General |
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Why is the Federal Reserve establishing the TALF?
The asset-backed securities (ABS) market has been under strain
for some months. This strain accelerated in the third
quarter of 2008 and the market came to a near-complete
halt in October. At the same time, interest rate spreads
on AAA-rated tranches of ABS rose to levels well outside
the range of historical experience, reflecting unusually
high risk premiums. The ABS markets
historically have funded a substantial share of consumer credit and U.S. Small
Business Administration (SBA)-guaranteed small business loans. Continued
disruption of these markets could significantly limit the availability of credit
to households and small businesses and thereby contribute to further weakening
of U.S. economic activity. The TALF is designed to increase credit availability
and support economic activity by facilitating renewed issuance of consumer
and small business ABS at more normal interest rate spreads.
How will the TALF work?
Under the TALF, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York will
provide non-recourse funding to any eligible borrower owning
eligible collateral. On a fixed day each month,
borrowers will be able to request one or more three-year
TALF loans. Loan proceeds will be disbursed to the
borrower, contingent on receipt by the New York Fed’s custodian
bank (custodian) of the eligible collateral, an administrative
fee, and margin, if applicable. As the loan is non-recourse,
if the borrower does not repay the loan, the New York Fed will
enforce its rights in the collateral and sell the collateral
to a special purpose vehicle (SPV) established specifically
for the purpose of managing such assets. The New York Fed has
published a Master Loan and Security Agreement (MLSA),
which provides further details on the terms that will apply
to borrowings under the TALF. The TALF loan is non-recourse
except for breaches of representations, warranties and
covenants, as further specified in the MLSA.
| Eligible Borrowers |
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Who may borrow under the TALF?
Any U.S. company that owns eligible collateral may borrow from the TALF provided
the company maintains an account relationship with a primary dealer. An entity
is a U.S. company if it is (i) a business entity or institution that is organized
under the laws of the United States or a political subdivision or territory
thereof (U.S.-organized) and conducts significant operations or activities
in the United States (regardless of whether any such an entity has a parent
company that is not U.S.-organized), including any U.S.-organized subsidiary
of such an entity; (ii) a U.S. branch or agency of a foreign bank (other than
a foreign central bank) that maintains reserves with a Federal Reserve Bank;
or (iii) an investment fund that is U.S.-organized and managed by an investment
manager that has its principal place of business in the United States. Notwithstanding
the foregoing, a U.S. company excludes any entity that is controlled by a foreign
government or is managed by an investment manager controlled by a foreign government.
May a U.S. subsidiary of a foreign entity borrow
from the TALF?
A U.S.-organized operating subsidiary of a foreign entity
may borrow from the TALF so long as (i) the U.S. subsidiary
conducts significant operations or activities in the United
States and (ii) the U.S. subsidiary is not directly
or indirectly controlled by a foreign government. A U.S.-organized
investment fund subsidiary of a foreign entity may borrow
from the TALF so long as (i) the U.S. subsidiary is
managed by an investment manager that has its principal place
of business in the United States; (ii) the U.S. subsidiary
is not directly or indirectly controlled by a foreign government;
and (iii) the investment manager of the U.S. subsidiary
is not directly or indirectly controlled by a foreign government.
What is an “investment fund” for purposes of the
TALF eligible borrower definition?
An investment fund is any type of pooled investment vehicle,
including a hedge fund, a private equity fund, and a mutual
fund, or a vehicle that primarily or exclusively invests
in eligible collateral and borrows from the TALF.
What types of investment funds are eligible borrowers?
Investment funds that are organized in the United States
and managed by an investment manager that has its principal
place of business located in the United States are eligible
borrowers for purposes of the TALF. However, any investment
fund that is controlled by a foreign government or is managed
by an investment manager controlled by a foreign government
is not an eligible borrower for purposes of the TALF.
Example
InvestcoBermuda is a “master” investment fund organized in
Bermuda that makes joint investments on behalf of InvestcoUS,
a U.S.-organized investment fund, and InvestcoCayman, a
Cayman Islands-organized investment fund. InvestcoBermuda,
InvestcoUS, and InvestcoCayman are all managed by an investment
manager with its principal place of business in the United
States. Only InvestcoUS is an eligible borrower because
it is the only investment fund that is U.S.-organized.
If, however, InvestcoBermuda establishes Newco, a subsidiary
investment fund, in the United States and hires its U.S.-based
investment manager to manage Newco, Newco would be an eligible
borrower for purposes of the TALF.
To be considered an eligible borrower, does an investment
fund need to primarily or exclusively invest in TALF eligible
ABS or can it be a multi-strategy fund?
An eligible investment fund includes funds that only invest
in TALF eligible ABS and only borrow from the TALF, as well
as funds that invest in a mix of TALF eligible ABS and other
assets.
What is the definition of “controlled” for purposes
of the eligible borrower definition?
For purposes of the eligible borrower definition, a foreign
government controls a company if, among other things, the
foreign government owns, controls, or holds with power to
vote 25 percent or more of a class of voting securities
of the company.
Can a newly formed investment fund borrow from the
TALF?
Yes, so long as it satisfies all the eligible borrower requirements
set forth above.
How does a borrower know that its loan request will
be funded?
If an eligible borrower posts eligible collateral there should
be every expectation of financing. The Federal Reserve reserves
the right not to fund in exceptional cases, such as upon
revelation of materially adverse information about the borrower
prior to settlement, but those cases are expected to be isolated
and rare. To enhance certainty of TALF financing, primary
dealers may submit names of prospective TALF borrowers for
a pre-certification review to be conducted by New York Fed compliance
in advance of subscription date. For more information about
our review process, please refer to the TALF borrower eligibility
and New York Fed due diligence policy.
In the isolated and unlikely occurrence that a borrower is deemed ineligible between the subscription date and the settlement date, is a primary dealer who acts as underwriter and agent for the borrower allowed to finance the failed subscription by borrowing under the TALF facility?
If a borrower is deemed ineligible between the subscription
date and the settlement date, the primary dealer may borrow
from the Primary Dealer Credit Facility (PDCF) using the
underwritten securities as collateral subject to the existing
terms and conditions for PDCF borrowing. A primary dealer
may also borrow under the TALF facility provided that:
1) the amount borrowed is equal to the loan amount that
the ineligible borrower requested on the subscription date;
and 2) the borrowing is not used for a transaction underwritten
by the primary dealer that contains assets that the primary
dealer, any of its affiliates, or any entities under direct
or indirect control of the primary dealer, originated.
The primary dealer must indicate its intent to borrow upon
receipt of a "Primary Dealer Receiving Notice" confirmation
two days prior to settlement date.
Is the TALF designed to provide loans directly to
small businesses or consumers?
No. The TALF is designed to increase credit availability
for small businesses and consumers by facilitating renewed
issuance of ABS backed by loans to consumers and small businesses
at more normal interest rate spreads. The $10 million minimum
loan size and requirement that all loans be secured by eligible
collateral will likely make direct borrowing from the TALF
infeasible for small businesses and consumers.
| Eligible Collateral |
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What types of ABS are eligible collateral under
the TALF?
Eligible collateral (eligible ABS) will include U.S. dollar-denominated cash
(that is, not synthetic) ABS that have a credit rating in the highest long-term
or short-term investment-grade rating category from two or more major nationally
recognized statistical rating organizations (NRSROs) and do not have a credit
rating below the highest investment-grade rating category from a major NRSRO.
Eligible small business ABS also will include U.S. dollar-denominated cash ABS
that are, or for which all of the underlying credit exposures are, fully guaranteed
as to principal and interest by the full faith and credit of the U.S. government.
All
or substantially all of the credit exposures underlying eligible
ABS must be exposures to U.S.-domiciled obligors. The underlying
credit exposures of eligible ABS must be auto loans, student
loans, credit card loans, or small business loans fully guaranteed
as to principal and interest by the SBA. The set of permissible
underlying credit exposures of eligible ABS may be expanded
over time. The underlying credit exposures must not include
exposures that are themselves cash or synthetic ABS. The
average life for credit card or auto loan ABS cannot be greater
than five years.
Eligible ABS must be cleared through the Depository Trust
Company and, except for SBA Pool Certificates or Development
Company Participation Certificates, must be issued on or
after January 1, 2009. All or substantially all of the credit
exposures underlying eligible auto loan ABS (except auto
dealer floorplan ABS) must have been originated on or after
October 1, 2007. All or substantially
all of the credit exposures underlying eligible student loan ABS must have had
a first disbursement date on or after May 1, 2007. SBA Pool Certificates
and Development Company Participation Certificates must have been issued on or
after January 1, 2008, regardless of the dates of the underlying loans or debentures.
The SBA-guaranteed credit exposures underlying all other eligible small business
ABS must have been originated on or after January 1, 2008. Eligible credit card
and auto dealer floorplan ABS must be issued to refinance existing credit card
and auto dealer floorplan ABS, respectively, maturing in 2009 and must be issued
in amounts no greater than the amount of the maturing ABS. Eligible auto dealer
floorplan ABS may also include ABS issued out of an existing or newly established
floorplan master trust in which all or substantially all of the auto dealer floorplan
lines of credit underlying the ABS were originated on or after January 1, 2009.
Which rating agencies are considered major nationally
recognized statistical rating organizations (NRSROs) for
purposes of the TALF?
The major NRSROs for purposes of determining TALF-eligible
ABS are Fitch Ratings, Moody’s Investors Service, and Standard & Poor’s.
The New York Fed will periodically review its use of NRSROs, for
the purpose of determining TALF-eligible ABS.
What level of assurance will be required from the
sponsor’s accountants that the ABS is TALF eligible?
As a condition of the disbursement of the TALF loan, an accounting
firm retained by the sponsor must provide an attestation
indicating that the ABS is TALF eligible. The accounting
firm must be a nationally recognized certified public accounting
firm that is registered with the Public Company Accounting
Oversight Board. The form of the certification is at http://www.new
yorkfed.org/markets/
TALFAuditorAttestationForm.pdf. SBA
Pool Certificates and Development Company Participation Certificates are
not required to be accompanied by an auditor attestation.
What information must the issuer and sponsor include
in the prospectus or other offering document of an ABS
in order to represent that the ABS is eligible collateral
for a TALF loan?
In addition to information required by applicable laws, the
issuer and sponsor must ensure that the information included
in a prospectus or other offering document of an ABS they
represent as eligible collateral under the TALF includes
a signed certification indicating, among other items, that
(a) the ABS is TALF eligible, (b) an accounting firm retained
by the sponsor has provided an accountant’s report, in a
form acceptable to the New York Fed, that the ABS is TALF eligible,
and (c) the sponsor (or, if the sponsor is a special purpose
vehicle, the sponsor’s direct or indirect ultimate parent)
has executed and delivered an undertaking to the New York Fed indemnifying
it from any losses it may suffer if such certifications are
untrue. Such indemnity undertaking shall be delivered to
the New York Fed no later than four days prior to the TALF loan
settlement date. The form of certification and indemnity
is at: http://www.new
yorkfed.org/markets/
Form_Certification_TALF_Eligibility.pdf.
SBA Pool Certificates and Development Company Participation
Certificates are not required to provide
an issuer certification or indemnity. However, pool assemblers
must deliver to the New York Fed an undertaking in connection with
SBA Pool Certificates which can be found at http://www.newyorkfed.org/markets/
TALF_Undertaking_SBA_ABS.pdf.
Development Company Participation Certificates do not have
be accompanied by this or any undertaking.
What entity is the “issuer” that must sign the Issuer
Certification?
The "issuer" for purposes of the Issuer Certification,
in both public and private offerings of TALF eligible ABS,
will be the legal entity that issues the ABS.
What information relating to TALF eligible SBA ABS
will be available from the SBA?
The SBA will post on its website the CUSIPs of all TALF-eligible
SBA Pool Certificates and Development Company Participation
Certificates.
What types of receivables are TALF eligible?
Auto-related receivables will include retail loans and leases
relating to cars, light trucks, motorcycles and recreational
vehicles (RVs), and will also include auto dealer floorplan
loans. Commercial, government and rental fleet leases of
cars, trucks and light trucks will not be eligible.
For TALF purposes, eligible credit card receivables include
both consumer and corporate credit card receivables. Student
loan receivables include federally guaranteed student loans
(including consolidation loans) and private student loans.
SBA loans include loans, debentures, or pools originated
under the SBA’s 7(a) and 504 programs, provided they are
fully guaranteed as to principal and interest by the full
faith and credit of the U.S. government and meet all other
TALF eligibility requirements.
What does “all or substantially all” mean in the
context of determining whether the credit exposures underlying
an ABS meet the U.S.-domiciled obligors criteria?
“All or substantially all” in this context means 95 percent
or more of the dollar amount of the credit exposures underlying
the ABS.
What does “all or substantially all” mean in the
context of determining whether the credit exposures underlying
an ABS meet the date of origination criteria?
“All or substantially all” in this context means 85 percent
or more of the dollar amount of the credit exposures underlying
the ABS.
Is there a minimum or maximum maturity limit for
ABS that can collateralize TALF loans?
There is no minimum limit. If an ABS’s maturity is shorter
than the three-year maturity of the TALF loan, the TALF loan
will mature upon maturity of the ABS collateral for that
loan. The average life for credit card or auto loan ABS
cannot be greater than five years.
What happens if an ABS that was eligible for TALF
financing is downgraded by an NRSRO?
Nothing happens to existing TALF loans secured by that ABS.
However, the ABS may not be used as collateral for any new
TALF loans until it regains its status as eligible collateral.
Why are there no loan origination date restrictions
for credit card and dealer floorplan ABS?
Unlike auto, SBA and student loan ABS, which are backed by
a fixed pool of loans, credit card and dealer floorplan ABS
are backed by dynamic pools of receivables that constantly
change as customers and vehicle dealerships draw on and repay
their credit lines. The pools include both seasoned and
recently originated receivables. Due to the quick turnover
and revolving nature of the underlying pools, the refinancing
of existing credit card and dealer floorplan ABS largely
fund newly originated receivables, consistent with the policy
goal of the TALF.
Are ABS that are rated in the highest investment
grade rating category but are on review or watch for downgrade
TALF eligible?
No, eligible ABS cannot be on review or watch for downgrade.
Are privately placed ABS eligible collateral for
a TALF loan, provided they meet all of the eligibility
requirements?
Yes.
Are AAA credit ratings achieved using a third-party
guarantee applicable for TALF eligibility?
No, an eligible ABS must obtain the necessary highest investment
grade ratings without the benefit of a third-party guarantee.
Does the requirement that eligible auto dealer floorplan
and credit card ABS be issued to refinance existing ABS
maturing in 2009 apply at the individual master trust level
or at the issuer level?
The refinancing limitation applies at the issuer level rather
than the individual trust level. For example, if an issuer
has four master trusts with a total of $20 billion in ABS
maturing in 2009, the maximum amount of TALF-eligible ABS
the issuer could issue in 2009 is $20 billion; it may issue
that $20 billion in ABS from one trust or from multiple trusts.
How are variable funding notes (VFNs) with commitment
termination dates in 2009 treated in the calculation of
the amount of an issuer's credit card or auto dealer floorplan
ABS maturing in 2009?
For TALF purposes, a VFN's maturity date is its commitment
termination date and its amount is its maximum contractual
principal balance, regardless of whether the VFN is renewed.
How are VFNs that (i) had commitment termination
dates prior to 2009 and (ii) have controlled amortization
periods in 2009 treated in the calculation of the amount
of an issuer's credit card or auto dealer floorplan ABS
maturing in 2009?
For VFNs in controlled amortization periods, only the amount
that amortizes in 2009 counts toward the amount of an issuer's
credit card or auto dealer floorplan ABS maturing in 2009.
For a VFN with a commitment termination date after
2009, (i) if a collateral or other event causes the revolving
period of the VFN to end in 2009, or (ii) if the VFN is
amended to move its commitment termination date to 2009,
will the maximum contractual principal balance of the VFN
be included in the calculation of the amount of credit
card or auto dealer floorplan ABS maturing in 2009?
No.
For non-VFN ABS with controlled amortization periods,
what amount counts toward an issuer's limit?
For ABS with controlled amortization periods, only the amount
that amortizes in 2009 counts toward the limit.
Do ABS in controlled accumulation periods with bullet
maturities after 2009 count toward an issuer's limit?
No. For TALF purposes, non-VFN ABS maturities
are defined as dates on which principal payments are due.
Must a credit card or auto dealer floorplan ABS
issuer issue eligible ABS concurrent with the maturation
of the ABS the eligible ABS is refinancing?
No. Issuers may pre-fund their maturing ABS with eligible
ABS up to three months in advance. Issuers also have the
option to refinance ABS that matured in 2009 in bulk on any
date up to December 31, 2009. Issuers may not, however,
pre-fund ABS that mature in 2010 with eligible ABS.
How will the issuance limits on credit card ABS
and auto dealer floorplan ABS be enforced?
Issuers of credit card ABS and auto dealer floorplan ABS
must state in their prospectuses that the aggregate amount
of eligible ABS they have issued does not exceed the amount
of their 2009 ABS maturities. Issuers may issue ABS in excess
of their 2009 maturities; however, these excess amounts will
not be eligible collateral for TALF loans.
For ABS backed by SBA loans, are explicit credit
ratings required?
U.S. dollar-denominated cash ABS backed by loans, debentures,
or pools under the SBA’s 7(a) and 504 programs will be eligible
as long as all of the underlying credit exposures, or the
ABS themselves, are fully guaranteed as to principal and
interest by the full faith and credit of the U.S. government.
These securities do not require an explicit credit rating.
Can a company that originates loans securitize them,
acquire the AAA-rated tranche of the securitization, and
finance it using the TALF?
No, eligible collateral for a particular borrower must not
be backed by loans originated or securitized by the borrower
or by an affiliate of the borrower.
How is "affiliate of the borrower" defined
for purposes of determining eligible collateral?
An affiliate of a borrower means any company that controls,
is controlled by, or is under common control with the borrower.
For this purpose, a person or company controls a company
if, among other things, it (1) owns, controls, or holds with
power to vote 25 percent or more of a class of voting securities
of the company; or (2) consolidates the company for financial
reporting purposes.
May investors borrow against ABS they already own?
Yes, an investor may borrow against any eligible ABS. Eligible
ABS must be issued on or after January 1, 2009, but
need not be issued on the same day the investor borrows
from the TALF. SBA Pool Certificates and Development Company
Participation Certificates must have been issued on or
after January 1, 2008.
| Operational Mechanics
|
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How does an entity participate in the TALF program?
An eligible borrower must be a customer of a primary dealer and must have executed
a customer agreement authorizing the primary dealer, among other things, to
execute the master loan and security agreement (MLSA) as agent for the borrower
and to perform all actions required on their behalf. The MLSA will provide
further details on the requirements that will apply to the entities seeking
to borrow from the New York Fed under the TALF.
What is the TALF process from subscription to settlement?
Prior to each subscription date, each primary dealer will
collect from prospective eligible borrowers the amount
of each borrower’s loan request(s), the interest rate format
corresponding to the type of collateral pledged (that is,
fixed or floating), the CUSIPs of the ABS the borrower
expects to deliver and pledge to the New York Fed, and the prospectuses
and/or offering documents of the ABS expected to be pledged.
On the subscription date, each primary dealer will submit
this information to the New York Fed’s custodial agent for review
and will also submit to the New York Fed the aggregate loans request
amount for all its customers by rate type and asset class.
On the loan settlement date, the borrower or its agent will
deliver against payment the ABS collateral, administrative
fee and applicable margin to the New York Fed’s settlement account
at the custodian.
How will the process work if a new ABS issue closes
on the same day as the TALF loan settlement date?
The borrower of a TALF loan must identify the counterparty
expected to deliver the new issue ABS to be pledged as collateral
at the time of the loan subscription. When the borrower’s
primary dealer who submitted the loan request receives the
confirmation of the loan and its details from the custodian
two days prior to the loan settlement date, the primary dealer
can extract the pertinent information to generate and forward
a trade confirmation to the borrower’s delivering counterparty.
The delivering counterparty can be the lead underwriter or
co-manager of the new ABS security issue, other syndicate
member, or the primary dealer agent of the borrower. The
borrower must always remit the margin to their agent primary
dealer who submitted the loan request. If the primary dealer
is not the delivering counterparty, the primary dealer will
forward the margin to New York Fed’s cash custody account at the
custodian in order for the issuer to receive the full purchase
price of the security issue. The delivering counterparty
will deliver the ABS collateral to New York Fed’s custodian against
payment. Upon settlement, the custodian will reflect the
loan and collateral pledged on its books.
The MLSA requires the primary dealer to deliver,
among other things, a sales confirmation in connection
with collateral that is newly issued. What form of sales
confirmation is acceptable?
A Rule 10b-10 confirmation is satisfactory. Other written
sales confirmations, including e-mail confirmations that
contain the required pricing information and are customarily
provided by many broker-dealers prior to mailing of a Rule
10b-10 confirmation, will also be acceptable.
Do issuers need to publish a final prospectus by
the subscription date, or can borrowers subscribe for a
loan based on the "red" prospectus, and deliver
the final prospectus at a later date?
On the subscription date, the primary dealer must provide
the custodian with the CUSIP numbers and prospectuses/offering
documents of all collateral expected to be pledged against
the TALF loans. If the CUSIP number corresponds to a new
issuance, the prospectus/offering documents submitted on
subscription date may be preliminary, but the final prospectus/offering
documents (including the corresponding accountant's report)
must be provided to the custodian no later than four days
prior to the TALF loan settlement date.
Must an eligible borrower own the ABS it plans to
pledge as collateral for a TALF loan at the time it subscribes
for the loan?
An eligible borrower need not own the ABS on the subscription
date. However, in order for the primary dealer and custodian
to perform their due diligence, the borrower must inform
the primary dealer by the subscription date of the CUSIP
of the ABS it intends to deliver as collateral on the loan
settlement date. If the borrower is allocated less than
expected of the new ABS issue, the borrower must inform New York Fed
and its custodian, through its primary dealer, no less than
four days prior to the loan settlement date so that an adjustment
may be made to the margin and administrative fee prior to
the loan settlement date.
Is there a penalty if an investor fails to provide
a security on settlement date?
No, although the New York Fed expects the ABS collateral identified
by CUSIP in the confirmation sent to the primary dealer by
the custodian to be delivered on the loan settlement date.
Should any portion of expected ABS collateral not be received
on settlement date, that portion of the loan will be cancelled
and the administrative fee will not be refunded.
When will the TALF become operational?
The initial TALF subscription date will be Tuesday, March
17, 2009 and the loan settlement date will be Wednesday,
March 25, 2009. Going forward monthly subscriptions will
be scheduled on the first Tuesday of every month.
What will be the length of time between the announcement
of terms and subscription date?
Based on experience with the initial subscription, the Federal
Reserve will review the term announcement and loan settlement
timeframes and announce a more detailed future TALF schedule.
Over what time period will the TALF operate?
The facility will cease making loans on December 31, 2009,
unless the Board of Governors extends the facility.
Will there be a limit on how many loans a borrower
may request?
No, an eligible borrower may request an unlimited number
of loans at each monthly subscription.
May borrowers request loans through multiple primary
dealers?
Yes. If a borrower requests loans through multiple primary
dealers, it must deliver the collateral for each loan through
the respective primary dealer, unless the collateral is a
new issuance delivered by the underwriter/other syndicate
desk.
What is the minimum TALF loan amount?
A borrower must request a minimum of $10 million for each
loan.
Is there a maximum TALF loan amount?
No.
What is the maturity of a TALF loan?
TALF loans have a three-year maturity.
If the ABS matures in four years and the TALF loan
matures in three years, is the borrower responsible for
selling the collateral and repaying the loan at the end
of the third year?
At the end of the three-year period the loan must be repaid.
The borrower may (1) repay the loan, at which time the New York Fed
will release the collateral, or (2) arrange
for the sale of the collateral and instruct
the New York Fed to deliver the ABS to the counterparty
against payment. The settlement amount of
the sales transaction must either be equal
to, or greater than, the loan amount outstanding,
or the borrower must make up any shortfall
to repay the loan in full, including accrued interest,
before the New York Fed will deliver the ABS. Any excess sale proceeds
will be remitted back to the borrower. At
maturity, a borrower may surrender the collateral to the
New York Fed, in lieu of repaying the outstanding principal or interest
on a TALF loan, by delivering a Collateral Surrender and
Acceptance Notice with respect to such loan by the maturity
date.
May a borrower pledge more than one security as
collateral for a single loan?
Yes, a borrower may pledge any combination of eligible ABS
as collateral for a single TALF loan. However, a fixed rate
ABS must be pledged against a fixed rate loan and a floating
rate ABS against a floating rate loan.
May a borrower revise its original loan request?
The borrower’s original loan request, submitted via its primary
dealer on the subscription date, may later be adjusted
only if the borrower is allocated less than the expected
amount of a new ABS issue. A borrower may not adjust its
loan request to obtain a larger amount of TALF loans than
originally requested.
Will prepayment of the loan be permitted?
Yes. A borrower may prepay a TALF loan in full or in part
at any time. If a borrower makes a partial prepayment,
collateral securing its loan will be released on a pro-rata
basis, taking into consideration minimum ABS denominations.
Are there any penalties associated with prepayment
of a TALF loan?
No.
May a borrower substitute collateral during the
term of its loan?
No, a borrower may not substitute collateral.
If the ABS collateral supporting a TALF loan is
sold, can the TALF loan be transferred with that collateral?
A borrower may assign all of its obligations with respect
to a TALF loan to another eligible borrower with the prior
consent of the New York Fed. The New York Fed will assess the eligibility
of the assignee as a borrower at the time of the transfer
and confirm that the assignee has executed all the requisite
documentation for the facility.
No assignments will be consented to after the termination
date for making new loans, which is December 31, 2009 unless
extended by the Board.
How are principal payments on eligible collateral
allocated between the borrower and repayment of principal
on the TALF loan?
Any remittance of principal on eligible collateral must be
used immediately to reduce the principal amount of the TALF
loan in proportion to the original loan-to-value ratio.
For example, if the original loan-to-value ratio was 90 percent,
90 percent of any remittance of principal on the ABS must
immediately be repaid to the New York Fed.
If a TALF-financed ABS incurs a principal loss,
would the loss be allocated between the borrower's haircut
and the TALF loan?
No. The borrower is responsible for all interest and principal
payments on a TALF loan. If the borrower does not make these
payments, the New York Fed will enforce its rights to the collateral
and the borrower will forfeit its haircut amount.
What happens if a borrower does not repay its loan?
In lieu of repaying the outstanding principal or interest
on a TALF loan, a borrower may surrender the collateral
to the New York Fed by delivering a Collateral Surrender and Acceptance
Notice with respect to the TALF loan. If a borrower fails
to deliver the Collateral Surrender and Acceptance Notice
by the maturity date, the New York Fed may exercise recourse rights
against the borrower and require it to repay the TALF loan.
Is there a grace period associated with a borrower’s
obligation to pay interest on a TALF loan?
Yes, a borrower has a grace period of 30 days during which
to pay interest on a TALF loan if the net interest on the
pledged ABS is not sufficient to cover the interest payment
associated with the loan. After the grace period, if the
loan remains delinquent, the New York Fed will enforce its rights
to the TALF loan collateral.
When a borrower elects to surrender the collateral
in satisfaction of a loan, can it do so by surrendering
specific collateral or is the entire pool of collateral
surrendered?
All of the ABS that secure an individual loan must be surrendered.
A borrower that desires to effect a collateral surrender
must make a request through its primary dealer.
Will there be a separate facility for each ABS asset
class?
No. Borrowers with eligible ABS of all asset types will
receive loans from the same facility.
What fees are associated with the TALF?
On each loan’s settlement date, the borrower must pay to the
New York Fed’s settlement account an administrative fee equal to 5
basis points of the loan amount, which will cover the New York Fed’s
fees associated with the facility.
| Haircuts and Rates |
 |
To what values will the haircuts be applied to determine
the maximum loan amount?
Under the TALF, the New York Fed will lend to each borrower an amount
equal to the lesser of the par or market value of the pledged
ABS minus a haircut. Alternatively, when the pledged ABS has
a market value above par, the New York Fed will lend an amount equal
to the market value -- subject to a cap of 110 percent of par
value -- minus a haircut, and the borrower will periodically
prepay a portion of the loan. The prepayments will be calculated
to adjust for the expected reversion of market value toward
par value as the ABS matures.1
What is the initial haircut schedule for each asset
type?
Initial collateral haircuts are as follows:
|
|
ABS
Average Life (years) |
Sector |
Subsector |
>0-1 |
>1-2 |
>2-3 |
>3-4 |
>4-5 |
>5-6 |
>6-7 |
Auto |
Prime
retail lease |
10% |
11% |
12% |
13% |
14% |
|
|
Auto |
Prime
retail loan |
6% |
7% |
8% |
9% |
10% |
|
|
Auto |
Subprime
retail loan |
9% |
10% |
11% |
12% |
13% |
|
|
Auto |
Floorplan |
12% |
13% |
14% |
15% |
16% |
|
|
Auto |
RV/motorcycle |
7% |
8% |
9% |
10% |
11% |
|
|
Credit
Card |
Prime |
5% |
5% |
6% |
7% |
8% |
|
|
Credit
Card |
Subprime |
6% |
7% |
8% |
9% |
10% |
|
|
Student
Loan |
Private |
8% |
9% |
10% |
11% |
12% |
13% |
14% |
Student
Loan |
Gov’t
guaranteed |
5% |
5% |
5% |
5% |
5% |
6% |
6% |
Small
Business |
SBA
loans |
5% |
5% |
5% |
5% |
5% |
6% |
6% |
For ABS benefitting from a substantial government guarantee
with average lives beyond five years, haircuts will increase
by one percentage point for every two additional years of
average life beyond five years. For all other ABS with average
lives beyond five years, haircuts will increase by one percentage
point for each additional year of average life beyond five
years.
How is average life defined for the purposes of
the haircut table?
For ABS with bullet maturities (credit cards, auto dealer floorplans),
average life is determined by the expected principal payment
date. For amortizing ABS (auto retail loans and leases, student
loans and SBA loans), average life is defined as the weighted
average life to maturity based on the prepayment assumptions
and market conventions listed below.
Sector |
Subsector |
Prepayment
Assumption |
Auto |
Prime
auto retail lease |
75%
of prepayment curve |
Auto |
Prime
auto retail loan |
1.3%
ABS |
Auto |
Subprime
retail loan |
1.5%
ABS |
Auto |
Motorcycle |
1.5%
ABS |
Auto |
RV |
18%
CPR |
Student
Loan |
Student
Loan Private |
4% CPR |
Student
Loan |
Student
Loan FFELP |
6% CPR |
Student
Loan |
Student
Loan Consolidation |
50%
of CLR curve |
Small
Business |
SBA
7a |
14%
CPR |
Small
Business |
SBA
504 |
5%
CPR |
 |
| CPR (Conditional Payment Rate) represents the proportion of the principal of a pool of loans that is assumed to be paid off prematurely in each period.
ABS (Absolute Prepayment Speed) represents the percentage of the original number of loans that prepay during a given period. |
Where will an ABS security’s average life be published?
The issuer is expected to publish the security’s average life in the prospectus
or offering document. For amortizing assets the issuer should calculate the
weighted average life to maturity based on the above prepayment assumptions
and make a representation in the prospectus that the weighted average life
to maturity for each AAA-rated tranche was calculated in accordance with the
TALF prepayment assumptions. In addition, issuers are encouraged to base weighted
average life to maturity calculations on a loan-by-loan analysis. However,
if the analysis is based on representative pools, the pools must fairly and
accurately model the actual collateral characteristics underlying TALF-eligible
securities. Issuers should understand that such representations of weighted
average life to maturity in the prospectus are material to the New York Fed's determination
of the haircuts for TALF loans and the representation as to accuracy of the
offering document contained in the issuer certification would be breached if
the weighted average life calculations incorrectly apply the prepayment assumptions
listed above or are based on assumptions that are not representative of the
actual collateral characteristics underlying TALF-eligible securities.
How are subprime versus prime defined for auto loan
and credit card ABS?
Auto loan and lease ABS are considered prime if the weighted
average FICO score of the receivables is 680 or greater.
Receivables without a FICO score are assigned the minimum
FICO score of 300 for this calculation. Commercial receivables
can be excluded from this calculation if historic cumulative
net losses on these accounts have been the same or lower
than those on receivables to individual obligors and this
information is available in the prospectus. In addition,
the percentage of commercial receivables in a trust must
not exceed 15 percent. For auto deals where a weighted average
FICO score is not disclosed, the subprime haircut schedule
will apply.
Credit card ABS are considered prime if at least 70 percent
or more of the receivables have a FICO score greater than
660. FICO scores must reflect performance data within the
last 120 days. For credit card trusts where a weighted average
FICO score is not disclosed, the subprime haircut schedule
will apply.
How will a borrower know if an ABS is considered
prime or subprime?
Issuers will publish in the prospectus whether the deal is
prime or subprime according to TALF criteria. If this is
not published in the prospectus, the deal will be considered
subprime. Such representations in the prospectus are material
to the New York Fed's determination of the haircuts for TALF loans
and are considered a component of the representation as to
the accuracy of the offering document.
Will the haircuts be the same for all borrowers
for the same assets?
Haircuts will vary across asset classes and securities’ average
lives, but not across borrowers.
What spreads will be offered on the TALF loans on
the first subscription date?
Borrowers will be able to choose either a fixed or a floating
rate on each TALF loan. In general, the interest rate on
floating-rate loans will be 100 basis points over 1-month
LIBOR and the interest rate on fixed-rate loans will be 100
basis points over the three-year LIBOR swap rate.
However, the interest rate spread on TALF loans backed by
collateral benefitting from a government guarantee -- that
is, FFELP ABS, SBA 7(a) ABS, and SBA 504 ABS -- will be 50
basis points. That spread is over the federal funds target
rate (or the top of the federal funds target range) plus
25 basis points for SBA 7(a) ABS, over one-month LIBOR for
FFELP ABS and over the three-year LIBOR swap rate for SBA
504 ABS. Interest rates will be set on the subscription
date.
Sector |
Subsector |
Fixed |
Floating |
Auto |
|
3-year
LIBOR swap rate + 100 bps |
1-month
LIBOR + 100 bps |
Credit
Card |
|
3-year LIBOR swap rate
+ 100 bps |
1-month
LIBOR + 100 bps |
Student
Loan |
Private |
NA |
1-month
LIBOR + 100 bps |
Student
Loan |
Gov't
guaranteed |
NA |
1-month
LIBOR + 50 bps |
Small
Business |
SBA
loans 7(a) |
NA |
Fed
Funds Target + 75 bps |
Small
Business |
SBA
loans 504 |
3-year LIBOR swap rate
+ 50 bps |
NA |
How are the interest rates on TALF loans determined?
The interest rates on TALF loans are set with a view to providing borrowers an
incentive to purchase newly issued eligible ABS at yield spreads higher than
in more normal market conditions but lower than in the highly illiquid market
conditions that have prevailed during the recent credit market turmoil.
Will the interest rate spread and haircuts change
from month to month?
The Federal Reserve will periodically review and, if appropriate,
adjust the TALF interest rate spread and haircuts for new
loans, consistent with the policy objectives of the TALF.
Why are the spreads on the loans backed by collateral
benefitting from government guarantees lower? The lower credit risk of these ABS merits a lower risk premium
on the TALF loans.
| Other |
 |
What is the primary dealer’s role?
The MLSA will specify a primary dealer’s roles and responsibilities, including
the agency functions to be performed on behalf of its customers. Among other
duties, the primary dealer shall:
-
Collect from its customers the amount of each borrower’s
loan requests, the CUSIPs of the ABS the borrower expects
to deliver and pledge against the loan, and the prospectuses
and/or offering documents of the ABS expected to be pledged;
- Submit
aggregate loan request amounts on behalf of its customers
in the form and manner specified by the New York Fed;
- On the subscription
date, submit a file to the custodian containing a detailed
breakdown of the loan requests, which will include the
identity of the individual borrowers, the amount of each
borrower’s loan request, and the material information collected
above;
- Work with its customers to resolve any discrepancies
identified by the custodian;
- Collect from its customers
and deliver to the custodian the administrative fee and
any applicable margin required to be delivered to the custodian
on the loan settlement date;
- Periodically receive from the
custodian the portion of the distributions on the collateral
that are to be paid to its customers and disburse such
payments in accordance with the instruction of its customers
and provide any applicable tax report to its customers;
and
- Receive, or forward, notices on behalf of its customers.
In addition, a primary dealer will be required to apply
its internal customer identification program and due diligence
procedures (“Know Your Customer” program) to each borrower
and represent that each borrower is eligible. A primary
dealer will be required to provide the New York Fed with information
sufficient to describe the dealer’s customer risk assessment
methodology. All primary dealers planning to participate
in the TALF must contact the New York Fed Compliance Function at talf.compliance@ny.frb.org for
further guidance.
What additional responsibilities does a primary
dealer that is an underwriter of an issue of asset-backed
securities have under section 10.1(d) of the MLSA?
While primary dealers generally do not have responsibility
for the accuracy of disclosure contained in the offering
materials, section 10.1(d) of the MLSA makes an exception
for primary dealers acting as underwriters. Under section
10.1(d), a primary dealer that acts as underwriter for an
ABS issue represents that no information contained in the
offering materials furnished by it is untrue as to any material
fact, or omits any material fact. The intention is that
the underwriter’s representation under Section 10.1(d) of
the MLSA as to the offering materials, taken together with
the “reasonable care” standard of liability under Section
17.0, would impose a duty as to this disclosure coextensive
with the underwriter’s legal obligations under the federal
securities laws. If, on the date offering materials were
delivered to the New York Fed or its custodian, the issuance
and distribution of the securities have been completed
so that the primary dealer is no longer acting as
underwriter of the issuance, section 10.1(d) imposes no incremental
duty on the primary dealer to "bring down" the
underwriter's due diligence to such date.
What constitutes “reasonable care” on the part of
a primary dealer in confirming the accuracy of the representation
as to eligibility of collateral for TALF loans?
The primary dealer is expected to have reviewed the relevant
offering materials (including the certifications contained
therein) and, except in the case of SBA collateral (as
defined in the MLSA), separately confirmed that
the ratings currently applicable to the collateral meet the
eligibility criteria.
What are the tax reporting and withholding responsibilities
of primary dealers that participate in the TALF?
The primary dealers are responsible for managing any tax
withholding and reporting obligations for their customers.
Primary dealers should consult with tax counsel to understand
tax implications and requirements of primary dealers for
the specific tasks performed on behalf of customers in connection
with TALF.
What information will the primary dealer receive
from the custodian to assist in reconciling and distributing
aggregate monthly interest payments to investors?
With each payment distribution, the primary
dealer will receive information regarding the gross principal
and interest amount paid by the ABS collateral, as well as
the principal and interest amount to be remitted to the borrower.
Should an interest deficiency exist, the net interest and/or
principal will be used to offset that deficiency, in which
case the primary dealer will be informed.
Are there any bankruptcy protections for the borrower
if the primary dealer should declare bankruptcy following
its receipt of principal and interest from the custodian,
but prior to disbursement to the borrower?
Once funds or collateral are transferred by the custodian
to a primary dealer or at the direction of the primary dealer,
neither the custodian/administrator nor the New York Fed has any
obligation to account for whether the funds or collateral
are transferred to the borrower.
Will the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)
be providing an exemption from Section 11(d)(1) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 to permit primary dealers
to arrange TALF financing from the New York Fed on new issues
for which they may be underwriters?
The SEC has granted a limited exemption from the prohibition
on arranging certain credit under Section 11(d)(1) for those
primary dealers arranging TALF financing from the New York Fed on
new issues of non-exempted securities where such dealers
may have been within the preceding 30 days a "member
of a selling syndicate or group" in respect of the distribution
of the new issue. This exemption is limited to the arranging
prohibitions of Section 11(d)(1), and does not relieve primary
dealers from any applicable limitations on direct extensions
of credit by them. Please refer to the SEC's letter to the
New York Fed on this matter, which is available at http://www.sec.gov/divisions/marketreg/mr-noaction/2009/New York Fed021709.pdf.
May a primary dealer that underwrites or sells an
issuance and acts as an agent to arrange financing for
a TALF borrower enter into transactions with or on behalf
of the borrower intended to insure, in whole or in part,
against losses on securities purchased with TALF financing?
In Appendix I to the MLSA, each primary dealer will agree
that it and its affiliates will not acquire collateral from
a borrower that it underwrites at a price designed to reduce
or eliminate any loss that such borrower would realize on
sale "or enter into any other agreement or consummate
any other transaction intended to have the same effect."
This contractual provision prohibits hedges since these hedges
are "other agreements" or "other transactions" intended
to protect the borrower against loss. As a result, in the
circumstances described above, a primary dealer will not
be permitted to enter into any transaction that is designed
to hedge against losses specific to securities purchased
with TALF financing. This prohibition extends to both direct
hedges, such as credit default swaps, and correlative hedges,
such as short-selling the ABX index. However, the prohibition
does not extend to hedges on a borrower’s broader portfolio,
which may include securities purchased with TALF loans.
May an issuer or sponsor enter into a transaction
with or on behalf of the borrower intended to insure, in
whole or in part, against losses on TALF collateral securitized
by the issuer or sponsor?
To ensure an independent assessment of risk by investors,
issuers and sponsors and their affiliates are prohibited
from entering into a transaction designed to hedge against
an investor’s losses on ABS purchased by the investor with
TALF financing and securitized by such issuer or sponsor.
Would the restrictions on hedging transactions prohibit
a primary dealer from entering into an interest rate swap
with an ABS trust, if it is intended solely to create a
floating-rate security based off of fixed-rate receivables?
Provided that the swap agreement is entered into at a fair
price, such an arrangement would not be prohibited, as the
potential borrower is not a party to the swap agreement.
What executive compensation restrictions will apply
to sponsors, underwriters, and borrowers under the TALF
program?
The goal of the TALF program is to encourage securitization
of privately originated loans in important asset classes
to consumers and small businesses. The TALF provides support
to ABS sponsors, who are providing credit to consumers and
businesses, and to ABS investors, who are bringing new capital
to this frozen market. The success of the program is important
to halting the destructive credit cycle and to restarting
credit formation.
Executive compensation restrictions are targeted towards
ensuring that executives of institutions that receive government
support are not unjustly enriched at the taxpayers’ expense.
Given the goals of the TALF and the desire to encourage market
participants to stimulate credit formation and utilize the
facility, the restrictions will not be applied to TALF sponsors,
underwriters, and borrowers as a result of their participation
in the TALF.
What is the legal basis for the TALF?
The TALF is authorized under section 13(3) of the Federal
Reserve Act, which permits the Federal Reserve Board, in
unusual and exigent circumstances, to authorize Reserve
Banks to extend credit to individuals, partnerships, and
corporations that are unable to obtain adequate credit
accommodations.
What is Treasury's role in the TALF?
The U.S. Treasury’s Troubled Assets Relief Program (TARP)
will purchase $20 billion of subordinated debt in an SPV
created by the New York Fed. The SPV will purchase and manage
any assets received by the New York Fed in connection with any
TALF loans. Residual returns from the SPV will be shared
between the New York Fed and the U.S. Treasury.
How will the Federal Reserve report lending under the TALF?
Balance sheet items related to the TALF will be reported
on the H.4.1 weekly statistical release entitled “Factors
Affecting Reserve Balances of Depository Institutions and
Condition Statement of Federal Reserve Banks.” There will
be an explanatory cover note on the release when items are
added. In addition, the value of the collateral pledged
to the New York Fed to secure TALF loans will be reported on the
Federal Reserve Board’s website at http://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy
What measures have been put in place to protect the TALF against credit
losses and fraud?
The Federal Reserve and the Treasury have structured the
TALF to minimize credit risk for the U.S. government to the
greatest extent possible, consistent with achieving the program’s
purpose of encouraging lending to consumers and small businesses.
Examples of the structural features of the TALF that minimize
credit risk include the following: (i) investors are required
to supply risk capital in the form of haircuts; (ii) the
TALF haircut methodology is risk sensitive across asset class
and maturity; and (iii) the TALF only accepts collateral
that has received two credit ratings in the highest investment-grade
rating category or that is fully U.S. government-guaranteed.
The New York Fed also has designed a number of measures to discourage
fraudulent activity associated with the TALF. The New York Fed
has established a compliance framework that includes a borrower
acceptance standard, an assurance program related to borrower
eligibility requirements, on-site inspection rights related
to the borrower’s obligations under the MLSA in respect to
its borrowings under the TALF, and the right to reject a
borrower for any reason. The New York Fed has also retained the
right to review all loan files held by the custodian pertaining
to each borrower. Furthermore, the New York Fed is establishing
a telephone and internet-based hotline for reporting of fraudulent
conduct or activity associated with the TALF.
In addition, except for SBA Pool Certificates or Development
Company Participation Certificates, an ABS issuer and sponsor
must provide a certification in connection with the prospectus
that the ABS is TALF eligible, that a nationally recognized
certified independent accounting firm has certified that
the ABS is TALF eligible, and that the issuer has not made
any untrue statements of material fact to an NRSRO to obtain
the credit rating of the ABS. If the collateral is found
to be ineligible, the New York Fed has the right of indemnity against
the sponsor in the event damages are suffered in relation
to the collateral and further remedy is available if there
is evidence of fraudulent activity. Additionally, if a borrower
who has participated in the program is found to be ineligible
or is found to have knowingly breached a representation related
to the eligibility of the collateral, the non-recourse feature
of the loan becomes inapplicable and the borrower must repay
the loan. Moreover, as indicated above, to assist the New York Fed
in screening borrowers, primary dealers are required to apply
their internal customer identification program and due diligence
procedures to each borrower and escalate information relating
to those borrowers assessed as high risk to the New York Fed.
Is there a unique regulatory capital treatment for
TALF-financed ABS held by a depository institution or bank
holding company?
The regulatory capital requirements for securities financed
by a TALF loan are the same as those for securities that are
not financed by a TALF loan.
Where should questions regarding the TALF be directed?
Questions should be directed to the New York Fed’s Public
Affairs department: 212-720-6130 or via email to TALF@ny.frb.org.
How may I receive updates regarding changes to TALF
documents?
Sign up for email alerts.
___________________________
1The amount of prepayment in dollars is determined by the following formula:
Par*(1-h)*(min(Price,1.10*Par)/Par-1)/(b*WAL)
Par is the par
value of the bond.
h is the haircut from the above table
corresponding to the expected life and asset class of the
bond.
Price is the price of the bond.
WAL is the weighted average life of the bond measured in years and calculated
at the prepayment assumption used to compute expected life
above. If the WAL is not available, half of the weighted
average life to maturity (WALM) may be used as an approximation.
b is equal to 12, 4, or 2 for securities with a remittance frequency of monthly,
quarterly, or semi-annually, respectively.
FAQs: March 11, 2009 ›› |