ ratings if we
lowered the ICR by as much as four notches.
Moreover, the minimum level of overcollateralization
that we view as commensurate with a ‘AAA’ rating on
a program doesn’t change if the ICR falls.
41 S&P Discusses Canada’s Proposed
Legislative Regime ForCovered Bonds
By Karlo Fuchs, Frankfurt
Without dedicated covered bond legislation in Canada,
these programs follow existing structured finance
techniques for segregating assets, and they operate as
contractual covered bonds. The Canadian Department
of Finance’s consultation paper outlines the ability of
those existing contractual covered bond programs to
become registered programs under a legislative
regime, subject to approval and compliance with the
then-published law.
45 Could CoveredBonds Help Reduce
Latin America’s Housing Deficit?
By Eric Gretch, New York
Latin America has long struggled with finding new
sources of liquidity to close the massive gap in its
housing deficit. To keep up with the soaring demand
for residential mortgages, governments are busy
writing legislation, reforming their mortgage markets,
and considering alternative financing options that
weren’t feasible in the past. Mortgage lenders have
also joined the effort and are pushing for greater
access to the capital markets.
Standard & Poor’s CreditWeek | November 2, 2011 3
Video: Standard & Poor's Covered Bond Rating
Methodology Addresses Market Value Risk
One of the key differences between coveredbonds and
RMBS is the potential exposure to market value risk, as the
assets backing the coveredbonds typically have longer
maturities than the coveredbonds themselves. In Standard
& Poor's previous covered bond methodology update, we
highlighted the analysis of this particular risk. New U.S.
legislation may lead to the development of a covered bonds
market in the U.S., but investors would need to be
comfortable with the credit risk of issuing banks and the
assets securing the covered bonds. In this CreditMatters TV
segment, Standard & Poor's Managing Director Karen Naylor
and Senior Director Ernestine Warner discuss the mechanics
of the covered bond market and what would be necessary
for a market to develop in the U.S.
Other Multimedia In This Special Report
8 Podcast: Covered Bonds: A Primer On The
Underlying Risks
25 Video: Covered Bonds: Not All Are Created Equal
37
Issuer Do
wngrades?
Multimedia
Video: How Sensitive Are CoveredBonds To
4 www.creditweek.com
features
special report
Standard & Poor’s CreditWeek | November 2, 2011 5
W
ith a deep and storied history in Europe dating back
centuries and $3 trillion in outstanding issuance
today, coveredbonds continue to stretch across the
globe and into new territories—most recently in Australia and
Turkey, with growing potential in Latin America and the U.S.
Covered Bonds
Evolve And Spread
Around The World
■
Covered bonds continue to stretch across the globe and into new territories—notably
Australia and Turkey, with growing potential also in Latin America and the U.S.
■
But, the market hasn’t escaped the effects of the sovereign crisis and evaporating
confidence in banks.
■
The question for issuers, investors, and regulators is how to determine which bonds
will be the strongest during times of market volatility—and whether a ‘AAA’ rating is
the only measure.
■
We believe that demand in countries that already have coveredbondsis growing
and we expect the overall growth of the covered bond market to continue, both in
terms of issuance volumes and geographic reach.
Overview
Covered bonds—essentially bank-issued
debt secured by mortgage loans or
public sector assets—are expanding into
new countries to meet growing demand
for long-term funding. Standard &
Poor’s Ratings Services believes that
demand in countries that already have
covered bondsisgrowing as new
investors shift away from senior unse-
cured bank debt, and as insurance and
bank regulators give covered bonds
preferential treatment in their tightening
capital and liquidity rules.
Covered Bonds Continue To
Evolve As Market Volatility Rises
Even as demandfor the funding tool
grows, the market hasn’t escaped the
effects of the sovereign crisis and evapo-
rating confidence in banks. On the other
hand, talk of private sector creditors
shouldering bigger losses if banks fail has
caused banks to address investor concerns
by focusing on secured funding alterna-
tives, such as covered bonds.
These crosscurrents between increasing
demand and the covered bond market’s
continuing evolution have got the
market—more than 200 banks issuing
covered bonds in about 30 countries
worldwide—focusing on how to maintain
its credibility. For starters, investors in
senior unsecured debt worry about
smaller recoveries if banks increasingly
tap coveredbondsfor funding, because
the bank would encumber more of its
asset base to provide ring-fenced collat-
eral for the covered bonds. Some issuers
are concerned over the perception of cov-
ered bond quality if others begin to
include assets such as loans to small and
midsize enterprises, credit card receiv-
ables, and auto loans in cover pools.
More broadly, as the global covered
bond market continues to evolve, we have
found increasing evidence to support our
belief that not all coveredbonds are cre-
ated equal. The common perception of
covered bonds as a homogeneous and uni-
versally low risk product is misleading. In
fact, the characteristics of covered bonds
are not only diverse, but can change over
time. Credit enhancement levels, the
degree of asset-liability mismatch, and col-
lateral type and performance all vary.
The question for issuers, investors,
and regulators, then, is how to deter-
mine which bonds will be the strongest
during times of market volatility—and
whether a ‘AAA’ rating is the only
measure. Most of the covered bond
market remains ‘AAA’, though we’re
assigning lower ratings to more and
more covered bonds. In fact, all covered
bonds for which we’ve assigned the
highest possible rating over that of the
issuer have overcollateralization that is,
in our view, sufficient to protect against
all asset default-related risks in a ‘AAA’
stress scenario—even if the covered
bond rating is below ‘AAA’.
Covered Bonds Open
New Frontiers
Australia is the latest entry in the cov-
ered bond market. Once the govern-
ment has fully implemented the legal
framework, Australian financial insti-
tutions—even with an issuance cap of
8% of their total assets—could have
the potential to issue up to A$150 bil-
lion. This would effectively propel this
relatively infant market into the top
10 countries in terms of global
issuance outstanding.
With the fate of the U.S. private-label
residential mortgage-backed securities
(RMBS) market still unclear, there’s new
hope that coveredbonds might finally
provide another needed source of long-
term liquidity—rather than an RMBS
replacement—to finance home mort-
gages. Legislation has been written,
hearings have been held, the U.S.
Treasury has cited it as another poten-
tial funding source, and the Federal
Reserve has given coveredbonds their
own collateral category.
Still, despite that momentum, develop-
ment has lagged because of the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation’s (FDIC)
desire to have recourse to covered bonds’
asset cover pools—as is the case for
other balance sheet assets—to avoid
lower recovery prospects. This stance
reflects the FDIC’s mandate to protect
bank depositors. Furthermore, we
believe that market participants can only
fully assess the fate of coveredbonds in
the U.S. once policymakers identify the
6 www.creditweek.com
features
special report
future role of the government-sponsored
enterprises (Fannie Mae and Freddie
Mac), and the Federal Home Loan
Banks for mortgage financing. However,
we believe that this is not likely to
happen anytime soon given politicians’
focus on the upcoming 2012 U.S. presi-
dential election, despite the U.S. Covered
Bond Act enjoying significant bi-partisan
support. Most observers have now
pushed backed estimates for the passage
of U.S. covered bond legislation until
after the 2012 presidential election.
A number of Latin American coun-
tries have already passed, or are in the
process of passing, covered bond laws:
Argentina enacted a law in 1995 for
securitizing mortgages (“letras hipote-
carias”) that closely resemble the tech-
niques used with covered bonds;
Mexico and Peru have both introduced
legislation. Brazil, too, passed a law in
1997 to issue a similar financial instru-
ment, called “letras de credito imobil-
iario,” or LCIs, which were structured
to stay on banks’ balance sheets.
Still, despite the appeal covered
bonds may have for providing liquidity
to help reduce the region’s housing
deficit, the viability of the financing
tool in Latin America depends on
many factors, including the speed of
regulatory reform, the legal strength of
the security interest over the assets, as
well as the emergence of a secondary
mortgage market.
What Next ForCovered Bonds?
Covered bonds continue to spread
around the globe. As their expansion
continues, however, it is important that
misconceptions are resolved and that
various market stakeholders begin to
provide greater transparency, rather
than just acknowledging the need for it.
As investors have different risk prefer-
ences, knowing the full range of risks
that exist in any covered bond program
and how these risks are addressed—
from overcollateralization levels to liq-
uidity coverage—clearly is essential to
make an educated investment decision.
As the covered bond market is
growing fast on heavy demandfor alter-
native investments, more “oppor-
tunistic” investors as well as issuers
have joined the predominant pool of
traditional covered bond stakeholders.
In our opinion, this could potentially be
negative for the market if their commit-
ment turns out to be short-lived.
However, we believe that rising
demand forcoveredbonds will see the
market expand further, both in terms of
issuance volumes as well as geographic
reach. In our view, the covered bond
market will only maintain its track
record as a high credit quality
product—with no defaults—if both
issuers and investors work together.
CW
Related Criteria And Research
■
Global Covered Bond Characteristics And
Rating Summary Q3 2011, Oct. 18, 2011
■
Revised Methodology And Assumptions For
Assessing Asset-Liability Mismatch Risk In
Covered Bonds, Dec. 16, 2009
Standard & Poor’s CreditWeek | November 2, 2011 7
It is important that misconceptions are
resolved and that various market
stakeholders begin to provide greater
transparency…
Analytical Contacts:
Sabrina Miehs
Frankfurt (49) 69-33-999-304
Andrew South
London (44) 20-7176-3712
Karlo Fuchs
Frankfurt (49) 69-33-999-156
Karen Naylor
London (44) 20-7176-3533
For more articles on this topic search RatingsDirect with keyword:
Covered Bonds
8 www.creditweek.com
features
special report
C
overed bonds have enjoyed significant investor demand
throughout 2011, with more than €300 billion in
benchmark issuance globally and further growth expected
from a geographically diverse set of issuers. Five countries—
Germany, France, Spain, Denmark, and the U.K.—dominate
the covered bond market. In fact, these countries collectively
account for about 80% of outstanding covered bond issuance
in the €2.5 trillion global market, according to data from the
European Covered Bond Council.
Covered Bonds
In this report on the top five countries,
Standard & Poor’s Ratings Services
illustrates some important distinctions
between programs and jurisdictions,
which mean that no two covered bond
programs can be considered the same,
in our view. We provide an overview of
the legal frameworks, supporting collat-
eral, currency, interest rate, and matu-
rity mismatch risks, highlighting the
extent to which these may differ
between programs and jurisdictions.
Germany
Covered bond type
The German Pfandbrief sector is the
largest, most established global covered
bond market, with 57 issuers who have
Pfandbriefe outstanding. The share of
mortgage coveredbondsis increasing,
with public sector covered bonds
decreasing in significance, as banks
reduce their public sector lending or
fund it by other means.
There are two types of bond issuances in
Germany: “Namenspfandbriefe,” which
are registered, and “Inhaberpfandbriefe,”
which take the form of bearer notes and
rank pari passu with each other (see table
1). Cover pool assets backing covered
bonds remain on the issuer’s balance
sheet, documented in a special cover reg-
ister, and a cover pool trustee
(“Treuhänder”) supervises these assets.
Legal framework
German covered bond legislation dates
back over a century but is now based on
the Covered Bond Act (Pfandbriefgesetz),
first established in 2005. The legislation
has since been updated several times,
with the latest amendment in 2010.
German financial institutions that use
covered bondsfor funding issue the
bonds directly, and bond holders have a
priority claim on the cover pool assets if
the issuer becomes insolvent.
Bankruptcy proceedings related to the
issuer do not lead to acceleration or
forced restructuring of the covered
bonds, and any hedging agreements also
survive the issuer’s insolvency. The
issuer establishes cover registers, which
document the assets assigned to secure
the covered bond obligations and if the
issuer becomes insolvent, this register
segregates the cover pool assets from
the insolvency estate.
Furthermore, in an insolvency, the cover
pool administrator (“Sachwalter”)—
appointed by the German Federal
Financial Supervisory Authority (BaFin)
Standard & Poor’s CreditWeek | November 2, 2011 9
A Primer On The Top Five
Global Jurisdictions
to oversee the management of the cov-
ered bonds—has the right to generate
additional liquidity via asset sales or
additional borrowing, to mitigate any
maturity mismatches between cash
inflows from the cover pool assets and
the liabilities falling due on the covered
bonds. Should cover assets ever prove
insufficient to redeem any bonds falling
due, the bond holders also have a claim
against the issuer’s estate that is pari
passu with senior unsecured creditors.
Assets
The German Covered Bond Act defines
which types of assets are eligible to be
included in the cover pool for different
types of covered bonds, i.e., mortgage
loans, loans to public sector entities, or
shipping- and aircraft-secured loans.
The issuer must maintain a segregated
cover pool for each asset category, and
meet matching and management
requirements separately for each type of
asset pool. Furthermore, a covered
bond issuer must publicly disclose key
risk indicators for each cover pool at
least quarterly. These include the cover
pool’s composition, according to certain
standardized criteria, and overcollater-
alization levels—based on both a nom-
inal, a net present value (NPV), and a
stressed NPV basis.
The composition of cover pools
securing German coveredbonds varies
significantly from program to program.
For example, pools backing some mort-
gage coveredbonds consist solely of res-
idential loans, while other programs’
pools may contain only commercial real
estate loans. We have also observed that
the diversity of geographic exposures in
cover pools—both within Germany and
across other European countries—
varies significantly from issuer to issuer.
Pools with a higher proportion of com-
mercial real estate exposures tend to
have wider geographic diversity across
Europe, whereas pools with primarily
residential mortgage exposures are
more likely to have a domestic focus.
Indeed, domestically-focused covered
bond programs often even have some
concentration in the regions where the
originating bank has its historical cus-
tomer base. Public sector covered bonds
exhibit equally diverse characteristics,
with domestic exposures ranging from
only 40% of the pool to nearly 95% in
some programs.
Structure
Many German coveredbonds feature a
bullet maturity that can create a matu-
rity mismatch between the bonds and
the cover assets, which are typically
amortizing. However, issuers with large,
long-established programs are able to
manage this risk by ensuring that the
maturity profile of the various bond
issuances outstanding in aggregate
closely matches the expected amortiza-
tion profile of the underlying assets. The
Covered Bond Act also addresses liq-
uidity risk by requiring that the cover
pool can be expected to generate cash
flows that meet the program’s maximum
liquidity need for a period of 180 days.
10 www.creditweek.com
features
special report
Covered bond type Issuer Legislative framework Balance sheet treatment Asset types
Öffentlicher Pfandbrief Financial institution Pfandbriefgesetz On issuer’s balance sheet, Public sector exposure and
(public sector covered bond) (German Covered Bond Act) recorded in cover pool register substitute collateral up to 10%
Hypothekenpfandbrief Financial institution Pfandbriefgesetz On issuer’s balance sheet, Mortgage loans (up to 60% LTV
(mortgage covered bond) (German Covered Bond Act) recorded in cover pool register can be included in the pool) and
substitute assets up to 20%
Schiffspfandbrief and Flugzeugpfandbrief Financial institution Pfandbriefgesetz On issuer’s balance sheet, Shipping or aircraft
(shipping and aircraft covered bond) (German Covered Bond Act) recorded in cover pool register finance loans
OC—Overcollateralization. LTV—Loan-to-value (based on prudent lending value not market value).
Germany
Table 1
Covered bond type Issuer Legislative framework Balance sheet treatment
Cédulas hipotecarias (CH) Credit institution Several laws from 1981, On issuer’s balance sheet
2003, 2007, and 2009
Cédulas territoriales (CT) Credit institution Several laws from 1981, 2003, On issuer’s balance sheet
2007, and 2009
Bono hipotecarios (BH) Credit institution As CH, specifically the On issuer’s balance sheet, registered assets
amendment from 2007
Multi-cédulas Special entity— Spanish securitization legislation Loan collateral on CH/CT issuers’ balance sheets;
Fondo de Titulización and laws applicable to CH/CT CH/CT on balance sheet of fund that issues multi-cédulas
de Activos
OC—Overcollateralization. LTV—Loan-to-value. EU—European Union.
Spain
Table 2
[...]... RatingsDirect with keyword: CoveredBonds Analytical Contacts: Sabine Daehn Frankfurt (49) 69-3399-9303 Karlo Fuchs Frankfurt (49) 69-3399-9156 Never Underestimate Credit Risk In Mortgage CoveredBonds Overview ■ ■ ■ Asset-liability mismatch is the most important risk forcovered bonds, followed by the credit risk that is present in the cover pools Credit risk factors in mortgage coveredbonds may vary significantly... 2, 2011 25 special report features tics, although full details may not always be clearly reported We believe this is reflected in recent demands for greater transparency on covered bond programs and their associated risks To help investors evaluate the risks underlying mortgage covered bonds, in this report we discuss some of the key considerations We detail the range of program characteristics using...As highlighted in our published criteria, potential asset-liability mismatch (ALMM) is a key factor in our rating analysis forcovered bond programs (see “Credit FAQ: Standard & Poor’s Explains Update To Criteria For Assessing Asset-Liability Mismatch Risk In Covered Bonds, ” published Dec 17, 2009, on RatingsDirect, on the Global Credit Portal) For the German covered bond programs that we rate,... liquidity risks have to be limited according to the principle chosen by the issuer for the respective capital center or cover register This decision does not depend upon the type of covered bond issued and can only be amended by notice to investors Assets The asset pools that back Danish covered bond programs revolve However, for most capital centers, once a mortgage loan is registered for a specific issuance... Danish coveredbonds Mortgage banks have favored this type of covered bond as a major funding tool due to their exclusive focus on granting loans and issuing bonds (these banks cannot take deposits) The special banking principle restricted other banks from using this funding source until 2007, when SDOs were introduced Issuers require a licence from the Danish banking authorities to issue covered bonds, ... spurred downgrades on covered bonds, has been that covered bond spreads have become more volatile, at some points reaching historical highs The spread correlation between government bonds and coveredbonds also collapsed in some peripheral European countries (such as Portugal and Italy), with coveredbonds even trading below government bonds Panelists hoped that coveredbonds in core issuing areas (such... collateral for the series of bonds issued out of this capital center Eligibility of such loans requires them to be registered in the land registry at Danish district courts If an issuer becomes insolvent, the capital centers freeze at their then-current state, repay claims under the covered bonds, and satisfy derivatives counterparties after paying fees and expenses Should the assets registered in... on the covered bonds, the cover pool administrator has the right to liquidate cover pool assets, borrow money, or issue new coveredbonds ranking pari passu with existing bonds Subject to the regulator’s approval, the administrator may also transfer some or all of the covered bond program’s assets and liabilities to another covered bond issuer Both the cover pool monitor and the cover pool administrator... program-specific data from our quarterly report on the sector (see GlobalCovered Bond Characteristics And Rating Summary Q2 2011,” published July 19, However, Standard & Poor’s Ratings Services believes that the common perception of mortgage coveredbonds as a homogeneous and universally low risk product is misleading In fact, the characteristics of individual mortgage coveredbonds are not only diverse, but... property’s value The total whole loan LTV ratio of this one loan in this example is therefore 100% This split allows the lender of loan part I, which has an LTV that is eligible under the local covered bond law, to refinance this part by issuing coveredbonds and by assigning various risk margins to the various loan parts The lender of loan part I, which is prior-ranking, and loan part II do not need to . Risk CreditMatters | Multimedia Edition SPECIAL REPORT Global Demand For Covered Bonds Is Growing Covered Bonds Evolve And Spread Around The World By Sabrina Miehs, Frankfurt Covered bonds bank-issued. if banks increasingly use covered bonds for funding because the bank would be using more of its collateral for covered bonds. Issuers are concerned about the quality of covered bonds as certain asset. coverage—clearly is essential to make an educated investment decision. As the covered bond market is growing fast on heavy demand for alter- native investments, more “oppor- tunistic” investors as well as issuers have