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If successful, the issue could provide a blueprint for other banks, a number of which are understood to be looking at similar models as they try to diversify their funding options and reorganise their balance sheets to meet new Basel III regulatory requirements.
German law currently only allows covered bonds to be backed by pools of mortgage, public sector or ship and aircraft loans, prompting some to say the Commerzbank bond cannot really be defined as a bond of that type.
Classic covered bonds – over-collateralised debt which is ring-fenced for investors even in bankruptcy – receive more favourable regulatory treatment than many equivalent securitisation products.
Some investors have shied away from securitisation instruments since the subprime crisis, although market sentiment is beginning to change. Advocates of the securitisation model argue it is still an efficient way for banks to fund themselves.
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