Scope rates AAA(SF) Italian RMBS notes issued by Asti Group RMBS IV S.r.l.
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The EUR 665m underlying portfolio of prime residential mortgage loans was originated to private individuals by Cassa di Risparmio di Asti S.p.A. and former Biver Banca.
Rating action
Scope Ratings GmbH (Scope) has assigned the following ratings on the issued instruments:
Transaction overview
The transaction is a granular, static securitisation of Italian prime residential mortgage loans originated by Cassa di Risparmio di Asti S.p.A. (CR Asti) and by the former Biver Banca, which is now part of CR Asti. At the cut-off date of 31 August 2024, the underlying portfolio yields 5.0% annually and has an estimated weighted average residual maturity of 18.9 years. 57% of the portfolio pays a fixed rate with the remainder paying a floating rate. The main structural features are: a) an initial level of credit enhancement via subordination of 17.0% for both class A1 and A2 notes; b) a gross excess spread at closing of 1.0%, measured as the difference between the portfolio’s yield and the weighted average cost of the rated notes; c) a bespoke amortisation mechanism for class A1 and A2 notes, upon which class A2 notes receive 55% of the available funds after senior payments (fast-pay) and class A1 notes receive the remaining 45%, as long as class A2 notes are still outstanding (slow-pay); d) a fixed-floating swap mitigating the risk of having fixed-rate assets against liabilities linked to 3 month Euribor; and e) a reserve fund of EUR 11.0m that covers any shortfalls in interest payments on the class A1 and A2 notes as well as any senior item, ensuring a liquidity coverage of approximately 4 months considering the current Euribor spot rate. The noteholders are exposed to the following key counterparties: Cassa di Risparmio di Asti S.p.A., as servicer and originator of the portfolio, and BNP Paribas, Italian Branch as issuer account bank holder.
Rating rationale
The assigned ratings reflect the Cash Flow Model (CFM) base case results. Counterparty risk is immaterial, relative to the assigned rating levels and none of the Key Rating Drivers are ESG related. The key rating drivers underlying the rating action are:
The key CFM assumptions underlying the above rating drivers are:
Details on these assumptions and other CFM Parameters are provided under the section ‘Quantitative analysis’ below. CFM assumptions factor in the historical performance of assets of similar nature to those of the securitised portfolio, (e.g. based on originators’ performance data or peer transaction benchmarks), and may as well consider qualitative judgements based on a variety of factors, such as a) the originator′s credit policies, b) Scope′s macro-economic expectations, and c) the credit committee′s asset class outlook over the transaction′s lifetime. The key data sources used to derive the key CFM assumptions are:
With regards to the vintage analysis, based on extrapolation techniques, Scope observed an average lifetime default rate of 3.8% for the underlying vintages with a coefficient of variation of 70.6%, and an average lifetime recovery rate of 60.0%.
Rating-change drivers
A change to the transaction’s Key CFM Assumptions based on observed performance or new data sources, significant changes to the transaction’s collateral and structural features, and a change in Scope’s credit views regarding the transition’s Key Rating Drivers could impact the ratings to the downside. All else equal, the sensitivity analysis below provides an indication of the impact of variations in key CFM assumptions on the CFM quantitative results compared to the assigned ratings. The analysis has the sole purpose of illustrating the sensitivity of the credit ratings to such parameters and is not indicative of expected or likely scenarios. Class A1 notes
Class A2 notes
Quantitative analysis
This section provides a non-exhaustive list of relevant CFM parameters:
Ratings driver references 1.? Loan-by-loan data tape of the securitised pool and originators’ vintage data (Confidential) 2. Transaction documentation and supporting material (Confidential)
Stress testing Stress testing was considered in the quantitative analysis by considering scenarios that stress factors, like defaults and recoveries, contributing to sensitivity of Credit Ratings and consider the likelihood of severe collateral losses or impaired cash flows. The impact on the rated instruments is weighted by the assumptions of the likelihood of the events in such scenarios occurring. Cash flow analysis Scope Ratings performed a cash flow analysis of the transaction with the use of Scope Ratings’ Cash Flow Model Version 2.0 incorporating relevant asset assumptions and taking into account the transaction’s main structural features, such as the instruments’ priority of payments, the instruments’ size and coupons. The outcome of the analysis is an expected loss rate and an expected weighted average life for the instruments based on the generated cash flows. Methodology The methodologies used for these Credit Ratings (Residential Mortgage-Backed Securities Rating Methodology, 17 July 2024; General Structured Finance Rating Methodology, 6 March 2024; Counterparty Risk Methodology, 10 July 2024), are available on https://scoperatings.com/governance-and-policies/rating-governance/methodologies . The model used for these Credit Ratings is (Cash Flow Model Version 2.0), available in Scope Ratings’ list of models, published under https://scoperatings.com/governance-and-policies/rating-governance/methodologies . Information on the meaning of each Credit Rating category, including definitions of default, recoveries, Outlooks and Under Review, can be viewed in ‘Rating Definitions – Credit Ratings, Ancillary and Other Services’, published on https://www.scoperatings.com/governance-and-policies/rating-governance/definitions-and-scales . Historical default rates of the entities rated by Scope Ratings can be viewed in the Credit Rating performance report at https://scoperatings.com/governance-and-policies/regulatory/eu-regulation . Also refer to the central platform (CEREP) of the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA): https://cerep.esma.europa.eu/cerep-web/statistics/defaults.xhtml . A comprehensive clarification of Scope Ratings’ definitions of default and Credit Rating notations can be found at https://www.scoperatings.com/governance-and-policies/rating-governance/definitions-and-scales . Guidance and information on how environmental, social or governance factors (ESG factors) are incorporated into the Credit Rating can be found in the respective sections of the methodologies or guidance documents provided on https://scoperatings.com/governance-and-policies/rating-governance/methodologies . Solicitation, key sources and quality of information The Rated Entity and/or its Related Third Parties participated in the Credit Rating process. The following substantially material sources of information were used to prepare the Credit Ratings: public domain, the Rated Entity, the Rated Entities’ Related Third Parties, third parties and Scope Ratings’ internal sources. Scope Ratings considers the quality of information available to Scope Ratings on the Rated Entity or instrument to be satisfactory. The information and data supporting these Credit Ratings originate from sources Scope Ratings considers to be reliable and accurate. Scope Ratings does not, however, independently verify the reliability and accuracy of the information and data. Scope Ratings has received a third-party asset due diligence assessment/asset audit. The external due diligence/asset audit assessment was considered when preparing the Credit Ratings and it has no impact on the Credit Ratings. Prior to the issuance of the Credit Rating action, the Rated Entity was given the opportunity to review the Credit Ratings and the principal grounds on which the Credit Ratings are based. Following that review, the Credit Ratings were not amended before being issued. Regulatory disclosures These Credit Ratings are issued by Scope Ratings GmbH, Lennéstra?e 5, D-10785 Berlin, Tel +49 30 27891-0. The Credit Ratings are UK-endorsed. Lead analyst: Rossella Ghidoni, Director Person responsible for approval of the Credit Ratings: Benoit Vasseur, Managing Director The Credit Ratings were first released by Scope Ratings on 13 November 2024. Potential conflicts See www.scoperatings.com under Governance & Policies/Regulatory for a list of potential conflicts of interest disclosures related to the issuance of Credit Ratings, as well as a list of Ancillary Services and certain non-Credit Rating Agency services provided to Rated Entities and/or Related Third Parties.
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Managing Director - Head of Structured & Project Finance Business Development
1 周Delighted that CR Asti and Unicredit chose Scope ratings for this important transaction. If you are an Investor, Issuer or Arranger of European RMBS you can find our rating methodology and Italian Addendum via this link. https://www.scoperatings.com/ratings-and-research/structured-finance/methodologies