Student Loan Corp's Deal Launched At 150BPS Over Benchmark
06 8월 2009 - 11:47PM
Dow Jones News
Student Loan Corp.'s (STU) $1.396 billion deal that is eligible
for funding under a Federal Reserve program has launched, according
to a person familiar with the matter.
The student loan-backed deal, dubbed SLCLT 2009-A, launched at
150 basis points over prime, a benchmark.
The single-tranche bond is led by Citigroup (C), and investors
can get cheap loans from the Fed to buy it through the Fed's Term
Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility, or TALF.
The sixth loan application deadline for TALF is Thursday, and
more than $8 billion in deals has surfaced this month in
anticipation of tapping investor funds via the facility.
Most of the deals sold on Wednesday. Issuers included General
Electric Co. (GE), SLM Corp. (SLM), Wheels Inc. and First National
Bank of Omaha.
Launched in March, TALF offers investors loans at attractive
rates to buy newly created asset-backed securities. Most of the
consumer loan-backed deals sold this year were eligible for TALF,
which helped revitalize the securitization market and improved the
availability of credit for consumers.
Initially, the program was viewed as user-unfriendly, but the
Fed's cheap loans drew investors who overcame lengthy documentation
and other implementation issues to participate. Now, many hope it
is extended past its scheduled expiration at the end of this
year.
The Fed has recently also begun to offer attractive financing
for new and existing commercial mortgage-backed loans in an effort
to revive the commercial real estate sector. The next loan
application deadline for the commercial-property portion is Aug.
20.
On Wednesday, General Electric sold two deals eligible for TALF
financing, totaling $2.25 billion.
SLM Corp., better known as Sallie Mae, sold a $1.68 billion
deal, and World Financial Network sold three smaller deals.
Wheels Inc. sold a $703.3 million fleet lease-backed deal and
First National Bank of Omaha sold a $500 million credit card
loan-backed deal.
-By Anusha Shrivastava, Dow Jones Newswires; 212-416-2227;
anusha.shrivastava@dowjones.com