Language: English
Published by Butterworths, London, UK, 1990
ISBN 10: 0406117225 ISBN 13: 9780406117229
Seller: BookScene, Hull, MA, U.S.A.
First Edition
Hardcover. Condition: Good+. Dust Jacket Condition: No Jacket (as issued). First Edition. 1st Printing. 1990. Moderate general wear. Scribbling on half-title page. Previous owner ink stamps. 339 pages. Many people (including potential investors) who have heard of securitisation but not experienced it are put off by its complexity. Undoubtedly the transactions are complicated and demanding but the objective of this book is to remove some of the mystery from the process. It has been written with the aim of providing a better understanding of what securitisation can provide and what it means on a practical basis. The book commences with an overview of the development of securitisation to date. An analysis of legal and tax aspects follows to enable readers to understand the manner in which legal theory and commercial objectives can be reconciled. Three chapters then discuss, from the perspective of different types of lenders, how securitisation can help. After a review by a merchant banker of the market, the rating agencies explain their approach to asset-backed debt. An insurance company and a professional trustee then explain their separate views of securitisation, followed by a discussion of various current issues which are being hotly debated in the United Kingdom. The accounting treatment of securitisation is then analysed before the securitisation of non-mortgage assets is discussed. The penultimate chapter considers securitisation in France and its new legal regime before the final chapter discusses the pressures and trends which are likely to develop in international financial markets in the coming months and years. The appendices contain a summary of all public UK transactions to date, the Bank of England's paper on loan transfers and securitisation (reproduced with their kind permission) and the Statement of Practice on transfers of mortgages issued by the United Kingdom Department of Environment (reproduced with their kind permission). 6219.