Prospectus supplement dated June 23, 2000
(to prospectus dated February 22, 2000)
$262,724,000
RESIDENTIAL ASSET MORTGAGE PRODUCTS, INC.
DEPOSITOR
RAMP SERIES 2000-RS2 TRUST
ISSUER
RESIDENTIAL FUNDING CORPORATION
MASTER SERVICER
MORTGAGE ASSET-BACKED PASS-THROUGH CERTIFICATES,
SERIES 2000-RS2
OFFERED CERTIFICATES
The trust will consist primarily of two groups of one- to four-family mortgage
loans. The trust will issue five classes of senior certificates, the Class A
Certificates, that are offered under this prospectus supplement.
CREDIT ENHANCEMENT
Credit enhancement for the offered certificates consists of:
o excess cash flow and overcollateralization;
o cross-collateralization; and
o a certificate guaranty insurance policy issued by Ambac Assurance
Corporation.
[Certificate Insurer's logo]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
YOU SHOULD CONSIDER CAREFULLY THE RISK FACTORS BEGINNING ON PAGE S-11 IN THIS
PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NEITHER THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION NOR ANY STATE SECURITIES
COMMISSION HAS APPROVED OR DISAPPROVED OF THE OFFERED CERTIFICATES OR DETERMINED
THAT THIS PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT OR THE PROSPECTUS IS ACCURATE OR COMPLETE. ANY
REPRESENTATION TO THE CONTRARY IS A CRIMINAL OFFENSE.
THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK HAS NOT PASSED ON OR ENDORSED THE
MERITS OF THIS OFFERING. ANY REPRESENTATION TO THE CONTRARY IS UNLAWFUL.
Bear, Stearns & Co. Inc. and Residential Funding Securities Corporation will
offer the offered certificates to the public, at varying prices to be determined
at the time of sale. The proceeds to the depositor from the sale of the offered
certificates will be approximately 99.69% of the principal balance of the
offered certificates, plus accrued interest on the Class A-I Certificates,
except on the Class A-I-1 Certificates, before deducting expenses.
BEAR, STEARNS & CO. INC. RESIDENTIAL FUNDING SECURITIES CORPORATION
<PAGE>
IMPORTANT NOTICE ABOUT INFORMATION PRESENTED IN THIS PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT AND
THE ACCOMPANYING PROSPECTUS
We provide information to you about the offered certificates in two separate
documents that provide progressively more detail:
o the prospectus, which provides general information, some of which may
not apply to your series of certificates; and
o this prospectus supplement, which describes the specific terms of your
series of certificates.
If the description of your certificates in this prospectus supplement differs
from the related description in the accompanying prospectus, you should rely on
the information in this prospectus supplement.
The depositor's principal offices are located at 8400 Normandale Lake Boulevard,
Suite 600, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55437 and its telephone number is (952)
832-7000.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
PAGE
Summary.....................................................................S-3
Risk Factors................................................................S-11
Risks Associated with the
Mortgage Loans.........................................................S-11
Limited Obligations....................................................S-15
Liquidity Risks........................................................S-15
Special Yield and Prepayment
Considerations.....................................................S-16
Risk of Interest Shortfalls............................................S-17
Introduction................................................................S-19
Description of the Mortgage Pool............................................S-19
General................................................................S-19
Payments on the Simple
Interest Mortgage Loans............................................S-19
Mortgage Loans with Unpaid
Amounts at Maturity................................................S-20
High Cost Loans........................................................S-20
Missing Loan Documentation.............................................S-21
Repayment Plan Loans and
Bankruptcy Plan Loans..............................................S-21
Balloon Mortgage Loans.................................................S-22
Negative Amortization Loans............................................S-22
Convertible Mortgage Loans.............................................S-22
Mortgage Loan Characteristics--
Group I Loans......................................................S-23
Group II Loans.........................................................S-31
Standard Hazard Insurance and
Primary Mortgage Insurance.........................................S-42
Product Types..........................................................S-43
Residential Funding....................................................S-44
Servicing .............................................................S-44
Special Servicing......................................................S-45
Additional Information.................................................S-45
The Certificate Insurer.....................................................S-45
Description of the Certificates.............................................S-47
General................................................................S-47
Book-Entry Certificates................................................S-47
Glossary of Terms......................................................S-49
PAGE
Multiple Loan Group Structure..........................................S-54
Interest Distributions.................................................S-54
Determination of One-Month
LIBOR..............................................................S-55
Principal Distributions on the
Class A Certificates...............................................S-56
Overcollateralization Provisions ......................................S-56
Allocation of Losses...................................................S-57
The Yield Maintenance Agreement........................................S-58
Advances ..............................................................S-59
Description of the Certificate
Guaranty Insurance Policy..........................................S-59
Yield and Prepayment Considerations.........................................S-60
General................................................................S-60
Final Scheduled Distribution
Dates..............................................................S-63
Weighted Average Life..................................................S-63
Pooling and Servicing Agreement.............................................S-70
General................................................................S-70
The Master Servicer....................................................S-70
Servicing and Other Compensation
and Payment of Expenses............................................S-71
Foreclosure Restrictions on the
Mortgage Loans.....................................................S-72
Voting Rights..........................................................S-72
Termination............................................................S-72
Method of Distribution......................................................S-73
Material Federal Income Tax
Consequences...........................................................S-74
State and Other Tax Consequences............................................S-76
ERISA Considerations........................................................S-76
Legal Investment............................................................S-77
Experts.....................................................................S-77
Legal Matters...............................................................S-77
Ratings.....................................................................S-78
ANNEX I......................................................................I-1
APPENDIX A...................................................................A-1
S-2
<PAGE>
SUMMARY
The following summary is a very general overview of the offered
certificates and does not contain all of the information that you should
consider in making your investment decision. To understand the terms of the
offered certificates, you should read carefully this entire document and the
prospectus.
Issuer or Trust..................... RAMP Series 2000-RS2 Trust.
Title of the offered certificates... Mortgage Asset-Backed Pass-Through
Certificates, Series 2000-RS2.
Depositor........................... Residential Asset Mortgage Products, Inc.,
an affiliate of Residential Funding
Corporation.
Master servicer..................... Residential Funding Corporation.
Trustee ........................... Bank One, National Association.
Certificate Insurer................. Ambac Assurance Corporation.
Mortgage pool....................... 2,019 fixed-rate and adjustable-rate
mortgage loans with an aggregate principal
balance of approximately $267,297,039 as
of the close of business on the day prior
to the cut-off date, secured primarily by
first liens on one- to four-family
residential properties.
Cut-off date........................ June 1, 2000.
Closing date........................ On or about June 28, 2000.
Distribution dates.................. Beginning on July 25, 2000 and thereafter
on the 25th of each month or, if the 25th
is not a business day, on the next
business day.
Scheduled final distribution date... June 25, 2030. The actual final
distribution date could be substantially
earlier.
Form of offered certificates........ Book-entry.
SEE "DESCRIPTION OF THE
CERTIFICATES--BOOK-ENTRY CERTIFICATES" IN
THIS PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT.
Minimum denominations............... $25,000.
ERISA Considerations................ The offered certificates may be purchased
by persons investing assets of employee
benefit plans or individual retirement
accounts subject to important
considerations.
SEE "ERISA CONSIDERATIONS" IN THIS
PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT AND IN THE
ACCOMPANYING PROSPECTUS.
S-3
<PAGE>
Legal investment.................... The offered certificates will not be
"mortgage related securities" for purposes
of the Secondary Mortgage Market
Enhancement Act of 1984.
SEE "LEGAL INVESTMENT" IN THIS PROSPECTUS
SUPPLEMENT AND "LEGAL INVESTMENT MATTERS"
IN THE PROSPECTUS.
S-4
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
OFFERED CERTIFICATES
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
INITIAL FINAL
CERTIFICATE SCHEDULED
PASS-THROUGH PRINCIPAL INITIAL RATING DISTRIBUTION
CLASS RATE BALANCE (S&P/FITCH) DESIGNATIONS DATE
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C>
Senior/ December 25,
A-I-1 Adjustable $ 39,457,000 AAA/AAA Adjustable Rate 2014
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Senior/ September 25,
A-I-2 7.92% $ 24,755,000 AAA/AAA Fixed Rate 2019
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Senior/ July 25,
A-I-3 8.06% $ 19,192,000 AAA/AAA Fixed Rate 2023
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Senior/ June 25,
A-I-4 8.36% $ 40,028,000 AAA/AAA Fixed Rate 2030
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Senior/ June 25,
A-II Adjustable $ 139,292,000 AAA/AAA Adjustable Rate 2030
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total Class A
Certificates: $ 262,724,000
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
NON-OFFERED CERTIFICATES
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C>
SB-I N/A $ 3,165,345 N/A Subordinate --
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SB-II N/A $ 1,407,695 N/A Subordinate --
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
R-I N/A N/A N/A Residual --
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
R-II N/A N/A N/A Residual --
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
R-III N/A N/A N/A Residual --
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total Class SB and
Class R Certificates: $ 4,573,039
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total offered and
non-offered certificates: $ 267,297,039
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
OTHER INFORMATION:
CLASS A-I:
The pass-through rate on the Class A-I Certificates, other than the Class A-I-1
Certificates, will be the lesser of the fixed rate per annum indicated above and
the weighted average of the net mortgage rates of the mortgage loans in loan
group I. Starting on the first distribution date after the first possible
optional termination date, the fixed rate indicated above for the Class A-I-4
Certificates will increase by a per annum rate equal to 0.50%.
The pass-through rate on the Class A-I-1 Certificates will be the least of:
o one-month LIBOR plus 0.15% per annum,
o 10% per annum and
o the weighted average of the net mortgage rates of the mortgage loans in loan
group I, adjusted to an actual over 360-day rate.
CLASS A-II:
The pass-through rate on the Class A-II Certificates will be the least of:
o one-month LIBOR plus 0.33% per annum, or, starting on the first distribution
date after the first possible optional termination date, one-month LIBOR
plus 0.66% per annum,
o 14% per annum and
o the weighted average of the net mortgage rates of the mortgage loans in
loan group II, adjusted to an actual over 360-day rate.
S-5
<PAGE>
THE TRUST
The depositor will establish a trust with respect to the Series 2000-RS2
Certificates. On the closing date, the depositor will deposit the pool of
mortgage loans described in this prospectus supplement into the trust. In
addition, the trust will include a certificate guaranty insurance policy issued
by the certificate insurer. Each certificate will represent a partial ownership
interest in the trust.
THE MORTGAGE POOL
The mortgage loans to be deposited into the trust will be divided into two loan
groups. Loan group I consists of fixed rate mortgage loans, and loan group II
consists of adjustable rate mortgage loans. The mortgage loans have the
following characteristics as of the cut-off date:
LOAN GROUP I
Minimum principal balance $97
Maximum principal balance $1,155,528
Average principal balance $117,984
Range of mortgage rates 6.13% to 18.38%
Weighted average 9.4119%
mortgage rate
Range of remaining terms to 6 to 360
stated maturity months
Weighted average remaining 305 months
term to stated maturity
LOAN GROUP II
Minimum principal balance $8,232
Maximum principal balance $649,468
Average principal balance $148,731
Range of mortgage rates 5.25% to 14.24%
Weighted average 9.0421%
mortgage rate
Range of remaining terms to 13 to 360
stated maturity months
Weighted average remaining 327 months
term to stated maturity
The interest rate on each mortgage loan in loan group II will adjust on each
adjustment date to equal the sum of the related index and the related note
margin on the mortgage, subject to a maximum and minimum interest rate, as
described in this prospectus supplement.
All of the mortgage loans were acquired under Residential Funding's negotiated
conduit asset program. Substantially all of these mortgage loans have one or
more of the following characteristics:
o they do not comply with Residential Funding's standard programs;
o they are seasoned loans;
o they were not originated in accordance with any standard secondary market
underwriting guidelines;
o the related mortgagors have delinquency
histories or low credit scores; and/or
o they have arrearages and are subject to
repayment or bankruptcy plans.
SEE "RISK FACTORS--RISKS ASSOCIATED WITH THE MORTGAGE LOANS" IN THIS PROSPECTUS
SUPPLEMENT.
Approximately 10.1% and 3.8% of the mortgage loans in loan group I and loan
group II, respectively, are balloon loans, which require a substantial portion
of the original principal amount to be paid on the respective scheduled maturity
date. Approximately 2.3% of the mortgage loans in loan group II are convertible
mortgage loans, which generally provide that, at the option of the related
mortgagors, the adjustable interest rate on the mortgage loans may be converted
to a fixed interest rate. Approximately 0.3% of the mortgage loans in loan group
II are negative amortization loans, which have a feature where, under some
circumstances, interest due on the mortgage loans is added to the principal
balance thereof.
S-6
<PAGE>
Approximately 98.7% of the mortgage loans in loan group I and all of the
mortgage loans in loan group II are secured by first mortgages or deeds of
trust. Approximately 1.3% of the mortgage loans in loan group I are secured by
second mortgages or deeds of trust.
SEE "DESCRIPTION OF THE MORTGAGE POOL--BALLOON MORTGAGE LOANS," "--CONVERTIBLE
MORTGAGE LOANS" AND "--NEGATIVE AMORTIZATION LOANS" IN THIS PROSPECTUS
SUPPLEMENT.
FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION REGARDING THE MORTGAGE POOL, SEE "DESCRIPTION OF THE
MORTGAGE POOL" IN THIS PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT.
PAYMENTS ON THE CERTIFICATES
AMOUNT AVAILABLE FOR MONTHLY DISTRIBUTION. On each monthly distribution date,
the trustee will make distributions to investors. The Class A-I Certificates
will relate to and will receive payments primarily from loan group I. The Class
A-II Certificates will relate to and will receive payments primarily from loan
group II. The amounts available for distribution will be calculated on a loan
group by loan group basis and will include:
o collections of monthly payments on the related mortgage loans, including
prepayments and other unscheduled collections PLUS
o advances for delinquent payments on the mortgage loans in the related loan
group MINUS
o fees and expenses of the subservicers and the master servicer for the
applicable loan group, including reimbursement for advances MINUS
o the premium paid to the certificate insurer for the certificate guaranty
insurance policy, to the extent allocable to the related loan group.
SEE "DESCRIPTION OF THE CERTIFICATES- GLOSSARY OF TERMS--AVAILABLE DISTRIBUTION
AMOUNT" IN THIS PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT.
PRIORITY OF PAYMENTS. Payments to the certificateholders will be made from the
available amount from each loan group as follows:
o Distribution of interest to the related offered certificates
o Distribution of principal to the related offered certificates
o Distribution of principal to the related offered certificates and
subsequently, to the non-related offered certificates to cover some
realized losses
o Reimbursement to the certificate insurer for prior draws made on the
certificate guaranty insurance policy
o Distribution of additional principal to the related offered certificates
and subsequently, to the non-related offered certificates from the excess
interest on the related mortgage loans, until the required level of
overcollateralization is reached
o Payment to the related offered certificates and subsequently, to the
non-related offered certificates in respect of prepayment interest
shortfalls
o Payment to the Class A-I-1 Certificates and Class A-II Certificates in
respect of basis risk shortfalls
S-7
<PAGE>
o Distribution of any remaining funds to the non-offered certificates
INTEREST DISTRIBUTIONS. The amount of interest owed to each class of offered
certificates on each distribution date will equal:
o The pass-through rate for that class of certificates MULTIPLIED BY
o The principal balance of that class of certificates as of the day
immediately prior to the related distribution date MULTIPLIED BY
o in the case of the Class A-I Certificates, other than the Class A-I-1
Certificates, 1/12th, and in the case of the Class A-I- 1 Certificates and
Class A-II Certificates, the actual number of days in the related interest
accrual period divided by 360, MINUS
o The share of some types of interest shortfalls allocated to that class.
SEE "DESCRIPTION OF THE CERTIFICATES-- INTEREST DISTRIBUTIONS" IN THIS
PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT.
ALLOCATIONS OF PRINCIPAL. Principal distributions on the certificates made from
principal payments on the mortgage loans in the corresponding loan group will be
allocated among the various classes of offered certificates as described in this
prospectus supplement.
In addition, the offered certificates will receive a distribution of principal
to the extent of any excess cash flow available to cover losses and then to
increase the amount of overcollateralization until the required amount of
overcollateralization for that loan group is reached. Each class of offered
certificates also may receive a distribution of principal to cover losses and to
increase the required amount of overcollateralization from the excess cash flow
from the non-related loan group. Also, payments of principal on the offered
certificates will be made from draws on the certificate guaranty insurance
policy to cover losses on the mortgage loans allocated to the offered
certificates.
SEE "DESCRIPTION OF THE CERTIFICATES-- PRINCIPAL DISTRIBUTIONS ON THE CLASS A
CERTIFICATES" IN THIS PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT.
CREDIT ENHANCEMENT
The credit enhancement for the benefit of the offered certificates consists of:
EXCESS CASH FLOW. Because more interest with respect to the mortgage loans in a
loan group is payable by the mortgagors than is necessary to pay the interest on
the related offered certificates each month, there may be excess cash flow with
respect to that loan group. Some of this excess cash flow may be used to protect
the related and non-related offered certificates against some realized losses by
making an additional payment of principal up to the amount of the realized
losses.
OVERCOLLATERALIZATION. On the closing date, the trust will issue an aggregate
principal amount of offered certificates related to each loan group which is
less than the aggregate principal balance of the mortgage loans in the related
loan group as of the cut-off date. In addition, on each distribution date, to
the extent not used to cover losses, excess cash flow with respect to a loan
group will be used first, to pay principal to the related offered certificates,
and then to the non-related offered certificates, further reducing the aggregate
principal amount of the offered certificates below the aggregate principal
balance of the mortgage loans in the related loan group. The excess amount of
the balance of the mortgage loans represents
S-8
<PAGE>
overcollateralization, which may absorb some losses on the mortgage loans, if
not covered by excess cash flow. If the level of overcollateralization falls
below what is required, the excess cash flow with respect to a loan group
described above will be paid first to the related offered certificates, and then
to the non-related offered certificates, as principal as and to the extent
described in this prospectus supplement. This will reduce the principal balance
of the offered certificates faster than the principal balance of the related
mortgage loans, until the required level of overcollateralization is reached
with respect to each loan group.
CERTIFICATE GUARANTY INSURANCE POLICY. On the closing date, the certificate
insurer will issue the certificate guaranty insurance policy in favor of the
trustee. The certificate guaranty insurance policy will unconditionally and
irrevocably guarantee shortfalls in amounts available to pay the interest
distribution amount for the offered certificates on any distribution date, will
cover any losses allocated to the offered certificates if not covered by excess
cash flow or overcollateralization and will guarantee amounts due on the offered
certificates on the distribution date in June 2030. However, the certificate
guaranty insurance policy will not provide coverage for some interest
shortfalls.
SEE "DESCRIPTION OF THE CERTIFICATES-- DESCRIPTION OF THE CERTIFICATE GUARANTY
INSURANCE POLICY" IN THIS PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT.
LIMITATIONS ON CREDIT ENHANCEMENT. Not all realized losses will be allocated as
described in the previous three paragraphs. Realized losses due to natural
disasters such as floods, earthquakes, or other extraordinary events and losses
due to fraud by or bankruptcy of a mortgagor will be allocated as described
above only up to specified amounts. Losses of these types in excess of the
specified amount and losses due to other extraordinary events will, in general,
be allocated to the offered certificates, provided that any loss on the offered
certificates will be covered by the certificate guaranty insurance policy.
SEE "DESCRIPTION OF THE CERTIFICATES-- ALLOCATION OF LOSSES" IN THIS PROSPECTUS
SUPPLEMENT.
YIELD MAINTENANCE AGREEMENT
The trust will include a yield maintenance agreement between Bear Stearns
Financial Products, Inc. and the trustee on behalf of the certificateholders,
which will be entered into on the closing date. Payments under the yield
maintenance agreement will be deposited into a reserve fund and will be made
available to cover certain interest shortfalls for the Class A-I-1 Certificates.
SEE "DESCRIPTION OF THE CERTIFICATES--THE YIELD MAINTENANCE AGREEMENT" IN THIS
PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT.
ADVANCES
For any month, if the master servicer receives a payment on a mortgage loan that
is less than the full scheduled payment, or if no payment is received at all,
the master servicer will advance its own funds to cover that shortfall. However,
the master servicer will make an advance only if it determines that the advance
will be recoverable form future payments or collections on that mortgage loan.
SEE "DESCRIPTION OF THE CERTIFICATES-- ADVANCES" IN THIS PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT.
OPTIONAL TERMINATION
On any distribution date on which the aggregate outstanding principal balance of
the mortgage loans as of the related
S-9
<PAGE>
determination date is less than 10% of their aggregate principal balance as of
the cut- off date, the master servicer may, but will not be required to:
o purchase from the trust all of the remaining mortgage loans and cause an
early retirement of the certificates;
or
o purchase all of the certificates.
An optional purchase of the certificates will cause the outstanding principal
balance of the certificates to be paid in full with accrued interest. However,
no purchase of the mortgage loans or the certificates will be permitted if it
would result in a draw on the certificate guaranty insurance policy unless the
certificate insurer consents to the termination.
SEE "POOLING AND SERVICING AGREEMENT-- TERMINATION" IN THIS PROSPECTUS
SUPPLEMENT.
RATINGS
When issued, the offered certificates will receive the ratings listed on page
S-5 of this prospectus supplement. A security rating is not a recommendation to
buy, sell or hold a security and may be changed or withdrawn at any time by the
assigning rating agency. The ratings also do not address the rate of principal
prepayments on the mortgage loans. The rate of prepayments, if different than
originally anticipated, could adversely affect the yield realized by holders of
the offered certificates.
SEE "RATINGS" IN THIS PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT.
LEGAL INVESTMENT
The offered certificates will not be "mortgage related securities" for purposes
of the Secondary Mortgage Market Enhancement Act of 1984. You should consult
your legal advisors in determining whether and to what extent the offered
certificates constitute legal investments for you.
SEE "LEGAL INVESTMENT" IN THIS PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT AND "LEGAL INVESTMENT
MATTERS" IN THE ACCOMPANYING PROSPECTUS.
ERISA CONSIDERATIONS
The offered certificates may be purchased by persons investing assets of
employee benefit plans or individual retirement accounts subject to important
considerations.
SEE "ERISA CONSIDERATIONS" IN THIS PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT AND IN THE ACCOMPANYING
PROSPECTUS.
TAX STATUS
For federal income tax purposes, the depositor will elect to treat the trust as
three REMICs. The offered certificates will each represent ownership of a
regular interest in a REMIC. The offered certificates generally will be treated
as debt instruments for federal income tax purposes. Offered certificateholders
will be required to include in income all interest and original issue discount,
if any, on their certificates in accordance with the accrual method of
accounting regardless of the certificateholder's usual method of accounting. For
federal income tax purposes, the residual certificates will represent the sole
residual interest in each REMIC.
SEE "MATERIAL FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSEQUENCES" IN THIS PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT AND
IN THE ACCOMPANYING PROSPECTUS.
S-10
<PAGE>
RISK FACTORS
The offered certificates are not suitable investments for all investors. In
particular, you should not purchase the offered certificates unless you
understand the prepayment, credit, liquidity and market risks associated with
the offered certificates.
The offered certificates are complex securities. You should possess, either
alone or together with an investment advisor, the expertise necessary to
evaluate the information contained in this prospectus supplement and the
accompanying prospectus in the context of your financial situation and tolerance
for risk.
You should carefully consider, among other things, the following factors in
connection with the purchase of the offered certificates:
RISKS ASSOCIATED WITH THE MORTGAGE LOANS
Many of the mortgage loans The mortgage loans were evaluated pursuant to
have underwriting the program described in this prospectus
exceptions and other supplement. SEE "DESCRIPTION OF THE MORTGAGE
attributes that may increase POOL--PRODUCT TYPES" IN THIS PROSPECTUS
risk of loss on the mortgage SUPPLEMENT. The mortgage loans are ineligible
loans. for inclusion in other securitizations conducted
by Residential Funding or any one of its
affiliates using the standard selection criteria
for those securitizations. The mortgage loans
include loans that:
o have delinquency histories that do not
comply with the standard requirements for
other securitizations conducted by
Residential Funding or any one of its
affiliates;
o are currently delinquent, but not greater
than 89 days delinquent;
o were originated to be held in portfolio
and not pursuant to any particular
secondary mortgage market program; as a
result many of the mortgage loans have
exceptions such as high loan-to-value
ratios at origination or no primary
mortgage insurance policy;
o have non-standard payment features, such
as balloon payments or negative
amortization, or they are convertible from
an adjustable rate to a fixed rate;
o have arrearages which may have resulted
from prior delinquencies, but the
borrowers have made at least an aggregate
of their three most recent scheduled
monthly payments or at least four of the
past six scheduled monthly payments,
except as provided in this prospectus
supplement;
S-11
<PAGE>
o are seasoned loans, which may not conform
to the seller's current underwriting
criteria or documentation requirements;
o have borrowers with low credit scores as
described in this prospectus supplement;
or
o have other factors and characteristics
that cause the loan to be ineligible for
inclusion in another securitization
conducted by Residential Funding or any
one of its affiliates, other than on an
exception basis.
The foregoing characteristics of the mortgage
loans may adversely affect the performance of
the mortgage pool and the value of the offered
certificates as compared to other mortgage pools
and other series of mortgage pass-through
certificates issued by Residential Funding and
its affiliates.
Investors should note that 25.2% and 35.3% of
the mortgage loans in loan group I and loan
group II, respectively, were made to borrowers
that had credit scores of less than 600. The
mortgage loans with higher loan-to-value ratios
may also present a greater risk of loss. 19.7%
and 18.9% of the mortgage loans in loan group I
and loan group II, respectively, are mortgage
loans with loan-to-value ratios at origination
in excess of 80% and are not insured by a
primary mortgage insurance policy.
The mortgage loans were The mortgage loans included in the trust were
originally underwritten in originally underwritten in accordance with a
accordance with a variety of variety of underwriting standards under several
underwriting standards and different programs. The standards under which
programs, which may the mortgage loans were underwritten are less
increase the risk of loss on stringent than the underwriting standards
the mortgage loans. applied by other first mortgage loan purchase
programs such as those run by Fannie Mae or by
Freddie Mac, or pursuant to the other programs
of Residential Funding or its affiliates. SEE
"DESCRIPTION OF THE MORTGAGE POOL--PRODUCT
TYPES." As a result, the mortgage loans are
likely to experience rates of delinquency,
foreclosure and bankruptcy that are higher, and
that may be substantially higher, than those
experienced by mortgage loans underwritten in a
more traditional manner.
The mortgage pool is not The mortgage pool consists of a wide variety of
homogeneous. As a result, mortgage loans, including a wide variety of
it may be difficult to underwriting standards, credit quality, mortgage
anticipate the performance loan types, payment terms, seasoning and
of the mortgage pool. originators. In addition, the adjustable rate
mortgage loans have a wide range of interest
rates, indices, initial adjustment dates and
periodic adjustment dates. As a result, the loss
and delinquency experience of the mortgage loans
may differ substantially from the
characteristics of more homogeneous pools, and
may be
S-12
<PAGE>
difficult to project. In addition, prepayments
on the mortgage loans may vary substantially
over the life of the transaction, and may be
difficult to project. SEE "DESCRIPTION OF THE
MORTGAGE POOL" IN THIS PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT.
The delinquencies on the Some of the mortgage loans included in the trust
mortgage loans are high, are either currently delinquent or have been
which may increase the risk delinquent in the past. As of the cut-off date,
of loss on the mortgage 4.9% and 3.9% of the mortgage loans in loan
loans. group I and loan group II, respectively, are 30
to 59 days delinquent in payment of principal
and interest. As of the cut-off date, 0.6% and
0.6% of the mortgage loans in loan group I and
loan group II, respectively, are 60 to 89 days
delinquent in payment of principal and interest.
Mortgage loans with a history of delinquencies
are more likely to experience delinquencies in
the future, even if these mortgage loans are
current as of the cut- off date. SEE
"DESCRIPTION OF THE MORTGAGE POOL--MORTGAGE LOAN
CHARACTERISTICS--GROUP I LOANS," "--GROUP II
LOANS--MORTGAGE LOAN CHARACTERISTICS" AND
"--PRODUCT TYPES" IN THIS PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT.
Origination disclosure Approximately 0.8% and 1.0% of the principal
practices for the mortgage balance of the mortgage loans as of the cut-off
loans could create liabilities date in loan group I and loan group II,
that may affect the return respectively, are subject to special rules,
on your certificates. disclosure requirements and other regulatory
provisions because they are high cost loans.
Purchasers or assignees of these high cost loans
could be exposed to all claims and defenses that
the mortgagors could assert against the
originators of the mortgage loans. Remedies
available to the mortgagor include monetary
penalties, as well as recission rights if the
appropriate disclosures were not given as
required or if other violations occurred. SEE
"DESCRIPTION OF THE MORTGAGE LOANS--HIGH COST
LOANS" IN THIS PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT AND
"CERTAIN LEGAL ASPECTS OF THE LOANS--THE
MORTGAGE LOANS--ANTI-DEFICIENCY LEGISLATION AND
OTHER LIMITATIONS ON LENDERS" IN THE PROSPECTUS.
The return on the offered One risk associated with investing in
certificates may be mortgage-backed securities is created by any
particularly sensitive to concentration of the related properties in one
changes in real estate or more specific geographic regions.
markets in specific regions. Approximately 19.2% and 16.8% of the mortgage
loans in loan group I and loan group II,
respectively, are located in California. If the
regional economy or housing market weakens in
California, or in any other region having a
significant concentration of properties
underlying the mortgage loans, the mortgage
loans in that region may experience high rates
of loss and delinquency resulting in losses to
Class A Certificateholders. A region's economic
condition and housing market may be adversely
affected by a variety of events, including
natural disasters such as earthquakes,
hurricanes, floods and eruptions, and civil
disturbances such as riots.
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The inability to foreclose Approximately 0.6% and 0.6% of the mortgage
on some mortgage loans may loans in loan group I and loan group II,
lead to increased losses respectively, are 60 to 89 days delinquent as of
with respect to those the cut-off date and will have certain
mortgage loans. restrictions placed on their foreclosure in the
pooling and servicing agreement. As a result,
losses on the mortgage loans may be greater than
if the master servicer did not have these
foreclosure restrictions. SEE "POOLING AND
SERVICING AGREEMENT-- FORECLOSURE RESTRICTIONS
ON THE MORTGAGE LOANS" IN THIS PROSPECTUS
SUPPLEMENT.
Certain of the mortgage Approximately 3.6% and 4.8% of the mortgage
loans have arrearages and loans in loan group I and loan group II,
are subject to repayment respectively, are currently subject to repayment
or bankruptcy plans. or bankruptcy plans, under which prior
delinquent monthly payments and unpaid tax and
insurance advances must be paid during a period,
generally ranging from zero to five years, after
the plan is entered into. As a result, these
loans will have larger monthly payments until
the obligations under the plans are paid off in
full.
For loans currently under a repayment or
bankruptcy plan, the borrowers have made an
aggregate of their three most recent scheduled
monthly payments or at least four of the past
six scheduled monthly payments, except as
provided in this prospectus supplement.
These mortgage loans under a repayment plan or
bankruptcy plan may have substantial arrearages.
Although the rights to receive these arrearages
are not included in the trust, the borrower must
make both the arrearage payment and the
scheduled monthly payment to avoid default. In
addition, if a borrower defaults under a
repayment plan, a foreclosure action may be
commenced immediately.
All of these loans, due to their prior
delinquency history, may have a greater risk of
delinquency and loss than newly-originated loans
of comparable size and geographical
concentration without any delinquency history.
Some of the mortgage Approximately 2.3% of the mortgage loans in loan
loans are convertible to group II provide that the mortgagors may, during
a fixed rate. a specified period of time, convert the
adjustable interest rate of these mortgage loans
to a fixed interest rate. As a result of the
mortgagor's exercise of the conversion option,
the mortgage pool will include additional
fixed-rate mortgage loans. The inclusion of
fixed-rate mortgage loans may affect the
pass-through rate on the Class A-II Certificates
or the amount of excess interest available to
cover losses. Neither the master servicer nor
any other party is obligated to purchase a
converting mortgage loan from the trust. SEE
"DESCRIPTION OF THE MORTGAGE POOL--CONVERTIBLE
MORTGAGE LOANS" IN THIS PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT.
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Some of the mortgage Approximately 10.1% and 3.8% of the mortgage
loans provide for large loans in loan group I and loan group II,
payments at maturity. respectively, are not fully amortizing over
their terms to maturity and, thus, will require
substantial principal payments (i.e., a balloon
payment) at their stated maturity. Mortgage
loans with balloon payments involve a greater
degree of risk because the ability of a
mortgagor to make a balloon payment typically
will depend upon the mortgagor's ability either
to timely refinance the loan or to sell the
related mortgaged property. SEE "DESCRIPTION OF
THE MORTGAGE POOL--BALLOON MORTGAGE LOANS" IN
THIS PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT.
Some of the mortgage Approximately 1.3% of the group I loans are
loans are secured by secured by second liens, rather than first
second liens. liens. In the case of second liens, proceeds
from liquidation of the mortgaged property will
be available to satisfy the mortgage loans only
if the claims of any senior mortgages have been
satisfied in full. When it is uneconomical to
foreclose on a mortgaged property or engage in
other loss mitigation procedures, the master
servicer may write off the entire outstanding
balance of the mortgage loan as a bad debt.
LIMITED OBLIGATIONS
Payments on the mortgage Credit enhancement includes excess cash flow,
loans, together with the cross-collateralization, overcollateralization
certificate guaranty and the certificate guaranty insurance policy,
insurance policy, are the in each case as described in this prospectus
sole source of payments on supplement. None of the depositor, the master
your certificates. servicer or any of their affiliates will have
any obligation to replace or supplement the
credit enhancement, or to take any other action
to maintain any rating of the offered
certificates. If any losses are incurred on the
mortgage loans that are not covered by the
credit enhancement, the holders of the offered
certificates will bear the risk of these losses.
To the extent that payments on the Class A-I-1
Certificates depend in part on payments to be
received under the yield maintenance agreement,
the ability of the trust to make payments on the
Class A-I-1 Certificates will be subject to the
credit risk of Bear Stearns Financial Products,
Inc.
LIQUIDITY RISKS
You may have to hold your A secondary market for your offered certificates
certificates to maturity if may not develop. Even if a secondary market does
their marketability is develop, it may not continue, or it may be
limited. illiquid. Illiquidity means you may not be able
to find a buyer to buy your securities readily
or at prices that will enable you to realize a
desired yield. Illiquidity can have an adverse
effect on the market value of the offered
certificates.
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The yield to maturity on
your certificates will vary
depending on the rate of
prepayments.
SPECIAL YIELD AND PREPAYMENT CONSIDERATIONS
The yield to maturity on your certificates will
depend on a variety of factors, including:
o the rate and timing of principal payments
on the mortgage loans in the related loan
group, including prepayments, defaults and
liquidations, and repurchases due to
breaches of representations or warranties;
o the pass-through rate for your
certificates; and
o the purchase price you paid for your
certificates.
The rates of prepayments and defaults are two of
the most important and least predictable of
these factors. In general, if you purchase a
certificate at a price higher than its
outstanding principal balance and principal
payments occur faster than you assumed at the
time of purchase, your yield will be lower than
anticipated. Conversely, if you purchase a
certificate at a price lower than its
outstanding principal balance and principal
payments occur more slowly than you assumed at
the time of purchase, your yield will be lower
than anticipated.
The rate of prepayments on Since mortgagors can generally prepay their
the mortgage loans will vary mortgage loans at any time, the rate and timing
depending on future market of principal payments on the offered
conditions, and other certificates are highly uncertain. Generally,
factors. when market interest rates increase, mortgagors
are less likely to prepay their mortgage loans.
This could result in a slower return of
principal to you at a time when you might have
been able to reinvest those funds at a higher
rate of interest than the pass-through rate. On
the other hand, when market interest rates
decrease, borrowers are generally more likely to
prepay their mortgage loans. This could result
in a faster return of principal to you at a time
when you might not be able to reinvest those
funds at an interest rate as high as the
pass-through rate.
Refinancing programs, which may involve
soliciting all or some of the mortgagors to
refinance their mortgage loans, may increase the
rate of prepayments on the mortgage loans. These
programs may be conducted by the master servicer
or any of its affiliates, the subservicers or a
third party.
Approximately 25.2% and 36.4% of the mortgage
loans in loan group I and loan group II,
respectively, provide for payment of a
prepayment charge. Prepayment charges may reduce
the rate of prepayment on the mortgage loans
until the end of the period during which these
prepayment charges apply. SEE "DESCRIPTION OF
THE MORTGAGE POOL--MORTGAGE LOAN
CHARACTERISTICS--GROUP I LOANS," "--GROUP II
LOANS--MORTGAGE LOAN CHARACTERISTICS" AND "YIELD
AND PREPAYMENT CONSIDERATIONS" IN THIS
PROSPECTUS
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SUPPLEMENT AND "MATURITY AND PREPAYMENT
CONSIDERATIONS" IN THE PROSPECTUS.
The Class A-I Certificates The Class A-I Certificates are subject to
are subject to different various priorities for payment of principal as
payment priorities. described in this prospectus supplement.
Distributions of principal on the Class A-I
Certificates having an earlier priority of
payment will be affected by the rates of
prepayment of the mortgage loans early in the
life of the mortgage pool. Those classes of
Class A-I Certificates with a later priority of
payment will be affected by the rates of
prepayment of the mortgage loans experienced
both before and after the commencement of
principal distributions on such classes.
SEE "DESCRIPTION OF THE CERTIFICATES--PRINCIPAL
DISTRIBUTIONS ON THE CLASS A CERTIFICATES" IN
THIS PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT.
The pass-through rate on The pass-through rate on the Class A-I
the Class A-I Certificates Certificates is subject to a cap equal to the
is subject to a weighted weighted average of the net mortgage rates on
average net rate cap. the mortgage loans in loan group I, adjusted, in
the case of the Class A-I-1 Certificates, to an
actual over 360-day rate. Therefore, the
prepayment of the mortgage loans in loan group I
with higher mortgage rates may result in a lower
pass-through rate on the Class A-I Certificates.
In particular, it is unlikely that the Class
A-I-4 Certificates will receive interest at
8.86% per annum after the first possible
optional termination date.
RISK OF INTEREST SHORTFALLS
The Class A-I-1 Certificates The Class A-I-1 Certificates and Class A-II
and Class A-II Certificates Certificates may not always receive interest at
may not always receive a rate equal to One-Month LIBOR plus the
interest based on One- applicable margin. If the weighted average net
Month LIBOR plus the mortgage rate on the mortgage loans in the
related margin. related loan group, adjusted to an actual over
360-day rate, is less than the lesser of (a)
One-Month LIBOR plus the related margin and (b)
10% in the case of the Class A-I-1 Certificates,
and 14% in the case of the Class A-II
Certificates, the interest rate on the Class
A-I-1 Certificates and Class A-II Certificates
will be reduced to that weighted average net
mortgage rate. Thus, the yield to investors in
the Class A-I-1 Certificates and Class A-II
Certificates will be sensitive to fluctuations
in the level of One-Month LIBOR and will be
adversely affected by the application of the
weighted average net mortgage rate on the
mortgage loans in the related loan group.
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The prepayment of the mortgage loans in the
related loan group with higher net mortgage
rates may result in a lower weighted average net
mortgage rate. If on any distribution date the
application of the related weighted average net
mortgage rate results in an interest payment
lower than One-Month LIBOR plus the related
margin on the Class A-I-1 Certificates or Class
A-II Certificates during the related interest
accrual period, the value of those Certificates
may be temporarily or permanently reduced.
Investors in the Class A-I-1 Certificates and
Class A-II Certificates should be aware that the
mortgage rates on the mortgage loans in loan
group I are fixed and the mortgage loans in loan
group II are adjustable generally monthly,
semi-annually or annually based on the related
index. Consequently, the interest that becomes
due on the mortgage loans in loan group I or
loan group II during the related due period may
be less than interest that would accrue on the
Class A-I-1 Certificates and Class A-II
Certificates, respectively, at the rate of
One-Month LIBOR plus the related margin. In a
rising interest rate environment, the Class
A-I-1 Certificates or Class A-II Certificates
may receive interest at the lesser of (a) the
weighted average net mortgage rate of the
related mortgage loans or (b) 10% or 14%,
respectively, for a protracted period of time.
In addition, in this situation, there would be
little or no excess cash flow to cover losses
and to create additional overcollateralization.
To the extent the related weighted average net
mortgage rate is paid to the Class A-I-1
Certificates or Class A-II Certificates, the
difference between the related weighted average
net mortgage rate and the lesser of One-Month
LIBOR plus the related margin and 10% or 14%,
respectively, will create a shortfall that will
carry forward with interest thereon. Any
resulting shortfall will not be payable by the
policy and will only be payable from the excess
cash flow and, in the case of the Class A-I-1
Certificates, from the yield maintenance
agreement. These shortfalls may remain unpaid on
the optional termination date or final
distribution date.
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INTRODUCTION
The depositor will establish a trust with respect to Series 2000-RS2 on the
closing date, under a pooling and servicing agreement, dated as of June 1, 2000,
among the depositor, the master servicer and the trustee. On the closing date,
the depositor will deposit into the trust two groups of mortgage loans that, in
the aggregate, will constitute a mortgage pool, secured by first and second lien
one- to four-family residential properties.
You can find a listing of definitions for capitalized terms used both in
the prospectus and this prospectus supplement under the caption "Glossary"
beginning on page 116 in the prospectus and under the caption "Description of
the Certificates--Glossary of Terms" in this prospectus supplement.
DESCRIPTION OF THE MORTGAGE POOL
GENERAL
The mortgage pool will consist of mortgage loans with an aggregate unpaid
principal balance of $267,297,039 as of the cut-off date after deducting
payments due during the month of June 2000. The mortgage loans are secured by
first liens and second liens on fee simple and leasehold interests in one- to
four-family residential properties. The mortgage pool will consist of two groups
of mortgage loans, Loan Group I and Loan Group II. The mortgage loans in the two
groups are referred to as the Group I Loans and the Group II Loans.
Approximately 9.6% and 0.8% of the mortgage loans in Loan Group I and Loan Group
II, respectively, have a due date other than the first of each month. The
mortgage loans in Loan Group I have fixed interest rates and the mortgage loans
in Loan Group II have adjustable interest rates. The mortgage loans will consist
of mortgage loans with terms to maturity of not more than 30 years, except with
respect to 0.3% of the Group I Loans for which the original term to maturity is
not more than 31 years, or in the case of approximately 19.7% and 3.9% of the
mortgage loans in Loan Group I and Loan Group II, respectively, not more than 15
years, from the date of origination or modification.
As to mortgage loans which have been modified, references in this
prospectus supplement to the date of origination shall be deemed to be the date
of the most recent modification. All percentages of the mortgage loans described
in this prospectus supplement are approximate percentages determined as of the
cut-off date after deducting payments due during the month of June 2000, unless
otherwise indicated.
Residential Funding will make some representations and warranties regarding
the mortgage loans sold by it as of the date of issuance of the certificates.
Further, Residential Funding will be required to repurchase or substitute for
any mortgage loan sold by it as to which a breach of its representations and
warranties relating to that mortgage loan occurs if the breach materially
adversely affects the interests of the certificateholders or the certificate
insurer in the mortgage loan. See "Description of the
Securities--Representations with Respect to Loans" and "--Repurchases of Loans"
in the prospectus.
PAYMENTS ON THE SIMPLE INTEREST MORTGAGE LOANS
Approximately 0.4% of the mortgage loans in Loan Group I provide for simple
interest payments and are referred to as the simple interest mortgage loans
which require that each scheduled monthly payment consist of an installment of
interest which is calculated according to the simple interest method. Accrued
interest is calculated based on the number of days in the period elapsed since
the preceding payment of interest was made and a 365-day year. As payments are
received on these mortgage loans, the amount received is applied first to
interest accrued to the date of payment and any balance is applied to reduce the
unpaid principal balance. Accordingly, if a mortgagor pays a fixed monthly
installment before its scheduled due date, the portion of the payment allocable
to interest for the period since the preceding payment was made will be less
than it would have been had the payment been made as scheduled, and the portion
of the payment applied to reduce the unpaid principal balance will be
correspondingly greater. Also, the next
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succeeding payment will result in a greater portion of the payment allocated to
interest if the payment is made on its scheduled due date.
Conversely, if a mortgagor pays a fixed monthly installment after its
scheduled due date, the portion of the payment allocable to interest for the
period since the preceding payment was made will be greater than it would have
been had the payment been made as scheduled, and the remaining portion, if any,
of the payment applied to reduce the unpaid principal balance will be
correspondingly less. If each scheduled payment is made on or prior to its
scheduled due date, the principal balance of the mortgage loan will amortize in
the manner described in the preceding paragraph. However, if the mortgagor
consistently makes scheduled payments after the scheduled due date the mortgage
loan will amortize more slowly than scheduled. Any remaining unpaid principal is
payable on the final maturity date of the mortgage loan.
For any distribution date, to the extent that the total interest collected
on the simple interest mortgage loans was greater or less than what would have
been collected if all payments were made on the scheduled due date, the
aggregate servicing fee for all of the mortgage loans will be increased or
decreased accordingly.
Approximately 99.6% of the mortgage loans in Loan Group I are actuarial
mortgage loans, on which 30 days of interest is owed each month irrespective of
the day on which the payment is received.
MORTGAGE LOANS WITH UNPAID AMOUNTS AT MATURITY
As to approximately 0.5% and 0.7% of the Group I Loans and Group II Loans,
respectively, either or both of the following applies:
o the scheduled payments on the related mortgage loans are not
sufficient to fully amortize the related mortgage loans or
o the scheduled payments received thereon were applied in a manner that
reduced the rate of principal amortization.
As a result, assuming no prepayments, each such mortgage loan may have an unpaid
principal amount on its scheduled maturity date of greater than one time but not
more than fourteen times the related monthly payment. It is not clear whether
the related mortgagor will be legally obligated to pay such unpaid principal
amount. Residential Funding will not be required to repurchase any such mortgage
loan unless the failure to fully amortize the mortgage loan results from a
missing mortgage note or modification and the repurchase obligation discussed
below under "--Missing Loan Documentation" applies.
HIGH COST LOANS
As of the cut-off date, 0.8% and 1.0% of the Group I Loans and Group II
Loans, respectively, were High Cost Loans. Purchasers or assignees of any High
Cost Loan, including the trust, could be liable under federal law for all claims
and subject to all defenses that the borrower could assert against the
originator of a High Cost Loan. Remedies available to the borrower include
monetary penalties, as well as rescission rights if appropriate disclosures were
not given or provided in a timely way as required or the mortgage contains
certain prohibited loan provisions. The maximum damages that may be recovered
under these provisions from an assignee, including the trust, is the remaining
amount of indebtedness plus the total amount paid by the borrower in connection
with the mortgage loan.
Residential Funding Corporation, as seller, will covenant, as of the date
of issuance of the certificates, that each mortgage loan at the time it was made
complied in all material respects with applicable local, state and federal laws.
As a result of this covenant, the seller will be required to repurchase or
substitute for any mortgage loan that violated
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the Homeownership Act at the time of origination, if that violation adversely
affects the interests of the certificateholders or the credit enhancer in that
mortgage loan. The seller maintains policies and procedures that are designed to
verify that the mortgage loans do not violate the Homeownership Act. However,
there can be no assurance that these policies and procedures will assure that
each and every mortgage loan complies with the Homeownership Act in all material
respects.
In addition to the Homeownership Act, a number of legislative proposals
have been introduced at both the federal and state level that are designed to
discourage predatory lending practices. Some states have enacted, or may enact,
laws or regulations generally similar to the Homeownership Act that prohibit
inclusion of some provisions in mortgage loans that have interest rates or
origination costs in excess of prescribed levels, and require that the borrowers
be given certain disclosures or receive credit counseling prior to the
consummation of the mortgage loans. In some cases state law may impose
requirements and restrictions greater than those in the Homeownership Act. The
originators' failure to comply with any of these laws that are applicable could
subject the trust, and other assignees of the mortgage loans, to monetary
penalties and could result in the borrowers' rescinding the mortgage loans
against either the trust or subsequent holders of the mortgage loans. However,
the seller will be required to repurchase or substitute for any mortgage loan
that violated any applicable law at the time of origination, if that violation
adversely affects the interests of the certificateholders or the credit enhancer
in that mortgage loan. See "Certain Legal Aspects of The Loans--The Mortgage
Loans--Anti-Deficiency Legislation and Other Limitations on Lenders" in the
prospectus.
MISSING LOAN DOCUMENTATION
The mortgage file for one Group I Loan, representing 0.05% of the Group I
Loans, does not contain a modification to the original mortgage note. In
addition, some of the mortgage loans in both loan groups are missing intervening
assignments. In the event of foreclosure on one of these mortgage loans, to the
extent these missing documents materially adversely affect the master servicer's
ability to foreclose on the related mortgage loan, Residential Funding will be
obligated to purchase the mortgage loan from the trust. See "Risk Factors--Risks
Associated with the Mortgage Loans" in this prospectus supplement.
REPAYMENT PLAN LOANS AND BANKRUPTCY PLAN LOANS
With respect to certain of the Mortgage Loans, the borrower in the past has
failed to pay one or more required scheduled monthly payments or tax and
insurance payments, and the borrower has entered into either (i) a repayment
plan (such Mortgage Loans, "Repayment Plan Loans"), or (ii) a confirmed
bankruptcy repayment plan following a proceeding under Chapter 13 of the
Bankruptcy Code (such Mortgage Loans, "Bankruptcy Plan Loans"), under which the
borrower has agreed to repay these arrearages in installments under a schedule,
in exchange for the related servicer agreeing not to foreclose on the related
Mortgage Loan.
0.6% and 1.9% of the Group I Loans and Group II Loans, respectively, are
Repayment Plan Loans, and 3.0% and 2.9% of the Group I Loans and Group II Loans,
respectively, are Bankruptcy Plan Loans.
For each Repayment Plan Loan and Bankruptcy Plan Loan, the borrower shall
have made at least an aggregate of its three most recent scheduled monthly
payments or at least four of the past six scheduled monthly payments prior to
the Cut-off Date, except with respect to 0.2% and 0.2% of the Group I Loans and
Group II Loans, respectively.
The right to receive all arrearages payable under a repayment or bankruptcy
plan shall not be included as part of the trust and, accordingly, payments with
respect to these arrearages will not be payable to the Certificateholders. The
borrowers under the Bankruptcy Plan Loans will make separate payments for their
scheduled monthly payments and for their arrearages. The borrowers under the
Repayment Plan Loans will make a single payment, which will be applied first to
their scheduled monthly payment and second to the arrearage. In either case, the
Master Servicer may
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immediately commence foreclosure if both payments are not received with respect
to a Bankruptcy Plan Loan or the payment on a Repayment Plan Loan is
insufficient to cover both the monthly payment and the arrearage.
BALLOON MORTGAGE LOANS
Approximately 10.1% and 3.8% of the Group I Loans and Group II Loans,
respectively, are balloon loans, which require monthly payments of principal
generally based on a 30-year amortization schedule and generally have scheduled
maturity dates of ten or fifteen years from the due date of the first monthly
payment, except with respect to 1.8% of the Group II Loans, for which the
scheduled maturity date is 20 months to 104 months from the due date of the
first monthly payment, in each case leaving a substantial portion of the
original principal amount due and payable on the respective scheduled maturity
date, or balloon payment. The existence of a balloon payment generally will
require the related mortgagor to refinance these mortgage loans or to sell the
mortgaged property on or prior to the scheduled maturity date. The ability of a
mortgagor to accomplish either of these goals will be affected by a number of
factors, including the level of available mortgage rates at the time of sale or
refinancing, the mortgagor's equity in the related mortgaged property, the
financial condition of the mortgagor, tax laws and prevailing general economic
conditions. None of the seller, the depositor, the master servicer or the
trustee is obligated to refinance any balloon loan.
All of the Group II Loans that are balloon loans are secured by mortgaged
properties located in the state of Hawaii.
NEGATIVE AMORTIZATION LOANS
Approximately 0.3% of the Group II Loans have a negative amortization
feature whereby interest payments on such mortgage loans may be deferred and may
be added to the Stated Principal Balance thereof. Because the rate at which
interest accrues on a negative amortization loan changes more frequently than
payment adjustments and because such adjustment of monthly payments on such
mortgage loans may be subject to limitations, the amount of interest accruing on
the remaining principal balance of such a mortgage loan at the applicable
mortgage rate may exceed the amount of the monthly payment. The resulting excess
is added to the unpaid principal balance of the related mortgage loan in the
month during which any such event occurs as deferred interest, resulting in
negative amortization of the mortgage loan.
CONVERTIBLE MORTGAGE LOANS
Approximately 2.3% of the Group II Loans are convertible mortgage loans,
which provide that, at the option of the related mortgagors, the adjustable
interest rate on these mortgage loans may be converted to a fixed interest rate.
Upon conversion, the mortgage rate will be converted to a fixed interest rate
determined in accordance with the formula set forth in the related mortgage note
which formula is intended to result in a mortgage rate which is not less than
the then current market interest rate (subject to applicable usury laws). After
the conversion, the monthly payments of principal and interest will be adjusted
to provide for full amortization over the remaining term to scheduled maturity.
Any converting mortgage loan will remain in the mortgage pool as a
fixed-rate mortgage loan and as a result the Pass-Through Rate on the Class A-II
Certificates may be reduced. See "Yield and Prepayment Considerations" in this
prospectus supplement.
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MORTGAGE LOAN CHARACTERISTICS--GROUP I LOANS
The Group I Loans will have the following characteristics as of the cut-off
date, after deducting payments of principal due in the month of June:
o The Group I Loans consist of 1,073 mortgage loans with an aggregate
principal balance as of the cut-off date of approximately $126,597,345.
o The Net Mortgage Rates of the Group I Loans range from 5.67% to 17.67%,
with a weighted average of approximately 8.8609%.
o The mortgage rates of the Group I Loans range from 6.13% to 18.38%, with a
weighted average of approximately 9.4119%.
o The Group I Loans had individual principal balances at origination of at
least $2,448 but not more than $1,158,000, with an average principal
balance at origination of approximately $122,261.
o No non-affiliate of Residential Funding sold more than 6.4% of the Group I
Loans to Residential Funding. Approximately 12.3% of the Group I Loans
were purchased from HomeComings Financial Network, Inc. or GMAC Mortgage
Corporation, both of which are affiliates of Residential Funding.
o None of the Group I Loans will have been originated prior to March 20,
1979 or will have a maturity date later than June 1, 2030.
o No Group I Loans will have a remaining term to stated maturity as of the
cut-off date of less than 6 months.
o The weighted average remaining term to stated maturity of the Group I
Loans as of the cut-off date will be approximately 305 months. The
weighted average original term to maturity of the Group I Loans as of the
cut- off date will be approximately 323 months.
o As of the cut-off date, 4.9% of the Group I Loans are currently 30 to 59
days delinquent in payment of principal and interest. As of the cut-off
date, 0.6% of the Group I Loans are currently 60 to 89 days delinquent in
payment of principal and interest. For a description of the methodology
used to categorize Group I Loans as delinquent, see "Pooling and Servicing
Agreement--The Master Servicer" in this prospectus supplement. In
addition, some of the Group I Loans have had delinquency problems in the
past. 3.6% of the Group I Loans are Repayment Plan Loans or Bankruptcy
Plan Loans.
o 98.7% of the Group I Loans are secured by first liens on fee simple or
leasehold interests in one- to four-family residential properties and the
remainder are secured by second liens.
o None of the Group I Loans are Buy-Down loans.
o 0.8% of the Group I Loans are High Cost Loans.
o 0.1% of the Group I Loans are Additional Collateral Loans.
o With respect to 0.04% of the Group I Loans, the related mortgagor is
currently the subject of bankruptcy proceedings.
o The Group I Loans generally contain due-on-sale clauses. See "Yield and
Prepayment Considerations" in this prospectus supplement.
S-23
<PAGE>
25.2% of the Group I Loans provide for payment of a prepayment charge. As
to some of those Group I Loans, the prepayment charge provisions provide for
payment of a prepayment charge for partial prepayments and full prepayments made
within up to five years following the origination of that Group I Loan, in an
amount equal to the lesser of:
o six months' advance interest on the amount of the prepayment that,
when added to all other amounts prepaid during the twelve-month period
immediately preceding the date of prepayment, exceeds twenty percent
of the original amount of the Group I Loan
o six months' advance interest on the amount of the prepayment or
o the maximum amount permitted by state law.
As to some of the Group I Loans, the prepayment charge provisions provide for
payment of a prepayment charge for full prepayments made within three years of
the origination of the Group I Loan, in an amount not to exceed six percent of
the original principal amount of the Group I Loan. Prepayment charges received
on the Group I Loans may be waived and in any case will not be available for
distribution on the certificates. See "Certain Legal Aspects of the
Loans--Default Interest and Limitations on Prepayments" in the prospectus.
In connection with the Group I Loans secured by a leasehold interest,
Residential Funding shall have represented to the depositor that, among other
things: the use of leasehold estates for residential properties is an accepted
practice in the area where the related mortgaged property is located;
residential property in such area consisting of leasehold estates is readily
marketable; the lease is recorded and no party is in any way in breach of any
provision of the lease; the leasehold is in full force and effect and is not
subject to any prior lien or encumbrance by which the leasehold could be
terminated or subject to any charge or penalty; and the remaining term of the
lease does not terminate less than ten years after the maturity date of the
mortgage loan.
Set forth below is a description of additional characteristics of the Group
I Loans as of the cut-off date, except as otherwise indicated. All percentages
of the Group I Loans are approximate percentages by aggregate principal balance
of the Group I Loans as of the cut-off date, except as otherwise indicated.
Unless otherwise specified, all principal balances of the Group I Loans are as
of the cut-off date, after deducting payments of principal due in the month of
June 2000, and are rounded to the nearest dollar.
S-24
<PAGE>
CREDIT SCORE DISTRIBUTION OF THE GROUP I LOANS
NUMBER OF PERCENTAGE OF
CREDIT SCORE RANGE GROUP I LOANS PRINCIPAL BALANCE GROUP I LOANS
------------------ ------------- ----------------- -------------
499 or less................... 41 $ 2,700,212 2.13%
500-519....................... 59 3,561,444 2.81
520-539....................... 79 5,656,347 4.47
540-559....................... 91 7,203,330 5.69
560-579....................... 79 6,275,682 4.96
580-599....................... 76 6,484,484 5.12
600-619....................... 58 6,448,917 5.09
620-639....................... 83 9,985,170 7.89
640-659....................... 90 13,382,084 10.57
660-679....................... 87 13,888,519 10.97
680-699....................... 97 14,707,977 11.62
700-719....................... 54 7,663,741 6.05
720-739....................... 56 9,699,180 7.66
740-759....................... 44 8,508,521 6.72
760 or greater................ 47 7,527,792 5.95
Subtotal with Credit Scores... 1,041 123,693,399 97.71
Not Available................. 32 2,903,945 2.29
----- ------------ ------
Total Pool............... 1,073 $126,597,345 100.00%
===== ============ ======
---------------
o Group I Loans indicated as having a Credit Score that is "not available"
include mortgage loans where the Credit Score was not provided by the
related seller and Group I Loans where no credit history can be obtained
for the related mortgagor.
As of the cut-off date, the weighted average Credit Score of the Group I
Loans will be approximately 651.
S-25
<PAGE>
ORIGINAL MORTGAGE LOAN PRINCIPAL BALANCES OF THE GROUP I LOANS
NUMBER OF PERCENT OF
ORIGINAL MORTGAGE LOAN BALANCE GROUP I LOANS PRINCIPAL BALANCE GROUP I LOANS
------------------------------ ------------- ----------------- -------------
$ 0-100,000............ 646 $ 32,647,920 25.79%
100,001-200,000............ 243 31,930,054 25.22
200,001-300,000............ 109 25,784,748 20.37
300,001-400,000............ 35 12,247,729 9.67
400,001-500,000............ 15 6,859,968 5.42
500,001-600,000............ 13 7,078,990 5.59
600,001-700,000............ 5 3,241,721 2.56
800,001-900,000............ 3 2,591,898 2.05
900,001-1,000,000.......... 2 1,977,804 1.56
1,000,001-1,100,000.......... 1 1,080,984 0.85
1,100,001-1,200,000.......... 1 1,155,528 0.91
----- ------------ ------
Total................ 1,073 $126,597,345 100.00%
===== ============ ======
As of the cut-off date, the average unpaid principal balance of the Group I
Loans will be approximately $117,984.
S-26
<PAGE>
NET MORTGAGE RATES OF THE GROUP I LOANS
NUMBER OF PERCENT OF
NET MORTGAGE RATES (%) GROUP I LOANS PRINCIPAL BALANCE GROUP I LOANS
---------------------- ------------- ----------------- -------------
5.500- 5.999............... 7 $ 688,531 0.54%
6.000- 6.499............... 5 1,274,306 1.01
6.500- 6.999............... 29 6,666,428 5.27
7.000- 7.499............... 45 8,056,224 6.36
7.500- 7.999............... 74 14,434,153 11.40
8.000- 8.499............... 151 28,268,667 22.33
8.500- 8.999............... 145 19,992,408 15.79
9.000- 9.499............... 137 15,168,619 11.98
9.500- 9.999............... 95 8,353,398 6.60
10.000-10.499................. 89 7,458,954 5.89
10.500-10.999................. 70 5,541,376 4.38
11.000-11.499................. 62 3,955,166 3.12
11.500-11.999................. 39 2,595,513 2.05
12.000-12.499................. 35 1,623,959 1.28
12.500-12.999................. 13 677,277 0.53
13.000-13.499................. 23 724,536 0.57
13.500-13.999................. 11 358,371 0.28
14.000-14.499................. 25 443,580 0.35
14.500-14.999................. 9 178,896 0.14
15.000-15.499................. 4 58,583 0.05
16.000-16.499................. 4 53,762 0.04
17.500-17.999................. 1 24,639 0.02
----- ------------ ------
Total................. 1,073 $126,597,345 100.00%
===== ============ ======
As of the cut-off date, the weighted average Net Mortgage Rate of the
Group I Loans will be approximately 8.8609% per annum.
S-27
<PAGE>
MORTGAGE RATES OF THE GROUP I LOANS
NUMBER OF PERCENT OF
MORTGAGE RATES (%) GROUP I LOANS PRINCIPAL BALANCE GROUP I LOANS
------------------ ------------- ----------------- -------------
6.000- 6.499 ............. 7 $ 688,531 0.54%
6.500- 6.999.............. 4 1,206,557 0.95
7.000- 7.499.............. 21 5,324,454 4.21
7.500- 7.999.............. 49 9,123,834 7.21
8.000- 8.499.............. 65 12,724,665 10.05
8.500- 8.999.............. 150 29,158,389 23.03
9.000- 9.499.............. 133 19,414,034 15.34
9.500- 9.999.............. 144 15,461,220 12.21
10.000-10.499............... 69 6,769,421 5.35
10.500-10.999............... 98 8,022,098 6.34
11.000-11.499............... 74 6,145,357 4.85
11.500-11.999............... 76 4,706,033 3.72
12.000-12.499............... 28 1,705,909 1.35
12.500-12.999............... 46 2,870,300 2.27
13.000-13.499............... 23 1,077,427 0.85
13.500-13.999............... 30 1,016,434 0.80
14.000-14.499............... 7 219,274 0.17
14.500-14.999............... 28 575,780 0.45
15.000-15.499............... 8 183,412 0.14
15.500-15.999............... 8 125,815 0.10
16.500-16.999............... 4 53,762 0.04
18.000-18.499............... 1 24,639 0.02
----- ------------ ------
Total................. 1,073 $126,597,345 100.00%
===== ============ ======
As of the cut-off date, the weighted average mortgage rate of the Group I
Loans will be approximately 9.4119% per annum.
S-28
<PAGE>
ORIGINAL LOAN-TO-VALUE RATIOS OF THE GROUP I LOANS
NUMBER OF PERCENT OF
ORIGINAL LOAN-TO-VALUE RATIO(%) GROUP I LOANS PRINCIPAL BALANCE GROUP I LOANS
------------------------------- ------------- ----------------- -------------
0.01- 50.00.................. 41 $ 2,999,685 2.37%
50.01- 55.00.................. 12 2,156,341 1.70
55.01- 60.00.................. 25 1,602,934 1.27
60.01- 65.00.................. 55 5,831,401 4.61
65.01- 70.00.................. 98 11,956,488 9.44
70.01- 75.00.................. 138 19,864,556 15.69
75.01- 80.00.................. 251 36,011,389 28.45
80.01- 85.00.................. 86 8,993,467 7.10
85.01- 90.00.................. 220 24,907,013 19.67
90.01- 95.00.................. 74 7,866,210 6.21
95.01-100.00.................. 73 4,407,862 3.48
----- ------------ ------
Total........................ 1,073 $126,597,345 100.00%
===== ============ ======
---------------
o With respect to Group I Loans secured by second liens, the combined
loan-to-value ratio is used for this table and throughout this prospectus
supplement.
The weighted average loan-to-value ratio at origination of the Group I
Loans will be approximately 79.49%.
S-29
<PAGE>
GEOGRAPHIC DISTRIBUTION OF MORTGAGED PROPERTIES OF THE GROUP I LOANS
NUMBER OF PERCENT OF
STATE GROUP I LOANS PRINCIPAL BALANCE GROUP I LOANS
----- ------------- ----------------- -------------
California.......... 123 $ 24,274,171 19.17%
Florida............. 103 10,275,100 8.12
Illinois............ 58 9,086,186 7.18
Texas............... 71 7,202,813 5.69
Michigan............ 60 5,272,224 4.16
Arizona............. 40 5,178,242 4.09
Maryland............ 29 4,960,278 3.92
Georgia............. 48 4,272,632 3.37
Colorado............ 25 4,246,961 3.35
New York............ 30 4,174,680 3.30
North Carolina...... 43 4,000,131 3.16
Other............... 443 43,653,929 34.48
----- ------------- ------
Total............ 1,073 $126,597,345 100.00%
===== ============ ======
--------------
o Other includes states and the District of Columbia with under 3%
concentrations individually.
No more than 1.2% of the Group I Loans will be secured by mortgaged
properties located in any one zip code area, which is in the state of Illinois,
and no more than 1.0% of the Group I Loans will be secured by mortgaged
properties located in any other one zip code area.
MORTGAGE LOAN PURPOSE OF THE GROUP I LOANS
NUMBER OF PERCENT OF
LOAN PURPOSE GROUP I LOANS PRINCIPAL BALANCE GROUP I LOANS
------------ ------------- ----------------- -------------
Purchase................... 513 $ 73,884,123 58.36%
Rate and Term Refinance.... 128 19,109,917 15.10
Equity Refinance........... 432 33,603,304 26.54
----- ------------ ------
Total................... 1,073 $126,597,345 100.00%
===== ============ ======
The weighted average loan-to-value ratio at origination of rate and term
refinance Group I Loans will be 76.45%. The weighted average loan-to-value ratio
at origination of equity refinance Group I Loans will be 75.72%.
S-30
<PAGE>
OCCUPANCY TYPES OF THE GROUP I LOANS
NUMBER OF PERCENT OF
OCCUPANCY GROUP I LOANS PRINCIPAL BALANCE GROUP I LOANS
--------- ------------- ----------------- -------------
Primary Residence........... 848 $104,778,390 82.77%
Second/Vacation............. 18 2,789,336 2.20
Non Owner-occupied.......... 207 19,029,619 15.03
----- ------------ ------
Total.................. 1,073 $126,597,345 100.00%
===== ============ ======
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
MORTGAGED PROPERTY TYPES OF THE GROUP I LOANS
NUMBER OF PERCENT OF
PROPERTY TYPE GROUP I LOANS PRINCIPAL BALANCE GROUP I LOANS
------------- ------------- ----------------- -------------
<S> <C> <C> <C>
Single-family detached.................. 754 $ 80,777,394 63.81%
Planned Unit Developments (detached).... 97 21,879,805 17.28
Two- to four-family units............... 109 13,223,633 10.45
Condo Low-Rise (less than 5 stories).... 42 4,864,465 3.84
Condo Mid-Rise (5 to 8 stories)......... 4 165,896 0.13
Condo High-Rise (9 stories or more)..... 13 1,814,087 1.43
Manufactured Home....................... 29 1,581,105 1.25
Townhouse............................... 8 594,559 0.47
Townhouse (two- to four-family units)... 1 69,597 0.05
Planned Unit Developments (attached).... 14 1,546,348 1.22
Leasehold............................... 2 80,457 0.06
----- ------------- ------
Total.............................. 1,073 $126,597,345 100.00%
===== ============ ======
</TABLE>
GROUP II LOANS
MORTGAGE RATE ADJUSTMENT. The mortgage rate on each Group II Loan will
adjust on each rate adjustment date to equal the index plus the note margin,
subject to the minimum mortgage rate, maximum mortgage rate and periodic rate
cap for such Group II Loan as set forth in the related mortgage note. The
mortgage rate on a Group II Loan may not exceed the maximum mortgage rate or be
less than the minimum mortgage rate specified for that Group II Loan in the
related mortgage note. The minimum mortgage rate for each Group II Loan will be
equal to the note margin, except in the case of approximately 37.3% of the Group
II Loans, which have a minimum mortgage rate greater than the note margin. The
minimum mortgage rates on the Group II Loans will range from 0.75% to 14.24%,
with a weighted average minimum mortgage rate as of the cut-off date of 6.0640%.
The maximum mortgage rates on the Group II Loans will range from 10.25% to
22.75%, with a weighted average maximum mortgage rate as of the cut-off date of
14.6130%.
For approximately 55.8% of the Group II Loans, the index will be the
One-Year Treasury Index. The One-Year U.S. Treasury Index will be a per annum
rate equal to the weekly average yield on U.S. Treasury securities adjusted to a
constant maturity of one year as reported by the Federal Reserve Board in
Statistical Release No. H.15 (519) as most recently available as of the date
forty-five days prior to the adjustment date. Those average yields reflect
S-31
<PAGE>
the yields for the week prior to that week. All of the Group II Loans with an
index based on the One-Year Treasury Index adjust annually.
For approximately 43.4% of the Group II Loans, the index will be the
Sixth-Month LIBOR Index. All of the mortgage loans with an index based on the
Six-Month LIBOR Index adjust semi-annually. The Six-Month LIBOR Index will be a
per annum rate equal to the average of interbank offered rates for six-month
U.S. dollar-denominated deposits in the London market based on quotations of
major banks as published in THE WALL STREET JOURNAL and are most recently
available:
o as of the first business day of the month immediately preceding the
month in which the adjustment date occurs;
o as of the date forty-five days prior to the adjustment date;
o as of the date fifteen days prior to the adjustment date, or
o as of the 20th day of the month preceding the month in which the
adjustment date occurs.
The "reference date" is the date as of which each of the One-Year Treasury
Index or the Six-Month LIBOR Index is determined.
For approximately 0.6%, 0.2% and 0.1% of the Group II Loans, the index will
be the National Monthly Median Cost of Funds Index, the Prime Rate and the
Eleventh District Cost of Funds Index, respectively.
One-Year U.S. Treasury Index, Six-Month LIBOR Index and the other indices
in the prior paragraph are each referred to in this prospectus supplement as an
index. In the event that the related index specified in a mortgage note is no
longer available, an index reasonably acceptable to the trustee that is based on
comparable information will be selected by the master servicer.
The initial mortgage rate in effect on a Group II Loan generally will be
lower, and may be significantly lower, than the mortgage rate that would have
been in effect based on the related index and note margin. Therefore, unless the
related index declines after origination of a mortgage loan, the related
mortgage rate will generally increase on the first adjustment date following
origination of the mortgage loan subject to the periodic rate cap. The repayment
of the mortgage loans will be dependent on the ability of the mortgagors to make
larger monthly payments following adjustments of the mortgage rate. Mortgage
loans that have the same initial mortgage rate may not always bear interest at
the same mortgage rate because these mortgage loans may have different
adjustment dates, and the mortgage rates therefore may reflect different related
index values, note margins, maximum mortgage rates and minimum mortgage rates.
The Net Mortgage Rate with respect to each mortgage loan as of the cut-off date
will be set forth in the related mortgage loan schedule attached to the pooling
and servicing agreement.
MORTGAGE LOAN CHARACTERISTICS. The Group II Loans will have the following
characteristics as of the cut-off date, after deducting payments of principal
due in the month of June:
S-32
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
SIX-MONTH ONE-YEAR
LIBOR INDEX TREASURY INDEX AGGREGATE FOR ALL
MORTGAGE LOANS MORTGAGE LOANS GROUP II LOANS
-------------- -------------- --------------
<S> <C> <C> <C>
Number of Mortgage Loans................. 564 372 946
Net Mortgage Rates:
Weighted average...................... 9.7598% 7.3824% 8.4144%
Range................................. 7.29% to 13.53% 4.54% to 11.79% 4.54% to 13.53%
Mortgage Rates:
Weighted average...................... 10.4737% 7.9423 9.0421%
Range................................. 8.00% to 14.24% 5.25% to 12.50% 5.25% to 14.24%
Note Margins:
Weighted average...................... 6.7091% 3.0160% 4.6133%
Range................................. 2.75% to 9.55% 2.63% to 7.45% 0.75% to 9.55%
Minimum Mortgage Rates:
Weighted average...................... 9.5593% 3.3949% 6.0640%
Range................................. 2.75% to 14.24% 2.63% to 12.50% 0.75% to 14.24%
Minimum Net Mortgage Rates:
Weighted average...................... 8.8454% 2.8351% 5.4363%
Range................................. 2.04% to 13.53% 1.91% to 11.79% 0.16% to 13.53%
Maximum Mortgage Rates:
Weighted average...................... 16.7595% 12.9492% 14.6130%
Range................................. 10.25% to 22.75% 10.38% to 18.50% 10.25% to 22.75%
Maximum Net Mortgage Rates:
Weighted average...................... 16.0456% 12.3894% 13.9853%
Range................................. 9.54% to 22.04% 9.79% to 17.79% 9.54% to 22.04%
Periodic Caps:
Weighted average...................... 1.0847% 2.0105% 1.6039%
Range................................. 0.50% to 3.00% 1.00% to 3.00% 0.00% to 3.00%
Weighted average months to next interest
rate adjustment date after
June 1, 2000............................. 20 8 13
</TABLE>
----------------------
o Aggregate numbers include ten additional mortgage loans with miscellaneous
indices.
The Group II Loans consist of 946 mortgage loans with an aggregate
principal balance as of the cut-off date of approximately $140,699,695.
o The Group II Loans had individual principal balances at origination of
at least $15,200 but not more than $650,000, with an average principal
balance at origination of approximately $154,050.
o Approximately 22.1% of the Group II Loans were purchased from Old Kent
Bank & Trust Company, an unaffiliated seller. Except as described in
the preceding sentence, no non-affiliate of Residential Funding sold
more than 9.7% of the Group II Loans to Residential Funding.
Approximately 17.5% of the Group II Loans were purchased from
HomeComings Financial Network, Inc. or GMAC Mortgage Corporation, both
of which are affiliates of Residential Funding.
o None of the Group II Loans will have been originated prior to March
26, 1987, or will have a maturity date later than June 1, 2030.
o No Group II Loans will have a remaining term to stated maturity as of
the cut-off date of less than 13 months.
o The weighted average remaining term to stated maturity of the Group II
Loans as of the cut-off date will be approximately 327 months. The
weighted average original term to maturity of the Group II Loans as of
the cut-off date will be approximately 349 months.
S-33
<PAGE>
o As of the cut-off date, 3.9% of the Group II Loans are currently 30 to
59 days delinquent in payment of principal and interest. As of the
cut-off date, 0.6% of the Group II Loans are currently 60 to 89 days
delinquent in payment of principal and interest. For a description of
the methodology used to categorize Group II Loans as delinquent, see
"Pooling and Servicing Agreement--The Master Servicer" in this
prospectus supplement. In addition, some of the Group II Loans have
had delinquency problems in the past. 4.8% of the Group II Loans are
Repayment Plan Loans or Bankruptcy Plan Loans.
o None of the Group II Loans are Buy-Down loans.
o 1.0% of the Group II Loans are High Cost Loans.
o All of the Group II Loans are secured by first liens on fee simple
interests in one- to four-family residential properties.
o 0.8% of the Group II Loans, all located in the state of Hawaii,
provide for an interest-only period, then a period of negative
amortization or partial amortization, before a balloon payment which
occurs within 48 to 104 months from the date of origination.
o The Group II Loans generally contain due-on-sale clauses. See "Yield
and Prepayment Considerations" in this prospectus supplement.
36.4% of the Group II Loans provide for a payment of a prepayment charge.
As to some of those Group II Loans, the prepayment charge provisions provide for
payment of a prepayment charge for partial prepayments and full prepayments made
within up to five years following the origination of that Group II Loan, in an
amount equal to the lesser of:
o six months' advance interest on the amount of the prepayment that,
when added to all other amounts prepaid during the twelve-month period
immediately preceding the date of prepayment, exceeds twenty percent
of the original amount of the Group II Loan
o six months' advance interest on the amount of the prepayment or
o the maximum amount permitted by state law.
As to some of the Group II Loans, the prepayment charge provisions provide for
payment of a prepayment charge for full prepayments made within three years of
the origination of the Group II Loan, in an amount not to exceed six percent of
the original principal amount of the Group II Loan. Prepayment charges received
on the Group II Loans may be waived and in any case will not be available for
distribution on the certificates. See "Certain Legal Aspects of the
Loans--Default Interest and Limitations on Prepayments" in the prospectus.
Set forth below is a description of additional characteristics of the Group
II Loans as of the cut-off date, except as otherwise indicated. All percentages
of the Group II Loans are approximate percentages by aggregate principal balance
of the Group II Loans as of the cut-off date, except as otherwise indicated.
Unless otherwise specified, all principal balances of the Group II Loans are as
of the cut-off date, after deducting payments of principal due in the month of
June 2000, and are rounded to the nearest dollar.
S-34
<PAGE>
CREDIT SCORE DISTRIBUTION OF THE GROUP II LOANS
NUMBER OF PERCENTAGE OF
CREDIT SCORE RANGE GROUP II LOANS PRINCIPAL BALANCE GROUP II LOANS
------------------ -------------- ----------------- --------------
499 or less................... 48 $ 4,942,318 3.51%
500-519....................... 61 5,632,923 4.00
520-539....................... 85 9,550,886 6.79
540-559....................... 108 12,475,979 8.87
560-579....................... 75 8,761,856 6.23
580-599....................... 74 8,240,609 5.86
600-619....................... 60 7,766,906 5.52
620-639....................... 56 7,166,046 5.09
640-659....................... 59 10,413,243 7.40
660-679....................... 54 10,166,332 7.23
680-699....................... 70 12,820,346 9.11
700-719....................... 43 9,463,877 6.73
720-739....................... 43 8,504,828 6.04
740-759....................... 38 10,209,587 7.26
760 or greater................ 58 13,408,514 9.53
Subtotal with Credit Scores... 932 139,524,250 99.16
Not Available................. 14 1,175,445 0.84
--- ------------ ------
Total Pool............... 946 $140,699,695 100.00%
=== ============ ======
---------------
o Group II Loans indicated as having a Credit Score that is "not available"
include mortgage loans where the Credit Score was not provided by the
related seller and Group II Loans where no credit history can be obtained
for the related mortgagor.
As of the cut-off date, the weighted average Credit Score of the Group II
Loans will be approximately 642.
S-35
<PAGE>
ORIGINAL MORTGAGE LOAN PRINCIPAL BALANCES OF THE GROUP II LOANS
NUMBER OF PERCENT OF
ORIGINAL MORTGAGE LOAN BALANCE GROUP II LOANS PRINCIPAL BALANCE GROUP II LOANS
------------------------------ -------------- ----------------- --------------
$ 0-100,000.............. 427 $ 26,056,105 18.52%
100,001-200,000.............. 271 36,719,958 26.10
200,001-300,000.............. 126 30,200,161 21.46
300,001-400,000.............. 64 21,416,755 15.22
400,001-500,000.............. 44 18,854,221 13.40
500,001-600,000.............. 9 4,761,074 3.38
600,001-700,000.............. 5 2,691,420 1.91
--- ------------ ------
Total.............. 946 $140,699,695 100.00%
=== ============ ======
As of the cut-off date, the average unpaid principal balance of the
Group II Loans will be approximately $148,731.
NET MORTGAGE RATES OF THE GROUP II LOANS
NUMBER OF PERCENT OF
NET MORTGAGE RATES (%) GROUP II LOANS PRINCIPAL BALANCE GROUP II LOANS
---------------------- -------------- ----------------- --------------
4.500- 4.999................ 2 $ 327,289 0.23%
5.000- 5.499................ 1 104,521 0.07
5.500- 5.999................ 2 747,016 0.53
6.000- 6.499................ 26 7,875,889 5.60
6.500- 6.999................ 72 23,361,466 16.60
7.000- 7.499................ 68 10,636,790 7.56
7.500- 7.999................ 118 21,856,491 15.53
8.000- 8.499................ 81 13,430,896 9.55
8.500- 8.999................ 97 13,350,736 9.49
9.000- 9.499................ 112 13,664,037 9.71
9.500- 9.999................ 113 12,926,496 9.19
10.000-10.499................ 85 7,915,834 5.63
10.500-10.999................ 58 4,632,820 3.29
11.000-11.499................ 41 4,092,529 2.91
11.500-11.999................ 28 2,437,600 1.73
12.000-12.499................ 23 1,925,116 1.37
12.500-12.999................ 10 604,630 0.43
13.000-13.499................ 8 783,669 0.56
13.500-13.999................ 1 25,870 0.02
--- ------------ ------
Total................ 946 $140,699,695 100.00%
=== ============ ======
As of the cut-off date, the weighted average Net Mortgage Rate of the Group
II Loans will be approximately 8.4144% per annum.
S-36
<PAGE>
MORTGAGE RATES OF THE GROUP II LOANS
NUMBER OF PERCENT OF
MORTGAGE RATES (%) GROUP II LOANS PRINCIPAL BALANCE GROUP II LOANS
------------------ -------------- ----------------- --------------
5.000- 5.499............ 1 $ 267,531 0.19%
5.500- 5.999............ 1 59,758 0.04
6.000- 6.499............ 1 104,521 0.07
6.500- 6.999............ 22 6,344,505 4.51
7.000- 7.499............ 62 21,578,804 15.34
7.500- 7.999............ 67 12,502,668 8.89
8.000- 8.499............ 114 21,298,944 15.14
8.500- 8.999............ 74 12,159,553 8.64
9.000- 9.499............ 85 12,158,522 8.64
9.500- 9.999............ 119 15,328,878 10.89
10.000-10.499............ 88 10,609,854 7.54
10.500-10.999............ 114 11,693,214 8.31
11.000-11.499............ 54 4,541,247 3.23
11.500-11.999............ 61 5,105,168 3.63
12.000-12.499............ 26 2,200,864 1.56
12.500-12.999............ 33 2,882,712 2.05
13.000-13.499............ 10 840,860 0.60
13.500-13.999............ 11 576,655 0.41
14.000-14.499............ 3 445,437 0.32
--- ------------ ------
Total.............. 946 $140,699,695 100.00%
=== ============ ======
As of the cut-off date, the weighted average mortgage rate of the Group II
Loans will be approximately 9.0421% per annum.
S-37
<PAGE>
ORIGINAL LOAN-TO-VALUE RATIOS OF THE GROUP II LOANS
NUMBER OF PERCENT OF
ORIGINAL LOAN-TO-VALUE RATIO(%) GROUP II LOANS PRINCIPAL BALANCE GROUP II LOANS
------------------------------- -------------- ----------------- --------------
0.01- 50.00................... 40 $ 6,760,730 4.81%
50.01- 55.00................... 10 1,702,612 1.21
55.01- 60.00................... 36 5,814,104 4.13
60.01- 65.00................... 56 8,421,966 5.99
65.01- 70.00................... 91 13,865,532 9.85
70.01- 75.00................... 149 23,620,009 16.79
75.01- 80.00................... 274 41,705,628 29.64
80.01- 85.00................... 93 11,868,283 8.44
85.01- 90.00................... 145 19,880,098 14.13
90.01- 95.00................... 38 5,432,636 3.86
95.01-100.00................... 14 1,628,097 1.16
--- ------------ ------
Total......................... 946 $140,699,695 100.00%
=== ============ ======
---------------
The weighted average loan-to-value ratio at origination of the Group II
Loans will be approximately 76.31%.
GEOGRAPHIC DISTRIBUTION OF MORTGAGED PROPERTIES OF THE GROUP II LOANS
NUMBER OF PERCENT OF
STATE GROUP II LOANS PRINCIPAL BALANCE GROUP II LOANS
----- -------------- ----------------- --------------
California........... 128 $ 23,686,588 16.83%
Michigan............. 132 17,742,234 12.61
Illinois............. 66 15,247,451 10.84
Hawaii............... 41 7,861,943 5.59
Florida.............. 47 5,933,512 4.22
Texas................ 44 5,413,478 3.85
Minnesota............ 21 4,545,525 3.23
Missouri............. 31 4,348,226 3.09
Other................ 436 55,920,737 39.74
--- ------------- ------
Total............. 946 $140,699,695 100.00%
=== ============ ======
--------------
o Other includes states and the District of Columbia with under 3%
concentrations individually.
No more than 1.2% of the Group II Loans will be secured by mortgaged
properties located in any one zip code area, which is in the state of Illinois,
and no more than 0.8% of the Group II Loans will be secured by mortgaged
properties located in any other one zip code area.
S-38
<PAGE>
MORTGAGE LOAN PURPOSE OF THE GROUP II LOANS
NUMBER OF PERCENT OF
LOAN PURPOSE GROUP II LOANS PRINCIPAL BALANCE GROUP II LOANS
------------ -------------- ----------------- --------------
Purchase.................... 432 $ 61,643,266 43.81%
Rate and Term Refinance..... 161 36,620,602 26.03
Equity Refinance............ 353 42,435,827 30.16
--- ------------- ------
Total.................... 946 $140,699,695 100.00%
=== ============ ======
The weighted average loan-to-value ratio at origination of rate and term
refinance Group II Loans will be 70.40%. The weighted average loan-to-value
ratio at origination of equity refinance Group II Loans will be 75.48%.
OCCUPANCY TYPES OF THE GROUP II LOANS
NUMBER OF PERCENT OF
OCCUPANCY GROUP II LOANS PRINCIPAL BALANCE GROUP II LOANS
--------- -------------- ----------------- --------------
Primary Residence........ 840 $131,279,083 93.30%
Second/Vacation.......... 14 1,998,320 1.42
Non Owner-occupied....... 92 7,422,291 5.28
--- ------------- ------
Total............... 946 $140,699,695 100.00%
=== ============ ======
S-39
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
MORTGAGED PROPERTY TYPES OF THE GROUP II LOANS
NUMBER OF PERCENT OF
PROPERTY TYPE GROUP II LOANS PRINCIPAL BALANCE GROUP II LOANS
------------- -------------- ----------------- --------------
<S> <C> <C> <C>
Single-family detached.................. 704 $103,598,625 73.63%
Planned Unit Developments (detached).... 85 19,197,869 13.64
Two- to four-family units............... 59 6,105,722 4.34
Condo Low-Rise (less than 5 stories).... 49 6,074,392 4.32
Condo High-Rise (9 stories or more)..... 1 363,903 0.26
Manufactured Home....................... 28 2,117,041 1.50
Townhouse............................... 10 1,096,847 0.78
Planned Unit Developments (attached).... 10 2,145,296 1.52
--- -------------- -------
Total.............................. 946 $140,699,695 100.00%
=== ============ ======
</TABLE>
MAXIMUM MORTGAGE RATES OF THE GROUP II LOANS
NUMBER OF PERCENT OF
NOTE MARGINS (%) GROUP II LOANS PRINCIPAL BALANCE GROUP II LOANS
---------------- -------------- ----------------- --------------
10.000-10.999.......... 24 $ 4,980,920 3.54%
11.000-11.999.......... 48 11,156,394 7.93
12.000-12.999.......... 79 17,628,121 12.53
13.000-13.999.......... 150 35,564,711 25.28
14.000-14.999.......... 87 10,764,616 7.65
15.000-15.999.......... 134 17,773,806 12.63
16.000-16.999.......... 170 20,011,034 14.22
17.000-17.999.......... 142 13,117,734 9.32
18.000-18.999.......... 67 6,076,402 4.32
19.000-19.999.......... 35 2,608,564 1.85
20.000-20.999.......... 9 735,045 0.52
22.000-22.999.......... 1 282,347 0.20
--- ------------ ------
Total.......... 946 $140,699,695 100.00%
=== ============ ======
As of the cut-off date, the weighted average maximum mortgage rate of the
Group II Loans will be approximately 14.6130% per annum.
S-40
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
NEXT INTEREST RATE ADJUSTMENT DATES OF THE GROUP II LOANS
NUMBER OF PERCENT OF
NEXT INTEREST RATE ADJUSTMENT DATE GROUP II LOANS PRINCIPAL BALANCE GROUP II LOANS
---------------------------------- -------------- ----------------- --------------
<S> <C> <C> <C> <C>
July 2000......................... 55 $ 7,802,418 5.55%
August 2000....................... 44 8,211,042 5.84
September 2000.................... 28 3,304,741 2.35
October 2000...................... 39 6,073,114 4.32
November 2000..................... 28 4,100,966 2.91
December 2000..................... 52 8,083,128 5.74
January 2001...................... 45 7,841,127 5.57
February 2001..................... 22 3,601,861 2.56
March 2001........................ 33 6,813,758 4.84
April 2001........................ 76 19,158,308 13.62
May 2001.......................... 40 11,455,711 8.14
June 2001......................... 25 4,456,689 3.17
July 2001......................... 4 514,693 0.37
August 2001....................... 14 1,442,059 1.02
September 2001.................... 19 2,243,112 1.59
October 2001...................... 29 3,140,265 2.23
November 2001..................... 44 5,031,947 3.58
December 2001..................... 37 3,063,007 2.18
January 2002...................... 59 6,268,901 4.46
February 2002..................... 25 2,165,269 1.54
March 2002........................ 20 2,295,908 1.63
April 2002........................ 12 846,830 0.60
May 2002.......................... 2 211,480 0.15
July 2002......................... 1 73,723 0.05
August 2002....................... 5 619,269 0.44
September 2002.................... 4 753,041 0.54
October 2002...................... 25 2,828,099 2.01
November 2002..................... 29 3,658,289 2.60
December 2002..................... 61 7,192,337 5.11
January 2003...................... 35 3,329,999 2.37
February 2003..................... 20 2,512,176 1.79
March 2003........................ 6 726,781 0.52
April 2003........................ 5 531,542 0.38
May 2003.......................... 3 348,105 0.25
--- ------------ ------
Total.......................... 946 $140,699,695 100.00%
=== ============ ======
</TABLE>
As of the cut-off date, the weighted average months to next interest rate
adjustment date will be approximately 13 months. As of the cut-off date, 36.2%
of the Group II Loans will have reached their first adjustment date.
S-41
<PAGE>
NOTE MARGINS OF THE GROUP II LOANS
NUMBER OF PERCENT OF
NOTE MARGINS (%) GROUP II LOANS PRINCIPAL BALANCE GROUP II LOANS
---------------- -------------- ----------------- --------------
0.500- 0.999............. 1 $220,520 0.16%
2.000- 2.499............. 1 125,928 0.09
2.500- 2.999............. 201 51,648,649 36.71
3.000- 3.499............. 145 21,793,948 15.49
3.500- 3.999............. 9 1,585,008 1.13
4.000- 4.499............. 6 1,183,579 0.84
4.500- 4.999............. 18 2,505,767 1.78
5.000- 5.499............. 20 2,401,349 1.71
5.500- 5.999............. 69 7,406,542 5.26
6.000- 6.499............. 114 13,147,187 9.34
6.500- 6.999............. 108 12,441,497 8.84
7.000- 7.499............. 157 16,380,121 11.64
7.500- 7.999............. 64 7,196,509 5.11
8.000- 8.499............. 21 1,718,578 1.22
8.500- 8.999............. 7 504,004 0.36
9.000- 9.499............. 4 397,161 0.28
9.500- 9.999............. 1 43,347 0.03
--- ------------ ------
Total............... 946 $140,699,695 100.00%
=== ============ ======
As of the cut-off date, the weighted average note margin of the Group II
Loans will be approximately 4.6133% per annum.
STANDARD HAZARD INSURANCE AND PRIMARY MORTGAGE INSURANCE
The mortgaged property related to each mortgage loan is required to be
covered by a standard hazard insurance policy. See "Insurance Policies on
Loans--Standard Hazard Insurance on Mortgaged Properties" in the prospectus. In
addition, the depositor has represented that, to the best of the depositor's
knowledge, each of the first lien mortgage loans with loan-to-value ratios at
origination in excess of 80% will be insured by a primary mortgage guaranty
insurance policy, except for 19.7% and 18.9% of the Group I Loans and Group II
Loans, respectively, which are mortgage loans with loan-to-value ratios, or
combined loan-to-value ratios in the case of the Group I Loans secured by second
liens, at origination in excess of 80% that are not so insured. This insurance
is allowed to lapse when the principal balance of the mortgage loan is reduced
to a level that would produce a loan-to-value ratio equal to or less than 80%
based on the value of the related mortgaged property used at origination. 15.7%
and 8.7% of the Group I Loans and Group II Loans, respectively, are covered by
primary mortgage guaranty insurance. The amount of this insurance covers the
amount of the mortgage loan in excess of 75%, or, with respect to seven of the
Group I Loans representing 0.7% of the Group I Loans, some other percentage, of
the value of the related mortgaged property used in determining the
loan-to-value ratio. Mortgage loans which are subject to negative amortization
will only be covered by a primary mortgage guaranty insurance policy if such
coverage was so required upon their origination, notwithstanding that subsequent
negative amortization may cause such mortgage loan's loan-to-value ratio (based
on the then-current
S-42
<PAGE>
balance) to subsequently exceed the limits which would have required such
coverage upon their origination. Substantially all of such primary mortgage
guaranty insurance policies were issued by General Electric Mortgage Insurance
Corporation, Republic Mortgage Insurance Company, United Guaranty Residential
Insurance Company, Mortgage Guaranty Insurance Corporation, PMI Mortgage
Insurance Company and Commonwealth Mortgage Assurance Company, each a "primary
insurer." See "Insurance Policies on Loans--Standard Hazard Insurance on
Mortgaged Properties" and "--Primary Insurance Policies" in the prospectus.
PRODUCT TYPES
THE NEGOTIATED CONDUIT ASSET PROGRAM
All of the mortgage loans included in the trust were acquired and
evaluated under Residential Funding's "Negotiated Conduit Asset Program" or NCA
program. For a description of the NCA program and the evaluation standards for
mortgage loans acquired under this program, see "Trust Asset Program--The
Negotiated Conduit Asset Program" in the prospectus. The mortgage loans belong
to the categories of "Program Violations," "Seasoned Loans" and "Re-Performing
Loans."
"Re-Performing Loans" are Repayment Plan Loans and Bankruptcy Plan Loans
that had arrearages when the repayment plan was entered into. Approximately 3.6%
and 4.8% of the Group I Loans and Group II Loans, respectively, are
Re-Performing Loans. See "Description of the Mortgage Pool--Repayment Plan Loans
and Bankruptcy Plan Loans" herein and "The Trusts--Characteristics of
Loans--Re-Performing Loans" in the prospectus.
The following tables sets forth additional information as of the cut-off
date with respect to the mortgage loans with respect to the product types above:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
GROUP I LOANS BY PRODUCT TYPES
DELINQUENCY WEIGHTED
AS OF THE AVERAGE
NUMBER CUT-OFF DATE LOAN-TO- WEIGHTED
OF PERCENT OF ----------------- VALUE AVERAGE
GROUP I PRINCIPAL GROUP I 30-59 60-89 RATIO AT SEASONING
PRODUCT TYPE LOANS BALANCE LOANS CURRENT DAYS DAYS ORIGINATION (MONTHS)
------------ ------- --------- ---------- ------- ------- ------- ----------- ----------
<S> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C>
PROGRAM VIOLATIONS....... 708 $95,028,688 75.06% 95.74% 3.93% 0.33 % 80% 4
SEASONED LOANS 299 27,009,696 21.34 92.81 6.74 0.45 77 54
RE-PERFORMING LOANS...... 66 4,558,991 3.60 78.92 14.06 6.37 82 45
----- --------- ---- ----- ----- ---- -- --
TOTAL OR WEIGHTED AVERAGE 1,073 $126,597,345 100.00% 94.51% 4.89% 0.57% 79% 16
===== ============ ======= ====== ====== ===== === ==
</TABLE>
S-43
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
GROUP II LOANS BY PRODUCT TYPES
DELINQUENCY WEIGHTED
AS OF THE AVERAGE
NUMBER CUT-OFF DATE LOAN-TO- WEIGHTED
OF PERCENT OF -------------- VALUE AVERAGE
GROUP II PRINCIPAL GROUP II 30-59 60-89 RATIO AT SEASONING
PRODUCT TYPE LOANS BALANCE LOANS CURRENT DAYS DAYS ORIGINATION (MONTHS)
------------ ----- --------- --------- ------- ----- ------ ----------- --------
<S> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C>
PROGRAM VIOLATIONS....... 572 $84,684,819 60.19% 96.13% 3.26% 0.61% 77% 4
SEASONED LOANS........... 314 49,220,124 34.98 95.70 4.13 0.17 76 50
RE-PERFORMING LOANS...... 60 6,794,751 4.83 86.74 9.30 3.96 77 37
-- --------- ------ ----- ---- ---- -- --
TOTAL OR WEIGHTED AVERAGE 946 $140,699,695 100.00% 95.53% 3.85% 0.62% 76% 22
=== ============ ====== ===== ==== ==== == ==
</TABLE>
o The Re-Performing Loans have made at least an aggregate of their three most
recent scheduled monthly payments or four of their last six scheduled
monthly payments under their repayment plan or bankruptcy plan, except as
provided in this prospectus supplement.
For a description of the methodology used to categorize mortgage loans as
delinquent in the above tables, see "Pooling and Servicing Agreement--The Master
Servicer" in this prospectus supplement.
RESIDENTIAL FUNDING
Residential Funding will be responsible for master servicing the mortgage
loans. These responsibilities will include the receipt of funds from
subservicers, the reconciliation of servicing activity with respect to the
mortgage loans, investor reporting, remittances to the trustee to accommodate
distributions to certificateholders, follow up with subservicers with respect to
mortgage loans that are delinquent or for which servicing decisions may need to
be made, management and liquidation of mortgaged properties acquired by
foreclosure or deed in lieu of foreclosure, notices and other responsibilities
as detailed in the pooling and servicing agreement.
Residential Funding and its affiliates are active purchasers of
non-conforming and subprime mortgage loans and have sold a substantial amount of
mortgage loans that do not present the special risk factors presented by the
mortgage loans as described in this prospectus supplement. Residential Funding
serves as the master servicer for transactions backed by most of these mortgage
loans. As a result of the program criteria and underwriting standards of the
mortgage loans, however, the mortgage loans may experience rates of delinquency,
foreclosure and loss that are higher than those experienced by other pools of
mortgage loans for which Residential Funding acts as master servicer.
SERVICING
Primary servicing will be provided with respect to 42.4% and 32.6% of the
Group I Loans and Group II Loans, respectively, by Cenlar Federal Savings Bank,
a wholly-owned subsidiary of Cenlar Capital Corp. Cenlar is subservicing these
mortgage loans pursuant to a subservicing agreement with the master servicer.
Cenlar is engaged primarily in the servicing industry and has been servicing
mortgage loans since 1965. Cenlar's executive offices are located at 425
Phillips Boulevard, Ewing, New Jersey 08618.
Primary servicing will be provided with respect to 21.9% and 44.2% of the
Group I Loans and Group II Loans, respectively, by HomeComings Financial
Network, Inc., a wholly-owned subsidiary of Residential Funding. HomeComings'
servicing operations are located at 9275 Sky Park Court, Third Floor, San Diego,
California 92123 and at 2711 North Haskell Avenue, Suite 900, Dallas, Texas
75204.
S-44
<PAGE>
SPECIAL SERVICING
Pursuant to the pooling and servicing agreement, Residential Funding will
be responsible for performing, directly or through an affiliate, special
servicing functions with respect to those mortgage loans that are currently
being subserviced by designated servicers. These mortgage loans comprise
approximately 64.3% and 76.8% of the Group I Loans and Group II Loans,
respectively. If and when a mortgage loan becomes 90 or more days delinquent,
Residential Funding will start the process of transferring the servicing for the
mortgage loan to Residential Funding's Asset Resolution Division, a division of
HomeComings.
Residential Funding's Asset Resolution Division specializes in the
servicing of sub-prime mortgage loans, the acquisition and management of
sub-performing and non-performing mortgage loans and the real property securing
these mortgage loans. Residential Funding's Asset Resolution Division's
servicing operations are located at 9275 Sky Park Court, Third Floor, San Diego,
California 92123.
Residential Funding's Asset Resolution Division is an approved "Special
Servicer" by Standard & Poor's and Fitch.
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
The description in this prospectus supplement of the mortgage pool and the
mortgaged properties is based upon the mortgage pool as of the cut-off date
after deducting payments due during the month of June 2000, except as otherwise
noted. Prior to the issuance of the certificates, mortgage loans may be removed
from the mortgage pool as a result of incomplete documentation or otherwise, if
the depositor deems that removal necessary or appropriate. A limited number of
other mortgage loans may be added to the mortgage pool prior to the issuance of
the certificates. The depositor believes that the information in this prospectus
supplement will be substantially representative of the characteristics of the
mortgage pool as it will be constituted at the time the certificates are issued
although the range of mortgage rates and maturities and some other
characteristics of the mortgage loans in the mortgage pool may vary.
A Current Report on Form 8-K will be available to purchasers of the
certificates and will be filed, together with the pooling and servicing
agreement, with the Commission within fifteen days after the initial issuance of
the certificates. In the event mortgage loans are removed from or added to the
mortgage pool as described in the preceding paragraph, that removal or addition
will be noted in the Current Report on Form 8-K.
THE CERTIFICATE INSURER
The following information has been supplied by Ambac Assurance Corporation,
the certificate insurer, for inclusion in this prospectus supplement. No
representation is made by the depositor, the master servicer, the underwriters
or any of their affiliates as to the accuracy or completeness of the
information.
The certificate insurer is a Wisconsin-domiciled stock insurance
corporation regulated by the Office of the Commissioner of Insurance of the
State of Wisconsin and licensed to do business in 50 states, the District of
Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico and the Territory of Guam. The
certificate insurer primarily insures newly-issued municipal and structured
finance obligations. The certificate insurer is a wholly owned subsidiary of
Ambac Financial Group, Inc. (formerly, AMBAC Inc.), a 100% publicly-held
company. Moody's Investors Service, Inc., Standard & Poor's and Fitch have each
assigned a triple-A financial strength rating to the certificate insurer.
The consolidated financial statements of the certificate insurer and
subsidiaries as of December 31, 1999 and December 31, 1998 and for each of the
years in the three-year period ended December 31, 1999 prepared in accordance
with generally accepted accounting principles, included in the Annual Report on
Form 10-K of Ambac Financial Group, Inc., which was filed with the Commission on
March 30, 2000; Commission File Number 1-10777, and the unaudited consolidated
financial statements of the certificate insurer and subsidiaries as of March 31,
2000 and for the periods ending March 31, 2000 and March 31, 1999, included in
the Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q of Ambac Financial Group, Inc., for the period
ended March 31, 2000, which was filed with the Commission on May 12, 2000, are
hereby incorporated by reference into this prospectus supplement and shall be
deemed to be a part of this prospectus
S-45
<PAGE>
supplement. Any statement contained in a document incorporated in this
prospectus supplement by reference shall be modified or superseded for the
purposes of this prospectus supplement to the extent that a statement contained
in this prospectus supplement by reference in this prospectus supplement also
modifies or supersedes the statement. Any statement so modified or superseded
shall not be deemed, except as so modified or superseded, to constitute a part
of this prospectus supplement.
All financial statements of the certificate insurer and subsidiaries
included in documents filed by Ambac Financial Group, Inc. with the Commission
pursuant to Section 13(a), 13(c), 14 or 15(d) of the Exchange Act subsequent to
the date of this prospectus supplement and prior to the termination of the
offering of the certificates shall be deemed to be incorporated by reference
into this prospectus supplement and to be a part hereof from the respective
dates of filing the documents.
The following table sets forth the capitalization of the certificate
insurer as of December 31, 1998, December 31, 1999, and March 31, 2000 in
conformity with generally accepted accounting principles.
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
AMBAC ASSURANCE CORPORATION
CAPITALIZATION TABLE
(DOLLARS IN MILLIONS)
DECEMBER 31, DECEMBER 31, MARCH 31,
1998 1999 2000
---- ---- -----
(UNAUDITED)
<S> <C> <C> <C>
Unearned premiums................................. $1,303 $1,442 $1,428
Other liabilities................................. 548 524 477
------ ------ ------
Total liabilities............................... 1,851 1,966 1,905
----- ----- -----
Stockholder's equity:
Common Stock.................................... 82 82 82
Additional paid-in capital...................... 541 752 752
Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss)... 138 (92) (36)
Retained earnings............................... 1,405 1,674 1,749
----- ----- -----
Total stockholder's equity...................... 2,166 2,416 2,547
----- ----- -----
Total liabilities and stockholder's equity...... $4,017 $4,382 $4,452
====== ====== ======
</TABLE>
For additional financial information concerning the certificate insurer,
see the audited financial statements of the certificate insurer incorporated by
reference in this prospectus supplement. Copies of the financial statements of
the certificate insurer incorporated by reference and copies of the certificate
insurer's annual statement for the year ended December 31, 1999 prepared in
accordance with statutory accounting standards are available, without charge,
from the certificate insurer. The address of the certificate insurer's
administrative offices and its telephone number are One State Street Plaza, 19th
Floor, New York, New York 10004 and (212) 668-0340.
The certificate insurer makes no representation regarding the certificates
or the advisability of investing in the certificates and makes no representation
regarding, nor has it participated in the preparation of, this prospectus
supplement other than the information supplied by the certificate insurer and
presented under the headings "The Certificate Insurer" and "Description of the
Certificates--Description of the Certificate Guaranty Insurance Policy" in this
prospectus supplement and in the financial statements incorporated in this
prospectus supplement by reference.
S-46
<PAGE>
DESCRIPTION OF THE CERTIFICATES
GENERAL
The certificates will be issued pursuant to the pooling and servicing
agreement. The following summaries describe provisions of the pooling and
servicing agreement. The summaries do not purport to be complete and are subject
to, and qualified in their entirety by reference to, the provisions of the
pooling and servicing agreement.
The certificates in the aggregate will evidence the entire beneficial
ownership interest in the trust. The trust will consist of:
o the mortgage loans;
o those assets as from time to time that are identified as deposited in
respect of the mortgage loans in the Custodial Account and in the
Payment Account as belonging to the trust;
o property acquired by foreclosure of the mortgage loans or deed in lieu
of foreclosure;
o any applicable primary mortgage insurance policies and standard hazard
insurance policies;
o the certificate guaranty insurance policy;
o the yield maintenance agreement and the reserve funds; and
o all proceeds of the foregoing.
Scheduled payments on the mortgage loans due on or before June 30, 2000, will
not be included in the trust.
The offered certificates will be issued in minimum denominations of $25,000
and integral multiples of $1 in excess of $25,000.
BOOK-ENTRY CERTIFICATES
The offered certificates will initially be issued as book-entry
certificates. Holders of the offered certificates may elect to hold their
certificates through DTC in the United States, or Clearstream Banking, societe
anonyme, formerly known as Cedelbank SA, or Clearstream, or Euroclear, in Europe
if they are participants of their systems, or indirectly through organizations
which are participants in their systems. The book-entry certificates will be
issued in one or more securities which equal the aggregate principal balance of
the certificates and will initially be registered in the name of Cede & Co., the
nominee of DTC. Clearstream and Euroclear will hold omnibus positions on behalf
of their participants through customers' securities accounts in Clearstream's
and Euroclear's names on the books of their respective depositaries which in
turn will hold the positions in customers' securities accounts in the
depositaries' names on the books of DTC. Investors may hold the beneficial
interests in the book-entry certificates in minimum denominations of $25,000 and
in integral multiples of $1 in excess of $25,000. Except as described below, no
beneficial owner of the certificates will be entitled to receive a physical
certificate, or definitive certificate, representing the security. Unless and
until definitive certificates are issued, it is anticipated that the only holder
of the certificates will be Cede & Co., as nominee of DTC. Certificate owners
will not be holders as that term is used in the pooling and servicing agreement.
The beneficial owner's ownership of a book-entry certificate will be
recorded on the records of the brokerage firm, bank, thrift institution or other
financial intermediary that maintains the beneficial owner's account for that
purpose. In turn, the financial intermediary's ownership of the book-entry
certificates will be recorded on the records of DTC, or of a participating firm
that acts as agent for the financial intermediary, whose interest will in turn
be recorded on the records of DTC, if the beneficial owner's financial
intermediary is not a DTC participant and on the records of Clearstream or
Euroclear, as appropriate.
Certificate owners will receive all payments of principal and interest on
the certificates from the trustee through DTC and DTC participants. While the
certificates are outstanding, except under the circumstances described below,
under the DTC rules, regulations and procedures, DTC is required to make
book-entry transfers among participants on
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whose behalf it acts in connection with the certificates and is required to
receive and transmit payments of principal and interest on the certificates.
Participants and indirect participants with whom certificate owners have
accounts for certificates are similarly required to make book-entry transfers
and receive and transmit the payments on behalf of their respective certificate
owners. Accordingly, although certificate owners will not possess physical
certificates, the DTC rules provide a mechanism by which certificate owners will
receive payments and will be able to transfer their interest.
Certificate owners will not receive or be entitled to receive definitive
certificates representing their respective interests in the certificates, except
under the limited circumstances described below. Unless and until definitive
certificates are issued, certificate owners who are not participants may
transfer ownership of certificates only through participants and indirect
participants by instructing the participants and indirect participants to
transfer the certificates, by book-entry transfer, through DTC for the account
of the purchasers of the certificates, which account is maintained with their
respective participants. Under the DTC rules and in accordance with DTC's normal
procedures, transfers of ownership of certificates will be executed through DTC
and the accounts of the respective participants at DTC will be debited and
credited. Similarly, the participants and indirect participants will make debits
or credits, as the case may be, on their records on behalf of the selling and
purchasing certificate owners.
Under a book-entry format, beneficial owners of the book-entry certificates
may experience some delay in their receipt of payments, since the payments will
be forwarded by the trustee to Cede & Co. Payments on certificates held through
Clearstream or Euroclear will be credited to the cash accounts of Clearstream
participants or Euroclear participants in accordance with the relevant system's
rules and procedures, to the extent received by the relevant depositary. The
payments will be subject to tax reporting in accordance with relevant United
States tax laws and regulations. Because DTC can only act on behalf of financial
intermediaries, the ability of a beneficial owner to pledge book-entry
certificates to persons or entities that do not participate in the depositary
system, or otherwise take actions relating to the book-entry certificates, may
be limited due to the lack of physical certificates for the book-entry
certificates. In addition, issuance of the book-entry certificates in book-entry
form may reduce the liquidity of the certificates in the secondary market since
some potential investors may be unwilling to purchase securities for which they
cannot obtain physical certificates.
DTC has advised the trustee that, unless and until definitive certificates
are issued, DTC will take any action permitted to be taken by the holders of the
book-entry certificates under the pooling and servicing agreement only at the
direction of one or more financial intermediaries to whose DTC accounts the
book-entry certificates are credited, to the extent that the actions are taken
on behalf of financial intermediaries whose holdings include the book-entry
certificates. Clearstream or the Euroclear operator, as the case may be, will
take any other action permitted to be taken by certificateholders under the
pooling and servicing agreement on behalf of a Clearstream participant or
Euroclear participant only in accordance with its relevant rules and procedures
and subject to the ability of the relevant depositary to effect the actions on
its behalf through DTC. DTC may take actions, at the direction of the related
participants, with respect to some certificates which conflict with actions
taken relating to other certificates.
Definitive certificates will be issued to beneficial owners of the
book-entry certificates, or their nominees, rather than to DTC, if (a) the
trustee determines that the DTC is no longer willing, qualified or able to
discharge properly its responsibilities as nominee and depository with respect
to the book-entry certificates and the trustee is unable to locate a qualified
successor, (b) the trustee elects to terminate a book-entry system through DTC
or (c) after the occurrence of an event of default under the pooling and
servicing agreement, beneficial owners having percentage interests aggregating
at least a majority of the certificate balance of the certificates advise the
DTC through the financial intermediaries and the DTC participants in writing
that the continuation of a book-entry system through DTC, or a successor to DTC,
is no longer in the best interests of beneficial owners.
Upon the occurrence of any of the events described in the immediately
preceding paragraph, the trustee will be required to notify all beneficial
owners of the occurrence of this event and the availability through DTC of
definitive certificates. Upon surrender by DTC of the global certificate or
certificates representing the book-entry certificates and instructions for
reregistration, the trustee will issue and authenticate definitive certificates,
and subsequently, the trustee will recognize the holders of the definitive
certificates as holders under the pooling and servicing agreement.
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Although DTC, Clearstream and Euroclear have agreed to the foregoing
procedures in order to facilitate transfers of certificates among participants
of DTC, Clearstream and Euroclear, they are under no obligation to perform or
continue to perform the procedures and the procedures may be discontinued at any
time. See Annex I to this prospectus supplement.
None of the depositor, the master servicer or the trustee will have any
liability for any actions taken by DTC or its nominee, including, without
limitation, actions for any aspect of the records relating to or payments made
on account of beneficial ownership interests in the certificates held by Cede,
as nominee for DTC, or for maintaining, supervising or reviewing any records
relating to the beneficial ownership interests.
For additional information regarding DTC, Clearstream, Euroclear and the
certificates, see "Description of the Securities--Form of Securities" in the
prospectus.
GLOSSARY OF TERMS
The following terms are given the meanings shown below to help describe the
cash flows on the certificates:
ACCRUED CERTIFICATE INTEREST--With respect to any class of Class A
Certificates and any distribution date, an amount equal to interest accrued
during the related Interest Accrual Period on its Certificate Principal Balance
immediately prior to that distribution date at the related Pass-Through Rate
less interest shortfalls from the mortgage loans in the related loan group, if
any, allocated to that class of Class A Certificates for that distribution date,
to the extent not covered by Excess Cash Flow, including in each case:
o the interest portions of Excess Losses on the mortgage loans in the
related loan group;
o the interest portion of any Advances with respect to the mortgage
loans in the related loan group that were made with respect to
delinquencies that were ultimately determined to be Excess Losses;
o with respect to the Class A-II Certificates, any Deferred Interest on
the Group II Loans allocated to the Class A-II Certificates as
described in "--Interest Distributions" below; and
o any other interest shortfalls with respect to the mortgage loans in
the related loan group not covered by Excess Cash Flow, including
interest shortfalls relating to the Soldier's and Sailor's Relief Act
of 1940, as amended, or similar legislation or regulations.
Any reductions will be allocated to the related class of Class A Certificates in
accordance with the amount of Accrued Certificate Interest that would have
accrued on the Class A Certificates absent these reductions; PROVIDED, HOWEVER,
that in the event that any shortfall described in the first two bullet points of
the previous sentence is allocated to any class of Class A Certificates, subject
to the terms of the certificate guaranty insurance policy, the amount of the
allocated shortfall will be drawn under the certificate guaranty insurance
policy and distributed to the holders of the related Class A Certificates. Any
shortfall described in the third or fourth bullet point of the second preceding
sentence will not be covered by the certificate guaranty insurance policy. In
addition, to the extent the Available Distribution Amount is less than Accrued
Certificate Interest on the Class A Certificates, the shortfall will be covered
by the certificate guaranty insurance policy, subject to its terms.
Notwithstanding the foregoing, if payments are not made as required under the
certificate guaranty insurance policy, any of these interest shortfalls may be
allocated to the Class A Certificates. See "Description of the
Certificates--Description of the Certificate Guaranty Insurance Policy." Accrued
Certificate Interest for the Class A-I Certificates, other than the Class A-I-1
Certificates, will be calculated on the basis of a 360-day year consisting of
twelve 30-day months. Accrued Certificate Interest for the Class A-I-1
Certificates and Class A-II Certificates will be calculated on the basis of the
actual number of days in the related Interest Accrual Period and a 360-day year.
AVAILABLE DISTRIBUTION AMOUNT--For any distribution date and each loan
group, an amount equal to the sum of the following amounts, net of amounts
reimbursable therefrom to the master servicer and any subservicer:
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o the aggregate amount of scheduled payments on the related mortgage
loans due during the related due period and received on or prior to
the related determination date, after deduction of the related master
servicing fees, any related subservicing fees in respect of the
mortgage loans and the related premium paid to the certificate insurer
for that distribution date;
o unscheduled payments, including mortgagor prepayments on the related
mortgage loans, Insurance Proceeds and Liquidation Proceeds from the
related mortgage loans, and proceeds from repurchases of and
substitutions for the related mortgage loans occurring during the
preceding calendar month;
o all Advances made for that distribution date in respect of the related
mortgage loans; and
o any amounts payable in respect of the related loan group under the
certificate guaranty insurance policy.
In addition to the foregoing amounts, with respect to unscheduled
collections on the mortgage loans, not including mortgagor prepayments, the
master servicer may elect to treat these amounts as included in the Available
Distribution Amount for a loan group for the distribution date in the month of
receipt, but is not obligated to do so. As described in this prospectus
supplement under "--Principal Distributions on the Class A Certificates," any
amount with respect to which this election is made shall be treated as having
been received on the last day of the preceding calendar month for the purposes
of calculating the amount of principal and interest distributions to any class
of certificates. With respect to any distribution date, the due period is the
calendar month in which the distribution date occurs and the determination date
is the 20th day of the month in which the distribution date occurs or, if the
20th day is not a business day, the immediately succeeding business day. The due
date with respect to each mortgage loan is the date on which the scheduled
monthly payment is due.
BANKRUPTCY AMOUNT--As of the cut-off date, an amount equal to $100,560 with
respect to Loan Group I and $125,832 with respect to Loan Group II. As of any
date of determination after the cut-off date and with respect to either loan
group, the Bankruptcy Amount shall equal the initial Bankruptcy Amount, less the
aggregate of any Bankruptcy Losses on the mortgage loans in that loan group up
to that date of determination. However, the provisions in this prospectus
supplement relating to subordination will not be applicable in connection with a
Realized Loss that is a Bankruptcy Loss so long as the master servicer has
notified the trustee in writing that the master servicer is diligently pursuing
any remedies that may exist in connection with the representations and
warranties made regarding the related mortgage loan and either
o the related mortgage loan is not in default with regard to payments
due thereunder; or
o delinquent payments of principal and interest under the related
mortgage loan and any premiums on any applicable primary hazard
insurance policy and any related escrow payments in respect of that
mortgage loan are being advanced on a current basis by the master
servicer or a subservicer.
BASIS RISK SHORTFALL--With respect to the Class A-I-1 Certificates and any
distribution date on which the related Net WAC Cap Rate is used to determine the
Pass-Through Rate of the Class A-I-1 Certificates, an amount equal to the excess
of (x) Accrued Certificate Interest calculated at a rate (not to exceed 10%)
equal to One-Month LIBOR plus the related Class A-I-1 Margin over (y) Accrued
Certificate Interest calculated using the related Net WAC Cap Rate. With respect
to the Class A-II Certificates and any distribution date on which the related
Net WAC Cap Rate is used to determine the Pass-Through Rate of the Class A-II
Certificates, an amount equal to the excess of (x) Accrued Certificate Interest
calculated at a rate (not to exceed 14%) equal to One-Month LIBOR plus the
related Class A-II Margin over (y) Accrued Certificate Interest calculated using
the related Net WAC Cap Rate.
BASIS RISK SHORTFALL CARRY-FORWARD AMOUNT--With respect to the Class A-I-1
Certificates and any distribution date, an amount equal to the aggregate amount
of related Basis Risk Shortfall for this class on that distribution date, plus
any unpaid related Basis Risk Shortfall from prior distribution dates, plus
interest thereon to the extent previously unreimbursed by Excess Cash Flow at a
rate equal to the lesser of (a) LIBOR plus the related Class A-I-1 Margin and
(b) 10%. With respect to the Class A-II Certificates and any distribution date,
an amount equal to the aggregate amount of related Basis Risk Shortfall for this
class on that distribution date, plus any unpaid related Basis
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Risk Shortfall from prior distribution dates, plus interest thereon to the
extent previously unreimbursed by Excess Cash Flow at a rate equal to the lesser
of (a) LIBOR plus the related Class A-II Margin and (b) 14%.
CERTIFICATE PRINCIPAL BALANCE--With respect to any offered certificate as
of any date of determination, an amount equal to its initial certificate
principal balance, plus any Deferred Interest added thereto, and reduced by the
aggregate of (a) all amounts allocable to principal previously distributed with
respect to the certificate, including amounts paid pursuant to the certificate
guaranty insurance policy, and (b) any reductions in its Certificate Principal
Balance deemed to have occurred in connection with allocations of Realized
Losses in the manner described in this prospectus supplement, other than any
amounts that have been paid pursuant to the certificate guaranty insurance
policy. The initial Certificate Principal Balance of the Class SB-I Certificates
and Class SB-II Certificates is equal to the excess, if any, of (a) the initial
aggregate Stated Principal Balance of the related mortgage loans over (b) the
initial aggregate Certificate Principal Balance of the related Class A
Certificates.
CLASS A-I-1 MARGIN--On any distribution date, 0.15% per annum.
CLASS A-II MARGIN--On any distribution date on or prior to the first
possible optional termination date, 0.33% per annum, and on each distribution
date thereafter, 0.66% per annum.
CUMULATIVE INSURANCE PAYMENTS--For either loan group, the aggregate of any
payment made with respect to the related Class A Certificates by the certificate
insurer under the certificate guaranty insurance policy, other than in respect
of Excess Losses, to the extent not previously reimbursed, plus interest on that
amount at the rate set forth in the insurance agreement.
DEFERRED INTEREST--With respect to a negative amortization loan and any
date of determination, the amount of deferred interest added to the Stated
Principal Balance thereof during the prior due period.
ELIGIBLE MASTER SERVICING COMPENSATION--For either loan group and any
distribution date, an amount equal to the lesser of (a) one-twelfth of 0.125% of
the Stated Principal Balance of the mortgage loans in that loan group
immediately preceding that distribution date and (b) the sum of the master
servicing fee payable to the master servicer in respect of its master servicing
activities and reinvestment income received by the master servicer on amounts
payable with respect to that distribution date with respect to the mortgage
loans in that loan group.
EXCESS CASH FLOW--For either loan group and with respect to any
distribution date, an amount generally equal to the sum of (a) one month's
interest on the related mortgage loans at the weighted average of the Net
Mortgage Rates for the related mortgage loans, to the extent paid or advanced,
weighted on the basis of their respective Stated Principal Balances as of the
immediately preceding distribution date, minus the related Interest Distribution
Amount and (b) the Overcollateralization Reduction Amount, if any, with respect
to that loan group.
EXCESS LOSS--With respect to each loan group, Special Hazard Losses in
excess of the related Special Hazard Amount, Fraud Losses in excess of the
related Fraud Loss Amount, Bankruptcy Losses in excess of the related Bankruptcy
Amount, related losses occasioned by war, civil insurrection, certain
governmental actions, nuclear reaction and other risks which, when added to the
aggregate of such Realized Losses for all preceding due periods, exceed the
limit set forth in the pooling and servicing agreement.
EXCESS OVERCOLLATERALIZATION AMOUNT--With respect to any distribution date
and either loan group, the excess, if any, of the related Overcollateralization
Amount on that distribution date over the related Required Overcollateralization
Amount.
FRAUD LOSS AMOUNT--An amount initially equal to $3,797,920 with respect to
Loan Group I and $4,220,991 with respect to Loan Group II. As of any date of
determination after the cut-off date and with respect to either loan group, the
Fraud Loss Amount shall equal:
o prior to the first anniversary of the cut-off date, an amount equal to
3% of the aggregate of the Stated Principal Balances of the mortgage
loans in the related loan group as of the cut-off date minus the
aggregate of any Realized Losses on the mortgage loans in the related
loan group due to Fraud Losses up to the date of determination;
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o from the first to the second anniversary of the cut-off date, an
amount equal to the lesser of (a) the related Fraud Loss Amount as of
the most recent anniversary of the cut-off date and (b) 2% of the
aggregate of the Stated Principal Balances of the mortgage loans in
the related loan group as of the most recent anniversary of the
cut-off date minus the aggregate of any Realized Losses on the
mortgage loans in the related loan group due to Fraud Losses since the
most recent anniversary of the cut-off date up to the date of
determination; and
o from the second to the fifth anniversary of the cut-off date, an
amount equal to the lesser of (a) the related Fraud Loss Amount as of
the most recent anniversary of the cut-off date and (b) 1% of the
aggregate of the Stated Principal Balances of the mortgage loans in
the related loan group as of the most recent anniversary of the
cut-off date minus the aggregate of any Realized Losses on the
mortgage loans in the related loan group due to Fraud Losses since the
most recent anniversary of the cut-off date up to the date of
determination.
On and after the fifth anniversary of the cut-off date, the Fraud Loss Amount
for each loan group shall be zero.
INTEREST ACCRUAL PERIOD--With respect to any distribution date and the
Class A-I Certificates, other than the Class A-I-1 Certificates, the prior
calendar month. With respect to any distribution date and the Class A-I-1
Certificates and Class A-II Certificates, (i) with respect to the distribution
date in July 2000, the period commencing on the closing date and ending on the
day preceding the distribution date in July 2000, and (ii) with respect to any
distribution date after the distribution date in July 2000, the period
commencing on the distribution date in the month immediately preceding the month
in which that distribution date occurs and ending on the day preceding that
distribution date.
INTEREST DISTRIBUTION AMOUNT--For either loan group and any distribution
date, the aggregate amount of Accrued Certificate Interest to be distributed to
the holders of the related Class A Certificates for that distribution date, to
the extent of the related Available Distribution Amount for that distribution
date, plus any Accrued Certificate Interest remaining unpaid from any prior
distribution date.
NET MORTGAGE RATE--With respect to any mortgage loan, the mortgage rate
thereon minus (i) the rates at which the master servicing and subservicing fees
are paid and (ii) the rate at which the related premium for the certificate
guaranty insurance policy is paid; provided, that for purposes of this
calculation, the rate at which the related premium for the certificate guaranty
insurance policy is paid shall be multiplied by a fraction equal to the
aggregate Certificate Principal Balance of the related Class A Certificates over
the aggregate Stated Principal Balance of the mortgage loans in the related loan
group.
NET WAC CAP RATE--With respect to any distribution date and the Class A-I
Certificates and Class A-II Certificates, the weighted average of the Net
Mortgage Rates of the Group I Loans and Group II Loans, respectively,
multiplied, in the case of the Class A-I-1 Certificates and Class A-II
Certificates, by a fraction equal to 30 divided by the actual number of days in
the related Interest Accrual Period.
ONE-MONTH LIBOR--The London interbank offered rate for one-month United
States Dollar deposits determined as described in this prospectus supplement.
OVERCOLLATERALIZATION AMOUNT--With respect to any distribution date and
each loan group, the excess, if any, of the aggregate Stated Principal Balances
of the mortgage loans in the related loan group before giving effect to
distributions of principal to be made on that distribution date, over the
aggregate Certificate Principal Balance of the related Class A Certificates as
of such date, before taking into account distributions of principal to be made
on that distribution date.
OVERCOLLATERALIZATION INCREASE AMOUNT--With respect to any distribution
date and each loan group, an amount equal to the lesser of (i) the related
Excess Cash Flow for that distribution date and (ii) the excess, if any, of (x)
the related Required Overcollateralization Amount for that distribution date
over (y) the related Overcollateralization Amount for that distribution date;
provided, that on the first distribution date, the Overcollateralization
Increase Amount for each loan group shall be zero.
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OVERCOLLATERALIZATION REDUCTION AMOUNT--With respect to any distribution
date and each loan group for which the Excess Overcollateralization Amount is,
or would be, after taking into account all other distributions to be made on
that distribution date, greater than zero, an amount equal to the lesser of (i)
the related Excess Overcollateralization Amount for that distribution date and
(ii) any amounts described in clauses (b)(i) through (iv) of the definition of
"Principal Distribution Amount" for that loan group for that distribution date.
PASS-THROUGH RATE--With respect to the Class A-I Certificates, other than
the Class A-I-1 Certificates, and any distribution date, the lesser of (i) the
fixed rate listed on page S-5 and (ii) the related Net WAC Cap Rate. With
respect to the Class A-I-1 Certificates and any distribution date, the least of
(i) One-Month LIBOR plus the related Class A-I-1 Margin, (ii) 10.00% per annum
and (iii) the related Net WAC Cap Rate. With respect to the Class A-II
Certificates and any distribution date, the least of (i) One-Month LIBOR plus
the related Class A-II Margin, (ii) 14.00% per annum and (iii) the related Net
WAC Cap Rate. The Pass-Through Rate on the Class A Certificates for the current
and immediately preceding Interest Accrual Period may be obtained by telephoning
the Trustee at (800) 524-9472.
PREPAYMENT INTEREST SHORTFALLS--With respect to any distribution date and
either loan group, the aggregate shortfall, if any, in collections of interest
resulting from mortgagor prepayments on the related mortgage loans during the
preceding calendar month. These shortfalls will result because interest on
prepayments in full is distributed only to the date of prepayment, and because
no interest is distributed on prepayments in part, as these prepayments in part
are applied to reduce the outstanding principal balance of the mortgage loans as
of the due date immediately preceding the date of prepayment. No assurance can
be given that the amounts available to cover Prepayment Interest Shortfalls will
be sufficient therefor. See "--Interest Distributions," "--Overcollateralization
Provisions" and "Pooling and Servicing Agreement--Servicing and Other
Compensation and Payment of Expenses" in this prospectus supplement. The
certificate guaranty insurance policy will not cover any Prepayment Interest
Shortfalls.
PRINCIPAL DISTRIBUTION AMOUNT--On any distribution date and with respect to
each loan group, the lesser of (a) the excess of (i) the related Available
Distribution Amount over (ii) the related Interest Distribution Amount and (b)
the aggregate amount described below:
(i) the principal portion of all scheduled monthly payments on the
mortgage loans in the related loan group received or Advanced with respect
to the related due period;
(ii) the principal portion of all proceeds of the repurchase of
mortgage loans in the related loan group, or, in the case of a
substitution, amounts representing a principal adjustment, as required by
the pooling and servicing agreement during the preceding calendar month;
(iii) the principal portion of all other unscheduled collections
received on the mortgage loans in the related loan group during the
preceding calendar month, or deemed to be received during the preceding
calendar month, including, without limitation, full and partial Principal
Prepayments made by the respective mortgagors, to the extent not
distributed in the preceding month;
(iv) the principal portion of any Realized Losses, other than Excess
Losses, incurred, or deemed to have been incurred, on any mortgage loans in
the related loan group in the calendar month preceding that distribution
date to the extent covered by related Excess Cash Flow for that
distribution date as described under "--Overcollateralization Provisions"
below; and
(v) except on the first distribution date, the amount of any related
Overcollateralization Increase Amount for that distribution date;
MINUS
(vi) the amount of any related Overcollateralization Reduction Amount
for that distribution date; and
(vii) in the case of the Group II Loans, the amount of any Deferred
Interest paid out of principal collections on the Group II Loans as part of
the related Interest Distribution Amount for that distribution date, as
described under "--Interest Distributions" below.
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In no event will the Principal Distribution Amount for either loan group on
any distribution date be less than zero or greater than the outstanding
Certificate Principal Balance of the related Class A Certificates.
REQUIRED OVERCOLLATERALIZATION AMOUNT--With respect to any distribution
date and each loan group, the required level of the related
Overcollateralization Amount as set forth in the pooling and servicing
agreement. These amounts may be reduced from time to time with the consent of
the certificate insurer and notification to the rating agencies.
SPECIAL HAZARD AMOUNT--An amount initially equal to $2,311,056 with respect
to Loan Group I and $1,406,997 with respect to Loan Group II. As of any date of
determination following the cut-off date and with respect to each loan group,
the Special Hazard Amount shall equal the respective initial Special Hazard
Amount less the sum of (A) the aggregate of any Realized Losses on the mortgage
loans in the related loan group due to Special Hazard Losses and (B) the related
adjustment amount. The adjustment amount for each loan group will be equal to an
amount calculated under the terms of the pooling and servicing agreement.
MULTIPLE LOAN GROUP STRUCTURE
The mortgage loans in the trust consist of the Group I Loans and Group II
Loans, as described above under "Description of the Mortgage Pool."
Distributions of principal on the Class A-I Certificates and Class A-II
Certificates will be based primarily on principal received or advanced with
respect to the Group I Loans and Group II Loans, respectively. However, the
Excess Cash Flow for a loan group will be available to pay amounts related to
the following for the non-related loan group:
o creating overcollateralization;
o covering Realized Losses;
o reimbursing the certificate insurer for Cumulative Insurance Payments;
o covering Prepayment Interest Shortfalls; and
o covering Basis Risk Shortfalls on the Class A-1-I Certificates or
Class A-II Certificates.
See "--Overcollateralization Provisions" in this prospectus supplement.
INTEREST DISTRIBUTIONS
On each distribution date, holders of each class of Class A Certificates
will be entitled to receive interest distributions in an amount equal to the
related Accrued Certificate Interest thereon for that distribution date to the
extent of the related Available Distribution Amount for that distribution date,
plus any Accrued Certificate Interest remaining unpaid from any prior
distribution date, less any related Prepayment Interest Shortfalls for that
distribution date not covered by Eligible Master Servicing Compensation or
Excess Cash Flow as described below.
Any Prepayment Interest Shortfalls which are not so covered will be
allocated to the related Class A Certificates in accordance with the amount of
Accrued Certificate Interest that would have accrued on that certificate absent
these shortfalls, will accrue interest at the applicable Pass-Through Rate on
that class of Class A Certificates, as adjusted from time to time, and will be
paid, together with interest thereon, on that distribution date or future
distribution dates only to the extent of any Excess Cash Flow available therefor
on that distribution date.
In addition, if the Pass-Through Rate on the Class A-I-1 Certificates or
Class A-II Certificates is equal to the related Net WAC Cap Rate, Basis Risk
Shortfalls will occur.
The ratings assigned to the Class A Certificates do not address the
likelihood of the receipt of any amounts in respect of any Prepayment Interest
Shortfalls or Basis Risk Shortfalls. The certificate guaranty insurance policy
will not cover any of these shortfalls and these shortfalls may remain unpaid on
the optional distribution date or final
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distribution date. See "--Overcollateralization Provisions" and "--Description
of the Certificate Guaranty Insurance Policy" below.
With respect to any distribution date, any Prepayment Interest Shortfalls
during the preceding calendar month will be offset:
o FIRST, by the master servicer, but only to the extent these Prepayment
Interest Shortfalls do not exceed Eligible Master Servicing
Compensation derived from that loan group,
o SECOND, by the master servicer, but only to the extent the Prepayment
Interest Shortfalls do not exceed Eligible Master Servicing
Compensation derived from the non-related loan group, and only to the
extent remaining after covering any Prepayment Interest Shortfalls
with respect to the non-related loan group and
o THIRD by Excess Cash Flow available therefor for that distribution
date from either loan group as described in "--Overcollateralization
Provisions" below.
To the extent that Deferred Interest causes a shortfall in interest
collections on the mortgage loans that would otherwise cause a shortfall in the
amount of interest payable to the Class A-II Certificateholders, the amount will
be paid using principal collections on the Group II Loans through the priority
of payment provisions described in this prospectus supplement. To the extent
that the aggregate Accrued Certificate Interest on the Class A-II Certificates
for any distribution date exceeds the related Available Distribution Amount for
that distribution date, the lesser of the excess and the aggregate amount of
Deferred Interest, if any, that is added to the principal balance of the
negative amortization loans on the due date occurring in the month in which that
distribution date occurs will be added to the Certificate Principal Balance of
the Class A-II Certificates in accordance with the amount of Accrued Certificate
Interest that would have accrued on that certificate absent this reduction and
will be subtracted from the amount of Accrued Certificate Interest otherwise
payable to the Class A-II Certificates for that distribution date.
DETERMINATION OF ONE-MONTH LIBOR
The Pass-Through Rate on the Class A-I-1 Certificates and Class A-II
Certificates for any Interest Accrual Period, including the initial Interest
Accrual Period, will be determined on the second LIBOR business day immediately
prior to the commencement of such Interest Accrual Period--the LIBOR rate
adjustment date.
On each LIBOR rate adjustment date, One-Month LIBOR shall be established by
the trustee and, as to any Interest Accrual Period, will equal the rate for one
month United States Dollar deposits that appears on the Dow Jones Telerate
Screen Page 3750 as of 11:00 a.m., London time, on such LIBOR rate adjustment
date. Dow Jones Telerate Screen Page 3750 means the display designated as page
3750 on the Dow Jones Telerate Service, or such other page as may replace page
3750 on that service for the purpose of displaying London interbank offered
rates of major banks. If the rate does not appear on this page, or any other
page as may replace that page on that service, or if the service is no longer
offered, any other service for displaying One-Month LIBOR or comparable rates as
may be selected by the trustee after consultation with the master servicer and
the certificate insurer, the rate will be the reference bank rate.
The reference bank rate will be determined on the basis of the rates at
which deposits in U.S. Dollars are offered by the reference banks, which shall
be three major banks that are engaged in transactions in the London interbank
market, selected by the trustee after consultation with the master servicer and
the certificate insurer, as of 11:00 a.m., London time, on the LIBOR rate
adjustment date to prime banks in the London interbank market for a period of
one month in amounts approximately equal to the Certificate Principal Balance of
the Class A-I-1 Certificates and Class A-II Certificates, respectively. The
trustee will request the principal London office of each of the reference banks
to provide a quotation of its rate. If at least two such quotations are
provided, the rate will be the arithmetic mean of the quotations. If on such
date fewer than two quotations are provided as requested, the rate will be the
arithmetic mean of the rates quoted by one or more major banks in New York City,
selected by the trustee after consultation with the master servicer and the
certificate insurer, as of 11:00 a.m., New York City time, on such date for
loans in U.S. Dollars to leading European banks for a period of one month in
amounts approximately equal to the Certificate Principal Balance of the Class
A-I-1 Certificates and Class A-II Certificates, respectively. If no such
quotations can be obtained, the rate will
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be One-Month LIBOR for the prior distribution date; provided however, if, under
the priorities described above, One- Month LIBOR for a distribution date would
be based on One-Month LIBOR for the previous distribution date for the third
consecutive distribution date, the trustee, after consultation with the
certificate insurer, shall select an alternative comparable index over which the
trustee has no control, used for determining one-month Eurodollar lending rates
that is calculated and published or otherwise made available by an independent
party. LIBOR business day means any day other than a Saturday or a Sunday or a
day on which banking institutions in the city of London, England are required or
authorized by law to be closed.
The establishment of One-Month LIBOR by the trustee and the trustee's
subsequent calculation of the Pass- Through Rate applicable to the Class A-I-1
Certificates and Class A-II Certificates for the relevant Interest Accrual
Period, in the absence of manifest error, will be final and binding.
PRINCIPAL DISTRIBUTIONS ON THE CLASS A CERTIFICATES
Holders of each class of Class A Certificates will be entitled to receive
on each distribution date, to the extent of the portion of the related Available
Distribution Amount remaining after the related Interest Distribution Amount is
distributed and in the manner set forth below, a distribution allocable to
principal equal to the related Principal Distribution Amount.
The Principal Distribution Amount with respect to Loan Group I will be
distributed on each distribution date to the Class A-I-1, Class A-I-2, Class
A-I-3 and Class A-I-4 Certificates, in that order, in each case in reduction of
the Certificate Principal Balance thereof, until the Certificate Principal
Balance thereof has been reduced to zero.
The Principal Distribution Amount with respect to Loan Group II will be
distributed on each distribution date to the Class A-II Certificates, until the
Certificate Principal Balance of that class has been reduced to zero.
OVERCOLLATERALIZATION PROVISIONS
The pooling and servicing agreement requires that, on each distribution
date, Excess Cash Flow on each loan group, if any, be applied on that
distribution date as an accelerated payment of principal on the related Class A
Certificates, but only in the manner and to the extent hereafter described.
Excess Cash Flow for a loan group will be applied on any distribution date as
follows:
FIRST, to pay to the holders of the related Class A Certificates, the
principal portion of Realized Losses (other than Excess Losses) incurred on
the mortgage loans in the related loan group for the preceding calendar
month;
SECOND, to pay to the holders of the non-related Class A Certificates,
the principal portion of Realized Losses (other than Excess Losses)
incurred on the mortgage loans in the non-related loan group for the
preceding calendar month, to the extent not covered by the Excess Cash Flow
for that non-related loan group;
THIRD, to pay to the certificate insurer any Cumulative Insurance
Payments relating to that loan group;
FOURTH, to pay to the certificate insurer any Cumulative Insurance
Payments relating to the non-related loan group, to the extent not covered
by the Excess Cash Flow for that non-related loan group;
FIFTH, to pay any Overcollateralization Increase Amount for the
non-related loan group to the non-related Class A Certificates, but only to
the extent the aggregate Certificate Principal Balance of the non-related
Class A Certificates exceeds the aggregate Stated Principal Balance of the
non-related mortgage loans after application of the Excess Cash Flow for
that non-related loan group;
SIXTH, except on the first distribution date, to pay any related
Overcollateralization Increase Amount to the related Class A Certificates;
SEVENTH, except on the first distribution date, to pay any
Overcollateralization Increase Amount for the non- related loan group to
the non-related Class A Certificates not covered pursuant to clause FIFTH
above, to the extent
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not covered by the Excess Cash Flow for that non-related loan group;
EIGHTH, to pay the holders of the related Class A Certificates, based
on Accrued Certificate Interest otherwise due thereon, the amount of any
related Prepayment Interest Shortfalls allocated thereto with respect to
the mortgage loans in the related loan group for that distribution date, to
the extent not covered by the Eligible Master Servicing Compensation for
the related loan group on that distribution date;
NINTH, to pay the holders of the non-related Class A Certificates,
based on Accrued Certificate Interest otherwise due thereon, the amount of
any Prepayment Interest Shortfalls allocated thereto with respect to the
mortgage loans in the non-related loan group for that distribution date, to
the extent not covered by the Eligible Master Servicing Compensation for
the non-related loan group on that distribution date, and to the extent not
covered by the Excess Cash Flow for that non-related loan group;
TENTH, to pay to the holders of the related Class A Certificates,
based on unpaid Prepayment Interest Shortfalls previously allocated
thereto, any Prepayment Interest Shortfalls remaining unpaid from prior
distribution dates together with interest thereon;
ELEVENTH, to pay to the holders of the non-related Class A
Certificates, based on unpaid Prepayment Interest Shortfalls previously
allocated thereto, any Prepayment Interest Shortfalls remaining unpaid from
prior distribution dates together with interest thereon, to the extent not
covered by the Excess Cash Flow for that non-related loan group;
TWELFTH, with respect to the remaining Excess Cash Flow for the Group
I Loans, to a reserve fund to pay to the holders of the Class A-I-1
Certificates the related Basis Risk Shortfall Carry-Forward Amount, and
with respect to the remaining Excess Cash Flow for the Group II Loans, to a
reserve fund to pay to the holders of the Class A-II Certificates the
related Basis Risk Shortfall Carry-Forward Amount;
THIRTEENTH, with respect to the remaining Excess Cash Flow for the
Group I Loans, to a reserve fund to pay to the holders of the Class A-II
Certificates the related Basis Risk Shortfall Carry-Forward Amount to the
extent not covered by the Excess Cash Flow for the Group II Loans , and
with respect to the remaining Excess Cash Flow for the Group II Loans, to a
reserve fund to pay to the holders of the Class A-I-1 Certificates the
related Basis Risk Shortfall Carry-Forward Amount to the extent not covered
by the Excess Cash Flow for the Group I Loans; and
FOURTEENTH, to pay to the holders of the related Class SB Certificates
any balance remaining, in accordance with the terms of the pooling and
servicing agreement.
The pooling and servicing agreement requires that the Excess Cash Flow for
each loan group, to the extent available as described above, will be applied as
an accelerated payment of principal first, on the related class of Class A
Certificates, and then to the non-related class of Class A Certificates, in each
case to the extent that the Required Overcollateralization Amount for that class
exceeds the related Overcollateralization Amount for that class as of that
distribution date. The application of Excess Cash Flow to the payment of
principal on the Class A Certificates has the effect of accelerating the
amortization of the Class A Certificates relative to the amortization of the
mortgage loans.
In the event that the Required Overcollateralization Amount for either loan
group is permitted to decrease or "step down" on a distribution date, a portion
of the principal which would otherwise be distributed to the holders of the
related Class A Certificates on that distribution date shall not be distributed
to the holders of the related Class A Certificates on that distribution date.
This has the effect of decelerating the amortization of those Class A
Certificates relative to the amortization of the related mortgage loans, and of
reducing the related Overcollateralization Amount.
ALLOCATION OF LOSSES
Subject to its terms, the certificate guaranty insurance policy will cover
all Realized Losses allocated to the Class A Certificates. However, if payments
are not made as required under the certificate guaranty insurance policy,
Realized Losses on the mortgage loans will be allocable to the related Class A
Certificates based on the following priorities.
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Realized Losses that are not Excess Losses with respect to the mortgage
loans in each loan group will be allocated or covered as follows: FIRST, to the
related Excess Cash Flow for the related distribution date; SECOND, to the
non-related Excess Cash Flow for the related distribution date; THIRD, by the
reduction of the related Overcollateralization Amount until reduced to zero;
FOURTH, by the reduction of the non-related Overcollateralization Amount until
reduced to zero; and FIFTH, for losses on the Group I Loans, to all of the Class
A-I Certificates on a pro rata basis, and for losses on the Group II Loans, to
the Class A-II Certificates, provided, that any allocation of a Realized Loss to
a Class A Certificate shall be covered by the certificate guaranty insurance
policy.
Any Excess Losses will be covered by the certificate guaranty insurance
policy; provided, that if a default by the certificate insurer exists, these
losses on the Group I Loans will be allocated to all of the Class A-I
Certificates on a pro rata basis, and on the Group II Loans will be allocated to
the Class A-II Certificates, in each case in an aggregate amount equal to the
percentage of the loss equal to the amount by which the then aggregate
Certificate Principal Balance of the related Class A Certificates exceeds the
then aggregate Stated Principal Balance of the related mortgage loans.
With respect to any defaulted mortgage loan that is finally liquidated,
through foreclosure sale, disposition of the related mortgaged property if
acquired on behalf of the certificateholders by deed in lieu of foreclosure, or
otherwise, the amount of loss realized, if any, will equal the portion of the
Stated Principal Balance remaining, if any, plus interest thereon through the
date of liquidation, after application of all amounts recovered, net of amounts
reimbursable to the master servicer or the subservicer for Advances and
expenses, including attorneys' fees, towards interest and principal owing on the
mortgage loan. This amount of loss realized and any Special Hazard Losses, Fraud
Losses, Bankruptcy Losses, except for Bankruptcy Losses that result from an
extension of the maturity of a mortgage loan, and Extraordinary Losses are
referred to in this prospectus supplement as Realized Losses.
The principal portion of any Realized Loss, other than a debt service
reduction, allocated to a Class A Certificate will be allocated in reduction of
its Certificate Principal Balance. The interest portion of any Realized Loss,
other than a debt service reduction, allocated to a Class A Certificate will be
allocated in reduction of its Accrued Certificate Interest for the related
distribution date. In addition, any allocation of Realized Loss may be made by
operation of the payment priority for the Class A Certificates set forth in this
prospectus supplement.
In order to maximize the likelihood of distribution in full of amounts of
interest and principal to be distributed to holders of the Class A Certificates
on each distribution date, holders of each class of Class A Certificates have a
right to distributions of the related Available Distribution Amount that is
prior to the rights of the holders of the Class SB Certificates and Class R
Certificates. In addition, overcollateralization will also increase the
likelihood of distribution of full amounts of interest and principal to the
Class A Certificates on each distribution date.
Each of the Special Hazard Amounts, Fraud Loss Amounts and Bankruptcy
Amounts may be subject to periodic reductions and may be subject to further
reduction or termination, without the consent of the Class A Certificateholders,
upon the written consent of the certificate insurer and the written confirmation
of each rating agency that the then- current rating of the Class A Certificates,
without taking into account the certificate guaranty insurance policy, will not
be adversely affected thereby.
THE YIELD MAINTENANCE AGREEMENT
On the closing date, the trustee will establish a reserve fund. The reserve
fund will be an asset of the trust fund but not of any REMIC. In addition, on
the closing date, the trustee, as trustee, will enter into the yield maintenance
agreement with Bear Stearns Financial Products, Inc., an affiliate of Bear,
Stearns & Co. Inc. The trustee will deposit into this reserve fund solely
amounts paid pursuant to the yield maintenance agreement.
On each distribution date, following all other distributions to be made on
that distribution date, all amounts in the reserve fund will be withdrawn and
paid as follows:
o first, to the Class A-I-1 Certificates, any unpaid related Basis Risk
Shortfall Carry-Forward Amount; and
o second, to Residential Funding.
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With respect to any distribution date, the yield maintenance agreement will
provide for the payment to the trustee of an amount equal to one-twelfth of the
product of (a) the rate, expressed as a fraction, equal to the excess of (x) the
lesser of (i) One-Month LIBOR (determined as described above under
"--Determination of One-Month LIBOR" above) and (ii) 9.85% per annum over (y)
8.70% per annum, and (b) the projected principal balance of the Class A-I-1
Certificates for that distribution date as listed in a schedule to the yield
maintenance agreement. Solely for purposes of the yield maintenance agreement,
the projected principal balance of the Class A-I-1 Certificates will be equal to
a balance based on the structuring assumptions, a 15% CPR for the Group I Loans
and a 28% CPR for the Group II Loans. After the distribution date in July 2002,
the yield maintenance agreement will terminate.
ADVANCES
Prior to each distribution date, the master servicer is required to make
Advances out of its own funds, advances made by a subservicer, or funds held in
the Custodial Account, with respect to any payments of principal and interest,
net of the related servicing fees, that were due on the mortgage loans during
the related due period and not received on the business day next preceding the
related determination date. With respect to the simple interest mortgage loans,
the related subservicer or the master servicer will make these Advances in an
amount equal to the related scheduled monthly payments as if they had been paid
on the related due date.
Advances are required to be made only to the extent they are deemed by the
master servicer to be recoverable from related late collections, Insurance
Proceeds, or Liquidation Proceeds. The purpose of making Advances is to maintain
a regular cash flow to the Certificateholders, rather than to guarantee or
insure against losses. The master servicer will not be required to make any
Advances with respect to reductions in the amount of the scheduled monthly
payments on the mortgage loans due to Debt Service Reductions or the application
of the Relief Act or similar legislation or regulations. In connection with the
failure by the related mortgagor to make a balloon payment, to the extent deemed
recoverable, the master servicer will Advance an amount equal to the monthly
payment for such balloon loan due prior to the balloon payment. Any failure by
the master servicer to make an Advance as required under the pooling and
servicing agreement will constitute an Event of Default thereunder, in which
case the trustee, as successor master servicer, will be obligated to make any
such Advance, in accordance with the terms of the pooling and servicing
agreement.
All Advances will be reimbursable to the master servicer on a first
priority basis from late collections, Insurance Proceeds and Liquidation
Proceeds from the mortgage loan as to which the unreimbursed Advance was made.
In addition, any Advances previously made which are deemed by the master
servicer to be nonrecoverable from related late collections, Insurance Proceeds
and Liquidation Proceeds may be reimbursed to the master servicer out of any
funds in the Custodial Account prior to distributions on the Class A
Certificates.
In addition, see "Description of the Securities--Withdrawals from the
Custodial Account" and "--Advances" in the prospectus.
DESCRIPTION OF THE CERTIFICATE GUARANTY INSURANCE POLICY
On the closing date, the certificate insurer will issue the certificate
guaranty insurance policy in favor of the trustee on behalf of the holders of
the offered certificates. The certificate guaranty insurance policy will
unconditionally and irrevocably guarantee specified payments on the offered
certificates equal to the sum of:
o any shortfall in amounts available on each distribution date in the
certificate account to pay one month's interest on the Certificate
Principal Balance of the Class A Certificates at the applicable
Pass-Through Rate, net of any interest shortfalls relating to Deferred
Interest, the Relief Act, Prepayment Interest Shortfalls and Basis
Risk Shortfalls allocated to the Class A Certificates;
o the principal portion on each distribution date of any Realized Loss
allocated to the Class A Certificates; and
o the Certificate Principal Balance of the Class A Certificates to the
extent unpaid on the distribution date in June 2030 or earlier
termination of the trust pursuant to the terms of the pooling and
servicing agreement.
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YIELD AND PREPAYMENT CONSIDERATIONS
GENERAL
The yields to maturity and the aggregate amount of distributions on the
Class A Certificates will be affected by the rate and timing of principal
payments on the mortgage loans and the amount and timing of mortgagor defaults
resulting in Realized Losses. These yields may be adversely affected by a higher
or lower than anticipated rate of principal payments on the mortgage loans. The
rate of principal payments on the mortgage loans will in turn be affected by the
amortization schedules of the mortgage loans, the rate and timing of principal
prepayments thereon by the mortgagors, liquidations of defaulted mortgage loans
and purchases of mortgage loans due to breaches of representations and
warranties. The timing of changes in the rate of prepayments, liquidations and
purchases of the mortgage loans may, and the timing of Realized Losses on the
mortgage loans will, significantly affect the yield to an investor in the Class
A Certificates, even if the average rate of principal payments experienced over
time is consistent with an investor's expectation. Since the rate and timing of
principal payments on the mortgage loans will depend on future events and on a
variety of factors, as described in this prospectus supplement, no assurance can
be given as to the rate or the timing of principal payments on the Class A
Certificates.
The rate and timing of principal payments on and the weighted average lives
of the Class A-I Certificates and Class A-II Certificates will be affected
primarily by the rate and timing of principal payments, including prepayments,
defaults, liquidations and purchases, on the mortgage loans in the related loan
group.
The mortgage loans may be prepaid by the mortgagors at any time in full or
in part, although approximately 25.2% and 36.4% of the Group I Loans and Group
II Loans, respectively, provide for payment of a prepayment charge, which may
have a substantial effect on the rate of prepayment. See "Description of the
Mortgage Pool--Mortgage Loan Characteristics--Group I Loans," "--Group II
Loans--Mortgage Loan Characteristics" and "Certain Legal Aspects of the
Loans--Default Interest and Limitations on Prepayments" in the prospectus. Some
state laws restrict the imposition of prepayment charges even when the mortgage
loans expressly provide for the collection of those charges. Although the
Alternative Mortgage Transactions Parity Act permits the collection of
prepayment charges in connection with some types of eligible mortgage loans,
preempting any contrary state law provisions, some states do not recognize the
preemptive authority of the Parity Act. As a result, it is possible that
prepayment charges may not be collected even on mortgage loans that provide for
the payment of these charges. The Group I Loans typically contain due-on-sale
clauses. The terms of the pooling and servicing agreement generally require the
master servicer or any subservicer, as the case may be, to enforce any
due-on-sale clause to the extent it has knowledge of the conveyance or the
proposed conveyance of the underlying mortgaged property and to the extent
permitted by applicable law, except that any enforcement action that would
impair or threaten to impair any recovery under any related insurance policy
will not be required or permitted. The Group II Loans (other than the
convertible mortgage loans) typically are assumable under some circumstances if,
in the sole judgment of the master servicer or subservicer, the prospective
purchaser of a mortgaged property is creditworthy and the security for the
mortgage loan is not impaired by the assumption. The convertible mortgage loans
are not assumable if the related mortgagor has exercised its option to convert
the mortgage loan into a fixed rate mortgage loan, in which case the mortgage
note with respect to such mortgage loan would generally contain a customary "due
on sale" provision. Prepayments, liquidations and purchases of the mortgage
loans will result in distributions to holders of the Class A Certificates of
principal amounts which would otherwise be distributed over the remaining terms
of the mortgage loans. Factors affecting prepayment, including defaults and
liquidations, of mortgage loans include changes in mortgagors' housing needs,
job transfers, unemployment, mortgagors' net equity in the mortgaged properties,
changes in the value of the mortgaged properties, mortgage market interest
rates, solicitations and servicing decisions. In addition, if prevailing
mortgage rates fell significantly below the mortgage rates on the mortgage
loans, the rate of prepayments, including refinancings, would be expected to
increase. Conversely, if prevailing mortgage rates rose significantly above the
mortgage rates on the mortgage loans, the rate of prepayments on the mortgage
loans would be expected to decrease.
Negative amortization may increase the risk of default. The outstanding
principal balance of a mortgage loan which is subject to negative amortization
increases by the amount of interest which is deferred as described in this
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prospectus supplement. During periods in which the outstanding principal balance
of a negative amortization loan is increasing due to the addition of Deferred
Interest thereto, the increasing principal balance of the negative amortization
loan may approach or exceed the value of the related mortgaged property, thus
increasing the likelihood of defaults as well as the amount of any loss
experienced with respect to any such negative amortization loan that is required
to be liquidated. Furthermore, each negative amortization loan provides for the
payment of any remaining unamortized principal balance of the negative
amortization loan (due to the addition of Deferred Interest, if any, to the
principal balance of the negative amortization loan) in a single payment at the
maturity of the negative amortization loan. Because the mortgagors may be so
required to make a larger single payment upon maturity, it is possible that the
default risk associated with the negative amortization loans is greater than
that associated with fully amortizing mortgage loans.
The convertible mortgage loans provide that the mortgagors may, during a
specified period of time, convert the adjustable interest rate of these mortgage
loans to a fixed interest rate. The Depositor is not aware of any publicly
available statistics that set forth principal prepayment or conversion
experience or conversion forecasts of adjustable-rate mortgage loans over an
extended period of time, and its experience with respect to adjustable-rate
mortgages is insufficient to draw any conclusions with respect to the expected
prepayment or conversion rates on the convertible mortgage loans. As is the case
with conventional, fixed-rate mortgage loans originated in a high interest rate
environment which may be subject to a greater rate of principal prepayments when
interest rates decrease, adjustable-rate mortgage loans may be subject to a
greater rate of principal prepayments (or purchases by the related subservicer
or the master servicer) due to their refinancing or conversion to fixed interest
rate loans in a low interest rate environment. For example, if prevailing
interest rates fall significantly, adjustable-rate mortgage loans could be
subject to higher prepayment and conversion rates than if prevailing interest
rates remain constant because the availability of fixed-rate or other
adjustable-rate mortgage loans at competitive interest rates may encourage
mortgagors to refinance their adjustable-rate mortgages to "lock in" a lower
fixed interest rate or to take advantage of the availability of such other
adjustable-rate mortgage loans, or, in the case of convertible adjustable-rate
mortgage loans, to exercise their option to convert the adjustable interest
rates to fixed interest rates. The conversion feature may also be exercised in a
rising interest rate environment as mortgagors attempt to limit their risk of
higher rates. Such a rising interest rate environment may also result in an
increase in the rate of defaults on the mortgage loans. As a result of the
mortgagor's exercise of the conversion option, the mortgage pool will include
fixed-rate mortgage loans.
The rate of defaults on the mortgage loans will also affect the rate and
timing of principal payments on the mortgage loans. In general, defaults on
mortgage loans are expected to occur with greater frequency in their early
years. Furthermore, the rate and timing of prepayments, defaults and
liquidations on the mortgage loans will be affected by the general economic
condition of the region of the country in which the related mortgaged properties
are located. The risk of delinquencies and loss is greater and prepayments are
less likely in regions where a weak or deteriorating economy exists, as may be
evidenced by, among other factors, increasing unemployment or falling property
values. In addition, the rate of default of mortgage loans secured by second
liens is likely to be greater than that mortgage home loans secured by first
liens on comparable properties. Also, because borrowers of balloon loans are
required to make a relatively large single payment upon maturity, it is possible
that the default risk associated with balloon loans is greater than that
associated with fully-amortizing mortgage loans. See "Risk Factors" in this
prospectus supplement.
A subservicer may allow the refinancing of a mortgage loan by accepting
prepayments thereon and permitting a new loan secured by a mortgage on the same
property. In the event of such a refinancing, the new loan would not be included
in the trust fund and, therefore, the refinancing would have the same effect as
a prepayment in full of the related mortgage loan. A subservicer or the master
servicer will, from time to time, implement programs designed to encourage
refinancing. These programs may include, without limitation, modifications of
existing loans, targeted solicitations, the offering of pre-approved
applications, reduced origination fees or closing costs, or other financial
incentives. Targeted solicitations may be based on a variety of factors,
including the credit of the borrower or the location of the mortgaged property.
In addition, subservicers or the master servicer may encourage the refinancing
of mortgage loans, including defaulted mortgage loans, that would permit
creditworthy borrowers to assume the outstanding indebtedness of these mortgage
loans.
The Repayment Plan Loans and Bankruptcy Plan Loans will have larger monthly
payments until the obligations under the plans are paid off in full. In
addition, these loans, due to their prior delinquency history, may have a
greater
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risk of delinquency and loss than newly-originated loans of comparable size and
geographical concentration without any delinquency history.
The amount of interest otherwise payable to holders of the Class A
Certificates will be reduced by any interest shortfalls on the mortgage loans to
the extent not covered by Excess Cash Flow or by the master servicer in each
case as described in this prospectus supplement, including Prepayment Interest
Shortfalls. These shortfalls will not be offset by a reduction in the servicing
fees payable to the master servicer or otherwise, except as described in this
prospectus supplement with respect to Prepayment Interest Shortfalls. See
"Description of the Certificates--Interest Distributions" in this prospectus
supplement for a discussion of possible shortfalls in the collection of
interest.
Because the mortgage rates on the Group I Loans and the Pass-Through Rate
on the Class A-I Certificates, other than Class A-I-1 Certificates, are
generally fixed, such rates will not change in response to changes in market
interest rates. Accordingly, if market interest rates or market yields for
securities similar to those classes of Class A-I Certificates were to rise, the
market value of these certificates may decline. In addition, the Pass-Through
Rate on those Class A-I Certificates is subject to a cap equal to the related
Net WAC Cap Rate. Therefore, the prepayment of the Group I Loans with higher
mortgage rates may result in a lower Pass-Through Rate on those classes of Class
A-I Certificates. In addition, as of the cut-off date, the Net WAC Cap Rate for
those classes of Class A-I Certificates is less than the Pass- Through Rate on
the Class A-I Certificates after the first possible optional termination date.
The Class A-I-1 Certificates may not always receive interest at a rate
equal to One-Month LIBOR plus the Class A-I-1 Margin. If the Net WAC Cap Rate
for the Class A-I-1 Certificates is less than both One-Month LIBOR plus the
Class A-I-1 Margin and 10%, the Pass-Through Rate on the Class A-I-1
Certificates will be limited to the related Net WAC Cap Rate. Thus, the yield to
investors in the Class A-I-1 Certificates will be sensitive to fluctuations in
the level of One-Month LIBOR and will be adversely affected by the application
of the related Net WAC Cap Rate. Therefore, the prepayment of the Group I Loans
with higher mortgage rates may result in a lower Pass-Through Rate on the Class
A-I-1 Certificates. If on any distribution date the application of the Net WAC
Cap Rate results in an interest payment lower than One-Month LIBOR plus the
Class A-I-1 Margin on the Class A-I-1 Certificates during the related Interest
Accrual Period, the value of the Class A-I-1 Certificates may be temporarily or
permanently reduced.
The Class A-II Certificates may not always receive interest at a rate equal
to One-Month LIBOR plus the Class A-II Margin. If the Net WAC Cap Rate for the
Class A-II Certificates is less than the lesser of One-Month LIBOR plus the
Class A-II Margin and 14%, the Pass-Through Rate on the Class A-II Certificates
will be limited to the related Net WAC Cap Rate. Thus, the yield to investors in
the Class A-II Certificates will be sensitive to fluctuations in the level of
One-Month LIBOR and will be adversely affected by the application of the related
Net WAC Cap Rate. Therefore, the prepayment of the Group II Loans with higher
mortgage rates may result in a lower Pass-Through Rate on the Class A-II
Certificates. If on any distribution date the application of the Net WAC Cap
Rate results in an interest payment lower than One-Month LIBOR plus the Class
A-II Margin on the Class A-II Certificates during the related Interest Accrual
Period, the value of the Class A-II Certificates may be temporarily or
permanently reduced.
Investors in the Class A-II Certificates should be aware that the Group II
Loans have adjustable interest rates. Consequently, the interest that becomes
due on these mortgage loans during the related due period may be less than
interest that would accrue on the Class A-II Certificates at the rate of
One-Month LIBOR plus the Class A-II Margin. In a rising interest rate
environment, the Class A-II Certificates may receive interest at the Net WAC Cap
Rate or at 14% for a protracted period of time. In addition, in this situation,
there would be little or no Excess Cash Flow to cover losses and to create
additional overcollateralization.
To the extent the related Net WAC Cap Rate is paid on the Class A-I-1
Certificates, the difference between the related Net WAC Cap Rate and the lesser
of One-Month LIBOR plus the Class A-I-1 Margin and 10% will create a shortfall
that will carry forward with interest thereon. This shortfall will not be
payable from the certificate guaranty insurance policy and will only be payable
from reserve funds that receive payments from Excess Cash Flow and the yield
maintenance agreement. These shortfalls may remain unpaid on the optional
distribution date and final distribution date.
S-62
<PAGE>
To the extent the related Net WAC Cap Rate is paid on the Class A-II
Certificates, the difference between the related Net WAC Cap Rate and the lesser
of One-Month LIBOR plus the Class A-II Margin and 14% will create a shortfall
that will carry forward with interest thereon. This shortfall will not be
payable from the certificate guaranty insurance policy and will only be payable
from reserve funds that receive payments from Excess Cash Flow. These shortfalls
may remain unpaid on the optional distribution date and final distribution date.
In addition, the yield to maturity on the Class A Certificates will depend
on, among other things, the price paid by the holders of the Class A
Certificates and the related Pass-Through Rate. The extent to which the yield to
maturity of a Class A Certificate is sensitive to prepayments will depend, in
part, upon the degree to which it is purchased at a discount or premium. In
general, if a Class A Certificate is purchased at a premium and principal
distributions thereon occur at a rate faster than assumed at the time of
purchase, the investor's actual yield to maturity will be lower than that
anticipated at the time of purchase. Conversely, if a Class A Certificate is
purchased at a discount and principal distributions thereon occur at a rate
slower than assumed at the time of purchase, the investor's actual yield to
maturity will be lower than that anticipated at the time of purchase.
FINAL SCHEDULED DISTRIBUTION DATES
Assuming a 0% prepayment assumption, no losses or delinquencies on the
mortgage loans, and no Excess Cash Flow on any distribution date, the final
distribution date on the Class A-I-1, Class A-I-2 and Class A-I-3 Certificates
will be as follows:
o for the Class A-I-1 Certificates, the distribution date in December
2014;
o for the Class A-I-2 Certificates, the distribution date in September
2019; and
o for the Class A-I-3 Certificates, the distribution date in July 2023.
The final scheduled distribution date with respect to the Class A-I-4
Certificates and Class A-II Certificates will be the distribution date in June
2030, which is the 360th distribution date. Due to losses and prepayments on the
mortgage loans, the final scheduled distribution date on each class of Class A
Certificates may be substantially earlier. In addition, the actual final
distribution date may be later than the final scheduled distribution date. The
certificate guaranty insurance policy guarantees the final payment of the Class
A Certificates on the distribution date in June 2030. No event of default under
the pooling and servicing agreement will arise or become applicable solely by
reason of the failure to retire the entire Certificate Principal Balance of any
class of Class A Certificates on or before its final scheduled distribution
date.
WEIGHTED AVERAGE LIFE
Weighted average life refers to the average amount of time that will elapse
from the date of issuance of a security to the date of distribution of net
reduction of principal balance of the security. The weighted average life of the
Class A Certificates will be influenced by, among other things, the rate at
which principal of the mortgage loans is paid, which may be in the form of
scheduled amortization, prepayments or liquidations.
The prepayment assumption used in this prospectus supplement with respect
to the mortgage loans, CPR, represents a constant rate of prepayment each month
relative to the then outstanding principal balance of a pool of mortgage loans.
An 15% CPR or a 28% CPR assumes a constant prepayment rate of 15% per annum or
28% per annum, respectively, of the then outstanding principal balance of the
related mortgage loans. CPR does not purport to be a historical description of
prepayment experience or a prediction of the anticipated rate of prepayment of
any pool of mortgage loans, including the mortgage loans in this mortgage pool.
The table set forth below has been prepared on the basis of assumptions as
described below regarding the weighted average characteristics of the mortgage
loans that are expected to be included in the trust as described under
"Description of the Mortgage Pool" in this prospectus supplement and their
performance. The table assumes, among other things, the following structuring
assumptions:
S-63
<PAGE>
o as of the date of issuance of the Class A Certificates, the mortgage
loans have the characteristics described in Appendix A hereto;
o the scheduled monthly payment for each mortgage loan has been based on
its outstanding balance, interest rate and remaining term to maturity
so that the mortgage loan will amortize in amounts sufficient for
repayment thereof over its remaining term to maturity;
o none of Residential Funding, the master servicer or the depositor will
repurchase any mortgage loan and the master servicer does not exercise
its option to purchase the mortgage loans and thereby cause a
termination of the trust on the optional termination date, except
where indicated;
o all delinquencies of payments due on or prior to the cut-off date are
brought current, and thereafter there are no delinquencies or Realized
Losses on the mortgage loans, and principal payments on the mortgage
loans will be timely received together with prepayments, if any, at
the constant percentages of CPR set forth in the table;
o there is no Prepayment Interest Shortfall, Basis Risk Shortfall,
Deferred Interest or any other interest shortfall in any month;
o payments on the Certificates will be received on the 25th day of each
month, commencing in July 2000;
o payments on the mortgage loans earn no reinvestment return;
o the expenses described under "Description of the
Certificates--Interest Distributions" will be paid from trust assets,
and there are no additional ongoing trust expenses payable out of the
trust;
o One-Month LIBOR remains constant at 6.650% per annum;
o there are no simple interest mortgage loans; and
o the certificates will be purchased on June 28, 2000.
The actual characteristics and performance of the mortgage loans will
differ from the assumptions used in constructing the table set forth below,
which is hypothetical in nature and is provided only to give a sense of how the
principal cash flows might behave under varying prepayment scenarios. For
example, it is very unlikely that the mortgage loans will prepay at a constant
percentage of CPR until maturity or that all of the mortgage loans will prepay
at the same rate of prepayment. Moreover, the diverse remaining terms to stated
maturity and mortgage rates of the mortgage loans could produce slower or faster
principal distributions than indicated in the table at the various constant
percentages of CPR specified, even if the weighted average remaining term to
stated maturity and weighted average mortgage rates of the mortgage loans in the
mortgage pool are as assumed. Any difference between the assumptions and the
actual characteristics and performance of the mortgage loans, or actual
prepayment experience, will affect the percentages of initial Certificate
Principal Balances of the certificates outstanding over time and the weighted
average lives of the Class A Certificates.
Subject to the foregoing discussion and assumptions, the following table
indicates the weighted average life of the Class A Certificates, and sets forth
the percentages of the initial Certificate Principal Balance of the Class A
Certificates that would be outstanding after each of the dates shown at various
constant percentages of CPR.
S-64
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
PERCENT OF INITIAL CERTIFICATE PRINCIPAL BALANCE OUTSTANDING AT THE
FOLLOWING PERCENTAGES OF CPR
CLASS A-I-1 CERTIFICATES
-------------------------------------------------
CPR FOR GROUP I LOANS 0% 8% 11% 15% 19% 23%
--------------------- -- -- --- --- ---- ---
CPR FOR GROUP II LOANS 0% 14% 21% 28% 35% 42%
---------------------- -- --- --- --- --- ---
DISTRIBUTION DATE
-----------------
<S> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C>
Initial Percentage............................... 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100%
June 2001........................................ 94 69 59 46 34 21
June 2002........................................ 90 42 25 3 0 0
June 2003........................................ 86 18 0 0 0 0
June 2004........................................ 81 0 0 0 0 0
June 2005........................................ 76 0 0 0 0 0
June 2006........................................ 71 0 0 0 0 0
June 2007........................................ 65 0 0 0 0 0
June 2008........................................ 58 0 0 0 0 0
June 2009........................................ 51 0 0 0 0 0
June 2010........................................ 43 0 0 0 0 0
June 2011........................................ 34 0 0 0 0 0
June 2012........................................ 25 0 0 0 0 0
June 2013........................................ 16 0 0 0 0 0
June 2014........................................ 1 0 0 0 0 0
June 2015........................................ 0 0 0 0 0 0
June 2016........................................ 0 0 0 0 0 0
June 2017........................................ 0 0 0 0 0 0
June 2018........................................ 0 0 0 0 0 0
June 2019........................................ 0 0 0 0 0 0
June 2020........................................ 0 0 0 0 0 0
June 2021........................................ 0 0 0 0 0 0
June 2022........................................ 0 0 0 0 0 0
June 2023........................................ 0 0 0 0 0 0
June 2024........................................ 0 0 0 0 0 0
June 2025........................................ 0 0 0 0 0 0
June 2026........................................ 0 0 0 0 0 0
June 2027........................................ 0 0 0 0 0 0
June 2028........................................ 0 0 0 0 0 0
June 2029........................................ 0 0 0 0 0 0
June 2030........................................ 0 0 0 0 0 0
Weighted Average Life in Years** (to Maturity)... 8.5 1.8 1.3 1.0 0.8 0.7
Weighted Average Life in Years** (to Call)....... 8.5 1.8 1.3 1.0 0.8 0.7
-------
</TABLE>
* Indicates a number that is greater than zero but less than 0.5%.
** The weighted average life of an Offered Certificate is determined by (i)
multiplying the net reduction, if any, of Certificate Principal Balance by
the number of years from the date of issuance of the Offered Certificate to
the related Distribution Date, (ii) adding the results, and (iii) dividing
the sum by the aggregate of the net reductions of the Certificate Principal
Balance described in (i) above.
THIS TABLE HAS BEEN PREPARED BASED ON THE STRUCTURING ASSUMPTION, INCLUDING THE
ASSUMPTIONS REGARDING THE CHARACTERISTICS AND PERFORMANCE OF THE MORTGAGE LOANS
WHICH DIFFER FROM THE ACTUAL CHARACTERISTICS AND PERFORMANCE THEREOF, AND SHOULD
BE READ IN CONJUNCTION THEREWITH.
(TABLE CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE.)
S-65
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
PERCENT OF INITIAL CERTIFICATE PRINCIPAL BALANCE OUTSTANDING AT THE
FOLLOWING PERCENTAGES OF CPR
CLASS A-I-2 CERTIFICATES
------------------------------------------
CPR FOR GROUP I LOANS 0% 8% 11% 15% 19% 23%
--------------------- -- -- --- --- ---- ---
CPR FOR GROUP II LOANS 0% 14% 21% 28% 35% 42%
---------------------- -- --- --- --- --- ---
DISTRIBUTION DATE
-----------------
<S> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C>
Initial Percentage............................... 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100%
June 2001........................................ 100 100 100 100 100 100
June 2002........................................ 100 100 100 100 72 40
June 2003........................................ 100 100 92 47 6 0
June 2004........................................ 100 92 49 0 0 0
June 2005........................................ 100 59 11 0 0 0
June 2006........................................ 100 28 0 0 0 0
June 2007........................................ 100 * 0 0 0 0
June 2008........................................ 100 0 0 0 0 0
June 2009........................................ 100 0 0 0 0 0
June 2010........................................ 100 0 0 0 0 0
June 2011........................................ 100 0 0 0 0 0
June 2012........................................ 100 0 0 0 0 0
June 2013........................................ 100 0 0 0 0 0
June 2014........................................ 100 0 0 0 0 0
June 2015........................................ 58 0 0 0 0 0
June 2016........................................ 45 0 0 0 0 0
June 2017........................................ 32 0 0 0 0 0
June 2018........................................ 17 0 0 0 0 0
June 2019........................................ * 0 0 0 0 0
June 2020........................................ 0 0 0 0 0 0
June 2021........................................ 0 0 0 0 0 0
June 2022........................................ 0 0 0 0 0 0
June 2023........................................ 0 0 0 0 0 0
June 2024........................................ 0 0 0 0 0 0
June 2025........................................ 0 0 0 0 0 0
June 2026........................................ 0 0 0 0 0 0
June 2027........................................ 0 0 0 0 0 0
June 2028........................................ 0 0 0 0 0 0
June 2029........................................ 0 0 0 0 0 0
June 2030........................................ 0 0 0 0 0 0
Weighted Average Life in Years** (to Maturity)... 16.0 5.3 4.0 3.0 2.4 1.9
Weighted Average Life in Years** (to Call)....... 16.0 5.3 4.0 3.0 2.4 1.9
-------
</TABLE>
* Indicates a number that is greater than zero but less than 0.5%.
** The weighted average life of an Offered Certificate is determined by (i)
multiplying the net reduction, if any, of Certificate Principal Balance by
the number of years from the date of issuance of the Offered Certificate to
the related Distribution Date, (ii) adding the results, and (iii) dividing
the sum by the aggregate of the net reductions of the Certificate Principal
Balance described in (i) above.
THIS TABLE HAS BEEN PREPARED BASED ON THE STRUCTURING ASSUMPTION, INCLUDING THE
ASSUMPTIONS REGARDING THE CHARACTERISTICS AND PERFORMANCE OF THE MORTGAGE LOANS
WHICH DIFFER FROM THE ACTUAL CHARACTERISTICS AND PERFORMANCE THEREOF, AND SHOULD
BE READ IN CONJUNCTION THEREWITH.
(Table continued on next page.)
S-66
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
PERCENT OF INITIAL CERTIFICATE PRINCIPAL BALANCE OUTSTANDING AT THE
FOLLOWING PERCENTAGES OF CPR
CLASS A-I-3 CERTIFICATES
-------------------------------------------
CPR FOR GROUP I LOANS 0% 8% 11% 15% 19% 23%
--------------------- -- -- --- --- ---- ---
CPR FOR GROUP II LOANS 0% 14% 21% 28% 35% 42%
---------------------- -- --- --- --- --- ---
DISTRIBUTION DATE
-----------------
<S> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C>
Initial Percentage............................... 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100%
June 2001........................................ 100 100 100 100 100 100
June 2002........................................ 100 100 100 100 100 100
June 2003........................................ 100 100 100 100 100 63
June 2004........................................ 100 100 100 97 44 0
June 2005........................................ 100 100 100 47 0 0
June 2006........................................ 100 100 72 5 0 0
June 2007........................................ 100 100 36 0 0 0
June 2008........................................ 100 69 4 0 0 0
June 2009........................................ 100 40 0 0 0 0
June 2010........................................ 100 14 0 0 0 0
June 2011........................................ 100 0 0 0 0 0
June 2012........................................ 100 0 0 0 0 0
June 2013........................................ 100 0 0 0 0 0
June 2014........................................ 100 0 0 0 0 0
June 2015........................................ 100 0 0 0 0 0
June 2016........................................ 100 0 0 0 0 0
June 2017........................................ 100 0 0 0 0 0
June 2018........................................ 100 0 0 0 0 0
June 2019........................................ 100 0 0 0 0 0
June 2020........................................ 78 0 0 0 0 0
June 2021........................................ 55 0 0 0 0 0
June 2022........................................ 30 0 0 0 0 0
June 2023........................................ 2 0 0 0 0 0
June 2024........................................ 0 0 0 0 0 0
June 2025........................................ 0 0 0 0 0 0
June 2026........................................ 0 0 0 0 0 0
June 2027........................................ 0 0 0 0 0 0
June 2028........................................ 0 0 0 0 0 0
June 2029........................................ 0 0 0 0 0 0
June 2030........................................ 0 0 0 0 0 0
Weighted Average Life in Years** (to Maturity)... 21.2 8.7 6.7 5.0 3.9 3.2
Weighted Average Life in Years** (to Call)....... 21.2 8.7 6.7 5.0 3.9 3.2
-------
</TABLE>
* Indicates a number that is greater than zero but less than 0.5%.
** The weighted average life of an Offered Certificate is determined by (i)
multiplying the net reduction, if any, of Certificate Principal Balance by
the number of years from the date of issuance of the Offered Certificate to
the related Distribution Date, (ii) adding the results, and (iii) dividing
the sum by the aggregate of the net reductions of the Certificate Principal
Balance described in (i) above.
THIS TABLE HAS BEEN PREPARED BASED ON THE STRUCTURING ASSUMPTION, INCLUDING THE
ASSUMPTIONS REGARDING THE CHARACTERISTICS AND PERFORMANCE OF THE MORTGAGE LOANS
WHICH DIFFER FROM THE ACTUAL CHARACTERISTICS AND PERFORMANCE THEREOF, AND SHOULD
BE READ IN CONJUNCTION THEREWITH.
(Table continued on next page.)
S-67
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
PERCENT OF INITIAL CERTIFICATE PRINCIPAL BALANCE OUTSTANDING AT THE
FOLLOWING PERCENTAGES OF CPR
CLASS A-I-4 CERTIFICATES
---------------------------------------------
CPR FOR GROUP I LOANS 0% 8% 11% 15% 19% 23%
--------------------- -- -- --- --- ---- ---
CPR FOR GROUP II LOANS 0% 14% 21% 28% 35% 42%
---------------------- -- --- --- --- --- ---
DISTRIBUTION DATE
-----------------
<S> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C>
Initial Percentage............................... 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100%
June 2001........................................ 100 100 100 100 100 100
June 2002........................................ 100 100 100 100 100 100
June 2003........................................ 100 100 100 100 100 100
June 2004........................................ 100 100 100 100 100 99
June 2005........................................ 100 100 100 100 96 75
June 2006........................................ 100 100 100 100 77 56
June 2007........................................ 100 100 100 85 61 43
June 2008........................................ 100 100 100 71 48 32
June 2009........................................ 100 100 88 58 38 24
June 2010........................................ 100 100 76 48 30 18
June 2011........................................ 100 95 66 40 23 13
June 2012........................................ 100 84 57 33 18 9
June 2013........................................ 100 75 48 27 14 6
June 2014........................................ 100 64 40 21 10 4
June 2015........................................ 100 52 32 15 7 2
June 2016........................................ 100 46 27 12 5 1
June 2017........................................ 100 40 23 10 3 1
June 2018........................................ 100 35 19 7 2 0
June 2019........................................ 100 30 16 6 1 0
June 2020........................................ 100 26 13 4 1 0
June 2021........................................ 100 22 10 3 * 0
June 2022........................................ 100 18 8 2 0 0
June 2023........................................ 100 14 6 1 0 0
June 2024........................................ 87 11 4 * 0 0
June 2025........................................ 71 8 3 0 0 0
June 2026........................................ 53 5 1 0 0 0
June 2027........................................ 34 2 0 0 0 0
June 2028........................................ 13 0 0 0 0 0
June 2029........................................ 0 0 0 0 0 0
June 2030........................................ 0 0 0 0 0 0
Weighted Average Life in Years** (to Maturity)... 26.1 16.8 13.9 11.0 8.9 7.3
Weighted Average Life in Years** (to Call)....... 25.9 14.7 11.6 8.8 7.0 5.7
-------
</TABLE>
* Indicates a number that is greater than zero but less than 0.5%.
** The weighted average life of an Offered Certificate is determined by (i)
multiplying the net reduction, if any, of Certificate Principal Balance by
the number of years from the date of issuance of the Offered Certificate to
the related Distribution Date, (ii) adding the results, and (iii) dividing
the sum by the aggregate of the net reductions of the Certificate Principal
Balance described in (i) above.
THIS TABLE HAS BEEN PREPARED BASED ON THE STRUCTURING ASSUMPTION, INCLUDING THE
ASSUMPTIONS REGARDING THE CHARACTERISTICS AND PERFORMANCE OF THE MORTGAGE LOANS
WHICH DIFFER FROM THE ACTUAL CHARACTERISTICS AND PERFORMANCE THEREOF, AND SHOULD
BE READ IN CONJUNCTION THEREWITH.
(Table continued on next page.)
S-68
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
PERCENT OF INITIAL CERTIFICATE PRINCIPAL BALANCE OUTSTANDING AT THE
FOLLOWING PERCENTAGES OF CPR
CLASS A-II CERTIFICATES
-----------------------------------------------
CPR FOR GROUP I LOANS 0% 8% 11% 15% 19% 23%
--------------------- -- -- --- --- ---- ---
CPR FOR GROUP II LOANS 0% 14% 21% 28% 35% 42%
---------------------- -- --- --- --- --- ---
DISTRIBUTION DATE
-----------------
<S> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C>
Initial Percentage............................... 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100%
June 2001........................................ 98 84 77 70 63 56
June 2002........................................ 97 71 60 49 40 31
June 2003........................................ 96 60 46 35 26 18
June 2004........................................ 94 51 36 25 16 10
June 2005........................................ 93 43 28 18 11 6
June 2006........................................ 91 36 22 12 7 3
June 2007........................................ 90 31 17 9 4 2
June 2008........................................ 88 26 13 6 2 1
June 2009........................................ 86 22 10 4 1 *
June 2010........................................ 84 18 8 3 1 0
June 2011........................................ 82 15 6 2 * 0
June 2012........................................ 80 13 4 1 0 0
June 2013........................................ 78 11 3 1 0 0
June 2014........................................ 76 9 2 * 0 0
June 2015........................................ 74 7 2 * 0 0
June 2016........................................ 71 6 1 0 0 0
June 2017........................................ 68 5 1 0 0 0
June 2018........................................ 65 4 * 0 0 0
June 2019........................................ 61 3 * 0 0 0
June 2020........................................ 57 2 * 0 0 0
June 2021........................................ 52 2 0 0 0 0
June 2022........................................ 47 1 0 0 0 0
June 2023........................................ 42 1 0 0 0 0
June 2024........................................ 36 * 0 0 0 0
June 2025........................................ 29 * 0 0 0 0
June 2026........................................ 21 0 0 0 0 0
June 2027........................................ 14 0 0 0 0 0
June 2028........................................ 6 0 0 0 0 0
June 2029........................................ 2 0 0 0 0 0
June 2030........................................ 0 0 0 0 0 0
Weighted Average Life in Years** (to Maturity)... 19.3 5.7 3.9 2.8 2.2 1.8
Weighted Average Life in Years** (to Call)....... 19.2 5.5 3.8 2.8 2.2 1.7
-------
</TABLE>
* Indicates a number that is greater than zero but less than 0.5%.
** The weighted average life of an Offered Certificate is determined by (i)
multiplying the net reduction, if any, of Certificate Principal Balance by
the number of years from the date of issuance of the Offered Certificate to
the related Distribution Date, (ii) adding the results, and (iii) dividing
the sum by the aggregate of the net reductions of the Certificate Principal
Balance described in (i) above.
THIS TABLE HAS BEEN PREPARED BASED ON THE STRUCTURING ASSUMPTION, INCLUDING THE
ASSUMPTIONS REGARDING THE CHARACTERISTICS AND PERFORMANCE OF THE MORTGAGE LOANS
WHICH DIFFER FROM THE ACTUAL CHARACTERISTICS AND PERFORMANCE THEREOF, AND SHOULD
BE READ IN CONJUNCTION THEREWITH.
(Table continued from previous page.)
S-69
<PAGE>
For additional considerations relating to the yield on the Class A
Certificates, see "Yield Considerations" and "Maturity and Prepayment
Considerations" in the prospectus.
POOLING AND SERVICING AGREEMENT
GENERAL
The certificates will be issued pursuant to the pooling and servicing
agreement dated as of June 1, 2000, among the depositor, the master servicer and
the trustee. Reference is made to the prospectus for important information in
addition to that set forth in this prospectus supplement regarding the terms and
conditions of the pooling and servicing agreement and the Class A Certificates.
The trustee, or any of its affiliates, in its individual or any other capacity,
may become the owner or pledgee of certificates with the same rights as it would
have if it were not trustee. The trustee will appoint Norwest Bank Minnesota,
National Association to serve as custodian for the mortgage loans. The Class A
Certificates will be transferable and exchangeable at the corporate trust office
of the trustee. The depositor will provide a prospective or actual
certificateholder, without charge, on written request, a copy, without exhibits,
of the pooling and servicing agreement. Requests should be addressed to the
President, Residential Asset Mortgage Products, Inc., 8400 Normandale Lake
Boulevard, Suite 600, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55437. In addition to the
circumstances described in the prospectus, the depositor may terminate the
trustee for cause under some circumstances. See "The Agreements--The Trustee" in
the prospectus.
THE MASTER SERVICER
The following information has been supplied by Residential Funding for
inclusion in this prospectus supplement. No representation is made by the
depositor or its affiliates as to the accuracy or completeness of such
information.
Residential Funding, an indirect wholly-owned subsidiary of GMAC Mortgage
Group, Inc. and an affiliate of the depositor, will act as master servicer for
the certificates pursuant to the pooling and servicing agreement. For a general
description of Residential Funding and its activities, see "Residential Funding
Corporation" in the prospectus and "Description of the Mortgage
Pool--Residential Funding" in this prospectus supplement.
The following table sets forth information concerning the delinquency
experience, including pending foreclosures, on one- to four-family residential
mortgage loans that generally complied with Residential Funding's Negotiated
Conduit Asset Program at the time of purchase by Residential Funding, were being
master serviced by Residential Funding on the dates indicated and that are
included in previously securitized pools. BECAUSE THE FIRST SECURITIZATION UNDER
THE NEGOTIATED CONDUIT ASSET PROGRAM CLOSED IN NOVEMBER 1998, THE LOSS
EXPERIENCE WITH RESPECT TO THESE MORTGAGE LOANS IS LIMITED AND IS NOT SUFFICIENT
TO PROVIDE MEANINGFUL DISCLOSURE WITH RESPECT TO LOSSES.
In addition, the following table:
o includes some mortgage loans that were recently originated,
o includes securitized pools of mortgage loans that, because of the
nature of the Negotiated Conduit Asset Program, have distinct and
materially different characteristics,
o includes recently securitized pools of mortgage loans that were
selected based in part by excluding loans that were delinquent more
than 89 days, and
o includes reperforming mortgage loans with capitalized arrearages,
which are not treated as delinquencies in the table as long as the
related mortgagor is current under the bankruptcy, repayment or
modification plan.
IN THE ABSENCE OF THESE FACTORS, THE DELINQUENCY EXPERIENCE SHOWN IN THE
FOLLOWING TABLE WOULD BE HIGHER AND COULD BE SUBSTANTIALLY HIGHER.
As noted above, the previously securitized pools under Residential
Funding's Negotiated Conduit Asset Program included a wide variety of underlying
mortgage loans that have distinct and materially different characteristics. In
S-70
<PAGE>
addition, each such mortgage pool has also experienced a wide range of
historical delinquency rates as of the dates indicated. As a result, there can
be no assurance that the aggregate delinquency experience set forth below will
be representative of the results that may be experienced with respect to the
mortgage loans related to this transaction, which may have a higher delinquency
experience or substantially higher delinquency experience than the following
table would indicate.
As used in this prospectus supplement, a loan is considered to be "30 to 59
days" or "30 or more days" delinquent when a payment due on any due date remains
unpaid as of the close of business on the next following monthly due date.
However, since the determination as to whether a loan falls into this category
is made as of the close of business on the last business day of each month, a
loan with a payment due on July 1 that remained unpaid as of the close of
business on July 31 would still be considered current as of July 31. If that
payment remained unpaid as of the close of business on August 31, the loan would
then be considered to be 30 to 59 days delinquent. Delinquency information
presented in this prospectus supplement as of the cut-off date is determined and
prepared as of the close of business on the last business day immediately prior
to the cut-off date.
NEGOTIATED CONDUIT ASSET PROGRAM DELINQUENCY EXPERIENCE
AT DECEMBER 31, 1999 AT MARCH 31, 2000
-------------------- -----------------
BY DOLLAR BY DOLLAR
BY NUMBER AMOUNT BY NUMBER AMOUNT
OF LOANS OF LOANS OF LOANS OF LOANS
-------- -------- -------- --------
(DOLLAR AMOUNTS IN (DOLLAR AMOUNTS IN
THOUSANDS) THOUSANDS)
Total Loan Portfolio........... 5,891 $908,909 6,701 $917,683
Period of Delinquency
30 to 59 days.............. 280 29,234 196 19,982
60 to 89 days.............. 136 11,403 133 12,917
90 days or more............ 224 18,756 340 28,779
Foreclosures Pending........... 111 13,151 110 10,884
--- ------ --- ------
Total Delinquent Loans......... 751 $72,544 779 $72,562
=== ======= === =======
Percent of Loan Portfolio...... 12.748% 7.981% 11.625% 7.907%
SERVICING AND OTHER COMPENSATION AND PAYMENT OF EXPENSES
The servicing fee for each mortgage loan is payable out of the interest
payments on the mortgage loan. The servicing fee rate in respect of each Group I
Loan will be at least 0.22% per annum, and in respect of each Group II Loan will
be at least 0.30% per annum, of the outstanding principal balance of the
mortgage loan. The servicing fee consists of servicing compensation payable to
the master servicer in respect of its master servicing activities, and
subservicing and other related compensation payable to the related primary
servicer or subservicer, as applicable, including any compensation paid to the
master servicer as the direct servicer of a mortgage loan for which there is no
primary servicer or subservicer. The primary compensation to be paid to the
master servicer in respect of its master servicing activities will be 0.05% per
annum of the outstanding principal balance of each mortgage loan. The primary
servicer or subservicer, as applicable, is entitled to servicing compensation in
a minimum amount equal to 0.17% per annum with respect to each Group I Loan, and
0.25% per annum with respect to each Group II Loan, of the outstanding principal
balance of each mortgage loan serviced by it. As of the cut-off date, the
weighted average of the servicing fee rates is approximately 0.3985% per annum
and 0.4632% per annum with respect to the Group I Loans and Group II Loans,
respectively. The master servicer is obligated to pay some ongoing expenses
associated with the trust and incurred by the master servicer in connection with
its responsibilities under the pooling and servicing agreement. See "Description
of the Securities--Withdrawals from the Custodial Account" in the prospectus for
information regarding other possible
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compensation to the master servicer and the primary servicer or subservicer, as
applicable, and for information regarding expenses payable by the master
servicer.
FORECLOSURE RESTRICTIONS ON THE MORTGAGE LOANS
Mortgage loans in the mortgage pool that are 60 to 89 days delinquent as of
the cut-off date will have certain restrictions placed on their foreclosure in
the pooling and servicing agreement. These mortgage loans constitute
approximately 0.6% and 0.6% of the Group I Loans and Group II Loans,
respectively. These restrictions will be lifted with respect to a delinquent
mortgage loan if the mortgage loan becomes current for three consecutive monthly
payments. In the event that one of these loans goes into foreclosure, if
acquiring title to the property underlying the mortgage loan would cause the
adjusted basis, for federal income tax purposes, of these mortgaged properties
that are currently owned by the trust after foreclosure, along with any other
assets owned by the related REMIC other than "qualified mortgages" and
"permitted investments" within the meaning of Section 860G of the Code, to
exceed 0.75% of the adjusted basis of the assets in the related REMIC, the
master servicer would not be permitted to acquire title to the mortgage loan on
behalf of that REMIC. Instead, the master servicer would have to dispose of the
mortgage loan for cash in the foreclosure sale. In addition, if the master
servicer determines that following a distribution on any distribution date the
adjusted bases of such mortgaged properties in foreclosure, along with any other
assets owned by the related REMIC other than "qualified mortgages" and
"permitted investments" within the meaning of Section 860G of the Code, exceed
1.0% of the adjusted bases of the assets of the related REMIC immediately after
the distribution, then prior to that distribution date, the master servicer
would be required to dispose of enough of such mortgaged properties in
foreclosure, for cash, so that the adjusted bases of such mortgaged properties
in foreclosure, along with any other assets owned by the related REMIC other
than "qualified mortgages" and "permitted investments" within the meaning of
Section 860G of the Code, will be less than 1.0% of the adjusted bases of the
assets of the related REMIC. In either event, the master servicer would be
permitted to acquire, for its own account and not on behalf of the trust, the
mortgaged property at the foreclosure sale for an amount not less than the
greater of: (i) the highest amount bid by any other person at the foreclosure
sale, or (ii) the estimated fair value of the mortgaged property, as determined
by the master servicer in good faith. As a result, losses on the mortgage loans
may be greater than if the master servicer was permitted to obtain title on
behalf of the trust.
VOTING RIGHTS
Some actions specified in the prospectus that may be taken by holders of
certificates evidencing a specified percentage of all undivided interests in the
trust may be taken by holders of certificates entitled in the aggregate to such
percentage of the voting rights. 97.25% of all voting rights will be allocated
among all holders of the Class A Certificates in proportion to their then
outstanding Certificate Principal Balances, 1% and 1% of all voting rights will
be allocated among the holders of the Class SB-I Certificates and Class SB-II
Certificates, respectively, and 0.25%, 0.25% and 0.25% of all voting rights will
be allocated to holders of the Class R-I, Class R-II and Class R-III
Certificates, respectively, in proportion to the percentage interests evidenced
by their certificates. The percentage interest of a Class A Certificate is equal
to the percentage obtained by dividing the initial Certificate Principal Balance
of that certificate by the aggregate initial Certificate Principal Balance of
all of the certificates of that class. So long as there does not exist a default
by the certificate insurer, the certificate insurer shall have the right to
exercise all rights of the holders of the Class A Certificates under the pooling
and servicing agreement without any consent of those holders, and those holders
may exercise their rights only with the prior written consent of the certificate
insurer except as provided in the pooling and servicing agreement.
TERMINATION
The circumstances under which the obligations created by the pooling and
servicing agreement will terminate in respect of the certificates are described
in "The Agreements--Termination; Retirement of Securities" in the prospectus.
The master servicer will have the option on any distribution date when the
aggregate Stated Principal Balance of the mortgage loans is less than 10% of the
initial aggregate principal balance of the mortgage loans as of the cut-off date
(i) to purchase all remaining mortgage loans and other assets in the trust
related thereto, except for the certificate guaranty insurance policy, thereby
effecting early retirement of the Class A Certificates, or (ii) to purchase in
whole, but not in part, the Class A Certificates; PROVIDED, HOWEVER, in each
case, that no early termination of the trust will be permitted if
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it would result in a draw under the certificate guaranty insurance policy unless
the certificate insurer consents to the termination. Any such purchase of
mortgage loans and other assets of the trust related thereto for the Class A
Certificates shall be made at a price equal to the sum of (a) 100% of the unpaid
principal balance of each mortgage loan, or, if less than such unpaid principal
balance, the fair market value of the related underlying mortgaged properties
with respect to the mortgage loans as to which title to such underlying
mortgaged properties has been acquired, net of any unreimbursed Advance
attributable to principal, as of the date of repurchase, (b) accrued interest
thereon at the Net Mortgage Rate plus the rate at which the related premium for
the certificate guaranty insurance policy is paid to, but not including, the
first day of the month in which the repurchase price is distributed and (c) any
amounts due to the certificate insurer pursuant to the insurance agreement.
Distributions on the Class A Certificates in respect of any optional termination
will be paid, FIRST, to the Class A Certificates on a pro rata basis and SECOND,
except as set forth in the pooling and servicing agreement, to the Class SB and
Class R Certificates. The proceeds of any such distribution may not be
sufficient to distribute the full amount to the Class A Certificates if the
purchase price is based in part on the fair market value of any underlying
mortgaged property and such fair market value is less than 100% of the unpaid
principal balance of the related mortgage loan; PROVIDED, HOWEVER, with respect
to the Class A Certificates, if such amount is an Insured Amount, such amount
will be paid under the certificate guaranty insurance policy.
Any such purchase of the Class A Certificates as discussed above, will be
made at a price equal to 100% of its Certificate Principal Balance plus the sum
of interest accrued thereon at the applicable Pass-Through Rate, including any
unpaid Prepayment Interest Shortfalls and accrued interest thereon, and any
previously accrued and unpaid interest. Upon the purchase of the Class A
Certificates or at any time thereafter, at the option of the master servicer or
the depositor, the mortgage loans may be sold, thereby effecting a retirement of
the Class A Certificates and the termination of the trust, or the Class A
Certificates so purchased may be held or resold by the master servicer. Upon
presentation and surrender of the Class A Certificates in connection with their
purchase, the holders of the Class A Certificates will receive an amount equal
to the Certificate Principal Balance of their class plus interest accrued
thereon at the related Pass-Through Rate plus any previously accrued and unpaid
interest.
METHOD OF DISTRIBUTION
Subject to the terms and conditions set forth in an underwriting agreement,
dated June 23, 2000, Bear, Stearns & Co. Inc. has agreed to purchase and the
depositor has agreed to sell the Class A-I Certificates to Bear, Stearns & Co.
Inc. and Bear, Stearns & Co. Inc. and Residential Funding Securities Corporation
have agreed to purchase and the depositor has agreed to sell 50% of the
Certificate Principal Balance of the Class A-II Certificates to each of Bear,
Stearns & Co. Inc. and Residential Funding Securities Corporation. It is
expected that delivery of the Class A Certificates will be made only in
book-entry form through the Same Day Funds Settlement System of DTC, Clearstream
and Euroclear on or about June 28, 2000, against payment therefor in immediately
available funds.
The underwriting agreement provides that the obligation of the underwriters
to pay for and accept delivery of the Class A Certificates is subject to, among
other things, the receipt of legal opinions and to the conditions, among others,
that no stop order suspending the effectiveness of the depositor's registration
statement shall be in effect, and that no proceedings for such purpose shall be
pending before or threatened by the Commission.
The distribution of the Class A Certificates by the underwriters may be
effected from time to time in one or more negotiated transactions, or otherwise,
at varying prices to be determined at the time of sale. Proceeds to the
depositor from the sale of the Class A Certificates, before deducting expenses
payable by the depositor, will be approximately 99.69% of the aggregate
Certificate Principal Balance of the Class A Certificates, plus accrued interest
from the cut-off date on the Class A-I Certificates, except on the Class A-I-1
Certificates. The underwriters may effect these transactions by selling the
Class A Certificates to or through dealers, and these dealers may receive
compensation in the form of underwriting discounts, concessions or commissions
from the underwriters for whom they act as agent. In connection with the sale of
the Class A Certificates, the underwriters may be deemed to have received
compensation from the depositor in the form of underwriting compensation. The
underwriters and any dealers that participate with the underwriters in the
distribution of the Class A Certificates may be deemed to be underwriters and
any profit on the resale of the Class A Certificates positioned by them may be
deemed to be underwriting discounts and commissions under the Securities Act of
1933, as amended.
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The underwriting agreement provides that the depositor will indemnify the
underwriters, and that under limited circumstances the underwriters will
indemnify the depositor, against some civil liabilities under the Securities Act
of 1933, or contribute to payments required to be made in respect thereof.
There can be no assurance that a secondary market for the Class A
Certificates will develop or, if it does develop, that it will continue. The
Class A Certificates will not be listed on any securities exchange. The primary
source of information available to investors concerning the Class A Certificates
will be the monthly statements discussed in the prospectus under "Description of
the Securities--Reports to Securityholders," which will include information as
to the outstanding principal balance of the Class A Certificates. There can be
no assurance that any additional information regarding the Class A Certificates
will be available through any other source. In addition, the depositor is not
aware of any source through which price information about the Class A
Certificates will be generally available on an ongoing basis. The limited nature
of information regarding the Class A Certificates may adversely affect the
liquidity of the Class A Certificates, even if a secondary market for the Class
A Certificates becomes available.
Residential Funding Securities Corporation is an affiliate of the depositor
and the master servicer.
MATERIAL FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSEQUENCES
The following is a general discussion of anticipated material federal
income tax consequences of the purchase, ownership and disposition of the
certificates offered under this prospectus. This discussion has been prepared
with the advice of Thacher Proffitt & Wood as counsel to the depositor.
Upon issuance of the certificates, Thacher Proffitt & Wood, counsel to the
depositor, will deliver its opinion generally to the effect that, assuming
compliance with all provisions of the pooling and servicing agreement, for
federal income tax purposes, the trust will qualify as three REMICs under the
Internal Revenue Code, which shall be referred to as REMIC I, REMIC II and REMIC
III.
For federal income tax purposes:
o the Class R-I Certificates will constitute the sole class of "residual
interests" in REMIC I;
o the Class R-II Certificates will constitute the sole class of
"residual interests" in REMIC II;
o each class of Class A Certificates and the Class SB Certificates will
represent ownership of "regular interests" in REMIC III and will
generally be treated as debt instruments of REMIC III, and the Class
A-I-1 Certificates and Class A-II Certificates will also represent the
right to receive payments in respect of the related Basis Risk
Shortfall Carry-Forward Amount, which will not be an entitlement from
any REMIC but from certain reserve funds; and
o the Class R-III Certificates will constitute the sole class of
"residual certificates" in REMIC III.
See "Material Federal Income Tax Consequences--Classification of REMICs and
FASITs" in the prospectus.
For federal income tax reporting purposes, the Class A Certificates will
not be treated as having been issued with original issue discount. The
prepayment assumption that will be used in determining the rate of accrual of
market discount and premium, if any, for federal income tax purposes will be
based on the assumption that subsequent to the date of any determination the
Group I Loans and Group II Loans will prepay at a rate equal to 15% CPR and 28%
CPR, respectively. No representation is made that the mortgage loans will prepay
at those rates or at any other rate. See "Material Federal Income Tax
Consequences--Taxation of Owners of REMIC and FASIT Regular Certificates" in the
prospectus.
The holders of the Class A Certificates will be required to include in
income interest on their certificates in accordance with the accrual method of
accounting.
The IRS has issued the OID Regulations under sections 1271 to 1275 of the
Code generally addressing the treatment of debt instruments issued with original
issue discount. Purchasers of the Class A-I-1 Certificates and Class A-II
Certificates should be aware that Section 1272(a)(6) of the Code and the OID
Regulations do not adequately address some issues relevant to, or applicable to,
prepayable securities bearing an adjustable rate of interest such as the Class
A-I-
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1 Certificates and Class A-II Certificates. In the absence of other
authority, the Master Servicer intends to be guided by certain principles of the
OID Regulations applicable to adjustable rate debt instruments in determining
whether such Certificates should be treated as issued with original issue
discount and in adapting the provisions of Section 1272(a)(6) of the Code to
such Certificates for the purpose of preparing reports furnished to
Certificateholders and the IRS. Because of the uncertainties concerning the
application of Section 1272(a)(6) of the Code to such Certificates and because
the rules relating to debt instruments having an adjustable rate of interest are
limited in their application in ways that could preclude their application to
such Certificates even in the absence of Section 1272(a)(6) of the Code, the IRS
could assert that the Class A-I-1 Certificates and Class A-II Certificates
should be governed by some other method not yet set forth in regulations or
should be treated as having been issued with original issue discount.
Prospective purchasers of the Class A-I-1 Certificates and Class A-II
Certificates are advised to consult their tax advisors concerning the tax
treatment of such Certificates.
Each holder of a Class A-I-1 Certificate and a Class A-II Certificate is
deemed to own an undivided beneficial ownership interest in two assets, a REMIC
regular interest and the right to receive payments in respect of the related
Basis Risk Shortfall Carry-Forward Amount. The treatment of amounts received by
a Class A-I-1 Certificateholder and a Class A-II Certificateholder under such
certificateholder's right to receive the related Basis Risk Shortfall Carry-
Forward Amount will depend on the portion, if any, of the Class A-I-1
Certificateholder's or Class A-II Certificateholder's purchase price allocable
thereto. Under the REMIC regulations, each holder of a Class A-I-1 Certificate
and a Class A-II Certificate must allocate its purchase price for that
Certificate between its undivided interest in the REMIC regular interest and its
undivided interest in the right to receive payments in respect of the related
Basis Risk Shortfall Carry-Forward Amount in accordance with the relative fair
market values of each property right. The trustee intends to treat payments made
to the holders of the Class A-I-1 Certificates and Class A-II Certificates with
respect to the related Basis Risk Shortfall Carry-Forward Amount as includible
in income based on the tax regulations relating to notional principal contracts.
The OID regulations provide that the trust's allocation of the issue price is
binding on all holders unless the holder explicitly discloses on its tax return
that its allocation is different from the trust's allocation. For tax reporting
purposes, the master servicer estimates that the right to receive Basis Risk
Shortfall Carry- Forward Amounts has a DE MINIMIS value. Under the REMIC
regulations, the master servicer is required to account for the REMIC regular
interest and the right to receive payments in respect of the Basis Risk
Shortfall Carry-Forward Amount as discrete property rights. Holders of the Class
A-I-1 Certificates and Class A-II Certificates are advised to consult their own
tax advisors regarding the allocation of issue price, timing, character and
source of income and deductions resulting from the ownership of their
Certificates. Treasury regulations have been promulgated under Section 1275 of
the Internal Revenue Code generally providing for the integration of a
"qualifying debt instrument" with a hedge if the combined cash flows of the
components are substantially equivalent to the cash flows on a variable rate
debt instrument. However, such regulations specifically disallow integration of
debt instruments subject to Section 1272(a)(6) of the Internal Revenue Code.
Therefore, holders of the Class A-I-1 Certificates and Class A-II Certificates
will be unable to use the integration method provided for under such regulations
with respect to such Certificates. If the trustee's treatment of Basis Risk
Shortfall Carry-Forward Amounts is respected, ownership of the right to the
Basis Risk Shortfall Carry-Forward Amounts will nevertheless entitle the owner
to amortize the separate price paid for the right to the Basis Risk Shortfall
Carry-Forward Amounts under the notional principal contract regulations.
In the event that the right to receive the related Basis Risk Shortfall
Carry Forward Amount is characterized as a "notional principal contract" for
federal income tax purposes, upon the sale of a Class A-I-1 Certificate or Class
A-II Certificate, the amount of the sale allocated to the selling
Certificateholder's right to receive payments in respect of the related Basis
Risk Shortfall Carry-Forward Amount would be considered a "termination payment"
under the notional principal contract regulations allocable to the related
Certificate. A Class A-I-1 Certificateholder or Class A-II Certificateholder
will have gain or loss from such a termination of the right to receive payments
in respect of the related Basis Risk Shortfall Carry-Forward Amount equal to (i)
any termination payment it received or is deemed to have received minus (ii) the
unamortized portion of any amount paid, or deemed paid, by the Certificateholder
upon entering into or acquiring its interest in the right to receive payments in
respect of the related Basis Risk Shortfall Carry-Forward Amount.
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Gain or loss realized upon the termination of the right to receive payments
in respect of the Basis Risk Shortfall Carry-Forward Amount will generally be
treated as capital gain or loss. Moreover, in the case of a bank or thrift
institution, Internal Revenue Code Section 582(c) would likely not apply to
treat such gain or loss as ordinary.
With respect to the Class A-I-1 Certificates and Class A-II Certificates,
this paragraph applies exclusive of any rights in respect of the Basis Risk
Shortfall Carry-Forward Amount. The Class A Certificates will be treated as
assets described in Section 7701(a)(19)(C) of the Internal Revenue Code and
"real estate assets" under Section 856(c)(4)(A) of the Internal Revenue Code
generally in the same proportion that the assets of the trust would be so
treated. In addition, interest on the Class A Certificates will be treated as
"interest on obligations secured by mortgages on real property" under Section
856(c)(3)(B) of the Internal Revenue Code generally to the extent that such
Class A Certificates are treated as "real estate assets" under Section
856(c)(4)(A) of the Internal Revenue Code. Moreover, the Class A Certificates
will be "qualified mortgages" within the meaning of Section 860G(a)(3) of the
Internal Revenue Code. However, prospective investors in Class A Certificates
that will be generally treated as assets described in Section 860G(a)(3) of the
Internal Revenue Code should note that, notwithstanding such treatment, any
repurchase of such a certificate pursuant to the right of the master servicer or
the depositor to repurchase such Class A Certificates may adversely affect any
REMIC that holds such Class A Certificates if such repurchase is made under
circumstances giving rise to a Prohibited Transaction Tax. See "Pooling and
Servicing Agreement--Termination" in this prospectus supplement and "Material
Federal Income Tax Consequences" in the prospectus.
The holders of the Class A Certificates will be required to include in
income interest on their certificates in accordance with the accrual method of
accounting. As noted above, each holder of a Class A-I-1 Certificate or Class
A-II Certificate will be required to allocate a portion of the purchase price
paid for its Certificates to the right to receive payments in respect of the
related Basis Risk Shortfall Carry-Forward Amount. The value of the right to
receive any such Basis Risk Shortfall Carry-Forward Amount is a question of fact
which could be subject to differing interpretations. Because the related Basis
Risk Shortfall Carry-Forward Amount is treated as a separate right of the Class
A-I-1 Certificates or Class A-II Certificates not payable by any REMIC, such
right will not be treated as a qualifying asset for any such Certificateholder
that is a mutual savings bank, domestic building and loan association, real
estate investment trust, or real estate mortgage investment conduit and any
amounts received in respect of the Basis Risk Shortfall Carry- Forward Amount
will not be qualifying real estate income for real estate investment trusts.
For further information regarding federal income tax consequences of
investing in the Class A Certificates, see "Material Federal Income Tax
Consequences--Taxation of Owners of REMIC and FASIT Regular Certificates" in the
prospectus.
STATE AND OTHER TAX CONSEQUENCES
In addition to the federal income tax consequences described in "Material
Federal Income Tax Consequences," potential investors should consider the state
and local tax consequences of the acquisition, ownership, and disposition of the
certificates offered by this prospectus. State tax law may differ substantially
from the corresponding federal tax law, and the discussion above does not
purport to describe any aspect of the tax laws of any state or other
jurisdiction. Therefore, prospective investors should consult their tax advisors
about the various tax consequences of investments in the certificates offered by
this prospectus.
ERISA CONSIDERATIONS
A fiduciary of any ERISA plan, any insurance company, whether through its
general or separate accounts, or any other person investing ERISA plan assets of
any ERISA plan, as defined under "ERISA Considerations--ERISA Plan Asset
Regulations" in the prospectus, should carefully review with its legal advisors
whether the purchase or holding of offered certificates could give rise to a
transaction prohibited or not otherwise permissible under ERISA or Section 4975
of the Internal Revenue Code. The purchase or holding of the offered
certificates by or on behalf of, or with ERISA plan assets of, an ERISA plan may
qualify for exemptive relief under the RFC exemption, as described under "ERISA
Considerations--Prohibited Transaction Exemptions--Certificates" in the
prospectus. However, the RFC exemption contains a number of conditions which
must be met for the RFC exemption to apply, including the requirement that any
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ERISA plan must be an "accredited investor" as defined in Rule 501(a)(1) of
Regulation D of the Securities and Exchange Commission under the Securities Act.
Insurance companies contemplating the investment of general account assets
in the offered certificates should consult with their legal advisors with
respect to the applicability of Section 401(c) of ERISA, as described under
"ERISA Considerations--Insurance Company General Accounts" in the prospectus.
The DOL published final regulations under Section 401(c) on January 5, 2000, but
these final regulations are generally not applicable until July 5, 2001.
Any fiduciary or other investor of ERISA plan assets that proposes to
acquire or hold the offered certificates on behalf of or with ERISA plan assets
of any ERISA plan should consult with its counsel with respect to: (i) whether
the specific and general conditions and the other requirements in the RFC
exemption would be satisfied, or whether any other prohibited transaction
exemption would apply, and (ii) the potential applicability of the general
fiduciary responsibility provisions of ERISA and the prohibited transaction
provisions of ERISA and Section 4975 of the Internal Revenue Code to the
proposed investment. See "ERISA Considerations" in the prospectus.
The sale of any of the offered certificates to an ERISA plan is in no
respect a representation by the depositor or the underwriter that such an
investment meets all relevant legal requirements relating to investments by
ERISA plans generally or any particular ERISA plan, or that such an investment
is appropriate for ERISA plans generally or any particular ERISA plan.
LEGAL INVESTMENT
The offered certificates will not constitute "mortgage related securities"
for purposes of SMMEA. The depositor makes no representations as to the proper
characterization of any class of the offered certificates for legal investment
or other purposes, or as to the ability of particular investors to purchase any
class of the offered certificates under applicable legal investment
restrictions. These uncertainties may adversely affect the liquidity of any
class of offered certificates. Accordingly, all institutions whose investment
activities are subject to legal investment laws and regulations, regulatory
capital requirements or review by regulatory authorities should consult with
their legal advisors in determining whether and to what extent any class of the
offered certificates constitutes a legal investment or is subject to investment,
capital or other restrictions.
One or more classes of the offered certificates may be viewed as "complex
securities" under TB13a, which applies to thrift institutions regulated by the
OTS.
See "Legal Investment Matters" in the prospectus.
EXPERTS
The consolidated financial statements of Ambac Assurance Corporation and
subsidiaries, as of December 31, 1999 and 1998 and for each of the years in the
three-year period ended December 31, 1999 are incorporated by reference in this
prospectus supplement and in the registration statement in reliance upon the
report of KPMG LLP, independent certified public accountants, incorporated by
reference in this prospectus supplement, and upon the authority of said firm as
experts in accounting and auditing.
LEGAL MATTERS
Legal matters concerning the offered certificates will be passed upon for
the depositor and Residential Funding Securities Corporation by Thacher Proffitt
& Wood, New York, New York and for Bear, Stearns & Co. Inc. by Brown & Wood LLP,
New York, New York.
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RATINGS
It is a condition of the issuance of the Class A Certificates that they be
rated "AAA" by Standard & Poor's, a division of The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.,
or Standard & Poor's, and Fitch, Inc., or Fitch.
Standard & Poor's ratings on mortgage pass-through certificates address the
likelihood of the receipt by certificateholders of payments required under the
pooling and servicing agreement. Standard & Poor's ratings take into
consideration the credit quality of the mortgage pool, structural and legal
aspects associated with the certificates, and the extent to which the payment
stream in the mortgage pool is adequate to make payments required under the
certificates. Standard & Poor's rating on the Class A Certificates is based on
the financial strength rating of the certificate insurer. Standard & Poor's
ratings on the Class A Certificates do not, however, constitute a statement
regarding frequency of prepayments on the mortgages. See "Yield and Prepayment
Considerations" in this prospectus supplement. In addition, the ratings do not
address the likelihood of the receipt of any amounts in respect of Prepayment
Interest Shortfalls.
The rating assigned by Fitch to the Class A Certificates address the
likelihood of the receipt by the Class A Certificateholders of all distributions
to which they are entitled under the pooling and servicing agreement. Fitch's
ratings reflect its analysis of the riskiness of the mortgage loans and the
structure of the transaction as described in the pooling and servicing
agreement. Fitch's ratings do not address the effect on the certificates' yield
attributable to prepayments or recoveries on the mortgage loans.
The depositor has not requested a rating on the Class A Certificates by any
rating agency other than Standard & Poor's and Fitch. However, there can be no
assurance as to whether any other rating agency will rate the Class A
Certificates, or, if it does, what rating would be assigned by any such other
rating agency. A rating on the Class A Certificates by another rating agency, if
assigned at all, may be lower than the ratings assigned to the Class A
Certificates by Standard & Poor's and Fitch.
A security rating is not a recommendation to buy, sell or hold securities
and may be subject to revision or withdrawal at any time by the assigning rating
organization. Each security rating should be evaluated independently of any
other security rating. In the event that the ratings initially assigned to the
Class A Certificates are subsequently lowered for any reason, no person or
entity is obligated to provide any additional support or credit enhancement with
respect to the Class A Certificates.
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ANNEX I
GLOBAL CLEARANCE, SETTLEMENT AND TAX DOCUMENTATION PROCEDURES
Except in certain limited circumstances, the globally offered Residential
Asset Mortgage Products, Inc., Mortgage Asset-Backed Pass-Through Certificates,
Series 2000-RS2, which are referred to as the global securities, will be
available only in book-entry form. Investors in the global securities may hold
interests in these global securities through any of DTC, Clearstream or
Euroclear. Initial settlement and all secondary trades will settle in same-day
funds.
Secondary market trading between investors holding interests in global
securities through Clearstream and Euroclear will be conducted in accordance
with their normal rules and operating procedures and in accordance with
conventional eurobond practice. Secondary market trading between investors
holding interests in global securities through DTC will be conducted according
to the rules and procedures applicable to U.S. corporate debt obligations.
Secondary cross-market trading between investors holding interests in
global securities through Clearstream or Euroclear and investors holding
interests in global securities through DTC participants will be effected on a
delivery-against-payment basis through the respective depositories of
Clearstream and Euroclear, in such capacity, and other DTC participants.
Although DTC, Euroclear and Clearstream are expected to follow the
procedures described below in order to facilitate transfers of interests in the
global securities among participants of DTC, Euroclear and Clearstream, they are
under no obligation to perform or continue to perform those procedures, and
those procedures may be discontinued at any time. Neither the depositor, the
master servicer nor the trustee will have any responsibility for the performance
by DTC, Euroclear and Clearstream or their respective participants or indirect
participants of their respective obligations under the rules and procedures
governing their obligations.
Non-U.S. holders of global securities will be subject to U.S. withholding
taxes unless those holders meet certain requirements and deliver appropriate
U.S. tax documents to the securities clearing organizations or their
participants.
INITIAL SETTLEMENT
The global securities will be registered in the name of Cede & Co. as
nominee of DTC. Investors' interests in the global securities will be
represented through financial institutions acting on their behalf as direct and
indirect participants in DTC. Clearstream and Euroclear will hold positions on
behalf of their participants through their respective depositories, which in
turn will hold such positions in accounts as DTC participants.
Investors electing to hold interests in global securities through DTC
participants, rather than through Clearstream or Euroclear accounts, will be
subject to the settlement practices applicable to similar issues of pass-through
certificates. Investors' securities custody accounts will be credited with their
holdings against payment in same-day funds on the settlement date.
Investors electing to hold interests in global securities through
Clearstream or Euroclear accounts will follow the settlement procedures
applicable to conventional eurobonds, except that there will be no temporary
global security and no "lock-up" or restricted period. Interests in global
securities will be credited to the securities custody accounts on the settlement
date against payment in same-day funds.
SECONDARY MARKET TRADING
Since the purchaser determines the place of delivery, it is important to
establish at the time of the trade where both the purchaser's and seller's
accounts are located to ensure that settlement can be made on the desired value
date.
TRANSFERS BETWEEN DTC PARTICIPANTS. Secondary market trading between DTC
participants will be settled using the DTC procedures applicable to similar
issues of pass-through certificates in same-day funds.
I-1
<PAGE>
TRANSFERS BETWEEN CLEARSTREAM AND/OR EUROCLEAR PARTICIPANTS. Secondary
market trading between Clearstream participants or Euroclear participants and/or
investors holding interests in global securities through them will be settled
using the procedures applicable to conventional eurobonds in same-day funds.
TRANSFERS BETWEEN DTC SELLER AND CLEARSTREAM OR EUROCLEAR PURCHASER. When
interests in global securities are to be transferred on behalf of a seller from
the account of a DTC participant to the account of a Clearstream participant or
a Euroclear participant for a purchaser, the purchaser will send instructions to
Clearstream or Euroclear through a Clearstream participant or Euroclear
participant at least one business day prior to settlement. Clearstream or the
Euroclear operator will instruct its respective depository to receive an
interest in the global securities against payment. Payment will include interest
accrued on the global securities from and including the last distribution date
to but excluding the settlement date. Payment will then be made by the
respective depository to the DTC participant's account against delivery of an
interest in the global securities. After this settlement has been completed, the
interest will be credited to the respective clearing system, and by the clearing
system, in accordance with its usual procedures, to the Clearstream
participant's or Euroclear participant's account. The credit of this interest
will appear on the next business day and the cash debit will be back-valued to,
and the interest on the global securities will accrue from, the value date,
which would be the preceding day when settlement occurred in New York. If
settlement is not completed through DTC on the intended value date, i.e., the
trade fails, the Clearstream or Euroclear cash debit will be valued instead as
of the actual settlement date.
Clearstream participants and Euroclear participants will need to make
available to the respective clearing system the funds necessary to process
same-day funds settlement. The most direct means of doing so is to pre-position
funds for settlement from cash on hand, in which case the Clearstream
participants or Euroclear participants will take on credit exposure to
Clearstream or the Euroclear operator until interests in the global securities
are credited to their accounts one day later.
As an alternative, if Clearstream or the Euroclear operator has extended a
line of credit to them, Clearstream participants or Euroclear participants can
elect not to pre-position funds and allow that credit line to be drawn upon.
Under this procedure, Clearstream participants or Euroclear participants
receiving interests in global securities for purchasers would incur overdraft
charges for one day, to the extent they cleared the overdraft when interests in
the global securities were credited to their accounts. However, interest on the
global securities would accrue from the value date. Therefore, the investment
income on the interest in the global securities earned during that one-day
period would tend to offset the amount of these overdraft charges, although this
result will depend on each Clearstream participant's or Euroclear participant's
particular cost of funds.
Since the settlement through DTC will take place during New York business
hours, DTC participants are subject to DTC procedures for transferring interests
in global securities to the respective depository of Clearstream or Euroclear
for the benefit of Clearstream participants or Euroclear participants. The sale
proceeds will be available to the DTC seller on the settlement date. Thus, to
the seller settling the sale through a DTC participant, a cross-market
transaction will settle no differently than a sale to a purchaser settling
through a DTC participant.
Finally, intra-day traders that use Clearstream participants or Euroclear
participants to purchase interests in global securities from DTC participants or
sellers settling through them for delivery to Clearstream participants or
Euroclear participants should note that these trades will automatically fail on
the sale side unless affirmative action is taken. At least three techniques
should be available to eliminate this potential condition:
o borrowing interests in global securities through Clearstream or
Euroclear for one day, until the purchase side of the intra-day trade
is reflected in the relevant Clearstream or Euroclear accounts, in
accordance with the clearing system's customary procedures;
o borrowing interests in global securities in the United States from a
DTC participant no later than one day prior to settlement, which would
give sufficient time for such interests to be reflected in the
relevant Clearstream or Euroclear accounts in order to settle the sale
side of the trade; or
I-2
<PAGE>
o staggering the value dates for the buy and sell sides of the trade so
that the value date for the purchase from the DTC participant is at
least one day prior to the value date for the sale to the Clearstream
participant or Euroclear participant.
TRANSFERS BETWEEN CLEARSTREAM OR EUROCLEAR SELLER AND DTC PURCHASER. Due to
time zone differences in their favor, Clearstream participants and Euroclear
participants may employ their customary procedures for transactions in which
interests in global securities are to be transferred by the respective clearing
system, through the respective depository, to a DTC participant. The seller will
send instructions to Clearstream or the Euroclear operator through a Clearstream
participant or Euroclear participant at least one business day prior to
settlement. Clearstream or Euroclear will instruct its respective depository, to
credit an interest in the global securities to the DTC participant's account
against payment. Payment will include interest accrued on the global securities
from and including the last distribution date to but excluding the settlement
date. The payment will then be reflected in the account of the Clearstream
participant or Euroclear participant the following business day, and receipt of
the cash proceeds in the Clearstream participant's or Euroclear participant's
account would be back-valued to the value date, which would be the preceding
day, when settlement occurred through DTC in New York. If settlement is not
completed on the intended value date, i.e., the trade fails, receipt of the cash
proceeds in the Clearstream participant's or Euroclear participant's account
would instead be valued as of the actual settlement date.
CERTAIN U.S. FEDERAL INCOME TAX DOCUMENTATION REQUIREMENTS
A beneficial owner of global securities holding securities through
Clearstream or Euroclear, or through DTC if the holder has an address outside
the U.S., will be subject to the 30% U.S. withholding tax that typically applies
to payments of interest, including original issue discount, on registered debt
issued by U.S. persons, unless:
o each clearing system, bank or other financial institution that holds
customers' securities in the ordinary course of its trade or business
in the chain of intermediaries between the beneficial owner and the
U.S. entity required to withhold tax complies with applicable
certification requirements; and
o the beneficial owner takes one of the following steps to obtain an
exemption or reduced tax rate:
o Exemption for Non-U.S. Persons--Form W-8 or Form W-8BEN.
Beneficial holders of global securities that are Non-U.S.
persons can obtain a complete exemption from the withholding
tax by filing a signed Form W-8, or Certificate of Foreign
Status, or Form W-8BEN, or Certificate of Foreign Status of
Beneficial Owner for United States Tax Withholding. If the
information shown on Form W-8 or Form W-8BEN changes, a new
Form W-8 or Form W-8BEN must be filed within 30 days of the
change. After December 31, 2000, only Form W-8BEN will be
acceptable.
o Exemption for Non-U.S. persons with effectively connected
income--Form 4224 or Form W-8ECI. A Non-U.S. person,
including a non-U.S. corporation or bank with a U.S. branch,
for which the interest income is effectively connected with
its conduct of a trade or business in the United States, can
obtain an exemption from the withholding tax by filing Form
4224, or Exemption from Withholding of Tax on Income
Effectively Connected with the Conduct of a Trade or
Business in the United States, or Form W-8ECI, or
Certificate of Foreign Person's Claim for Exemption from
Withholding on Income Effectively Connected with the Conduct
of a Trade or Business in the United States.
o Exemption or reduced rate for Non-U.S. persons resident in
treaty countries--Form 1001 or Form W- 8BEN. Non-U.S.
persons residing in a country that has a tax treaty with the
United States can obtain an exemption or reduced tax rate,
depending on the treaty terms, by filing Form 1001, or
Holdership, Exemption or Reduced Rate Certificate, or Form
W-8BEN. Form 1001 or Form W-8BEN may be filed by Bond
Holders or their agent. After December 31, 2000, only Form
W-8BEN will be acceptable.
o Exemption for U.S. Persons--Form W-9. U.S. persons can
obtain a complete exemption from the withholding tax by
filing Form W-9, or Payer's Request for Taxpayer
Identification Number and Certification.
I-3
<PAGE>
U.S. FEDERAL INCOME TAX REPORTING PROCEDURE. The holder of a global
security or, in the case of a Form 1001 or a Form 4224 filer, his agent, files
by submitting the appropriate form to the person through whom it holds the
security--the clearing agency, in the case of persons holding directly on the
books of the clearing agency. Form W-8, Form 1001 and Form 4224 are effective
until December 31, 2000. Form W-8BEN and Form W-8ECI are effective until the
third succeeding calendar year from the date the form is signed. The term "U.S.
person" means:
o a citizen or resident of the United States;
o a corporation, partnership or other entity treated as a corporation or
a partnership for United States federal income tax purposes, organized
in or under the laws of the United States or any state thereof,
including for this purpose the District of Columbia, unless, in the
case of a partnership, future Treasury regulations provide otherwise;
o an estate that is subject to U.S. federal income tax regardless of the
source of its income; or
o a trust if a court within the United States is able to exercise
primary supervision of the administration of the trust and one or more
United States persons have the authority to control all substantial
decisions of the trust.
Certain trusts not described in the final bullet of the preceding sentence in
existence on August 20, 1996 that elect to be treated as a United States Person
will also be a U.S. person. The term "Non-U.S. person" means any person who is
not a U.S. person. This summary does not deal with all aspects of U.S. federal
income tax withholding that may be relevant to foreign holders of the global
securities. Investors are advised to consult their own tax advisors for specific
tax advice concerning their holding and disposing of the global securities.
I-4
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
APPENDIX A
MORTGAGE LOAN ASSUMPTIONS
MONTHS
ORIGINAL REMAINING MONTHS TO BETWEEN INITIAL SUBSEQUENT
AGGREGATE TERM TO TERM TO FIRST RATE PERIODIC PERIODIC
LOAN PRINCIPAL MORTGAGE SERVICING MATURITY MATURITY ADJUSTMENT ADJUSTMENT RATE RATE
NUMBER BALANCE RATE FEE RATE (MONTHS) (MONTHS) DATE DATE CAP CAP
------ ------- ----- -------- -------- -------- ---- ---- --- ---
<S> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C>
1 $ 9,623,999.28 10.803% 0.3800% 360 354 N/A N/A N/A N/A
2 694,568.09 9.869 0.3800 119 105 N/A N/A N/A N/A
3 10,322,138.84 8.581 0.3800 180 161 N/A N/A N/A N/A
4 1,332,232.59 10.688 0.3800 255 247 N/A N/A N/A N/A
5 90,886,993.73 9.173 0.3800 360 344 N/A N/A N/A N/A
6 3,015,573.36 11.102 0.5500 352 326 N/A N/A N/A N/A
7 1,493,971.47 11.189 0.5500 174 135 N/A N/A N/A N/A
8 338,182.39 11.291 0.5500 265 248 N/A N/A N/A N/A
9 8,889,684.76 10.144 0.5500 360 334 N/A N/A N/A N/A
10 1,285,981.90 9.884 0.5165 360 313 3 6 2.387% 1.379%
11 1,993,907.01 9.760 0.5165 360 347 10 6 2.698 1.100
12 12,308,964.57 10.307 0.5165 360 353 16 6 2.842 1.100
13 11,459,365.84 10.576 0.5165 360 357 20 6 2.847 1.072
14 12,913,598.45 9.890 0.5165 360 354 29 6 2.933 1.046
15 7,448,602.83 10.565 0.5165 360 357 32 6 2.950 1.103
16 4,727,032.71 7.992 0.5165 360 308 3 12 3.387 2.000
17 4,034,648.25 8.823 0.5165 360 312 9 12 3.931 2.000
18 61,490,843.53 7.746 0.3821 360 336 8 12 2.819 2.000
19 9,439,925.88 11.285 0.5500 357 320 3 6 5.111 1.218
20 3,255,378.40 10.362 0.5500 356 331 15 7 3.172 1.166
21 2,150,312.81 10.361 0.5500 360 353 28 6 2.905 1.047
22 4,620,854.07 9.230 0.5500 178 125 3 12 6.210 2.136
23 2,850,148.03 9.193 0.5500 153 107 9 12 6.145 2.069
24 720,130.23 6.223 0.5500 320 297 20 12 3.486 2.000
</TABLE>
MAXIMUM MINIMUM
LOAN GROSS MORTGAGE MORTGAGE
NUMBER MARGIN RATE RATE INDEX
------ ------ ---- ---- -----
1 N/A N/A N/A FIX
2 N/A N/A N/A FIX
3 N/A N/A N/A FIX
4 N/A N/A N/A FIX
5 N/A N/A N/A FIX
6 N/A N/A N/A FIX
7 N/A N/A N/A FIX
8 N/A N/A N/A FIX
9 N/A N/A N/A FIX
10 5.097% 15.359% 7.642% LF6
11 6.303 16.554 9.535 LF6
12 6.638 16.771 9.666 LF6
13 6.828 16.833 10.125 LF6
14 6.792 16.582 8.174 LF6
15 6.886 17.109 10.032 LF6
16 2.894 12.299 2.894 TY1
17 2.938 12.412 3.047 TY1
18 2.869 12.813 2.869 TY1
19 6.259 16.605 9.596 LF6
20 6.334 16.630 9.852 LF6
21 6.853 16.611 9.356 LF6
22 4.326 14.970 8.420 TY1
23 4.438 14.714 7.894 TY1
24 2.750 11.931 2.750 TY1
_____________
(1) No periodic cap.
A-1
<PAGE>
EXPLANATORY NOTES AND ADDITIONAL ASSUMPTIONS
The hypothetical Loan Numbers 1 through 9 represent Group I Loans. The
hypothetical Loan Numbers 10 through 24 represent Group II Loans.
The hypothetical Loan Numbers 1 and 6 represent balloon loans with remaining
terms to maturity of 174 months and 167 months, respectively.
The indices under the heading "Index" mean the following: FIX means a fixed rate
(no index), LF6 means Six-Month LIBOR, which remains constant at 6.91125% per
annum, and TYI means a One-Year Treasury Rate, which remains constant at 6.104%
per annum.
A-2
<PAGE>
RESIDENTIAL ASSET MORTGAGE PRODUCTS, INC.
$262,724,000
MORTGAGE ASSET-BACKED PASS-THROUGH CERTIFICATES, SERIES 2000-RS2
----------------------
PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT
----------------------
BEAR, STEARNS & CO. INC. RESIDENTIAL FUNDING SECURITIES CORPORATION
YOU SHOULD RELY ONLY ON THE INFORMATION CONTAINED OR INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE
IN THIS PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT AND THE ACCOMPANYING PROSPECTUS. WE HAVE NOT
AUTHORIZED ANYONE TO PROVIDE YOU WITH DIFFERENT INFORMATION.
WE ARE NOT OFFERING THE OFFERED CERTIFICATES IN THIS PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT IN
ANY STATE WHERE THE OFFER IS NOT PERMITTED.
Dealers will be required to deliver a prospectus supplement and prospectus when
acting as underwriters of the certificates offered hereby and with respect to
their unsold allotments or subscriptions. In addition, all dealers selling the
offered certificates, whether or not participating in this offering, may be
required to deliver a prospectus supplement and prospectus until September 22,
2000.
<PAGE>
PROSPECTUS
MORTGAGE ASSET-BACKED PASS-THROUGH CERTIFICATES AND
ASSET-BACKED NOTES
RESIDENTIAL ASSET MORTGAGE PRODUCTS, INC.
Depositor
The depositor may periodically form separate trusts to issue securities in
series, secured by assets of that trust.
OFFERED CERTIFICATES The securities in a series will consist of
certificates or notes representing interests in a trust
and will be paid only from the assets of that trust. Each
series may include multiple classes of securities with
differing payment terms and priorities. Credit
enhancement will be provided for all offered securities.
TRUST ASSETS Each trust will consist primarily of:
mortgage loans secured by first or junior liens on one- to four-family
residential properties;
home equity revolving lines of credit secured by first or junior liens on
one- to four-family residential properties, including partial balances of
those lines of credit;
home improvement installment sales contracts and installment loan
agreements, either unsecured or secured;
manufactured housing installment sales contracts and installment loan
agreements; or
mortgage or asset-backed securities backed by, and whole or partial
participations in, the types of assets listed above.
NEITHER THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION NOR ANY STATE SECURITIES
COMMISSION HAS APPROVED OR DISAPPROVED OF THESE SECURITIES OR DETERMINED THAT
THIS PROSPECTUS IS ACCURATE OR COMPLETE. ANY REPRESENTATION TO THE CONTRARY IS A
CRIMINAL OFFENSE.
February 22, 2000
<PAGE>
IMPORTANT NOTICE ABOUT INFORMATION PRESENTED IN THIS PROSPECTUS AND
THE ACCOMPANYING PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT
We provide information to you about the securities in two separate documents
that provide progressively more detail:
this prospectus, which provides general information, some of which may not
apply to your series of securities; and
the accompanying prospectus supplement, which describes the specific terms
of your series of securities.
IF THE DESCRIPTION OF YOUR SECURITIES IN THE ACCOMPANYING PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT
DIFFERS FROM THE RELATED DESCRIPTION IN THIS PROSPECTUS, YOU SHOULD RELY ON THE
INFORMATION IN THAT PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT.
You should rely only on the information provided in this prospectus and the
accompanying prospectus supplement, including the information incorporated by
reference. See 'Additional Information', 'Reports to Securityholders' and
'Incorporation of Certain Information by Reference' in this prospectus. You can
request information incorporated by reference from Residential Asset Mortgage
Products, Inc. by calling us at (612) 832-7000 or writing to us at 8400
Normandale Lake Boulevard, Suite 600, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55437. We have not
authorized anyone to provide you with different information. We are not offering
the securities in any state where the offer is not permitted.
Some capitalized terms used in this prospectus are defined in the Glossary
beginning on page 116.
-------------------
2
<PAGE>
TABLE OF CONTENTS
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
PAGE
----
<S> <C>
Introduction........................... 4
The Trusts............................. 4
General............................ 4
Characteristics of Loans........... 6
Revolving Credit Loans............. 12
The Contracts...................... 14
Mexico Loans....................... 15
The Mortgaged Properties........... 16
The Agency Securities.............. 17
Private Securities................. 18
Trust Asset Program.................... 19
Underwriting Standards............. 19
The Negotiated Conduit Asset
Program.......................... 23
Description of the Securities.......... 25
General............................ 25
Form of Securities................. 25
Assignment of Loans................ 27
Representations with Respect to
Loans............................ 29
Repurchases of Loans............... 30
Limited Right of Substitution...... 32
Certain Insolvency and Bankruptcy
Issues........................... 33
Assignment of Agency or Private
Securities....................... 33
Excess Spread and Excluded
Spread........................... 33
Payments on Loans.................. 34
Withdrawals from the Custodial
Account.......................... 36
Distributions of Principal and
Interest on the Securities....... 37
Advances........................... 38
Prepayment Interest Shortfalls..... 39
Funding Account.................... 39
Reports to Securityholders......... 40
Servicing and Administration of
Loans............................ 41
Description of Credit Enhancement...... 45
General............................ 45
Letters of Credit.................. 46
Subordination...................... 47
Overcollateralization.............. 48
Mortgage Pool Insurance Policies... 48
Special Hazard Insurance
Policies......................... 50
Bankruptcy Bonds................... 50
Reserve Funds...................... 51
Financial Guaranty Insurance
Policies; Surety Bonds........... 51
Maintenance of Credit
Enhancement...................... 52
Reduction or Substitution of Credit
Enhancement...................... 52
Other Financial Obligations Related to
the Securities....................... 53
Swaps and Yield Supplement
Agreements....................... 53
Purchase Obligations............... 53
Insurance Policies on Loans............ 54
Primary Insurance Policies......... 54
Standard Hazard Insurance on
Mortgaged Properties............. 55
Standard Hazard Insurance on
Manufactured Homes............... 56
</TABLE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
PAGE
----
<S> <C>
Description of FHA Insurance Under
Title I.......................... 57
FHA Mortgage Insurance............. 59
VA Mortgage Guaranty............... 59
The Depositor.......................... 60
Residential Funding Corporation........ 60
The Agreements......................... 60
Events of Default; Rights Upon
Event of Default................. 61
Amendment.......................... 64
Termination; Retirement of
Securities....................... 65
The Trustee........................ 66
The Owner Trustee.................. 66
The Indenture Trustee.............. 66
Yield Considerations................... 67
Maturity and Prepayment
Considerations....................... 70
Certain Legal Aspects of the Loans..... 74
The Mortgage Loans................. 74
The Manufactured Housing
Contracts........................ 83
The Home Improvement Contracts..... 85
Enforceability of Certain
Provisions....................... 86
Consumer Protection Laws........... 87
Applicability of Usury Laws........ 87
Environmental Legislation.......... 87
Soldiers' and Sailors' Civil Relief
Act of 1940...................... 88
Default Interest and Limitations on
Prepayments...................... 89
Forfeitures in Drug and RICO
Proceedings...................... 89
Negative Amortization Loans........ 89
Material Federal Income Tax
Consequences......................... 90
General............................ 90
Classification of REMICs and
FASITs........................... 90
Taxation of Owners of REMIC and
FASIT Regular Certificates....... 91
Pass-through Entities Holding FASIT
Regular Certificates............. 96
Taxation of Owners of REMIC
Residual Certificates............ 96
Backup Withholding with Respect to
Securities....................... 104
Foreign Investors in Regular
Certificates..................... 104
State and Other Tax Consequences....... 105
ERISA Considerations................... 105
ERISA Plan Asset Regulations....... 106
Prohibited Transaction
Exemptions....................... 107
Insurance Company General
Accounts......................... 110
Representations From Investing
Plans............................ 110
Tax-Exempt Investors............... 111
Consultation with Counsel.......... 111
Legal Investment Matters............... 112
Use of Proceeds........................ 113
Methods of Distribution................ 113
Legal Matters.......................... 114
Financial Information.................. 114
Additional Information................. 114
Reports to Securityholders............. 115
Incorporation of Certain Information by
Reference............................ 115
Glossary............................... 116
</TABLE>
3
<PAGE>
INTRODUCTION
The securities offered may be sold from time to time in series. Each series
of certificates will represent in the aggregate the entire beneficial ownership
interest in, and each series of notes in the aggregate will represent
indebtedness of, a trust consisting primarily of the trust assets described in
the following section. The trust assets will have been acquired by the depositor
from one or more affiliated or unaffiliated institutions. Each series of
certificates will be issued under a pooling and servicing agreement among the
depositor, the trustee and master servicer or servicer, or a trust agreement
between the depositor and trustee, all as specified in the accompanying
prospectus supplement. Each series of notes will be issued under an indenture
between the related trust and the indenture trustee specified in the
accompanying prospectus supplement. Unless the context indicates otherwise,
references in this prospectus to the trustee refer to the indenture trustee in
the case of a series of notes. The trust assets for each series of notes will be
held in a trust under a trust agreement and pledged under the indenture to
secure a series of notes as described in this prospectus and in the accompanying
prospectus supplement. The ownership of the trust fund for each series of notes
will be evidenced by certificates issued under the trust agreement, which
certificates are not offered by this prospectus.
THE TRUSTS
GENERAL
As specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement, the trust for a
series of securities will consist primarily of a segregated pool of assets. The
trust assets will primarily include any combination of the following:
one- to four-family first or junior lien mortgage loans, including
closed-end home equity loans, Home Loans and Cooperative Loans;
one- to four-family first or junior lien home equity revolving lines of
credit, which are referred to in this prospectus as revolving credit loans,
including partial balances of revolving credit loans;
home improvement installment sales contracts and installment loan
agreements, which are referred to in this prospectus as home improvement
contracts, that are either unsecured or secured by first or junior liens on
one- to four-family residential properties or by purchase money security
interests in the home improvements financed by those home improvement
contracts;
manufactured housing installment sales contracts and installment loan
agreements, which are referred to in this prospectus as manufactured
housing contracts, secured by security interests in manufactured homes;
partial balances of, or partial interests in, any of the assets described
above;
Agency Securities and private securities, which as used in this prospectus,
are mortgage-backed or asset-backed securities issued by entities other
than Freddie Mac, Fannie Mae and Ginnie Mae that represent interests in or
are secured by any of the assets described above, including pass-through
certificates, participation certificates or other instruments that evidence
interests in or are secured by these assets;
all payments and collections derived from the trust assets described above
after the related cut-off date, other than Excluded Spread or other
interest retained by the depositor or any of its affiliates with respect to
any trust asset, as from time to time are identified as deposited in the
Custodial Account and in the related Payment Account;
property acquired by foreclosure on the mortgaged properties or other
security for the trust assets or deed in lieu of foreclosure, and portions
of proceeds from the disposition of any related Additional Collateral or
Pledged Assets;
hazard insurance policies and primary insurance policies, if any; and
any one or a combination, if applicable and to the extent specified in the
accompanying prospectus supplement, of a letter of credit, purchase
obligation, mortgage pool insurance policy, contract pool insurance policy,
special hazard insurance policy, bankruptcy bond, financial guaranty
insurance policy, derivative products, surety bond or other type of credit
enhancement as described under 'Description of Credit Enhancement.'
4
<PAGE>
Unless the context indicates otherwise, as used in this prospectus, mortgage
loans includes:
mortgage loans or closed-end home equity loans secured by first or junior
liens on one- to four- family residential properties;
Home Loans; and
Cooperative Loans.
Unless the context indicates otherwise, as used in this prospectus,
Contracts includes:
manufactured housing contracts; and
home improvement contracts.
The mortgage loans, revolving credit loans and, if applicable, the contracts
will be evidenced by mortgage notes secured by mortgages, deeds of trust or
other similar security instruments creating first or junior liens on one- to
four-family residential properties. Unless the context indicates otherwise,
mortgage notes includes Cooperative Notes; mortgages includes security
agreements for Cooperative Notes; and mortgaged properties may include shares in
the related Cooperative and the related proprietary leases or occupancy
agreements securing Cooperative Notes. In addition, if specified in the
accompanying prospectus supplement relating to a series of securities, a
mortgage pool may contain Additional Collateral Loans or Pledged Asset Mortgage
Loans that are secured, in addition to the related mortgaged property, by
Additional Collateral or Pledged Assets.
The mortgage loans, revolving credit loans and the contracts are referred to
in this prospectus collectively as the loans. In connection with a series of
securities backed by revolving credit loans, if the accompanying prospectus
supplement indicates that the pool consists of certain balances of the revolving
credit loans, then the term 'revolving credit loans' in this prospectus refers
only to those balances.
If specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement, the trust underlying
a series of securities may include private securities. The private securities in
the trust may have been issued previously by the depositor or an affiliate, an
unaffiliated financial institution or other entity engaged in the business of
mortgage lending or a limited purpose corporation organized for the purpose of,
among other things, acquiring and depositing loans into trusts, and selling
beneficial interests in those trusts. As to any series of securities, the
accompanying prospectus supplement will include a description of any private
securities along with any related credit enhancement, and the trust assets
underlying those private securities will be described together with any other
trust assets included in the pool relating to that series.
Each trust asset will be selected by the depositor for inclusion in a pool
from among those purchased by the depositor from any of the following sources:
directly or through its affiliates, including Residential Funding
Corporation;
sellers who are affiliates of the depositor including HomeComings Financial
Network, Inc., Residential Money Centers, Inc., and GMAC Mortgage
Corporation; or
savings banks, savings and loan associations, commercial banks, credit
unions, insurance companies or similar institutions that are supervised
and/or examined by a federal or state authority, lenders approved by the
United States Department of Housing and Urban Development, known as HUD,
mortgage bankers, investment banking firms, the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, known as the FDIC, or other regulated and unregulated mortgage
loan originators or sellers, including brokers, not affiliated with the
depositor, all as described in the accompanying prospectus supplement.
The sellers may include state or local government housing finance agencies.
If so described in the accompanying prospectus supplement, the depositor may
issue one or more classes of securities to a seller as consideration for the
purchase of the trust assets securing such series of securities. If a pool is
composed of trust assets acquired by the depositor directly from sellers other
than Residential Funding Corporation, the accompanying prospectus supplement
will specify the extent of trust assets so acquired.
The trust assets may also be delivered to the depositor in a Designated
Seller Transaction. Those securities may be sold in whole or in part to any
designated seller identified in the accompanying prospectus supplement in
exchange for the related trust assets, or may be offered under any of the other
methods described in this prospectus under 'Methods of Distributions.' The
accompanying prospectus supplement for a Designated Seller Transaction will
include information provided by the designated seller about the designated
seller, the trust assets and the underwriting standards applicable to the loans.
None of the depositor, Residential Funding
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Corporation, GMAC Mortgage Corporation or any of their affiliates will make any
representation or warranty with respect to the trust assets sold in a Designated
Seller Transaction, or any representation as to the accuracy or completeness of
the information provided by the designated seller, unless that entity is the
designated seller. GMAC Mortgage Corporation, an affiliate of the depositor, may
be a designated seller.
Any seller, including any designated seller, or Residential Funding
Corporation may retain or acquire any Excluded Balances for any related
revolving credit loans, or any loan secured by a mortgage senior or subordinate
to any loan included in any pool.
The depositor will cause the trust assets constituting each pool to be
assigned without recourse to the trustee named in the accompanying prospectus
supplement, for the benefit of the holders of all of the securities of a series.
The master servicer or servicer, which may be an affiliate of the depositor,
named in the accompanying prospectus supplement will service the loans, either
directly or through subservicers under a servicing agreement and will receive a
fee for its services. See 'The Trusts' and 'Description of the Securities.' As
to those loans serviced by the master servicer or a servicer through a
subservicer, the master servicer or servicer, as applicable, will remain liable
for its servicing obligations under the related servicing agreement as if the
master servicer or servicer alone were servicing the trust assets. In addition
to or in place of the master servicer or servicer for a series of securities,
the accompanying prospectus supplement may identify an Administrator for the
trust. The Administrator may be an affiliate of the depositor. All references in
this prospectus to the master servicer and any discussions of the servicing and
administration functions of the master servicer or servicer will also apply to
the Administrator to the extent applicable. The master servicer's obligations
relating to the trust assets will consist principally of its contractual
servicing obligations under the related pooling and servicing agreement or
servicing agreement, including its obligation to use its best efforts to enforce
purchase obligations of Residential Funding Corporation or, in some instances,
the designated seller or seller, as described in this prospectus under
'Description of the Securities -- Representations with Respect to Loans' and '
-- Assignment of Loans' or under the terms of any private securities.
CHARACTERISTICS OF LOANS
The loans may be secured by mortgages or deeds of trust, deeds to secure
debt or other similar security instruments creating a first or junior lien on or
other interests in the related mortgaged properties. Cooperative Loans are
evidenced by promissory notes secured by a first or junior lien on the shares
issued by Cooperatives and on the related proprietary leases or occupancy
agreements granting exclusive rights to occupy specific units within a
Cooperative.
The loans may include loans insured by the Federal Housing Administration,
known as FHA, a division of HUD, loans partially guaranteed by the Veterans
Administration, known as VA, and loans that are not insured or guaranteed by the
FHA or VA. As described in the accompanying prospectus supplement, the loans may
include one or more of the following:
adjustable rate loans, known as ARM loans;
negatively amortizing ARM loans;
Balloon Loans;
Convertible Mortgage Loans;
Buy-Down Loans;
Additional Collateral Loans;
Pledged Asset Mortgage Loans;
simple interest loans;
actuarial loans;
delinquent loans;
re-performing loans;
Mexico Loans;
Cooperative Loans;
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High Cost Loans;
GPM Loans;
GEM Loans;
fixed rate loans;
loans that have been modified;
loans that provide for payment on a bi-weekly or other non-monthly basis
during the term of the loan; and
loans that provide for the reduction of the interest rate based on the
payment performance of the loans.
The accompanying prospectus supplement will provide information concerning
the types and characteristics of the loans and other assets included in the
related trust. Each prospectus supplement applicable to a series of securities
will include information to the extent then available to the depositor, as of
the related cut-off date, if appropriate, on an approximate basis. No more than
five percent (5%) of the trust assets by aggregate principal balance as of the
cut-off date will have characteristics that deviate from those characteristics
described in the accompanying prospectus supplement. Other trust assets
available for purchase by the depositor may have characteristics which would
make them eligible for inclusion in a pool but were not selected for inclusion
in a pool at that time.
The information in the accompanying prospectus supplement may include, if
applicable:
the aggregate principal balance of the loans;
the type of property securing the loans and related lien priority, if any;
the original or modified and/or remaining terms to maturity of the loans;
the range of principal balances of the loans at origination or
modification;
the aggregate credit limits and the range of credit limits of the related
credit line agreements in the case of revolving credit loans;
the range of the years of origination of the loans;
the earliest origination or modification date and latest maturity date of
the loans;
the loan-to-value ratios, known as LTV ratios, or the combined LTV ratios
of the loans, as applicable;
the weighted average loan rate and range of loan rates borne by the loans;
the applicable index, the range of gross margins, the weighted average
gross margin, the frequency of adjustments and maximum loan rate;
the geographic distribution of the mortgaged properties;
the number and percentage of home improvement contracts that are partially
insured by the FHA under Title I;
the weighted average junior ratio and Credit Utilization Rate;
the weighted average and range of debt-to-income ratios;
the distribution of loan purposes; and
the range of Credit Scores.
A Current Report on Form 8-K will be available on request to holders of the
related series of securities and will be filed, together with the related
pooling and servicing agreement or trust agreement, for each series of
certificates, or the related trust agreement and indenture, for each series of
notes, with the Securities and Exchange Commission within fifteen days after the
initial issuance of the securities. The composition and characteristics of a
pool containing revolving credit loans may change from time to time as a result
of any Draws made after the related cut-off date under the related credit line
agreements that are included in the pool. If trust assets are added to or
deleted from the trust after the date of the accompanying prospectus supplement
other than as a result of any Draws, the addition or deletion will be noted in
the Form 8-K. Additions or deletions of this type, if any, will be made prior to
the closing date.
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In some cases, loans may be prepaid by the borrowers at any time without
payment of any prepayment fee or penalty. The prospectus supplement will
disclose whether a material portion of the loans provide for payment of a
prepayment charge if the borrower prepays within a specified time period. This
charge may affect the rate of prepayment. The master servicer or servicer will
be entitled to all prepayment charges and late payment charges received on the
loans and those amounts will not be available for payment on the securities.
However, some states' laws restrict the imposition of prepayment charges even
when the loans expressly provide for the collection of those charges. As a
result, it is possible that prepayment charges may not be collected even on
loans that provide for the payment of these charges.
Some of the loans may be 'equity refinance' loans, as to which a portion of
the proceeds are used to refinance an existing loan, and the remaining proceeds
may be retained by the borrower or used for purposes unrelated to the mortgaged
property. Alternatively, the loans may be 'rate and term refinance' loans, as to
which substantially all of the proceeds, net of related costs incurred by the
borrower, are used to refinance an existing loan or loans, which may include a
junior lien, primarily in order to change the interest rate or other terms of
the existing loan.
The loans may be loans that have been consolidated and/or have had various
terms changed, loans that have been converted from adjustable rate loans to
fixed rate loans, or construction loans which have been converted to permanent
loans. If a loan is a modified loan, references to origination typically shall
refer to the date of modification.
ARM Loans
In most cases, ARM loans will have an original or modified term to maturity
of not more than 30 years. The loan rate for ARM loans usually adjusts initially
after a specified period subsequent to the initial payment date and thereafter
at either one-month, three-month, six-month, one-year or other intervals, with
corresponding adjustments in the amount of monthly payments, over the term of
the loan, and at any time is equal the sum of a fixed percentage described in
the related mortgage note, known as the gross margin, and an index, subject to
the maximum rate specified in the mortgage note and permitted by applicable law.
The accompanying prospectus supplement will describe the relevant index and the
highest, lowest and weighted average gross margin for the ARM loans in the
related pool. The accompanying prospectus supplement will also indicate any
periodic or lifetime limitations on changes in any per annum loan rate at the
time of any adjustment. An ARM loan may include a provision that allows the
borrower to convert the adjustable loan rate to a fixed rate at specified times
during the term of the ARM loan. The index or indices for a particular pool will
be specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement and may include one of
the following indexes:
the weekly average yield on U.S. Treasury securities adjusted to a constant
maturity of six months, one year or other terms to maturity;
the weekly auction average investment yield of U.S. Treasury bills of
various maturities;
the daily bank prime loan rate made available by the Federal Reserve Board;
the cost of funds of member institutions of any of the regional Federal
Home Loan Banks;
the interbank offered rates for U.S. dollar deposits in the London market,
each calculated as of a date prior to each scheduled interest rate
adjustment date which will be specified in the accompanying prospectus
supplement; or
the weekly average of secondary market interest rates on six-month
negotiable certificates of deposit.
ARM loans have features that provide different investment considerations
than fixed-rate loans. Adjustable loan rates can cause payment increases that
may exceed some borrowers' capacity to cover those payments. Some ARM loans, may
be teaser loans, with an introductory rate that is lower than the rate that
would be in effect if the applicable index and gross margin were used to
determine the loan rate. As a result of the introductory rate, interest
collections on the loans may initially be lower than expected. Commencing on
their first adjustment date, the loan rates on the teaser loans will be based on
the applicable index and gross margin, subject to any rate caps applicable to
the first adjustment date. An ARM loan may provide that its loan rate may not be
adjusted to a rate above the applicable maximum loan rate or below the
applicable minimum loan rate, if any, for the ARM loan. In addition, some of the
ARM loans may provide for limitations on the maximum amount by which their loan
rates may adjust for any single adjustment period. Some ARM loans provide for
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limitations on the amount of scheduled payments of principal and interest, or
may have other features relating to payment adjustment as described in the
accompanying prospectus supplement.
Negatively Amortizing ARM Loans
Certain ARM loans may be subject to negative amortization from time to time
prior to their maturity. Negative amortization results if the accrued monthly
interest exceeds the scheduled payment. In addition, negative amortization often
results from either the adjustment of the loan rate on a more frequent basis
than the adjustment of the scheduled payment or the application of a cap on the
size of the scheduled payment. If the scheduled payment is not sufficient to pay
the accrued monthly interest on a negative amortization ARM loan, the amount of
accrued monthly interest that exceeds the scheduled payment on the loans is
added to the principal balance of the ARM loan, bears interest at the loan rate
and is repaid from future scheduled payments.
Negatively amortizing ARM loans in most cases do not provide for the
extension of their original stated maturity to accommodate changes in their loan
rate. Investors should be aware that a loan secured by a junior lien may be
subordinate to a negatively amortizing senior loan. An increase in the principal
balance of the loan secured by a senior lien on the related mortgaged property
may cause the sum of the outstanding principal balance of the senior loan and
the outstanding principal balance of the junior loan to exceed the sum of the
principal balances at the time of origination of the junior loan. The
accompanying prospectus supplement will specify whether the ARM loans underlying
a series allow for negative amortization and the percentage, if known, of any
loans that are subordinate to any related senior loan that allows for negative
amortization.
Balloon Loans
With respect to Balloon Loans, payment of the Balloon Amount, which, based
on the amortization schedule of those loans, is expected to be a substantial
amount and will typically depend on the mortgagor's ability to obtain
refinancing of the related mortgage loan or to sell the mortgaged property prior
to the maturity of the Balloon Loan. The ability to obtain refinancing will
depend on a number of factors prevailing at the time refinancing or sale is
required, including, without limitation, real estate values, the mortgagor's
financial situation, the level of available mortgage loan interest rates, the
mortgagor's equity in the related mortgaged property, tax laws, prevailing
general economic conditions and the terms of any related first lien mortgage
loan. Neither the depositor, the master servicer or servicer, the trustee, as
applicable, nor any of their affiliates will be obligated to refinance or
repurchase any mortgage loan or to sell the mortgaged property.
Convertible Mortgage Loans
On any conversion of a Convertible Mortgage Loan, the depositor, the master
servicer or servicer or a third party may be obligated to purchase the converted
mortgage loan. Alternatively, if specified in the accompanying prospectus
supplement, the depositor, Residential Funding Corporation or another party may
agree to act as remarketing agent for the converted mortgage loans and, in that
capacity, to use its best efforts to arrange for the sale of the converted
mortgage loans under specified conditions. On the failure of any party so
obligated to purchase any converted mortgage loan, the inability of any
remarketing agent to arrange for the sale of any converted mortgage loan or the
unwillingness of the remarketing agent to exercise any election to purchase any
converted mortgage loan for its own account, the related pool will thereafter
include both fixed rate and adjustable rate mortgage loans. If specified in the
accompanying prospectus supplement, neither the depositor nor any other party
will be obligated to repurchase or remarket any converted mortgage loan, and, as
a result, converted mortgage loans will remain in the related pool.
Buy-Down Loans
In the case of Buy-Down Loans, the monthly payments made by the borrower
during the Buy-Down Period will be less than the scheduled monthly payments on
the mortgage loan, the resulting difference to be made up from:
Buy-Down Funds contributed by the seller of the mortgaged property or
another source and placed in the Buy-Down Account;
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if the Buy-Down Funds are contributed on a present value basis, investment
earnings on the Buy-Down Funds; or
additional buydown funds to be contributed over time by the borrower's
employer or another source.
Additional Collateral Loans
If stated in the accompanying prospectus supplement, a trust will contain
Additional Collateral Loans. The Additional Collateral Requirement will in most
cases terminate when the LTV Ratio of the mortgage loan is reduced to a
predetermined level, which in most cases shall not be more than 75%, as a result
of a reduction in the loan amount caused by principal payments by the borrower
under the mortgage loan or an increase in the appraised value of the related
mortgaged property.
The servicer of the Additional Collateral Loan will be required, in
accordance with the master servicer's or servicer's servicing guidelines or its
normal servicing procedures, to attempt to realize on any Additional Collateral
if the related Additional Collateral Loan is liquidated on default. The right to
receive proceeds from the realization of Additional Collateral on any
liquidation will be assigned to the related trustee. No assurance can be given
as to the amount of proceeds, if any, that might be realized from the Additional
Collateral and thereafter remitted to the trustee.
Unless otherwise specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement, an
insurance company whose claims-paying ability is rated by at least one
nationally recognized rating agency in a rating category at least as high as the
highest long-term rating category assigned to one or more classes of the
applicable series of securities will have issued a limited purpose surety bond
insuring any deficiency in the amounts realized by the Additional Collateral
Loan seller from the liquidation of Additional Collateral, up to the amount of
the Additional Collateral Requirement. For additional considerations concerning
the Additional Collateral Loans, see 'Certain Legal Aspects of Loans -- The
Mortgage Loans -- Anti-Deficiency Legislation and Other Limitations on Lenders'
in this prospectus.
Pledged Asset Mortgage Loans
If stated in the accompanying prospectus supplement, a mortgage pool may
include Pledged Asset Mortgage Loans. Each Pledged Asset will be held by a
custodian for the benefit of the trustee for the trust in which the related
Pledged Asset Mortgage Loan is held, and will be invested in investment
obligations permitted by the rating agencies rating the related series of
securities. The amount of the Pledged Assets will be determined by the seller in
accordance with its underwriting standards, but in most cases will not be more
than an amount that, if applied to reduce the original principal balance of the
mortgage loan, would reduce that principal balance to less than 70% of the
appraised value of the mortgaged property.
If, following a default by the borrower and the liquidation of the related
mortgaged property, there remains a loss on the related mortgage loan, a limited
liability company will be required to pay to the master servicer or the servicer
on behalf of the trustee the amount of that loss, up to the pledged amount for
that mortgage loan. If the borrower becomes a debtor in a bankruptcy proceeding,
there is a significant risk that the Pledged Assets will not be available to be
paid to the securityholders. At the borrower's request, and in accordance with
some conditions, the Pledged Assets may be applied as a partial prepayment of
the mortgage loan. The Pledged Assets will be released to the limited liability
company if the outstanding principal balance of the mortgage loan has been
reduced by the amount of the Pledged Assets.
Actuarial Loans
Monthly payments made by or on behalf of the borrower for each loan, in most
cases, will be one-twelfth of the applicable loan rate times the unpaid
principal balance, with any remainder of the payment applied to principal. This
is known as an actuarial loan.
Simple Interest Loans
If specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement, a portion of the
loans underlying a series of securities may be simple interest loans. A simple
interest loan provides the amortization of the amount financed under the loan
over a series of equal monthly payments, except, in the case of a Balloon Loan,
the final
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payment. Each monthly payment consists of an installment of interest which is
calculated on the basis of the outstanding principal balance of the loan
multiplied by the stated loan rate and further multiplied by a fraction, with
the numerator equal to the number of days in the period elapsed since the
preceding payment of interest was made and the denominator equal to the number
of days in the annual period for which interest accrues on the loan. As payments
are received under a simple interest loan, the amount received is applied first
to interest accrued to the date of payment and then the remaining amount is
applied to pay any unpaid fees and then to reduce the unpaid principal balance.
Accordingly, if a borrower pays a fixed monthly installment on a simple interest
loan before its scheduled due date, the portion of the payment allocable to
interest for the period since the preceding payment was made will be less than
it would have been had the payment been made as scheduled, and the portion of
the payment applied to reduce the unpaid principal balance will be
correspondingly greater. On the other hand, if a borrower pays a fixed monthly
installment after its scheduled due date, the portion of the payment allocable
to interest for the period since the preceding payment was made will be greater
than it would have been had the payment been made as scheduled, and the
remaining portion, if any, of the payment applied to reduce the unpaid principal
balance will be correspondingly less. If each scheduled payment under a simple
interest loan is made on or prior to its scheduled due date, the principal
balance of the loan will amortize more quickly than scheduled. However, if the
borrower consistently makes scheduled payments after the scheduled due date, the
loan will amortize more slowly than scheduled. If a simple interest loan is
prepaid, the borrower is required to pay interest only to the date of
prepayment. The variable allocations among principal and interest of a simple
interest loan may affect the distributions of principal and interest on the
securities, as described in the accompanying prospectus supplement.
Delinquent Loans
Some pools may include loans that are one or more months delinquent with
regard to payment of principal or interest at the time of their deposit into a
trust. The accompanying prospectus supplement will set forth the percentage of
loans that are so delinquent. Delinquent loans are more likely to result in
losses than loans that have a current payment status.
Re-Performing Loans
The term 're-performing loans' includes (i) repayment plan loans and
bankruptcy plan loans that had arrearages of at least three monthly payments
when the repayment plan was entered into, and (ii) trial modification loans.
These loans may be acquired by a designated seller or Residential Funding
Corporation from a wide variety of sources through bulk or periodic sales. The
re-performing loans were originally either:
acquired by the designated seller or Residential Funding Corporation as a
performing loan;
acquired under Residential Funding Corporation's negotiated conduit asset
program; or
acquired by the designated seller or Residential Funding Corporation as a
delinquent loan with a view toward establishing a repayment plan.
In the case of loans that are acquired by Residential Funding Corporation as
delinquent loans with a view toward establishing a repayment plan, no
determination is made as to whether the loans complied with the underwriting
criteria of any specific origination program. In each case, however, at the time
of purchase, every loan is evaluated by Residential Funding Corporation. This
evaluation includes obtaining at least validation of the related property value,
a review of the credit and collateral files, and a review of the servicing
history on the loan. The information is used to assess both the borrower's
willingness and capacity to pay, and the underlying collateral value. The rate
of default on re-performing loans is more likely to be higher than the rate of
default on loans that have not previously been in arrears.
Repayment Plan Loans and Bankruptcy Plan Loans. Some of the loans may be
loans where the borrower in the past has failed to pay one or more required
scheduled monthly payments or tax and insurance payments, and the borrower has
entered into either a repayment plan, or a confirmed bankruptcy plan in a case
under Chapter 13 of Title 11 of the United States Code, known as the Bankruptcy
Code, under which the borrower has agreed to repay these arrearages in
installments under a schedule, in exchange for the related master servicer or
servicer agreeing not to foreclose on the related mortgaged property or other
security. For each loan subject to a repayment plan, or a confirmed bankruptcy
plan, the borrower shall have made at least an aggregate of its three most
recent scheduled monthly payments prior to the cut-off date.
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The right to receive all arrearages payable under the repayment plan will
not be included as part of the trust and, accordingly, payments made on these
arrearages will not be payable to the securityholders. The borrowers under any
confirmed bankruptcy plan will make separate payments for their scheduled
monthly payments and for their arrearages. The borrowers under any repayment
plan will make a single payment, which will be applied first to their scheduled
monthly payment and second to the arrearage. In either case, the master servicer
or servicer may immediately commence foreclosure if, in the case of a bankruptcy
plan, both payments are not received and the bankruptcy court has authorized
that action or, in the case of a repayment plan, the payment is insufficient to
cover both the monthly payment and the arrearage.
Trial Modification Loans. Some of the loans may be loans where the borrower
in the past has failed to pay three or more required scheduled monthly payments,
and the borrower has entered into a trial modification agreement. Under this
arrangement:
the borrower agrees to pay a reduced monthly payment for a specified trial
period typically lasting 3 to 6 months;
if the borrower makes all required monthly payments during the trial
period, at the end of the trial period, the original loan terms will be
modified to reflect terms stated in the trial modification agreement. The
modifications may include a reduced interest rate, the forgiveness of some
arrearages, the capitalization of some arrearages, an extension of the
maturity, or a provision for a balloon payment at maturity;
if the borrower makes all required payments during the trial period, the
monthly payment amount will continue to be the monthly payment in effect
during the trial period, with no additional repayment of arrearages; and
if the borrower fails to make any of the required payments during the trial
period, the modified terms will not take effect, and a foreclosure action
may be commenced immediately. None of the depositor, the seller, the
designated seller, the master servicer or the servicer, as applicable, will
have any obligation to repurchase the related loan under those
circumstances.
For each trial modification loan, the borrower shall have made at least its
aggregate of the three most recent scheduled monthly payments as of the cut-off
date under the terms of the trial modification agreement.
REVOLVING CREDIT LOANS
General
The revolving credit loans will be originated under credit line agreements
subject to a maximum amount or credit limit. In most instances, interest on each
revolving credit loan will be calculated based on the average daily balance
outstanding during the billing cycle. The billing cycle in most cases will be
the calendar month preceding a due date. Each revolving credit loan will have a
loan rate that is subject to adjustment on the day specified in the related
mortgage note, which may be daily or monthly, equal to the sum of the index on
the day specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement, and the gross
margin specified in the related mortgage note, which may vary under
circumstances if stated in the accompanying prospectus supplement, subject to
the maximum rate specified in the mortgage note and the maximum rate permitted
by applicable law. If specified in the prospectus supplement, some revolving
credit loans may be teaser loans with an introductory rate that is lower than
the rate that would be in effect if the applicable index and gross margin were
used to determine the loan rate. As a result of the introductory rate, interest
collections on the loans may initially be lower than expected. Commencing on
their first adjustment date, the loan rates on the teaser loans will be based on
the applicable index and gross margin. The index or indices will be specified in
the related prospectus supplement and may include one of the indices mentioned
under ' -- Characteristics of Loans,' in this prospectus.
Unless specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement, each revolving
credit loan will have a term to maturity from the date of origination of not
more than 25 years. The borrower for each revolving credit loan may make a Draw
under the related credit line agreement at any time during the Draw Period.
Unless specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement, the Draw Period will
not be more than 15 years. Unless specified in the accompanying prospectus
supplement, for each revolving credit loan, if the Draw Period is less than the
full term of the revolving credit loan, the related borrower will not be
permitted to make any Draw during the Repayment Period. Prior to the Repayment
Period, or prior to the date of maturity for loans without Repayment
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Periods, the borrower for each revolving credit loan will be obligated to make
monthly payments on the revolving credit loan in a minimum amount as specified
in the related mortgage note, which usually will be the finance charge for each
billing cycle as described in the second following paragraph. In addition, if a
revolving credit loan has a Repayment Period, during this period, the borrower
is required to make monthly payments consisting of principal installments that
would substantially amortize the principal balance by the maturity date, and to
pay any current finance charges and additional charges.
The borrower for each revolving credit loan will be obligated to pay off the
remaining account balance on the related maturity date, which may be a
substantial principal amount. The maximum amount of any Draw for any revolving
credit loan is equal to the excess, if any, of the credit limit over the
principal balance outstanding under the mortgage note at the time of the Draw.
Draws will be funded by the master servicer or servicer or other entity
specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement.
Unless specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement, for each
revolving credit loan:
the finance charge for any billing cycle, in most cases, will be an amount
equal to the aggregate of, as calculated for each day in the billing cycle,
the then-applicable loan rate divided by 365 multiplied by that day's
principal balance,
the account balance on any day in most cases will be the aggregate of the
unpaid principal of the revolving credit loan outstanding at the beginning
of the day, plus all related Draws funded on that day and outstanding at
the beginning of that day, plus the sum of any unpaid finance charges and
any unpaid fees, insurance premiums and other charges, collectively known
as additional charges, that are due on the revolving credit loan minus the
aggregate of all payments and credits that are applied to the repayment of
any Draws on that day, and
the principal balance on any day usually will be the related account
balance minus the sum of any unpaid finance charges and additional charges
that are due on the revolving credit loan.
Payments made by or on behalf of the borrower for each revolving credit
loan, in most cases, will be applied, first, to any unpaid finance charges that
are due on the revolving credit loan, second, to any unpaid additional charges
that are due thereon, and third, to any related Draws outstanding.
The mortgaged property securing each revolving credit loan will be subject
to the lien created by the related loan in the amount of the outstanding
principal balance of each related Draw or portion thereof, if any, that is not
included in the related pool, whether made on or prior to the related cut-off
date or thereafter. The lien will be the same rank as the lien created by the
mortgage relating to the revolving credit loan, and monthly payments,
collections and other recoveries under the credit line agreement related to the
revolving credit loan will be allocated as described in the related prospectus
supplement among the revolving credit loan and the outstanding principal balance
of each Draw or portion of Draw excluded from the pool. The depositor, an
affiliate of the depositor or an unaffiliated seller may have an interest in any
Draw or portion thereof excluded from the pool. If any entity with an interest
in a Draw or portion thereof excluded from the pool or any other Excluded
Balance were to become a debtor under the Bankruptcy Code and regardless of
whether the transfer of the related revolving credit loan constitutes an
absolute assignment, a bankruptcy trustee or creditor of such entity or such
entity as a debtor-in-possession could assert that such entity retains rights in
the related revolving credit loan and therefore compel the sale of such
revolving credit loan, including any Trust Balance, over the objection of the
trust and the securityholders. If that occurs, delays and reductions in payments
to the trust and the securityholders could result.
In most cases, each revolving credit loan may be prepaid in full or in part
at any time and without penalty, and the related borrower will have the right
during the related Draw Period to make a Draw in the amount of any prepayment
made for the revolving credit loan. The mortgage note or mortgage related to
each revolving credit loan will usually contain a customary 'due-on-sale'
clause.
As to each revolving credit loan, the borrower's rights to receive Draws
during the Draw Period may be suspended, or the credit limit may be reduced, for
cause under a limited number of circumstances, including, but not limited to:
a materially adverse change in the borrower's financial circumstances;
a decline in the value of the mortgaged property significantly below its
appraised value at origination; or
a payment default by the borrower.
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However, as to each revolving credit loan, a suspension or reduction usually
will not affect the payment terms for previously drawn balances. The master
servicer or the servicer, as applicable, will have no obligation to investigate
as to whether any of those circumstances have occurred or may have no knowledge
of their occurrence. Therefore, there can be no assurance that any borrower's
ability to receive Draws will be suspended or reduced if the foregoing
circumstances occur. In the event of default under a revolving credit loan, at
the discretion of the master servicer or servicer, the revolving credit loan may
be terminated and declared immediately due and payable in full. For this
purpose, a default includes but is not limited to:
the borrower's failure to make any payment as required;
any action or inaction by the borrower that materially and adversely
affects the mortgaged property or the rights in the mortgaged property; or
any fraud or material misrepresentation by a borrower in connection with
the loan.
The master servicer or servicer will have the option to allow an increase in
the credit limit applicable to any revolving credit loan in certain limited
circumstances. In most cases, the master servicer or servicer will have an
unlimited ability to allow increases provided that the specified conditions are
met including:
a new appraisal or other indication of value is obtained; and
the new combined LTV ratio is less than or equal to the original combined
LTV ratio.
If a new appraisal is not obtained and the other conditions in the preceding
sentence are met, the master servicer or servicer will have the option to allow
a credit limit increase for any revolving credit loan subject to the limitations
described in the related agreement.
The proceeds of the revolving credit loans may be used by the borrower to
improve the related mortgaged properties, may be retained by the related
borrowers or may be used for purposes unrelated to the mortgaged properties.
Allocation of Revolving Credit Loan Balances
For any series of securities backed by revolving credit loans, the related
trust may include either (i) the entire principal balance of each revolving
credit loan outstanding at any time, including balances attributable to Draws
made after the related cut-off date, or (ii) the Trust Balance of each revolving
credit loan.
The accompanying prospectus supplement will describe the specific provisions
by which payments and losses on any revolving credit loan will be allocated as
between the Trust Balance and any Excluded Balance. Typically, the provisions
(i) may provide that principal payments made by the borrower will be allocated
as between the Trust Balance and any Excluded Balance either on a pro rata
basis, or first to the Trust Balance until reduced to zero, then to the Excluded
Balance, or according to other priorities specified in the accompanying
prospectus supplement, and (ii) may provide that interest payments, as well as
liquidation proceeds or similar proceeds following a default and any Realized
Losses, will be allocated between the Trust Balance and any Excluded Balance on
a pro rata basis or according to other priorities specified in the accompanying
prospectus supplement.
Even where a trust initially includes the entire principal balance of the
revolving credit loans, the related agreement may provide that after a specified
date or on the occurrence of specified events, the trust may not include
balances attributable to additional Draws made thereafter. The accompanying
prospectus supplement will describe these provisions as well as the related
allocation provisions that would be applicable.
THE CONTRACTS
Home Improvement Contracts
The trust for a series may include a contract pool evidencing interests in
home improvement contracts. The home improvement contracts may be conventional
home improvement contracts or, to the extent specified in the accompanying
prospectus supplement, the home improvement contracts may be partially insured
by the FHA under Title I.
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In most cases, the home improvement contracts will be fully amortizing and
may have fixed loan rates or adjustable loan rates and may provide for other
payment characteristics as described in the accompanying prospectus supplement.
The home improvements securing the home improvement contracts may include,
but are not limited to, replacement windows, house siding, new roofs, swimming
pools, satellite dishes, kitchen and bathroom remodeling goods and solar heating
panels. The proceeds of contracts under the Title I Program may be used only for
permitted purposes, including, but not limited to, the alteration, repair or
improvement of residential property, the purchase of a manufactured home and/or
lot on which to place that home, or cooperative interest in the home and/or lot.
Home improvements, unlike mortgaged properties, in most cases, depreciate in
value. Consequently, at any time after origination it is possible, especially in
the case of home improvement contracts with high LTV ratios at origination, that
the market value of a home improvement may be lower than the principal amount
outstanding under the related contract.
Manufactured Housing Contracts
The trust for a series may include a contract pool evidencing interests in
manufactured housing contracts originated by one or more manufactured housing
dealers, or the other entity or entities described in the accompanying
prospectus supplement. The manufactured housing contracts may be conventional
manufactured housing contracts or manufactured housing contracts insured by the
FHA or partially guaranteed by the VA. Each manufactured housing contract will
be secured by a manufactured home. The manufactured housing contracts will be
fully amortizing or, if specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement,
Balloon Loans.
The manufactured homes securing the manufactured housing contracts will
consist of 'manufactured homes' within the meaning of 42 U.S.C. 'SS'5402(6),
which are treated as 'single family residences' for the purposes of the REMIC
provisions of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, or Internal Revenue Code.
Accordingly, a manufactured home will be a structure built on a permanent
chassis, which is transportable in one or more sections and customarily used at
a fixed location, has a minimum of 400 square feet of living space and minimum
width in excess of 8 1/2 feet, is designed to be used as a dwelling with or
without a permanent foundation when connected to the required utilities, and
includes the plumbing, heating, air conditioning, and electrical systems
contained therein.
Manufactured homes, unlike mortgaged properties, in most cases, depreciate
in value. Consequently, at any time after origination it is possible, especially
in the case of manufactured housing contracts with high LTV ratios at
origination, that the market value of a manufactured home may be lower than the
principal amount outstanding under the related contract.
MEXICO LOANS
Each Mexico Loan will be secured by the beneficial ownership interest in a
separate trust, the sole asset of which is a residential property located in
Mexico. The residential property may be a second home, vacation home or the
primary residence of the borrower. The borrower of a Mexico Loan may be a U.S.
borrower or an international borrower.
Because of the uncertainty and delays in foreclosing on real property
interests in Mexico and because non-Mexican citizens are prohibited from owning
real property located in some areas of Mexico, the nature of the security
interest and the manner in which the Mexico Loans are secured differ from that
of mortgage loans typically made in the United States. Record ownership and
title to the Mexican property will be held in the name of a Mexican financial
institution acting as Mexican trustee for a Mexican trust under the terms of a
trust agreement. The trust agreement will be governed by Mexican law and will be
filed (in Spanish) in the real property records in the jurisdiction in which the
property is located. The original term of the Mexican trust will be 50 years and
will be renewable at the option of the borrower. To secure the repayment of the
Mexico Loan, the lender is named as a beneficiary of the Mexican trust. The
lender's beneficial interest in the Mexican trust grants to the lender the right
to direct the Mexican trustee to transfer the borrower's beneficial interest in
the Mexican trust or to terminate the Mexican trust and sell the Mexican
property. The borrower's beneficial interest in the Mexican trust grants to the
borrower the right to use, occupy and enjoy the Mexican property so long as it
is not in default of its obligations relating to the Mexico Loan.
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As security for repayment of the Mexico Loan, under the loan agreement, the
borrower grants to the lender a security interest in the borrower's beneficial
interest in the Mexican trust. If the borrower is domiciled in the United
States, the borrower's beneficial interest in the Mexican trust should be
considered under applicable state law to be an interest in personal property,
not real property, and, accordingly, the lender will file financing statements
in the appropriate state to perfect the lender's security interest. Because the
lender's security interest in the borrower's beneficial interest in the Mexican
trust is not, for purposes of foreclosing on that collateral, an interest in
real property, the depositor either will rely on its remedies that are available
in the United States under the applicable Uniform Commercial Code, or UCC, and
under the trust agreement and foreclose on the collateral securing a Mexico Loan
under the UCC, or direct the Mexican trustee to conduct an auction to sell the
borrower's beneficial interest or the Mexican property under the trust
agreement. If a borrower is not a resident of the United States, the lender's
security interest in the borrower's beneficial interest in the Mexican trust may
be unperfected under the UCC. If the lender conducts its principal lending
activities in the United States, the loan agreement will provide that rights and
obligations of the borrower and the lender under the loan agreement will be
governed under applicable United States state law. See 'Certain Legal Aspects of
the Loans -- The Mortgage Loans.'
In connection with the assignment of a Mexico Loan into a trust created
under the related pooling and servicing agreement or trust agreement, the
depositor will transfer to the trustee, on behalf of the securityholders, all of
its right, title and interest in the mortgage note, the lender's beneficial
interest in the Mexican trust, the lender's security interest in the borrower's
beneficial interest in the Mexican trust, and its interest in any policies of
insurance on the Mexico Loan or the Mexican property. The percentage of mortgage
loans, if any, that are Mexico Loans will be specified in the accompanying
prospectus supplement.
THE MORTGAGED PROPERTIES
The mortgaged properties will consist primarily of attached or detached
individual dwellings, Cooperative dwellings, individual or adjacent
condominiums, townhouses, duplexes, row houses, modular housing, manufactured
homes, individual units or two- to four-unit dwellings in planned unit
developments and two- to four-family dwellings. Each mortgaged property, other
than a Cooperative dwelling or Mexican property, will be located on land owned
by the borrower or, if specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement, land
leased by the borrower. The ownership of the Mexican properties will be held in
a Mexican trust. Attached dwellings may include structures where each borrower
owns the land on which the unit is built with the remaining adjacent land owned
in common. Mortgaged properties may also include dwellings on non-contiguous
properties, multiple dwellings on one property, or dwelling units subject to a
proprietary lease or occupancy agreement in an apartment building owned by a
Cooperative. The proprietary lease or occupancy agreement securing a Cooperative
Loan is subordinate, in most cases, to any blanket mortgage on the related
cooperative apartment building or on the underlying land. Additionally, in the
case of a Cooperative Loan, the proprietary lease or occupancy agreement may be
terminated and the cooperative shares may be cancelled by the Cooperative if the
tenant-stockholder fails to pay maintenance or other obligations or charges owed
by the tenant-stockholder. See 'Certain Legal Aspects of the Loans.'
Mortgaged properties consisting of modular housing, also known as
pre-assembled, pre-fabricated, sectional or pre-built homes, are factory built
and constructed in two or more three dimensional sections, including interior
and exterior finish, plumbing, wiring and mechanical systems. On completion, the
modular home is transported to the property site to be joined together on a
permanent foundation.
Mortgaged properties consisting of manufactured homes must be legally
classified as real estate, have the wheels and axles removed and be attached to
a permanent foundation and may not be located in a mobile home park. The
manufactured homes will also have other characteristics as specified in the
prospectus supplement.
The mortgaged properties may be located in any of the fifty states, the
District of Columbia or the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico. In addition, if
specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement, the trust assets may
contain Mexico Loans, which are secured by interests in trusts that own
residential properties located in Mexico. The Mexico Loans will not exceed ten
percent (10%) by aggregate principal balance of the mortgage loans in any
mortgage pool as of the cut-off date specified in the accompanying prospectus
supplement.
The mortgaged properties may be owner occupied or non-owner occupied and may
include vacation homes, second homes and investment properties. The percentage
of loans secured by mortgaged properties that are
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owner-occupied will be disclosed in the accompanying prospectus supplement. The
basis for any statement that a given percentage of the loans are secured by
mortgaged properties that are owner-occupied will be one of the following:
the making of a representation by the borrower at origination of a loan
that the borrower intends to use the mortgaged property as a primary
residence for at least the first six months of occupancy,
a representation by the originator of the loan, which may be based solely
on the above clause, or
the fact that the mailing address for the borrower is the same as the
address of the mortgaged property.
Any representation and warranty regarding owner-occupancy may be based solely on
this information. Loans secured by investment properties, including two- to
four-unit dwellings, may also be secured by an assignment of leases and rents
and operating or other cash flow guarantees relating to the loans.
A mortgaged property securing a loan may be subject to the senior liens
securing one or more conventional mortgage loans at the time of origination and
may be subject to one or more junior liens at the time of origination or after
that origination. Loans evidencing liens junior or senior to the loans in the
trust will likely not be included in the related trust, but the depositor, an
affiliate of the depositor or an unaffiliated seller may have an interest in the
junior or senior loan.
THE AGENCY SECURITIES
Government National Mortgage Association
Ginnie Mae is a wholly-owned corporate instrumentality of the United States
within HUD. Section 306(g) of Title III of the National Housing Act of 1934, as
amended, referred to in this prospectus as the Housing Act, authorizes Ginnie
Mae to guarantee the timely payment of the principal of and interest on
securities representing interests in a pool of mortgages insured by the FHA,
under the Housing Act or under Title V of the Housing Act of 1949, or partially
guaranteed by the VA under the Servicemen's Readjustment Act of 1944, as
amended, or under Chapter 37 of Title 38, United States Code.
Section 306(g) of the Housing Act provides that 'the full faith and credit
of the United States is pledged to the payment of all amounts which may be
required to be paid under any guarantee under this subsection.' In order to meet
its obligations under that guarantee, Ginnie Mae may, under Section 306(d) of
the Housing Act, borrow from the United States Treasury an amount that is at any
time sufficient to enable Ginnie Mae to perform its obligations under its
guarantee. See 'Additional Information' for the availability of further
information regarding Ginnie Mae and Ginnie Mae securities.
Ginnie Mae Securities
In most cases, each Ginnie Mae security relating to a series, which may be a
Ginnie Mae I Certificate or a Ginnie Mae II Certificate as referred to by Ginnie
Mae, will be a 'fully modified pass-through' mortgage-backed certificate issued
and serviced by a mortgage banking company or other financial concern approved
by Ginnie Mae, except any stripped mortgage-backed securities guaranteed by
Ginnie Mae or any REMIC securities issued by Ginnie Mae. The characteristics of
any Ginnie Mae securities included in the trust for a series of securities will
be described in the accompanying prospectus supplement.
Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation
Freddie Mac is a corporate instrumentality of the United States created
under Title III of the Emergency Home Finance Act of 1970, as amended, or the
Freddie Mac Act. Freddie Mac was established primarily for the purpose of
increasing the availability of mortgage credit for the financing of needed
housing. The principal activity of Freddie Mac currently consists of purchasing
first-lien, conventional, residential mortgage loans or participation interests
in mortgage loans and reselling the mortgage loans so purchased in the form of
guaranteed mortgage securities, primarily Freddie Mac securities. In 1981,
Freddie Mac initiated its Home Mortgage Guaranty Program under which it
purchases mortgage loans from sellers with Freddie Mac securities representing
interests in the mortgage loans so purchased. All mortgage loans purchased by
Freddie Mac must meet certain standards set forth in the Freddie Mac Act.
Freddie Mac is confined to purchasing, so far as practicable, mortgage loans
that it deems to be of the quality and type that generally meets the purchase
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standards imposed by private institutional mortgage investors. See 'Additional
Information' for the availability of further information regarding Freddie Mac
and Freddie Mac securities. Neither the United States nor any agency thereof is
obligated to finance Freddie Mac's operations or to assist Freddie Mac in any
other manner.
Freddie Mac Securities
In most cases, each Freddie Mac security relating to a series will represent
an undivided interest in a pool of mortgage loans that typically consists of
conventional loans, but may include FHA loans and VA loans, purchased by Freddie
Mac, except any stripped mortgage backed securities issued by Freddie Mac. Each
of those pools will consist of mortgage loans, substantially all of which are
secured by one- to four-family residential properties or, if specified in the
accompanying prospectus supplement, are secured by multi-family residential
properties. The characteristics of any Freddie Mac Securities included in the
trust for a series of securities will be set forth in the accompanying
prospectus supplement.
Federal National Mortgage Association
Fannie Mae is a federally chartered and privately owned corporation
organized and existing under the Federal National Mortgage Association Charter
Act (12 U.S.C. 'SS'1716 et seq.). It is the nation's largest supplier of
residential mortgage funds. Fannie Mae was originally established in 1938 as a
United States government agency to provide supplemental liquidity to the
mortgage market and was transformed into a stockholder-owned and privately
managed corporation by legislation enacted in 1968. Fannie Mae provides funds to
the mortgage market primarily by purchasing home mortgage loans from local
lenders, thereby replenishing their funds for additional lending. See
'Additional Information' for the availability of further information respecting
Fannie Mae and Fannie Mae securities. Although the Secretary of the Treasury of
the United States has authority to lend Fannie Mae up to $2.25 billion
outstanding at any time, neither the United States nor any agency thereof is
obligated to finance Fannie Mae's operations or to assist Fannie Mae in any
other manner.
Fannie Mae Securities
In most cases, each Fannie Mae security relating to a series will represent
a fractional undivided interest in a pool of mortgage loans formed by Fannie
Mae, except any stripped mortgage backed securities issued by Fannie Mae.
Mortgage loans underlying Fannie Mae securities will consist of fixed, variable
or adjustable rate conventional mortgage loans or fixed-rate FHA loans or VA
loans. Those mortgage loans may be secured by either one- to four-family or
multi-family residential properties. The characteristics of any Fannie Mae
securities included in the trust for a series of securities will be set forth in
the accompanying prospectus supplement.
PRIVATE SECURITIES
Any private securities underlying any securities will (i) either (a) have
been previously registered under the Securities Act, or (b) will be eligible for
sale under Rule 144(k) under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and (ii)
will be acquired in secondary market transactions from persons other than the
issuer or its affiliates. Alternatively, if the private securities were acquired
from their issuer or its affiliates, or were issued by the depositor or any of
its affiliates, then the private securities will be registered under the
Securities Act of 1933, as amended, at the same time as the securities.
For any series of securities backed by private securities or Agency
Securities, the entity that administers the private securities or Agency
securities may be referred to as the manager, if stated in the accompanying
prospectus supplement. References in this prospectus to Advances to be made and
other actions to be taken by the master servicer or servicer in connection with
the loans may include Advances made and other actions taken under the terms of
the private securities. Each security offered by this prospectus will evidence
an interest in only the related pool and corresponding trust, and not in any
other pool or trust related to securities issued in this prospectus.
In addition, as to any series of securities secured by private securities,
the private securities may consist of an ownership interest in a structuring
entity formed by the depositor for the limited purpose of holding the trust
assets relating to a series of securities. This special purpose entity may be
organized in the form of a trust, limited partnership or limited liability
company, and will be structured in a manner that will insulate the holders
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of securities from liabilities of the special purpose entity. The provisions
governing the special purpose entity will restrict the special purpose entity
from engaging in or conducting any business other than the holding of trust
assets and the issuance of ownership interests in the trust assets and some
incidental activities. Any ownership interest will evidence an ownership
interest in the related trust assets as well as the right to receive specified
cash flows derived from the trust assets, as described in the accompanying
prospectus supplement. The obligations of the depositor as to any ownership
interest will be limited to some representations and warranties relating to the
trust assets, as described in this prospectus. Credit support of any of the
types described in this prospectus under 'Description of Credit Enhancement' may
be provided for the benefit of any ownership interest, if stated in the
accompanying prospectus supplement.
TRUST ASSET PROGRAM
UNDERWRITING STANDARDS
General
The depositor expects that the originator of each of the loans will have
applied, consistent with applicable federal and state laws and regulations,
underwriting procedures intended to evaluate the borrower's credit standing and
repayment ability and/or the value and adequacy of the related property as
collateral. The depositor expects that any FHA loans or VA loans will have been
originated in compliance with the underwriting policies of the FHA or VA,
respectively. The underwriting criteria applied by the originators of the loans
included in a pool may vary significantly among sellers. The accompanying
prospectus supplement will describe most aspects of the underwriting criteria,
to the extent known by the depositor, that were applied by the originators of
the loans. In most cases, the depositor will have less detailed information
concerning the origination of seasoned loans than it will have concerning
newly-originated loans.
The underwriting standards of any particular originator typically include a
set of specific criteria by which the underwriting evaluation is made. However,
the application of the underwriting standards does not imply that each specific
criterion was satisfied individually. Rather, a loan will be considered to be
originated in accordance with a given set of underwriting standards if, based on
an overall qualitative evaluation, the loan is in substantial compliance with
the underwriting standards. For example, a loan may be considered to comply with
a set of underwriting standards, even if one or more specific criteria included
in the underwriting standards were not satisfied, if other factors compensated
for the criteria that were not satisfied or if the loan is considered to be in
substantial compliance with the underwriting standards. In the case of a
Designated Seller Transaction, the applicable underwriting standards will be
those of the designated seller or of the originator of the loans, and will be
described in the accompanying prospectus supplement.
The depositor anticipates that loans, other than the Mexico Loans and some
loans secured by mortgaged properties located in Puerto Rico, included in pools
for certain series of securities will have been originated based on underwriting
standards and documentation requirements that are less restrictive than for
other mortgage loan lending programs. In such cases, borrowers may have credit
histories that contain delinquencies on mortgage and/or consumer debts. Some
borrowers may have initiated bankruptcy proceedings within a few years of the
time of origination of the related loan. In addition, some loans with LTV ratios
over 80% will not be required to have and may not have the benefit of primary
mortgage insurance. Loans and contracts that are secured by junior liens
generally will not be required by the depositor to be covered by primary
mortgage insurance. Likewise, loans included in a trust may have been originated
in connection with a governmental program under which underwriting standards
were significantly less stringent and designed to promote home ownership or the
availability of affordable residential rental property regardless of higher
risks of default and losses. As discussed above, in evaluating seasoned loans,
the depositor may place greater weight on payment history or market and other
economic trends and less weight on underwriting factors usually applied to newly
originated loans.
Loan Documentation
In most cases, under a traditional 'full documentation' program, each
borrower will have been required to complete an application designed to provide
to the original lender pertinent credit information concerning the borrower. As
part of the description of the borrower's financial condition, the borrower will
have furnished information, which may or may not be verified, describing the
borrower's assets, liabilities, income, credit
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history and employment history, and furnished an authorization to apply for a
credit report that summarizes the borrower's available credit history with local
merchants and lenders and any record of bankruptcy. The borrower may also have
been required to authorize verifications of deposits at financial institutions
where the borrower had demand or savings accounts. In the case of investment
properties, only income derived from the mortgaged property may have been
considered for underwriting purposes, rather than the income of the borrower
from other sources. For mortgaged property consisting of vacation or second
homes, no income derived from the property will typically have been considered
for underwriting purposes.
The underwriting standards applied by originators in some cases allow for
loans to be supported by alternative documentation. For alternatively documented
loans, a borrower may demonstrate income and employment directly by providing
alternative documentation in the form of copies of the borrower's own records
relating to income and employment, rather than having the originator obtain
independent verifications from third parties, such as the borrower's employer or
mortgage servicer.
As described in the accompanying prospectus supplement, some loans may have
been originated under 'limited documentation' or 'no documentation' programs
that require less documentation and verification than do traditional 'full
documentation' programs. Under a limited documentation or no documentation
program, minimal or no investigation into the borrower's credit history and
income profile is undertaken by the originator and the underwriting may be based
primarily or entirely on an appraisal or other valuation of the mortgaged
property and the LTV or combined LTV ratio at origination.
Appraisals
The adequacy at origination of a mortgaged property as security for
repayment of the related loan will typically have been determined by an
appraisal. Appraisers may be either staff appraisers employed by the originator
or independent appraisers selected in accordance with guidelines established by
or acceptable to the originator. The appraisal procedure guidelines in most
cases will have required the appraiser or an agent on its behalf to personally
inspect the property and to verify whether the property was in good condition
and that construction, if new, had been substantially completed. The appraisal
will have considered a market data analysis of recent sales of comparable
properties and, when deemed applicable, an analysis based on income generated
from the property or replacement cost analysis based on the current cost of
constructing or purchasing a similar property. In certain instances, the LTV
ratio or combined LTV ratio may have been based on the appraised value as
indicated on a review appraisal conducted by the seller or originator.
Alternatively, as specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement, values
may be supported by:
a statistical valuation;
a broker's price opinion;
an automated appraisal, drive by appraisal or other certification of value;
or
a statement of value by the borrower.
A statistical valuation estimates the value of the property as determined by
a form of appraisal which uses a statistical model to estimate the value of a
property. The stated value will be value of the property as stated by the
related borrower in his or her application. Unless otherwise specified in the
accompanying prospectus supplement, an appraisal of any manufactured home will
not be required.
Loan-to-Value and Combined Loan-to-Value Ratios
In the case of each first lien loan made to finance the purchase of a
mortgaged property, the Loan-to-Value Ratio, or LTV ratio, in most cases is the
ratio, expressed as a percentage, of the original principal amount or credit
limit, as applicable, of the related loan to the lesser of (1) the appraised
value determined in an appraisal obtained at origination of the related loan and
(2) the sales price for the related mortgaged property, except that in the case
of some employee or preferred customer loans, the denominator of the ratio may
be the sales price.
In the case of some non-purchase first lien mortgage loans including
refinance, modified or converted mortgage loans, the LTV ratio at origination is
defined as the ratio, expressed as a percentage, of the principal amount of the
mortgage loan to either the appraised value determined in an appraisal obtained
at the time of
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refinancing, modification or conversion or, if no appraisal has been obtained,
the value of the related mortgaged property which value generally will be
supported by either:
a representation by the related seller as to value;
an appraisal or other valuation obtained prior to origination; or
the sales price, if the related mortgaged property was purchased within the
previous twelve months.
In the case of some mortgage loans seasoned for over twelve months, the LTV
ratio may be determined at the time of purchase from the related seller based on
the ratio of the current loan amount to the current value of the mortgaged
property as determined by an appraisal or other valuation.
For any loan secured by a junior lien on the related mortgaged property, the
combined LTV ratio, in most cases, will be the ratio, expressed as a percentage,
of (A) the sum of (1) the original principal balance or the credit limit, as
applicable, and (2) the principal balance of any related senior mortgage loan at
origination of the loan together with any loan subordinate to it, to (B) the
appraised value of the related mortgaged property. The appraised value for any
junior lien loan will be the appraised value of the related mortgaged property
determined in the appraisal used in the origination of the loan, which may have
been obtained at an earlier time. However, if the loan was originated
simultaneously with or not more than 12 months after a senior lien on the
related mortgaged property, the appraised value will in most cases be the lesser
of the appraised value at the origination of the senior lien and the sales price
for the mortgaged property.
As to each loan secured by a junior lien on the mortgaged property, the
junior ratio will be the ratio, expressed as a percentage, of the original
principal balance or the credit limit, as applicable, of the loan to the sum of
(1) the original principal balance or the credit limit, as applicable, of the
loan and (2) the principal balance of any related senior loan at origination of
the loan. The credit utilization rate for any revolving credit loan is
determined by dividing the cut-off date principal balance of the revolving
credit loan by the credit limit of the related credit line agreement.
Some of the loans which are subject to negative amortization will have LTV
ratios that will increase after origination as a result of their negative
amortization. In the case of some seasoned loans, the values used in calculating
LTV ratios may no longer be accurate valuations of the mortgaged properties.
Some mortgaged properties may be located in regions where property values have
declined significantly since the time of origination.
The underwriting standards applied by an originator typically require that
the underwriting officers be satisfied that the value of the property being
financed, as indicated by an appraisal or other acceptable valuation method as
described above, currently supports, except with respect to Home Loans, and is
anticipated to support in the future the outstanding loan balance. In fact, some
states where the mortgaged properties may be located have 'anti-deficiency' laws
requiring, in general, that lenders providing credit on single family property
look solely to the property for repayment in the event of foreclosure. See
'Certain Legal Aspects of the Loans.' Any of these factors could change
nationwide or merely could affect a locality or region in which all or some of
the mortgaged properties are located. However, declining values of real estate,
as experienced periodically in certain regions, or increases in the principal
balances of some loans, such as GPM Loans and negative amortization ARM loans,
could cause the principal balance of some or all of these loans to exceed the
value of the mortgaged properties.
Credit Scores
Credit Scores are obtained by some mortgage lenders in connection with loan
applications to help assess a borrower's credit-worthiness. In addition, Credit
Scores may be obtained by Residential Funding Corporation or the designated
seller after the origination of a loan if the seller does not provide a current
Credit Score. Credit Scores are obtained from credit reports provided by various
credit reporting organizations, each of which may employ differing computer
models and methodologies.
The Credit Score is designed to assess a borrower's credit history at a
single point in time, using objective information currently on file for the
borrower at a particular credit reporting organization. Although each scoring
model varies, typically Credit Scores range from approximately 350 to
approximately 840, with higher scores indicating an individual with a more
favorable credit history compared to an individual with a lower score. However,
a Credit Score purports only to be a measurement of the relative degree of risk
a borrower represents
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to a lender, i.e., a borrower with a higher score is statistically expected to
be less likely to default in payment than a borrower with a lower score. In
addition, it should be noted that Credit Scores were developed to indicate a
level of default probability over a two-year period, which in most cases, does
not correspond to the life of a loan. Furthermore, many Credit Scores were not
developed specifically for use in connection with mortgage loans, but for
consumer loans in general, and assess only the borrower's past credit history.
Therefore, in most cases, a Credit Score may not take into consideration the
differences between mortgage loans and consumer loans, or the specific
characteristics of the related loan, including the LTV ratio or combined LTV
ratio, as applicable, the collateral for the loan, or the debt to income ratio.
There can be no assurance that the Credit Scores of the borrowers will be an
accurate predictor of the likelihood of repayment of the related loans or that
any borrower's Credit Score would not be lower if obtained as of the date of the
accompanying prospectus supplement.
Application of Underwriting Standards
Based on the data provided in the application and certain verifications, if
required, and the appraisal or other valuation of the mortgaged property, a
determination will have been generally made by the original lender that the
borrower's monthly income would be sufficient to enable the borrower to meet its
monthly obligations on the loan and other expenses related to the property.
Examples of other expenses include property taxes, utility costs, standard
hazard and primary mortgage insurance, maintenance fees and other levies
assessed by a Cooperative, if applicable, and other fixed obligations other than
housing expenses including, in the case of loans secured by a junior lien on the
related mortgaged property, payments required to be made on any senior mortgage.
The originator's guidelines for loans will, in most cases, specify that
scheduled payments on a loan during the first year of its term plus taxes and
insurance, including primary mortgage insurance, and all scheduled payments on
obligations that extend beyond one year, including those mentioned above and
other fixed obligations, would equal no more than specified percentages of the
prospective borrower's gross income. The originator may also consider the amount
of liquid assets available to the borrower after origination. The loan rate in
effect from the origination date of an ARM loan or other types of loans to the
first adjustment date are likely to be lower, and may be significantly lower,
than the sum of the then applicable index and Note Margin. Similarly, the amount
of the monthly payment on Buy-Down Loans, GEM Loans or other graduated payment
loans will, and on negative amortization loans may, increase periodically. If
the borrowers' incomes do not increase in an amount commensurate with the
increases in monthly payments, the likelihood of default will increase. In
addition, in the case of either ARM loans or graduated payment or other loans
that are subject to negative amortization, due to the addition of deferred
interest the principal balances of those loans are more likely to equal or
exceed the value of the underlying mortgaged properties, thereby increasing the
likelihood of defaults and losses. For Balloon Loans, payment of the Balloon
Amount will depend on the borrower's ability to obtain refinancing or to sell
the mortgaged property prior to the maturity of the Balloon Loan, and there can
be no assurance that refinancing will be available to the borrower or that a
sale will be possible.
In some circumstances, the loans have been made to employees or preferred
customers of the originator for which, in accordance with the originator's
mortgage loan programs, income, asset and employment verifications and
appraisals may not have been required. As to loans made under any employee loan
program maintained by Residential Funding Corporation, GMAC Mortgage Corporation
or any of their affiliates, in limited circumstances preferential note rates may
be allowed.
A portion of the loans may be purchased in negotiated transactions, and
those negotiated transactions may be governed by agreements, known as master
commitments, relating to ongoing purchases of loans by Residential Funding
Corporation or the designated seller, from sellers who will represent that the
loans have been originated in accordance with underwriting standards agreed to
by Residential Funding Corporation or the designated seller, as applicable.
Residential Funding Corporation or the designated seller, as the case may be, on
behalf of the depositor or a designated third party, will normally review only a
limited portion of the loans in any delivery from the related seller for
conformity with the applicable underwriting standards. A portion of loans may be
purchased from sellers who may represent that the loans were originated under
underwriting standards acceptable to Residential Funding Corporation or the
designated seller. Loans purchased under Residential Funding Corporation's
negotiated conduit asset program are not typically purchased pursuant to master
commitments.
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The level of review by Residential Funding Corporation, if any, will vary
depending on several factors, including its experience with the seller.
Residential Funding Corporation, on behalf of the depositor, typically will
review a portion of the loans constituting the pool for a series of securities
for conformity with Residential Funding Corporation's underwriting standards or
applicable underwriting standards specified in the accompanying prospectus
supplement, and to assess the likelihood of repayment of the loan from the
various sources for such repayment, including the borrower, the mortgaged
property, and primary mortgage insurance, if any. In reviewing seasoned loans,
or loans that have been outstanding for more than 12 months, Residential Funding
Corporation may take into consideration, in addition to or in lieu of the
factors described above, the borrower's actual payment history in assessing a
borrower's current ability to make payments on the loan. In addition,
Residential Funding Corporation may conduct additional procedures to assess the
current value of the mortgaged properties. Those procedures may consist of
statistical valuations, drive-by appraisals or real estate broker's price
opinions. The depositor may also consider a specific area's housing value
trends. These alternative valuation methods are not necessarily as reliable as
the type of borrower financial information or appraisals that are typically
obtained at origination. In its underwriting analysis, Residential Funding
Corporation may also consider the applicable Credit Score of the related
borrower used in connection with the origination or acquisition of the loan, as
determined based on a credit scoring model acceptable to the depositor.
Residential Funding Corporation will not undertake any review of loans sold to
the depositor in a Designated Seller Transaction.
THE NEGOTIATED CONDUIT ASSET PROGRAM
Some of the loans included in a trust may have been acquired and evaluated
under Residential Funding Corporations' negotiated conduit asset program. The
negotiated conduit asset program targets loans with document deficiencies,
program violations, unusual property types, seasoned loans, delinquent loans,
and loans not eligible for Residential Funding Corporations' other programs. In
most cases, the negotiated conduit asset program loans fall into three
categories: Portfolio Programs, Program Violations and Seasoned Loans.
Portfolio Programs: These loans are originated by various originators for
their own mortgage loan portfolio and not under any of Residential Funding
Corporation's standard programs or any other secondary market program.
Typically, these loans are originated under programs offered by financial
depository institutions that were designed to provide the financial institution
with a competitive origination advantage. This is achieved by permitting loan
terms and underwriting criteria that did not conform with typical secondary
market standards, with the intention that these loans would be held in the
originating institution's portfolio rather than sold in the secondary market.
However, for various reasons including merger or acquisition or other financial
considerations specific to the originating institution, that institution may
offer the loans for sale, and the loans are then acquired by Residential Funding
Corporation in the secondary market.
Program Violations: These loans are originated for sale in the secondary
market with the intention that the loans will meet the criteria and underwriting
guidelines of a standard loan purchase program of Residential Funding
Corporation, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, or another secondary market participant.
However, after origination it may be determined that the loans do not meet the
requirements of the intended program for any of a number of reasons, including
the failure to reach required loan-to-value ratios, debt-to-income ratios or
credit scores, or because the mortgage file has document deficiencies.
Seasoned Loans: These loans are acquired by Residential Funding Corporation
through the exercise of a right to repurchase loans in a pool previously
securitized by the depositor or any of its affiliates, or are other seasoned
loans. In most cases, these loans are seasoned longer than twelve months. Due to
the length of time since origination, no assurance can be given as to whether
such loans will conform with current underwriting criteria or documentation
requirements. Although at origination some of the loans may have been purchased
through one of Residential Funding Corporation's standard loan purchase
programs, seasoned loans are typically not purchased through these programs
because these programs require current information regarding the mortgagor's
credit and the property value.
Evaluation Standards for Negotiated Conduit Asset Program Loans: Every
negotiated conduit asset program loan is evaluated by Residential Funding
Corporation to determine whether the characteristics of the loan, the borrower
and the collateral, taken as a whole, represent a prudent lending risk. The
factors considered include:
the mortgage loan's payment terms and characteristics,
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negotiated conduit asset program
the borrower's credit score,
the value of the mortgaged property which may be estimated using a broker's
price opinion or a statistical valuation,
the credit and legal documentation associated with the loan,
the seasoning of the loan,
a reevaluation of the financial capacity, eligibility and experience of the
seller and/or servicer of the loan, and
the representations and warranties made by the seller.
In most cases, Residential Funding Corporation orders an updated credit
score for each loan reviewed. For seasoned loans, an updated credit score is
ordered for the primary borrower as reported on the tape data or loan file
submitted by the seller. Periodic quality control reviews are performed.
Broker's price opinions are obtained if, among other reasons, the loan is
delinquent or the principal balance of the mortgage loan exceeds $400,000. In
addition, statistical property valuations and drive-by appraisals may be used,
or a review may be done of the original appraisal.
Many of the negotiated conduit asset program loans include characteristics
representing underwriting deficiencies as compared to other mortgage loans
originated in compliance with standard origination programs for the secondary
mortgage market. In addition, some of the mortgaged properties for these loans
are not typically permitted in the secondary market, including mixed-use
properties, incomplete properties, properties with deferred maintenance, and
properties with excess acreage.
The negotiated conduit asset program loans may have missing or defective
loan documentation. Neither Residential Funding Corporation nor the seller will
be obligated to repurchase a negotiated conduit asset program loan because of
such missing or defective documentation unless the omission or defect materially
interferes with the servicer's or master servicer's ability to foreclose on the
related mortgaged property.
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DESCRIPTION OF THE SECURITIES
GENERAL
The securities will be issued in series. Each series of certificates or, in
some instances, two or more series of certificates, will be issued under a
pooling and servicing agreement or, in the case of certificates backed by
private securities, a trust agreement, similar to one of the forms filed as an
exhibit to the registration statement under the Securities Act of 1933, as
amended, for the certificates of which this prospectus is a part. Each series of
notes will be issued under an indenture between the related trust and the entity
named in the accompanying prospectus supplement as indenture trustee for the
series. A form of indenture has been filed as an exhibit to the registration
statement under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, for the notes of which
this prospectus forms a part. In the case of each series of notes, the
depositor, the related trust and the entity named in the accompanying prospectus
supplement as master servicer for the series will enter into a separate
servicing agreement. Each pooling and servicing agreement, trust agreement,
servicing agreement, and indenture will be filed with the Securities and
Exchange Commission as an exhibit to a Form 8-K. The following summaries
(together with additional summaries under 'The Agreements' below) describe all
material terms and provisions relating to the securities common to each
agreement. All references to an 'agreement' and any discussion of the provisions
of any agreement applies to pooling and servicing agreements, trust agreements,
servicing agreements and indentures, as applicable. The summaries do not purport
to be complete and are subject to, and are qualified in their entirety by
reference to, all of the provisions of related agreement for each trust and the
accompanying prospectus supplement.
Each series of securities may consist of any one or a combination of the
following:
a single class of securities;
one or more classes of senior securities, of which one or more classes of
securities may be senior in right of payment to any other class or classes
of securities subordinate to it, and as to which some classes of senior
securities may be senior to other classes of senior securities, as
described in the respective prospectus supplement;
one or more classes of mezzanine securities which are subordinate
securities but which are senior to other classes of subordinate securities
relating to such distributions or losses;
one or more classes of strip securities which will be entitled to (a)
principal distributions, with disproportionate, nominal or no interest
distributions or (b) interest distributions, with disproportionate, nominal
or no principal distributions;
two or more classes of securities which differ as to the timing, sequential
order, rate, pass-through rate or amount of distributions of principal or
interest or both, or as to which distributions of principal or interest or
both on any class may be made on the occurrence of specified events, in
accordance with a schedule or formula, including 'planned amortization
classes' and 'targeted amortization classes,' or on the basis of
collections from designated portions of the pool, which series may include
one or more classes of accrual securities for which some accrued interest
will not be distributed but rather will be added to their principal balance
on the distribution date, which will be specified in the accompanying
prospectus supplement; or
other types of classes of securities, as described in the accompanying
prospectus supplement.
Credit support for each series of securities will be provided by a mortgage
pool insurance policy, special hazard insurance policy, bankruptcy bond, letter
of credit, purchase obligation, reserve fund, excess spread,
overcollateralization, financial guaranty insurance policy, derivative products,
surety bond or other credit enhancement as described under 'Description of
Credit Enhancement,' or by the subordination of one or more classes of
securities as described under 'Description of Credit Enhancement --
Subordination' or by any combination of the foregoing.
FORM OF SECURITIES
As specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement, the securities of
each series will be issued either as physical securities or in book-entry form.
If issued as physical securities, the securities will be in fully registered
form only in the denominations specified in the accompanying prospectus
supplement, and will be
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transferable and exchangeable at the corporate trust office of the certificate
registrar appointed under the related pooling and servicing agreement or
indenture to register the certificates. No service charge will be made for any
registration of exchange or transfer of securities, but the trustee may require
payment of a sum sufficient to cover any tax or other governmental charge. The
term securityholder or holder refers to the entity whose name appears on the
records of the security registrar or, if applicable, a transfer agent, as the
registered holder of the certificate, except as otherwise indicated in the
accompanying prospectus supplement.
If issued in book-entry form, the classes of a series of securities will be
initially issued through the book-entry facilities of The Depository Trust
Company, or DTC, or Clearstream Bank, societe anonyme, formerly known as
Cedelbank, SA, or Clearstream, or the Euroclear System (in Europe) if they are
participants of those systems, or indirectly through organizations which are
participants in those systems, or through any other depository or facility as
may be specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement. As to any class of
book-entry securities so issued, the record holder of those securities will be
DTC's nominee. Clearstream and Euroclear System will hold omnibus positions on
behalf of their participants through customers' securities accounts in
Clearstream's and Euroclear System's names on the books of their respective
depositaries, which in turn will hold those positions in customers' securities
accounts in the depositaries' names on the books of DTC. DTC is a
limited-purpose trust company organized under the laws of the State of New York,
which holds securities for its DTC participants, which include securities
brokers and dealers, banks, trust companies and clearing corporations. DTC
together with the Clearstream and Euroclear System participating organizations
facilitates the clearance and settlement of securities transactions between
participants through electronic book-entry changes in the accounts of
participants. Other institutions that are not participants but indirect
participants which clear through or maintain a custodial relationship with
participants have indirect access to DTC's clearance system.
Unless otherwise specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement, no
beneficial owner in an interest in any book-entry security will be entitled to
receive a security representing that interest in registered, certificated form,
unless either (i) DTC ceases to act as depository for that security and a
successor depository is not obtained, or (ii) the depositor elects in its sole
discretion to discontinue the registration of the securities through DTC. Prior
to any such event, beneficial owners will not be recognized by the trustee, the
master servicer or the servicer as holders of the related securities for
purposes of the related agreement, and beneficial owners will be able to
exercise their rights as owners of their securities only indirectly through DTC,
participants and indirect participants. Any beneficial owner that desires to
purchase, sell or otherwise transfer any interest in book-entry securities may
do so only through DTC, either directly if the beneficial owner is a participant
or indirectly through participants and, if applicable, indirect participants.
Under the procedures of DTC, transfers of the beneficial ownership of any
book-entry securities will be required to be made in minimum denominations
specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement. The ability of a beneficial
owner to pledge book-entry securities to persons or entities that are not
participants in the DTC system, or to otherwise act with respect to the
securities, may be limited because of the lack of physical securities evidencing
the securities and because DTC may act only on behalf of participants.
Because of time zone differences, the securities account of a Clearstream
or Euroclear System participant as a result of a transaction with a DTC
participant, other than a depositary holding on behalf of Clearstream or
Euroclear System, will be credited during a subsequent securities settlement
processing day, which must be a business day for Clearstream or Euroclear
System, as the case may be, immediately following the DTC settlement date.
Credits or any transactions in those securities settled during this processing
will be reported to the relevant Euroclear System participant or Clearstream
participants on that business day. Cash received in Clearstream or Euroclear
System as a result of sales of securities by or through a Clearstream
participant or Euroclear System participant to a DTC participant, other than the
depositary for Clearstream or Euroclear System, will be received with value on
the DTC settlement date, but will be available in the relevant Clearstream or
Euroclear System cash account only as of the business day following settlement
in DTC.
Transfers between participants will occur in accordance with DTC rules.
Transfers between Clearstream participants and Euroclear System participants
will occur in accordance with their respective rules and operating procedures.
Cross-market transfers between persons holding directly or indirectly
through DTC, on the one hand, and directly or indirectly through Clearstream
participants or Euroclear System participants, on the other, will be effected in
DTC in accordance with DTC rules on behalf of the relevant European
international clearing system
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by the relevant depositaries; however, the cross market transactions will
require delivery of instructions to the relevant European international clearing
system by the counterparty in that system in accordance with its rules and
procedures and within its established deadlines defined with respect to European
time. The relevant European international clearing system will, if the
transaction meets its settlement requirements, deliver instructions to its
depositary to take action to effect final settlement on its behalf by delivering
or receiving securities in DTC, and making or receiving payment in accordance
with normal procedures for same day funds settlement applicable to DTC.
Clearstream participants and Euroclear System participants may not deliver
instructions directly to the depositaries.
Clearstream, as a professional depository, holds securities for its
participating organizations and facilitates the clearance and settlement of
securities transactions between Clearstream participants through electronic
book-entry changes in accounts of Clearstream participants, thereby
eliminating the need for physical movement of securities. As a professional
depository, Clearstream is subject to regulation by the Luxembourg Monetary
Institute.
Euroclear System was created to hold securities for participants of
Euroclear System and to clear and settle transactions between Euroclear System
participants through simultaneous electronic book-entry delivery against
payment, thereby eliminating the need for physical movement of securities and
any risk from lack of simultaneous transfers of securities and cash. Euroclear
System operator is the Brussels, Belgium office of Morgan Guaranty Trust Company
of New York, under contract with the clearance cooperative, Euroclear System
Clearance Systems S.C., a Belgian co-operative corporation. All operations are
conducted by the Euroclear System operator, and all Euroclear System securities
clearance accounts and Euroclear System cash accounts are accounts with the
Euroclear System operator, not the clearance cooperative.
The clearance cooperative establishes policy for Euroclear System on behalf
of Euroclear System participants. The Euroclear System operator is the Belgian
branch of a New York banking corporation which is a member bank of the Federal
Reserve System. As a result, it is regulated and examined by the Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve System and the New York State Banking
Department, as well as the Belgian Banking Commission. Securities clearance
accounts and cash accounts with the Euroclear System operator are governed by
the terms and conditions Governing Use of Euroclear System and the related
operating procedures of the Euroclear System and applicable Belgian law. The
terms and conditions govern transfers of securities and cash within Euroclear
System, withdrawals of securities and cash from Euroclear System, and receipts
of payments for securities in Euroclear System. All securities in Euroclear
System are held on a fungible basis without attribution of specific securities
to specific securities clearance accounts.
Distributions on the book-entry securities will be forwarded by the trustee
to DTC, and DTC will be responsible for forwarding those payments to
participants, each of which will be responsible for disbursing the payments to
the beneficial owners it represents or, if applicable, to indirect participants.
Accordingly, beneficial owners may experience delays in the receipt of payments
relating to their securities. Under DTC's procedures, DTC will take actions
permitted to be taken by holders of any class of book-entry securities under the
related agreement only at the direction of one or more participants to whose
account the book-entry securities are credited and whose aggregate holdings
represent no less than any minimum amount of percentage interests or voting
rights required therefor. DTC may take conflicting actions for any action of
securityholders of any class to the extent that participants authorize those
actions. None of the master servicer, the servicer, the depositor, the trustee
or any of their respective affiliates will have any liability for any aspect of
the records relating to or payments made on account of beneficial ownership
interests in the book-entry securities, or for maintaining, supervising or
reviewing any records relating to those beneficial ownership interests.
ASSIGNMENT OF LOANS
At the time of issuance of a series of securities, the depositor will cause
the loans and any other assets included in the related trust to be assigned
without recourse to the trustee or owner trustee or its nominee, which may be
the custodian, together with, unless specified in the accompanying prospectus
supplement, all principal and interest received on the trust assets after the
cut-off date, but not including principal and interest due on or before the
cut-off date or any Excluded Spread. Each loan will be identified in a schedule
appearing as an exhibit to the related agreement. Each schedule of loans will
include, among other things, information as to the principal balance of each
loan as of the cut-off date, as well as information respecting the loan rate,
the currently
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scheduled monthly payment of principal and interest, the maturity of the
mortgage note and the LTV ratio or combined LTV ratio and junior mortgage ratio,
as applicable, at origination or modification.
If stated in the accompanying prospectus supplement, and in accordance with
the rules of membership of MERSCORP, Inc. and/or Mortgage Electronic
Registration Systems, Inc. or, MERS'r', assignments of mortgages for any trust
asset in the related trust will be registered electronically through Mortgage
Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., or MERS'r' System. For trust assets
registered through the MERS'r' System, MERS'r' shall serve as mortgagee of
record solely as a nominee in an administrative capacity on behalf of the
trustee and shall not have any interest in any of those trust assets.
In addition, except as provided below for some series of securities backed
by Trust Balances of revolving credit loans, the depositor will, as to each loan
that is a trust asset, deliver to an entity specified in the accompanying
prospectus supplement, which may be the trustee, a custodian or another entity
appointed by the trustee, the legal documents relating to each loan that are in
possession of the depositor. Depending on the type of trust asset, the legal
documents may include the following, as applicable:
the mortgage note and any modification or amendment thereto endorsed
without recourse either in blank or to the order of the trustee or owner
trustee or a nominee or a lost note affidavit together with a copy of the
related mortgage note;
the mortgage, except for any mortgage not returned from the public
recording office, with evidence of recording indicated thereon or, in the
case of a Cooperative Loan or a Mexico Loan, the respective security
agreements and any applicable UCC financing statements;
an assignment in recordable form of the mortgage, except in the case of a
mortgage registered with MERS'r' or, for a Cooperative Loan, an assignment
of the respective security agreements, any applicable financing statements,
recognition agreements, relevant stock certificates, related blank stock
powers and the related proprietary leases or occupancy agreements and, with
respect to a Mexico Loan, an assignment of the borrower's beneficial
interest in the Mexican trust;
if applicable, any riders or modifications to the mortgage note and
mortgage, together with any other documents at such times as described in
the related agreement; and
if applicable, the original contract and copies of documents and
instruments related to each contract and, other than in the case of
unsecured contracts, the security interest in the property securing the
related contract.
Assignments of the loans, including contracts secured by liens on mortgaged
property, will be recorded in the appropriate public recording office, except
for mortgages registered with MERS'r' or in states where, in the opinion of
counsel acceptable to the trustee, the recording is not required to protect the
trustee's interests in the loans against the claim of any subsequent transferee
or any successor to or creditor of the depositor or the originator of the loans,
or except as otherwise specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement.
The assignments may be blanket assignments covering mortgages secured by
mortgaged properties located in the same county, if permitted by law. If so
provided in the accompanying prospectus supplement, the depositor may not be
required to deliver one or more of the related documents if any of the documents
are missing from the files of the party from whom the loans were purchased.
In the case of contracts, the depositor, the master servicer or the servicer
will cause a financing statement to be executed by the depositor identifying the
trustee as the secured party and identifying all contracts as collateral.
However, unless otherwise specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement,
the contracts will not be stamped or otherwise marked to reflect their
assignment from the depositor to the trust and no recordings or filings will be
made in the jurisdictions in which the manufactured homes are located. See
'Certain Legal Aspects of the Loans -- The Manufactured Housing Contracts' and '
-- The Home Improvement Contracts.'
Any mortgage for a loan secured by mortgaged property located in Puerto Rico
will be either a Direct Puerto Rico Mortgage or an Endorsable Puerto Rico
Mortgage. Endorsable Puerto Rico Mortgages do not require an assignment to
transfer the related lien. Rather, transfer of those mortgages follows an
effective endorsement of the related mortgage note and, therefore, delivery of
the assignment referred to in the fifth preceding paragraph would be
inapplicable. Direct Puerto Rico Mortgages, however, require an assignment to be
recorded for any transfer of the related lien and the assignment would be
delivered to the trustee, or the custodian.
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If, for any loan including any contract secured by a lien on mortgaged
property, the depositor cannot deliver the mortgage or any assignment with
evidence of recording thereon concurrently with the execution and delivery of
the related agreement because of a delay caused by the public recording office,
the depositor will deliver or cause to be delivered to the trustee or the
custodian a true and correct photocopy of the mortgage or assignment. The
depositor will deliver or cause to be delivered to the trustee or the custodian
such mortgage or assignment with evidence of recording indicated thereon after
receipt thereof from the public recording office or from the related master
servicer or servicer.
In most cases, the trustee or the custodian will review the legal documents
within 90 days after receipt. If any document is found to be defective in any
material respect, the trustee or the custodian shall notify the master servicer
or servicer and the depositor, and the master servicer, the servicer or the
trustee shall notify the seller, including a designated seller. Other than with
respect to loans purchased under Residential Funding Corporation's negotiated
conduit asset program, if the seller cannot cure the defect within 60 days, or
within the other period specified in the related prospectus supplement, after
notice of the defect is given to the seller, the seller is required to, not
later than 90 days after such notice, or within the other period specified in
the related prospectus supplement, either repurchase the related loan or any
property acquired in respect of it from the trustee or, if permitted, substitute
for that loan a new loan in accordance with the standards described in this
prospectus. Unless otherwise specified in the accompanying prospectus
supplement, the purchase price for any loan will be equal to the principal
balance thereof as of the date of purchase plus accrued and unpaid interest less
the amount, expressed as a percentage per annum, payable for servicing or
administrative compensation and the Excluded Spread, if any. There can be no
assurance that the applicable seller or designated seller will fulfill its
obligation to purchase or substitute any loan as described above. In most cases
only the seller or the designated seller, and not Residential Funding
Corporation, will be obligated to repurchase a loan for a material defect in a
constituent document. The obligation to repurchase or substitute for a loan
constitutes the sole remedy available to the securityholder or the trustee for a
material defect in a constituent document. Any loan not so purchased or
substituted for shall remain in the related trust.
For any series of securities backed by Trust Balances of revolving credit
loans, the foregoing documents in most cases will have been delivered to an
entity specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement, which may be the
trustee, a custodian or another entity appointed by the trustee. That entity
shall hold those documents as or on behalf of the trustee for the benefit of the
securityholders, for the Trust Balances thereof, and on behalf of any other
applicable entity for any Excluded Balance thereof, as their respective
interests may appear. In those cases, the review of the related documents need
not be performed if a similar review has previously been performed by the entity
holding the documents for an Excluded Balance and such review covered all
documentation for any Trust Balance.
Under some circumstances, as to any series of securities, the depositor may
have the option to repurchase trust assets from the trust for cash, or in
exchange for other trust assets or Permitted Investments. Alternatively, for any
series of securities secured by private securities, the depositor may have the
right to repurchase loans from the entity that issued the private securities.
All provisions relating to these optional repurchase provisions will be
described in the accompanying prospectus supplement.
REPRESENTATIONS WITH RESPECT TO LOANS
Sellers will typically make certain limited representations and warranties
with respect to the trust assets that they sell. However, trust assets purchased
from certain unaffiliated sellers may be purchased with very limited or no
representations and warranties. In addition, unless provided in the accompanying
prospectus supplement, the representations and warranties of the seller will not
be assigned to the trustee for the benefit of the holders of the related series
of securities, and therefore a breach of the representations and warranties of
the seller, in most cases, will not be enforceable on behalf of the trust.
Except in the case of a Designated Seller Transaction, all of the
representations and warranties of a seller relating to a trust asset will have
been made as of the date on which the related seller sold the trust asset to the
depositor, Residential Funding Corporation, GMAC Mortgage Corporation or one of
their affiliates. The date as of which the representations and warranties were
made typically will be a date prior to the date of issuance of the related
series of securities. A substantial period of time may elapse between the date
as of which the representations and warranties were made and the date of
issuance of the related series of securities. The seller's repurchase obligation
if any, or, if specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement, limited
substitution
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option, will not arise if, after the sale of the related trust asset, an event
occurs that would have given rise to such an obligation had the event occurred
prior to that period.
Except in the case of a Designated Seller Transaction, loans acquired under
Residential Funding Corporation's negotiated conduit asset program, or loans
underlying any private securities, for any loan, in most cases, Residential
Funding Corporation will represent and warrant that:
as of the cut-off date, the information set forth in a listing of the
related loans was true and correct in all material respects;
except in the case of Cooperative Loans, a policy of title insurance in the
form and amount acceptable to Residential Funding Corporation or similar
alternative coverage was effective or an attorney's certificate was
received at origination or, if not in place at origination, was
subsequently obtained, and each policy remained in full force and effect on
the date of sale of the related loan to the depositor;
to the best of Residential Funding Corporation's knowledge, if required by
applicable underwriting standards or unless otherwise stated in the
accompanying prospectus supplement, each loan that is secured by a first
lien on the related mortgaged property is the subject of a primary
insurance policy;
Residential Funding Corporation had good title to the loan and the loan is
not subject to offsets, defenses or counterclaims except as may be provided
under the Soldiers' and Sailors' Civil Relief Act of 1940, as amended, or
Relief Act, and except for any buydown agreement for a Buy-Down Loan;
to the best of Residential Funding Corporation's knowledge, each mortgaged
property is free of material damage and is in good repair;
each loan complied in all material respects with all applicable local,
state and federal laws at the time of origination;
to the best of Residential Funding Corporation's knowledge, there is no
delinquent tax or assessment lien against the related mortgaged property;
and
to the best of Residential Funding Corporation's knowledge, any home
improvement contract that is partially insured by the FHA under Title I was
originated in accordance with applicable FHA regulations and is insured,
without set-off, surcharge or defense by the FHA.
In addition, except in the case of a Designated Seller Transaction, unless
otherwise specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement, Residential
Funding Corporation will be obligated to repurchase or substitute for any loan
as to which it is discovered that the related mortgage does not create a valid
lien having at least the priority represented and warranted in the related
agreement on or, in the case of a Cooperative Loan, a perfected security
interest in, the related mortgaged property, subject only to the following:
liens of real property taxes and assessments not yet due and payable;
covenants, conditions and restrictions, rights of way, easements and other
matters of public record as of the date of recording of such mortgage and
certain other permissible title exceptions;
liens of any senior mortgages, in the case of loans secured by junior liens
on the related mortgaged property; and
other encumbrances to which like properties are commonly subject which do
not materially adversely affect the value, use, enjoyment or marketability
of the mortgaged property.
In a Designated Seller Transaction, unless otherwise specified in the
accompanying prospectus supplement, the designated seller will have made
representations and warranties regarding the loans to the depositor in most
cases similar to those made by Residential Funding Corporation and described
above.
REPURCHASES OF LOANS
If a designated seller, Residential Funding Corporation or the seller, if
the agreement under which Residential Funding Corporation purchased loans from a
seller is assigned to the trust, cannot cure a breach of any representation or
warranty made by it relating to any loan within 90 days after notice from the
master servicer, the servicer or the trustee, and the breach materially and
adversely affects the interests of the securityholders in the loan, the
designated seller, Residential Funding Corporation or the seller, as the case
may be, will be obligated to purchase the loan. Unless otherwise specified in
the accompanying prospectus
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supplement, the purchase price for any loan will be equal to the principal
balance thereof as of the date of purchase plus accrued and unpaid interest less
the amount, expressed as a percentage per annum, payable for servicing or
administrative compensation and the Excluded Spread, if any. In certain limited
cases, a substitution may be made in lieu of such repurchase obligation. See '
-- Limited Right of Substitution' below.
In most instances, Residential Funding Corporation will not be required to
repurchase or substitute for any loan if the circumstances giving rise to the
requirement also constitute fraud in the origination of the related loan.
Furthermore, because the listing of the related loan in most cases contains
information for the loan as of the cut-off date, prepayments and, in certain
limited circumstances, modifications to the interest rate and principal and
interest payments may have been made for one or more of the related loans
between the cut-off date and the closing date. No seller will be required to
repurchase or substitute for any loan as a result of any such prepayment or
modification.
In addition, except in the case of a Designated Seller Transaction, unless
otherwise specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement, the loan files
for certain of the loans may be missing the original executed mortgage notes as
a result of being lost, misfiled, misplaced or destroyed. With respect to all
such loans, the depositor in most cases will deliver a lost note affidavit to
the trustee or custodian certifying that the original mortgage note has been
lost or destroyed, together with a copy of the related mortgage note. In
addition, some of the loans may be missing intervening assignments. Neither the
depositor nor Residential Funding Corporation will be obligated to purchase
loans acquired under the negotiated conduit asset program for missing or
defective documentation. However, in the event of foreclosure on one of these
loans, to the extent those missing documents materially adversely affects the
master servicer's or servicer's ability to foreclose on the related loan,
Residential Funding Corporation will be obligated to repurchase or substitute
for such. Residential Funding will not be required to repurchase or substitute
for any loan if the circumstances giving rise to the requirement also constitute
fraud in the origination of the related loan.
The master servicer or the servicer, as applicable, will be required under
the related pooling and servicing agreement or trust agreement to use its best
reasonable efforts to enforce the repurchase obligations of the designated
seller, Residential Funding Corporation or the seller, for the benefit of the
trustee and the securityholders, using practices it would employ in its good
faith business judgment and which are normal and usual in its general servicing
activities.
The master servicer or servicer will be entitled to reimbursement for any
costs and expenses incurred in pursuing these purchase or substitution
obligations, including but not limited to any costs or expenses associated with
litigation. In instances where a seller is unable, or disputes its obligation,
to purchase affected loans, the master servicer or servicer, employing the
standards described in the preceding paragraph, may negotiate and enter into one
or more settlement agreements with that seller that could provide for, among
other things, the purchase of only a portion of the affected loans or coverage
of some loss amounts. Any such settlement could lead to losses on the loans
which would be borne by the related credit enhancement, and to the extent not
available, on the related securities.
Furthermore, the master servicer or servicer may pursue foreclosure or
similar remedies concurrently with pursuing any remedy for a breach of a
representation and warranty. However, the master servicer or servicer is not
required to continue to pursue both remedies if it determines that one remedy is
more likely to result in a greater recovery. In accordance with the above
described practices, the master servicer or servicer will not be required to
enforce any purchase obligation of a designated seller, Residential Funding
Corporation or seller, if the master servicer or servicer determines in the
reasonable exercise of its business judgment that the matters related to the
misrepresentation did not directly cause or are not likely to directly cause a
loss on the related loan. The foregoing obligations will constitute the sole
remedies available to securityholders or the trustee for a breach of any
representation by a designated seller, Residential Funding Corporation in its
capacity as a seller of loans to the depositor or the seller, or for any other
event giving rise to the obligations.
Neither the depositor nor the master servicer or servicer will be obligated
to purchase a loan if a seller or designated seller defaults on its obligation
to do so, and no assurance can be given that the sellers will carry out those
obligations for loans. This type of default by a seller or designated seller is
not a default by the depositor or by the master servicer or servicer. However,
to the extent that a breach of the representations and warranties of a seller or
designated seller also constitutes a breach of a representation made by
Residential Funding Corporation, Residential Funding Corporation may have a
purchase or substitution obligation. Any loan not so
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purchased or substituted for shall remain in the related trust and any losses
related thereto shall be allocated to the related credit enhancement, and to the
extent not available, to the related securities.
For any seller that requests the master servicer's or servicer's consent to
the transfer of subservicing rights relating to any loans to a successor
servicer, the master servicer or servicer may release that seller from liability
under its representations and warranties described above, on the assumption of
the successor servicer of the seller's liability for the representations and
warranties as of the date they were made. In that event, the master servicer's
or servicer's rights under the instrument by which the successor servicer
assumes the seller's liability will be assigned to the trustee, and the
successor servicer shall be deemed to be the 'seller' for purposes of the
foregoing provisions.
The depositor generally monitors whether each seller or, in the case of a
Designated Seller Transaction, the designated seller, is under the control of
the FDIC, or are insolvent, otherwise in receivership or conservatorship or
financially distressed. Those sellers may not be able or permitted to repurchase
loans for which there has been a breach of representation or warranty. Moreover,
any seller may make no representations or warranties for loans sold by it. The
FDIC, either in its corporate capacity or as receiver or conservator for a
depository institution, may also be a seller, in which event neither the FDIC
nor the related depository institution may make representations or warranties
for the loans sold, or only limited representations or warranties may be made,
for example, that the related legal documents are enforceable. The FDIC may have
no obligation to repurchase any loan for a breach of a representation or
warranty.
LIMITED RIGHT OF SUBSTITUTION
In the case of a loan required to be repurchased from the trust, a
designated seller or Residential Funding Corporation may substitute a new loan
for the repurchased loan that was removed from the trust, during the limited
time period described below. Any such substitution must be effected within 120
days of the date of the issuance of the securities for a trust for which no
REMIC election is to be made. For a trust for which a REMIC election is to be
made, except as otherwise provided in the accompanying prospectus supplement,
the substitution must be effected within two years of the date of the issuance
of the securities, and may not be made if the substitution would cause the trust
to fail to qualify as a REMIC or result in a prohibited transaction tax under
the Internal Revenue Code.
In most cases, any qualified substitute loan will, on the date of
substitution:
have an outstanding principal balance, after deduction of the principal
portion of the monthly payment due in the month of substitution, not in
excess of the outstanding principal balance of the repurchased loan;
have a loan rate and a Net Loan Rate not less than, and not more than one
percentage point greater than, the loan rate and Net Loan Rate,
respectively, of the repurchased loan as of the date of substitution;
have an LTV ratio or combined LTV ratio, as applicable, at the time of
substitution no higher than that of the repurchased loan;
have a remaining term to maturity not greater than, and not more than one
year less than, that of the repurchased loan;
be secured by mortgaged property located in the United States, unless the
repurchased loan was a Mexico Loan or a loan secured by mortgaged property
located in Puerto Rico, in which case the qualified substitute loan may be
a Mexico Loan or a loan secured by mortgaged property located in Puerto
Rico, respectively; and
comply with all of the representations and warranties made with respect to
the repurchased loans as of the date of substitution.
If the outstanding principal balance of a qualified substitute loan is less
than the outstanding principal balance of the related repurchased loan, the
amount of the shortfall shall be deposited into the Custodial Account in the
month of substitution for distribution to the related securityholders. There may
be additional requirements relating to ARM loans, revolving credit loans,
negative amortization loans or other specific types of loans, or additional
provisions relating to meeting the foregoing requirements on an aggregate basis
where a number of substitutions occur contemporaneously. Unless otherwise
specified in the accompanying prospectus
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supplement, a seller, will have no option to substitute for a loan that it is
obligated to repurchase in connection with a breach of a representation and
warranty.
CERTAIN INSOLVENCY AND BANKRUPTCY ISSUES
Each seller, including a designated seller, and the depositor will represent
and warrant that its respective transfer of trust assets constitutes a valid
sale and assignment of all of its right, title and interest in and to such trust
assets, except to the extent that such seller or the depositor retains any
security. Nevertheless, if a seller were to become a debtor in a bankruptcy case
and a creditor or bankruptcy trustee of such seller, or such seller as a
debtor-in-possession, were to assert that the sale of the trust assets from such
seller to the depositor should be recharacterized as a pledge of such trust
assets to secure a borrowing by such seller, then delays in payments to the
depositor (and therefore to the trust and the securityholders) could occur and
possible reductions in the amount of such payments could result. In addition, if
a court were to recharacterize the transfer as a pledge and a subsequent
assignee were to take physical possession of any mortgage notes, through
negligence, fraud or otherwise, the trustee's interest in such mortgage notes
could be defeated.
If an entity with an interest in a loan of which only a partial balance has
been transferred to the trust were to become a debtor under the Bankruptcy Code
and regardless of whether the transfer of the related loan constitutes an
absolute assignment, a bankruptcy trustee or creditor of such entity or such
entity as a debtor-in-possession could assert that such entity retains rights in
the related loan and therefore compel the sale of such loan, including any
partial balance included in the trust, over the objection of the trust and the
securityholders. If that occurs, delays and reductions in payments to the trust
and the securityholders could result.
The depositor has been structured such that (i) the filing of a voluntary or
involuntary petition for relief by or against the depositor under the Bankruptcy
Code and (ii) the substantive consolidation of the assets and liabilities of the
depositor with those of an affiliated seller is unlikely. The certificate of
incorporation of the depositor restricts the nature of the depositor's business
and the ability of the depositor to commence a voluntary case or proceeding
under such laws without the prior unanimous consent of all directors.
ASSIGNMENT OF AGENCY OR PRIVATE SECURITIES
The depositor will transfer, convey and assign to the trustee or its
nominee, which may be the custodian, all right, title and interest of the
depositor in the Agency Securities or private securities and other property to
be included in the trust for a series. The assignment will include all principal
and interest due on or for the Agency Securities or private securities after the
cut-off date specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement, except for any
Excluded Spread. The depositor will cause the Agency Securities or private
securities to be registered in the name of the trustee or its nominee, and the
trustee will concurrently authenticate and deliver the securities. Unless
otherwise specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement, the trustee will
not be in possession of or be assignee of record of any underlying assets for an
Agency Security or private security. Each Agency Security or private security
will be identified in a schedule appearing as an exhibit to the related
agreement, which will specify as to each Agency Security or private security
information regarding the original principal amount and outstanding principal
balance of each Agency Security or private security as of the cut-off date, as
well as the annual pass-through rate or interest rate for each Agency Security
or private security conveyed to the trustee.
EXCESS SPREAD AND EXCLUDED SPREAD
The depositor, the servicer, the seller, the master servicer or any of their
affiliates, or any other entity specified in the accompanying prospectus
supplement may retain or be paid a portion of interest due for the related trust
assets. The payment of any portion of interest in this manner will be disclosed
in the accompanying prospectus supplement. This payment may be in addition to
any other payment, including a servicing fee, that the specified entity is
otherwise entitled to receive for the trust assets. Any of these payments
generated from the trust assets will represent the Excess Spread or will be
excluded from the assets transferred to the related trust, referred to as
Excluded Spread. The interest portion of a Realized Loss and any partial
recovery of interest on the trust assets will be allocated between the owners of
any Excess Spread or Excluded Spread and the securityholders entitled to
payments of interest.
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PAYMENTS ON LOANS
Collection of Payments on Loans
The servicer or the master servicer, as applicable, will deposit or will
cause to be deposited into the Custodial Account payments and collections
received by it subsequent to the cut-off date, other than payments due on or
before the cut-off date, as specifically described in the related agreement,
which in most cases, except as otherwise provided, will include the following:
all payments on account of principal of the loans comprising a trust;
all payments on account of interest on the loans comprising that trust, net
of the portion of each payment thereof retained by the master servicer or
servicer, if any, as Excess or Excluded Spread, its servicing or other
compensation;
Liquidation Proceeds;
all amounts, net of unreimbursed liquidation expenses and insured expenses
incurred, and unreimbursed Servicing Advances made, by the related
subservicer, received and retained, including Insurance Proceeds or
proceeds from any alternative arrangements established in lieu of any such
insurance and described in the applicable prospectus supplement, other than
proceeds to be applied to the restoration of the related property or
released to the borrower in accordance with the master servicer's or
servicer's normal servicing procedures;
any Buy-Down Funds and, if applicable, investment earnings thereon,
required to be paid to securityholders;
all proceeds of any loan in the trust purchased or, in the case of a
substitution, amounts representing a principal adjustment, by the
depositor, the designated seller, Residential Funding Corporation, any
seller or any other person under the terms of the related agreement;
any amount required to be deposited by the master servicer or servicer in
connection with losses realized on investments of funds held in the
Custodial Account; and
any amounts required to be transferred from the Payment Account to the
Custodial Account.
See 'Description of the Securities -- Representations with Respect to Loans'
and ' -- Repurchases of Loans.'
In addition to the Custodial Account, the master servicer or servicer will
establish and maintain the Payment Account. Both the Custodial Account and the
Payment Account must be either:
maintained with a depository institution whose debt obligations at the time
of any deposit therein are rated by any rating agency that rated any
securities of the related series not less than a specified level comparable
to the rating category of the securities;
an account or accounts the deposits in which are fully insured to the
limits established by the FDIC, provided that any deposits not so insured
shall be otherwise maintained so that, as evidenced by an opinion of
counsel, the securityholders have a claim with respect to the funds in such
accounts or a perfected first priority security interest in any collateral
securing those funds that is superior to the claims of any other depositors
or creditors of the depository institution with which the accounts are
maintained;
in the case of the Custodial Account, a trust account or accounts
maintained in either the corporate trust department or the corporate asset
services department of a financial institution which has debt obligations
that meet specified rating criteria;
in the case of the Payment Account, a trust account or accounts maintained
with the trustee; or
any other Eligible Account.
The collateral that is eligible to secure amounts in an Eligible Account is
limited to some Permitted Investments. A Payment Account may be maintained as an
interest-bearing or a non-interest-bearing account, or funds therein may be
invested in Permitted Investments as described in this prospectus under
'Description of the Securities -- Payments on Loans.' The Custodial Account may
contain funds relating to more than one series of securities as well as payments
received on other loans and assets serviced or master serviced by the master
servicer or servicer that have been deposited into the Custodial Account.
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Unless otherwise described in the accompanying prospectus supplement, not
later than the business day preceding each distribution date, the master
servicer or servicer, as applicable, will withdraw from the Custodial Account
and deposit into the applicable Payment Account, in immediately available funds,
the amount to be distributed therefrom to securityholders on that distribution
date. The master servicer, the servicer or the trustee will also deposit or
cause to be deposited into the Payment Account:
the amount of any Advances made by the master servicer or the servicer as
described in this prospectus under ' -- Advances';
any payments under any letter of credit, financial guaranty insurance
policy, derivative product, and any amounts required to be transferred to
the Payment Account from a reserve fund, as described under 'Description of
Credit Enhancement' in this prospectus;
any amounts required to be paid by the master servicer or servicer out of
its own funds due to the operation of a deductible clause in any blanket
policy maintained by the master servicer or servicer to cover hazard losses
on the loans as described under 'Insurance Policies on Loans' below;
any distributions received on any Agency Securities or private securities
included in the trust; and
any other amounts as described in the related agreement.
The portion of any payment received by the master servicer or the servicer
relating to a trust asset that is allocable to Excess Spread or Excluded Spread
will typically be deposited into the Custodial Account, but any Excluded Spread
will not be deposited in the Payment Account for the related series of
securities and will be distributed as provided in the related agreement.
Funds on deposit in the Custodial Account may be invested in Permitted
Investments maturing in general not later than the business day preceding the
next distribution date and funds on deposit in the related Payment Account may
be invested in Permitted Investments maturing, in general, no later than the
distribution date. Except as otherwise specified in the accompanying prospectus
supplement, all income and gain realized from any investment will be for the
account of the servicer or the master servicer as additional servicing
compensation. The amount of any loss incurred in connection with any such
investment must be deposited in the Custodial Account or in the Payment Account,
as the case may be, by the servicer or the master servicer out of its own funds
at the time of the realization of the loss.
For each Buy-Down Loan, the subservicer will deposit the related Buy-Down
Funds provided to it in a Buy-Down Account which will comply with the
requirements described in this prospectus for a Subservicing Account. Unless
otherwise specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement, the terms of all
Buy-Down Loans provide for the contribution of Buy-Down Funds in an amount equal
to or exceeding either (i) the total payments to be made from those funds under
the related buydown plan or (ii) if the Buy-Down Funds are to be deposited on a
discounted basis, that amount of Buy-Down Funds which, together with investment
earnings thereon will support the scheduled level of payments due under the
Buy-Down Loan.
Neither the master servicer nor the servicer nor the depositor will be
obligated to add to any discounted Buy-Down Funds any of its own funds should
investment earnings prove insufficient to maintain the scheduled level of
payments. To the extent that any insufficiency is not recoverable from the
borrower or, in an appropriate case, from the subservicer, distributions to
securityholders may be affected. For each Buy-Down Loan, the subservicer will
withdraw from the Buy-Down Account and remit to the master servicer or servicer
on or before the date specified in the subservicing agreement described in this
prospectus under 'Description of the Securities -- Payments on Loans' the
amount, if any, of the Buy-Down Funds, and, if applicable, investment earnings
thereon, for each Buy-Down Loan that, when added to the amount due from the
borrower on the Buy-Down Loan, equals the full monthly payment which would be
due on the Buy-Down Loan if it were not subject to the buydown plan. The
Buy-Down Funds will in no event be a part of the related trust.
If the borrower on a Buy-Down Loan prepays the mortgage loan in its entirety
during the Buy-Down Period, the subservicer will withdraw from the Buy-Down
Account and remit to the borrower or any other designated party in accordance
with the related buydown plan any Buy-Down Funds remaining in the Buy-Down
Account. If a prepayment by a borrower during the Buy-Down Period together with
Buy-Down Funds will result in full prepayment of a Buy-Down Loan, the
subservicer will, in most cases, be required to withdraw from the Buy-Down
Account and remit to the master servicer or servicer the Buy-Down Funds and
investment earnings thereon, if any, which together with such prepayment will
result in a prepayment in full; provided that
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Buy-Down Funds may not be available to cover a prepayment under some mortgage
loan programs. Any Buy-Down Funds so remitted to the master servicer or servicer
in connection with a prepayment described in the preceding sentence will be
deemed to reduce the amount that would be required to be paid by the borrower to
repay fully the related mortgage loan if the mortgage loan were not subject to
the buydown plan.
Any investment earnings remaining in the Buy-Down Account after prepayment
or after termination of the Buy-Down Period will be remitted to the related
borrower or any other designated party under the Buy-Down Agreement. If the
borrower defaults during the Buy-Down Period for a Buy-Down Loan and the
property securing that Buy-Down Loan is sold in liquidation either by the master
servicer, the servicer, the primary insurer, the pool insurer under the mortgage
pool insurance policy or any other insurer, the subservicer will be required to
withdraw from the Buy-Down Account the Buy-Down Funds and all investment
earnings thereon, if any, and remit the same to the master servicer or servicer
or, if instructed by the master servicer, pay the same to the primary insurer or
the pool insurer, as the case may be, if the mortgaged property is transferred
to that insurer and the insurer pays all of the loss incurred relating to such
default.
Collection of Payments on Agency Securities or Private Securities
The trustee will deposit in the Payment Account all payments on the Agency
Securities or private securities as they are received after the cut-off date. If
the trustee has not received a distribution for any Agency Security or private
security by the second business day after the date on which such distribution
was due and payable, the trustee will request the issuer or guarantor, if any,
of such Agency Security or private security to make such payment as promptly as
possible and legally permitted. The trustee may take any legal action against
the related issuer or guarantor as is appropriate under the circumstances,
including the prosecution of any claims in connection therewith. The reasonable
legal fees and expenses incurred by the trustee in connection with the
prosecution of any legal action will be reimbursable to the trustee out of the
proceeds of the action and will be retained by the trustee prior to the deposit
of any remaining proceeds in the Payment Account pending distribution thereof to
the securityholders of the affected series. If the trustee has reason to believe
that the proceeds of the legal action may be insufficient to cover its projected
legal fees and expenses, the trustee will notify the related securityholders
that it is not obligated to pursue any available remedies unless adequate
indemnity for its legal fees and expenses is provided by the securityholders.
WITHDRAWALS FROM THE CUSTODIAL ACCOUNT
The servicer or the master servicer, as applicable, may, from time to time,
make withdrawals from the Custodial Account for various purposes, as
specifically described in the pooling and servicing agreement or servicing
agreement, which in most cases will include the following:
to make deposits to the Payment Account as described in this prospectus
under ' -- Payments on Loans;'
to reimburse itself or any subservicer for any Advances, or for any
Servicing Advances, out of late payments, Insurance Proceeds, Liquidation
Proceeds, any proceeds relating to any REO Loan or collections on the loan
for which those Advances or Servicing Advances were made;
to pay to itself or any subservicer unpaid servicing fees and subservicing
fees, out of payments or collections of interest on each loan;
to pay to itself as additional servicing compensation any investment income
on funds deposited in the Custodial Account, any amounts remitted by
subservicers as interest on partial prepayments on the loans, and, if so
provided in the related agreement, any profits realized on the disposition
of a mortgaged property acquired by deed in lieu of foreclosure or
repossession or otherwise allowed under the agreement;
to pay to itself, a subservicer, Residential Funding Corporation, the
depositor or the designated seller all amounts received for each loan
purchased, repurchased or removed under the terms of the related agreement
and not required to be distributed as of the date on which the related
purchase price is determined;
to pay the depositor or its assignee, or any other party named in the
accompanying prospectus supplement, all amounts allocable to the Excluded
Spread, if any, out of collections or payments which
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represent interest on each loan, including any loan as to which title to
the underlying mortgaged property was acquired;
to reimburse itself or any subservicer for any Nonrecoverable Advance,
limited by the terms of the related agreement as described in the
accompanying prospectus supplement;
to reimburse itself or the depositor for other expenses incurred for which
it or the depositor is entitled to reimbursement, including reimbursement
in connection with enforcing any repurchase, substitution or
indemnification obligation of any seller, or against which it or the
depositor is indemnified under the related agreement;
to withdraw any amount deposited in the Custodial Account that was not
required to be deposited in the Custodial Account;
to reimburse itself or the depositor for payment of FHA insurance premiums,
if applicable, or against which it or the depositor is indemnified under
the related agreement;
to pay to itself or any subservicer for the funding of any draws made on
the revolving credit loans, if applicable;
to make deposits to the funding account in the amounts and in the manner
provided in the related agreement, if applicable; and
to clear the Custodial Account of amounts relating to the corresponding
loans in connection with the termination of the trust under the related
agreement, as described in 'The Agreements -- Termination; Retirement of
Securities.'
DISTRIBUTIONS OF PRINCIPAL AND INTEREST ON THE SECURITIES
Beginning on the distribution date in the month next succeeding the month in
which the cut-off date occurs, or any other date as may be set forth in the
accompanying prospectus supplement, for a series of securities, distribution of
principal and interest, or, where applicable, of principal only or interest
only, on each class of securities entitled to such payments will be made either
by the trustee, the master servicer or servicer, as applicable, acting on behalf
of the trustee or a paying agent appointed by the trustee. The distributions
will be made to the persons who are registered as the holders of the securities
at the close of business on the last business day of the preceding month or on
such other day as is specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement.
Distributions will be made in immediately available funds, by wire transfer
or otherwise, to the account of a securityholder at a bank or other entity
having appropriate facilities, if the securityholder has so notified the
trustee, the master servicer or the servicer, as applicable, or the paying
agent, as the case may be, and the applicable agreement provides for that form
of payment, or by check mailed to the address of the person entitled to such
payment as it appears on the security register. Except as otherwise provided in
the related agreement, the final distribution in retirement of the securities
will be made only on the presentation and surrender of the securities at the
office or agency of the trustee specified in the notice to the securityholders.
Distributions will be made to each securityholder in accordance with that
holder's percentage interest in a particular class.
The method of determining, and the amount of, distributions of principal and
interest, or, where applicable, of principal only or interest only, on a
particular series of securities will be described in the accompanying prospectus
supplement. Distributions of interest on each class of securities will be made
prior to distributions of principal thereon. Each class of securities, other
than classes of strip securities, may have a different specified interest rate,
or pass-through rate, which may be a fixed, variable or adjustable pass-through
rate, or any combination of two or more pass-through rates. The accompanying
prospectus supplement will specify the pass-through rate or rates for each
class, or the initial pass-through rate or rates, the interest accrual period
and the method for determining the pass-through rate or rates. Unless otherwise
specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement, interest on the securities
will accrue during each calendar month and will be payable on the distribution
date in the following calendar month. If stated in the accompanying prospectus
supplement, interest on any class of securities for any distribution date may be
limited to the extent of available funds for that distribution date. Interest on
the securities will be calculated on the basis of a 360-day year consisting of
twelve 30-day months or, if specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement,
the actual number of days in the related interest period and a 360 or
365/366-day year.
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On each distribution date for a series of securities, the trustee or the
master servicer or servicer, as applicable, on behalf of the trustee will
distribute or cause the paying agent to distribute, as the case may be, to each
holder of record on the record date of a class of securities specified in the
accompanying prospectus supplement, an amount equal to the percentage interest
represented by the security held by that holder multiplied by that class's
Distribution Amount.
In the case of a series of securities which includes two or more classes of
securities, the timing, sequential order, priority of payment or amount of
distributions of principal, and any schedule or formula or other provisions
applicable to that determination, including distributions among multiple classes
of senior securities or subordinate securities, shall be described in the
accompanying prospectus supplement. Distributions of principal on any class of
securities will be made on a pro rata basis among all of the securities of that
class unless otherwise set forth in the accompanying prospectus supplement. In
addition, as specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement, payments of
principal on the notes will be limited to monthly principal payments on the
loans, any excess interest, if applicable, applied as principal payments on the
notes and any amount paid as a payment of principal under the related form of
credit enhancement. If stated in the accompanying prospectus supplement, a
series of notes may provide for a revolving period during which all or a portion
of the principal collections on the loans otherwise available for payment to the
notes are reinvested in additional balances or additional loans or accumulated
in a trust account pending the commencement of an amortization period specified
in the accompanying prospectus supplement or the occurrence of events specified
in the accompanying prospectus supplement.
On the day of the month specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement
as the determination date, the master servicer or servicer, as applicable, will
determine the amounts of principal and interest which will be paid to
securityholders on the immediately succeeding distribution date. Prior to the
close of business on the business day next succeeding each determination date,
the master servicer or servicer, as applicable, will furnish a statement to the
trustee, setting forth, among other things, the amount to be distributed on the
next succeeding distribution date.
ADVANCES
If specified accompanying prospectus supplement, the master servicer or
servicer, as applicable, will agree to make Advances, either out of its own
funds, funds advanced to it by subservicers or funds being held in the Custodial
Account for future distribution, for the benefit of the securityholders, on or
before each distribution date, of monthly payments on the loans that were
delinquent as of the close of business on the business day preceding the
determination date on the loans in the related pool, but only to the extent that
the Advances would, in the judgment of the master servicer or servicer, as
applicable, be recoverable out of late payments by the borrowers, Liquidation
Proceeds, Insurance Proceeds or otherwise. Advances will not be made in
connection with revolving credit loans, Home Loans, home improvement contracts,
closed-end home equity loans, negative amortization loans and loans acquired
under Residential Funding Corporation's negotiated conduit asset program, except
as otherwise provided in the accompanying prospectus supplement. As specified in
the accompanying prospectus supplement for any series of securities as to which
the trust includes private securities, the master servicer's or servicer's, as
applicable, advancing obligations will be under the terms of such private
securities, as may be supplemented by the terms of the applicable agreement, and
may differ from the provisions relating to Advances described in this
prospectus. Unless specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement, the
master servicer or servicer, as applicable, will not make any advance with
respect to principal on any simple interest loan.
The amount of any Advance will be determined based on the amount payable
under the loan as adjusted from time to time and as may be modified as described
in this prospectus under ' -- Servicing and Administration of Loans,' and no
Advance will be required in connection with any reduction in amounts payable
under the Relief Act or as a result of certain actions taken by a bankruptcy
court.
Advances are intended to maintain a regular flow of scheduled interest and
principal payments to related securityholders. Advances do not represent an
obligation of the master servicer or servicer to guarantee or insure against
losses. If Advances have been made by the master servicer or servicer from cash
being held for future distribution to securityholders, those funds will be
required to be replaced on or before any future distribution date to the extent
that funds in the Payment Account on that distribution date would be less than
payments required to be made to securityholders. Any Advances will be
reimbursable to the master servicer or servicer out
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of recoveries on the related loans for which those amounts were advanced,
including late payments made by the related borrower, any related Liquidation
Proceeds and Insurance Proceeds, proceeds of any applicable form of credit
enhancement, or proceeds of any loans purchased by the depositor, Residential
Funding Corporation, a subservicer, a seller, or a designated seller.
Advances will also be reimbursable from cash otherwise distributable to
securityholders to the extent that the master servicer or servicer shall
determine that any Advances previously made are not ultimately recoverable as
described in the third preceding paragraph. For any senior/subordinate series,
so long as the related subordinate securities remain outstanding and limited for
Special Hazard Losses, Fraud Losses, Bankruptcy Losses and Extraordinary Losses,
the Advances may also be reimbursable out of amounts otherwise distributable to
holders of the subordinate securities, if any. The master servicer or the
servicer may also be obligated to make Servicing Advances, to the extent
recoverable out of Liquidation Proceeds or otherwise, relating to some taxes and
insurance premiums not paid by borrowers on a timely basis. Funds so advanced
will be reimbursable to the master servicer or servicer to the extent permitted
by the related agreement.
In the case of revolving credit loans, the master servicer or servicer is
required to advance funds to cover any Draws made on a revolving credit loan,
subject to reimbursement by the entity specified in the accompanying prospectus
supplement, provided that as specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement
during any revolving period associated with the related series of securities,
Draws may be covered first from principal collections on the other loans in the
pool.
The master servicer's or servicer's obligation to make Advances may be
supported by another entity, the trustee, a financial guaranty insurance policy,
a letter of credit or other method as may be described in the related agreement.
If the short-term or long-term obligations of the provider of the support are
downgraded by a rating agency rating the related securities or if any collateral
supporting such obligation is not performing or is removed under the terms of
any agreement described in the accompanying prospectus supplement, the
securities may also be downgraded.
PREPAYMENT INTEREST SHORTFALLS
When a borrower prepays a loan in full between scheduled due dates for the
loan, the borrower pays interest on the amount prepaid only to but not including
the date on which the Principal Prepayment is made. Prepayments in full in most
cases will be applied as of the date of prepayment so that interest on the
related securities will be paid only until that date. Similarly, Liquidation
Proceeds from a mortgaged property will not include interest for any period
after the date on which the liquidation took place. Partial prepayments will in
most cases be applied as of the most recent due date, so that no interest is due
on the following due date on the amount prepaid.
If stated in the accompanying prospectus supplement, to the extent funds are
available from the servicing fee, the master servicer or servicer may make an
additional payment to securityholders out of the servicing fee otherwise payable
to it for any loan that prepaid during the related prepayment period equal to
the Compensating Interest for that loan from the date of the prepayment to the
related due date. Compensating Interest will be limited to the aggregate amount
specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement and may not be sufficient to
cover the Prepayment Interest Shortfall. Compensating Interest is not generally
paid with respect to closed-end home equity loans, Home Loans and revolving
credit loans. If so disclosed in the accompanying prospectus supplement,
Prepayment Interest Shortfalls may be applied to reduce interest otherwise
payable for one or more classes of securities of a series. See 'Yield
Considerations' in this prospectus.
FUNDING ACCOUNT
If specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement, a pooling and
servicing agreement, trust agreement or other agreement may provide for the
transfer by the sellers of additional loans to the related trust after the
closing date for the related securities. Any additional loans will be required
to conform to the requirements set forth in the related agreement providing for
such transfer. If a Funding Account is established, all or a portion of the
proceeds of the sale of one or more classes of securities of the related series
or a portion of collections on the loans of principal will be deposited in such
account to be released as additional loans are transferred. Unless otherwise
specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement, a Funding Account will be
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required to be maintained as an Eligible Account. All amounts in the Funding
Account will be required to be invested in Permitted Investments and the amount
held in the Funding Account shall at no time exceed 25% of the aggregate
outstanding principal balance of the securities. Unless otherwise specified in
the accompanying prospectus supplement, the related agreement providing for the
transfer of additional loans will provide that all transfers must be made within
90 days, and that amounts set aside to fund the transfers, whether in a Funding
Account or otherwise, and not so applied within the required period of time will
be deemed to be Principal Prepayments and applied in the manner described in the
prospectus supplement.
REPORTS TO SECURITYHOLDERS
On each distribution date, the master servicer or servicer will forward or
cause to be forwarded to each securityholder of record a statement or statements
for the related trust setting forth the information described in the related
agreement. Except as otherwise provided in the related agreement, the
information will in most cases include the following (as applicable):
the aggregate amount of interest collections and principal collections, if
applicable;
the amount, if any, of the distribution allocable to principal;
the amount, if any, of the distribution allocable to interest and the
amount, if any, of any shortfall in the amount of interest and principal;
the aggregate unpaid principal balance of the loans after giving effect to
the distribution of principal on that distribution date;
the outstanding principal balance or notional amount of each class of
securities after giving effect to the distribution of principal on that
distribution date;
based on the most recent reports furnished by subservicers, the number and
aggregate principal balances of loans in the related trust that are
delinquent (a) one month, (b) two months and (c) three months, and that are
in foreclosure;
the book value of any property acquired by the trust through foreclosure or
grant of a deed in lieu of foreclosure;
the balance of the reserve fund, if any, at the close of business on that
distribution date;
the percentage of the outstanding principal balances of the senior
securities, if applicable, after giving effect to the distributions on that
distribution date;
the amount of credit enhancement remaining or credit enhancement payments
made under any letter of credit, mortgage pool insurance policy or other
form of credit enhancement covering default risk as of the close of
business on the applicable determination date and a description of any
credit enhancement substituted therefor;
if applicable, the Special Hazard Amount, Fraud Loss Amount and Bankruptcy
Amount as of the close of business on the applicable distribution date and
a description of any change in the calculation of those amounts, as well as
the aggregate amount of each type of loss;
in the case of securities benefiting from alternative credit enhancement
arrangements described in a prospectus supplement, the amount of coverage
under the alternative arrangements as of the close of business on the
applicable determination date;
the servicing fee payable to the master servicer or the servicer and the
subservicer;
the aggregate amount of any Draws;
the FHA insurance amount, if any; and
for any series of securities as to which the trust includes Agency
Securities or private securities, any additional information as required
under the related agreement.
In addition to the information described above, reports to securityholders
will contain any other information as is described in the applicable agreement,
which may include, without limitation, information as to Advances,
reimbursements to subservicers, servicers and the master servicer and losses
borne by the related trust.
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In addition, within a reasonable period of time after the end of each
calendar year, the master servicer or servicer will furnish or cause to be
furnished report to each person that was a holder of record of any class of
securities at any time during that calendar year. The report will include
information as to the aggregate of principal and interest distributions for that
calendar year or, if the person was a holder of record of a class of securities
during a portion of that calendar year, for the applicable portion of that year.
SERVICING AND ADMINISTRATION OF LOANS
General
The master servicer or any servicer, as applicable, that is a party to a
pooling and servicing agreement or servicing agreement, will be required to
perform the services and duties specified in the related agreement. The master
servicer or servicer may be an affiliate of the depositor. As to any series of
securities secured by Agency Securities or private securities the requirements
for servicing the underlying assets will be described in the accompanying
prospectus supplement. The duties to be performed by the master servicer or
servicer will include the customary functions of a servicer, including but not
limited to:
collection of payments from borrowers and remittance of those collections
to the master servicer or servicer in the case of a subservicer;
maintenance of escrow or impoundment accounts of borrowers for payment of
taxes, insurance and other items required to be paid by the borrower, if
applicable;
processing of assumptions or substitutions, although, as specified in the
accompanying prospectus supplement, the master servicer or servicer is, in
most cases, required to exercise due-on-sale clauses to the extent that
exercise is permitted by law and would not adversely affect insurance
coverage;
attempting to cure delinquencies;
supervising foreclosures;
collections on Additional Collateral;
inspection and management of mortgaged properties under various
circumstances; and
maintaining accounting records relating to the trust assets.
Under each servicing agreement, the servicer or the master servicer may
enter into subservicing agreements with one or more subservicers who will agree
to perform certain functions for the servicer or master servicer relating to the
servicing and administration of the loans included in the trust relating to the
subservicing agreement. A subservicer may be an affiliate of the depositor.
Under any subservicing agreement, each subservicer will agree, among other
things, to perform some or all of the servicer's or the master servicer's
servicing obligations, including but not limited to, making Advances to the
related securityholders. The servicer or the master servicer, as applicable,
will remain liable for its servicing obligations that are delegated to a
subservicer as if the servicer or the master servicer alone were servicing such
loans.
In the event of a bankruptcy, receivership or conservatorship of the master
servicer or servicer or any subservicer, the bankruptcy court or the receiver or
conservator may have the power to prevent both the appointment of a successor to
service the trust assets and the transfer of collections commingled with funds
of the master servicer, servicer or subservicer at the time of its bankruptcy,
receivership or conservatorship. In addition, if the master servicer or servicer
or any subservicer were to become a debtor in a bankruptcy case, its rights
under the related agreement, including the right to service the trust assets,
would be property of its bankruptcy estate and therefore, under the Bankruptcy
Code, subject to its right to assume or reject such agreement.
Collection and Other Servicing Procedures
The servicer or the master servicer, directly or through subservicers, as
the case may be, will make reasonable efforts to collect all payments called for
under the loans and will, consistent with the related servicing agreement and
any applicable insurance policy, FHA insurance or other credit enhancement,
follow the collection procedures which are normal and usual in its general loan
servicing activities that are comparable to the loans. Consistent with the
previous sentence, the servicer or the master servicer may, in its discretion,
waive
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any prepayment charge in connection with the prepayment of a loan or extend the
due dates for payments due on a mortgage note, provided that the insurance
coverage for the loan or any coverage provided by any alternative credit
enhancement will not be adversely affected by the waiver or extension. The
master servicer or servicer may also waive or modify any term of a loan so long
as the master servicer or servicer has determined that the waiver or
modification is not materially adverse to any securityholders, taking into
account any estimated loss that may result absent that action. For any series of
securities as to which the trust includes private securities, the master
servicer's or servicer's servicing and administration obligations will be under
the terms of those private securities.
Under some circumstances, as to any series of securities, the master
servicer or servicer may have the option to repurchase trust assets from the
trust for cash, or in exchange for other trust assets or Permitted Investments.
All provisions relating to these optional repurchase provisions will be
described in the accompanying prospectus supplement.
In instances in which a loan is in default, or if default is reasonably
foreseeable, and if determined by the master servicer or servicer to be in the
best interests of the related securityholders, the master servicer or servicer
may engage, either directly or through subservicers, in a wide variety of loss
mitigation practices including waivers, modifications, payment forbearances,
partial forgiveness, entering into repayment schedule arrangements, and
capitalization of arrearages rather than proceeding with foreclosure or
repossession, if applicable. In making that determination, the estimated
Realized Loss that might result if the loan were liquidated would be taken into
account. Modifications may have the effect of reducing the loan rate or
extending the final maturity date of the loan. Any modified loan may remain in
the related trust, and the reduction in collections resulting from a
modification may result in reduced distributions of interest or other amounts
on, or may extend the final maturity of, one or more classes of the related
notes.
Borrowers may, from time to time, request partial releases of the mortgaged
properties, easements, consents to alteration or demolition and other similar
matters. The master servicer or servicer may approve that request if it has
determined, exercising its good faith business judgment in the same manner as it
would if it were the owner of the related loan, that the approval will not
adversely affect the security for, and the timely and full collectability of,
the related loan. Any fee collected by the master servicer or the servicer for
processing that request will be retained by the master servicer or servicer as
additional servicing compensation.
In instances in which a loan is in default or if default is reasonably
foreseeable, and if determined by the master servicer or servicer to be in the
best interests of the related securityholders, the master servicer or servicer
may permit modifications of the loan rather than proceeding with foreclosure. In
making this determination, the estimated Realized Loss that might result if the
loans were liquidated would be taken into account. These modifications may have
the effect of reducing the loan rate or extending the final maturity date of the
loan. Any modified loan may remain in the related trust, and the reduction in
collections resulting from the modification may result in reduced distributions
of interest, or other amounts, on, or may extend the final maturity of, one or
more classes of the related securities.
In connection with any significant partial prepayment of a loan, the master
servicer or servicer, to the extent not inconsistent with the terms of the
mortgage note and local law and practice, may permit the loan to be re-amortized
so that the monthly payment is recalculated as an amount that will fully
amortize its remaining principal amount by the original maturity date based on
the original loan rate, provided that the re-amortization shall not be permitted
if it would constitute a modification of the loan for federal income tax
purposes.
The master servicer or servicer for a given trust may establish and maintain
an escrow account in which borrowers will be required to deposit amounts
sufficient to pay taxes, assessments, certain mortgage and hazard insurance
premiums and other comparable items unless, in the case of loans secured by
junior liens on the related mortgaged property, the borrower is required to
escrow such amounts under the senior mortgage documents. Withdrawals from any
escrow account may be made to effect timely payment of taxes, assessments,
mortgage and hazard insurance, to refund to borrowers amounts determined to be
owed, to pay interest on balances in the escrow account, if required, to repair
or otherwise protect the mortgaged properties and to clear and terminate such
account. The master servicer or any servicer, as the case may be, will be
responsible for the administration of each such escrow account and will be
obligated to make advances to the escrow accounts when a deficiency exists
therein. The master servicer or servicer will be entitled to reimbursement for
any advances from the Custodial Account.
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Other duties and responsibilities of each servicer and master servicer are
described above under ' -- Payments on Loans.'
Special Servicing
If provided for in the accompanying prospectus supplement, the related
agreement or servicing agreement for a series of securities may name a Special
Servicer. The Special Servicer will be responsible for the servicing of certain
delinquent loans as described in the prospectus supplement. The Special Servicer
may have certain discretion to extend relief to borrowers whose payments become
delinquent. The Special Servicer may be permitted to grant a period of temporary
indulgence to a borrower or may enter into a liquidating plan providing for
repayment by the borrower, in each case without the prior approval of the master
servicer or the servicer, as applicable. Other types of forbearance typically
will require the approval of the master servicer or servicer, as applicable.
In addition, the master servicer or servicer may enter into various
agreements with holders of one or more classes of subordinate securities or of a
class of securities representing interests in one or more classes of subordinate
securities. Under the terms of those agreements, the holder may, for some
delinquent loans:
instruct the master servicer or servicer to commence or delay foreclosure
proceedings, provided that the holder deposits a specified amount of cash
with the master servicer or servicer which will be available for
distribution to securityholders if Liquidation Proceeds are less than they
otherwise may have been had the master servicer or servicer acted under its
normal servicing procedures;
instruct the master servicer or servicer to purchase the loans from the
trust prior to the commencement of foreclosure proceedings at the purchase
price and to resell the loans to the holder at such purchase price, in
which case any subsequent loss on the loans will not be allocated to the
securityholders;
become, or designate a third party to become, a subservicer for the loans
so long as (i) the master servicer or servicer has the right to transfer
the subservicing rights and obligations of the loans to another subservicer
at any time or (ii) the holder or its servicing designee is required to
service the loans according to the master servicer's or servicer's
servicing guidelines; or
the accompanying prospectus supplement may provide for the other types of
special servicing arrangements.
Enforcement of 'Due-on-Sale' Clauses
Unless otherwise specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement, when
any mortgaged property relating to a loan, other than an ARM loan, is about to
be conveyed by the borrower, the master servicer or the servicer, as applicable,
directly or through a subservicer, to the extent it has knowledge of the
proposed conveyance, in most cases will be obligated to exercise the trustee's
rights to accelerate the maturity of such loan under any due-on-sale clause
applicable thereto. A due-on-sale clause will be enforced only if the exercise
of such rights is permitted by applicable law and only to the extent it would
not adversely affect or jeopardize coverage under any primary insurance policy
or applicable credit enhancement arrangements. See 'Certain Legal Aspects of the
Loans -- Enforceability of Certain Provisions.'
If the master servicer or servicer is prevented from enforcing a due-on-sale
clause under applicable law or if the master servicer or servicer determines
that it is reasonably likely that a legal action would be instituted by the
related borrower to avoid enforcement of such due-on-sale clause, the master
servicer or servicer will enter into an assumption and modification agreement
with the person to whom such property has been or is about to be conveyed, under
which such person becomes liable under the mortgage note subject to certain
specified conditions. The original borrower may be released from liability on a
loan if the master servicer or servicer shall have determined in good faith that
such release will not adversely affect the collectability of the loan. An ARM
loan may be assumed if it is by its terms assumable and if, in the reasonable
judgment of the master servicer or servicer, the proposed transferee of the
related mortgaged property establishes its ability to repay the loan and the
security for the ARM loan would not be impaired by the assumption. If a borrower
transfers the mortgaged property subject to an ARM loan without consent, such
ARM loan may be declared due and payable. Any fee collected by the master
servicer or servicer for entering into an assumption or substitution of
liability agreement or for processing a request for partial release of the
mortgaged property in most cases will be retained by the
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master servicer or servicer as additional servicing compensation. In connection
with any assumption, the loan rate borne by the related mortgage note may not be
altered. Borrowers may, from time to time, request partial releases of the
mortgaged properties, easements, consents to alteration or demolition and other
similar matters. The master servicer or servicer may approve such a request if
it has determined, exercising its good faith business judgment, that such
approval will not adversely affect the security for, and the timely and full
collectability of, the related loan.
Realization Upon Defaulted Loans
If a loan, including a contract secured by a lien on a mortgaged property,
is in default, the master servicer or servicer may take a variety of actions,
including foreclosing on the mortgaged property, writing off the principal
balance of the loan as a bad debt, taking a deed in lieu of foreclosure,
accepting a short sale, permitting a short refinancing, arranging for a
repayment plan or modification as described above, or taking an unsecured note.
Realization on other contracts may be accomplished through repossession and
subsequent resale of the underlying home improvement. In connection with that
decision, the master servicer or servicer will, following usual practices in
connection with senior and junior mortgage servicing activities or repossession
and resale activities, estimate the proceeds expected to be received and the
expenses expected to be incurred in connection with that foreclosure or
repossession and resale to determine whether a foreclosure proceeding or a
repossession and resale is appropriate. To the extent that a loan secured by a
lien on a mortgaged property is junior to another lien on the related mortgaged
property, unless foreclosure proceeds for that loan are expected to at least
satisfy the related senior mortgage loan in full and to pay foreclosure costs,
it is likely that that loan will be written off as bad debt with no foreclosure
proceeding. Similarly, the expense and delay that may be associated with
foreclosing on the borrower's beneficial interest in the Mexican trust following
a default on a Mexico Loan, particularly if eviction or other proceedings are
required to be commenced in the Mexican courts, may make attempts to realize on
the collateral securing the Mexico Loans uneconomical, thus significantly
increasing the amount of the loss on the Mexico Loan. If title to any mortgaged
property is acquired in foreclosure or by deed in lieu of foreclosure, the deed
or certificate of sale will be issued to the trustee or to its nominee on behalf
of securityholders and, if applicable, the holders of any Excluded Balances.
Any acquisition of title and cancellation of any REO Loan will be considered
for most purposes to be an outstanding loan held in the trust until it is
converted into a Liquidated Loan.
For purposes of calculations of amounts distributable to securityholders
relating to an REO Loan, the amortization schedule in effect at the time of any
acquisition of title, before any adjustment by reason of any bankruptcy or any
similar proceeding or any moratorium or similar waiver or grace period, will be
deemed to have continued in effect and, in the case of an ARM loan, the
amortization schedule will be deemed to have adjusted in accordance with any
interest rate changes occurring on any adjustment date, so long as the REO Loan
is considered to remain in the trust. If a REMIC election has been made, any
mortgaged property so acquired by the trust must be disposed of in accordance
with applicable federal income tax regulations and consistent with the status of
the trust as a REMIC. To the extent provided in the related agreement, any
income, net of expenses and other than gains described in the second succeeding
paragraph, received by the servicer or the master servicer on the mortgaged
property prior to its disposition will be deposited in the Custodial Account on
receipt and will be available at that time for making payments to
securityholders.
For a loan in default, the master servicer or servicer may pursue
foreclosure or similar remedies subject to any senior loan positions and certain
other restrictions pertaining to junior loans as described under 'Certain Legal
Aspects of the Loans' concurrently with pursuing any remedy for a breach of a
representation and warranty. However, the master servicer or servicer is not
required to continue to pursue both remedies if it determines that one remedy is
more likely to result in a greater recovery. If the mortgage loan is an
Additional Collateral Loan or a Pledged Asset Mortgage Loan, the master servicer
or the servicer may proceed against the related mortgaged property or the
related Additional Collateral or Pledged Assets first, or may proceed against
both concurrently, as permitted by applicable law and the terms under which the
Additional Collateral or Pledged Assets are held, including any third-party
guarantee.
On the first to occur of final liquidation and a repurchase or substitution
under a breach of a representation and warranty, the loan will be removed from
the related trust. The master servicer or servicer may elect to treat a
defaulted loan as having been finally liquidated if substantially all amounts
expected to be received in connection therewith have been received. Any
additional liquidation expenses relating to the loan thereafter
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incurred will be reimbursable to the master servicer or servicer from any
amounts otherwise distributable to the related securityholders, or may be offset
by any subsequent recovery related to the loan. Alternatively, for purposes of
determining the amount of related Liquidation Proceeds to be distributed to
securityholders, the amount of any Realized Loss or the amount required to be
drawn under any applicable form of credit enhancement, the master servicer or
servicer may take into account minimal amounts of additional receipts expected
to be received, as well as estimated additional liquidation expenses expected to
be incurred in connection with the defaulted loan. On foreclosure of a revolving
credit loan, the related Liquidation Proceeds will be allocated among the Trust
Balances and Excluded Balances as described in the prospectus supplement.
For some series of securities, the applicable form of credit enhancement may
provide, to the extent of coverage, that a defaulted loan or REO Loan will be
removed from the trust prior to its final liquidation. In addition, the master
servicer, the servicer or the holder of the most subordinate class of
certificates of a series may have the option to purchase from the trust any
defaulted loan after a specified period of delinquency. If a final liquidation
of a loan resulted in a Realized Loss and within two years thereafter the master
servicer or servicer receives a subsequent recovery specifically related to that
loan, in connection with a related breach of a representation or warranty or
otherwise, such subsequent recovery shall be distributed to the then-current
securityholders of any outstanding class to which the Realized Loss was
allocated, with the amounts to be distributed allocated among such classes in
the same proportions as such Realized Loss was allocated, provided that no such
distribution shall result in distributions on the securities of any class in
excess of the total amount of the Realized Loss that was allocated to that
class. In the case of a series of securities other than a senior/subordinate
series, if so provided in the accompanying prospectus supplement, the applicable
form of credit enhancement may provide for reinstatement in accordance with
specified conditions if, following the final liquidation of a loan and a draw
under the related credit enhancement, subsequent recoveries are received. If a
defaulted loan or REO Loan is not so removed from the trust, then, on its final
liquidation, if a loss is realized which is not covered by any applicable form
of credit enhancement or other insurance, the securityholders will bear the
loss. However, if a gain results from the final liquidation of an REO Loan which
is not required by law to be remitted to the related borrower, the master
servicer or servicer will be entitled to retain that gain as additional
servicing compensation unless the accompanying prospectus supplement provides
otherwise. For a description of the master servicer's or the servicer's
obligations to maintain and make claims under applicable forms of credit
enhancement and insurance relating to the loans, see 'Description of Credit
Enhancement' and 'Insurance Policies on Loans.'
For a discussion of legal rights and limitations associated with the
foreclosure of a loan, see 'Certain Legal Aspects of the Loans.'
The master servicer or servicer will deal with any defaulted private
securities in the manner set forth in the accompanying prospectus supplement.
DESCRIPTION OF CREDIT ENHANCEMENT
GENERAL
As described in the accompanying prospectus supplement, credit support
provided for each series of securities may include one or more or any
combination of the following:
a letter of credit;
subordination provided by any class of subordinated securities for the
related series;
overcollateralization;
a mortgage repurchase bond, mortgage pool insurance policy, special hazard
insurance policy, bankruptcy bond or other types of insurance policies, or
a secured or unsecured corporate guaranty, as described in the accompanying
prospectus supplement;
a reserve fund;
a financial guaranty insurance policy or surety bond;
derivatives products; or
another form as may be described in the accompanying prospectus supplement.
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If specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement, the loans or home
improvement contracts may be partially insured by the FHA under Title I.
Credit support for each series of securities may be comprised of one or more
of the following components. Each component will have a dollar limit and will
provide coverage for Realized Losses that are:
Defaulted Mortgage Losses;
Special Hazard Losses;
Bankruptcy Losses; and
Fraud Losses.
Most forms of credit support will not provide protection against all risks
of loss and will not guarantee repayment of the entire outstanding principal
balance of the securities and interest thereon. If losses occur that exceed the
amount covered by credit support or are of a type that is not covered by the
credit support, securityholders will bear their allocable share of deficiencies.
In particular, Defaulted Mortgage Losses, Special Hazard Losses, Bankruptcy
Losses and Fraud Losses in excess of the amount of coverage provided therefor
and Extraordinary Losses will not be covered. To the extent that the credit
enhancement for any series of securities is exhausted, the securityholders will
bear all further risks of loss not otherwise insured against.
Credit support may also be provided in the form of an insurance policy
covering the risk of collection and adequacy of any Additional Collateral
provided in connection with any Additional Collateral Loan, as limited by that
insurance policy. As described in the related agreement, credit support may
apply to all of the loans or to some loans contained in a pool.
For any series of securities backed by Trust Balances of revolving credit
loans, the credit enhancement provided for the securities will cover any portion
of any Realized Losses allocated to the Trust Balances, subject to any
limitations described in this prospectus and in the accompanying prospectus
supplement. See 'The Trusts -- Revolving Credit Loans' in this prospectus.
Each prospectus supplement will include a description of:
the amount payable under the credit enhancement arrangement, if any,
provided for a series;
any conditions to payment thereunder not otherwise described in this
prospectus;
the conditions under which the amount payable under the credit support may
be reduced and under which the credit support may be terminated or
replaced; and
the material provisions of any agreement relating to the credit support.
Additionally, each prospectus supplement will contain information for the
issuer of any third-party credit enhancement, if applicable. The related
agreement or other documents may be modified in connection with the provisions
of any credit enhancement arrangement to provide for reimbursement rights,
control rights or other provisions that may be required by the credit enhancer.
To the extent provided in the applicable agreement, the credit enhancement
arrangements may be periodically modified, reduced and substituted for based on
the performance of or on the aggregate outstanding principal balance of the
loans covered thereby. See 'Description of Credit Enhancement -- Reduction or
Substitution of Credit Enhancement.' If specified in the applicable prospectus
supplement, credit support for a series of securities may cover one or more
other series of securities.
The descriptions of any insurance policies, bonds or other instruments
described in this prospectus or any prospectus supplement and the coverage
thereunder do not purport to be complete and are qualified in their entirety by
reference to the actual forms of the policies, copies of which typically will be
exhibits to the Form 8-K to be filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission
in connection with the issuance of the related series of securities.
LETTERS OF CREDIT
If any component of credit enhancement as to any series of securities is to
be provided by a letter of credit, a bank will deliver to the trustee an
irrevocable letter of credit. The letter of credit may provide direct coverage
for the loans. The letter of credit bank, the amount available under the letter
of credit for each component of credit enhancement, the expiration date of the
letter of credit, and a more detailed description of the letter of credit will
be specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement. On or before each
distribution date, the
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letter of credit bank will be required to make payments after notification from
the trustee, to be deposited in the related Payment Account for the coverage
provided thereby. The letter of credit may also provide for the payment of
Advances.
SUBORDINATION
A senior/subordinate series of securities will consist of one or more
classes of senior securities and one or more classes of subordinate securities,
as specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement. Subordination of the
subordinate securities of any senior/subordinate series will be effected by the
following method, unless an alternative method is specified in the accompanying
prospectus supplement. In addition, some classes of senior or subordinate
securities may be senior to other classes of senior or subordinate securities,
as specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement.
For any senior/subordinate series, the total amount available for
distribution on each distribution date, as well as the method for allocating
that amount among the various classes of securities included in the series, will
be described in the accompanying prospectus supplement. In most cases, for any
series, the amount available for distribution will be allocated first to
interest on the senior securities of that series, and then to principal of the
senior securities up to the amounts described in the accompanying prospectus
supplement, prior to allocation of any amounts to the subordinate securities.
If so provided in the related agreement, the master servicer or servicer may
be permitted, under certain circumstances, to purchase any loan that is two or
more months delinquent in payments of principal and interest, at the repurchase
price. If specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement, any Realized Loss
subsequently incurred in connection with any such loan will be passed through to
the then outstanding securityholders of the related series in the same manner as
Realized Losses on loans that have not been so purchased, unless that purchase
was made on the request of the holder of the most junior class of securities of
the related series. See ' Description of the Securities -- Servicing and
Administration of Loans -- Special Servicing' above.
In the event of any Realized Losses not in excess of the limitations
described below (other than Extraordinary Losses), the rights of the subordinate
securityholders to receive distributions will be subordinate to the rights of
the senior securityholders and the owner of Excluded Spread and, as to certain
classes of subordinated securities, may be subordinate to the rights of other
subordinate securityholders.
Except as noted below, Realized Losses will be allocated to the subordinate
securities of the related series until their outstanding principal balances have
been reduced to zero. Additional Realized Losses, if any, will be allocated to
the senior securities. If the series includes more than one class of senior
securities, the additional Realized Losses will be allocated either on a pro
rata basis among all of the senior securities in proportion to their respective
outstanding principal balances or as otherwise provided in the accompanying
prospectus supplement.
Special Hazard Losses in excess of the Special Hazard Amount will be
allocated among all outstanding classes of securities of the related series,
either on a pro rata basis in proportion to their outstanding principal
balances, or as otherwise provided in the accompanying prospectus supplement.
The respective amounts of other specified types of losses, including Fraud
Losses, Special Hazard Losses and Bankruptcy Losses, that may be borne solely by
the subordinate securities may be similarly limited to the Fraud Loss Amount,
Special Hazard Amount and Bankruptcy Amount, and the subordinate securities may
provide no coverage for Extraordinary Losses or other specified types of losses,
as described in the accompanying prospectus supplement, in which case those
losses would be allocated on a pro rata basis among all outstanding classes of
securities or as otherwise specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement.
Each of the Special Hazard Amount, Fraud Loss Amount and Bankruptcy Amount may
be subject to periodic reductions and may be subject to further reduction or
termination, without the consent of the securityholders, on the written
confirmation from each applicable rating agency that the then-current rating of
the related series of securities will not be adversely affected.
In most cases, any allocation of a Realized Loss, including a Special Hazard
Loss, Fraud Loss or Bankruptcy Loss, to a security in a senior/subordinate
series will be made by reducing its outstanding principal balance as of the
distribution date following the calendar month in which the Realized Loss was
incurred.
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The rights of holders of the various classes of securities of any series to
receive distributions of principal and interest is determined by the aggregate
outstanding principal balance of each class or, if applicable, the related
notional amount. The outstanding principal balance of any security will be
reduced by all amounts previously distributed on that security representing
principal, and by any Realized Losses allocated thereto. If there are no
Realized Losses or Principal Prepayments on any loan, the respective rights of
the holders of securities of any series to future distributions in most cases
would not change. However, to the extent described in the accompanying
prospectus supplement, holders of senior securities may be entitled to receive a
disproportionately larger amount of prepayments received during specified
periods, which will have the effect, absent offsetting losses, of accelerating
the amortization of the senior securities and increasing the respective
percentage ownership interest evidenced by the subordinate securities in the
related trust, with a corresponding decrease in the percentage of the
outstanding principal balances of the senior securities, thereby preserving the
availability of the subordination provided by the subordinate securities. In
addition, some Realized Losses will be allocated first to subordinate securities
by reduction of their outstanding principal balance, which will have the effect
of increasing the respective ownership interest evidenced by the senior
securities in the related trust.
If so provided in the accompanying prospectus supplement, some amounts
otherwise payable on any distribution date to holders of subordinate securities
may be deposited into a reserve fund. Amounts held in any reserve fund may be
applied as described under 'Description of Credit Enhancement -- Reserve Funds'
and in the accompanying prospectus supplement.
In lieu of the foregoing provisions, subordination may be effected in the
following manner, or in any other manner as may be described in the accompanying
prospectus supplement. The rights of the holders of subordinate securities to
receive the Subordinate Amount will be limited to the extent described in the
accompanying prospectus supplement. As specified in the accompanying prospectus
supplement, the Subordinate Amount may be reduced based on the amount of losses
borne by the holders of the subordinate securities as a result of the
subordination, a specified schedule or other method of reduction as the
prospectus supplement may specify.
For any senior/subordinate series, the terms and provisions of the
subordination may vary from those described in this prospectus. Any variation
and any additional credit enhancement will be described in the accompanying
prospectus supplement.
OVERCOLLATERALIZATION
If stated in the accompanying prospectus supplement, interest collections on
the loans may exceed interest payments on the securities for the related
distribution date. To the extent such excess interest is applied as principal
payments on the securities, the effect will be to reduce the principal balance
of the securities relative to the outstanding balance of the loan, thereby
creating overcollateralization and additional protection to the securityholders,
if and to the extent specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement.
MORTGAGE POOL INSURANCE POLICIES
Any insurance policy covering losses on a loan pool obtained by the
depositor for a trust will be issued by the mortgage pool insurer. Each mortgage
pool insurance policy, in accordance with the limitations described in this
prospectus and in the prospectus supplement, if any, will cover Defaulted
Mortgage Losses in an amount specified in the prospectus supplement. As
described under ' -- Maintenance of Credit Enhancement,' the master servicer or
servicer will use its best reasonable efforts to maintain the mortgage pool
insurance policy and to present claims thereunder to the pool insurer on behalf
of itself, the trustee and the securityholders. The mortgage pool insurance
policies, however, are not blanket policies against loss, since claims
thereunder may only be made respecting particular defaulted loans and only on
satisfaction of specified conditions precedent described in the succeeding
paragraph. Unless specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement, the
mortgage pool insurance policies may not cover losses due to a failure to pay or
denial of a claim under a primary insurance policy, irrespective of the reason
therefor.
Each mortgage pool insurance policy will provide that no claims may be
validly presented thereunder unless, among other things:
any required primary insurance policy is in effect for the defaulted loan
and a claim thereunder has been submitted and settled;
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hazard insurance on the property securing the loan has been kept in force
and real estate taxes and other protection and preservation expenses have
been paid by the master servicer or servicer;
if there has been physical loss or damage to the mortgaged property, it has
been restored to its condition, reasonable wear and tear excepted, at the
cut-off date; and
the insured has acquired good and merchantable title to the mortgaged
property free and clear of liens except permitted encumbrances.
On satisfaction of these conditions, the pool insurer will have the option
either (a) to purchase the property securing the defaulted loan at a price equal
to its outstanding principal balance plus accrued and unpaid interest at the
applicable loan rate to the date of purchase and some expenses incurred by the
master servicer or servicer on behalf of the trustee and securityholders, or (b)
to pay the amount by which the sum of the outstanding principal balance of the
defaulted loan plus accrued and unpaid interest at the loan rate to the date of
payment of the claim and the aforementioned expenses exceeds the proceeds
received from an approved sale of the mortgaged property, in either case net of
some amounts paid or assumed to have been paid under any related primary
insurance policy.
Securityholders may experience a shortfall in the amount of interest payable
on the related securities in connection with the payment of claims under a
mortgage pool insurance policy because the pool insurer is only required to
remit unpaid interest through the date a claim is paid rather than through the
end of the month in which the claim is paid. In addition, the securityholders
may also experience losses for the related securities in connection with
payments made under a mortgage pool insurance policy to the extent that the
master servicer or servicer expends funds to cover unpaid real estate taxes or
to repair the related mortgaged property in order to make a claim under a
mortgage pool insurance policy, as those amounts will not be covered by payments
under the policy and will be reimbursable to the master servicer or servicer
from funds otherwise payable to the securityholders. If any mortgaged property
securing a defaulted loan is damaged and proceeds, if any (see ' -- Special
Hazard Insurance Policies' below for risks which are not covered by those
policies), from the related hazard insurance policy or applicable special hazard
insurance policy are insufficient to restore the damaged property to a condition
sufficient to permit recovery under the mortgage pool insurance policy, the
master servicer or servicer is not required to expend its own funds to restore
the damaged property unless it determines that (a) restoration will increase the
proceeds to securityholders on liquidation of the mortgage loan after
reimbursement of the master servicer or servicer for its expenses and (b) the
expenses will be recoverable by it through Liquidation Proceeds or Insurance
Proceeds.
A mortgage pool insurance policy and some primary insurance policies will
likely not insure against loss sustained by reason of a default arising from,
among other things, fraud or negligence in the origination or servicing of a
mortgage loan, including misrepresentation by the borrower, the seller or other
persons involved in the origination thereof, failure to construct a mortgaged
property in accordance with plans and specifications or bankruptcy, unless, if
specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement, an endorsement to the
mortgage pool insurance policy provides for insurance against that type of loss.
Depending on the nature of the event, a breach of representation made by a
seller may also have occurred. That breach, if it materially and adversely
affects the interests of securityholders and cannot be cured, would give rise to
a repurchase obligation on the part of the seller, as described under
'Description of the Securities -- Repurchases of Loans.' However, such an event
would not give rise to a breach of a representation and warranty or a repurchase
obligation on the part of the depositor or Residential Funding Corporation.
The original amount of coverage under each mortgage pool insurance policy
will be reduced over the life of the related series of securities by the
aggregate amount of claims paid less the aggregate of the net amounts realized
by the pool insurer on disposition of all foreclosed properties. The amount of
claims paid includes some expenses incurred by the master servicer or servicer
as well as accrued interest on delinquent mortgage loans to the date of payment
of the claim. See 'Certain Legal Aspects of the Loans.' Accordingly, if
aggregate net claims paid under any mortgage pool insurance policy reach the
original policy limit, coverage under that mortgage pool insurance policy will
be exhausted and any further losses will be borne by the related
securityholders. In addition, unless the master servicer or servicer determines
that an Advance relating to a delinquent mortgage loan would be recoverable to
it from the proceeds of the liquidation of the mortgage loan or otherwise, the
master servicer or servicer would not be obligated to make an Advance respecting
any delinquency since the Advance would not be ultimately recoverable to it from
either the mortgage pool insurance policy or from any other related source. See
'Description of the Securities -- Advances.'
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Since each mortgage pool insurance policy will require that the property
subject to a defaulted mortgage loan be restored to its original condition prior
to claiming against the pool insurer, the policy will not provide coverage
against hazard losses. As described under 'Insurance Policies on Loans --
Standard Hazard Insurance on Mortgaged Properties,' the hazard policies covering
the mortgage loans typically exclude from coverage physical damage resulting
from a number of causes and, even when the damage is covered, may afford
recoveries which are significantly less than full replacement cost of those
losses. Additionally, no coverage for Special Hazard Losses, Fraud Losses or
Bankruptcy Losses will cover all risks, and the amount of any such coverage will
be limited. See ' -- Special Hazard Insurance Policies' below. As a result,
certain hazard risks will not be insured against and may be borne by
securityholders.
Contract pools may be covered by pool insurance policies that are similar to
the mortgage pool insurance policies described above.
SPECIAL HAZARD INSURANCE POLICIES
Any insurance policy covering Special Hazard Losses obtained for a trust
will be issued by the insurer named in the accompanying prospectus supplement.
Each special hazard insurance policy subject to limitations described in this
paragraph and in the accompanying prospectus supplement, if any, will protect
the related securityholders from Special Hazard Losses. Aggregate claims under a
special hazard insurance policy will be limited to the amount set forth in the
related agreement and will be subject to reduction as described in the related
agreement. A special hazard insurance policy will provide that no claim may be
paid unless hazard and, if applicable, flood insurance on the property securing
the loan has been kept in force and other protection and preservation expenses
have been paid by the master servicer or servicer.
In accordance with the foregoing limitations, a special hazard insurance
policy will provide that, where there has been damage to property securing a
foreclosed loan, title to which has been acquired by the insured, and to the
extent the damage is not covered by the hazard insurance policy or flood
insurance policy, if any, maintained by the borrower or the master servicer or
servicer, the insurer will pay the lesser of (i) the cost of repair or
replacement of the related property or (ii) on transfer of the property to the
insurer, the unpaid principal balance of the loan at the time of acquisition of
the related property by foreclosure or deed in lieu of foreclosure, plus accrued
interest at the loan rate to the date of claim settlement and certain expenses
incurred by the master servicer or servicer for the related property.
If the property is transferred to a third party in a sale approved by the
special hazard insurer, the amount that the special hazard insurer will pay will
be the amount under (ii) above reduced by the net proceeds of the sale of the
property. If the unpaid principal balance plus accrued interest and some
expenses is paid by the special hazard insurer, the amount of further coverage
under the related special hazard insurance policy will be reduced by that amount
less any net proceeds from the sale of the property. Any amount paid as the cost
of repair of the property will further reduce coverage by that amount.
Restoration of the property with the proceeds described under (i) above will
satisfy the condition under each mortgage pool insurance policy or contract pool
insurance policy that the property be restored before a claim under the policy
may be validly presented for the defaulted loan secured by the related property.
The payment described under (ii) above will render presentation of a claim
relating to a loan under the related mortgage pool insurance policy or contract
pool insurance policy unnecessary. Therefore, so long as a mortgage pool
insurance policy or contract pool insurance policy remains in effect, the
payment by the insurer under a special hazard insurance policy of the cost of
repair or of the unpaid principal balance of the related loan plus accrued
interest and some expenses will not affect the total Insurance Proceeds paid to
securityholders, but will affect the relative amounts of coverage remaining
under the related special hazard insurance policy and mortgage pool insurance
policy or contract pool insurance policy.
To the extent described in the accompanying prospectus supplement, coverage
of Special Hazard Losses for a series of securities may be provided, in whole or
in part, by a type of special hazard coverage other than a special hazard
insurance policy or by means of a representation of the depositor or Residential
Funding Corporation.
BANKRUPTCY BONDS
In the event of a personal bankruptcy of a borrower, a bankruptcy court may
establish the value of the mortgaged property of the borrower, and, if specified
in the accompanying prospectus supplement, any related
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Additional Collateral, at a Deficient Valuation. The amount of the secured debt
could then be reduced to that value, and, thus, the holder of the loan would
become an unsecured creditor to the extent the outstanding principal balance of
the loan, together with any senior loan in the case of a loan secured by a
junior lien on the related mortgaged property, exceeds the value assigned to the
mortgaged property, and any related Additional Collateral, by the bankruptcy
court.
In addition, other modifications of the terms of a loan can result from a
bankruptcy proceeding, including a Debt Service Reduction. See 'Certain Legal
Aspects of the Loans -- The Mortgage Loans -- Anti-Deficiency Legislation and
Other Limitations on Lenders.' Any bankruptcy policy to provide coverage for
Bankruptcy Losses resulting from proceedings under the federal Bankruptcy Code
obtained for a trust will be issued by an insurer named in the accompanying
prospectus supplement. The level of coverage under each bankruptcy policy will
be set forth in the accompanying prospectus supplement.
RESERVE FUNDS
If stated in the accompanying prospectus supplement, the depositor will
deposit or cause to be deposited in a reserve fund, any combination of cash or
Permitted Investments in specified amounts, or any other instrument satisfactory
to the rating agency or agencies, which will be applied and maintained in the
manner and under the conditions specified in the accompanying prospectus
supplement. In the alternative or in addition to that deposit, to the extent
described in the accompanying prospectus supplement, a reserve fund may be
funded through application of all or a portion of amounts otherwise payable on
any related subordinate securities, from the Excess Spread or otherwise. To the
extent that the funding of the reserve fund is dependent on amounts otherwise
payable on related subordinate securities, Excess Spread or other cash flows
attributable to the related loans or on reinvestment income, the reserve fund
may provide less coverage than initially expected if the cash flows or
reinvestment income on which the funding is dependent are lower than
anticipated.
For any series of securities as to which credit enhancement includes a
letter of credit, if stated in the accompanying prospectus supplement, under
specified circumstances the remaining amount of the letter of credit may be
drawn by the trustee and deposited in a reserve fund. Amounts in a reserve fund
may be distributed to securityholders, or applied to reimburse the master
servicer or servicer for outstanding Advances, or may be used for other
purposes, in the manner and to the extent specified in the accompanying
prospectus supplement. If stated in the accompanying prospectus supplement,
amounts in a reserve fund may be available only to cover specific types of
losses, or losses on specific loans. Unless otherwise specified in the
accompanying prospectus supplement, any reserve fund will not be deemed to be
part of the related trust. A reserve fund may provide coverage to more than one
series of securities, if set forth in the accompanying prospectus supplement.
The trustee will have a perfected security interest for the benefit of the
securityholders in the assets in the reserve fund, unless the assets are owned
by the related trust. However, to the extent that the depositor, any affiliate
of the depositor or any other entity has an interest in any reserve fund, in the
event of the bankruptcy, receivership or insolvency of that entity, there could
be delays in withdrawals from the reserve fund and the corresponding payments to
the securityholders. These delays could adversely affect the yield to investors
on the related securities.
Amounts deposited in any reserve fund for a series will be invested in
Permitted Investments by, or at the direction of, and for the benefit of a
servicer, the master servicer or any other person named in the accompanying
prospectus supplement.
FINANCIAL GUARANTY INSURANCE POLICIES; SURETY BONDS
The depositor may obtain one or more financial guaranty insurance policies
or guaranties or one or more surety bonds, or one or more guarantees issued by
insurers or other parties acceptable to the rating agency or agencies rating the
securities offered insuring the holders of one or more classes of securities the
payment of amounts due in accordance with the terms of that class or those
classes of securities. Any financial guaranty insurance policy, surety bond or
guaranty will have the characteristics described in, and will be in accordance
with any limitations and exceptions described in, the accompanying prospectus
supplement.
Unless specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement, a financial
guaranty insurance policy will be unconditional and irrevocable and will
guarantee to holders of the applicable securities that an amount equal to the
full amount of payments due to these holders will be received by the trustee or
its agent on behalf of the holders for payment on each payment date. The
specific terms of any financial guaranty insurance policy will be
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described in the accompanying prospectus supplement. A financial guaranty
insurance policy may have limitations and, in most cases, will not insure the
obligation of the sellers or the master servicer or servicer to purchase or
substitute for a defective trust asset and will not guarantee any specific rate
of Principal Prepayments or cover specific interest shortfalls. In most cases,
the insurer will be subrogated to the rights of each holder to the extent the
insurer makes payments under the financial guaranty insurance policy.
MAINTENANCE OF CREDIT ENHANCEMENT
If credit enhancement has been obtained for a series of securities, the
master servicer or the servicer will be obligated to exercise its best
reasonable efforts to keep or cause to be kept the credit enhancement in full
force and effect throughout the term of the applicable agreement, unless
coverage thereunder has been exhausted through payment of claims or otherwise,
or substitution therefor is made as described below under ' -- Reduction or
Substitution of Credit Enhancement.' The master servicer or the servicer, as
applicable, on behalf of itself, the trustee and securityholders, will be
required to provide information required for the trustee to draw under any
applicable credit enhancement.
The master servicer or the servicer will agree to pay the premiums for each
mortgage pool insurance policy, special hazard insurance policy, bankruptcy
policy, financial guaranty insurance policy or surety bond, as applicable, on a
timely basis, unless the premiums are paid directly by the trust. As to mortgage
pool insurance policies generally, if the related insurer ceases to be a
Qualified Insurer, the master servicer or the servicer will use its best
reasonable efforts to obtain from another Qualified Insurer a comparable
replacement insurance policy or bond with a total coverage equal to the then
outstanding coverage of the policy or bond. If the cost of the replacement
policy is greater than the cost of the existing policy or bond, the coverage of
the replacement policy or bond will, unless otherwise agreed to by the
depositor, be reduced to a level so that its premium rate does not exceed the
premium rate on the original insurance policy. If a pool insurer ceases to be a
Qualified Insurer because it ceases to be approved as an insurer by Freddie Mac
or Fannie Mae or any successor entity, the master servicer or the servicer will
review, not less often than monthly, the financial condition of the pool insurer
with a view toward determining whether recoveries under the mortgage pool
insurance policy or contract pool insurance policy are jeopardized for reasons
related to the financial condition of the pool insurer. If the master servicer
or the servicer determines that recoveries are so jeopardized, it will exercise
its best reasonable efforts to obtain from another Qualified Insurer a
replacement insurance policy as described above, at the same cost limit. Any
losses in market value of the securities associated with any reduction or
withdrawal in rating by an applicable rating agency shall be borne by the
securityholders.
If any property securing a defaulted loan is damaged and proceeds, if any,
from the related hazard insurance policy or any applicable special hazard
insurance policy are insufficient to restore the damaged property to a condition
sufficient to permit recovery under any letter of credit, mortgage pool
insurance policy, contract pool insurance policy or any related primary
insurance policy, the master servicer or the servicer is not required to expend
its own funds to restore the damaged property unless it determines (i) that
restoration will increase the proceeds to one or more classes of securityholders
on liquidation of the loan after reimbursement of the master servicer or the
servicer for its expenses and (ii) that the expenses will be recoverable by it
through Liquidation Proceeds or Insurance Proceeds. If recovery under any letter
of credit, mortgage pool insurance policy, contract pool insurance policy other
credit enhancement or any related primary insurance policy is not available
because the master servicer or the servicer has been unable to make the above
determinations, has made the determinations incorrectly or recovery is not
available for any other reason, the master servicer or the servicer is
nevertheless obligated to follow whatever normal practices and procedures, in
accordance with the preceding sentence, that it deems necessary or advisable to
realize upon the defaulted loan and if this determination has been incorrectly
made, is entitled to reimbursement of its expenses in connection with the
restoration.
REDUCTION OR SUBSTITUTION OF CREDIT ENHANCEMENT
The amount of credit support provided for any series of securities and
relating to various types of losses incurred may be reduced under specified
circumstances. In most cases, the amount available as credit support will be
subject to periodic reduction on a non-discretionary basis in accordance with a
schedule or formula set forth in the related agreement. Additionally, in most
cases, the credit support may be replaced, reduced or terminated, and the
formula used in calculating the amount of coverage for Bankruptcy Losses,
Special Hazard Losses or Fraud Losses may be changed, without the consent of the
securityholders, on the written assurance
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from each applicable rating agency that the then-current rating of the related
series of securities will not be adversely affected thereby.
Furthermore, if the credit rating of any obligor under any applicable credit
enhancement is downgraded or the amount of credit enhancement is no longer
sufficient to support the rating on the related securities, the credit rating of
each class of the related securities may be downgraded to a corresponding level,
and, unless otherwise specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement,
neither the master servicer, the servicer nor the depositor will be obligated to
obtain replacement credit support in order to restore the rating of the
securities. The master servicer or the servicer, as applicable, will also be
permitted to replace any credit support with other credit enhancement
instruments issued by obligors whose credit ratings are equivalent to the
downgraded level and in lower amounts which would satisfy the downgraded level,
provided that the then-current rating of each class of the related series of
securities is maintained. Where the credit support is in the form of a reserve
fund, a permitted reduction in the amount of credit enhancement will result in a
release of all or a portion of the assets in the reserve fund to the depositor,
the master servicer or the servicer or any other person that is entitled to the
credit support. Any assets so released and any amount by which the credit
enhancement is reduced will not be available for distributions in future
periods.
OTHER FINANCIAL OBLIGATIONS RELATED TO THE SECURITIES
SWAPS AND YIELD SUPPLEMENT AGREEMENTS
The trustee on behalf of the trust may enter into interest rate swaps and
related caps, floors and collars to minimize the risk to securityholders of
adverse changes in interest rates, and other yield supplement agreements or
similar yield maintenance arrangements that do not involve swap agreements or
other notional principal contracts.
An interest rate swap is an agreement between two parties to exchange a
stream of interest payments on an agreed hypothetical or 'notional' principal
amount. No principal amount is exchanged between the counterparties to an
interest rate swap. In the typical swap, one party agrees to pay a fixed rate on
a notional principal amount, while the counterparty pays a floating rate based
on one or more reference interest rates including the London Interbank Offered
Rate or, LIBOR, a specified bank's prime rate or U.S. Treasury Bill rates.
Interest rate swaps also permit counterparties to exchange a floating rate
obligation based on one reference interest rate (such as LIBOR) for a floating
rate obligation based on another referenced interest rate (such as U.S. Treasury
Bill rates).
The swap market has grown substantially in recent years with a significant
number of banks and financial service firms acting both as principals and as
agents utilizing standardized Swap documentation. Caps, floors and collars are
more recent innovations, and they are less liquid than other swaps.
Yield supplement agreements may be entered into to supplement the interest
rate or rates on one or more classes of the securities of any series.
There can be no assurance that the trust will be able to enter into or
offset swaps or enter into yield supplement agreements at any specific time or
at prices or on other terms that are advantageous. In addition, although the
terms of the swaps and yield supplement agreements may provide for termination
under some circumstances, there can be no assurance that the trust will be able
to terminate a swap or yield supplement agreement when it would be economically
advantageous to the trust to do so.
PURCHASE OBLIGATIONS
Some types of loans and classes of securities of any series, as specified in
the accompanying prospectus supplement, may be subject to a purchase obligation.
The terms and conditions of each purchase obligation, including the purchase
price, timing and payment procedure, will be described in the accompanying
prospectus supplement. A purchase obligation for loans may apply to the loans or
to the related securities. Each purchase obligation may be a secured or
unsecured obligation of its provider, which may include a bank or other
financial institution or an insurance company. Each purchase obligation will be
evidenced by an instrument delivered to the trustee for the benefit of the
applicable securityholders of the related series. Unless otherwise specified in
the accompanying prospectus supplement, each purchase obligation for loans will
be payable solely to the trustee for the benefit of the securityholders of the
related series. Other purchase obligations may be payable to the trustee or
directly to the holders of the securities to which the obligations relate.
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INSURANCE POLICIES ON LOANS
The mortgaged property related to each loan (other than a Cooperative Loan)
will be required to be covered by a hazard insurance policy (as described
below). In addition, some loans will be required to be covered by a primary
insurance policy. FHA loans and VA loans will be covered by the government
mortgage insurance programs described below. The descriptions of any insurance
policies contained in this prospectus or any prospectus supplement and the
coverage thereunder do not purport to be complete and are qualified in their
entirety by reference to the forms of policies.
PRIMARY INSURANCE POLICIES
Unless otherwise specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement and
except as described below, (i) each mortgage loan having a LTV ratio at
origination of over 80% will be covered by a primary mortgage guaranty insurance
policy insuring against default on the mortgage loan up to an amount set forth
in the accompanying prospectus supplement, unless and until the principal
balance of the mortgage loan is reduced to a level that would produce a LTV
ratio equal to or less than 80%, and (ii) the depositor or the related seller
will represent and warrant that, to the best of its knowledge, the mortgage
loans are so covered. Alternatively, coverage of the type that would be provided
by a primary insurance policy if obtained may be provided by another form of
credit enhancement as described in this prospectus under 'Description of Credit
Enhancement.' However, the foregoing standard may vary significantly depending
on the characteristics of the mortgage loans and the applicable underwriting
standards. A mortgage loan will not be considered to be an exception to the
foregoing standard if no primary insurance policy was obtained at origination
but the mortgage loan has amortized to an 80% or less LTV ratio level as of the
applicable cut-off date. In most cases, the depositor will have the ability to
cancel any primary insurance policy if the LTV ratio of the mortgage loan is
reduced to 80% or less (or a lesser specified percentage) based on an appraisal
of the mortgaged property after the related closing date or as a result of
principal payments that reduce the principal balance of the mortgage loan after
the closing date. Trust assets secured by a junior lien on the related mortgaged
property usually will not be required by the depositor to be covered by a
primary mortgage guaranty insurance policy insuring against default on the
mortgage loan.
Under recently enacted federal legislation, borrowers with respect to many
residential mortgage loans originated on or after July 29, 1999, will have a
right to request the cancellation of any private mortgage insurance policy
insuring loans when the outstanding principal amount of the mortgage loan has
been reduced or is scheduled to have been reduced to 80% or less of the value of
the mortgaged property at the time the mortgage loan was originated. The
borrower's right to request the cancellation of the policy is subject to certain
conditions, including (i) the condition that no monthly payment has been thirty
days or more past due during the twelve months prior to the cancellation date,
and no monthly payment has been sixty days or more past due during the twelve
months prior to that period, (ii) there has been no decline in the value of the
mortgaged property since the time the mortgage loan was originated and (iii) the
mortgaged property is not encumbered by subordinate liens. In addition, any
requirement for private mortgage insurance will automatically terminate when the
scheduled principal balance of the mortgage loan, based on the original
amortization schedule for the mortgage loan, is reduced to 78% or less of the
value of the mortgaged property at the time of origination, provided the
mortgage loan is current. The legislation requires that borrowers be provided
written notice of these cancellation rights at the origination of the mortgage
loans.
If the private mortgage insurance is not otherwise canceled or terminated by
borrower request in the circumstances described above, it must be terminated no
later than the first day of the month immediately following the date that is the
midpoint of the mortgage loan's amortization period, if on that date, the
borrower is current on the payments required by the terms of the mortgage loan.
The mortgagee's or master servicer's or servicer's failure to comply with the
law could subject such parties to civil money penalties but would not affect the
validity or enforceability of the mortgage loan. The law does not preempt any
state law regulating private mortgage insurance except to the extent that such
law is inconsistent with the federal law and then only to the extent of the
inconsistency.
In most cases, Mexico Loans will have LTV ratios of less than 80% and will
not be insured under a primary insurance policy. Primary mortgage insurance or
similar credit enhancement on a Mexico Loan may be issued by a private
corporation or a governmental agency and may be in the form of a guarantee,
insurance policy or another type of credit enhancement.
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Mortgage loans which are subject to negative amortization will only be
covered by a primary insurance policy if that coverage was required on their
origination, regardless that subsequent negative amortization may cause that
mortgage loan's LTV ratio based on the then-current balance, to subsequently
exceed the limits which would have required coverage on their origination.
Primary insurance policies may be required to be obtained and paid for by
the borrower, or may be paid for by the master servicer, the servicer, the
seller or a third party.
While the terms and conditions of the primary insurance policies issued by
one primary mortgage guaranty insurer will usually differ from those in primary
insurance policies issued by other primary insurers, each primary insurance
policy generally will pay either:
the insured percentage of the loss on the related mortgaged property;
the entire amount of the loss, after receipt by the primary insurer of good
and merchantable title to, and possession of, the mortgaged property; or
at the option of the primary insurer under certain primary insurance
policies, the sum of the delinquent monthly payments plus any Advances made
by the insured, both to the date of the claim payment and, thereafter,
monthly payments in the amount that would have become due under the
mortgage loan if it had not been discharged plus any Advances made by the
insured until the earlier of (a) the date the mortgage loan would have been
discharged in full if the default had not occurred or (b) an approved sale.
The amount of the loss as calculated under a primary insurance policy
covering a mortgage loan will in most cases consist of the unpaid principal
amount of such mortgage loan and accrued and unpaid interest thereon and
reimbursement of some expenses, less:
rents or other payments received by the insured (other than the proceeds of
hazard insurance) that are derived from the related mortgaged property;
hazard insurance proceeds received by the insured in excess of the amount
required to restore the mortgaged property and which have not been applied
to the payment of the mortgage loan;
amounts expended but not approved by the primary insurer;
claim payments previously made on the mortgage loan; and
unpaid premiums and other amounts.
As conditions precedent to the filing or payment of a claim under a primary
insurance policy, in the event of default by the borrower, the insured will
typically be required, among other things, to:
advance or discharge (a) hazard insurance premiums and (b) as necessary and
approved in advance by the primary insurer, real estate taxes, protection
and preservation expenses and foreclosure and related costs;
in the event of any physical loss or damage to the mortgaged property, have
the mortgaged property restored to at least its condition at the effective
date of the primary insurance policy (ordinary wear and tear excepted); and
tender to the primary insurer good and merchantable title to, and
possession of, the mortgaged property.
For any securities offered under this prospectus, the master servicer or the
servicer will maintain or cause each subservicer to maintain, as the case may
be, in full force and effect and to the extent coverage is available a primary
insurance policy with regard to each mortgage loan for which coverage is
required under the standard described above unless an exception to such standard
applies or alternate credit enhancement is provided as described in the
accompanying prospectus supplement; provided that the primary insurance policy
was in place as of the cut-off date and the depositor had knowledge of such
primary insurance policy.
STANDARD HAZARD INSURANCE ON MORTGAGED PROPERTIES
The terms of the mortgage loans (other than Cooperative Loans) require each
borrower to maintain a hazard insurance policy covering the related mortgaged
property and providing for coverage at least equal to that of the standard form
of fire insurance policy with extended coverage customary in the state in which
the property is located. Most coverage will be in an amount equal to the lesser
of the principal balance of the mortgage loan and, in the case of loans secured
by junior liens on the related mortgaged property, the principal balance of any
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senior mortgage loans, or 100% of the insurable value of the improvements
securing the mortgage loan. The pooling and servicing agreement will provide
that the master servicer or the servicer shall cause the hazard policies to be
maintained or shall obtain a blanket policy insuring against losses on the
mortgage loans. The master servicer or the servicer may satisfy its obligation
to cause hazard policies to be maintained by maintaining a blanket policy
insuring against losses on those mortgage loans. The ability of the master
servicer or the servicer to ensure that hazard insurance proceeds are
appropriately applied may be dependent on its being named as an additional
insured under any hazard insurance policy and under any flood insurance policy
referred to below, or on the extent to which information in this regard is
furnished to the master servicer or the servicer by borrowers or subservicers.
If loans secured by junior liens on the related mortgaged property are included
within any trust, investors should also consider the application of hazard
insurance proceeds discussed in this prospectus under 'Certain Legal Aspects of
the Loans -- The Mortgage Loans -- Junior Mortgages, Rights of Senior
Mortgagees.'
The standard form of fire and extended coverage policy covers physical
damage to or destruction of the improvements on the property by fire, lightning,
explosion, smoke, windstorm, hail, riot, strike and civil commotion, in
accordance with the conditions and exclusions specified in each policy. The
policies relating to the mortgage loans will be underwritten by different
insurers under different state laws in accordance with different applicable
state forms and therefore will not contain identical terms and conditions, the
basic terms of which are dictated by respective state laws. These policies
typically do not cover any physical damage resulting from the following: war,
revolution, governmental actions, floods and other water-related causes, earth
movement, including earthquakes, landslides and mudflows, nuclear reactions, wet
or dry rot, vermin, rodents, insects or domestic animals, theft and, in some
cases, vandalism. The foregoing list is merely indicative of some kinds of
uninsured risks and is not intended to be all-inclusive. Where the improvements
securing a mortgage loan are located in a federally designated flood area at the
time of origination of that mortgage loan, the pooling and servicing agreement
typically requires the master servicer or the servicer to cause to be maintained
for each such mortgage loan serviced, flood insurance, to the extent available,
in an amount equal to the lesser of the amount required to compensate for any
loss or damage on a replacement cost basis or the maximum insurance available
under the federal flood insurance program.
The hazard insurance policies covering the mortgaged properties typically
contain a co-insurance clause that in effect requires the related borrower at
all times to carry insurance of a specified percentage, typically 80% to 90%, of
the full replacement value of the improvements on the property in order to
recover the full amount of any partial loss. If the related borrower's coverage
falls below this specified percentage, this clause usually provides that the
insurer's liability in the event of partial loss does not exceed the greater of
(i) the replacement cost of the improvements damaged or destroyed less physical
depreciation or (ii) the proportion of the loss as the amount of insurance
carried bears to the specified percentage of the full replacement cost of the
improvements.
Since the amount of hazard insurance that borrowers are required to maintain
on the improvements securing the mortgage loans may decline as the principal
balances owing thereon decrease, and since residential properties have
historically appreciated in value over time, hazard insurance proceeds could be
insufficient to restore fully the damaged property in the event of a partial
loss. See 'Description of Credit Enhancement -- Subordination' above for a
description of when subordination is provided, the protection, limited to the
Special Hazard Amount as described in the accompanying prospectus supplement,
afforded by subordination, and 'Description of Credit Enhancement -- Special
Hazard Insurance Policies' for a description of the limited protection afforded
by any special hazard insurance policy against losses occasioned by hazards
which are otherwise uninsured against.
Hazard insurance on the Mexican properties will usually be provided by
insurers located in Mexico. The depositor may not be able to obtain as much
information about the financial condition of the companies issuing hazard
insurance policies in Mexico as it is able to obtain for companies based in the
United States. The ability of the insurers to pay claims also may be affected
by, among other things, adverse political and economic developments in Mexico.
STANDARD HAZARD INSURANCE ON MANUFACTURED HOMES
The terms of the related agreement will require the servicer or the master
servicer, as applicable, to cause to be maintained for each manufactured housing
contract one or more standard hazard insurance policies that
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provide, at a minimum, the same coverage as a standard form fire and extended
coverage insurance policy that is customary for manufactured housing, issued by
a company authorized to issue the policies in the state in which the
manufactured home is located, and in an amount that is not less than the maximum
insurable value of the manufactured home or the principal balance due from the
borrower on the related manufactured housing contract, whichever is less.
Coverage may be provided by one or more blanket insurance policies covering
losses on the manufactured housing contracts resulting from the absence or
insufficiency of individual standard hazard insurance policies. If a
manufactured home's location was, at the time of origination of the related
manufactured housing contract, within a federally designated flood area, the
servicer or the master servicer also will be required to maintain flood
insurance.
If the servicer or the master servicer repossesses a manufactured home on
behalf of the trustee, the servicer or the master servicer will either maintain
at its expense hazard insurance for the manufactured home or indemnify the
trustee against any damage to the manufactured home prior to resale or other
disposition.
DESCRIPTION OF FHA INSURANCE UNDER TITLE I
Some of the home improvement contracts contained in a trust may be Title I
loans which are insured under the Title I Program as described in this section
and in the accompanying prospectus supplement. The regulations, rules and
procedures promulgated by the FHA under the Title I, or FHA Regulations, contain
the requirements under which a lender approved for participation in the Title I
Program may obtain insurance against a portion of losses incurred on eligible
loans that have been originated and serviced in accordance with FHA Regulations,
subject to the amount of insurance coverage available in that Title I lender's
FHA reserve, as described in this section and in the accompanying prospectus
supplement, and subject to the terms and conditions established under the
National Housing Act and FHA Regulations. FHA Regulations permit the Secretary
of the Department of Housing and Urban Development, or HUD, subject to statutory
limitations, to waive a Title I lender's noncompliance with FHA Regulations if
enforcement would impose an injustice on the lender, provided the Title I lender
has substantially complied with the FHA Regulations in good faith and has
credited the borrower for any excess charge. In general, an insurance claim
against the FHA will be denied if the Title I loan to which it relates does not
strictly satisfy the requirements of the National Housing Act and FHA
Regulations.
Unlike some other government loan insurance programs, loans under the Title
I Program other than loans in excess of $25,000, are not subject to prior review
by the FHA. Under the Title I Program, the FHA disburses insurance proceeds for
defaulted loans for which insurance claims have been filed by a Title I lender
prior to any review of those loans. A Title I lender is required to repurchase a
Title I loan from the FHA that is determined to be ineligible for insurance
after insurance claim payments for that loan have been paid to that lender.
Under the FHA Regulations, if the Title I lender's obligation to repurchase the
Title I loan is unsatisfied, the FHA is permitted to offset the unsatisfied
obligation against future insurance claim payments owed by the FHA to that
lender. FHA Regulations permit the FHA to disallow an insurance claim for any
loan that does not qualify for insurance for a period of up to two years after
the claim is made and to require the Title I lender that has submitted the
insurance claim to repurchase the loan.
The proceeds of loans under the Title I Program may be used only for
permitted purposes, including, but not limited to, the alteration, repair or
improvement of residential property, the purchase of a manufactured home and/or
lot, or cooperative interest in a manufactured home and/or lot, on which to
place that home.
Subject to the limitations described below, eligible Title I loans are in
most cases insured by the FHA for 90% of an amount equal to the sum of:
the net unpaid principal amount and the uncollected interest earned to the
date of default,
interest on the unpaid loan obligation from the date of default to the date
of the initial submission of the insurance claim, plus 15 calendar days,
the total period not to exceed nine months, at a rate of 7% per annum,
uncollected court costs,
amount of attorney's fees on an hourly or other basis for time actually
expended and billed not to exceed $500, and
amount of expenses for recording the assignment of the security to the
United States.
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However, the insurance coverage provided by the FHA is limited to the extent
of the balance in the Title I lender's FHA reserve maintained by the FHA.
Accordingly, if sufficient insurance coverage is available in that FHA reserve,
then the Title I lender bears the risk of losses on a Title I loan for which a
claim for reimbursement is paid by the FHA of at least 10% of the unpaid
principal, uncollected interest earned to the date of default, interest from the
date of default to the date of the initial claim submission and various
expenses. Unlike most other FHA insurance programs, the obligation of the FHA to
reimburse a Title I lender for losses in the portfolio of insured loans held by
that Title I lender is limited to the amount in an FHA reserve maintained on a
lender-by-lender basis and not on a loan-by-loan basis.
Under Title I, the FHA maintains an FHA insurance coverage reserve account,
referred to as an FHA reserve for each Title I lender. The amount in each Title
I lender's FHA reserve is 10% of the amounts disbursed, advanced or expended by
a Title I lender in originating or purchasing eligible loans registered with the
FHA for Title I insurance, with some adjustments permitted or required by FHA
Regulations. The balance of that FHA reserve is the maximum amount of insurance
claims the FHA is required to pay to the related Title I lender. Title I loans
to be insured under Title I will be registered for insurance by the FHA.
Following either the origination or transfer of loans eligible under Title I,
the Title I lender will submit those loans for FHA insurance coverage within its
FHA reserve by delivering a transfer report or through an electronic submission
to the FHA in the form prescribed under the FHA Regulations. The increase in the
FHA insurance coverage for those loans in the Title I lender's FHA reserve will
occur on the date following the receipt and acknowledgment by the FHA of the
transfer report for those loans. The insurance available to any trust will be
subject to the availability, from time to time, of amounts in each Title I
lender's FHA reserve, which will initially be limited to the FHA insurance
amount as specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement.
Under Title I, the FHA will reduce the insurance coverage available in a
Title I lender's FHA reserve relating to loans insured under that Title I
lender's contract of insurance by:
the amount of FHA insurance claims approved for payment related to those
loans, and
the amount of reduction of the Title I lender's FHA reserve by reason of
the sale, assignment or transfer of loans registered under the Title I
lender's contract of insurance.
This insurance coverage also may be reduced for any FHA insurance claims
previously disbursed to the Title I lender that are subsequently rejected by the
FHA.
In most cases, the FHA will insure home improvement contracts up to $25,000
for a single-family property, with a maximum term of 20 years. The FHA will
insure loans of up to $17,500 for manufactured homes which qualify as real
estate under applicable state law and loans of up to $12,000 per unit for a
$60,000 limit for an apartment house or a dwelling for two or more families. If
the loan amount is $15,000 or more, the FHA requires a drive-by appraisal, the
current tax assessment value, or a full Uniform Residential Appraisal Report
dated within 12 months of the closing to verify the property's value. The
maximum loan amount on transactions requiring an appraisal is the amount of
equity in the property shown by the market value determination of the property.
Following a default on a home improvement contract partially insured by the
FHA, the master servicer or the servicer, either directly or through a
subservicer, may, subject to various conditions, either commence foreclosure
proceedings against the improved property securing the loan, if applicable, or
submit a claim to FHA, but may submit a claim to FHA after proceeding against
the improved property only with the prior approval of the Secretary of HUD. The
availability of FHA insurance following a default on a home improvement contract
is subject to a number of conditions, including strict compliance with FHA
Regulations in originating and servicing the home improvement contract. Failure
to comply with FHA Regulations may result in a denial of or surcharge on the FHA
insurance claim. Prior to declaring a home improvement contract in default and
submitting a claim to FHA, the master servicer or the servicer must take steps
to attempt to cure the default, including personal contact with the borrower
either by telephone or in a meeting and providing the borrower with 30 days'
written notice prior to declaration of default. FHA may deny insurance coverage
if the borrower's nonpayment is related to a valid objection to faulty
contractor performance. In that event, the master servicer or the servicer or
other entity as specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement will seek to
obtain payment by or a judgment against the borrower, and may resubmit the claim
to FHA following that judgment.
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FHA MORTGAGE INSURANCE
The Housing Act authorizes various FHA mortgage insurance programs. Some of
the mortgage loans may be insured under either Section 203(b), Section 234 or
Section 235 of the Housing Act. Under Section 203(b), FHA insures mortgage loans
of up to 30 years' duration for the purchase of one- to four-family dwelling
units. Mortgage loans for the purchase of condominium units are insured by FHA
under Section 234. Trust assets insured under these programs must bear interest
at a rate not exceeding the maximum rate in effect at the time the loan is made,
as established by HUD, and may not exceed specified percentages of the lesser of
the appraised value of the property and the sales price, less seller-paid
closing costs for the property, up to certain specified maximums. In addition,
FHA imposes initial investment minimums and other requirements on mortgage loans
insured under the Section 203(b) and Section 234 programs.
Under Section 235, assistance payments are paid by HUD to the mortgagee on
behalf of eligible borrowers for as long as the borrowers continue to be
eligible for the payments. To be eligible, a borrower must be part of a family,
have income within the limits prescribed by HUD at the time of initial
occupancy, occupy the property and meet requirements for recertification at
least annually.
The regulations governing these programs provide that insurance benefits are
payable either on foreclosure, or other acquisition of possession, and
conveyance of the mortgaged premises to HUD or on assignment of the defaulted
mortgage loan to HUD. The FHA insurance that may be provided under these
programs on the conveyance of the home to HUD is equal to 100% of the
outstanding principal balance of the mortgage loan, plus accrued interest, as
described below, and certain additional costs and expenses. When entitlement to
insurance benefits results from assignment of the mortgage loan to HUD, the
insurance payment is computed as of the date of the assignment and includes the
unpaid principal amount of the mortgage loan plus mortgage interest accrued and
unpaid to the assignment date.
When entitlement to insurance benefits results from foreclosure (or other
acquisition of possession) and conveyance, the insurance payment is equal to the
unpaid principal amount of the mortgage loan, adjusted to reimburse the
mortgagee for certain tax, insurance and similar payments made by it and to
deduct certain amounts received or retained by the mortgagee after default, plus
reimbursement not to exceed two-thirds of the mortgagee's foreclosure costs. Any
FHA insurance relating to underlying a series of securities will be described in
the accompanying prospectus supplement.
VA MORTGAGE GUARANTY
The Servicemen's Readjustment Act of 1944, as amended, permits a veteran,
or, in certain instances, his or her spouse, to obtain a mortgage loan guaranty
by the VA, covering mortgage financing of the purchase of a one- to four-family
dwelling unit to be occupied as the veteran's home, at an interest rate not
exceeding the maximum rate in effect at the time the loan is made, as
established by HUD. The program has no limit on the amount of a mortgage loan,
requires no down payment from the purchaser and permits the guaranty of mortgage
loans with terms, limited by the estimated economic life of the property, up to
30 years. The maximum guaranty that may be issued by the VA under this program
is 50% of the original principal amount of the mortgage loan up to a certain
dollar limit established by the VA. The liability on the guaranty is reduced or
increased pro rata with any reduction or increase in the amount of indebtedness,
but in no event will the amount payable on the guaranty exceed the amount of the
original guaranty. Regardless of the dollar and percentage limitations of the
guaranty, a mortgagee will ordinarily suffer a monetary loss only when the
difference between the unsatisfied indebtedness and the proceeds of a
foreclosure sale of mortgaged premises is greater than the original guaranty as
adjusted. The VA may, at its option, and without regard to the guaranty, make
full payment to a mortgagee of the unsatisfied indebtedness on a mortgage on its
assignment to the VA.
Since there is no limit imposed by the VA on the principal amount of a
VA-guaranteed mortgage loan but there is a limit on the amount of the VA
guaranty, additional coverage under a primary mortgage insurance policy may be
required by the depositor for VA loans in excess of certain amounts. The amount
of any additional coverage will be set forth in the accompanying prospectus
supplement. Any VA guaranty relating to underlying a series of securities will
be described in the accompanying prospectus supplement.
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THE DEPOSITOR
The depositor is an indirect wholly-owned subsidiary of GMAC Mortgage Group,
Inc., which is a wholly-owned subsidiary of General Motors Acceptance
Corporation. The depositor was incorporated in the State of Delaware in
Nopvember 17, 1999. The depositor was organized for the limited purpose of
acquiring loans and issuing securities backed by such loans. The depositor
anticipates that it will in many cases have acquired loans indirectly through
Residential Funding Corporation, which is an indirect wholly-owned subsidiary of
GMAC Mortgage Group, Inc. The depositor anticipates that it will in many cases
acquire loans from GMAC Mortgage Corporation, which is also an indirect
wholly-owned subsidiary of GMAC Mortgage Group, Inc. The depositor does not
have, nor is it expected in the future to have, any significant assets.
The securities do not represent an interest in or an obligation of the
depositor. The depositor's only obligations for a series of securities will be
the limited representations and warranties made by the depositor or as otherwise
provided in the accompanying prospectus supplement.
The depositor maintains its principal office at 8400 Normandale Lake
Boulevard, Suite 600, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55437. Its telephone number is
(612) 832-7000.
RESIDENTIAL FUNDING CORPORATION
If specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement, Residential Funding
Corporation, an affiliate of the depositor, will act as the master servicer or
the servicer for each series of securities.
Residential Funding Corporation buys loans under several loan purchase
programs from mortgage loan originators or sellers nationwide, including
affiliates, that meet its seller/servicer eligibility requirements and services
loans for its own account and for others. Residential Funding Corporation's
principal executive offices are located at 8400 Normandale Lake Boulevard, Suite
600, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55437. Its telephone number is (612) 832-7000.
Residential Funding Corporation conducts operations from its headquarters in
Minneapolis and from offices located primarily in California, Texas and
Maryland.
THE AGREEMENTS
As described in this prospectus under 'Introduction' and 'Description of the
Securities -- General,' each series of certificates will be issued under a
pooling and servicing agreement or trust agreement, as applicable, and each
series of notes will be issued under an indenture, each as described in that
section. In the case of each series of notes, the provisions relating to the
servicing of the loans will be contained in the related servicing agreements.
The following summaries describe additional provisions common to each pooling
and servicing agreement and trust agreement relating to a series of
certificates, and each indenture and servicing agreement relating to a series of
notes.
Servicing Compensation and Payment of Expenses
Each servicer or the master servicer, as applicable, will be paid
compensation for the performance of its servicing obligations at the percentage
per annum described in the accompanying prospectus supplement of the outstanding
principal balance of each loan. Any subservicer will also be entitled to the
servicing fee as described in the accompanying prospectus supplement. Except as
otherwise provided in the accompanying prospectus supplement, the servicer or
the master servicer, if any, will deduct the servicing fee for the loans
underlying the securities of a series in an amount to be specified in the
accompanying prospectus supplement. The servicing fees may be fixed or variable.
In addition, the master servicer, any servicer or the relevant subservicers, if
any, will be entitled to servicing compensation in the form of assumption fees,
late payment charges or excess proceeds following disposition of property in
connection with defaulted loans and any earnings on investments held in the
Payment Account or any Custodial Account, to the extent not applied as
Compensating Interest. Any Excess Spread or Excluded Spread retained by a
seller, the master servicer or servicer will not constitute part of the
servicing fee. Regardless of the foregoing, for a series of securities as to
which the trust includes private securities, the compensation payable to the
master servicer or servicer for servicing and administering such private
securities on behalf of the holders of such securities may be based on a
percentage per annum described in the accompanying prospectus supplement of the
outstanding balance of such private securities and may be retained from
distributions of interest thereon, if stated in the accompanying prospectus
supplement. In addition,
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some reasonable duties of the master servicer or the servicer may be performed
by an affiliate of the master servicer or the servicer who will be entitled to
compensation for performance of those duties.
The master servicer or the servicer will pay or cause to be paid some of the
ongoing expenses associated with each trust and incurred by it in connection
with its responsibilities under the related agreement, including, without
limitation, payment of any fee or other amount payable for any alternative
credit enhancement arrangements, payment of the fees and disbursements of the
trustee, any custodian appointed by the trustee, the security registrar and any
paying agent, and payment of expenses incurred in enforcing the obligations of
subservicers and sellers. The master servicer or the servicer will be entitled
to reimbursement of expenses incurred in enforcing the obligations of
subservicers and sellers under limited circumstances. In addition, as indicated
in the preceding section, the master servicer or the servicer will be entitled
to reimbursements for some of the expenses incurred by it in connection with
Liquidated Loans and in connection with the restoration of mortgaged properties,
such right of reimbursement being prior to the rights of securityholders to
receive any related Liquidation Proceeds, including Insurance Proceeds.
Evidence as to Compliance
Each pooling and servicing agreement or servicing agreement will provide
that the master servicer or the servicer will, for each series of securities,
deliver to the trustee, on or before the date in each year specified in the
agreement, an officer's certificate stating that a review of the activities of
the master servicer or the servicer during the preceding calendar year relating
to its servicing of loans and its performance under pooling and servicing
agreements or servicing agreements, as applicable, including the related
agreement, has been made under the supervision of that officer.
Certain Other Matters Regarding Servicing
Each servicer or the master servicer, as applicable, may not resign from its
obligations and duties under the related pooling and servicing agreement or
servicing agreement unless each rating agency has confirmed in writing that the
resignation will not qualify, reduce or cause to be withdrawn the then current
ratings on the securities except on a determination that its duties thereunder
are no longer permissible under applicable law. No resignation will become
effective until the trustee or a successor servicer or master servicer has
assumed the servicer's or the master servicer's obligations and duties under the
related pooling and servicing agreement.
Each pooling and servicing agreement or servicing agreement will also
provide that neither the servicer, the master servicer, nor any director,
officer, employee or agent of the master servicer or servicer, as applicable,
will be under any liability to the trust or the securityholders for any action
taken or for refraining from taking any action in good faith under the related
agreement, or for errors in judgment. However, neither the servicer, the master
servicer nor any such person will be protected against any liability that would
otherwise be imposed by reason of the failure to perform its obligations in
compliance with any standard of care set forth in the related agreement. The
servicer or the master servicer, as applicable, may, in its discretion,
undertake any action that it may deem necessary or desirable with respect to the
servicing agreement and the rights and duties of the parties thereto and the
interest of the related securityholders. The legal expenses and costs of the
action and any liability resulting therefrom will be expenses, costs and
liabilities of the trust and the servicer or the master servicer will be
entitled to be reimbursed out of funds otherwise distributable to
securityholders.
The master servicer or the servicer will be required to maintain a fidelity
bond and errors and omissions policy for its officers and employees and other
persons acting on behalf of the master servicer or the servicer in connection
with its activities under the related servicing agreement.
A servicer or the master servicer may have other business relationships with
the company, any seller or their affiliates.
EVENTS OF DEFAULT; RIGHTS UPON EVENT OF DEFAULT
Pooling and Servicing Agreement; Servicing Agreement
Events of default under the related pooling and servicing agreement or
servicing agreement for a series of securities will include:
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any failure by the servicer or master servicer to make a required deposit
to the Custodial Account or the Payment Account or, if the master servicer
or servicer is the paying agent, to distribute to the holders of any class
of securities of that series any required payment which continues
unremedied for five days after the giving of written notice of the failure
to the master servicer or the servicer by the trustee or the depositor, or
to the master servicer or the servicer, the depositor and the trustee by
the holders of securities of such class evidencing not less than 25% of the
aggregate percentage interests constituting that class or the credit
enhancer, if applicable;
any failure by the master servicer or servicer duly to observe or perform
in any material respect any other of its covenants or agreements in the
related agreement for that series of securities which continues unremedied
for a period of not more than 45 days, or 15 days in the case of a failure
to pay the premium for any insurance policy which is required to be
maintained under the related servicing agreement, after the giving of
written notice of the failure to the master servicer or the servicer by the
trustee or the depositor, or to the master servicer or servicer, the
depositor and the trustee by the holders of any class of securities of that
series evidencing not less than 25%, 33% in the case of a trust including
private securities or a majority in the case of a series of notes, of the
aggregate percentage interests constituting that class, or the credit
enhancer, if applicable; and
some events of insolvency, bankruptcy or similar proceedings regarding the
master servicer or servicer and certain actions by the master servicer or
servicer indicating its insolvency or inability to pay its obligations.
A default under the terms of any private securities included in any trust
will not constitute an event of default under the related agreement.
So long as an event of default remains unremedied, except as otherwise
provided for in the related agreement with respect to any third party credit
enhancer, either the depositor or the trustee may, and, in the case of an event
of default under a pooling and servicing agreement, at the direction of the
holders of securities evidencing not less than 51% of the aggregate voting
rights in the related trust, the trustee shall, by written notification to the
master servicer or servicer and to the depositor or the trustee, terminate all
of the rights and obligations of the master servicer or servicer under the
related agreement, other than any rights of the master servicer or servicer as
securityholder, and, in the case of termination under a servicing agreement, the
right to receive servicing compensation, expenses for servicing the trust assets
during any period prior to the date of that termination, and other reimbursement
of amounts the master servicer or the servicer is entitled to withdraw from the
Custodial Account. The trustee or, on notice to the depositor and with the
depositor's consent, its designee will succeed to all responsibilities, duties
and liabilities of the master servicer or the servicer under the related
agreement, other than the obligation to purchase loans under some circumstances,
and will be entitled to similar compensation arrangements. If the trustee would
be obligated to succeed the master servicer or the servicer but is unwilling so
to act, it may appoint or if it is unable so to act, it shall appoint or
petition a court of competent jurisdiction for the appointment of, a Fannie
Mae-or Freddie Mac-approved mortgage servicing institution with a net worth of
at least $10,000,000 to act as successor to the master servicer or the servicer
under the related agreement, unless otherwise set forth in the agreement.
Pending appointment, the trustee is obligated to act in that capacity. The
trustee and such successor may agree on the servicing compensation to be paid,
which in no event may be greater than the compensation to the initial master
servicer or the servicer under the related agreement.
No securityholder will have any right under a pooling and servicing
agreement to institute any proceeding with respect to the pooling and servicing
agreement, except as otherwise provided for in the related pooling and servicing
agreement with respect to the credit enhancer, unless the holder previously has
given to the trustee written notice of default and the continuance thereof and
unless the holders of securities of any class evidencing not less than 25% of
the aggregate percentage interests constituting that class have made written
request upon the trustee to institute the proceeding in its own name as trustee
thereunder and have offered to the trustee reasonable indemnity and the trustee
for 60 days after receipt of the request and indemnity has neglected or refused
to institute any proceeding. However, the trustee will be under no obligation to
exercise any of the trusts or powers vested in it by the pooling and servicing
agreement or to institute, conduct or defend any litigation thereunder or in
relation thereto at the request, order or direction of any of the holders of
securities covered by the pooling and servicing agreement, unless the
securityholders have offered to the trustee reasonable security or indemnity
against the costs, expenses and liabilities which may be incurred therein or
thereby.
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Indenture
An event of default under the indenture for each series of notes, in most
cases, will include:
default for five days or more in the payment of any principal of or
interest on any note of the series;
failure to perform any other covenant of the depositor or the trust in the
indenture which continues for a period of thirty days after notice of that
failure is given in accordance with the procedures described in the
accompanying prospectus supplement;
any representation or warranty made by the depositor or the trust in the
indenture or in any certificate or other writing delivered pursuant thereto
or in connection therewith as to or affecting the series having been
incorrect in a material respect as of the time made, and the breach is not
cured within thirty days after notice of that error is given in accordance
with the procedures described in the accompanying prospectus supplement;
and
certain bankruptcy, insolvency, or similar events relating to the depositor
or the trust.
If an event of default as to the notes of any series at the time outstanding
occurs and is continuing, either the trustee, the credit enhancer, if
applicable, or the holders of a majority of the then aggregate outstanding
amount of the notes of the series with the written consent of the credit
enhancer may declare the principal amount, or, if the notes of that series are
accrual notes, that portion of the principal amount as may be specified in the
terms of that series, of all the notes of the series to be due and payable
immediately. That declaration may, under some circumstances, be rescinded and
annulled by the holders of a majority in aggregate outstanding amount of the
related notes.
If, following an event of default for any series of notes, the notes of the
series have been declared to be due and payable, the trustee may, in its
discretion, or, if directed in writing by the credit enhancer, will, regardless
of that acceleration, elect to maintain possession of the collateral securing
the notes of that series and to continue to apply payments on that collateral as
if there had been no declaration of acceleration if that collateral continues to
provide sufficient funds for the payment of principal of and interest on the
notes of the series as they would have become due if there had not been a
declaration. In addition, the trustee may not sell or otherwise liquidate the
collateral securing the notes of a series following an event of default, unless:
the holders of 100% of the then aggregate outstanding amount of the notes
of the series consent to that sale,
the proceeds of the sale or liquidation are sufficient to pay in full the
principal of and accrued interest, due and unpaid, on the outstanding notes
of the series, and to reimburse the credit enhancer, if applicable, at the
date of that sale, or
the trustee determines that the collateral would not be sufficient on an
ongoing basis to make all payments on those notes as those payments would
have become due if those notes had not been declared due and payable, and
the trustee obtains the consent of the holders of 66 2/3% of the then
aggregate outstanding amount of the notes of the series and the credit
enhancer, if applicable.
In the event that the trustee liquidates the collateral in connection with
an event of default, the indenture provides that the trustee will have a prior
lien on the proceeds of that liquidation for unpaid fees and expenses. As a
result, on the occurrence of that event of default, the amount available for
payments to the securityholders would be less than would otherwise be the case.
However, the trustee may not institute a proceeding for the enforcement of its
lien except in connection with a proceeding for the enforcement of the lien of
the indenture for the benefit of the securityholders after the occurrence of an
event of default.
If stated in the accompanying prospectus supplement, in the event the
principal of the notes of a series is declared due and payable, as described in
the second preceding paragraph, the holders of any notes issued at a discount
from par may be entitled to receive no more than an amount equal to the unpaid
principal amount of those notes less the amount of the discount that is
unamortized.
In most cases, no noteholder will have any right under an indenture to
institute any proceeding in connection with the agreement unless:
the holder previously has given to the trustee written notice of default
and the continuance of that default,
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the holders of securities of any class evidencing not less than 25% of the
aggregate percentage interests constituting the class (1) have made written
request upon the trustee to institute that proceeding in its own name as
trustee thereunder and (2) have offered to the trustee reasonable
indemnity,
the trustee has neglected or refused to institute that proceeding for 60
days after receipt of that request and indemnity, and
no direction inconsistent with that written request has been given to the
trustee during that 60 day period by the holders of a majority of the
security balances of that class, except as otherwise provided for in the
related agreement regarding the credit enhancer.
However, the trustee will be under no obligation to exercise any of the
trusts or powers vested in it by the applicable agreement or to institute,
conduct or defend any litigation thereunder or in relation thereto at the
request, order or direction of any of the holders of securities covered by the
agreement, unless the securityholders have offered to the trustee reasonable
security or indemnity against the costs, expenses and liabilities which may be
incurred in or by exercise of that power.
AMENDMENT
In most cases, each agreement may be amended by the parties to the
agreement, except as otherwise provided for in the related agreement with
respect to the credit enhancer, without the consent of the related
securityholders:
to cure any ambiguity;
to correct or supplement any provision therein which may be inconsistent
with any other provision therein or to correct any error;
to change the timing and/or nature of deposits in the Custodial Account or
the Payment Account or to change the name in which the Custodial Account is
maintained, except that (a) deposits to the Payment Account may not occur
later than the related distribution date, (b) the change may not adversely
affect in any material respect the interests of any securityholder, as
evidenced by an opinion of counsel, and (c) the change may not adversely
affect the then-current rating of any rated classes of securities, as
evidenced by a letter from each applicable rating agency;
if an election to treat the related trust as a 'real estate mortgage
investment conduit' or, REMIC has been made, to modify, eliminate or add to
any of its provisions (a) to the extent necessary to maintain the
qualification of the trust as a REMIC or to avoid or minimize the risk of
imposition of any tax on the related trust, provided that the trustee has
received an opinion of counsel to the effect that (1) the action is
necessary or desirable to maintain qualification or to avoid or minimize
that risk, and (2) the action will not adversely affect in any material
respect the interests of any related securityholder, or (b) to modify the
provisions regarding the transferability of the REMIC Residual
Certificates, provided that the depositor has determined that the change
would not adversely affect the applicable ratings of any classes of the
certificates, as evidenced by a letter from each applicable rating agency,
and that any such amendment will not give rise to any tax for the transfer
of the REMIC Residual Certificates to a non-permitted transferee;
to make any other provisions for matters or questions arising under the
related agreement which are not materially inconsistent with its
provisions, so long as the action will not adversely affect in any material
respect the interests of any securityholder; or
to amend any provision that is not material to holders of any class of
related securities.
In most cases, each agreement may also be amended by the parties to the
agreement, except as otherwise provided for in the related agreement with
respect to the credit enhancer, with the consent of the holders of securities of
each class affected thereby evidencing not less than 66%, in the case of a
series of securities issued under a pooling and servicing agreement, or a
majority, in the case of a series of securities issued under an indenture, of
the aggregate outstanding principal amount of securities of that class for the
purpose of adding any provisions to or changing in any manner or eliminating any
of the provisions of the related agreement or of modifying in any manner the
rights of the related securityholders, except that no such amendment may (i)
reduce in any manner the amount of, or delay the timing of, payments received on
loans which are required to be distributed on a security of any class without
the consent of the holder of the security, (ii) adversely affect
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in any material respect the interests of the holders of any class of securities
in a manner other than as described in the preceding clause, without the consent
of the holders of securities of that class evidencing not less than 66%, in the
case of a series of securities issued under a pooling and servicing agreement,
or a majority, in the case of a series of securities issued under an indenture,
of the aggregate outstanding principal amount of the securities of each class of
that series affected by that amendment or (iii) reduce the percentage of
securities of any class the holders of which are required to consent to any such
amendment unless the holders of all securities of that class have consented to
the change in the percentage.
Regardless of the foregoing, if a REMIC election has been made with respect
to the related trust, the trustee will not be entitled to consent to any
amendment to a pooling and servicing agreement without having first received an
opinion of counsel to the effect that the amendment or the exercise of any power
granted to the master servicer, the servicer, the depositor or the trustee in
accordance with the amendment will not result in the imposition of a tax on the
related trust or cause the trust to fail to qualify as a REMIC.
TERMINATION; RETIREMENT OF SECURITIES
The primary obligations created by the trust agreement or pooling and
servicing agreement for each series of certificates will terminate on the
payment to the related securityholders of all amounts held in the Payment
Account or by the master servicer or any servicer and required to be paid to the
securityholders following the earlier of
the final payment or other liquidation or disposition, or any Advance with
respect thereto, of the last loan subject thereto and all property acquired
on foreclosure or deed in lieu of foreclosure of any loan, and
the purchase by the master servicer, the servicer or the depositor or, if
specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement, by the holder of the
REMIC Residual Certificates (see 'Material Federal Income Tax Consequences'
below) from the trust, or from the special purpose entity, if applicable,
for such series of all remaining loans and all property acquired relating
to the loans.
Any option to purchase described in the second item above will be limited to
cases in which the aggregate Stated Principal Balance of the remaining loans is
less than or equal to ten percent (10%) of the initial aggregate Stated
Principal Balance of the loans. In addition to the foregoing, the master
servicer, the servicer, or the depositor may have the option to purchase, in
whole but not in part, the securities specified in the accompanying prospectus
supplement in the manner described in the accompanying prospectus supplement. At
the time of the purchase of such securities or at any time thereafter, at the
option of the master servicer, the servicer, or the depositor, the loans may be
sold, thereby effecting a retirement of the securities and the termination of
the trust, or the securities so purchased may be held or resold by the master
servicer, the servicer, or the depositor. Written notice of termination of the
related agreement will be given to each securityholder, and the final
distribution will be made only at the time of the surrender and cancellation of
the securities at an office or agency appointed by the trustee which will be
specified in the notice of termination. If the securityholders are permitted to
terminate the trust under the applicable agreement, a penalty may be imposed on
the securityholders based on the fee that would be foregone by the master
servicer or the servicer, as applicable, because of the related termination.
Any purchase described in the preceding paragraph of loans and property
acquired relating to the loans evidenced by a series of securities shall be made
at the option of the master servicer, servicer, depositor or, if applicable, the
holder of the REMIC Residual Certificates at the price specified in the
accompanying prospectus supplement. The exercise of that right will effect early
retirement of the securities of that series, but the right of any entity to
purchase the loans and related property will be in accordance with the criteria,
and will be at the price, set forth in the accompanying prospectus supplement.
Early termination in this manner may adversely affect the yield to holders of
some classes of the securities. If a REMIC election has been made, the
termination of the related trust will be effected in a manner consistent with
applicable federal income tax regulations and its status as a REMIC.
In addition to the optional repurchase of the property in the related trust,
if stated in the accompanying prospectus supplement, a holder of the Call Class
will have the right, solely at its discretion, to terminate the related trust
and thereby effect early retirement of the securities of the series, on any
distribution date after the 12th distribution date following the date of initial
issuance of the related series of securities and until the date when the
optional termination rights of the master servicer or the servicer and the
depositor become exercisable.
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The Call Class will not be offered under the prospectus supplement. Any such
call will be of the entire trust at one time; multiple calls for any series of
securities will not be permitted. In the case of a call, the holders of the
securities will be paid a price equal to the Call Price. To exercise the call,
the holder of the Call Security must remit to the related trustee for
distribution to the certificateholders, funds equal to the Call Price. If those
funds are not deposited with the related trustee, the securities of that series
will remain outstanding. In addition, in the case of a trust for which a REMIC
election or elections have been made, this termination will be effected in a
manner consistent with applicable Federal income tax regulations and its status
as a REMIC. In connection with a call by the holder of a Call Security, the
final payment to the certificateholders will be made at the time of surrender of
the related securities to the trustee. Once the securities have been surrendered
and paid in full, there will not be any further liability to certificateholders.
The indenture will be discharged as to a series of notes, except for some
continuing rights specified in the indenture, at the time of the distribution to
noteholders of all amounts required to be distributed under the indenture.
THE TRUSTEE
The trustee under each pooling and servicing agreement or trust agreement
under which a series of certificates is issued will be named in the accompanying
prospectus supplement. The commercial bank or trust company serving as trustee
may have normal banking relationships with the depositor and/or its affiliates,
including Residential Funding Corporation and GMAC Mortgage Corporation.
The trustee may resign at any time, in which event the depositor will be
obligated to appoint a successor trustee. The depositor may also remove the
trustee if the trustee ceases to be eligible to continue as trustee under the
related agreement or if the trustee becomes insolvent. After becoming aware of
those circumstances, the depositor will be obligated to appoint a successor
trustee. The trustee may also be removed at any time by the holders of
securities evidencing not less than 51% of the aggregate voting rights in the
related trust. Any resignation or removal of the trustee and appointment of a
successor trustee will not become effective until acceptance of the appointment
by the successor trustee.
THE OWNER TRUSTEE
The owner trustee under the trust agreement will be named in the
accompanying prospectus supplement. The commercial bank or trust company serving
as owner trustee may have normal banking relationships with the depositor and/or
its affiliates, including Residential Funding Corporation and GMAC Mortgage
Corporation.
The owner trustee may resign at any time, in which case the Administrator or
the indenture trustee will be obligated to appoint a successor owner trustee as
described in the agreements. The Administrator or the indenture trustee may also
remove the owner trustee if the owner trustee ceases to be eligible to continue
as such under the trust agreement or if the owner trustee becomes insolvent.
After becoming aware of those circumstances, the Administrator or the indenture
trustee will be obligated to appoint a successor owner trustee. Any resignation
or removal of the owner trustee and appointment of a successor owner trustee
will not become effective until acceptance of the appointment by the successor
owner trustee.
THE INDENTURE TRUSTEE
The indenture trustee under the indenture will be named in the accompanying
prospectus supplement. The commercial bank or trust company serving as indenture
trustee may have normal banking relationships with the depositor and/or its
affiliates, including Residential Funding Corporation and GMAC Mortgage
Corporation.
The indenture trustee may resign at any time, in which case the depositor,
the owner trustee or the Administrator will be obligated to appoint a successor
indenture trustee as described in the indenture. The depositor, the owner
trustee or the Administrator as described in the indenture may also remove the
indenture trustee if the indenture trustee ceases to be eligible to continue as
such under the indenture or if the indenture trustee becomes insolvent. After
becoming aware of those circumstances, the depositor, the owner trustee or the
Administrator will be obligated to appoint a successor indenture trustee. If
stated in the indenture, the indenture trustee may also be removed at any time
by the holders of a majority by principal balance of the notes. Any
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resignation or removal of the indenture trustee and appointment of a successor
indenture trustee will not become effective until acceptance of the appointment
by the successor indenture trustee.
YIELD CONSIDERATIONS
The yield to maturity of a security will depend on the price paid by the
holder for the security, the pass-through rate on any security entitled to
payments of interest, which pass-through rate may vary if stated in the
accompanying prospectus supplement, and the rate and timing of principal
payments on the loans, including payments in excess of required installments,
prepayments or terminations, liquidations and repurchases, the rate and timing
of Draws in the case of revolving credit loans, and the allocation of principal
payments to reduce the principal balance of the security or notional amount
thereof, if applicable.
In general, defaults on loans are expected to occur with greater frequency
in their early years. The rate of default on cash out refinance, limited
documentation or no documentation mortgage loans, and on loans with high LTV
ratios or combined LTV ratios, as applicable, may be higher than for other types
of loans. Likewise, the rate of default on loans that have been originated under
lower than traditional underwriting standards may be higher than those
originated under traditional standards. A trust may include loans that are one
month or more delinquent at the time of offering of the related series of
securities or which have recently been several months delinquent. The rate of
default on delinquent loans or loans with a recent history of delinquency is
more likely to be higher than the rate of default on loans that have a current
payment status. In addition, the rate and timing of prepayments, defaults and
liquidations on the loans will be affected by the general economic condition of
the region of the country or the locality in which the related mortgaged
properties are located. The risk of delinquencies and loss is greater and
prepayments are less likely in regions where a weak or deteriorating economy
exists, as may be evidenced by, among other factors, increasing unemployment or
falling property values. The risk of loss may also be greater on loans with LTV
ratios or combined LTV ratios greater than 80% and no primary insurance
policies. The yield on any class of securities and the timing of principal
payments on that class may also be affected by modifications or actions that may
be taken or approved by the master servicer, the servicer or any of their
affiliates as described in this prospectus under 'Description of the
Securities-Servicing and Administration of Loans,' in connection with a loan
that is in default, or if a default is reasonably foreseeable.
The risk of loss on loans made on loans secured by mortgaged properties
located in Puerto Rico may be greater than on loans that are made to borrowers
who are United States residents and citizens or that are secured by properties
located in the United States. See 'Certain Legal Aspects of the Loans' in this
prospectus.
Because of the uncertainty, delays and costs that may be associated with
realizing on collateral securing the Mexico Loans, as well as the additional
risks of a decline in the value and marketability of the collateral, the risk of
loss for Mexico Loans may be greater than for mortgage loans secured by
mortgaged properties located in the United States. The risk of loss on loans
made to international borrowers may be greater than loans that are made to U.S.
borrowers located in the United States. See 'Certain Legal Aspects of the Loans'
in this prospectus.
The application of any withholding tax on payments made by borrowers of
Mexico Loans residing outside of the United States may increase the risk of
default because the borrower may have qualified for the loan on the basis of the
lower mortgage payment, and may have difficulty making the increased payments
required to cover the withholding tax payments. The application of withholding
tax may increase the risk of loss because the applicable taxing authorities may
be permitted to place a lien on the mortgaged property or effectively prevent
the transfer of an interest in the mortgaged property until any delinquent
withholding taxes have been paid.
To the extent that any document relating to a loan is not in the possession
of the trustee, the deficiency may make it difficult or impossible to realize on
the mortgaged property in the event of foreclosure, which will affect the timing
and the amount of Liquidation Proceeds received by the Trustee. See 'Description
of the Securities -- Assignment of Loans' in this prospectus.
The amount of interest payments on a loans distributed monthly to holders of
a class of securities entitled to payments of interest will be calculated, or
accrued in the case of deferred interest or accrual securities, on the basis of
that class's specified percentage of each payment of interest, or accrual in the
case of accrual securities, and will be expressed as a fixed, adjustable or
variable pass-through rate payable on the outstanding principal balance or
notional amount of the security, or any combination of pass-through rates,
calculated as described in
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this prospectus and in the accompanying prospectus supplement under 'Description
of the Securities -- Distributions of Principal and Interest on the Securities.'
Holders of strip securities or a class of securities having a pass-through rate
that varies based on the weighted average interest rate of the underlying loans
will be affected by disproportionate prepayments and repurchases of loans having
higher net interest rates or higher rates applicable to the strip securities, as
applicable.
The effective yield to maturity to each holder of securities entitled to
payments of interest will be below that otherwise produced by the applicable
pass-through rate and purchase price of the security because, while interest
will accrue on each loan from the first day of each month, the distribution of
interest will be made on the 25th day or, if the 25th day is not a business day,
the next succeeding business day, of the month following the month of accrual
or, in the case of a trust including private securities, such other day that is
specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement.
A class of securities may be entitled to payments of interest at a fixed,
variable or adjustable pass-through rate, or any combination of pass-through
rates, each as specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement. A variable
pass-through rate may be calculated based on the weighted average of the Net
Loan Rates, net of servicing fees and any Excess Spread or Excluded Spread, of
the related loan or certain balances thereof for the month preceding the
distribution date. An adjustable pass-through rate may be calculated by
reference to an index or otherwise.
The aggregate payments of interest on a class of securities, and the yield
to maturity thereon, will be affected by the rate of payment of principal on the
securities, or the rate of reduction in the notional amount of securities
entitled to payments of interest only, and, in the case of securities evidencing
interests in ARM loans, by changes in the Net Loan Rates on the ARM loans. See
'Maturity and Prepayment Considerations' below. The yield on the securities will
also be affected by liquidations of loans following borrower defaults and by
purchases of loans in the event of breaches of representations made for the
loans by the depositor, the master servicer or the servicer and others, or
conversions of ARM loans to a fixed interest rate. See 'Description of the
Securities -- Representations with Respect to Loans' in this prospectus.
In general, if a security is purchased at a premium over its face amount and
payments of principal on the related loan occur at a rate faster than
anticipated at the time of purchase, the purchaser's actual yield to maturity
will be lower than that assumed at the time of purchase. On the other hand, if a
class of securities is purchased at a discount from its face amount and payments
of principal on the related loan occur at a rate slower than anticipated at the
time of purchase, the purchaser's actual yield to maturity will be lower than
assumed. The effect of Principal Prepayments, liquidations and purchases on
yield will be particularly significant in the case of a class of securities
entitled to payments of interest only or disproportionate payments of interest.
In addition, the total return to investors of securities evidencing a right to
distributions of interest at a rate that is based on the weighted average Net
Loan Rate of the loans from time to time will be adversely affected by principal
prepayments on loans with loan rates higher than the weighted average loan rate
on the loans. In general, loans with higher loan rates prepay at a faster rate
than loans with lower loan rates. In some circumstances, rapid prepayments may
result in the failure of the holders to recoup their original investment. In
addition, the yield to maturity on other types of classes of securities,
including accrual securities, securities with a pass-through rate that
fluctuates inversely with or at a multiple of an index or other classes in a
series including more than one class of securities, may be relatively more
sensitive to the rate of prepayment on the related loans than other classes of
securities.
The outstanding principal balances of revolving credit loans, closed-end
home equity loans, home improvement contracts and Home Loans are, in most cases,
much smaller than traditional first lien mortgage loan balances, and the
original terms to maturity of those loans and contracts are often shorter than
those of traditional first lien mortgage loans. As a result, changes in interest
rates will not affect the monthly payments on those loans or contracts to the
same degree that changes in mortgage interest rates will affect the monthly
payments on traditional first lien mortgage loans. Consequently, the effect of
changes in prevailing interest rates on the prepayment rates on shorter-term,
smaller balance loans and contracts may not be similar to the effects of those
changes on traditional first lien mortgage loan prepayment rates, or those
effects may be similar to the effects of those changes on mortgage loan
prepayment rates, but to a smaller degree.
The timing of changes in the rate of principal payments on or repurchases of
the loans may significantly affect an investor's actual yield to maturity, even
if the average rate of principal payments experienced over time is consistent
with an investor's expectation. In general, the earlier a prepayment of
principal on the loans or a
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repurchase of loans, the greater will be the effect on an investor's yield to
maturity. As a result, the effect on an investor's yield of principal payments
and repurchases occurring at a rate higher or lower than the rate anticipated by
the investor during the period immediately following the issuance of a series of
securities would not be fully offset by a subsequent like reduction or increase
in the rate of principal payments.
When a full prepayment is made on a loan, the borrower is charged interest
on the principal amount of the loan so prepaid for the number of days in the
month actually elapsed up to the date of the prepayment, at a daily rate
determined by dividing the loan rate by 365. Prepayments in full or final
liquidations of loans in most cases may reduce the amount of interest
distributed in the following month to holders of securities entitled to
distributions of interest if the resulting Prepayment Interest Shortfall is not
covered by Compensating Interest. See 'Description of the Securities --
Prepayment Interest Shortfalls.' A partial prepayment of principal is applied so
as to reduce the outstanding principal balance of the related mortgage loan,
other than a revolving credit loan, as of the first day of the month in which
the partial prepayment is received. As a result, the effect of a partial
prepayment on a mortgage loan, other than a revolving credit loan, will be to
reduce the amount of interest distributed to holders of securities in the month
following the receipt of the partial prepayment by an amount equal to one
month's interest at the applicable pass-through rate or Net Loan Rate, as the
case may be, on the prepaid amount if such shortfall is not covered by
Compensating Interest. See 'Description of the Securities -- Prepayment Interest
Shortfalls.' Neither full or partial Principal Prepayments nor Liquidation
Proceeds will be distributed until the distribution date in the month following
receipt. See 'Maturity and Prepayment Considerations.'
For some loans, including revolving credit loans and ARM loans, the loan
rate at origination may be below the rate that would result if the index and
margin relating thereto were applied at origination. Under the applicable
underwriting standards, the borrower under each of the loans, other than a
revolving credit loan, usually will be qualified on the basis of the loan rate
in effect at origination, and borrowers under revolving credit loans are usually
qualified based on an assumed payment which reflects a rate significantly lower
than the maximum rate. The repayment of any such loan may thus be dependent on
the ability of the borrower to make larger monthly payments following the
adjustment of the loan rate. In addition, the periodic increase in the amount
paid by the borrower of a Buy-Down Loan during or at the end of the applicable
Buy-Down Period may create a greater financial burden for the borrower, who
might not have otherwise qualified for a mortgage under the applicable
underwriting guidelines, and may accordingly increase the risk of default for
the related loan.
For any loans secured by junior liens on the related mortgaged property, the
inability of the borrower to pay off the balance thereof may affect the ability
of the borrower to obtain refinancing of any related senior loan, thereby
preventing a potential improvement in the borrower's circumstances. Furthermore,
unless stated in the accompanying prospectus supplement, under the applicable
agreement the master servicer or the servicer may be restricted or prohibited
from consenting to any refinancing of any related senior loan, which in turn
could adversely affect the borrower's circumstances or result in a prepayment or
default under the corresponding loan.
The holder of a loan secured by a junior lien on the related mortgaged
property will be subject to a loss of its mortgage if the holder of a senior
mortgage is successful in foreclosure of its mortgage and its claim, including
any related foreclosure costs, is not paid in full, since no junior liens or
encumbrances survive such a foreclosure. Also, due to the priority of the senior
mortgage, the holder of a loan secured by a junior lien on the related mortgaged
property may not be able to control the timing, method or procedure of any
foreclosure action relating to the mortgaged property. Investors should be aware
that any liquidation, insurance or condemnation proceeds received relating to
any loans secured by junior liens on the related mortgaged property will be
available to satisfy the outstanding balance of such loans only to the extent
that the claims of the holders of the senior mortgages have been satisfied in
full, including any related foreclosure costs. For loans secured by junior liens
that have low junior mortgage ratios, foreclosure costs may be substantial
relative to the outstanding balance of the loan, and therefore the amount of any
Liquidation Proceeds available to securityholders may be smaller as a percentage
of the outstanding balance of the loan than would be the case in a typical pool
of first lien residential loans. In addition, the holder of a loan secured by a
junior lien on the related mortgaged property may only foreclose on the property
securing the related loan subject to any senior mortgages, in which case the
holder must either pay the entire amount due on the senior mortgages to the
senior mortgagees at or prior to the foreclosure sale or undertake the
obligation to make payments on the senior mortgages.
Depending upon the use of the revolving credit line and the payment
patterns, during the repayment period, a borrower may be obligated to make
payments that are higher than the borrower originally qualified for. Some
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of the revolving credit loans are not expected to significantly amortize prior
to maturity. As a result, a borrower will, in these cases, be required to pay a
substantial principal amount at the maturity of a revolving credit loan.
Similarly, a borrower of a Balloon Loan will be required to pay the Balloon
Amount at maturity. Those loans pose a greater risk of default than
fully-amortizing loans, because the borrower's ability to make such a
substantial payment at maturity will in most cases depend on the borrower's
ability to obtain refinancing of those loans or to sell the mortgaged property
prior to the maturity of the loan. The ability to obtain refinancing will depend
on a number of factors prevailing at the time refinancing or sale is required,
including, without limitation, the borrower's personal economic circumstances,
the borrower's equity in the related mortgaged property, real estate values,
prevailing market interest rates, tax laws and national and regional economic
conditions. None of the seller, the depositor, Residential Funding Corporation,
GMAC Mortgage Group, Inc. or any of their affiliates will be obligated to
refinance or repurchase any loan or to sell any mortgaged property, unless that
obligation is specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement.
The loan rates on ARM loans that are subject to negative amortization
typically adjust monthly and their amortization schedules adjust less
frequently. Because initial loan rates are typically lower than the sum of the
indices applicable at origination and the related Note Margins, during a period
of rising interest rates as well as immediately after origination, the amount of
interest accruing on the principal balance of those loans may exceed the amount
of the scheduled monthly payment. As a result, a portion of the accrued interest
on negatively amortizing loans may become deferred interest which will be added
to their principal balance and will bear interest at the applicable loan rate.
Unless otherwise specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement, revolving
credit loans will not be subject to negative amortization.
The addition of any deferred interest to the principal balance of any
related class of securities will lengthen the weighted average life of that
class of securities and may adversely affect yield to holders of those
securities. In addition, for ARM loans that are subject to negative
amortization, during a period of declining interest rates, it might be expected
that each scheduled monthly payment on such a loan would exceed the amount of
scheduled principal and accrued interest on its principal balance, and since the
excess will be applied to reduce the principal balance of the related class or
classes of securities, the weighted average life of those securities will be
reduced and may adversely affect yield to holders thereof.
If stated in the accompanying prospectus supplement, a trust may contain GPM
Loans, GEM Loans or Buy-Down Loans that have monthly payments that increase
during the first few years following origination. Borrowers in most cases will
be qualified for such loans on the basis of the initial monthly payment. To the
extent that the related borrower's income does not increase at the same rate as
the monthly payment, such a loan may be more likely to default than a mortgage
loan with level monthly payments.
If credit enhancement for a series of securities is provided by a letter of
credit, insurance policy or bond that is issued or guaranteed by an entity that
suffers financial difficulty, such credit enhancement may not provide the level
of support that was anticipated at the time an investor purchased its security.
In the event of a default under the terms of a letter of credit, insurance
policy or bond, any Realized Losses on the loans not covered by the credit
enhancement will be applied to a series of securities in the manner described in
the accompanying prospectus supplement and may reduce an investor's anticipated
yield to maturity.
The accompanying prospectus supplement may set forth other factors
concerning the loans securing a series of securities or the structure of such
series that will affect the yield on the securities.
MATURITY AND PREPAYMENT CONSIDERATIONS
As indicated above under 'The Trusts,' the original terms to maturity of the
loans in a given trust will vary depending on the type of loans included in the
trust. The prospectus supplement for a series of securities will contain
information for the types and maturities of the loans in the related trust. The
prepayment experience, the timing and rate of repurchases and the timing and
amount of liquidations for the related loans will affect the life and yield of
the related series of securities.
If the related agreement for a series of securities provides for a Funding
Account or other means of funding the transfer of additional loans to the
related trust, as described under 'Description of the Securities -- Funding
Account', and the trust is unable to acquire any additional loans within any
applicable time limit, the amounts set aside for such purpose may be applied as
principal distributions on one or more classes of securities of such series.
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Prepayments on loans are commonly measured relative to a prepayment standard
or model. The prospectus supplement for each series of securities may describe
one or more prepayment standard or model and may contain tables setting forth
the projected yields to maturity on each class of securities or the weighted
average life of each class of securities and the percentage of the original
principal amount of each class of securities of that series that would be
outstanding on specified payment dates for the series based on the assumptions
stated in the accompanying prospectus supplement, including assumptions that
prepayments on the loans are made at rates corresponding to various percentages
of the prepayment standard or model. There is no assurance that prepayment of
the loans underlying a series of securities will conform to any level of the
prepayment standard or model specified in the accompanying prospectus
supplement.
The following is a list of factors that may affect prepayment experience:
homeowner mobility;
economic conditions;
changes in borrowers' housing needs;
job transfers;
unemployment;
borrowers' equity in the properties securing the mortgages;
servicing decisions;
enforceability of due-on-sale clauses;
mortgage market interest rates;
mortgage recording taxes;
solicitations and the availability of mortgage funds; and
the obtaining of secondary financing by the borrower.
All statistics known to the depositor that have been compiled for prepayment
experience on loans indicate that while some loans may remain outstanding until
their stated maturities, a substantial number will be paid significantly earlier
than their respective stated maturities. The rate of prepayment for conventional
fixed-rate loans has fluctuated significantly in recent years. In general,
however, if prevailing interest rates fall significantly below the loan rates on
the loans underlying a series of securities, the prepayment rate of such loans
is likely to be significantly higher than if prevailing rates remain at or above
the rates borne by those loans. Conversely, when prevailing interest rates
increase, borrowers are less likely to prepay their loans. The depositor is not
aware of any historical prepayment experience for loans secured by properties
located in Mexico or Puerto Rico and, accordingly, prepayments on such loans may
not occur at the same rate or be affected by the same factors as more
traditional loans.
An increase in the amount of the monthly payments owed on a Mexico Loan due
to the imposition of withholding taxes may increase the risk of prepayment on
that loan if alternative financing on more favorable terms are available.
There can be no assurance as to the rate of principal payments or Draws on
the revolving credit loans. In most cases, the revolving credit loans may be
prepaid in full or in part without penalty. The closed-end home equity loans may
provide for a prepayment charge. The prospectus supplement will specify whether
loans may not be prepaid in full or in part without penalty. The depositor has
no significant experience regarding the rate of Principal Prepayments on home
improvement contracts, but in most cases expects that prepayments on home
improvement contracts will be higher than other loans due to the possibility of
increased property value resulting from the home improvement and greater
refinance options. The rate of principal payments and the rate of Draws, if
applicable, may fluctuate substantially from time to time. In most cases, home
equity loans are not viewed by borrowers as permanent financing. Accordingly,
such loans may experience a higher rate of prepayment than typical first lien
mortgage loans. Due to the unpredictable nature of both principal payments and
Draws, the rates of principal payments net of Draws for those loans may be much
more volatile than for typical first lien mortgage loans.
The yield to maturity of the securities of any series, or the rate and
timing of principal payments or Draws, if applicable, on the related loans, may
also be affected by a wide variety of specific terms and conditions
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applicable to the respective programs under which the loans were originated. For
example, the revolving credit loans may provide for future Draws to be made only
in specified minimum amounts, or alternatively may permit Draws to be made by
check or through a credit card in any amount. A pool of revolving credit loans
subject to the latter provisions may be likely to remain outstanding longer with
a higher aggregate principal balance than a pool of revolving credit loans with
the former provisions, because of the relative ease of making new Draws.
Furthermore, the loans may provide for interest rate changes on a daily or
monthly basis, or may have gross margins that may vary under some circumstances
over the term of the loan. In extremely high market interest rate scenarios,
securities backed by loans with adjustable rates subject to substantially higher
maximum rates than typically apply to adjustable rate first mortgage loans may
experience rates of default and liquidation substantially higher than those that
have been experienced on other adjustable rate mortgage loan pools.
The yield to maturity of the securities of any series, or the rate and
timing of principal payments on the loans or Draws on the related revolving
credit loans and corresponding payments on the securities, will also be affected
by the specific terms and conditions applicable to the securities. For example,
if the index used to determine the loan rates for a series of securities is
different from the index applicable to the loan rates of the underlying loans,
the yield on the securities may be reduced by application of a cap on the loan
rates based on the weighted average of the loan rates. Depending on applicable
cash flow allocation provisions, changes in the relationship between the two
indexes may also affect the timing of some principal payments on the securities,
or may affect the amount of any overcollateralization, or the amount on deposit
in any reserve fund, which could in turn accelerate the payment of principal on
the securities if so provided in the prospectus supplement. For any series of
securities backed by revolving credit loans, provisions governing whether future
Draws on the revolving credit loans will be included in the trust will have a
significant effect on the rate and timing of principal payments on the
securities. The rate at which additional balances are generated may be affected
by a variety of factors. The yield to maturity of the securities of any series,
or the rate and timing of principal payments on the loans may also be affected
by the risks associated with other loans.
As a result of the payment terms of the revolving credit loans or of the
mortgage provisions relating to future Draws, there may be no principal payments
on those securities in any given month. In addition, it is possible that the
aggregate Draws on revolving credit loans included in a pool may exceed the
aggregate payments of principal on those revolving credit loans for the related
period. If specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement, a series of
securities may provide for a period during which all or a portion of the
principal collections on the revolving credit loans are reinvested in additional
balances or are accumulated in a trust account pending commencement of an
amortization period relating to the securities.
Unless otherwise specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement, in
most cases mortgage loans (other than ARM loans) and revolving credit loans
will, and closed-end home equity loans and home improvement contracts may,
contain due-on-sale provisions permitting the mortgagee to accelerate the
maturity of the loan upon sale or some transfers by the borrower of the
underlying mortgaged property. Unless the accompanying prospectus supplement
indicates otherwise, the master servicer or servicer will enforce any
due-on-sale clause to the extent it has knowledge of the conveyance or proposed
conveyance of the underlying mortgaged property and it is entitled to do so
under applicable law, provided, however, that the master servicer or servicer
will not take any action in relation to the enforcement of any due-on-sale
provision which would adversely affect or jeopardize coverage under any
applicable insurance policy.
An ARM loan is assumable, in some circumstances, if the proposed transferee
of the related mortgaged property establishes its ability to repay the loan and,
in the reasonable judgment of the master servicer or the servicer, the security
for the ARM loan would not be impaired by the assumption. The extent to which
ARM loans are assumed by purchasers of the mortgaged properties rather than
prepaid by the related borrowers in connection with the sales of the mortgaged
properties will affect the weighted average life of the related series of
securities. See 'Description of the Securities -- Servicing and Administration
of Loans -- Enforcement of 'Due-on-Sale' Clauses' and 'Certain Legal Aspects of
the Loans -- Enforceability of Certain Provisions' for a description of
provisions of each agreement and legal developments that may affect the
prepayment rate of loans.
While most manufactured housing contracts will contain 'due-on-sale'
provisions permitting the holder of the manufactured housing contract to
accelerate the maturity of the manufactured housing contract on conveyance by
the borrower, the master servicer or servicer, as applicable, may permit
proposed assumptions of manufactured housing contracts where the proposed buyer
of the manufactured home meets the underwriting
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standards described above. Such assumption would have the effect of extending
the average life of the manufactured housing contract. FHA loans and VA loans
are not permitted to contain 'due-on-sale' clauses, and are freely assumable.
In addition, some private securities included in a pool may be backed by
underlying loans having differing interest rates. Accordingly, the rate at which
principal payments are received on the related securities will, to some extent,
depend on the interest rates on the underlying loans.
Some types of loans included in a trust may have characteristics that make
it more likely to default than collateral provided for mortgage pass-through
securities from other mortgage purchase programs. The depositor anticipates
including 'limited documentation' and 'no documentation' mortgage loans, loans
acquired under Residential Funding Corporation's negotiated conduit asset
program, Mexico Loans, loans secured by mortgaged properties located in Puerto
Rico and mortgage loans that were made to international borrowers or that were
originated in accordance with lower underwriting standards and which may have
been made to borrowers with imperfect credit histories and prior bankruptcies.
Likewise, a trust may include loans that are one month or more delinquent at the
time of offering of the related series of securities or are secured by junior
liens on the related mortgaged property. Such loans may be susceptible to a
greater risk of default and liquidation than might otherwise be expected by
investors in the related securities.
The mortgage loans may in most cases be prepaid by the borrowers at any time
without payment of any prepayment fee or penalty, although some of the mortgage
loans as described in the accompanying prospectus supplement provide for payment
of a prepayment charge. This may have an effect on the rate of prepayment. Some
states' laws restrict the imposition of prepayment charges even when the
mortgage loans expressly provide for the collection of those charges. As a
result, it is possible that prepayment charges may not be collected even on
mortgage loans that provide for the payment of these charges.
The master servicer or the servicer may allow the refinancing of a loans in
any trust by accepting prepayments thereon and permitting a new loan to the same
borrower secured by a mortgage on the same property, which may be originated by
the servicer or the master servicer or any of their respective affiliates or by
an unrelated entity. In the event of a refinancing, the new loan would not be
included in the related trust and, therefore, the refinancing would have the
same effect as a prepayment in full of the related loan. A servicer or the
master servicer may, from time to time, implement programs designed to encourage
refinancing. These programs may include, without limitation, modifications of
existing loans, general or targeted solicitations, the offering of pre-approved
applications, reduced origination fees or closing costs, reduced or no
documentation or other financial incentives. Targeted solicitations may be based
on a variety of factors, including the credit of the borrower or the location of
the mortgaged property. In addition, servicers or the master servicer may
encourage assumption of loans, including defaulted loans, under which
creditworthy borrowers assume the outstanding indebtedness of the loans, which
may be removed from the related pool. As a result of these programs, for the
pool underlying any trust:
the rate of Principal Prepayments of the loans in the pool may be higher
than would otherwise be the case;
in some cases, the average credit or collateral quality of the loans
remaining in the pool may decline; and
weighted average interest rate on the loans that remain in the trust may be
lower, thus reducing the rate of prepayments on the loans in the future.
Although the loan rates on revolving credit loans and ARM loans will be
subject to periodic adjustments, the adjustments in most cases will:
as to ARM loans, not increase or decrease the loan rates by more than a
fixed percentage amount on each adjustment date;
not increase the loan rates over a fixed percentage amount during the life
of any revolving credit loan or ARM loan; and
be based on an index, which may not rise and fall consistently with
mortgage interest rates, plus the related Gross Margin, which may be
different from margins being used at the time for newly originated
adjustable rate loans.
As a result, the loan rates on the revolving credit loans or ARM loans in a
trust at any time may not equal the prevailing rates for similar, newly
originated adjustable rate loans or lines of credit, and accordingly the rate
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of principal payments and Draws, if applicable, may be lower or higher that
would otherwise be anticipated. In some rate environments, the prevailing rates
on fixed-rate loans may be sufficiently low in relation to the then-current loan
rates on revolving credit loans or ARM loans that the rate of prepayment may
increase as a result of refinancings. There can be no certainty as to the rate
of prepayments or Draws, if applicable, on the loans during any period or over
the life of any series of securities.
For any index used in determining the rate of interest applicable to any
series of securities or loan rates of the underlying loans, there are a number
of factors affect the performance of those indices and may cause those indices
to move in a manner different from other indices. If an index applicable to a
series responds to changes in the general level of interest rates less quickly
than other indices, in a period of rising interest rates, increases in the yield
to securityholders due to those rising interest rates may occur later than that
which would be produced by other indices, and in a period of declining rates,
that index may remain higher than other market interest rates which may result
in a higher level of prepayments of the loans, which adjust in accordance with
that index, than of loans which adjust in accordance with other indices.
No assurance can be given that the value of the mortgaged property securing
a loan has remained or will remain at the level existing on the date of
origination. If the residential real estate market should experience an overall
decline in property values such that the outstanding balances of the loans and
any secondary financing on the mortgaged properties in a particular pool become
equal to or greater than the value of the mortgaged properties, the actual rates
of delinquencies, foreclosures and losses could be higher than those now
generally experienced in the mortgage lending industry. The value of any Mexican
property could also be adversely affected by, among other things, adverse
political and economic developments in Mexico. In addition, the value of
property securing Cooperative Loans and the delinquency rates for Cooperative
Loans could be adversely affected if the current favorable tax treatment of
cooperative tenant stockholders were to become less favorable. See 'Certain
Legal Aspects of the Loans.'
To the extent that losses resulting from delinquencies, losses and
foreclosures or repossession of mortgaged property for loans included in a trust
for a series of securities are not covered by the methods of credit enhancement
described in this prospectus under 'Description of Credit Enhancement' or in the
accompanying prospectus supplement, the losses will be borne by holders of the
securities of the related series. Even where credit enhancement covers all
Realized Losses resulting from delinquency and foreclosure or repossession, the
effect of foreclosures and repossessions may be to increase prepayment
experience on the loans, thus reducing average weighted life and affecting yield
to maturity. See 'Yield Considerations.'
Under some circumstances, the master servicer, a servicer, the depositor or,
if specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement, the holders of the REMIC
Residual Certificates may have the option to purchase the loans in a trust. See
'The Agreements -- Termination; Retirement of Securities.' Any repurchase will
shorten the weighted average lives of the related securities.
CERTAIN LEGAL ASPECTS OF THE LOANS
The following discussion contains summaries of some legal aspects of the
loans that are general in nature. Because these legal aspects are governed in
part by state law, which laws may differ substantially from state to state, the
summaries do not purport to be complete, to reflect the laws of any particular
state or to encompass the laws of all states in which the mortgaged properties
may be situated. These legal aspects are in addition to the requirements of any
applicable FHA Regulations described in 'Description of FHA Insurance' in this
prospectus and in the accompanying prospectus supplement regarding the home
improvement contracts partially insured by FHA under Title I. The summaries are
qualified in their entirety by reference to the applicable federal and state
laws governing the loans.
THE MORTGAGE LOANS
General
The loans, other than Cooperative Loans, Mexico Loans and contracts, will be
secured by deeds of trust, mortgages or deeds to secure debt depending on the
prevailing practice in the state in which the related mortgaged property is
located. In some states, a mortgage, deed of trust or deed to secure debt
creates a lien on the related real property. In other states, the mortgage, deed
of trust or deed to secure debt conveys legal title to
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the property to the mortgagee subject to a condition subsequent, for example,
the payment of the indebtedness secured thereby. These instruments are not prior
to the lien for real estate taxes and assessments and other charges imposed
under governmental police powers. Priority with respect to these instruments
depends on their terms and in some cases on the terms of separate subordination
or inter-creditor agreements, and in most cases on the order of recordation of
the mortgage deed of trust or deed to secure debt in the appropriate recording
office.
There are two parties to a mortgage, the mortgagor, who is the borrower and
homeowner, and the mortgagee, who is the lender. Under the mortgage instrument,
the mortgagor delivers to the mortgagee a note or bond and the mortgage. In some
states, three parties may be involved in a mortgage financing when title to the
property is held by a land trustee under a land trust agreement of which the
borrower is the beneficiary; at origination of a mortgage loan, the land
trustee, as fee owner of the property, executes the mortgage and the borrower
executes a separate undertaking to make payments on the mortgage note. Although
a deed of trust is similar to a mortgage, a deed of trust has three parties: the
grantor, who is the borrower/homeowner; the beneficiary, who is the lender; and
a third-party grantee called the trustee. Under a deed of trust, the borrower
grants the mortgaged property to the trustee, irrevocably until satisfaction of
the debt. A deed to secure debt typically has two parties, under which the
borrower, or grantor, conveys title to the real property to the grantee, or
lender, typically with a power of sale, until the time when the debt is repaid.
The trustee's authority under a deed of trust and the mortgagee's or grantee's
authority under a mortgage or a deed to secure debt, as applicable, are governed
by the law of the state in which the real property is located, the express
provisions of the deed of trust, mortgage or deed to secure debt and, in some
deed of trust transactions, the directions of the beneficiary.
Cooperative Loans
If specified in the prospectus supplement relating to a series of
securities, the loans may include Cooperative Loans. Each Cooperative Note
evidencing a Cooperative Loan will be secured by a security interest in shares
issued by the Cooperative that owns the related apartment building, which is a
corporation entitled to be treated as a housing cooperative under federal tax
law, and in the related proprietary lease or occupancy agreement granting
exclusive rights to occupy a specific dwelling unit in the Cooperative's
building. The security agreement will create a lien on, or grant a security
interest in, the Cooperative shares and proprietary leases or occupancy
agreements, the priority of which will depend on, among other things, the terms
of the particular security agreement as well as the order of recordation of the
agreement, or the filing of the financing statements related thereto, in the
appropriate recording office or the taking of possession of the Cooperative
shares, depending on the law of the state in which the Cooperative is located.
This type of lien or security interest is not, in general, prior to liens in
favor of the cooperative corporation for unpaid assessments or common charges.
In most cases, each Cooperative owns in fee or has a leasehold interest in
all the real property and owns in fee or leases the building and all separate
dwelling units therein. The Cooperative is directly responsible for property
management and, in most cases, payment of real estate taxes, other governmental
impositions and hazard and liability insurance. If there is an underlying
mortgage or mortgages on the Cooperative's building or underlying land, as is
typically the case, or an underlying lease of the land, as is the case in some
instances, the Cooperative, as mortgagor or lessee, as the case may be, is also
responsible for fulfilling the mortgage or rental obligations.
An underlying mortgage loan is ordinarily obtained by the Cooperative in
connection with either the construction or purchase of the Cooperative's
building or the obtaining of capital by the Cooperative. The interest of the
occupant under proprietary leases or occupancy agreements as to which that
Cooperative is the landlord is usually subordinate to the interest of the holder
of an underlying mortgage and to the interest of the holder of a land lease. If
the Cooperative is unable to meet the payment obligations (i) arising under an
underlying mortgage, the mortgagee holding an underlying mortgage could
foreclose on that mortgage and terminate all subordinate proprietary leases and
occupancy agreements or (ii) arising under its land lease, the holder of the
landlord's interest under the land lease could terminate it and all subordinate
proprietary leases and occupancy agreements. In addition, an underlying mortgage
on a Cooperative may provide financing in the form of a mortgage that does not
fully amortize, with a significant portion of principal being due in one final
payment at maturity. The inability of the Cooperative to refinance a mortgage
and its consequent inability to make the final payment could lead to foreclosure
by the mortgagee. Similarly, a land lease has an expiration date and the
inability of the Cooperative to extend its term or, in the alternative, to
purchase the land, could lead to
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termination of the Cooperative's interest in the property and termination of all
proprietary leases and occupancy agreements. In either event, a foreclosure by
the holder of an underlying mortgage or the termination of the underlying lease
could eliminate or significantly diminish the value of any collateral held by
the lender who financed the purchase by an individual tenant-stockholder of
shares of the Cooperative, or in the case of the loans, the collateral securing
the Cooperative Loans.
Each Cooperative is owned by shareholders, referred to as
tenant-stockholders, who, through ownership of stock or shares in the
Cooperative, receive proprietary leases or occupancy agreements which confer
exclusive rights to occupy specific dwellings. In most instances, a
tenant-stockholder of a Cooperative must make a monthly maintenance payment to
the Cooperative under the proprietary lease, which rental payment represents the
tenant-stockholder's pro rata share of the Cooperative's payments for its
underlying mortgage, real property taxes, maintenance expenses and other capital
or ordinary expenses. An ownership interest in a Cooperative and accompanying
occupancy rights may be financed through a Cooperative Loan evidenced by a
Cooperative Note and secured by an assignment of and a security interest in the
occupancy agreement or proprietary lease and a security interest in the related
shares of the related Cooperative. The lender usually takes possession of the
stock certificate and a counterpart of the proprietary lease or occupancy
agreement and a financing statement covering the proprietary lease or occupancy
agreement and the Cooperative shares is filed in the appropriate state or local
offices to perfect the lender's interest in its collateral. In accordance with
the limitations discussed below, on default of the tenant-stockholder, the
lender may sue for judgment on the Cooperative Note, dispose of the collateral
at a public or private sale or otherwise proceed against the collateral or
tenant-stockholder as an individual as provided in the security agreement
covering the assignment of the proprietary lease or occupancy agreement and the
pledge of Cooperative shares. See ' -- Foreclosure on Shares of Cooperatives'
below.
Tax Aspects of Cooperative Ownership
In general, a 'tenant-stockholder' (as defined in Section 216(b)(2) of the
Internal Revenue Code, of a corporation that qualifies as a 'cooperative housing
corporation' within the meaning of Section 216(b)(1) of the Internal Revenue
Code is allowed a deduction for amounts paid or accrued within his or her
taxable year to the corporation representing his or her proportionate share of
certain interest expenses and real estate taxes allowable as a deduction under
Section 216(a) of the Internal Revenue Code to the corporation under Sections
163 and 164 of the Internal Revenue Code. In order for a corporation to qualify
under Section 216(b)(1) of the Internal Revenue Code for its taxable year in
which those items are allowable as a deduction to the corporation, the section
requires, among other things, that at least 80% of the gross income of the
corporation be derived from its tenant-stockholders. By virtue of this
requirement, the status of a corporation for purposes of Section 216(b)(1) of
the Internal Revenue Code must be determined on a year-to-year basis.
Consequently, there can be no assurance that Cooperatives relating to the
Cooperative Loans will qualify under this section for any particular year. If a
Cooperative fails to qualify for one or more years, the value of the collateral
securing any related Cooperative Loans could be significantly impaired because
no deduction would be allowable to tenant-stockholders under Section 216(a) of
the Internal Revenue Code with respect to those years. In view of the
significance of the tax benefits accorded tenant-stockholders of a corporation
that qualifies under Section 216(b)(1) of the Internal Revenue Code, the
likelihood that this type of failure would be permitted to continue over a
period of years appears remote.
Mexico Loans
If specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement, the mortgage loans
may include Mexico Loans. See 'The Trusts -- Mexico Loans' for a description of
the security for the Mexico Loans.
Foreclosure on Mortgage Loans
Although a deed of trust or a deed to secure debt may also be foreclosed by
judicial action, foreclosure of a deed of trust or a deed to secure debt is
typically accomplished by a non-judicial sale under a specific provision in the
deed of trust or deed to secure debt which authorizes the trustee or grantee, as
applicable, to sell the property on default by the borrower under the terms of
the note or deed of trust or deed to secure debt. In addition to any notice
requirements contained in a deed of trust or deed to secure debt, in some
states, the trustee or grantee, as applicable, must record a notice of default
and send a copy to the borrower and to any person who has recorded a request for
a copy of notice of default and notice of sale. In addition, in some states, the
trustee or grantee, as applicable, must provide notice to any other individual
having an interest of record in the real property, including any junior
lienholders. If the deed of trust or deed to secure debt is not reinstated
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within a specified period, a notice of sale must be posted in a public place
and, in most states, published for a specific period of time in one or more
newspapers. In addition, some states' laws require that a copy of the notice of
sale be posted on the property and sent to all parties having an interest of
record in the real property.
Foreclosure of a mortgage usually is accomplished by judicial action. In
most cases, the action is initiated by the service of legal pleadings on all
parties having an interest of record in the real property. Delays in completion
of the foreclosure may result from difficulties in locating and serving
necessary parties, including borrowers, such as international borrowers, located
outside the jurisdiction in which the mortgaged property is located.
Difficulties in foreclosing on mortgaged properties owned by international
borrowers may result in increased foreclosure costs, which may reduce the amount
of proceeds from the liquidation of the related loan available to be distributed
to the securityholders of the related series. In addition, delays in completion
of the foreclosure and additional losses may result where loan documents
relating to the loan are missing. If the mortgagee's right to foreclose is
contested, the legal proceedings necessary to resolve the issue can be
time-consuming.
In some states, the borrower has the right to reinstate the loan at any time
following default until shortly before the trustee's sale. In general, in those
states, the borrower, or any other person having a junior encumbrance on the
real estate, may, during a reinstatement period, cure the default by paying the
entire amount in arrears plus the costs and expenses incurred in enforcing the
obligation.
In the case of foreclosure under a mortgage, a deed of trust or deed to
secure debt, the sale by the referee or other designated officer or by the
trustee or grantee, as applicable, is a public sale. However, because of the
difficulty a potential buyer at the sale may have in determining the exact
status of title and because the physical condition of the property may have
deteriorated during the foreclosure proceedings, it is uncommon for a third
party to purchase the property at a foreclosure sale. Rather, it is common for
the lender to purchase the property from the trustee or grantee, as applicable,
or referee for a credit bid less than or equal to the unpaid principal amount of
the loan, accrued and unpaid interest and the expense of foreclosure, in which
case the mortgagor's debt will be extinguished unless the lender purchases the
property for a lesser amount and preserves its right against a borrower to seek
a deficiency judgment and the remedy is available under state law and the
related loan documents. In some states, there is a statutory minimum purchase
price that the lender may offer for the property and in most cases, state law
controls the amount of foreclosure costs and expenses, including attorneys'
fees, which may be recovered by a lender. Thereafter, subject to the right of
the borrower in some states to remain in possession during the redemption
period, the lender will assume the burdens of ownership, including obtaining
hazard insurance, paying taxes and making repairs at its own expense that are
necessary to render the property suitable for sale. In most cases, the lender
will obtain the services of a real estate broker and pay the broker's commission
in connection with the sale of the property. Depending on market conditions, the
ultimate proceeds of the sale of the property may not equal the lender's
investment in the property and, in some states, the lender may be entitled to a
deficiency judgment. In some cases, a deficiency judgment may be pursued in lieu
of foreclosure. Any loss may be reduced by the receipt of any mortgage insurance
proceeds or other forms of credit enhancement for a series of securities. See
'Description of Credit Enhancement.'
Foreclosure on Junior Mortgage Loans
A junior mortgagee may not foreclose on the property securing a junior loan
unless it forecloses subject to the senior mortgages, in which case it must
either pay the entire amount due on the senior mortgages to the senior
mortgagees prior to or at the time of the foreclosure sale or undertake the
obligation to make payments on the senior mortgages if the mortgagor is in
default thereunder, in either event adding the amounts expended to the balance
due on the junior loan. In addition, if the foreclosure by a junior mortgagee
triggers the enforcement of a 'due-on-sale' clause in a senior mortgage, the
junior mortgagee may be required to pay the full amount of the senior mortgages
to the senior mortgagees, to avoid a default with respect thereto. Accordingly,
if the junior lender purchases the property, the lender's title will be subject
to all senior liens and claims and certain governmental liens. The proceeds
received by the referee or trustee from the sale are applied first to the costs,
fees and expenses of sale and then in satisfaction of the indebtedness secured
by the mortgage or deed of trust that is being foreclosed. Any remaining
proceeds are typically payable to the holders of junior mortgages or deeds of
trust and other liens and claims in order of their priority, whether or not the
borrower is in default. Any additional proceeds are usually payable to the
mortgagor or trustor. The payment of the proceeds to the holders of junior
mortgages may occur in the foreclosure action of the senior mortgagee or may
require the institution of
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separate legal proceedings. See 'Description of the Securities - Servicing and
Administration of Loans -- Realization Upon Defaulted Loans' in this prospectus.
Foreclosure on Mexico Loans
Foreclosure on the borrower's beneficial interest in the Mexican trust
typically is expected to be accomplished by public sale in accordance with the
provisions of Article 9 of the UCC and the security agreement relating to that
beneficial interest or by public auction held by the Mexican trustee under the
Mexico trust agreement. Article 9 of the UCC requires that a sale be conducted
in a 'commercially reasonable' manner. Whether a sale has been conducted in a
'commercially reasonable' manner will depend on the facts in each case. In
determining commercial reasonableness, a court will look to the notice given the
debtor and the method, manner, time, place and terms of the sale and the sale
price. In most cases, a sale conducted according to the usual practice of banks
selling similar collateral in the same area will be considered reasonably
conducted. Under the trust agreement, the lender may direct the Mexican trustee
to transfer the borrower's beneficial interest in the Mexican trust to the
purchaser on completion of the public sale and notice from the lender. That
purchaser will be entitled to rely on the terms of the Mexico trust agreement to
direct the Mexican trustee to transfer the borrower's beneficial interest in the
Mexican trust into the name of the purchaser or its nominee, or the trust may be
terminated and a new trust may be established.
Article 9 of the UCC provides that the proceeds of the sale will be applied
first to pay the costs and expenses of the sale and then to satisfy the
indebtedness secured by the lender's security interest. If there are proceeds
remaining, the lender must account to the borrower for the surplus. On the other
hand, if a portion of the indebtedness remains unpaid, the borrower is usually
responsible for the deficiency. However, some states limit the rights of lenders
to obtain deficiency judgments. See ' -- Anti-Deficiency Legislation and Other
Limitations on Lenders' below. The costs of sale may be substantially higher
than the costs associated with foreclosure sales for property located in the
United States, and may include transfer taxes, notary public fees, trustee fees,
capital gains and other taxes on the proceeds of sale, and the cost of amending
or terminating the Mexico trust agreement and preparing a new trust agreement.
Additional costs associated with realizing on the collateral may include
eviction proceedings, the costs of defending actions brought by the defaulting
borrower and enforcement actions. Any of the additional foreclosure costs may
make the cost of foreclosing on the collateral uneconomical, which may increase
the risk of loss on the Mexico Loans substantially.
Where the borrower does not maintain its principal residence in the United
States, or, if a borrower residing in the United States moves its principal
residence from the state in which the UCC financing statements have been filed,
and the lender, because it has no knowledge of the relocation of the borrower or
otherwise, fails to refile in the state to which the borrower has moved within
four months after relocation, or if the borrower no longer resides in the United
States, the lender's security interest in the borrower's beneficial interest in
the Mexican trust may be unperfected. In those circumstances, if the borrower
defaults on the Mexico Loan, the Mexico loan agreement will nonetheless permit
the lender to terminate the borrower's rights to occupy the Mexican property,
and the Mexico trust agreement will permit the lender to instruct the Mexican
trustee to transfer the Mexican property to a subsequent purchaser or to
recognize the subsequent purchaser as the beneficiary of the borrower's
beneficial interest in the Mexican trust. However, because the lender's security
interest in the borrower's beneficial interest in the Mexican trust will be
unperfected, no assurance can be given that the lender will be successful in
realizing on its interest in the collateral under those circumstances. The
lender's security interest in the borrower's beneficial interest in the Mexican
trust is not, for purposes of foreclosing on that collateral, an interest in
real property. The depositor either will rely on its remedies that are available
in the United States under the applicable UCC and under the Mexico trust
agreement and foreclose on the collateral securing a Mexico Loan under the UCC,
or follow the procedures described below.
In the case of some Mexico Loans, the Mexico trust agreement may permit the
Mexican trustee, on notice from the lender of a default by the borrower, to
notify the borrower that the borrower's beneficial interest in the Mexican trust
or the Mexican property will be sold at an auction in accordance with the Mexico
trust agreement. Under the terms of the Mexico trust agreement, the borrower may
avoid foreclosure by paying in full prior to sale the outstanding principal
balance of, together with all accrued and unpaid interest and other amounts owed
on, the Mexico Loan. At the auction, the Mexican trustee may sell the borrower's
beneficial interest in the Mexican trust to a third party, sell the Mexican
property to another trust established to hold title to that property, or sell
the Mexican property directly to a Mexican citizen.
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The depositor is not aware of any other mortgage loan programs involving
mortgage loans that are secured in a manner similar to the Mexico Loans. As a
result, there may be uncertainty and delays in the process of attempting to
realize on the mortgage collateral and gaining possession of the mortgaged
property, and the process of marketing the borrower's beneficial interest in the
Mexican trust to persons interested in purchasing a Mexican property may be
difficult.
Foreclosure on Mortgaged Properties Located in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico
Under the laws of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico the foreclosure of a real
estate mortgage usually follows an ordinary 'civil action' filed in the Superior
Court for the district where the mortgaged property is located. If the defendant
does not contest the action filed, a default judgment is rendered for the
plaintiff and the mortgaged property is sold at public auction, after
publication of the sale for two weeks, by posting written notice in three public
places in the municipality where the auction will be held, in the tax collection
office and in the public school of the municipality where the mortgagor resides,
if known. If the residence of the mortgagor is not known, publication in one of
the newspapers of general circulation in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico must be
made at least once a week for two weeks. There may be as many as three public
sales of the mortgaged property. If the defendant contests the foreclosure, the
case may be tried and judgment rendered based on the merits of the case.
There are no redemption rights after the public sale of a foreclosed
property under the laws of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico. Commonwealth of
Puerto Rico law provides for a summary proceeding for the foreclosure of a
mortgage, but it is very seldom used because of concerns regarding the validity
of those actions. The process may be expedited if the mortgagee can obtain the
consent of the defendant to the execution of a deed in lieu of foreclosure.
Under Commonwealth of Puerto Rico law, in the case of the public sale on
foreclosure of a mortgaged property that (a) is subject to a mortgage loan that
was obtained for a purpose other than the financing or refinancing of the
acquisition, construction or improvement of the property and (b) is occupied by
the mortgagor as his principal residence, the mortgagor of the property has a
right to be paid the first $1,500 from the proceeds obtained on the public sale
of the property. The mortgagor can claim this sum of money from the mortgagee at
any time prior to the public sale or up to one year after the sale. This payment
would reduce the amount of sales proceeds available to satisfy the mortgage loan
and may increase the amount of the loss.
Foreclosure on Shares of Cooperatives
The Cooperative shares owned by the tenant-stockholder, together with the
rights of the tenant-stockholder under the proprietary lease or occupancy
agreement, are pledged to the lender and are, in almost all cases, in accordance
with restrictions on transfer as set forth in the Cooperative's certificate of
incorporation and by-laws, as well as in the proprietary lease or occupancy
agreement. The proprietary lease or occupancy agreement, even while pledged, may
be cancelled by the Cooperative for failure by the tenant-stockholder to pay
rent or other obligations or charges owed by the tenant-stockholder, including
mechanics' liens against the Cooperative's building incurred by the
tenant-stockholder.
In most cases, rent and other obligations and charges arising under a
proprietary lease or occupancy agreement which are owed to the Cooperative are
made liens on the shares to which the proprietary lease or occupancy agreement
relates. In addition, the proprietary lease or occupancy agreement in most cases
permits the Cooperative to terminate the lease or agreement if the borrower
defaults in the performance of covenants thereunder. Typically, the lender and
the Cooperative enter into a recognition agreement which, together with any
lender protection provisions contained in the proprietary lease or occupancy
agreement, establishes the rights and obligations of both parties in the event
of a default by the tenant-stockholder on its obligations under the proprietary
lease or occupancy agreement. A default by the tenant-stockholder under the
proprietary lease or occupancy agreement will usually constitute a default under
the security agreement between the lender and the tenant-stockholder.
The recognition agreement in most cases provides that, if the
tenant-stockholder has defaulted under the proprietary lease or occupancy
agreement, the Cooperative will take no action to terminate the lease or
agreement until the lender has been provided with notice of and an opportunity
to cure the default. The recognition agreement typically provides that if the
proprietary lease or occupancy agreement is terminated, the Cooperative will
recognize the lender's lien against proceeds from a sale of the shares and the
proprietary lease or occupancy agreement allocated to the dwelling, subject,
however, to the Cooperative's right to sums due under the proprietary lease or
occupancy agreement or which have become liens on the shares relating to the
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proprietary lease or occupancy agreement. The total amount owed to the
Cooperative by the tenant-stockholder, which the lender in most cases cannot
restrict and does not monitor, could reduce the amount realized upon a sale of
the collateral below the outstanding principal balance of the Cooperative Loan
and accrued and unpaid interest thereon.
Recognition agreements also typically provide that if the lender succeeds to
the tenant-shareholder's shares and proprietary lease or occupancy agreement as
the result of realizing upon its collateral for a Cooperative Loan, the lender
must obtain the approval or consent of the board of directors of the Cooperative
as required by the proprietary lease before transferring the Cooperative shares
and assigning the proprietary lease. This approval or consent is usually based
on the prospective purchaser's income and net worth, among other factors, and
may significantly reduce the number of potential purchasers, which could limit
the ability of the lender to sell and realize upon the value of the collateral.
In most cases, the lender is not limited in any rights it may have to dispossess
the tenant-stockholder.
Because of the nature of Cooperative Loans, lenders do not require the
tenant-stockholder (i.e., the borrower) to obtain title insurance of any type.
Consequently, the existence of any prior liens or other imperfections of title
affecting the Cooperative's building or real estate also may adversely affect
the marketability of the shares allocated to the dwelling unit in the event of
foreclosure.
A foreclosure on the Cooperative shares is accomplished by public sale in
accordance with the provisions of Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code, or
UCC, and the security agreement relating to those shares. Article 9 of the UCC
requires that a sale be conducted in a 'commercially reasonable' manner. Whether
a sale has been conducted in a 'commercially reasonable' manner will depend on
the facts in each case. In determining commercial reasonableness, a court will
look to the notice given the debtor and the method, manner, time, place and
terms of the sale and the sale price. In most instances, a sale conducted
according to the usual practice of creditors selling similar collateral in the
same area will be considered reasonably conducted.
Where the lienholder is the junior lienholder, any foreclosure may be
delayed until the junior lienholder obtains actual possession of such
Cooperative shares. Additionally, if the lender does not have a first priority
perfected security interest in the Cooperative shares, any foreclosure sale
would be subject to the rights and interests of any creditor holding senior
interests in the shares. Also, a junior lienholder may not be able to obtain a
recognition agreement from a Cooperative since many cooperatives do not permit
subordinate financing. Without a recognition agreement, the junior lienholder
will not be afforded the usual lender protections from the Cooperative which are
in most cases provided for in recognition agreements.
Article 9 of the UCC provides that the proceeds of the sale will be applied
first to pay the costs and expenses of the sale and then to satisfy the
indebtedness secured by the lender's security interest. The recognition
agreement, however, in most cases provides that the lender's right to
reimbursement is subject to the right of the Cooperative corporation to receive
sums due under the proprietary lease or occupancy agreement. If there are
proceeds remaining, the lender must account to the tenant-stockholder for the
surplus. On the other hand, if a portion of the indebtedness remains unpaid, the
tenant-stockholder is in most cases responsible for the deficiency. See ' --
Anti-Deficiency Legislation and Other Limitations on Lenders' below.
Rights of Redemption
In some states, after sale under a deed of trust, or a deed to secure debt
or foreclosure of a mortgage, the borrower and foreclosed junior lienors or
other parties are given a statutory period, typically ranging from six months to
two years, in which to redeem the property from the foreclosure sale. In some
states, redemption may occur only on payment of the entire principal balance of
the mortgage loan, accrued interest and expenses of foreclosure. In other
states, redemption may be authorized if the former borrower pays only a portion
of the sums due. In some states, the right to redeem is an equitable right. The
equity of redemption, which is a non-statutory right, should be distinguished
from statutory rights of redemption. The effect of a statutory right of
redemption is to diminish the ability of the lender to sell the foreclosed
property. The rights of redemption would defeat the title of any purchaser
subsequent to foreclosure or sale under a deed of trust or a deed to secure
debt. Consequently, the practical effect of the redemption right is to force the
lender to maintain the property and pay the expenses of ownership until the
redemption period has expired.
Anti-Deficiency Legislation and Other Limitations on Lenders
Some states have imposed statutory prohibitions which limit the remedies of
a beneficiary under a deed of trust, a mortgagee under a mortgage or a grantee
under a deed to secure debt. In some states, including
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California, statutes limit the right of the beneficiary, mortgagee or grantee to
obtain a deficiency judgment against the borrower following foreclosure. A
deficiency judgment is a personal judgment against the former borrower equal in
most cases to the difference between the net amount realized upon the public
sale of the real property and the amount due to the lender. In the case of a
mortgage loan secured by a property owned by a trust where the Mortgage Note is
executed on behalf of the trust, a deficiency judgment against the trust
following foreclosure or sale under a deed of trust or deed to secure debt, even
if obtainable under applicable law, may be of little value to the beneficiary,
grantee or mortgagee if there are no mortgage loans against which the deficiency
judgment may be executed. Some state statutes require the beneficiary, grantee
or mortgagee to exhaust the security afforded under a deed of trust, deed to
secure debt or mortgage by foreclosure in an attempt to satisfy the full debt
before bringing a personal action against the borrower.
In other states, the lender has the option of bringing a personal action
against the borrower on the debt without first exhausting the security; however,
in some of these states, the lender, following judgment on the personal action,
may be deemed to have elected a remedy and may be precluded from exercising
remedies for the security. Consequently, the practical effect of the election
requirement, in those states permitting this election, is that lenders will
usually proceed against the security first rather than bringing a personal
action against the borrower. Finally, in some states, statutory provisions limit
any deficiency judgment against the borrower following a foreclosure to the
excess of the outstanding debt over the fair value of the property at the time
of the public sale. The purpose of these statutes is in most cases to prevent a
beneficiary, grantee or mortgagee from obtaining a large deficiency judgment
against the borrower as a result of low or no bids at the judicial sale.
In most cases, Article 9 of the UCC governs foreclosure on Cooperative
shares and the related proprietary lease or occupancy agreement. Some courts
have interpreted Article 9 to prohibit or limit a deficiency award in some
circumstances, including circumstances where the disposition of the collateral,
which, in the case of a Cooperative Loan, would be the shares of the Cooperative
and the related proprietary lease or occupancy agreement, was not conducted in a
commercially reasonable manner.
In addition to laws limiting or prohibiting deficiency judgments, numerous
other federal and state statutory provisions, including the federal bankruptcy
laws and state laws affording relief to debtors, may interfere with or affect
the ability of the secured mortgage lender to realize upon its collateral and/or
enforce a deficiency judgment. For example, under the federal bankruptcy law,
all actions against the debtor, the debtor's property and any co-debtor are
automatically stayed upon the filing of a bankruptcy petition. Moreover, a court
having federal bankruptcy jurisdiction may permit a debtor through its Chapter
11 or Chapter 13 rehabilitative plan to cure a monetary default relating to a
mortgage loan or revolving credit loan on the debtor's residence by paying
arrearages within a reasonable time period and reinstating the original loan
payment schedule, even though the lender accelerated the mortgage loan or
revolving credit loan and final judgment of foreclosure had been entered in
state court. Some courts with federal bankruptcy jurisdiction have approved
plans, based on the particular facts of the reorganization case, that effected
the curing of a mortgage loan or revolving credit loan default by paying
arrearages over a number of years.
Courts with federal bankruptcy jurisdiction have also indicated that the
terms of a mortgage loan or revolving credit loan secured by property of the
debtor may be modified. These courts have allowed modifications that include
reducing the amount of each monthly payment, changing the rate of interest,
altering the repayment schedule, forgiving all or a portion of the debt and
reducing the lender's security interest to the value of the residence, thus
leaving the lender a general unsecured creditor for the difference between the
value of the residence and the outstanding balance of the mortgage loan or
revolving credit loan. In most cases, however, the terms of a mortgage loan or
revolving credit loan secured only by a mortgage on real property that is the
debtor's principal residence may not be modified under a plan confirmed under
Chapter 13, as opposed to Chapter 11, except for mortgage payment arrearages,
which may be cured within a reasonable time period. Courts with federal
bankruptcy jurisdiction similarly may be able to modify the terms of a
Cooperative Loan.
Certain tax liens arising under the Internal Revenue Code may, in some
circumstances, have priority over the lien of a mortgage, deed to secure debt or
deed of trust. This may have the effect of delaying or interfering with the
enforcement of rights for a defaulted mortgage loan or revolving credit loan.
In addition, substantive requirements are imposed on mortgage lenders in
connection with the origination and the servicing of mortgage loans or revolving
credit loans by numerous federal and some state consumer protection laws. These
laws include the federal Truth-in-Lending Act, Real Estate Settlement Procedures
Act, Equal Credit Opportunity Act, Fair Credit Billing Act, Fair Credit
Reporting Act and related statutes. These
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federal laws impose specific statutory liabilities on lenders who originate
mortgage loans or revolving credit loans and who fail to comply with the
provisions of the law. In some cases, this liability may affect assignees of the
mortgage loans or revolving credit loans.
Some of the mortgage loans or revolving credit loans may be High Cost Loans.
Purchasers or assignees of any High Cost Loan, including any trust, could be
liable for all claims and subject to all defenses arising under any applicable
law that the borrower could assert against the originator of the High Cost Loan.
Remedies available to the borrower include monetary penalties, as well as
rescission rights if the appropriate disclosures were not given as required.
Alternative Mortgage Instruments
Alternative mortgage instruments, including ARM loans and early ownership
mortgage loans or revolving credit loans, originated by non-federally chartered
lenders, have historically been subjected to a variety of restrictions. These
restrictions differed from state to state, resulting in difficulties in
determining whether a particular alternative mortgage instrument originated by a
state-chartered lender was in compliance with applicable law. These difficulties
were alleviated substantially as a result of the enactment of Title VIII of the
Garn-St Germain Act, or Title VIII. Title VIII provides that, regardless of any
state law to the contrary;
state-chartered banks may originate alternative mortgage instruments in
accordance with regulations promulgated by the Comptroller of the Currency
for the origination of alternative mortgage instruments by national banks,
state-chartered credit unions may originate alternative mortgage
instruments in accordance with regulations promulgated by the National
Credit Union Administration for origination of alternative mortgage
instruments by federal credit unions and
all other non-federally chartered housing creditors, including
state-chartered savings and loan associations, state-chartered savings
banks and mutual savings banks and mortgage banking companies, may
originate alternative mortgage instruments in accordance with the
regulations promulgated by the Federal Home Loan Bank Board, predecessor to
the OTS, for origination of alternative mortgage instruments by federal
savings and loan associations.
Title VIII also provides that any state may reject applicability of the
provisions of Title VIII by adopting, prior to October 15, 1985, a law or
constitutional provision expressly rejecting the applicability of these
provisions. Some states have taken this action.
Junior Mortgages; Rights of Senior Mortgagees
The mortgage loans or revolving credit loans included in the trust may be
junior to other mortgages, deeds to secure debt or deeds of trust held by other
lenders. Absent an intercreditor agreement, the rights of the trust, and
therefore the securityholders, as mortgagee under a junior mortgage, are
subordinate to those of the mortgagee under the senior mortgage, including the
prior rights of the senior mortgagee to receive hazard insurance and
condemnation proceeds and to cause the property securing the mortgage loan or
revolving credit loan to be sold on default of the mortgagor. The sale of the
mortgaged property may extinguish the junior mortgagee's lien unless the junior
mortgagee asserts its subordinate interest in the property in foreclosure
litigation and, in certain cases, either reinstates or satisfies the defaulted
senior mortgage loan or revolving credit loan or mortgage loans or revolving
credit loans. A junior mortgagee may satisfy a defaulted senior mortgage loan or
revolving credit loan in full or, in some states, may cure the default and bring
the senior mortgage loan or revolving credit loan current thereby reinstating
the senior mortgage loan or revolving credit loan, in either event usually
adding the amounts expended to the balance due on the junior mortgage loan or
revolving credit loan. In most states, absent a provision in the mortgage, deed
to secure debt or deed of trust, or an intercreditor agreement, no notice of
default is required to be given to a junior mortgagee. Where applicable law or
the terms of the senior mortgage, deed to secure debt or deed of trust do not
require notice of default to the junior mortgagee, the lack of any notice may
prevent the junior mortgagee from exercising any right to reinstate the mortgage
loan or revolving credit loan which applicable law may provide.
The standard form of the mortgage, deed to secure debt or deed of trust used
by most institutional lenders confers on the mortgagee the right both to receive
all proceeds collected under any hazard insurance policy and all awards made in
connection with condemnation proceedings, and to apply the proceeds and awards
to any indebtedness secured by the mortgage, deed to secure debt or deed of
trust, in the order as the mortgagee may determine. Thus, if improvements on the
property are damaged or destroyed by fire or other casualty, or if the
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property is taken by condemnation, the mortgagee or beneficiary under underlying
senior mortgages will have the prior right to collect any insurance proceeds
payable under a hazard insurance policy and any award of damages in connection
with the condemnation and to apply the same to the indebtedness secured by the
senior mortgages. Proceeds in excess of the amount of senior mortgage
indebtedness, in most cases, may be applied to the indebtedness of junior
mortgages in the order of their priority.
Another provision sometimes found in the form of the mortgage, deed to
secure debt or deed of trust used by institutional lenders obligates the
mortgagor to pay before delinquency all taxes and assessments on the property
and, when due, all encumbrances, charges and liens on the property which are
prior to the mortgage, deed to secure debt or deed of trust, to provide and
maintain fire insurance on the property, to maintain and repair the property and
not to commit or permit any waste thereof, and to appear in and defend any
action or proceeding purporting to affect the property or the rights of the
mortgagee under the mortgage or deed of trust. After a failure of the mortgagor
to perform any of these obligations, the mortgagee or beneficiary is given the
right under certain mortgages, deeds to secure debt or deeds of trust to perform
the obligation itself, at its election, with the mortgagor agreeing to reimburse
the mortgagee for any sums expended by the mortgagee on behalf of the mortgagor.
All sums so expended by a senior mortgagee become part of the indebtedness
secured by the senior mortgage. Also, since most senior mortgages require the
related mortgagor to make escrow deposits with the holder of the senior mortgage
for all real estate taxes and insurance premiums, many junior mortgagees will
not collect and retain the escrows and will rely on the holder of the senior
mortgage to collect and disburse the escrows.
The form of credit line trust deed or mortgage used by most institutional
lenders that make revolving credit loans typically contains a 'future advance'
clause, which provides, in essence, that additional amounts advanced to or on
behalf of the borrower by the beneficiary or lender are to be secured by the
deed of trust or mortgage. The priority of the lien securing any advance made
under the clause may depend in most states on whether the deed of trust or
mortgage is designated as a credit line deed of trust or mortgage. If the
beneficiary or lender advances additional amounts, the advance is entitled to
receive the same priority as amounts initially advanced under the trust deed or
mortgage, regardless of the fact that there may be junior trust deeds or
mortgages and other liens that intervene between the date of recording of the
trust deed or mortgage and the date of the future advance, and regardless that
the beneficiary or lender had actual knowledge of these intervening junior trust
deeds or mortgages and other liens at the time of the advance. In most states,
the trust deed or mortgage lien securing mortgage loans or revolving credit
loans of the type that includes revolving credit loans applies retroactively to
the date of the original recording of the trust deed or mortgage, provided that
the total amount of advances under the credit limit does not exceed the maximum
specified principal amount of the recorded trust deed or mortgage, except as to
advances made after receipt by the lender of a written notice of lien from a
judgment lien creditor of the trustor.
THE MANUFACTURED HOUSING CONTRACTS
General
A manufactured housing contract evidences both (a) the obligation of the
mortgagor to repay the loan evidenced thereby and (b) the grant of a security
interest in the manufactured home to secure repayment of the loan. Certain
aspects of both features of the manufactured housing contracts are described
below.
Security Interests in Manufactured Homes
The law governing perfection of a security interest in a manufactured home
varies from state to state. Security interests in manufactured homes may be
perfected either by notation of the secured party's lien on the certificate of
title or by delivery of the required documents and payments of a fee to the
state motor vehicle authority, depending on state law. In some non-title states,
perfection under the provisions of the UCC is required. The lender, the servicer
or the master servicer may effect the notation or delivery of the required
documents and fees, and obtain possession of the certificate of title, as
appropriate under the laws of the state in which any manufactured home securing
a manufactured housing contract is registered. If the master servicer, the
servicer or the lender fails to effect the notation or delivery, or files the
security interest under the wrong law, for example, under a motor vehicle title
statute rather than under the UCC, in a few states, the certificateholders may
not have a first priority security interest in the manufactured home securing a
manufactured housing contract. As manufactured homes have become larger and
often have been attached to their sites without any apparent intention to move
them, courts in many states have held that manufactured homes, under certain
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circumstances, may become subject to real estate title and recording laws. As a
result, a security interest in a manufactured home could be rendered subordinate
to the interests of other parties claiming an interest in the home under
applicable state real estate law. In order to perfect a security interest in a
manufactured home under real estate laws, the holder of the security interest
must record a mortgage, deed of trust or deed to secure debt, as applicable,
under the real estate laws of the state where the manufactured home is located.
These filings must be made in the real estate records office of the county where
the manufactured home is located. In some cases, a security interest in the
manufactured home will be governed by the certificate of title laws or the UCC,
and the notation of the security interest on the certificate of title or the
filing of a UCC financing statement will be effective to maintain the priority
of the seller's security interest in the manufactured home. If, however, a
manufactured home is permanently attached to its site or if a court determines
that a manufactured home is real property, other parties could obtain an
interest in the manufactured home which is prior to the security interest
originally retained by the mortgage collateral seller and transferred to the
depositor. In certain cases, the master servicer or the servicer, as applicable,
may be required to perfect a security interest in the manufactured home under
applicable real estate laws. If the real estate recordings are not required and
if any of the foregoing events were to occur, the only recourse of the
certificateholders would be against the mortgage collateral seller under its
repurchase obligation for breach of representations or warranties.
The depositor will assign its security interests in the manufactured homes
to the trustee on behalf of the certificateholders. See 'Description of the
Securities -- Assignment of Loans' in this prospectus. Unless otherwise
specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement, if a manufactured home is
governed by the applicable motor vehicle laws of the relevant state neither the
depositor nor the trustee will amend the certificates of title to identify the
trustee as the new secured party. Accordingly, the depositor or any other entity
as may be specified in the prospectus supplement will continue to be named as
the secured party on the certificates of title relating to the manufactured
homes. However, there exists a risk that, in the absence of an amendment to the
certificate of title, the assignment of the security interest may not be held
effective against subsequent purchasers of a manufactured home or subsequent
lenders who take a security interest in the manufactured home or creditors of
the assignor.
If the owner of a manufactured home moves it to a state other than the state
in which the manufactured home initially is registered and if steps are not
taken to re-perfect the trustee's security interest in the state, the security
interest in the manufactured home will cease to be perfected. While in many
circumstances the trustee would have the opportunity to re-perfect its security
interest in the manufactured home in the state of relocation, there can be no
assurance that the trustee will be able to do so.
When a mortgagor under a manufactured housing contract sells a manufactured
home, the trustee, or the servicer or the master servicer on behalf of the
trustee, must surrender possession of the certificate of title or will receive
notice as a result of its lien noted thereon and accordingly will have an
opportunity to require satisfaction of the related lien before release of the
lien.
Under the laws of most states, liens for repairs performed on a manufactured
home take priority over a perfected security interest. The applicable mortgage
collateral seller typically will represent that it has no knowledge of any liens
for any manufactured home securing payment on any manufactured housing contract.
However, the liens could arise at any time during the term of a manufactured
housing contract. No notice will be given to the trustee or certificateholders
if a lien arises and the lien would not give rise to a repurchase obligation on
the part of the party specified in the related agreement.
To the extent that manufactured homes are not treated as real property under
applicable state law, manufactured housing contracts in most cases are 'chattel
paper' as defined in the UCC in effect in the states in which the manufactured
homes initially were registered. Under the UCC, the sale of chattel paper is
treated in a manner similar to perfection of a security interest in chattel
paper. Under the related agreement, the master servicer, the servicer or the
depositor, as the case may be, will transfer physical possession of the
manufactured housing contracts to the trustee or its custodian. In addition, the
master servicer or the servicer will make an appropriate filing of a financing
statement in the appropriate states to give notice of the trustee's ownership of
the manufactured housing contracts. Unless otherwise specified in the
accompanying prospectus supplement, the manufactured housing contracts will not
be stamped or marked otherwise to reflect their assignment from the depositor to
the trustee. Therefore, if a subsequent purchaser were able to take physical
possession of the manufactured housing contracts without notice of the
assignment, the trustee's interest in the manufactured housing contracts could
be defeated. To the extent that manufactured homes are treated as real property
under
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applicable state law, contracts will be treated in a manner similar to that
described above with regard to mortgage loans. See ' -- The Mortgage Loans'
above.
Enforcement of Security Interests in Manufactured Homes
The servicer or the master servicer on behalf of the trustee, to the extent
required by the related agreement, may take action to enforce the trustee's
security interest for manufactured housing contracts in default by repossession
and sale of the manufactured homes securing the defaulted manufactured housing
contracts. So long as the manufactured home has not become subject to real
estate law, a creditor in most cases can repossess a manufactured home securing
a contract by voluntary surrender, by 'self-help' repossession that is
'peaceful' or, in the absence of voluntary surrender and the ability to
repossess without breach of the peace, by judicial process. The UCC and consumer
protection laws in most states place restrictions on repossession sales,
including requiring prior notice to the debtor and commercial reasonableness in
effecting the sale. The debtor may also have a right to redeem the manufactured
home at or before resale.
Certain statutory provisions, including federal and state bankruptcy and
insolvency laws and general equitable principles, may limit or delay the ability
of a lender to repossess and resell collateral or enforce a deficiency judgment.
For a discussion of deficiency judgments, see ' -- The Mortgage Loans --
Anti-Deficiency Legislation and Other Limitations on Lenders' above.
THE HOME IMPROVEMENT CONTRACTS
General
The home improvement contracts, other than those home improvement contracts
that are unsecured or secured by mortgages on real estate, in most cases, are
'chattel paper' and include 'purchase money security interests' each as defined
in the UCC. Those home improvement contracts are referred to in this section as
'contracts'. Under the UCC, the sale of chattel paper is treated in a manner
similar to perfection of a security interest in chattel paper. Under the related
agreement, the depositor will transfer physical possession of the contracts to
the trustee or a designated custodian or may retain possession of the contracts
as custodian for the trustee. In addition, the depositor will make an
appropriate filing of a financing statement in the appropriate states to give
notice of the trustee's ownership of the contracts. Unless specified in the
accompanying prospectus supplement, the contracts will not be stamped or
otherwise marked to reflect their assignment from the depositor to the trustee.
Therefore, if through negligence, fraud or otherwise, a subsequent purchaser
were able to take physical possession of the contracts without notice of the
assignment, the trustee's interest in the contracts could be defeated. In
addition, if the depositor were to become insolvent or a debtor in a bankruptcy
case while in possession of the contracts, competing claims to the contracts
could arise. Even if unsuccessful, these claims could delay payments to the
trust and the securityholders. If successful, losses to the trust and the
securityholders also could result.
The contracts that are secured by the home improvements financed by those
contracts grant to the originator of the contracts a purchase money security
interest in the home improvements to secure all or part of the purchase price of
the home improvements and related services. A financing statement in most cases
is not required to be filed to perfect a purchase money security interest in
consumer goods. These purchase money security interests are assignable. In most
cases, a purchase money security interest grants to the holder a security
interest that has priority over a conflicting security interest in the same
collateral and the proceeds of the collateral. However, to the extent that the
collateral subject to a purchase money security interest becomes a fixture, in
order for the related purchase money security interest to take priority over a
conflicting interest in the fixture, the holder's interest in the home
improvement must in most cases be perfected by a timely fixture filing. In most
cases, under the UCC, a security interest does not exist under the UCC in
ordinary building material incorporated into an improvement on land. Home
improvement contracts that finance lumber, bricks, other types of ordinary
building material or other goods that are deemed to lose this characterization,
upon incorporation of these materials into the related property, will not be
secured by a purchase money security interest in the home improvement being
financed.
Forms of notes and mortgages used by lenders may contain provisions
obligating the borrower to pay a late charge or additional interest if payments
are not timely made, and in some circumstances may provide for prepayment fees
or yield maintenance penalties if the obligation is paid prior to maturity. In
addition to limitations imposed by FHA Regulations relating to home improvement
contracts partially insured by the FHA under Title I, in some states, there are
or may be specific limitations on the late charges that a lender may collect
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from a borrower for delinquent payments. Some states also limit the amounts that
a lender may collect from a borrower as an additional charge if the loan is
prepaid. In addition, the enforceability of provisions that provide for
prepayment fees or penalties on an involuntary prepayment is unclear under the
laws of many states. Most conventional single-family mortgage loans may be
prepaid in full or in part without penalty. The regulations of the Federal Home
Loan Bank Board, as succeeded by the Office of Thrift Supervision, or OTS,
prohibit the imposition of a prepayment penalty or equivalent fee for or in
connection with the acceleration of a loan by exercise of a due-on-sale clause.
A mortgagee to whom a prepayment in full has been tendered may be compelled to
give either a release of the mortgage or an instrument assigning the existing
mortgage. The absence of a restraint on prepayment, particularly relating to
loans and/or contracts having higher interest rates, may increase the likelihood
of refinancing or other early retirements of the home equity loans and/or home
improvement contracts.
Enforcement of Security Interest in Home Improvements
So long as the home improvement has not become subject to the real estate
law, a creditor can repossess a home improvement securing a contract by
voluntary surrender, 'self-help' repossession that is 'peaceful', that is,
without breach of the peace, or, in the absence of voluntary surrender and the
ability to repossess without breach of the peace, judicial process. The holder
of a contract must give the debtor a number of days' notice, which varies from
10 to 30 days or more depending on the state, prior to commencement of any
repossession. The UCC and consumer protection laws in most states restrict
repossession sales, including requiring prior notice to the debtor and
commercial reasonableness in effecting this type of sale. The law in most states
also requires that the debtor be given notice of any sale prior to resale of the
related property so that the debtor may redeem it at or before the resale.
Under the laws applicable in most states, a creditor is entitled to obtain a
deficiency judgment from a debtor for any deficiency on repossession and resale
of the property securing the debtor's loan. However, some states impose
prohibitions or limitations on deficiency judgments and in many cases the
defaulting borrower would have no assets with which to pay a judgment.
Some other statutory provisions, including federal and state bankruptcy and
insolvency laws and general equity principles, may limit or delay the ability of
a lender to repossess and resell collateral or enforce a deficiency judgment.
ENFORCEABILITY OF CERTAIN PROVISIONS
Unless the accompanying prospectus supplement indicates otherwise, the loans
contain due-on-sale clauses. These clauses permit the lender to accelerate the
maturity of the loan if the borrower sells, transfers or conveys the property.
The enforceability of these clauses has been the subject of legislation or
litigation in many states, and in some cases the enforceability of these clauses
has been limited or denied. However, the Garn-St Germain Depository Institutions
Act of 1982, or Garn-St Germain Act, preempts state constitutional, statutory
and case law that prohibit the enforcement of due-on-sale clauses and permits
lenders to enforce these clauses in accordance with their terms, subject to
limited exceptions. The Garn-St Germain Act does 'encourage' lenders to permit
assumption of loans at the original rate of interest or at some other rate less
than the average of the original rate and the market rate.
The Garn-St Germain Act also sets forth nine specific instances in which a
mortgage lender covered by the Garn-St Germain Act may not exercise a
due-on-sale clause, regardless of the fact that a transfer of the property may
have occurred. These include intra-family transfers, certain transfers by
operation of law, leases of fewer than three years and the creation of a junior
encumbrance. Regulations promulgated under the Garn-St Germain Act also prohibit
the imposition of a prepayment penalty on the acceleration of a loan under a
due-on-sale clause.
The inability to enforce a due-on-sale clause may result in a loan bearing
an interest rate below the current market rate being assumed by a new home buyer
rather than being paid off, which may have an impact on the average life of the
loans and the number of loans which may be outstanding until maturity.
On foreclosure, courts have imposed general equitable principles. These
equitable principles are designed to relieve the borrower from the legal effect
of its defaults under the loan documents. Examples of judicial remedies that
have been fashioned include judicial requirements that the lender undertake
affirmative and expensive actions to determine the causes for the borrower's
default and the likelihood that the borrower will be able to reinstate the loan.
In some cases, courts have required that lenders reinstate loans or recast
payment
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schedules in order to accommodate borrowers who are suffering from temporary
financial disability. In other cases, courts have limited the right of the
lender to foreclose if the default under the mortgage instrument is not
monetary, including the borrower failing to adequately maintain the property.
Finally, some courts have been faced with the issue of whether or not federal or
state constitutional provisions reflecting due process concerns for adequate
notice require that borrowers under deeds of trust, deeds to secure debt or
mortgages receive notices in addition to the statutorily prescribed minimum. For
the most part, these cases have upheld the notice provisions as being reasonable
or have found that the sale by a trustee under a deed of trust, or under a deed
to secure a debt or a mortgagee having a power of sale, does not involve
sufficient state action to afford constitutional protections to the borrower.
CONSUMER PROTECTION LAWS
Numerous federal and state consumer protection laws impose requirements
applicable to the origination of loans, including the Truth in Lending Act, the
Federal Trade Commission Act, the Fair Credit Billing Act, the Fair Credit
Reporting Act, the Equal Credit Opportunity Act, the Fair Debt Collection
Practices Act and the Uniform Consumer Credit Code. In the case of some of these
laws, the failure to comply with their provisions may affect the enforceability
of the related loan.
If the transferor of a consumer credit contract is also the seller of goods
that give rise to the transaction, and, in certain cases, related lenders and
assignees, the 'Holder-in-Due-Course' rule of the Federal Trade Commission is
intended to defeat the ability of the transferor to transfer the contract free
of notice of claims by the debtor thereunder. The effect of this rule is to
subject the assignee of the contract to all claims and defenses that the debtor
could assert against the seller of goods. Liability under this rule is limited
to amounts paid under a contract; however, the borrower also may be able to
assert the rule to set off remaining amounts due as a defense against a claim
brought against the borrower.
APPLICABILITY OF USURY LAWS
Title V of the Depository Institutions Deregulation and Monetary Control Act
of 1980, or Title V, provides that state usury limitations shall not apply to
some types of residential first mortgage loans, including Cooperative Loans
originated by some lenders. Title V also provides that, subject to certain
conditions, state usury limitations shall not apply to any loan that is secured
by a first lien on certain kinds of manufactured housing. Title V also provides
that, subject to the following conditions, state usury limitations shall not
apply to any home improvement contract that is secured by a first lien on some
kinds of consumer goods. The contracts would be covered if they satisfy some
conditions, among other things, governing the terms of any prepayments, late
charges and deferral fees and requiring a 30-day notice period prior to
instituting any action leading to repossession of the related unit.
Title V authorized any state to reimpose limitations on interest rates and
finance charges by adopting before April 1, 1983 a law or constitutional
provision that expressly rejects application of the federal law. Fifteen states
adopted this type of prior to the April 1, 1983 deadline. In addition, even
where Title V was not so rejected, any state is authorized by the law to adopt a
provision limiting discount points or other charges on loans covered by Title V.
Usury limits apply to junior mortgage loans in many states and Mexico Loans.
Any applicable usury limits in effect at origination will be reflected in the
maximum interest rates for the mortgage loans, as described in the accompanying
prospectus supplement.
In most cases, each seller of a loan will have represented that the loan was
originated in compliance with then applicable state laws, including usury laws,
in all material respects. However, the interest rates on the loans will be
subject to applicable usury laws as in effect from time to time.
ENVIRONMENTAL LEGISLATION
Under the federal Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and
Liability Act of 1980, as amended, or CERCLA, and under state law in some
states, a secured party which takes a deed-in-lieu of foreclosure, purchases a
mortgaged property at a foreclosure sale, or operates a mortgaged property may
become liable in some circumstances for the costs of cleaning up hazardous
substances regardless of whether they have contaminated the property. CERCLA
imposes strict, as well as joint and several, liability on several classes of
potentially responsible parties, including current owners and operators of the
property who did not cause or
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contribute to the contamination. Furthermore, liability under CERCLA is not
limited to the original or unamortized principal balance of a loan or to the
value of the property securing a loan. Lenders may be held liable under CERCLA
as owners or operators unless they qualify for the secured creditor exemption to
CERCLA. This exemption exempts from the definition of owners and operators those
who, without participating in the management of a facility, hold indicia of
ownership primarily to protect a security interest in the facility.
The Asset Conservation, Lender Liability and Deposit Insurance Act of 1996,
or Conservation Act amended, among other things, the provisions of CERCLA for
lender liability and the secured creditor exemption. The Conservation Act offers
substantial protection to lenders by defining the activities in which a lender
can engage and still have the benefit of the secured creditor exemption. For a
lender to be deemed to have participated in the management of a mortgaged
property, the lender must actually participate in the operational affairs of the
mortgaged property. The Conservation Act provides that 'merely having the
capacity to influence, or unexercised right to control' operations does not
constitute participation in management. A lender will lose the protection of the
secured creditor exemption only if it exercises decision-making control over the
mortgagor's environmental compliance and hazardous substance handling and
disposal practices, or assumes day-to-day management of substantially all
operational functions of the mortgaged property. The Conservation Act also
provides that a lender will continue to have the benefit of the secured creditor
exemption even if it forecloses on a mortgaged property, purchases it at a
foreclosure sale or accepts a deed-in-lieu of foreclosure provided that the
lender seeks to sell the mortgaged property at the earliest practicable
commercially reasonable time on commercially reasonable terms.
Other federal and state laws in some circumstances may impose liability on a
secured party which takes a deed-in-lieu of foreclosure, purchases a mortgaged
property at a foreclosure sale, or operates a mortgaged property on which
contaminants other than CERCLA hazardous substances are present, including
petroleum, agricultural chemicals, hazardous wastes, asbestos, radon, and
lead-based paint. These cleanup costs may be substantial. It is possible that
the cleanup costs could become a liability of a trust and reduce the amounts
otherwise distributable to the holders of the related series of securities.
Moreover, some federal statutes and some states by statute impose an
Environmental Lien. All subsequent liens on that property are usually
subordinated to an Environmental Lien and, in some states, even prior recorded
liens are subordinated to Environmental Liens. In the latter states, the
security interest of the trustee in a related parcel of real property that is
subject to an Environmental Lien could be adversely affected.
Traditionally, many residential mortgage lenders have not taken steps to
evaluate whether contaminants are present for any mortgaged property prior to
the origination of the loan or prior to foreclosure or accepting a deed-in-lieu
of foreclosure. Neither the depositor nor any master servicer or servicer will
be required by any agreement to undertake any of these evaluations prior to
foreclosure or accepting a deed-in-lieu of foreclosure. The depositor does not
make any representations or warranties or assume any liability for the absence
or effect of contaminants on any mortgaged property or any casualty resulting
from the presence or effect of contaminants. However, the master servicer or the
servicer will not be obligated to foreclose on any mortgaged property or accept
a deed-in-lieu of foreclosure if it knows or reasonably believes that there are
material contaminated conditions on the property. A failure so to foreclose may
reduce the amounts otherwise available to securityholders of the related series.
Except as otherwise specified in the applicable prospectus supplement, at
the time the loans were originated, no environmental assessment or a very
limited environment assessment of the mortgaged properties will have been
conducted.
SOLDIERS' AND SAILORS' CIVIL RELIEF ACT OF 1940
Under the terms of the Relief Act a borrower who enters military service
after the origination of the borrower's loan, including a borrower who was in
reserve status and is called to active duty after origination of the loan, may
not be charged interest, including fees and charges, above an annual rate of 6%
during the period of the borrower's active duty status, unless a court orders
otherwise on application of the lender. The Relief Act applies to borrowers who
are members of the Air Force, Army, Marines, Navy, National Guard, Reserves or
Coast Guard, and officers of the U.S. Public Health Service assigned to duty
with the military.
Because the Relief Act applies to borrowers who enter military service,
including reservists who are called to active duty, after origination of the
related loan, no information can be provided as to the number of loans that may
be affected by the Relief Act. For loans included in a trust, application of the
Relief Act would adversely
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affect, for an indeterminate period of time, the ability of the servicer or the
master servicer, as applicable, to collect full amounts of interest on the
loans. Any shortfall in interest collections resulting from the application of
the Relief Act or similar legislation or regulations, which would not be
recoverable from the related loans, would result in a reduction of the amounts
distributable to the holders of the related securities, and would not be covered
by Advances or any form of credit enhancement provided in connection with the
related series of securities. In addition, the Relief Act imposes limitations
that would impair the ability of the servicer or the master servicer, as
applicable, to foreclose on an affected loan during the mortgagor's period of
active duty status, and, under some circumstances, during an additional three
month period thereafter. Thus, if the Relief Act or similar legislation or
regulations applies to any loan which goes into default, there may be delays in
payment and losses on the related securities in connection therewith. Any other
interest shortfalls, deferrals or forgiveness of payments on the loans resulting
from similar legislation or regulations may result in delays in payments or
losses to securityholders of the related series.
DEFAULT INTEREST AND LIMITATIONS ON PREPAYMENTS
Notes and mortgages may contain provisions that obligate the borrower to pay
a late charge or additional interest if payments are not timely made, and in
some circumstances, may prohibit prepayments for a specified period and/or
condition prepayments on the borrower's payment of prepayment fees or yield
maintenance penalties. In some states, there are or may be specific limitations
on the late charges which a lender may collect from a borrower for delinquent
payments. Some states also limit the amounts that a lender may collect from a
borrower as an additional charge if the loan is prepaid. In addition, the
enforceability of provisions that provide for prepayment fees or penalties on an
involuntary prepayment is unclear under the laws of many states. Most
conventional single-family mortgage loans may be prepaid in full or in part
without penalty. The regulations of the Federal Home Loan Bank Board, as
succeeded by the OTS, prohibit the imposition of a prepayment penalty or
equivalent fee for or in connection with the acceleration of a loan by exercise
of a due-on-sale clause. A mortgagee to whom a prepayment in full has been
tendered may be compelled to give either a release of the mortgage or an
instrument assigning the existing mortgage. The absence of a restraint on
prepayment, particularly for mortgage loans having higher loan rates, may
increase the likelihood of refinancing or other early retirements of the
mortgage loans.
FORFEITURES IN DRUG AND RICO PROCEEDINGS
Federal law provides that property owned by persons convicted of
drug-related crimes or of criminal violations of the Racketeer Influenced and
Corrupt Organizations, or RICO statute can be seized by the government if the
property was used in, or purchased with the proceeds of, those crimes. Under
procedures contained in the Comprehensive Crime Control Act of 1984, the
government may seize the property even before conviction. The government must
publish notice of the forfeiture proceeding and may give notice to all parties
'known to have an alleged interest in the property,' including the holders of
mortgage loans.
A lender may avoid forfeiture of its interest in the property if it
establishes that: (i) its mortgage was executed and recorded before commission
of the crime on which the forfeiture is based, or (ii) the lender was, at the
time of execution of the mortgage, 'reasonably without cause to believe' that
the property was used in, or purchased with the proceeds of, illegal drug or
RICO activities.
NEGATIVE AMORTIZATION LOANS
A recent case held that state restrictions on the compounding of interest
are not preempted by the provisions of the Depository Institutions Deregulation
and Monetary Control Act of 1980, or DIDMC, and as a result, a mortgage loan
that provided for negative amortization violated New Hampshire's requirement
that first mortgage loans provide for computation of interest on a simple
interest basis. The court did not address the applicability of the Alternative
Mortgage Transaction Parity Act of 1982, which authorizes a lender to make
residential mortgage loans that provide for negative amortization. As a result,
the enforceability of compound interest on mortgage loans that provide for
negative amortization is unclear. The case, which was decided by the First
Circuit Court of Appeals, is binding authority only on Federal District Courts
in Maine, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island and Puerto Rico.
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MATERIAL FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSEQUENCES
GENERAL
The following is a discussion of the material (and certain other) federal
income tax consequences of the purchase, ownership and disposition of the
securities. This discussion is directed solely to securityholders that hold the
securities as capital assets within the meaning of Section 1221 of the Internal
Revenue Code and does not purport to discuss all federal income tax consequences
that may be applicable to particular categories of investors, some of which,
including banks, insurance companies and foreign investors) may be subject to
special rules. In addition, the authorities on which this discussion, and the
opinion referred to below, are based are subject to change or differing
interpretations, which could apply retroactively. This discussion does not
purport to be as detailed and complete as the advice a securityholder may get
from its tax advisor and accordingly, taxpayers should consult their tax
advisors and tax return preparers regarding the consequences to them of
investing in the securities and the preparation of any item on a tax return,
even where the anticipated tax treatment has been discussed in this prospectus
or in a prospectus supplement. In addition to the federal income tax
consequences described in this prospectus, potential investors should consider
the state and local tax consequences, if any, of the purchase, ownership and
disposition of the securities. See 'State and Other Tax Consequences.'
Securityholders should consult their tax advisors concerning the federal, state,
local or other tax consequences to them of the purchase, ownership and
disposition of the securities offered hereunder.
The following discussion addresses REMIC and FASIT certificates representing
interests in a trust for which the transaction documents require the making of
an election to have the trust (or a portion thereof) be treated as one or more
REMICs or FASITs. The prospectus supplement for each series of securities will
indicate whether a REMIC or FASIT election or elections will be made for the
related trust and, if that election is to be made, will identify all 'regular
interests' and 'residual interests' in the REMIC or the 'regular interests' and
'high yield regular interests' in the FASIT, as the case may be. If interests in
a FASIT ownership interest are offered for sale the federal income consequences
of the purchase, ownership and disposition of those interests will be described
in the accompanying prospectus supplement. For purposes of this tax discussion,
references to a 'securityholder' or a 'holder' are to the beneficial owner of a
security.
If neither a REMIC nor FASIT election is to be made for a particular series
because, for example, a grantor trust structure is being used, the tax
consequences of that structure will be discussed in the prospectus supplement
for that series.
Regulations specifically addressing certain of the issues discussed in this
prospectus have not been issued and this discussion is based in part on
regulations that do not adequately address some issues relevant to, and in some
instances provide that they are not applicable to, securities similar to the
securities.
CLASSIFICATION OF REMICS AND FASITS
Upon the issuance of each series of REMIC or FASIT certificates, one of
Thacher Proffitt & Wood, Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe LLP or Stroock & Stroock
& Lavan LLP, counsel to the depositor, will deliver its opinion to the effect
that, assuming compliance with all provisions of the related pooling and
servicing agreement, indenture or trust agreement, the related trust, or each
applicable portion of the trust, will qualify as a REMIC or FASIT, as the case
may be, and the certificates offered with respect thereto will be considered to
be (or evidence the ownership of) 'regular interests,' in the related REMIC or
FASIT or, solely in the case of REMICs, 'residual interests,' in that REMIC.
Opinions of counsel only represent the views of that counsel and are not binding
on the Internal Revenue Service, known as the IRS, or the courts. Accordingly,
there can be no assurance that the IRS and the courts will not take a differing
position.
No Treasury regulations supplementing the FASIT provisions of the Internal
Revenue Code have been issued and many issues remain unresolved. Further, any
future Treasury regulations may be applied retroactively, and the Internal
Revenue Code authorizes the Treasury to issue 'anti-abuse' regulations to
prevent the abuse of the purposes of the FASIT provisions through transactions
that are not primarily related to securitization of debt instruments by a FASIT.
Although it is unclear what form of transactions such regulations may prohibit,
it is expected that any transactions described in this prospectus would fall
outside the scope of such regulations. Since the FASIT Provisions will
ultimately be interpreted by their own regulations (which, as indicated above,
have not yet been issued), investors should be cautious in purchasing any of the
Certificates and should consult
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with their tax advisors in determining the federal, state, local and other tax
consequences to them for the purchase, holding and disposition of the
Certificates.
In addition, certain FASIT regular interests or FASIT Regular Certificates
may be treated as 'high-yield regular interests.' Special rules, discussed below
apply to those securities. Although the accompanying prospectus supplement will
indicate which FASIT securities are expected to be treated as 'high-yield
regular interests,' in many cases it will not be clear as of the date of the
prospectus supplement (and possibly not even after the issuance of the
securities) whether any particular class will actually be so treated.
If an entity electing to be treated as a REMIC or FASIT fails to comply with
one or more of the ongoing requirements of the Internal Revenue Code for that
status during any taxable year, the Internal Revenue Code provides that the
entity will not be treated as a REMIC or FASIT for that year and thereafter. In
that event, the entity may be taxable as a separate corporation under Treasury
regulations, and the related certificates may not be accorded the status or
given the tax treatment described in this prospectus under 'Material Federal
Income Tax Consequences'. The IRS may, but is not compelled to provide relief
but any relief may be accompanied by sanctions, including the imposition of a
corporate tax on all or a portion of the trust's income for the period in which
the requirements for that status are not satisfied. The pooling and servicing
agreement, indenture or trust agreement for each REMIC or FASIT will include
provisions designed to maintain the trust's status as a REMIC or FASIT. It is
not anticipated that the status of any trust as a REMIC or FASIT will be
terminated.
TAXATION OF OWNERS OF REMIC AND FASIT REGULAR CERTIFICATES
General
In general, REMIC and FASIT Regular Certificates will be treated for federal
income tax purposes as debt instruments and not as ownership interests in the
REMIC or FASIT or its assets. Moreover, holders of Regular Certificates that
otherwise report income under a cash method of accounting will be required to
report income for Regular Certificates under an accrual method.
Original Issue Discount
Some REMIC or FASIT Regular Certificates may be issued with 'original issue
discount' within the meaning of Section 1273(a) of the Internal Revenue Code.
Any holders of Regular Certificates issued with original issue discount
typically will be required to include original issue discount in income as it
accrues, in accordance with the method described below, in advance of the
receipt of the cash attributable to that income. In addition, Section 1272(a)(6)
of the Internal Revenue Code provides special rules applicable to Regular
Certificates and certain other debt instruments issued with original issue
discount. Regulations have not been issued under that section.
The Internal Revenue Code requires that a prepayment assumption be used for
loans held by a REMIC or FASIT in computing the accrual of original issue
discount on Regular Certificates issued by that issuer, and that adjustments be
made in the amount and rate of accrual of the discount to reflect differences
between the actual prepayment rate and the prepayment assumption. The prepayment
assumption is to be determined in a manner prescribed in Treasury regulations;
as noted above, those regulations have not been issued. The conference committee
report accompanying the Tax Reform Act of 1986 indicates that the regulations
will provide that the prepayment assumption used for a Regular Certificate must
be the same as that used in pricing the initial offering of the Regular
Certificate. The prepayment assumption used by the master servicer, the
servicer, or the REMIC or FASIT administrator, as applicable, in reporting
original issue discount for each series of Regular Certificates will be
consistent with this standard and will be disclosed in the accompanying
prospectus supplement. However, none of the depositor, the REMIC or FASIT
administrator, as applicable, or the master servicer or the servicer will make
any representation that the loans will in fact prepay at a rate conforming to
the prepayment assumption or at any other rate.
The original issue discount, if any, on a REMIC or FASIT Regular Certificate
will be the excess of its stated redemption price at maturity over its issue
price. The issue price of a particular class of Regular Certificates will be the
first cash price at which a substantial amount of Regular Certificates of that
class is sold, excluding sales to bond houses, brokers and underwriters. If less
than a substantial amount of a particular class of Regular Certificates is sold
for cash on or prior to the date of their initial issuance, or the closing date,
the
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issue price for that class will be treated as the fair market value of the class
on the closing date. Under the OID regulations, the stated redemption price of a
REMIC or FASIT Regular Certificate is equal to the total of all payments to be
made on that certificate other than 'qualified stated interest.' Qualified
stated interest includes interest that is unconditionally payable at least
annually at a single fixed rate, or in the case of a variable rate debt
instrument, at a 'qualified floating rate,' an 'objective rate,' a combination
of a single fixed rate and one or more 'qualified floating rates' or one
'qualified inverse floating rate,' or a combination of 'qualified floating
rates' that in most cases does not operate in a manner that accelerates or
defers interest payments on a Regular Certificate.
In the case of Regular Certificates bearing adjustable interest rates, the
determination of the total amount of original issue discount and the timing of
the inclusion of the original issue discount will vary according to the
characteristics of the Regular Certificates. If the original issue discount
rules apply to the certificates, the accompanying prospectus supplement will
describe the manner in which the rules will be applied by the master servicer,
the servicer, or REMIC or FASIT administrator, as applicable, for those
certificates in preparing information returns to the certificateholders and the
Internal Revenue Service, or IRS.
Some classes of the Regular Certificates may provide for the first interest
payment with respect to their certificates to be made more than one month after
the date of issuance, a period which is longer than the subsequent monthly
intervals between interest payments. Assuming the 'accrual period' (as defined
below) for original issue discount is each monthly period that begins or ends on
a distribution date, in some cases, as a consequence of this 'long first accrual
period,' some or all interest payments may be required to be included in the
stated redemption price of the Regular Certificate and accounted for as original
issue discount. Because interest on Regular Certificates must in any event be
accounted for under an accrual method, applying this analysis would result in
only a slight difference in the timing of the inclusion in income of the yield
on the Regular Certificates.
In addition, if the accrued interest to be paid on the first distribution
date is computed for a period that begins prior to the closing date, a portion
of the purchase price paid for a Regular Certificate will reflect the accrued
interest. In these cases, information returns to the certificateholders and the
IRS will be based on the position that the portion of the purchase price paid
for the interest accrued for periods prior to the closing date is treated as
part of the overall cost of the Regular Certificate, and not as a separate asset
the cost of which is recovered entirely out of interest received on the next
distribution date, and that portion of the interest paid on the first
distribution date in excess of interest accrued for a number of days
corresponding to the number of days from the closing date to the first
distribution date should be included in the stated redemption price of the
Regular Certificate. However, the OID regulations state that all or some portion
of the accrued interest may be treated as a separate asset the cost of which is
recovered entirely out of interest paid on the first distribution date. It is
unclear how an election to do so would be made under the OID regulations and
whether that election could be made unilaterally by a certificateholder.
Regardless of the general definition of original issue discount, original
issue discount on a Regular Certificate will be considered to be de minimis if
it is less than 0.25% of the stated redemption price of the Regular Certificate
multiplied by its weighted average life. For this purpose, the weighted average
life of the Regular Certificate is computed as the sum of the amounts
determined, as to each payment included in the stated redemption price of the
Regular Certificate, by multiplying (i) the number of complete years, rounding
down for partial years, from the issue date until the payment is expected to be
made, presumably taking into account the prepayment assumption, by (ii) a
fraction, the numerator of which is the amount of the payment, and the
denominator of which is the stated redemption price at maturity of the Regular
Certificate. Under the OID regulations, original issue discount of only a de
minimis amount, other than de minimis original issue discount attributable to a
so-called 'teaser' interest rate or an initial interest holiday, will be
included in income as each payment of stated principal is made, based on the
product of the total amount of the de minimis original issue discount and a
fraction, the numerator of which is the amount of the principal payment and the
denominator of which is the outstanding stated principal amount of the Regular
Certificate. The OID regulations also would permit a certificateholder to elect
to accrue de minimis original issue discount into income currently based on a
constant yield method. See ' -- Market Discount' for a description of that
election under the OID regulations.
If original issue discount on a Regular Certificate is in excess of a de
minimis amount, the holder of the certificate must include in ordinary gross
income the sum of the 'daily portions' of original issue discount for each day
during its taxable year on which it held the Regular Certificate, including the
purchase date but
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excluding the disposition date. In the case of an original holder of a Regular
Certificate, the daily portions of original issue discount will be determined as
follows.
As to each 'accrual period,' that is, unless otherwise stated in the
accompanying prospectus supplement, each period that begins or ends on a date
that corresponds to a distribution date and begins on the first day following
the immediately preceding accrual period, or in the case of the first accrual
period, begins on the closing date, a calculation will be made of the portion of
the original issue discount that accrued during that accrual period. The portion
of original issue discount that accrues in any accrual period will equal the
excess, if any, of (i) the sum of (A) the present value, as of the end of the
accrual period, of all of the distributions remaining to be made on the Regular
Certificate, if any, in future periods and (B) the distributions made on the
Regular Certificate during the accrual period of amounts included in the stated
redemption price, over (ii) the adjusted issue price of the Regular Certificate
at the beginning of the accrual period. The present value of the remaining
distributions referred to in the preceding sentence will be calculated (1)
assuming that distributions on the Regular Certificate will be received in
future periods based on the loans being prepaid at a rate equal to the
prepayment assumption and (2) using a discount rate equal to the original yield
to maturity of the certificate. For these purposes, the original yield to
maturity of the certificate will be calculated based on its issue price and
assuming that distributions on the certificate will be made in all accrual
periods based on the loans being prepaid at a rate equal to the prepayment
assumption. The adjusted issue price of a Regular Certificate at the beginning
of any accrual period will equal the issue price of the certificate, increased
by the aggregate amount of original issue discount that accrued for that
certificate in prior accrual periods, and reduced by the amount of any
distributions made on that Regular Certificate in prior accrual periods of
amounts included in its stated redemption price. The original issue discount
accruing during any accrual period, computed as described above, will be
allocated ratably to each day during the accrual period to determine the daily
portion of original issue discount for that day.
The OID regulations suggest that original issue discount for securities that
represent multiple uncertificated regular interests, in which ownership
interests will be issued simultaneously to the same buyer and which may be
required under the related pooling and servicing agreement to be transferred
together, should be computed on an aggregate method. In the absence of further
guidance from the IRS, original issue discount for securities that represent the
ownership of multiple uncert ificated regular interests will be reported to the
IRS and the certificateholders on an aggregate method based on a single overall
constant yield and the prepayment assumption stated in the accompanying
prospectus supplement, treating all uncertificated regular interests as a single
debt instrument as set forth in the OID regulations, so long as the pooling and
servicing agreement requires that the uncertificated regular interests be
transferred together.
A subsequent purchaser of a Regular Certificate that purchases the
certificate at a cost, excluding any portion of that cost attributable to
accrued qualified stated interest, less than its remaining stated redemption
price will also be required to include in gross income the daily portions of any
original issue discount for that certificate. However, each daily portion will
be reduced, if the cost is in excess of its 'adjusted issue price,' in
proportion to the ratio that excess bears to the aggregate original issue
discount remaining to be accrued on the Regular Certificate. The adjusted issue
price of a Regular Certificate on any given day equals (i) the adjusted issue
price or, in the case of the first accrual period, the issue price, of the
certificate at the beginning of the accrual period which includes that day, plus
(ii) the daily portions of original issue discount for all days during the
accrual period prior to that day minus (iii) any principal payments made during
the accrual period prior to that day for the certificate.
Market Discount
A certificateholder that purchases a Regular Certificate at a market
discount, that is, in the case of a Regular Certificate issued without original
issue discount, at a purchase price less than its remaining stated principal
amount, or in the case of a Regular Certificate issued with original issue
discount, at a purchase price less than its adjusted issue price will recognize
income on receipt of each distribution representing stated redemption price. In
particular, under Section 1276 of the Internal Revenue Code such a
certificateholder in most cases will be required to allocate the portion of each
distribution representing stated redemption price first to accrued market
discount not previously included in income, and to recognize ordinary income to
that extent.
A certificateholder may elect to include market discount in income currently
as it accrues rather than including it on a deferred basis in accordance with
the foregoing. If made, the election will apply to all market
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discount bonds acquired by the certificateholder on or after the first day of
the first taxable year to which the election applies. In addition, the OID
regulations permit a certificateholder to elect to accrue all interest,
discount, including de minimis market or original issue discount, and premium in
income as interest, based on a constant yield method. If the election were made
for a Regular Certificate with market discount, the certificateholder would be
deemed to have made an election to include currently market discount in income
for all other debt instruments having market discount that the certificateholder
acquires during the taxable year of the election or thereafter. Similarly, a
certificateholder that made this election for a certificate that is acquired at
a premium would be deemed to have made an election to amortize bond premium for
all debt instruments having amortizable bond premium that the certificateholder
owns or acquires. See ' -- Premium.' Each of these elections to accrue interest,
discount and premium for a certificate on a constant yield method or as interest
may not be revoked without the consent of the IRS.
However, market discount for a Regular Certificate will be considered to be
de minimis for purposes of Section 1276 of the Internal Revenue Code if the
market discount is less than 0.25% of the remaining stated redemption price of
the Regular Certificate multiplied by the number of complete years to maturity
remaining after the date of its purchase. In interpreting a similar rule for
original issue discount on obligations payable in installments, the OID
regulations refer to the weighted average maturity of obligations, and it is
likely that the same rule will be applied for market discount, presumably taking
into account the prepayment assumption. If market discount is treated as de
minimis under this rule, it appears that the actual discount would be treated in
a manner similar to original issue discount of a de minimis amount. See ' --
Original Issue Discount.' This treatment may result in discount being included
in income at a slower rate than discount would be required to be included in
income using the method described above.
Section 1276(b)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code specifically authorizes the
Treasury Department to issue regulations providing for the method for accruing
market discount on debt instruments, the principal of which is payable in more
than one installment. Until regulations are issued by the Treasury Department,
certain rules described in the Committee Report apply. The Committee Report
indicates that in each accrual period market discount on Regular Certificates
should accrue, at the certificateholder's option:
on the basis of a constant yield method,
in the case of a Regular Certificate issued without original issue
discount, in an amount that bears the same ratio to the total remaining
market discount as the stated interest paid in the accrual period bears to
the total amount of stated interest remaining to be paid on the Regular
Certificate as of the beginning of the accrual period, or
in the case of a Regular Certificate issued with original issue discount,
in an amount that bears the same ratio to the total remaining market
discount as the original issue discount accrued in the accrual period bears
to the total original issue discount remaining on the Regular Certificate
at the beginning of the accrual period.
Moreover, the prepayment assumption used in calculating the accrual of
original issue discount is to be used in calculating the accrual of market
discount. Because the regulations referred to in this paragraph have not been
issued, it is not possible to predict what effect those regulations might have
on the tax treatment of a Regular Certificate purchased at a discount in the
secondary market.
To the extent that Regular Certificates provide for monthly or other
periodic distributions throughout their term, the effect of these rules may be
to require market discount to be includible in income at a rate that is not
significantly slower than the rate at which the discount would accrue if it were
original issue discount. Moreover, in any event a holder of a Regular
Certificate in most cases will be required to treat a portion of any gain on the
sale or exchange of that Certificate as ordinary income to the extent of the
market discount accrued to the date of disposition under one of the foregoing
methods, less any accrued market discount previously reported as ordinary
income.
In addition, under Section 1277 of the Internal Revenue Code, a holder of a
Regular Certificate may be required to defer a portion of its interest
deductions for the taxable year attributable to any indebtedness incurred or
continued to purchase or carry a Regular Certificate purchased with market
discount. For these purposes, the de minimis rule referred to above applies. Any
deferred interest expense would not exceed the market discount that accrues
during that taxable year and is, in general, allowed as a deduction not later
than the year in which the market discount is includible in income. If the
holder elects to include market discount in income currently
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as it accrues on all market discount instruments acquired by that holder in that
taxable year or thereafter, the interest deferral rule described above will not
apply.
Premium
A Regular Certificate purchased at a cost, excluding any portion of that
cost attributable to accrued qualified stated interest, greater than its
remaining stated redemption price will be considered to be purchased at a
premium. The holder of a Regular Certificate may elect under Section 171 of the
Internal Revenue Code to amortize that premium under the constant yield method
over the life of the certificate. If made, this election will apply to all debt
instruments having amortizable bond premium that the holder owns or subsequently
acquires. Amortizable premium will be treated as an offset to interest income on
the related Regular Certificate, rather than as a separate interest deduction.
The OID regulations also permit certificateholders to elect to include all
interest, discount and premium in income based on a constant yield method,
further treating the certificateholder as having made the election to amortize
premium generally. See ' -- Market Discount.' The conference committee report
states that the same rules that apply to accrual of market discount, which rules
will require use of a prepayment assumption in accruing market discount for
Regular Certificates without regard to whether those certificates have original
issue discount, will also apply in amortizing bond premium under Section 171 of
the Internal Revenue Code.
Realized Losses
Under Section 166 of the Internal Revenue Code, both corporate holders of
the Regular Certificates and noncorporate holders of the Regular Certificates
that acquire those certificates in connection with a trade or business should be
allowed to deduct, as ordinary losses, any losses sustained during a taxable
year in which their certificates become wholly or partially worthless as the
result of one or more Realized Losses on the loans. However, it appears that a
noncorporate holder that does not acquire a Regular Certificate in connection
with a trade or business will not be entitled to deduct a loss under Section 166
of the Internal Revenue Code until the holder's certificate becomes wholly
worthless -- until its outstanding principal balance has been reduced to zero --
and that the loss will be characterized as a short-term capital loss.
Each holder of a Regular Certificate will be required to accrue interest and
original issue discount for that certificate, without giving effect to any
reductions in distributions attributable to defaults or delinquencies on the
loans or the underlying certificates until it can be established that any
reduction ultimately will not be recoverable. As a result, the amount of taxable
income reported in any period by the holder of a Regular Certificate could
exceed the amount of economic income actually realized by the holder in that
period. Although the holder of a Regular Certificate eventually will recognize a
loss or reduction in income attributable to previously accrued and included
income that, as the result of a Realized Loss, ultimately will not be realized,
the law is unclear with respect to the timing and character of the loss or
reduction in income.
Special Rules for FASIT High-Yield Regular Interests
General. A high-yield interest in a FASIT is a subcategory of a FASIT
regular interest. A FASIT high-yield regular interest is a FASIT regular
interest that either (i) has an issue price that exceeds 125% of its stated
principal amount, (ii) has a yield to maturity equal to or greater than a
specified amount (generally 500 basis points above the appropriate applicable
federal rate), or (iii) is an interest-only obligation whose interest payments
consist of a non-varying specified portion of the interest payments on permitted
assets. A holder of a FASIT high-yield regular interest is subject to treatment,
described above, applicable to FASIT Regular Interests, generally.
Limitations on Utilization of Losses. The holder of a FASIT high-yield
regular interest may not offset its income derived thereon by any unrelated
losses. Thus, the taxable income of such holder will be at least equal to the
taxable income derived from such interest (which includes gain or loss from the
sale of such interests), any FASIT ownership interests and any excess inclusion
income derived from REMIC Residual Interests. Thus, income from such interests
generally cannot be offset by current net operating losses or net operating loss
carryovers. Similarly, the alternative minimum taxable income of the holder of a
high-yield regular interest cannot be less than such holder's taxable income
determined solely for such interests. For purposes of these provisions, all
members of an affiliated group filing a consolidated return are treated as one
taxpayer.
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Accordingly, the consolidated taxable income of the group cannot be less than
the group's 'tainted' income (thereby preventing losses of one member from
offsetting the tainted income of another member). However, to avoid doubly
penalizing income, net operating loss carryovers are determined without regard
to such income for both regular tax and alternative minimum tax purposes.
Transfer Restrictions. Transfers of FASIT high-yield Regular Certificates to
certain 'disqualified holders' will (absent the satisfaction of certain
conditions) be disregarded for federal income tax purposes. In such event, the
most recent eligible holder (generally the transferring holder) will continue to
be taxed as if it were the holder of the certificate (although the disqualified
holder (and not the most recent eligible holder) would be taxable on any gain
recognized by such holder for such interest). Although not free from doubt, the
tax ownership of a FASIT high-yield Regular Certificate may (absent the
satisfaction of certain conditions) revert to a prior holder even if the
transferee becomes a disqualified holder after the relevant transfer. Each
applicable pooling and servicing agreement, trust agreement or indenture
requires, as a prerequisite to any transfer of a FASIT high-yield Regular
Certificate, the delivery to the trustee of an affidavit of the transferee to
the effect that it is not a disqualified holder and contains certain other
provisions designed to preclude the automatic reversion of the tax ownership of
such Certificate. For these purposes, a 'disqualified holder' is any person
other than a (i) FASIT or (ii) domestic C corporation (other than a corporation
that is exempt from (or not subject to) federal income tax); provided, however,
that all (a) regulated investment companies subject to the provisions of Part I
of subchapter M of the Internal Revenue Code, (b) real estate investment trusts
subject to the provisions of Part II of subchapter M of the Internal Revenue
Code, (c) REMICs, and (d) cooperatives described in Section 1381(a) of the
Internal Revenue Code are also 'disqualified holders.'
PASS-THROUGH ENTITIES HOLDING FASIT REGULAR CERTIFICATES
If a Pass-Through Entity issues a high-yielding debt or equity interest that
is supported by any FASIT Regular Interest, such entity will be subject to an
excise tax unless no principal purpose of such resecuritization was the
avoidance of the rules relating to FASIT High-yield Interests (pertaining to
eligible holders of such interests). See 'Taxation of Owners of REMIC and FASIT
Regular Certificates -- Taxation of Holders of FASIT High-yield Regular
Interests -- Transfer Restrictions'. The tax will apply if the original yield to
maturity of the debt or equity interest in the Pass-Through Entity exceeds the
greater of (i) the sum of (a) the applicable federal rate in effect for the
calendar month in which the debt or equity interest is issued) and (b) five
percentage points or (ii) the yield to maturity to such entity on the FASIT
Regular Interest (determined as of the date that such entity acquired such
interest). The Internal Revenue Code provides that Treasury regulations will be
issued to provide the manner in which to determine the yield to maturity of any
equity interest. No such regulations have yet been issued. If such tax did
apply, the tax would equal the product of (i) the highest corporate tax rate and
(ii) the income of the holder of the debt or equity interest that is properly
attributable to the FASIT Regular Interest supporting such interest.
TAXATION OF OWNERS OF REMIC RESIDUAL CERTIFICATES
General
As residual interests, the REMIC Residual Certificates will be subject to
tax rules that differ significantly from those that would apply if the REMIC
Residual Certificates were treated for federal income tax purposes as direct
ownership interests in the loans or as debt instruments issued by the REMIC.
A holder of a REMIC Residual Certificate generally will be required to
report its daily portion of the taxable income or, in accordance with the
limitations noted in this discussion, the net loss of the REMIC for each day
during a calendar quarter that the holder owned the REMIC Residual Certificate.
For this purpose, the taxable income or net loss of the REMIC will be allocated
to each day in the calendar quarter ratably using a '30 days per month/90 days
per quarter/360 days per year' convention unless otherwise disclosed in the
accompanying prospectus supplement. The daily amounts will then be allocated
among the REMIC residual certificateholders in proportion to their respective
ownership interests on that day. Any amount included in the gross income or
allowed as a loss of any REMIC residual certificateholder by virtue of this
allocation will be treated as ordinary income or loss. The taxable income of the
REMIC will be determined under the rules described in this prospectus in ' --
Taxable Income of the REMIC' and will be taxable to the REMIC residual
certificateholders without regard to the timing or amount of cash distributions
by the REMIC. Ordinary income
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derived from REMIC Residual Certificates will be 'portfolio income' for purposes
of the taxation of taxpayers in accordance with limitations under Section 469 of
the Internal Revenue Code on the deductibility of 'passive losses.'
A holder of a REMIC Residual Certificate that purchased the certificate from
a prior holder of that certificate also will be required to report on its
federal income tax return amounts representing its daily portion of the taxable
income or net loss of the REMIC for each day that it holds the REMIC Residual
Certificate. These daily portions generally will equal the amounts of taxable
income or net loss determined as described above. The committee report indicates
that modifications of the general rules may be made, by regulations, legislation
or otherwise, to reduce, or increase, the income or loss of a REMIC residual
certificateholder that purchased the REMIC Residual Certificate from a prior
holder of such certificate at a price greater than, or less than, the adjusted
basis (as defined below) that REMIC Residual Certificate would have had in the
hands of an original holder of that Certificate. The REMIC regulations, however,
do not provide for any such modifications.
Any payments received by a REMIC residual certificateholder in connection
with the acquisition of that REMIC Residual Certificate will be taken into
account in determining the income of the holder for federal income tax purposes.
Although it appears likely that any payment would be includible in income
immediately on its receipt, the IRS might assert that the payment should be
included in income over time according to an amortization schedule or according
to some other method. Because of the uncertainty concerning the treatment of
these payments, holders of REMIC Residual Certificates should consult their tax
advisors concerning the treatment of these payments for income tax purposes.
The amount of income REMIC residual certificateholders will be required to
report, or the tax liability associated with that income, may exceed the amount
of cash distributions received from the REMIC for the corresponding period.
Consequently, REMIC residual certificateholders should have other sources of
funds sufficient to pay any federal income taxes due as a result of their
ownership of REMIC Residual Certificates or unrelated deductions against which
income may be offset, subject to the rules relating to 'excess inclusions' and
'noneconomic' residual interests discussed below. The fact that the tax
liability associated with the income allocated to REMIC residual
certificateholders may exceed the cash distributions received by the REMIC
residual certificateholders for the corresponding period may significantly
adversely affect the REMIC residual certificateholders after-tax rate of return.
Taxable Income of the REMIC
The taxable income of the REMIC will equal the income from the loans and
other assets of the REMIC plus any cancellation of indebtedness income due to
the allocation of Realized Losses to Regular Certificates, less the deductions
allowed to the REMIC for interest, including original issue discount and reduced
by the amortization of any premium received on issuance, on the Regular
Certificates, and any other class of REMIC certificates constituting 'regular
interests' in the REMIC not offered hereby, amortization of any premium on the
loans, bad debt deductions for the loans and, except as described below, for
servicing, administrative and other expenses.
For purposes of determining its taxable income, the REMIC will have an
initial aggregate basis in its assets equal to their fair market value
immediately after their transfer to the REMIC. For this purpose, the master
servicer, the servicer, or REMIC administrator, as applicable, intends to treat
the fair market value of the loans as being equal to the aggregate issue prices
of the Regular Certificates and REMIC Residual Certificates. The aggregate basis
will be allocated among the loans collectively and the other assets of the REMIC
in proportion to their respective fair market values. The issue price of any
REMIC certificates offered hereby will be determined in the manner described
above under ' -- Taxation of Owners of REMIC and FASIT Regular Certificates --
Original Issue Discount.' Accordingly, if one or more classes of REMIC
certificates are retained initially rather than sold, the master servicer, the
servicer, or REMIC administrator, as applicable, may be required to estimate the
fair market value of those interests in order to determine the basis of the
REMIC in the loans and other property held by the REMIC.
Subject to the possible application of the de minimis rules, the method of
accrual by the REMIC of original issue discount income and market discount
income for loans that it holds will be equivalent to the method of accruing
original issue discount income for Regular Certificateholders -- under the
constant yield method taking into account the prepayment assumption. However, a
REMIC that acquires collateral at a market discount must
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include the discount in income currently, as it accrues, on a constant interest
basis. See ' -- Taxation of Owners of REMIC and FASIT Regular Certificates'
above, which describes a method of accruing discount income that is analogous to
that required to be used by a REMIC as to loans with market discount that it
holds.
A loan will be deemed to have been acquired with discount or premium to the
extent that the REMIC's basis therein, determined as described in the preceding
paragraph, is less than or greater than its stated redemption price. Any
discount will be includible in the income of the REMIC as it accrues, in advance
of receipt of the cash attributable to that income, under a method similar to
the method described above for accruing original issue discount on the Regular
Certificates. It is anticipated that each REMIC will elect under Section 171 of
the Internal Revenue Code to amortize any premium on the loans. Premium on any
loan to which the election applies may be amortized under a constant yield
method, presumably taking into account a prepayment assumption.
A REMIC will be allowed deductions for interest, including original issue
discount, on the Regular Certificates, including any other class of REMIC
certificates constituting 'regular interests' in the REMIC not offered hereby,
equal to the deductions that would be allowed if the Regular Certificates,
including any other class of REMIC certificates constituting 'regular interests'
in the REMIC not offered hereby, were indebtedness of the REMIC. Original issue
discount will be considered to accrue for this purpose as described above under
' -- Taxation of Owners of REMIC and FASIT Regular Certificates -- Original
Issue Discount,' except that the de minimis rule and the adjustments for
subsequent holders of Regular Certificates, including any other class of
certificates constituting 'regular interests' in the REMIC not offered hereby,
described therein will not apply.
If a class of Regular Certificates is issued at an Issue Premium, the net
amount of interest deductions that are allowed the REMIC in each taxable year
for the Regular Certificates of that class will be reduced by an amount equal to
the portion of the Issue Premium that is considered to be amortized or repaid in
that year. Although the matter is not entirely certain, it is likely that Issue
Premium would be amortized under a constant yield method in a manner analogous
to the method of accruing original issue discount described above under ' --
Taxation of Owners of REMIC and FASIT Regular Certificates -- Original Issue
Discount.'
As a general rule, the taxable income of the REMIC will be determined in the
same manner as if the REMIC were an individual having the calendar year as its
taxable year and using the accrual method of accounting. However, no item of
income, gain, loss or deduction allocable to a prohibited transaction will be
taken into account. See ' -- Prohibited Transactions and Other Taxes' below.
Further, the limitation on miscellaneous itemized deductions imposed on
individuals by Section 67 of the Internal Revenue Code, which allows those
deductions only to the extent they exceed in the aggregate two percent of the
taxpayer's adjusted gross income, will not be applied at the REMIC level so that
the REMIC will be allowed deductions for servicing, administrative and other
non-interest expenses in determining its taxable income. All of these expenses
will be allocated as a separate item to the holders of REMIC Residual
Certificates, subject to the limitation of Section 67 of the Internal Revenue
Code. See ' -- Possible Pass-Through of Miscellaneous Itemized Deductions.' If
the deductions allowed to the REMIC exceed its gross income for a calendar
quarter, the excess will be the net loss for the REMIC for that calendar
quarter.
Basis Rules, Net Losses and Distributions
The adjusted basis of a REMIC Residual Certificate will be equal to the
amount paid for that REMIC Residual Certificate, increased by amounts included
in the income of the related certificateholder and decreased, but not below
zero, by distributions made, and by net losses allocated, to the related
certificateholder.
A REMIC residual certificateholder is not allowed to take into account any
net loss for any calendar quarter to the extent the net loss exceeds the REMIC
residual certificateholder's adjusted basis in its REMIC Residual Certificate as
of the close of that calendar quarter, determined without regard to the net
loss. Any loss that is not currently deductible by reason of this limitation may
be carried forward indefinitely to future calendar quarters and, in accordance
with the same limitation, may be used only to offset income from the REMIC
Residual Certificate. The ability of REMIC residual certificateholders to deduct
net losses in accordance with additional limitations under the Internal Revenue
Code, as to which the certificateholders should consult their tax advisors.
Any distribution on a REMIC Residual Certificate will be treated as a
non-taxable return of capital to the extent it does not exceed the holder's
adjusted basis in the REMIC Residual Certificate. To the extent a distribution
on a REMIC Residual Certificate exceeds the adjusted basis, it will be treated
as gain from the sale
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of the REMIC Residual Certificate. holders of REMIC Residual Certificates may be
entitled to distributions early in the term of the related REMIC under
circumstances in which their bases in the REMIC Residual Certificates will not
be sufficiently large that distributions will be treated as nontaxable returns
of capital. Their bases in the REMIC Residual Certificates will initially equal
the amount paid for such REMIC Residual Certificates and will be increased by
their allocable shares of taxable income of the trust. However, their basis
increases may not occur until the end of the calendar quarter, or perhaps the
end of the calendar year, for which the REMIC taxable income is allocated to the
REMIC residual certificateholders. To the extent the REMIC residual
certificateholders initial bases are less than the distributions to the REMIC
residual certificateholders, and increases in the initial bases either occur
after distributions or, together with their initial bases, are less than the
amount of the distributions, gain will be recognized to the REMIC residual
certificateholders on those distributions and will be treated as gain from the
sale of their REMIC Residual Certificates.
The effect of these rules is that a certificateholder may not amortize its
basis in a REMIC Residual Certificate, but may only recover its basis through
distributions, through the deduction of its share of any net losses of the REMIC
or on the sale of its REMIC Residual Certificate. See ' -- Sales of REMIC
Certificates.' For a discussion of possible modifications of these rules that
may require adjustments to income of a holder of a REMIC Residual Certificate
other than an original holder in order to reflect any difference between the
cost of the REMIC Residual Certificate to its holder and the adjusted basis the
REMIC Residual Certificate would have had in the hands of the original holder,
see ' -- General.'
Excess Inclusions
Any 'excess inclusions' for a REMIC Residual Certificate will be subject to
federal income tax in all events.
In general, the 'excess inclusions' for a REMIC Residual Certificate for any
calendar quarter will be the excess, if any, of (i) the sum of the daily
portions of REMIC taxable income allocable to the REMIC Residual Certificate
over (ii) the sum of the 'daily accruals' (as defined below) for each day during
that quarter that the REMIC Residual Certificate was held by the REMIC residual
certificateholder. The daily accruals of a REMIC residual certificateholder will
be determined by allocating to each day during a calendar quarter its ratable
portion of the product of the 'adjusted issue price' of the REMIC Residual
Certificate at the beginning of the calendar quarter and 120% of the 'long-term
Federal rate' in effect on the closing date. For this purpose, the adjusted
issue price of a REMIC Residual Certificate as of the beginning of any calendar
quarter will be equal to the issue price of the REMIC Residual Certificate,
increased by the sum of the daily accruals for all prior quarters and decreased,
but not below zero, by any distributions made on the REMIC Residual Certificate
before the beginning of that quarter. The issue price of a REMIC Residual
Certificate is the initial offering price to the public, excluding bond houses,
brokers and underwriters, at which a substantial amount of the REMIC Residual
Certificates were sold. If less than a substantial amount of a particular class
of REMIC Residual Certificates is sold for cash on or prior to the closing date,
the issue price of that class will be treated as the fair market value of that
class on the closing date. The 'long-term Federal rate' is an average of current
yields on Treasury securities with a remaining term of greater than nine years,
computed and published monthly by the IRS.
For REMIC residual certificateholders, an excess inclusion:
will not be permitted to be offset by deductions, losses or loss carryovers
from other activities,
will be treated as 'unrelated business taxable income' to an otherwise
tax-exempt organization and
will not be eligible for any rate reduction or exemption under any
applicable tax treaty for the 30% United States withholding tax imposed on
distributions to REMIC residual certificateholders that are foreign
investors.
See, however, ' -- Foreign Investors in Regular Certificates.'
Furthermore, for purposes of the alternative minimum tax, (i) excess
inclusions will not be permitted to be offset by the alternative tax net
operating loss deduction and (ii) alternative minimum taxable income may not be
less than the taxpayer's excess inclusions; provided, however, that for purposes
of (ii), alternative minimum taxable income is determined without regard to the
special rule that taxable income cannot be less than excess inclusions. The
latter rule has the effect of preventing nonrefundable tax credits from reducing
the taxpayer's income tax to an amount lower than the alternative minimum tax on
excess inclusions.
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In the case of any REMIC Residual Certificates held by a real estate
investment trust, the aggregate excess inclusions allocated to the REMIC
Residual Certificates, reduced, but not below zero, by the real estate
investment trust taxable income, within the meaning of Section 857(b)(2) of the
Internal Revenue Code, excluding any net capital gain, will be allocated among
the shareholders of the trust in proportion to the dividends received by the
shareholders from the trust, and any amount so allocated will be treated as an
excess inclusion from a REMIC Residual Certificate as if held directly by the
shareholder. Treasury regulations yet to be issued could apply a similar rule to
regulated investment companies, common trust funds and some cooperatives; the
REMIC regulations currently do not address this subject.
Noneconomic REMIC Residual Certificates
Under the REMIC regulations, transfers of 'noneconomic' REMIC Residual
Certificates will be disregarded for all federal income tax purposes if 'a
significant purpose of the transfer was to enable the transferor to impede the
assessment or collection of tax.' If the transfer is disregarded, the purported
transferor will continue to remain liable for any taxes due with respect to the
income on the 'noneconomic' REMIC Residual Certificate. The REMIC regulations
provide that a REMIC Residual Certificate is noneconomic unless, based on the
prepayment assumption and on any required or permitted clean up calls, or
required qualified liquidation provided for in the REMIC's organizational
documents, (1) the present value of the expected future distributions
(discounted using the 'applicable Federal rate' for obligations whose term ends
on the close of the last quarter in which excess inclusions are expected to
accrue on the REMIC Residual Certificate, which rate is computed and published
monthly by the IRS) on the REMIC Residual Certificate equals at least the
present value of the expected tax on the anticipated excess inclusions, and (2)
the transferor reasonably expects that the transferee will receive distributions
on the REMIC Residual Certificate at or after the time the taxes accrue on the
anticipated excess inclusions in an amount sufficient to satisfy the accrued
taxes. Accordingly, all transfers of REMIC Residual Certificates that may
constitute noneconomic residual interests will be subject to restrictions under
the terms of the related pooling and servicing agreement or trust agreement that
are intended to reduce the possibility of any transfer being disregarded. The
restrictions will require each party to a transfer to provide an affidavit that
no purpose of the transfer is to impede the assessment or collection of tax,
including representations as to the financial condition of the prospective
transferee, as to which the transferor also is required to make a reasonable
investigation to determine the transferee's historic payment of its debts and
ability to continue to pay its debts as they come due in the future. Prior to
purchasing a REMIC Residual Certificate, prospective purchasers should consider
the possibility that a purported transfer of the REMIC Residual Certificate by
such a purchaser to another purchaser at some future date may be disregarded in
accordance with the above-described rules which would result in the retention of
tax liability by that purchaser.
The accompanying prospectus supplement will disclose whether offered REMIC
Residual Certificates may be considered 'noneconomic' residual interests under
the REMIC regulations. Any disclosure that a REMIC Residual Certificate will not
be considered 'noneconomic' will be based on some assumptions, and the depositor
will make no representation that a REMIC Residual Certificate will not be
considered 'noneconomic' for purposes of the above-described rules. See ' --
Foreign Investors in Regular Certificates' for additional restrictions
applicable to transfers of certain REMIC Residual Certificates to foreign
persons.
Possible Pass-Through of Miscellaneous Itemized Deductions
Fees and expenses of a REMIC generally will be allocated to the holders of
the related REMIC Residual Certificates. The applicable Treasury regulations
indicate, however, that in the case of a REMIC that is similar to a single class
grantor trust, all or a portion of those fees and expenses should be allocated
to the holders of the related Regular Certificates. Unless otherwise stated in
the accompanying prospectus supplement, fees and expenses will be allocated to
holders of the related REMIC Residual Certificates in their entirety and not to
the holders of the related Regular Certificates.
For REMIC Residual Certificates or Regular Certificates the holders of which
receive an allocation of fees and expenses in accordance with the preceding
discussion, if any holder thereof is an individual, estate or trust, or a
Pass-Through Entity beneficially owned by one or more individuals, estates or
trusts, (i) an amount equal to the individual's, estate's or trust's share of
fees and expenses will be added to the gross income of that holder and (ii) the
individual's, estate's or trust's share of fees and expenses will be treated as
a miscellaneous itemized deduction allowable in accordance with the limitation
of Section 67 of the Internal Revenue Code, which
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permits those deductions only to the extent they exceed in the aggregate two
percent of a taxpayer's adjusted gross income. In addition, Section 68 of the
Internal Revenue Code provides that the amount of itemized deductions otherwise
allowable for an individual whose adjusted gross income exceeds a specified
amount will be reduced by the lesser of (i) 3% of the excess of the individual's
adjusted gross income over that amount or (ii) 80% of the amount of itemized
deductions otherwise allowable for the taxable year. The amount of additional
taxable income reportable by REMIC certificateholders that are in accordance
with the limitations of either Section 67 or Section 68 of the Internal Revenue
Code may be substantial. Furthermore, in determining the alternative minimum
taxable income of such a holder of a REMIC Certificate that is an individual,
estate or trust, or a Pass-Through Entity beneficially owned by one or more
individuals, estates or trusts, no deduction will be allowed for such holder's
allocable portion of servicing fees and other miscellaneous itemized deductions
of the REMIC, even though an amount equal to the amount of such fees and other
deductions will be included in the holder's gross income. Accordingly, the REMIC
certificates may not be appropriate investments for individuals, estates, or
trusts, or Pass-Through Entities beneficially owned by one or more individuals,
estates or trusts. Any prospective investors should consult with their tax
advisors prior to making an investment in these certificates.
Tax and Restrictions on Transfers of REMIC Residual Certificates to Certain
Organizations
If a REMIC Residual Certificate is transferred to a Disqualified
Organization, a tax would be imposed in an amount, determined under the REMIC
regulations, equal to: the product of
(1) the present value, discounted using the 'applicable Federal rate' for
obligations whose term ends on the close of the last quarter in which
excess inclusions are expected to accrue on the certificate, which rate
is computed and published monthly by the IRS, of the total anticipated
excess inclusions on the REMIC Residual Certificate for periods after
the transfer; and
(2) the highest marginal federal income tax rate applicable to corporations.
The anticipated excess inclusions must be determined as of the date that the
REMIC Residual Certificate is transferred and must be based on events that have
occurred up to the time of transfer, the prepayment assumption and any required
or permitted clean up calls or required liquidation provided for in the REMIC's
organizational documents. This tax generally would be imposed on the transferor
of the REMIC Residual Certificate, except that where the transfer is through an
agent for a Disqualified Organization, the tax would instead be imposed on that
agent. However, a transferor of a REMIC Residual Certificate would in no event
be liable for the tax on a transfer if the transferee furnishes to the
transferor an affidavit that the transferee is not a Disqualified Organization
and, as of the time of the transfer, the transferor does not have actual
knowledge that the affidavit is false. Moreover, an entity will not qualify as a
REMIC unless there are reasonable arrangements designed to ensure that:
residual interests in the entity are not held by Disqualified
Organizations; and
information necessary for the application of the tax described in this
prospectus will be made available.
Restrictions on the transfer of REMIC Residual Certificates and other
provisions that are intended to meet this requirement will be included in the
pooling and servicing agreement, including provisions:
(1) requiring any transferee of a REMIC Residual Certificate to provide an
affidavit representing that it is not a Disqualified Organization and is
not acquiring the REMIC Residual Certificate on behalf of a Disqualified
Organization, undertaking to maintain that status and agreeing to obtain
a similar affidavit from any person to whom it shall transfer the REMIC
Residual Certificate;
(2) providing that any transfer of a REMIC Residual Certificate to a
Disqualified Organization shall be null and void; and
(3) granting to the master servicer or the servicer the right, without
notice to the holder or any prior holder, to sell to a purchaser of its
choice any REMIC Residual Certificate that shall become owned by a
Disqualified Organization despite (1) and (2) above.
In addition, if a Pass-Through Entity includes in income excess inclusions
on a REMIC Residual Certificate, and a Disqualified Organization is the record
holder of an interest in that entity, then a tax will be imposed on the entity
equal to the product of (i) the amount of excess inclusions on the REMIC
Residual Certificate that are allocable to the interest in the Pass-Through
Entity held by the Disqualified Organization and
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(ii) the highest marginal federal income tax rate imposed on corporations. A
Pass-Through Entity will not be subject to this tax for any period, however, if
each record holder of an interest in the Pass-Through Entity furnishes to that
Pass-Through Entity (i) the holder's social security number and a statement
under penalties of perjury that the social security number is that of the record
holder or (ii) a statement under penalties of perjury that the record holder is
not a Disqualified Organization. For taxable years beginning after December 31,
1997, regardless of the preceding two sentences, in the case of a REMIC Residual
Certificate held by an 'electing large partnership,' all interests in such
partnership shall be treated as held by Disqualified Organizations, without
regard to whether the record holders of the partnership furnish statements
described in the preceding sentence, and the amount that is subject to tax under
the second preceding sentence is excluded from the gross income of the
partnership allocated to the partners, in lieu of allocating to the partners a
deduction for the tax paid by the partners.
Sales of Certificates
If a certificate is sold, the selling certificateholder will recognize gain
or loss equal to the difference between the amount realized on the sale and its
adjusted basis in the Certificate. The adjusted basis of a Regular Certificate
generally will equal the cost of that Regular Certificate to that
certificateholder, increased by income reported by the certificateholder with
respect to that Regular Certificate, including original issue discount and
market discount income, and reduced, but not below zero, by distributions on the
Regular Certificate received by the certificateholder and by any amortized
premium. The adjusted basis of a REMIC Residual Certificate will be determined
as described under ' -- Taxation of Owners of REMIC Residual Certificates --
Basis Rules, Net Losses and Distributions.' Except as described below, any gain
or loss generally will be capital gain or loss.
Gain from the sale of a REMIC Regular Certificate (but not a FASIT regular
interest) that might otherwise be capital gain will be treated as ordinary
income to the extent the gain does not exceed the excess, if any, of (i) the
amount that would have been includible in the seller's income for the Regular
Certificate had income accrued thereon at a rate equal to 110% of the
'applicable federal rate', which is typically a rate based on an average of
current yields on Treasury securities having a maturity comparable to that of
the certificate, which rate is computed and published monthly by the IRS,
determined as of the date of purchase of the Regular Certificate, over (ii) the
amount of ordinary income actually includible in the seller's income prior to
the sale. In addition, gain recognized on the sale of a Regular Certificate by a
seller who purchased the Regular Certificate at a market discount will be
taxable as ordinary income to the extent of any accrued and previously
unrecognized market discount that accrued during the period the certificate was
held. See ' -- Taxation of Owners of REMIC and FASIT Regular Certificates --
Market Discount.'
A portion of any gain from the sale of a Regular Certificate that might
otherwise be capital gain may be treated as ordinary income to the extent that
the certificate is held as part of a 'conversion transaction' within the meaning
of Section 1258 of the Internal Revenue Code. A conversion transaction generally
is one in which the taxpayer has taken two or more positions in certificates or
similar property that reduce or eliminate market risk, if substantially all of
the taxpayer's return is attributable to the time value of the taxpayer's net
investment in the transaction. The amount of gain so realized in a conversion
transaction that is recharacterized as ordinary income generally will not exceed
the amount of interest that would have accrued on the taxpayer's net investment
at 120% of the appropriate 'applicable Federal rate', which rate is computed and
published monthly by the IRS, at the time the taxpayer enters into the
conversion transaction, subject to appropriate reduction for prior inclusion of
interest and other ordinary income items from the transaction.
Finally, a taxpayer may elect to have net capital gain taxed at ordinary
income rates rather than capital gains rates in order to include any net capital
gain in total net investment income for the taxable year, for purposes of the
limitation on the deduction of interest on indebtedness incurred to purchase or
carry property held for investment to a taxpayer's net investment income.
If the seller of a REMIC Residual Certificate reacquires the certificate,
any other residual interest in a REMIC or any similar interest in a 'taxable
mortgage pool' (as defined in Section 7701(i) of the Internal Revenue Code)
within six months of the date of the sale, the sale will be subject to the 'wash
sale' rules of Section 1091 of the Internal Revenue Code. In that event, any
loss realized by the REMIC residual certificateholders on the sale will not be
deductible, but instead will be added to the REMIC residual certificateholders
adjusted basis in the newly-acquired asset.
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Prohibited Transactions and Other Taxes
The Internal Revenue Code imposes a prohibited transactions tax, which is a
tax on REMICs equal to 100% of the net income derived from prohibited
transactions. In general, subject to specified exceptions a prohibited
transaction means the disposition of a loan, the receipt of income from a source
other than any loan or other Permitted Investments, the receipt of compensation
for services, or gain from the disposition of an asset purchased with the
payments on the loans for temporary investment pending distribution on the REMIC
certificates. It is not anticipated that any REMIC will engage in any prohibited
transactions in which it would recognize a material amount of net income. In
addition, some contributions to a REMIC made after the day on which the REMIC
issues all of its interests could result in the imposition of a contributions
tax, which is a tax on the REMIC equal to 100% of the value of the contributed
property. Each pooling and servicing agreement or trust agreement will include
provisions designed to prevent the acceptance of any contributions that would be
subject to the tax.
REMICs also are subject to federal income tax at the highest corporate rate
on 'net income from foreclosure property,' determined by reference to the rules
applicable to real estate investment trusts. 'Net income from foreclosure
property' generally means gain from the sale of a foreclosure property that is
inventory property and gross income from foreclosure property other than
qualifying rents and other qualifying income for a real estate investment trust.
Unless otherwise disclosed in the accompanying prospectus supplement, it is not
anticipated that any REMIC will recognize 'net income from foreclosure property'
subject to federal income tax.
Unless otherwise disclosed in the accompanying prospectus supplement, it is
not anticipated that any material state or local income or franchise tax will be
imposed on any REMIC.
Unless otherwise stated in the accompanying prospectus supplement, and to
the extent permitted by then applicable laws, any prohibited transactions tax,
contributions tax, tax on 'net income from foreclosure property' or state or
local income or franchise tax that may be imposed on the REMIC will be borne by
the related master servicer, the servicer, the REMIC administrator or the
trustee in either case out of its own funds, provided that the master servicer,
the servicer, the REMIC administrator or the trustee, as the case may be, has
sufficient assets to do so, and provided further that the tax arises out of a
breach of the master servicer's, the servicer's, the REMIC administrator's or
the trustee's obligations, as the case may be, under the related pooling and
servicing agreement or trust agreement and relating to compliance with
applicable laws and regulations. Any tax not borne by the master servicer, the
servicer or the trustee will be payable out of the related trust resulting in a
reduction in amounts payable to holders of the related REMIC certificates.
In the case of a FASIT, the holder of the ownership interest and not the
FASIT itself will be subject to any prohibited transaction taxes.
Termination
A REMIC will terminate immediately after the distribution date following
receipt by the REMIC of the final payment from the loans or on a sale of the
REMIC's assets following the adoption by the REMIC of a plan of complete
liquidation. The last distribution on a Regular Certificate will be treated as a
payment in retirement of a debt instrument. In the case of a REMIC Residual
Certificate, if the last distribution on the REMIC Residual Certificate is less
than the certificateholder's adjusted basis in the certificate, the
certificateholder should be treated as realizing a loss equal to the amount of
the difference, and the loss may be treated as a capital loss.
Reporting and Other Administrative Matters
Solely for purposes of the administrative provisions of the Internal Revenue
Code, a REMIC will be treated as a partnership and REMIC residual
certificateholders will be treated as partners. Unless otherwise stated in the
accompanying prospectus supplement, the master servicer, the servicer, or the
REMIC administrator, as applicable, will file REMIC federal income tax returns
on behalf of the related REMIC and will act as the 'tax matters person' for the
REMIC in all respects, and may hold a nominal amount of REMIC Residual
Certificates.
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As the tax matters person, the master servicer, the servicer, or the REMIC
administrator, as applicable, will have the authority to act on behalf of the
REMIC and the REMIC residual certificateholders in connection with the
administrative and judicial review of items of income, deduction, gain or loss
of the REMIC, as well as the REMIC's classification. REMIC residual
certificateholders will be required to report the REMIC items consistently with
their treatment on the related REMIC's tax return and may in some circumstances
be bound by a settlement agreement between the master servicer, the servicer, or
the REMIC administrator, as applicable, as tax matters person, and the IRS
concerning any REMIC item.
Adjustments made to the REMIC tax return may require a REMIC residual
certificateholders to make corresponding adjustments on its return, and an audit
of the REMIC's tax return, or the adjustments resulting from an audit, could
result in an audit of the certificateholder's return. No REMIC will be
registered as a tax shelter under Section 6111 of the Internal Revenue Code
because it is not anticipated that any REMIC will have a net loss for any of the
first five taxable years of its existence. Any person that holds a REMIC
Residual Certificate as a nominee for another person may be required to furnish
to the related REMIC, in a manner to be provided in Treasury regulations, the
name and address of that person and other information.
Reporting of interest income, including any original issue discount, on
Regular Certificates is required annually, and may be required more frequently
under Treasury regulations. These information reports are required to be sent to
individual holders of regular Interests and the IRS; holders of Regular
Certificates that are corporations, trusts, securities dealers and other
non-individuals will be provided interest and original issue discount income
information and the information in the following paragraph on request in
accordance with the requirements of the applicable regulations. The information
must be provided by the later of 30 days after the end of the quarter for which
the information was requested, or two weeks after the receipt of the request.
The REMIC must also comply with rules requiring a Regular Certificate issued
with original issue discount to disclose on its face information including the
amount of original issue discount and the issue date, and requiring such
information to be reported to the IRS. Reporting for the REMIC Residual
Certificates, including income, excess inclusions, investment expenses and
relevant information regarding qualification of the REMIC's assets will be made
as required under the Treasury regulations, typically on a quarterly basis.
As applicable, the Regular Certificate information reports will include a
statement of the adjusted issue price of the Regular Certificate at the
beginning of each accrual period. In addition, the reports will include
information required by regulations for computing the accrual of any market
discount. Because exact computation of the accrual of market discount on a
constant yield method requires information relating to the holder's purchase
price that the master servicer or the servicer will not have, the regulations
only require that information pertaining to the appropriate proportionate method
of accruing market discount be provided. See ' -- Taxation of Owners of REMIC
and FASIT Regular Certificates -- Market Discount.'
The responsibility for complying with the foregoing reporting rules will be
borne by the master servicer or the servicer. Certificateholders may request any
information with respect to the returns described in Section 1.6049-7(e)(2) of
the Treasury regulations. Any request should be directed to the master servicer
or the servicer at Residential Funding Corporation, 8400 Normandale Lake
Boulevard, Suite 600, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55437.
BACKUP WITHHOLDING WITH RESPECT TO SECURITIES
Payments of interest and principal, as well as payments of proceeds from the
sale of securities, may be subject to the 'backup withholding tax' under Section
3406 of the Internal Revenue Code at a rate of 31% if recipients of payments
fail to furnish to the payor certain information, including their taxpayer
identification numbers, or otherwise fail to establish an exemption from the
tax. Any amounts deducted and withheld from a distribution to a recipient would
be allowed as a credit against the recipient's federal income tax. Furthermore,
penalties may be imposed by the IRS on a recipient of payments that is required
to supply information but that does not do so in the proper manner.
FOREIGN INVESTORS IN REGULAR CERTIFICATES
A regular certificateholder (other than a holder of a FASIT high-yield
regular interest) that is not a United States person and is not subject to
federal income tax as a result of any direct or indirect connection to the
United States in addition to its ownership of a Regular Certificate will not be
subject to United States federal
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income or withholding tax on a distribution on a Regular Certificate, provided
that the holder complies to the extent necessary with certain identification
requirements, including delivery of a statement, signed by the certificateholder
under penalties of perjury, certifying that the certificateholder is not a
United States person and providing the name and address of the
certificateholder. For these purposes, United States person means a citizen or
resident of the United States, a corporation, partnership or other entity
created or organized in, or under the laws of, the United States, any state
thereof or the District of Columbia, except, in the case of a partnership, to
the extent provided in regulations, or an estate whose income is subject to
United States federal income tax regardless of its source, or a trust if a court
within the United States is able to exercise primary supervision over the
administration of the trust and one or more United States persons have the
authority to control all substantial decisions of the trust. To the extent
prescribed in regulations by the Secretary of the Treasury, which regulations
have not yet been issued, a trust which was in existence on August 20, 1996
(other than a trust treated as owned by the grantor under subpart E of part I of
subchapter J of chapter 1 of the Internal Revenue Code), and which was treated
as a United States person on August 19, 1996, may elect to continue to be
treated as a United States person regardless of the previous sentence. It is
possible that the IRS may assert that the foregoing tax exemption should not
apply to a REMIC Regular Certificate held by a REMIC residual certificateholder
that owns directly or indirectly a 10% or greater interest in the REMIC Residual
Certificates or a FASIT Regular Certificate held by a person that owns directly
or indirectly a 10% or greater interest in the holder of the ownership interest
in the FASIT. If the holder does not qualify for exemption, distributions of
interest, including distributions of accrued original issue discount, to the
holder may be subject to a tax rate of 30%, subject to reduction under any
applicable tax treaty.
In addition, the foregoing rules will not apply to exempt a United States
shareholder of a controlled foreign corporation from taxation on the United
States shareholder's allocable portion of the interest income received by the
controlled foreign corporation.
Further, it appears that a Regular Certificate would not be included in the
estate of a non-resident alien individual and would not be subject to United
States estate taxes. However, certificateholders who are non-resident alien
individuals should consult their tax advisors concerning this question.
Unless otherwise stated in the accompanying prospectus supplement, transfers
of REMIC Residual Certificates and FASIT high-yield regular interests to
investors that are not United States persons will be prohibited under the
related pooling and servicing agreement or trust agreement.
New Withholding Regulations
The Treasury Department has issued new regulations which make some
modifications to the withholding, backup withholding and information reporting
rules described above. The new regulations attempt to unify certification
requirements and modify reliance standards. The new regulations will be
effective for most payments made after December 31, 2000. The new regulations
contain transaction rules applicable to some payments made after December 31,
2000. Prospective investors are urged to consult their tax advisors regarding
the New Regulations.
STATE AND OTHER TAX CONSEQUENCES
In addition to the federal income tax consequences described in 'Material
Federal Income Tax Consequences,' potential investors should consider the state
and local tax consequences of the acquisition, ownership, and disposition of the
certificates offered hereunder. State tax law may differ substantially from the
corresponding federal tax law, and the discussion above does not purport to
describe any aspect of the tax laws of any state or other jurisdiction.
Therefore, prospective investors should consult their tax advisors with respect
to the various tax consequences of investments in the certificates offered
hereby.
ERISA CONSIDERATIONS
Sections 404 and 406 of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974,
or ERISA, impose fiduciary and prohibited transaction restrictions on employee
pension and welfare benefit plans and certain other retirement plans and
arrangements, including individual retirement accounts and annuities and Keogh
plans, subject to ERISA, or Plans, and on bank collective investment funds and
insurance company general and
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separate accounts in which those Plans are invested. Section 4975 of the
Internal Revenue Code imposes essentially the same prohibited transaction
restrictions on Tax-Favored Plans.
Some employee benefit plans, including governmental plans (as defined in
Section 3(32) of ERISA) and, if no election has been made under Section 410(d)
of the Internal Revenue Code, church plans (as defined in Section 3(33) of
ERISA), are not subject to the ERISA requirements discussed in this prospectus.
Accordingly, assets of these plans may be invested in securities without regard
to the ERISA considerations described below, subject to the provisions of
applicable federal and state law. Any plan that is a tax-qualified plan and
exempt from taxation under Sections 401(a) and 501(a) of the Internal Revenue
Code, however, is subject to the prohibited transaction rules in Section 503 of
the Internal Revenue Code.
In addition to ERISA rules imposing general fiduciary requirements,
including those of investment prudence and diversification and the requirement
that a Plan's investment be made in accordance with the documents governing the
Plan, Section 406 of ERISA and Section 4975 of the Internal Revenue Code
prohibit a broad range of transactions involving 'plan assets' of Plans and
Tax-Favored Plans, or ERISA plans, and Parties in Interest, unless a statutory
or administrative exemption is available. Certain Parties in Interest that
participate in a prohibited transaction may be subject to a penalty (or an
excise tax) imposed under Section 502(i) of ERISA or Section 4975 of the
Internal Revenue Code, unless a statutory or administrative exemption is
available for any transaction of this sort.
ERISA PLAN ASSET REGULATIONS
An investment of ERISA plan assets in securities may cause the underlying
loans, private securities or any other assets held in a trust to be deemed 'plan
assets' of the Plan. The U.S. Department of Labor, or DOL, has promulgated
regulations at 29 C.F.R. Section 2510.3-101, or the DOL Regulations, concerning
whether or not an ERISA plan's assets would be deemed to include an interest in
the underlying assets of an entity, including a trust, for purposes of applying
the general fiduciary responsibility provisions of ERISA and the prohibited
transaction provisions of ERISA and Section 4975 of the Internal Revenue Code,
when ERISA plan assets are used to acquire an 'equity interest,' such as a
certificate, in that entity. Exceptions contained in the DOL Regulations provide
that an ERISA plan's assets will not include an undivided interest in each asset
of an entity in which it makes an equity investment if:
(i) the entity is an operating company;
(ii)the equity investment made by the ERISA plan is either a
'publicly-offered security' that is 'widely held,' both as defined in
the DOL Regulations, or a security issued by an investment company
registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended; or
(iii) Benefit Plan Investors do not own 25% or more in value of any class of
equity interests issued by the entity.
For this purpose, the term 'Benefit Plan Investors' include ERISA plans, as well
as any 'employee benefit plan,' as defined in Section 3(3) or ERISA, which is
not subject to Title I of ERISA, such as governmental plans, as defined in
Section 3(32) of ERISA, church plans, as defined in Section 3(33) of ERISA,
which have not made an election under Section 410(d) of the Internal Revenue
Code, foreign plans and any entity whose underlying assets include ERISA plan
assets by reason of an ERISA plan's investment in the entity. The DOL
Regulations provide that the term 'equity interest' means any interest in an
entity other than an instrument which is treated as indebtedness under
applicable local law and which has no 'substantial equity features.'
Because of the factual nature of some of the rules in the DOL Regulations,
ERISA plan assets may be deemed to include either an interest in the assets of
an entity, including a trust, or merely an ERISA plan's interest in the
instrument evidencing such equity interest, such as a certificate. Therefore,
neither ERISA plans nor entities deemed to hold ERISA plan assets should acquire
or hold securities, in reliance on the availability of any exception under the
DOL Regulations, either (i) certificates or (ii) notes which may be deemed (if
so stated) in the accompanying prospectus supplement to have 'substantial equity
features.' For purposes of this section, the term 'ERISA plan assets' or 'assets
of an ERISA plan' has the meaning specified in the DOL Regulations and includes
an undivided interest in the underlying assets of some entities in which a ERISA
plan invests.
The prohibited transaction provisions of Section 406 of ERISA and Section
4975 of the Internal Revenue Code may apply to a trust and cause the depositor,
the master servicer, any Administrator, any servicer, any
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subservicer, any trustee, the obligor under any credit enhancement mechanism or
some affiliates of those entities to be considered or become Parties in Interest
for an investing ERISA plan or of an ERISA plan holding an interest in an
ERISA-subject investment entity. If so, the acquisition or holding of securities
by or on behalf of the investing ERISA plan could also give rise to a prohibited
transaction under ERISA and/or Section 4975 of the Internal Revenue Code, unless
some statutory or administrative exemption is available. Securities acquired by
an ERISA plan would be assets of that plan. Under the DOL Regulations, a trust,
including the mortgage loans, private securities or any other assets held in the
trust, may also be deemed to be assets of each ERISA plan that acquires
certificates or notes deemed to have 'substantial equity features.' Special
caution should be exercised before ERISA plan assets are used to acquire a
security in those circumstances, especially if, for the ERISA plan assets, the
depositor, the master servicer, any Administrator, any servicer, any
subservicer, any trustee, the obligor under any credit enhancement mechanism or
an affiliate thereof either (i) has investment discretion for the investment of
the ERISA plan assets; or (ii) has authority or responsibility to give, or
regularly gives, investment advice for ERISA plan assets for a fee under an
agreement or understanding that any advice will serve as a primary basis for
investment decisions for the ERISA plan assets.
Any person who has discretionary authority or control respecting the
management or disposition of ERISA plan assets, and any person who provides
investment advice for the ERISA plan assets for a fee (in the manner described
above), is a fiduciary of the investing ERISA plan. If the mortgage loans,
private securities or any other assets held in a trust were to constitute ERISA
plan assets, then any party exercising management or discretionary control for
those ERISA plan assets may be deemed to be a 'fiduciary,' and thus subject to
the fiduciary requirements of ERISA and the prohibited transaction provisions of
ERISA and Section 4975 of the Internal Revenue Code, for any investing ERISA
plan. In addition, if the mortgage loans, private securities or any other assets
held in a trust were to constitute ERISA plan assets, then the acquisition or
holding of securities by, on behalf of a ERISA plan assets or with ERISA plan
assets, as well as the operation of the trust, may constitute or result in a
prohibited transaction under ERISA and the Internal Revenue Code.
PROHIBITED TRANSACTION EXEMPTIONS
Certificates. The DOL has issued an individual exemption, prohibited
transaction exemption, or PTE, 94-29, 59 Fed. Reg. 14674 (March 29, 1994), as
amended by PTE 97-34, 62 Fed. Reg. 39021 (July 21, 1997), to Residential Funding
Corporation and certain of its affiliates, the RFC exemption, which generally
exempts, from the application of the prohibited transaction provisions of
Section 406 of ERISA and Section 4975 of the Internal Revenue Code, various
transactions, among others, relating to the servicing and operation of pools of
secured obligations of some types, including mortgage loans and private
securities, which are held in a trust and the purchase, sale and holding of
pass-through certificates issued by that trust as to which
(i) the depositor or any of its affiliates is the sponsor if any entity
which has received from the DOL an individual prohibited transaction
exemption which is similar to the RFC exemption is the sole
underwriter, a manager or co-manager of the underwriting syndicate or a
seller or placement agent, or
(ii) the depositor or an affiliate is the underwriter or placement agent,
provided that the conditions of the exemption are satisfied.
For purposes of this section, the term underwriter includes
(a) the depositor and certain of its affiliates,
(b) any person directly or indirectly, through one or more intermediaries,
controlling, controlled by or under common control with the depositor
and certain of its affiliates,
(c) any member of the underwriting syndicate or selling group of which a
person described in (a) or (b) is a manager or co-manager for a class
of certificates, or
(d) any entity which has received an exemption from the DOL relating to
certificates which is substantially similar to the RFC exemption.
The RFC exemption sets forth six general conditions which must be satisfied
for a transaction involving the purchase, sale and holding of certificates to be
eligible for exemptive relief under the exemption.
First, the acquisition of certificates by an ERISA plan or with ERISA plan
assets must be on terms that are at least as favorable to the ERISA plan as
they would be in an arm's-length transaction with an unrelated party.
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Second, the RFC exemption only applies to certificates evidencing rights
and interests that are not subordinated to the rights and interests
evidenced by the other certificates of the same trust.
Third, at the time of acquisition by an ERISA plan or with ERISA plan
assets, the certificates must be rated in one of the three highest generic
rating categories by Standard & Poor's, a division of McGraw Hill
Companies, Inc., Moody's Investors Service, Inc., Duff & Phelps Credit
Rating Co. or Fitch IBCA, Inc., called the exemption rating agencies.
Fourth, the trustee cannot be an affiliate of any other member of the
restricted group which consists of any underwriter, the depositor, the
master servicer, the REMIC administrator, any servicer, any subservicer,
any trustee and any borrower for assets of a trust constituting more than
5% of the aggregate unamortized principal balance of the assets in the
related trust as of the date of initial issuance of the certificates.
Fifth, the sum of all payments made to and retained by the underwriters
must represent not more than reasonable compensation for underwriting the
certificates; the sum of all payments made to and retained by the depositor
under the assignment of the assets to the related trust must represent not
more than the fair market value of those obligations; and the sum of all
payments made to and retained by the master servicer, the REMIC
administrator, any servicer and any subservicer must represent not more
than reasonable compensation for that person's services under the related
pooling and servicing agreement or trust agreement and reimbursement of
that person's reasonable expenses in connection therewith.
Sixth, the RFC exemption states that the investing ERISA plan or ERISA plan
assets investor must be an accredited investor as defined in Rule 501(a)(1)
of Regulation D of the Securities and Exchange Commission under the
Securities Act of 1933, as amended.
In addition, except as otherwise specified in the accompanying prospectus
supplement, the exemptive relief afforded by the RFC exemption may not apply to
any certificates where the related trust contains a swap or Mexico Loans.
The RFC exemption also requires that each trust meet the following
requirements:
the trust must consist solely of assets of the type that have been included
in other investment pools;
certificates evidencing interests in those other investment pools must have
been rated in one of the three highest categories of one of the exemption
rating agencies for at least one year prior to the acquisition of
certificates by or on behalf of an ERISA plan or with ERISA plan assets in
reliance on the RFC exemption; and
certificates in the other investment pools must have been purchased by
investors other than ERISA plans for at least one year prior to any
acquisition of certificates by or on behalf of an ERISA plan or with ERISA
plan assets in reliance on the RFC exemption.
A fiduciary of or other investor of ERISA plan assets contemplating
purchasing a certificate must make its own determination that the general
conditions described above will be satisfied for that certificate.
If the general conditions of the RFC exemption are satisfied, the RFC
exemption may provide an exemption, from the application of the prohibited
transaction provisions of Sections 406(a) and 407(a) of ERISA and Sections
4975(c)(1)(A) through (D) of the Internal Revenue Code, in connection with the
direct or indirect sale, exchange, transfer, holding or the direct or indirect
acquisition or disposition in the secondary market of certificates by or with
ERISA plan assets. However, no exemption is provided from the restrictions of
Sections 406(a)(1)(E) and 406(a)(2) of ERISA for the acquisition or holding of a
certificate by or with ERISA plan assets of an excluded plan by any person who
has discretionary authority or renders investment advice for ERISA plan assets
of the excluded plan. For purposes of the certificates, an excluded plan is a
ERISA plan sponsored by any member of the restricted group. If specific
conditions of the RFC exemption are also satisfied, the RFC exemption may
provide an exemption, from the application of the prohibited transaction
provisions of Sections 406(b)(1) and (b)(2) of ERISA and Section 4975(c)(1)(E)
of the Internal Revenue Code, in connection with the following:
(1) the direct or indirect sale, exchange or transfer of certificates in the
initial issuance of certificates between the depositor or an underwriter
and an ERISA plan when the person who has discretionary authority or
renders investment advice for the investment of the relevant ERISA plan
assets in the certificates is:
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(a) a borrower with respect to 5% or less of the fair market value of
the assets of a trust; or
(b) an affiliate of such a person,
provided that, if the certificates are acquired in connection with their
initial issuance, the quantitative restrictions described in the RFC
exemption are met.
(2) the direct or indirect acquisition or disposition in the secondary
market of certificates by an ERISA plan or with ERISA plan assets; and
(3) the holding of certificates by an ERISA plan or with ERISA plan assets.
Additionally, if specific conditions of the RFC exemption are satisfied, the
RFC exemption may provide an exemption, from the application of the prohibited
transaction provisions of Sections 406(a), 406(b) and 407(a) of ERISA and
Section 4975 of the Internal Revenue Code, for transactions in connection with
the servicing, management and operation of the pools. The depositor expects that
the specific conditions of the RFC exemption required for this purpose will be
satisfied for the certificates so that the RFC exemption would provide an
exemption, from the application of the prohibited transaction provisions of
Sections 406(a) and (b) of ERISA and Section 4975 of the Internal Revenue Code,
for transactions in connection with the servicing, management and operation of
the pools, provided that the general conditions of the RFC exemption are
satisfied.
The RFC exemption also may provide an exemption from, the application of the
prohibited transaction provisions of Sections 406(a) and 407(a) of ERISA and
Sections 4975(c)(1)(A) through (D) of the Internal Revenue Code, if those
restrictions are deemed to otherwise apply merely because a person is deemed to
be a Party in Interest for an investing ERISA plan, or an ERISA plan holding
interests in an ERISA-subject investment entity, by virtue of providing services
to the ERISA plan or the investment entity, or by virtue of having specified
relationships to such a person, solely as a result of the ERISA plan's ownership
of certificates.
Before purchasing a certificate, a fiduciary or other investor of ERISA plan
assets should itself confirm that (a) the certificates constitute 'certificates'
for purposes of the RFC exemption and (b) the specific and general conditions
described in the RFC exemption and the other requirements in the RFC exemption
would be satisfied. In addition to making its own determination as to the
availability of the exemptive relief provided in the RFC exemption, the
fiduciary or other ERISA plan assets investor should consider its general
fiduciary obligations under ERISA in determining whether to purchase any
securities with ERISA plan assets.
Any fiduciary or other ERISA plan assets investor that proposes to purchase
certificates on behalf of an ERISA plan or with ERISA plan assets should consult
with its counsel for the potential applicability of ERISA and the Internal
Revenue Code to that investment and the availability of the RFC exemption or any
other DOL prohibited transaction class exemption, or PTCE, in connection
therewith. In particular, in connection with a contemplated purchase of
certificates representing a beneficial ownership interest in a pool of
single-family residential first or second mortgage loans or Agency Securities,
the fiduciary or other ERISA plan assets investor should consider the
availability of the RFC exemption or PTCE 83-1 for some transactions involving
mortgage pool investment trusts. However, PTCE 83-1 does not provide exemptive
relief for certificates evidencing interests in trusts which include loans
secured by third or more junior liens or Cooperative Loans or some types of
private securities, or which contain a swap or Mexico Loans. In addition, the
fiduciary or other ERISA plan assets investor should consider the availability
of other class exemptions granted by the DOL, which provide relief from certain
of the prohibited transaction provisions of ERISA and the related excise tax
provisions of Section 4975 of the Internal Revenue Code, including Sections I
and III of PTCE 95-60, regarding transactions by insurance company general
accounts. The accompanying prospectus supplement may contain additional
information regarding the application of the RFC exemption, PTCE 83-1, PTCE
95-60 or other DOL class exemptions for the certificates offered thereby. There
can be no assurance that any of these exemptions will apply for any particular
ERISA plan's or other ERISA plan assets investor's investment in the
certificates or, even if an exemption were deemed to apply, that any exemption
would apply to all prohibited transactions that may occur in connection with
this form of investment.
Notes. With respect to the purchase and holding of notes, an ERISA plan
fiduciary or other ERISA plan assets investor should consider the availability
of some class exemptions granted by the DOL, which provide relief from some of
the prohibited transaction provisions of ERISA and the related excise tax
provisions of the Internal Revenue Code, including PTCE 96-23, regarding
transactions effected by an 'in-house asset manager'; PTCE 95-60, regarding
transactions by insurance company general accounts; PTCE 91-38, regarding
investments by bank collective investment funds; PTCE 90-1, regarding
transactions by insurance company
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pooled separate accounts; and PTCE 84-14, regarding transactions effected by a
'qualified professional asset manager.' The accompanying prospectus supplement
may contain additional information regarding the application of these class
exemptions for the notes offered by this prospectus.
INSURANCE COMPANY GENERAL ACCOUNTS
In addition to any exemptive relief that may be available under PTCE 95-60
for the purchase and holding of the certificates by an insurance company general
account, the Small Business Job Protection Act of 1996 added a new Section
401(c) to ERISA, which provides exemptive relief from the provisions of Part 4
of Title I of ERISA and Section 4975 of the Internal Revenue Code, including the
prohibited transaction restrictions imposed by ERISA and the related excise
taxes imposed by Section 4975 of the Internal Revenue Code, for transactions
involving an insurance company general account.
The 401(c) Regulations, which were issued in final form on January 4, 2000
and generally become applicable on July 5, 2001, provide guidance for the
purpose of determining, in cases where insurance policies or annuity contracts
supported by an insurer's general account are issued to or for the benefit of a
ERISA plan on or before December 31, 1998, which general account assets
constitute ERISA plan assets. Section 401(c) of ERISA generally provides that,
until July 5, 2001, no person shall be subject to liability under Part 4 of
Title I of ERISA or Section 4975 of the Internal Revenue Code on the basis of a
claim that the assets of an insurance company general account constitute ERISA
plan assets, unless (i) as otherwise provided by the Secretary of Labor in the
401(c) Regulations to prevent avoidance of the regulations or (ii) an action is
brought by the Secretary of Labor for certain breaches of fiduciary duty which
would also constitute a violation of federal or state criminal law. Any assets
of an insurance company general account that support insurance policies or
annuity contracts issued to a ERISA plan after December 31, 1998 or issued to
ERISA plans on or before December 31, 1998 for which the insurance company does
not comply with the 401(c) Regulations may be treated as ERISA plan assets. In
addition, because Section 401(c) does not relate to insurance company separate
accounts, separate account assets are still treated as ERISA plan assets of any
ERISA plan invested in a separate account. Insurance companies contemplating the
investment of general account assets in the certificates should consult with
their legal counsel with respect to the applicability of Sections I and III of
PTCE 95-60 and Section 401(c) of ERISA, including the general account's ability
to continue to hold the certificates after July 5, 2001.
REPRESENTATIONS FROM INVESTING PLANS
Certificates. It is not clear whether certificates backed by revolving
credit loans, unsecured loans or loans with LTVs in excess of 100% would
constitute 'certificates' for purposes of the RFC exemption. In promulgating the
RFC exemption, the DOL did not have under consideration interests in pools of
the exact nature described in this paragraph and accordingly, unless otherwise
provided in the accompanying prospectus supplement, certificates backed by loans
mentioned in this paragraph should not be purchased by or on behalf of an ERISA
plan or with ERISA plan assets based solely on the RFC exemption. In addition,
the exemptive relief afforded by the RFC exemption will not apply to the
purchase, sale or holding of any class of subordinate certificates and may not
apply, unless certain additional conditions set forth in the accompanying
prospectus supplement are satisfied, to any certificates where the related trust
contains a Funding Account during the period in which additional mortgage loans
are permitted to be transferred to the trust.
The exemptive relief afforded by the exemption will not apply to the
purchase, sale or holding of any class of subordinate certificates or REMIC
Residual Certificates. If certificates are backed by loans mentioned in the
paragraph next above or are subordinate certificates, or if the related trust
contains a swap or Mexico Loan, except as otherwise specified in the
accompanying prospectus supplement, transfers of those certificates to an ERISA
plan, to a trustee or other person acting on behalf of any ERISA plan, or to any
other person using ERISA plan assets to effect the acquisition, will not be
registered by the trustee unless the transferee provides the depositor, the
trustee and the master servicer with an opinion of counsel satisfactory to the
depositor, the trustee and the master servicer which opinion will not be at the
expense of the depositor, the trustee or the master servicer that the purchase
of the certificates by or on behalf of the ERISA plan or with ERISA plan assets
is permissible under applicable law, will not constitute or result in any
non-exempt prohibited transaction under ERISA or Section 4975 of the Internal
Revenue Code, and will not subject the depositor, the trustee or the master
servicer to any obligation in addition to those undertaken in the pooling and
servicing agreement.
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In lieu of an opinion of counsel, except as otherwise specified in the
accompanying prospectus supplement, the transferee may provide a certification
of facts substantially to the effect that the purchase of the certificates by or
on behalf of the ERISA plan or with ERISA plan assets is permissible under
applicable law, will not constitute or result in a non-exempt prohibited
transaction under ERISA or Section 4975 of the Internal Revenue Code, will not
subject the depositor, the trustee or the master servicer to any obligation in
addition to those undertaken in the pooling and servicing agreement, and the
following conditions are met: (a) the source of funds used to purchase the
certificates is an 'insurance company general account' (as that term is defined
in PTCE 95-60), and (b) the conditions in Sections I and III of PTCE 95-60 have
been satisfied as of the date of the acquisition of the certificates.
Notes. If the accompanying prospectus supplement states that any of the
notes being issued have 'substantial equity features' within the meaning of the
DOL Regulations, transfers of the notes to an ERISA plan, to a trustee or other
person acting on behalf of any ERISA plan, or to any other person using the
assets of any ERISA plan to effect the acquisition will not be registered by the
indenture trustee unless the transferee provides the depositor, the indenture
trustee and the master servicer or the servicer with an opinion of counsel
satisfactory to the depositor, the indenture trustee and the master servicer or
the servicer, which opinion will not be at the expense of the depositor, the
indenture trustee or the master or the servicer, that the purchase of the notes
by or on behalf of the ERISA plan is permissible under applicable law, will not
constitute or result in any non-exempt prohibited transaction under ERISA or
Section 4975 of the Internal Revenue Code and will not subject the depositor,
the indenture trustee or the master servicer or the servicer to any obligation
in addition to those undertaken in the trust agreement. In lieu of the opinion
of counsel, the transferee may provide a certification of facts substantially to
the effect that (i) the purchase of notes by or on behalf of the ERISA plan is
permissible under applicable law, will not constitute or result in any
non-exempt prohibited transaction under ERISA or Section 4975 of the Internal
Revenue Code and will not subject the depositor, the indenture trustee or the
master servicer or the servicer to any obligation in addition to those
undertaken in the trust agreement, and (ii) the following statements are
correct: (a) the transferee is an insurance company, (b) the source of funds
used to purchase the notes is an 'insurance company general account,' as the
term is defined in PTCE 95-60, and (c) the conditions described in Section I and
Section III of PTCE 95-60 have been satisfied as of the date of the acquisition
of the notes.
TAX-EXEMPT INVESTORS
A Tax-Exempt Investor nonetheless will be subject to federal income taxation
to the extent that its income is 'unrelated business taxable income,' or UBTI,
within the meaning of Section 512 of the Internal Revenue Code. All 'excess
inclusions' of a REMIC allocated to a REMIC Residual Certificate held by a
Tax-Exempt Investor will be considered UBTI and thus will be subject to federal
income tax. See 'Material Federal Income Tax Consequences -- Taxation of Owners
of REMIC Residual Certificates -- Excess Inclusions.'
CONSULTATION WITH COUNSEL
There can be no assurance that the RFC exemption or any other DOL exemption
will apply for any particular ERISA plan that acquires the certificates or, even
if all of the conditions specified therein were satisfied, that the exemption
would apply to all transactions involving a trust. Prospective ERISA plan
investors should consult with their legal counsel concerning the impact of ERISA
and the Internal Revenue Code and the potential consequences to their specific
circumstances prior to making an investment in the certificates.
Before purchasing a security in reliance on any exemption, a fiduciary of an
ERISA plan should itself confirm that all of the specific and general conditions
described in the exemption would be satisfied. In addition to making its own
determination as to the availability of the exemptive relief provided in the
exemption, an ERISA plan fiduciary should consider its general fiduciary
obligations under ERISA in determining whether to purchase a security on behalf
of an ERISA plan.
Any fiduciary or other investor of ERISA plan assets that proposes to
acquire or hold certificates on behalf of an ERISA plan or with ERISA plan
assets should consult with its counsel for the potential applicability of the
fiduciary responsibility provisions of ERISA and the prohibited transaction
provisions of ERISA and Section 4975 of the Internal Revenue Code to the
proposed investment and the exemption and the availability of exemptive relief
under PTCE 83-1, Sections I and III of PTCE 95-60 or any other DOL class
exemption.
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LEGAL INVESTMENT MATTERS
Each class of securities offered hereby and by the accompanying prospectus
supplement will be rated at the date of issuance in one of the four highest
rating categories by at least one rating agency. If stated in the accompanying
prospectus supplement, classes that are, and continue to be, rated in one of the
two highest rating categories by at least one nationally recognized statistical
rating organization will constitute 'mortgage related securities' for purposes
of the Secondary Mortgage Market Enhancement Act of 1984, as amended, or SMMEA,
and, as such, will be legal investments for persons, trusts, corporations,
partnerships, associations, business trusts and business entities (including
depository institutions, life insurance companies and pension funds) created
under or existing under the laws of the United States or of any State whose
authorized investments are subject to state regulation to the same extent that,
under applicable law, obligations issued by or guaranteed as to principal and
interest by the United States or any agency or instrumentality thereof
constitute legal investments for those entities. Under SMMEA, if a State enacted
legislation on or prior to October 3, 1991 specifically limiting the legal
investment authority of any of these entities for 'mortgage related securities,'
these securities will constitute legal investments for entities subject to the
legislation only to the extent provided therein. Certain States enacted
legislation which overrides the preemption provisions of SMMEA. SMMEA provides,
however, that in no event will the enactment of any such legislation affect the
validity of any contractual commitment to purchase, hold or invest in 'mortgage
related securities,' or require the sale or other disposition of the securities,
so long as the contractual commitment was made or the securities acquired prior
to the enactment of the legislation.
SMMEA also amended the legal investment authority of federally-chartered
depository institutions as follows: federal savings and loan associations and
federal savings banks may invest in, sell or otherwise deal with 'mortgage
related securities' without limitation as to the percentage of their assets
represented thereby, federal credit unions may invest in these securities, and
national banks may purchase these securities for their own account without
regard to the limitations generally applicable to investment securities set
forth in 12 U.S.C. SS24 (Seventh), subject in each case to any regulations that
the applicable federal regulatory authority may prescribe.
The 1998 Policy Statement was adopted by the Federal Reserve Board, the
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, the FDIC, the National Credit Union
Administration, or NCUA and the OTS with an effective date of May 26, 1998. The
1998 Policy Statement rescinded a 1992 policy statement that had required, prior
to purchase, a depository institution to determine whether a mortgage derivative
product that it was considering acquiring was high-risk, and, if so, required
that the proposed acquisition would reduce the institution's overall interest
rate risk. The 1998 Policy Statement eliminates constraints on investing in
certain 'high-risk' mortgage derivative products and substitutes broader
guidelines for evaluating and monitoring investment risk.
The OTS has issued Thrift Bulletin 13a, entitled 'Management of Interest
Rate Risk, Investment Securities, and Derivatives Activities,' or TB 13a, which
is effective as of December 1, 1998 and applies to thrift institutions regulated
by the OTS. One of the primary purposes of TB 13a is to require thrift
institutions, prior to taking any investment position to conduct (i) a
pre-purchase portfolio sensitivity analysis for any 'significant transaction'
involving securities or financial derivatives, and (ii) a pre-purchase price
sensitivity analysis of any 'complex security' or financial derivative. For the
purposes of TB 13a, 'complex security' includes, among other things, any
collateralized mortgage obligation or REMIC security, other than any 'plain
vanilla' mortgage pass-through security (that is, securities that are part of a
single class of securities in the related pool that are non-callable and do not
have any special features). One or more classes of securities offered hereby and
by the accompanying prospectus supplement may be viewed as 'complex securities'.
The OTS recommends that while a thrift institution should conduct its own
in-house pre-acquisition analysis, it may rely on an analysis conducted by an
independent third-party as long as management understands the analysis and its
key assumptions. Further, TB 13a recommends that the use of 'complex securities
with high price sensitivity' be limited to transactions and strategies that
lower a thrift institution's portfolio interest rate risk. TB 13a warns that
investment in complex securities by thrift institutions that do not have
adequate risk measurement, monitoring and control systems may be viewed by OTS
examiners as an unsafe and unsound practice.
Prospective investors in the securities, including in particular the classes
of securities that do not constitute 'mortgage related securities' for purposes
of SMMEA, should consider the matters discussed in the following paragraph.
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There may be other restrictions on the ability of some investors either to
purchase some classes of securities or to purchase any class of securities
representing more than a specified percentage of the investors' assets. The
depositor will make no representations as to the proper characterization of any
class of securities for legal investment or other purposes, or as to the ability
of particular investors to purchase any class of securities under applicable
legal investment restrictions. These uncertainties may adversely affect the
liquidity of any class of securities. Accordingly, all investors whose
investment activities are subject to legal investment laws and regulations,
regulatory capital requirements or review by regulatory authorities should
consult with their own legal advisors in determining whether and to what extent
the securities of any class constitute legal investments or are subject to
investment, capital or other restrictions, and, if applicable, whether SMMEA has
been overridden in any jurisdiction relevant to the investor.
USE OF PROCEEDS
Substantially all of the net proceeds to be received from the sale of
securities will be applied by the depositor to finance the purchase of, or to
repay short-term loans incurred to finance the purchase of, the loans underlying
the securities or will be used by the depositor for general corporate purposes.
The depositor expects that it will make additional sales of securities similar
to the securities from time to time, but the timing and amount of any additional
offerings will be dependent on a number of factors, including the volume of
loans purchased by the depositor, prevailing interest rates, availability of
funds and general market conditions.
METHODS OF DISTRIBUTION
The securities offered hereby and by the accompanying prospectus supplements
will be offered in series through one or more of the methods described below.
The prospectus supplement prepared for each series will describe the method of
offering being utilized for that series and will state the net proceeds to the
depositor from that sale.
The depositor intends that securities will be offered through the following
methods from time to time and that offerings may be made concurrently through
more than one of these methods or that an offering of a particular series of
securities may be made through a combination of two or more of the following
methods:
by negotiated firm commitment or best efforts underwriting and public
re-offering by underwriters
by placements by the depositor with institutional investors through
dealers; and
by direct placements by the depositor with institutional investors.
In addition, if specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement, a
series of securities may be offered in whole or in part in exchange for the
loans, and other assets, if applicable, that would comprise the trust securing
the securities.
If underwriters are used in a sale of any securities, other than in
connection with an underwriting on a best efforts basis, the securities will be
acquired by the underwriters for their own account and may be resold from time
to time in one or more transactions, including negotiated transactions, at fixed
public offering prices or at varying prices to be determined at the time of sale
or at the time of commitment therefor. These underwriters may be broker-dealers
affiliated with the depositor whose identities and relationships to the
depositor will be as described in the accompanying prospectus supplement. The
managing underwriter or underwriters for the offer and sale of a particular
series of securities will be set forth on the cover of the prospectus supplement
relating to that series and the members of the underwriting syndicate, if any,
will be named in the accompanying prospectus supplement.
In connection with the sale of the securities, underwriters may receive
compensation from the depositor or from purchasers of the securities in the form
of discounts, concessions or commissions. Underwriters and dealers participating
in the distribution of the securities may be deemed to be underwriters in
connection with the securities, and any discounts or commissions received by
them from the depositor and any profit on the resale of securities by them may
be deemed to be underwriting discounts and commissions under the Securities Act
of 1933, as amended.
It is anticipated that the underwriting agreement pertaining to the sale of
any series of securities will provide that the obligations of the underwriters
will be subject to certain conditions precedent, that the underwriters will be
obligated to purchase all of the securities if any are purchased (other than in
connection
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with an underwriting on a best efforts basis) and that, in limited
circumstances, the depositor will indemnify the several underwriters and the
underwriters will indemnify the depositor against certain civil liabilities,
including liabilities under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, or will
contribute to payments required to be made in respect thereof.
The prospectus supplement for any series offered by placements through
dealers will contain information regarding the nature of the offering and any
agreements to be entered into between the depositor and purchasers of securities
of that series.
The depositor anticipates that the securities offered hereby will be sold
primarily to institutional investors or sophisticated non-institutional
investors. Purchasers of securities, including dealers, may, depending on the
facts and circumstances of the purchases, be deemed to be 'underwriters' within
the meaning of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, in connection with
reoffers and sales by them of securities. Holders of securities should consult
with their legal advisors in this regard prior to any reoffer or sale.
LEGAL MATTERS
Certain legal matters, including certain federal income tax matters, will be
passed on for the depositor by Thacher Proffitt & Wood, New York, New York,
Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe LLP, New York, New York or Stroock & Stroock &
Lavan LLP, as specified in the prospectus supplement.
FINANCIAL INFORMATION
The depositor has determined that its financial statements are not material
to the offering made hereby. The securities do not represent an interest in or
an obligation of the depositor. The depositor's only obligations for a series of
securities will be to repurchase certain loans on any breach of limited
representations and warranties made by the depositor, or as otherwise provided
in the applicable prospectus supplement.
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
The depositor has filed the registration statement with the Securities and
Exchange Commission. The depositor is also subject to some of the information
requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, or Exchange
Act, and, accordingly, will file reports thereunder with the Securities and
Exchange Commission. The registration statement and the exhibits thereto, and
reports and other information filed by the depositor under the Exchange Act can
be inspected and copied at the public reference facilities maintained by the
Securities and Exchange Commission at 450 Fifth Street, N.W., Washington, D.C.
20549, and at certain of its Regional Offices located as follows: Chicago
Regional Office, Citicorp Center, 500 West Madison Street, Suite 1400, Chicago,
Illinois 60661-2511; and Northeast Regional Office, 7 World Trade Center, Suite
1300, New York, New York 10048 and electronically through the Securities and
Exchange Commission's Electronic Data Gathering, Analysis and Retrieval System
at the Securities and Exchange Commission's Web Site (http://www.sec.gov).
Copies of Ginnie Mae's information statement and annual report can be
obtained by writing or calling the United States Department of Housing and Urban
Development, 451-7th Street S.W., Room 6210, Washington, D.C. 20410-9000
(202-708-3649). Copies of Freddie Mac's most recent offering circular for
Freddie Mac Certificates, Freddie Mac's information statement and most recent
supplement to such information statement and any quarterly report made available
by Freddie Mac can be obtained by writing or calling the Investor Relations
Department of Freddie Mac at Post Office Box 4112, Reston, Virginia 22090
(outside the Washington, D.C. metropolitan area, telephone 800-424-5401, ext.
8160; within the Washington, D.C. metropolitan area, telephone 703-759-8160).
Copies of Fannie Mae's most recent prospectus for Fannie Mae Certificates and
Fannie Mae's annual report and quarterly financial statements, as well as other
financial information, are available from the Director of Investor Relations of
Fannie Mae, 3900 Wisconsin Avenue, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20016 (202-537-7115).
The depositor does not, and will not, participate in the preparation of Ginnie
Mae's information statements or annual reports, Freddie Mac's offering
circulars, information statements or any supplements thereto or any of its
quarterly reports or Fannie Mae's prospectuses or any of its reports, financial
statements or other information and, accordingly, makes no representations as to
the accuracy or completeness of the information set forth therein.
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REPORTS TO SECURITYHOLDERS
Monthly reports which contain information concerning the trust fund for a
series of securities will be sent by or on behalf of the master servicer, the
servicer or the trustee to each holder of record of the securities of the
related series. See 'Description of the Securities -- Reports to
Securityholders.' Reports forwarded to holders will contain financial
information that has not been examined or reported on by an independent
certified public accountant. The depositor will file with the Securities and
Exchange Commission those periodic reports relating to the trust for a series of
securities as are required under the Exchange Act.
INCORPORATION OF CERTAIN INFORMATION BY REFERENCE
The SEC allows the depositor to 'incorporate by reference' the information
filed with the SEC by the depositor, under Section 13(a), 13(c), 14 or 15(d) of
the Exchange Act, that relates to the trust fund for the securities. This means
that the depositor can disclose important information to any investor by
referring the investor to these documents. The information incorporated by
reference is an important part of this prospectus, and information filed by the
depositor with the SEC that relates to the trust fund for the securities will
automatically update and supersede this information. Documents that may be
incorporated by reference for a particular series of securities include an
insurer's financials, a certificate policy, mortgage pool policy, computational
materials, collateral term sheets, the related pooling and servicing agreement
and amendments thereto, other documents on Form 8-K and Section 13(a), 13(c), 14
or 15(d) of Exchange Act as may be required in connection with the related trust
fund.
The depositor will provide or cause to be provided without charge to each
person to whom this prospectus and accompanying prospectus supplement is
delivered in connection with the offering of one or more classes of the related
series of securities, on written or oral request of that person, a copy of any
or all reports incorporated in this prospectus by reference, in each case to the
extent the reports relate to one or more of the classes of the related series of
securities, other than the exhibits to those documents, unless the exhibits are
specifically incorporated by reference in the documents. Requests should be
directed in writing to Residential Asset Mortgage Products, Inc., 8400
Normandale Lake Boulevard, Suite 600, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55437, or by
telephone at (612) 832-7000.
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GLOSSARY
1998 POLICY STATEMENT -- The revised supervisory statement listing the
guidelines for investments in 'high risk mortgage securities', and adopted by
the Federal Reserve Board, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, the
FDIC, the National Credit Union Administration, or NCUA and the OTS with an
effective date of May 26, 1998.
401(C) REGULATIONS -- The regulations the DOL is required to issue under
Section 401(c) of ERISA, which were issued in final form on January 4, 2000.
ADDITIONAL BALANCE -- An additional principal balance in a revolving credit
loan created by a Draw.
ADDITIONAL COLLATERAL -- For an Additional Collateral Loan, (1) financial
assets owned by the borrower, which will consist of securities, insurance
policies, annuities, certificates of deposit, cash, accounts or similar assets
and/or (2) a third party guarantee, usually by a relative of the borrower, which
in turn is secured by a security interest in financial assets.
ADDITIONAL COLLATERAL LOANS -- A mortgage loan with an LTV ratio at
origination in excess of 80%, but not greater than 100%, and secured by
Additional Collateral in addition to the related Mortgaged Property and in lieu
of any primary mortgage insurance.
ADDITIONAL COLLATERAL REQUIREMENT -- The amount of Additional Collateral
required for any Additional Collateral Loan, which in most cases will not exceed
30% of the principal amount of that mortgage loan.
ADMINISTRATOR -- In addition to or in lieu of the master servicer or
servicer for a series of notes, if specified in the accompanying prospectus
supplement, an administrator for the trust. The Administrator may be an
affiliate of the depositor, the master servicer or the servicer.
ADVANCE -- As to a particular loan and any distribution date, an amount
equal to the scheduled payments of principal (other than any Balloon Amount in
the case of a Balloon Loan) and interest at the applicable pass-through rate
which were delinquent as of the close of business on the business day preceding
the determination date on the loans.
AGENCY SECURITIES -- Any securities issued by Freddie Mac, Fannie Mae or
Ginnie Mae. Such Agency Securities may represent whole or partial interests in
pools of (1) loans or (2) Agency Securities. Unless otherwise set forth in the
accompanying prospectus supplement, all Ginnie Mae securities will be backed by
the full faith and credit of the United States. None of the Freddie Mac
securities or Fannie Mae securities will be backed, directly or indirectly, by
the full faith and credit of the United States. Agency Securities may be backed
by fixed or adjustable rate mortgage loans or other types of loans specified in
the accompanying prospectus supplement.
BALLOON AMOUNT -- The full outstanding principal balance on a Balloon Loan
due and payable on the maturity date.
BALLOON LOANS -- Loans with level monthly payments of principal and interest
based on a 30 year amortization schedule, or such other amortization schedule as
specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement, and having original or
modified terms to maturity shorter than the term of the related amortization
schedule.
BANKRUPTCY AMOUNT -- The amount of Bankruptcy Losses that may be borne
solely by the subordinate securities of the related series.
BANKRUPTCY LOSSES -- A Realized Loss attributable to certain actions which
may be taken by a bankruptcy court in connection with a mortgage loan, including
a reduction by a bankruptcy court of the principal balance of or the loan rate
on a mortgage loan or an extension of its maturity.
BUY-DOWN ACCOUNT -- As to a Buydown Loan, the custodial account where
Buydown Funds are deposited.
BUY-DOWN FUNDS -- As to a Buydown Loan, the amount contributed by the seller
of the Mortgaged Property or another source and placed in the Buydown Account.
BUY-DOWN LOAN -- A mortgage loan, other than a closed-end home equity loan,
subject to a temporary buydown plan.
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BUY-DOWN PERIOD -- The early years of the term of or Buy-Down Loan when
payments will be less than the scheduled monthly payments on the mortgage loan,
the resulting difference to be made up from the Buy-Down Funds.
CALL CLASS -- A class of securities under which the holder will have the
right, at its sole discretion, to terminate the related trust, resulting in
early retirement of the securities of the series.
CALL PRICE -- In the case of a call with respect to a Call Class, a price
equal to 100% of the principal balance of the related securities as of the day
of that purchase plus accrued interest at the applicable pass-through rate.
CALL SECURITY -- Any security evidencing an interest in a Call Class.
COMPENSATING INTEREST -- For any loan that prepaid in full and, if stated in
the accompanying prospectus supplement, in part, during the related prepayment
period an additional payment made by the master servicer or the servicer, to the
extent funds are available from the servicing fee, equal to the amount of
interest at the loan rate, less the servicing fee and Excluded Spread, if any,
for that loan from the date of the prepayment to the related due date.
CONVERTIBLE MORTGAGE LOAN -- ARM loans which allow the borrowers to convert
the adjustable rates on those mortgage loans to a fixed rate at one or more
specified periods during the life of the mortgage loans, in most cases not later
than ten years subsequent to the date of origination.
COOPERATIVE -- For a Cooperative Loan, the corporation that owns the related
apartment building.
COOPERATIVE LOANS -- Cooperative apartment loans evidenced by Cooperative
Notes secured by security interests in shares issued by Cooperatives and in the
related proprietary leases or occupancy agreements granting exclusive rights to
occupy specific dwelling units in the related buildings.
COOPERATIVE NOTES -- A promissory note with respect to a Cooperative Loan.
CREDIT SCORES -- A measurement of the relative degree of risk a borrower
represents to a lender obtained from credit reports utilizing, among other
things, payment history, delinquencies on accounts, levels of outstanding
indebtedness, length of credit history, types of credit, and bankruptcy
experience.
CREDIT UTILIZATION RATE -- For any revolving credit loan, the cut-off date
principal balance of the revolving credit loan divided by the credit limit of
the related credit line agreement.
CUSTODIAL ACCOUNT -- The custodial account or accounts created and
maintained under the pooling and servicing agreement in the name of a depository
institution, as custodian for the holders of the securities, for the holders of
certain other interests in loans serviced or sold by the master servicer or the
servicer and for the master servicer or the servicer, into which the amounts
shall be deposited directly. Any such account shall be an Eligible Account.
DEBT SERVICE REDUCTION -- Modifications of the terms of a loan resulting
from a bankruptcy proceeding, including a reduction in the amount of the monthly
payment on the related loan, but not any permanent forgiveness of principal.
DEFAULTED MORTGAGE LOSSES -- A Realized Loss attributable to the borrower's
failure to make any payment of principal or interest as required under the
mortgage note, but not including Special Hazard Losses, Extraordinary Losses or
other losses resulting from damage to a mortgaged property, Bankruptcy Losses or
Fraud Losses.
DEFICIENT VALUATION -- In connection with the personal bankruptcy of a
borrower, the difference between the outstanding principal balance of the first
and junior lien loans and a lower value established by the bankruptcy court.
DESIGNATED SELLER TRANSACTION -- A transaction in which the loans are
provided by an unaffiliated or affiliated seller described in the prospectus
supplement.
DIRECT PUERTO RICO MORTGAGE -- For any loan secured by mortgaged property
located in Puerto Rico, a Mortgage to secure a specific obligation for the
benefit of a specified person.
DISQUALIFIED ORGANIZATION -- As used in this prospectus means:
the United States, any State or political subdivision thereof, any foreign
government, any international organization, or any agency or
instrumentality of the foregoing (but does not include instrumentalities
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described in Section 168(h)(2)(D) of the Internal Revenue Code the Federal
Home Loan Mortgage Corporation),
any organization (other than a cooperative described in Section 521 of the
Internal Revenue Code) that is exempt from federal income tax, unless it is
subject to the tax imposed by Section 511 of the Internal Revenue Code, or
any organization described in Section 1381(a)(2)(C) of the Internal Revenue
Code.
DISTRIBUTION AMOUNT -- As to a class of securities for any distribution date
will be the portion, if any, of the amount to be distributed to that class for
that distribution date of principal, plus, if the class is entitled to payments
of interest on that distribution date, interest accrued during the related
interest accrual period at the applicable pass-through rate on the principal
balance or notional amount of that class specified in the applicable prospectus
supplement, less certain interest shortfalls, which will include:
any deferred interest added to the principal balance of the mortgage loans
and/or the outstanding balance of one or more classes of securities on the
related due date;
any other interest shortfalls, including, without limitation, shortfalls
resulting from application of the Relief Act or similar legislation or
regulations as in effect from time to time, allocable to securityholders
which are not covered by advances or the applicable credit enhancement; and
Prepayment Interest Shortfalls not covered by Compensating Interest, in
each case in an amount that is allocated to that class on the basis set
forth in the prospectus supplement.
DRAW -- Money drawn by the borrower in most cases with either checks or
credit cards, subject to applicable law, on a revolving credit loan under the
related credit line agreement at any time during the Draw Period.
DRAW PERIOD -- The period specified in the related credit line agreement
when a borrower on a revolving credit loan may make a Draw.
DUE PERIOD -- As to any distribution date, the period starting on the second
day of the month prior to such distribution date, and ending on the first day of
the month of such distribution date or such other period as specified in the
accompanying prospectus supplement.
ELIGIBLE ACCOUNT -- An account acceptable to the applicable rating agency.
ENDORSABLE PUERTO RICO MORTGAGE -- As to any loan secured by mortgaged
property located in Puerto Rico, a mortgage to secure an instrument transferable
by endorsement.
ENVIRONMENTAL LIEN -- A lien imposed by federal or state statute, for any
cleanup costs incurred by a state on the property that is the subject of the
cleanup costs.
EXCESS SPREAD -- A portion of interest due on the loans or securities
transferred as part of the assets of the related trust as specified in the
accompanying prospectus supplement.
EXCLUDED BALANCE -- That portion of the principal balance of a revolving
credit loan, if any, not included in the Trust Balance at any time, which will
include balances attributable to Draws after the cut-off date and may include a
portion of the principal balance outstanding as of the cut-off date.
EXCLUDED SPREAD -- A portion of interest due on the loans or securities,
excluded from the assets transferred to the related trust.
EXTRAORDINARY LOSSES -- Realized Losses occasioned by war, civil
insurrection, certain governmental actions, nuclear reaction and certain other
risks.
FASIT -- A financial asset securitization trust as described in section 860L
of the Internal Revenue Code.
FASIT REGULAR CERTIFICATES -- Certificates or notes representing ownership
of one or more regular interests in a FASIT.
FUNDING ACCOUNT -- An account established for the purpose of funding the
transfer of additional loans into the related trust.
FRAUD LOSS AMOUNT -- The amount of Fraud Losses that may be borne solely by
the subordinate securities of the related series.
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FRAUD LOSSES -- A Realized Loss incurred on defaulted loans as to which
there was fraud in the origination of the loans.
GEM LOAN -- A mortgage loan with monthly payments of principal and interest
based on a 30 year amortization schedule, or such other amortization schedule as
specified in the accompanying prospectus supplement, and that provide a
specified time period during which the monthly payments by the borrower are
increased and the full amount of the increase is applied to reduce the
outstanding principal balance of the related mortgage loan.
GPM LOAN -- A mortgage loan under which the monthly payments by the borrower
during the early years of the mortgage are less than the amount of interest that
would otherwise be payable thereon, with the interest not so paid added to the
outstanding principal balance of such mortgage loan.
GROSS MARGIN -- For an ARM loan, the fixed percentage set forth in the
related mortgage note, which when added to the related index, provides the loan
rate for the ARM loan.
HIGH COST LOANS -- Loans that are subject to the special rules, disclosure
requirements and other provisions that were added to the federal
Truth-in-Lending Act by the Homeownership and Equity Protection Act of 1994,
which were originated on or after October 1, 1995, are not loans made to finance
the purchase of the mortgaged property and have interest rates or origination
costs in excess of prescribed levels.
HOME LOANS -- One- to four- family first or junior lien mortgage loans with
LTV ratios or combined LTV ratios in most cases between 100% and 125%, and
classified by the depositor as Home Loans.
INSURANCE PROCEEDS -- Proceeds of any special hazard insurance policy,
bankruptcy bond, mortgage pool insurance policy, primary insurance policy and
any title, hazard or other insurance policy or guaranty covering any loan in the
pool together with any payments under any letter of credit.
ISSUE PREMIUM -- As to a class of REMIC Regular Certificates, the issue
price in excess of the stated redemption price of that class.
LIQUIDATED LOAN -- A defaulted loan for which the related mortgaged property
has been sold by the related trust and all recoverable Liquidation Proceeds and
Insurance Proceeds have been received.
LIQUIDATION PROCEEDS -- Amounts collected by the servicer or subservicer in
connection with the liquidation of a loan, by foreclosure or otherwise.
MEXICO LOAN -- A mortgage loan secured by a beneficial interest in a trust,
the principal asset of which is residential real property located in Mexico.
NET LOAN RATE -- As to any loan, the loan rate net of servicing fees, other
administrative fees and any Excess Spread or Excluded Spread.
NONRECOVERABLE ADVANCE -- Any Advance previously made which the master
servicer or the servicer has determined to not be ultimately recoverable from
Liquidation Proceeds, Insurance Proceeds or otherwise.
NOTE MARGIN -- Amounts advanced by the master servicer or servicer to cover
taxes, insurance premiums or similar expenses as to any mortgaged property. For
an ARM loan, the fixed percentage set forth in the related mortgage note, which
when added to the related index, provides the loan rate for the ARM loan.
PARTIES IN INTEREST -- For an ERISA plan, persons who are either 'parties in
interest' within the meaning of ERISA or 'disqualified persons' within the
meaning of the Internal Revenue Code, because they have specified relationships
to the ERISA plan.
PASS-THROUGH ENTITY -- Any regulated investment company, real estate
investment trust, trust, partnership or other entities described in Section
860E(e)(6) of the Internal Revenue Code. In addition, a person holding an
interest in a pass-through entity as a nominee for another person will, for that
interest, be treated as a pass-through entity.
PAYMENT ACCOUNT -- An account established and maintained by the master
servicer or the servicer in the name of the trustee for the benefit of the
holders of each series of securities, for the disbursement of payments on the
loans evidenced by each series of securities.
PERMITTED INVESTMENTS -- United States government securities and other
investment grade obligations specified in the related pooling and servicing
agreement.
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PLEDGED ASSET MORTGAGE LOANS -- Mortgage loans that have LTV ratios at
origination of up to 100% and are secured, in addition to the related mortgaged
property, by Pledged Assets.
PLEDGED ASSETS -- As to a Pledged Asset Mortgage Loan, (1) financial assets
owned by the borrower, which will consist of securities, insurance policies,
annuities, certificates of deposit, cash, accounts or similar assets and/or (2)
a third party guarantee, usually by a relative of the borrower, which in turn is
secured by a security interest in financial assets or residential property owned
by the guarantor.
PREPAYMENT INTEREST SHORTFALL -- For a loan that is subject to a borrower
prepayment or liquidation, the amount that equals the difference between a full
month's interest due for that mortgage loan and the amount of interest paid or
recovered with respect thereto.
PRINCIPAL PREPAYMENTS -- Any principal payments received for a loan, in
advance of the scheduled due date and not accompanied by a payment of interest
for any period following the date of payment.
QUALIFIED INSURER -- As to a mortgage pool insurance policy, special hazard
insurance policy, bankruptcy policy, financial guaranty insurance policy or
surety bond, an insurer qualified under applicable law to transact the insurance
business or coverage as applicable.
REALIZED LOSS -- As to any defaulted loan that is finally liquidated, the
amount of loss realized, if any, will equal the portion of the Stated Principal
Balance remaining after application of all amounts recovered, net of amounts
reimbursable to the master servicer or the servicer for related Advances and
expenses, towards interest and principal owing on the loan. For a loan the
principal balance of which has been reduced in connection with bankruptcy
proceedings, the amount of the reduction will be treated as a Realized Loss.
REGULAR CERTIFICATES -- FASIT Regular Certificates or REMIC Regular
Certificates.
REMIC -- A real estate mortgage investment conduit as described in section
860D of the Internal Revenue Code.
REMIC REGULAR CERTIFICATES -- Certificates or notes representing ownership
of one or more regular interests in a REMIC.
REMIC RESIDUAL CERTIFICATE -- A Certificate representing an ownership
interest in a residual interest in a REMIC within the meaning of section 860D of
the Internal Revenue Code.
REO LOAN -- A loan where title to the related mortgaged property has been
obtained by the trustee or its nominee on behalf of securityholders of the
related series.
REPAYMENT PERIOD -- For a revolving credit loan, the period from the end of
the related Draw Period to the related maturity date.
SENIOR PERCENTAGE -- At any given time, the percentage of the outstanding
principal balances of all of the securities evidenced by the senior securities,
determined in the manner described in the accompanying prospectus supplement.
SERVICING ADVANCES -- Amounts advanced on any loan to cover taxes, insurance
premiums or similar expenses.
SPECIAL HAZARD AMOUNT -- The amount of Special Hazard Losses that may be
allocated to the subordinate securities of the related series.
SPECIAL HAZARD LOSSES -- A Realized Loss incurred, to the extent that the
loss was attributable to (i) direct physical damage to a mortgaged property
other than any loss of a type covered by a hazard insurance policy or a flood
insurance policy, if applicable, and (ii) any shortfall in insurance proceeds
for partial damage due to the application of the co-insurance clauses contained
in hazard insurance policies. The amount of the Special Hazard Loss is limited
to the lesser of the cost of repair or replacement of the mortgaged property;
any loss above that amount would be a Defaulted Mortgage Loss or other
applicable type of loss. Special Hazard Losses does not include losses
occasioned by war, civil insurrection, certain governmental actions, errors in
design, faulty workmanship or materials (except under certain circumstances),
nuclear reaction, chemical contamination or waste by the borrower.
SPECIAL SERVICER -- A special servicer named under the pooling and servicing
agreement for a series of securities, which will be responsible for the
servicing of delinquent loans.
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STATED PRINCIPAL BALANCE -- As to any loan as of any date of determination,
its principal balance as of the cut-off date, after application of all scheduled
principal payments due on or before the cut-off date, whether received or not,
reduced by all amounts allocable to principal that are distributed to
securityholders on or before the date of determination, and as further reduced
to the extent that any Realized Loss has been allocated to any securities on or
before that date.
SUBORDINATE AMOUNT -- A specified portion of subordinated distributions with
respect to the loans, allocated to the holders of the subordinate securities as
set forth in the accompanying prospectus supplement.
SUBSERVICING ACCOUNT -- An account established and maintained by a
subservicer which is acceptable to the master servicer or the servicer.
TAX-EXEMPT INVESTOR -- Tax-qualified retirement plans described in Section
401(a) of the Internal Revenue Code and on individual retirement accounts
described in Section 408 of the Internal Revenue Code.
TAX-FAVORED PLANS -- An ERISA plan which is exempt from federal income
taxation under Section 501(a) of the Internal Revenue Code or is an individual
retirement plan or annuity described in Section 408 of the Internal Revenue
Code.
TITLE I -- Title I of the National Housing Act.
TRUST BALANCE -- A specified portion of the total principal balance of each
revolving credit loan outstanding at any time, which will consist of all or a
portion of the principal balance thereof as of the cut-off date minus the
portion of all payments and losses thereafter that are allocated to the Trust
Balance, and will not include any portion of the principal balance attributable
to Draws made after the cut-off date.
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