PAINEWEBBER MORTGAGE ACCEPTANCE CORPORATION IV
424B5, 1999-05-26
ASSET-BACKED SECURITIES
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<PAGE>

PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT DATED MAY 24, 1999
(TO PROSPECTUS DATED MAY 24, 1999)

                                  $436,889,824
                                 (APPROXIMATE)
                       NEW SOUTH HOME EQUITY TRUST 1999-1

                                     [LOGO]

                 PAINEWEBBER MORTGAGE ACCEPTANCE CORPORATION IV
                                  (DEPOSITOR)
                         NEW SOUTH FEDERAL SAVINGS BANK
                           (TRANSFEROR AND SERVICER)
              HOME EQUITY ASSET BACKED CERTIFICATES, SERIES 1999-1

    The New South Home Equity Trust 1999-1 is issuing certificates in 10
classes, but is offering only the following classes through this Prospectus
Supplement:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                              APPROXIMATE
                                          INITIAL PRINCIPAL OR    PASS-THROUGH      PRICE TO        UNDERWRITING    PROCEEDS TO
                                            NOTIONAL BALANCE        RATE(1)          PUBLIC           DISCOUNT      DEPOSITOR(4)
                                          --------------------    ------------    ------------      ------------    ------------
<S>                                       <C>                     <C>             <C>               <C>             <C>
Class A-1 Certificates.................       $105,701,000           (2)            100.00000%         0.0750%       99.92500%
Class A-2 Certificates.................       $107,896,000             6.21%         99.99683%         0.1000%       99.89683%
Class A-3 Certificates.................       $104,428,000          6.39%(3)         99.97848%         0.1750%       99.80348%
Class A-4 Certificates.................       $ 46,142,000          6.75%(3)         99.97285%         0.3000%       99.67285%
Class A-5 Certificates.................       $ 50,722,824          7.21%(3)         99.94581%         0.3750%       99.57081%
Class A-6 Certificates.................       $ 22,000,000          6.73%(3)         99.98386%         0.3250%       99.65886%
Class A-6IO Certificates...............       $ 22,000,000          8.00%(4)         14.34768%         0.2232%       14.12448%
                                             -------------
Total..................................       $436,889,824                        $439,976,855        $819,161    $439,157,694
                                             -------------
                                             -------------
</TABLE>

(1) Commencing on the first day of the Accrual Period in which the optional
    termination date occurs, the interest rate on the offered certificates
    (other than Class A-6IO) will increase by 0.50% per annum.

(2) The Class A-1 Certificates will bear interest at a variable rate equal to
    the sum of (A) LIBOR plus (B) 0.09% per annum, subject to an available funds
    cap.

(3) The Pass-Through Rate will be subject to an 'available funds cap'.

(4) The Class A-6IO Certificates will not be entitled to distributions after the
    distribution date in May 2001.

(5) Plus accrued interest on each class other than Class A-1 and before
    deducting expenses.
                            ------------------------
 Interest and principal will be distributable monthly on the 25th day of each
 month, beginning in June 1999, to the extent described in this Prospectus
 Supplement.

 The trust's main source of funds for making distributions on the certificates
 will be collections on a pool of closed-end, fixed-rate loans secured primarily
 by first or second mortgages or deeds of trust on residential one- to four-
 family properties and security interests in manufactured homes.

 Credit enhancement will be provided by (i) the availability, if any, of excess
 interest, (ii) overcollateralization in certain circumstances, as described in
 this Prospectus Supplement, and (iii) a certificate guaranty insurance policy
 issued by Ambac Assurance Corporation, which will protect holders of the
 offered certificates against certain shortfalls in amounts due to be
 distributed at the times and to the extent described in this Prospectus
 Supplement.

                                     [Logo]

    YOU SHOULD CONSIDER CAREFULLY THE RISK FACTORS BEGINNING ON PAGE S-12 OF
THIS PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT AND PAGE 16 IN THE PROSPECTUS.

    The certificates will not represent obligations of PaineWebber Mortgage
Acceptance Corporation IV, the Transferor or any other person or entity. No
governmental agency will insure the certificates or the loans backing the
certificates.

    You should consult with your own advisors to determine if the offered
certificates are appropriate investments for you and to determine the applicable
legal, tax, regulatory and accounting treatment of the offered certificates.

    NEITHER THE SEC NOR ANY STATE SECURITIES COMMISSION HAS APPROVED THE OFFERED
CERTIFICATES OR DETERMINED THAT THIS PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT OR THE ACCOMPANYING
PROSPECTUS IS ACCURATE OR COMPLETE. ANY REPRESENTATION TO THE CONTRARY IS A
CRIMINAL OFFENSE.

    The offered certificates will not be listed on any national securities
exchange or on any automated quotation system of any registered securities
association such as NASDAQ.

    The Underwriters, PaineWebber Incorporated and First Union Capital Markets
Corp., will purchase the offered certificates from PaineWebber Mortgage
Acceptance Corporation IV and expect to deliver the offered certificates in
book-entry form through the facilities of The Depository Trust Company,
Cedelbank and The Euroclear System to purchasers on or about May 27, 1999.

PAINEWEBBER INCORPORATED                       FIRST UNION CAPITAL MARKETS CORP.




<PAGE>


              IMPORTANT NOTICE ABOUT INFORMATION PRESENTED IN THIS
              PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT AND THE ACCOMPANYING PROSPECTUS

     Information about the offered certificates for the Series 1999-1 is
provided in two separate documents that progressively include more detail: (a)
the accompanying Prospectus dated May 24, 1999, which provides general
information, some of which may not apply to the offered certificates for the
Series 1999-1; and (b) this Prospectus Supplement, which describes the specific
terms of the offered certificates for the Series 1999-1. Sales of the offered
certificates may not be completed unless you have received both this Prospectus
Supplement and the Prospectus. You are urged to read both this Prospectus
Supplement and the Prospectus in full.

     IF THE TERMS OF THE OFFERED CERTIFICATES VARY BETWEEN THIS PROSPECTUS
SUPPLEMENT AND THE ACCOMPANYING PROSPECTUS, THEN YOU SHOULD RELY ON THE
INFORMATION IN THIS PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT.

     Cross-references in this Prospectus Supplement and the accompanying
Prospectus to captions in these materials are included to assist in locating
further related discussions. The following table of contents and the table of
contents in the accompanying Prospectus provide the pages on which these
captions are located.

     Certain capitalized terms are defined and used in this Prospectus
Supplement and the Prospectus to assist you in understanding the terms of the
offered certificates and this offering. A listing of the pages where capitalized
terms used in this Prospectus Supplement and the accompanying Prospectus are
defined is included under the caption "Index of Defined Terms" beginning on page
S-65 in this Prospectus Supplement and under the caption "Index of Defined
Terms" beginning on page 136 in the accompanying Prospectus.

     In this Prospectus Supplement, the terms "Depositor," "we," "us," and "our"
refer to PaineWebber Mortgage Acceptance Corporation IV.

                           FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS

     In this Prospectus Supplement and the accompanying Prospectus, we use
certain forward-looking statements. Such forward-looking statements are found in
the material, including each of the tables, set forth under "Risk Factors" and
"Prepayment and Yield Considerations" in this Prospectus Supplement.
Forward-looking statements are also found elsewhere in this Prospectus
Supplement and Prospectus and include words like "expects," "intends,"
"anticipates," "estimates" and other similar words. Such statements are intended
to convey our projections or expectations as of the date of this Prospectus
Supplement. Such statements are inherently subject to a variety of risks and
uncertainties. Actual results could differ materially from those we anticipate
due to changes in, among other things:

     economic conditions and industry competition,

     political and/or social conditions, and

     the law and government regulatory initiatives.

     We will not update or revise any forward-looking statement to reflect
changes in our expectations or changes in the conditions or circumstances on
which such statements were originally based.

                                      S-2




<PAGE>


                                TABLE OF CONTENTS

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                    PAGE
                                                                    ----
<S>                                                                <C>
SUMMARY ...........................................................  S-4
RISK FACTORS ...................................................... S-12
   Yield, Prepayment And Maturity Considerations .................. S-12
Limited Liquidity ................................................. S-13
Interest Rates on the Class A-1, Class A-3, Class A-4,
   Class A-5 and Class A-6 Certificates Are Subject to Limits ..... S-13
Adequacy of Credit Enhancement .................................... S-13
Underwriting Guidelines ........................................... S-14
Realization Upon Defaulted Loans .................................. S-14
Geographic Concentration .......................................... S-15
Seasoning of Loans ................................................ S-15
Borrower May Be Unable to Make Balloon Payments ................... S-15
Subordinate Loans ................................................. S-15
Legal Considerations .............................................. S-15
Risks Associated with Year 2000 Compliance ........................ S-16
Limitations on the Transferor and Servicer ........................ S-17
Other Risks ....................................................... S-17
DESCRIPTION OF THE LOANS .......................................... S-17
General ........................................................... S-17
Characteristics of the Loans ...................................... S-17
Statistical Information ........................................... S-18
Assignment of Loans ............................................... S-23
Representations and Warranties of the Transferor .................. S-24
THE TRANSFEROR AND THE SERVICER ................................... S-25
General ........................................................... S-25
Credit and Underwriting Guidelines ................................ S-25
Delinquency and Loss Experience ................................... S-28
PREPAYMENT AND YIELD CONSIDERATIONS ............................... S-29
General ........................................................... S-29
Modeling Assumptions .............................................. S-30
Yield Sensitivity of the Class A-6IO Certificates ................. S-39
DESCRIPTION OF THE OFFERED CERTIFICATES ........................... S-39
General ........................................................... S-39
Registration and Denominations .................................... S-40
Definitive Certificates ........................................... S-40
Certificate Principal Balances and Notional Amount ................ S-41
Pass-Through Rates ................................................ S-41
Distributions ..................................................... S-43
Related Definitions ............................................... S-44
Calculation of LIBOR .............................................. S-47
Termination; Purchase of Loans .................................... S-47
Report to Certificateholders ...................................... S-48
SERVICING OF THE LOANS ............................................ S-48
The Servicer ...................................................... S-48
Collection and Other Servicing Procedures; Loan Modifications ..... S-49
Payments on the Loans ............................................. S-49
Realization Upon or Sale of Defaulted Loans ....................... S-51
Servicing Fees and Other Compensation and Payment of Expenses ..... S-52
Enforcement of Due-on-Sale Clauses ................................ S-52
Maintenance of Insurance Policies and Errors
   and Omissions and Fidelity Coverage ............................ S-53
Servicer Reports .................................................. S-53
Removal and Resignation of Servicer ............................... S-54
Amendment ......................................................... S-55
THE TRUSTEE ....................................................... S-55
THE CERTIFICATE INSURANCE POLICY .................................. S-56
THE CERTIFICATE INSURER ........................................... S-57
CERTAIN FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSEQUENCES ........................... S-58
General ........................................................... S-58
Characterization of Investments in Offered Certificates ........... S-59
Taxation of Basis Risk Arrangements ............................... S-59
ERISA CONSIDERATIONS .............................................. S-60
LEGAL INVESTMENT .................................................. S-62
USE OF PROCEEDS ................................................... S-62
UNDERWRITING ...................................................... S-63
EXPERTS ........................................................... S-63
RATINGS ........................................................... S-64
LEGAL MATTERS ..................................................... S-64
INDEX OF DEFINED TERMS ............................................ S-65
</TABLE>


                                      S-3




<PAGE>


                                     SUMMARY

     THIS SUMMARY HIGHLIGHTS SELECTED INFORMATION FROM THIS DOCUMENT AND DOES
NOT CONTAIN ALL OF THE INFORMATION THAT YOU NEED TO CONSIDER IN MAKING AN
INVESTMENT DECISION. TO UNDERSTAND ALL OF THE TERMS OF THE OFFERING OF THE
OFFERED CERTIFICATES, YOU SHOULD READ CAREFULLY THIS ENTIRE DOCUMENT AND THE
ACCOMPANYING PROSPECTUS.

<TABLE>
<S>                              <C>
RELEVANT PARTIES

  Depositor...................... PaineWebber Mortgage Acceptance Corporation
                                  IV (the "Depositor"), a Delaware corporation.
                                  The Depositor's address is 1285 Avenue of the
                                  Americas, New York, New York 10019, telephone
                                  number (212) 713-2000. See "The Depositor" in
                                  the accompanying Prospectus.

  Trust.......................... New South Home Equity Trust 1999-1, a New
                                  York common law trust (the "Trust") created
                                  pursuant to a Pooling and Servicing Agreement
                                  (the "Pooling and Servicing Agreement") among
                                  the Depositor, New South Federal Savings Bank
                                  and The Chase Manhattan Bank (the "Trustee").

  Servicer....................... New South Federal Savings Bank ("New South",
                                  or in its capacity as servicer, the
                                  "Servicer"). The Servicer is a federally
                                  chartered savings bank with its principal
                                  place of business in Birmingham, Alabama. The
                                  Servicer is a wholly owned subsidiary of New
                                  South Bancshares, Inc., a Delaware
                                  corporation. The Servicer's address is 1900
                                  Crestwood Boulevard, Birmingham, Alabama
                                  35210, telephone number (205) 951-1001. New
                                  South will act as Servicer for the Trust Fund
                                  and, in that capacity, will (i) provide
                                  customary servicing functions with respect to
                                  the Loans pursuant to the Pooling and
                                  Servicing Agreement, (ii) provide certain
                                  reports to the Trustee and (iii) make certain
                                  advances. All references in this Prospectus
                                  Supplement to the "Servicer" shall mean
                                  "Master Servicer" for purposes of the
                                  accompanying Prospectus.

  Transferor..................... New South Federal Savings Bank (in this
                                  capacity, the "Transferor").

  Trustee........................ The Chase Manhattan Bank, a New York banking
                                  corporation. The Trustee's address is 450
                                  West 33rd Street, New York, New York 10001,
                                  telephone number (212) 946-3200.

  The Certificate Insurer........ Ambac Assurance Corporation (the "Certificate
                                  Insurer"). The Certificate Insurer's address
                                  is One State Street Plaza, 17th Floor, New
                                  York, New York 10004, telephone number (212)
                                  668-0340.

RELEVANT DATES

  Cut-Off Date................... May 1, 1999 (the "Cut-Off Date").

  Closing Date................... On or about May 27, 1999 (the "Closing Date").

  Statistical Calculation Date... The loans described in this Prospectus
                                  Supplement represent the pool of loans as of
                                  the Statistical Calculation Date of May 1,
                                  1999 that have been identified by New South.
                                  We anticipate that additional loans may be
                                  conveyed to the Trust at closing, or other
                                  loans may be substituted for the currently
                                  identified loans. See "Description of the
                                  Loans -- Characteristics of the Loans" in this
                                  Prospectus Supplement.
</TABLE>


                                      S-4


<PAGE>


<TABLE>
<S>                              <C>
  Distribution Date.............. Distributions on the Certificates will be made
                                  on the 25th day of each month (or, if such
                                  25th day is not a Business Day, on the next
                                  succeeding Business Day) (each, a
                                  "Distribution Date"), commencing in June 1999.
                                  A "Business Day" will be any other day than
                                  (i) a Saturday or Sunday, or (i) any day on
                                  which banking institutions located in the
                                  States of New York or Alabama are authorized
                                  or obligated by law or executive order to
                                  close.

  Determination Date............. The 18th calendar day of each month or, if
                                  such day is not a Business Day, then the
                                  immediately preceding Business Day (the
                                  "Determination Date").

  Due Period..................... The calendar month preceding the relevant
                                  Distribution Date or Determination Date, as
                                  the case may be (the "Due Period").

  Accrual Period................. For the Offered Certificates (other than the
                                  Class A-1 Certificates), the calendar month
                                  immediately prior to the month in which the
                                  relevant Distribution Date occurs. For the
                                  Class A-1 Certificates, the period beginning
                                  on the prior Distribution Date (or on the
                                  Closing Date in the case of the first
                                  Distribution Date) and ending on the day prior
                                  to the relevant Distribution Date.

OFFERED CERTIFICATES............. We are offering the following 7 classes of
                                  Certificates as part of the Series 1999-1
                                  (collectively, the "Offered Certificates" or
                                  the "Class A Certificates"):

                                       Class A-1
                                       Class A-2
                                       Class A-3
                                       Class A-4
                                       Class A-5
                                       Class A-6
                                       Class A-6IO

                                  The Series 1999-1 will consist of a total of
                                  10 classes; however, the Class X-IO, the Class
                                  Z-IO and the Class R Certificates are not
                                  being offered through this Prospectus
                                  Supplement and the accompanying Prospectus.
                                  The Offered Certificates, together with the
                                  Class X-IO, the Class Z-IO and Class R
                                  Certificates, are collectively referred to as
                                  the "Certificates".

  Balances and
    Pass-Through Rates........... Your certificates will have the approximate
                                  original certificate principal balances or
                                  notional balance set forth below, subject to a
                                  permitted variance of plus or minus 5%:

                                      Class A-1...$105,701,000 principal balance
                                      Class A-2...$107,896,000 principal balance
                                      Class A-3...$104,428,000 principal balance
</TABLE>


                                      S-5




<PAGE>


<TABLE>
<S>                              <C>
                                    Class A-4.....$46,142,000 principal balance
                                    Class A-5.....$50,722,824 principal balance
                                    Class A-6.....$22,000,000 principal balance
                                    Class A-6IO...$22,000,000 notional balance

                                  The notional balance of the Class A-6IO
                                  Certificates at all times will equal the
                                  outstanding principal balance of the Class A-6
                                  Certificates. The Class A-6IO Certificates are
                                  entitled to receive interest only, not
                                  principal. The notional balance is used solely
                                  to calculate interest on the Class A-6IO
                                  Certificates and does not represent an
                                  entitlement to principal.

                                  Each class of Offered Certificates will accrue
                                  interest for each Accrual Period on its unpaid
                                  principal balance or notional balance at the
                                  rates described on the cover of this
                                  Prospectus Supplement.

  Distributions.................. The total of all payments or other collections
                                  on or in respect of the Loans (including
                                  advances of interest by the Servicer but
                                  excluding prepayment premiums) that are
                                  available for distributions of interest on and
                                  principal of the Offered Certificates on any
                                  Distribution Date is referred to as the
                                  "Available Distribution Amount" for such date.
                                  See "Description of the Offered Certificates -
                                  Distributions Available Distribution Amount"
                                  in this Prospectus Supplement.

                                  On each Distribution Date, the Trustee will
                                  apply the Available Distribution Amount and
                                  any payments received from the Certificate
                                  Insurer under the certificate insurance policy
                                  for such date for the following purposes and
                                  in the following order of priority:

                                  First, Class A: To interest on the Class A
                                  Certificates, pro rata, in accordance with
                                  their interest entitlements, subject to any
                                  applicable available funds caps.

                                  Second, Class A: To principal of the Class A
                                  Certificates, in the amount and manner
                                  described under "Description of the Offered
                                  Certificates --Distributions" in this
                                  Prospectus Supplement, all principal
                                  collections on the Loans until the principal
                                  balance of each such class is reduced to zero.

                                  A portion of the remaining Available
                                  Distribution Amount, described under
                                  "Description of the Offered Certificates --
                                  Distributions" in this Prospectus Supplement,
                                  will be then allocated as follows:

                                  Third, Certificate Insurer: To reimburse the
                                  Certificate Insurer for all payments made by
                                  the Certificate Insurer under the certificate
                                  insurance policy which have not been repaid,
                                  together with interest on such amounts.

                                  Fourth, Class A: To pay principal of the Class
                                  A Certificates in the amount and manner
                                  described under "Description of the Offered
                                  Certificates Distributions" in this Prospectus
                                  Supplement, up to an amount sufficient to
                                  achieve or maintain a certain required
                                  overcollateralization amount, in each case
                                  until the principal balance of each such class
                                  is reduced to zero.
</TABLE>


                                      S-6




<PAGE>


<TABLE>
<S>                              <C>
                                  Any remaining Available Distribution Amount
                                  will be allocated as follows:

                                  Fifth, Class A: To the Class A-1, Class A-3,
                                  Class A-4, Class A-5 and Class A-6
                                  Certificates, pro rata, in accordance with
                                  their entitlements to such amounts, interest
                                  deferred from prior periods due to the
                                  imposition of an available funds cap on their
                                  interest rates to the extent currently
                                  payable, together with interest on such
                                  amounts.

                                  A description of each Class of Certificates'
                                  interest entitlement can be found in
                                  "Description of the Offered Certificates -
                                  Pass-Through Rates" and "--Related
                                  Definitions" in this Prospectus Supplement. As
                                  described in such section, there are
                                  circumstances in which your interest
                                  entitlement for a Distribution Date could be
                                  less than one full month's interest at the
                                  Pass-Through Rate on your Certificate
                                  Principal Balance.

                                  The amount of principal required to be
                                  distributed to the classes entitled to
                                  principal on a particular Distribution Date
                                  also can be found in "Description of the
                                  Offered Certificates Distributions" and
                                  "--Related Definitions" in this Prospectus
                                  Supplement.

                                  None of the Offered Certificates will be
                                  entitled to receive any prepayment penalties
                                  received on the Loans.

  ASSETS OF THE POOL............. Unless the context indicates otherwise, any
                                  numerical or statistical information with
                                  respect to the Loans (as defined below)
                                  presented in this Prospectus Supplement is
                                  based upon the characteristics of such portion
                                  of the total pool of Loans that will be
                                  included in the Trust that have been
                                  identified as of the date of this Prospectus
                                  Supplement. This portion consists of Loans
                                  having an aggregate principal balance of
                                  $436,889,824 (the "Cut-Off Date Statistical
                                  Principal Balance") as of the Cut-Off Date.
                                  The Transferor will transfer Loans to the
                                  Depositor, or other Loans may be substituted
                                  for those loans identified in this Prospectus
                                  Supplement and transferred to the Depositor,
                                  who in turn will transfer such Loans to the
                                  Trust on the Closing Date. The Transferor
                                  expects that the total pool of Loans on the
                                  Closing Date will have an aggregate principal
                                  balance of approximately $436,889,824 as of
                                  the Cut-Off Date, subject to a permitted
                                  variance of plus or minus 5%.

                                  The Loans will consist primarily of fixed
                                  rate, closed-end loans secured by first or
                                  second priority liens and having original
                                  terms to maturity of not greater than 30
                                  years. Loans ("Mortgage Loans") representing
                                  approximately 93.71% of the Cut-Off Date
                                  Statistical Principal Balance will be secured
                                  by mortgages or deeds of trust on properties
                                  ("Mortgaged Properties"). Loans ("Manufactured
                                  Housing Contracts", and together with the
                                  Mortgage Loans, the "Loans") representing
                                  approximately 6.29% of the Cut-Off Date
                                  Statistical Principal Balance will be secured
                                  by security interests in manufactured homes
                                  that are not real estate ("Manufactured Homes"
                                  and together with the Mortgaged Properties,
                                  the "Properties").

                                  Each Loan bears interest at a fixed rate. As
                                  of the Cut-Off Date, the weighted average
                                  interest rate for the Loans based on the
                                  Cut-Off Date Statistical Principal Balance was
                                  approximately 9.70% per annum.
</TABLE>


                                      S-7




<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<S>                              <C>
                                  See "Description of the Loans" in this
                                  Prospectus Supplement.

  SERVICING OF THE LOANS......... The Servicer has agreed to service the Loans
                                  on a "scheduled/actual" basis (i.e., the
                                  Servicer is responsible for advancing
                                  scheduled payments of interest, but not
                                  principal) and to cause the Loans to be
                                  serviced with the same care as it customarily
                                  employs in servicing and administering loans
                                  for its own account in accordance with
                                  accepted mortgage servicing practices of
                                  prudent lending institutions and giving due
                                  consideration to the Certificate Insurer's and
                                  the Certificateholders' reliance on the
                                  Servicer.

                                  The Servicer will be required to advance
                                  delinquent payments of interest on the Loans
                                  and advance any property protection expenses
                                  relating to the Loans. The Servicer will not
                                  be required to make any advance that it
                                  determines would be nonrecoverable. The
                                  Servicer will also be required to pay
                                  compensating interest, to the extent of its
                                  aggregate monthly servicing fee, to cover
                                  interest shortfalls resulting from prepayments
                                  that do not include one full month's interest.

                                  See "Servicing of the Loans" in this
                                  Prospectus Supplement.

OPTIONAL TERMINATION............. The Servicer may (with the consent of the
                                  Certificate Insurer if such termination would
                                  cause a payment to be made under the
                                  Certificate Insurance Policy) , at its option
                                  (and if such option is not exercised by the
                                  Servicer, the Certificate Insurer may, at its
                                  option) repurchase all but not less than all
                                  of the Loans in the Trust on the first date
                                  (the "Optional Termination Date") on which the
                                  current aggregate principal balance of the
                                  Loans is less than 10% of the aggregate unpaid
                                  principal balances of the Loans as of the
                                  Cut-Off Date, by purchasing from the Trust on
                                  the next succeeding Distribution Date all of
                                  the property of the Trust. See "Description of
                                  the Offered Certificates--Termination;
                                  Purchase of Loans" in this Prospectus
                                  Supplement.

CREDIT ENHANCEMENT............... The credit enhancement provided for the
                                  benefit of the Offered Certificate consists of
                                  (a) excess interest, (b) the
                                  Overcollateralization Amounts and (c) the
                                  Certificate Insurance Policy.

  Excess Interest................ Because the amount of interest collected on
                                  the Loans for each Due Period is expected to
                                  be higher than the interest distributable on
                                  the Certificates for the related Distribution
                                  Date, excess interest will be generated. This
                                  excess interest will be applied both to absorb
                                  interest shortfalls and unreimbursed expenses
                                  of the Trust Fund, and a portion of it will be
                                  available to create and maintain the required
                                  level of overcollateralization.

  Overcollateralization.......... On the Closing Date, the Overcollateralization
                                  Amount will equal zero. As a result of the
                                  application of a portion of the excess
                                  interest in reduction of the principal balance
                                  of the Class A Certificates, the applicable
                                  Overcollateralization Amount is expected to
                                  increase over time until it reaches the
                                  applicable required level of
                                  overcollateralization; however, subject to the
                                  satisfaction of certain loss and delinquency
                                  tests, the required percentage level of
                                  overcollateralization may increase or decrease
                                  over time. The Overcollateralization Amount is
                                  the first amount to absorb realized losses on
                                  the Loans.
</TABLE>


                                      S-8




<PAGE>


<TABLE>
<S>                              <C>
  Certificate Insurance Policy... The Certificate Insurer will issue a
                                  Certificate Guaranty Insurance Policy (the
                                  "Certificate Insurance Policy"), pursuant to
                                  which it will irrevocably and unconditionally
                                  guaranty on each Distribution Date timely
                                  payment of interest, subject to any applicable
                                  available funds caps, and ultimate payment of
                                  principal due on the Class A Certificates. A
                                  payment by the Certificate Insurer under the
                                  Certificate Insurance Policy is referred to
                                  herein as an "Insured Payment". The
                                  Certificate Insurer will be entitled to
                                  reimbursement from a portion of the excess
                                  interest and the Overcollateralization Amount
                                  for all Insured Payments, together with
                                  interest. See "The Certificate Insurance
                                  Policy" in this Prospectus Supplement.

REGISTRATION AND
DENOMINATIONS OF THE
CERTIFICATES..................... The Offered Certificates initially will be
                                  issued in book-entry form, in minimum
                                  denominations of $25,000 and integral
                                  multiples of $1,000 in excess of that amount
                                  (except for one Certificate of each class
                                  which may be issued in a greater or lesser
                                  amount). The Class A Certificates are
                                  sometimes referred to as "Book-Entry
                                  Certificates." No person acquiring an interest
                                  in the Book-Entry Certificates (a "Beneficial
                                  Owner") will be entitled to receive a
                                  definitive certificate representing such
                                  person's interest in the Trust Fund, except
                                  under limited circumstances as described
                                  herein. Beneficial Owners may elect to hold
                                  their interests through The Depository Trust
                                  Company ("DTC"), in the United States, or
                                  Cedelbank ("Cedelbank") or The Euroclear
                                  System ("Euroclear"), in Europe. Transfers
                                  within DTC, Cedelbank or Euroclear, as the
                                  case may be, will be in accordance with the
                                  usual rules and operating procedures of the
                                  relevant system. See "Description of the
                                  Offered Certificates - Registration and
                                  Denominations" in this Prospectus Supplement.

TAX STATUS....................... The Trustee will make elections to treat
                                  designated portions of the Trust Fund as
                                  separate REMICs for federal income tax
                                  purposes. In the opinion of counsel, such
                                  portions of the Trust Fund will qualify for
                                  this treatment. A portion of the Trust Fund,
                                  which includes certain interest distributable
                                  to holders of the Offered Certificates, will
                                  be treated as a grantor trust.

                                  Pertinent federal income tax consequences of
                                  an investment in the Offered Certificates
                                  include:

                                      Your Certificates (except for the Class
                                      A-6IO Certificates) will represent a
                                      "regular interest" in a REMIC and the
                                      right to receive interest from the grantor
                                      trust at the excess of their Pass-Through
                                      Rates over the REMIC rate, which will be
                                      set at 3.5% per annum.

                                      The Class A-6IO Certificates will
                                      represent the right to receive interest
                                      from the grantor trust.

                                      The regular interests will be treated as
                                      newly originated debt instruments and the
                                      interests in the grantor trust will
                                      represent notional principal contracts for
                                      federal income tax purposes, to the extent
                                      described in this Prospectus Supplement.
</TABLE>


                                      S-9




<PAGE>


<TABLE>
<S>                              <C>
                                      You will be required to report income on
                                      the Offered Certificates in accordance
                                      with the accrual method of accounting.

                                      One or more classes of Offered
                                      Certificates may be issued with original
                                      issue discount for federal income tax
                                      purposes, which generally requires you to
                                      report income in advance of the related
                                      cash distributions.

                                      The portion of your purchase price for the
                                      Offered Certificates (other than Class
                                      A-6IO) allocable to the right to receive
                                      interest on such Certificates in excess of
                                      the REMIC rate of 3.5% per annum and, to
                                      the extent described in this Prospectus
                                      Supplement, the entire purchase price for
                                      the Class A-6IO Certificates, will be
                                      amortizable under the rules for notional
                                      principal contracts, subject to
                                      limitations if you are an individual.

                                  See "Certain Federal Income Tax Consequences"
                                  in this Prospectus Supplement and in the
                                  accompanying Prospectus.

ERISA CONSIDERATIONS............. A fiduciary of any employee benefit plan or
                                  other retirement arrangement subject to ERISA,
                                  or the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as
                                  amended (the "Code") 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 the Code.
                                  The U.S. Department of Labor has issued to
                                  PaineWebber Incorporated and First Union
                                  Capital Markets Corp. individual Prohibited
                                  Transaction Exemption 90-36 and Prohibited
                                  Transaction Exemption 96-22, each of which
                                  generally exempts from the application of
                                  certain of the prohibited transaction
                                  provisions of ERISA, and the excise taxes
                                  imposed on such prohibited transactions by
                                  Section 4975(a) and (b) of the Code and
                                  Section 502(i) of ERISA, transactions relating
                                  to the purchase, sale and holding of
                                  pass-through certificates such as the Offered
                                  Certificates and the servicing and operation
                                  of asset pools such as the Trust, provided
                                  that certain conditions are satisfied.

LEGAL INVESTMENT................. The Offered Certificates will not constitute
                                  "mortgage related securities" for purposes of
                                  the Secondary Mortgage Market Enhancement Act
                                  of 1984, as amended. See "Legal Investment" in
                                  this Prospectus Supplement.

CERTIFICATE RATINGS.............. On the Closing Date, the Offered Certificates
                                  are required to have the following ratings by
                                  each of Standard & Poor's Ratings Services, a
                                  division of The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
                                  ("S&P") and Moody's Investors Service, Inc.
                                  ("Moody's", and together with S&P, the "Rating
                                  Agencies")
</TABLE>


                                      S-10




<PAGE>


<TABLE>
<S>                              <C>
                                      CLASS           S&P        MOODY'S
                                      -----           ---        -------
                                       A-1            AAA          Aaa
                                       A-2            AAA          Aaa
                                       A-3            AAA          Aaa
                                       A-4            AAA          Aaa
                                       A-5            AAA          Aaa
                                       A-6            AAA          Aaa
                                      A-6IO           AAAr         Aaa

                                  The ratings on the Offered Certificates are
                                  based on the presence of the Certificate
                                  Insurance Policy. 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. The ratings do not address the
                                  possibility that holders of the Offered
                                  Certificates may suffer a lower than
                                  anticipated yield. S&P assigns the additional
                                  rating of "r" to highlight classes of
                                  securities that S&P believes may experience
                                  high volatility or high variability in
                                  expected returns due to non-credit risks.

                                  See "Ratings" in this Prospectus Supplement
                                  for discussion of the primary factors upon
                                  which the ratings are based.

IMPORTANT COVENANTS
OF CERTIFICATEHOLDERS............ By accepting your Certificate, you agree to
                                  allow the Certificate Insurer to exercise all
                                  of your voting rights with respect to the
                                  Certificates.

</TABLE>

                                      S-11




<PAGE>


                                  RISK FACTORS

     YOU SHOULD CAREFULLY CONSIDER THE FOLLOWING RISKS BEFORE MAKING AN
INVESTMENT DECISION. IN PARTICULAR, PAYMENTS ON YOUR CERTIFICATES WILL DEPEND ON
PAYMENTS RECEIVED ON AND OTHER RECOVERIES WITH RESPECT TO THE LOANS. THEREFORE,
YOU SHOULD CAREFULLY CONSIDER THE RISK FACTORS RELATING TO THE LOANS.

     THE RISKS AND UNCERTAINTIES DESCRIBED BELOW ARE NOT THE ONLY ONES RELATING
TO YOUR CERTIFICATES. ADDITIONAL RISKS AND UNCERTAINTIES NOT PRESENTLY KNOWN OR
THAT WE CURRENTLY CONSIDER IMMATERIAL MAY ALSO IMPAIR YOUR INVESTMENT.

     IF ANY OF THE FOLLOWING RISKS ARE REALIZED, YOUR INVESTMENT COULD BE
MATERIALLY AND ADVERSELY AFFECTED.

     THIS PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT ALSO CONTAINS FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS THAT
INVOLVE RISKS AND UNCERTAINTIES. ACTUAL RESULTS COULD DIFFER MATERIALLY FROM
THOSE ANTICIPATED IN THESE FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS AS A RESULT OF CERTAIN
FACTORS, INCLUDING THE RISKS DESCRIBED BELOW AND ELSEWHERE IN THIS PROSPECTUS
SUPPLEMENT.

YIELD, PREPAYMENT AND MATURITY CONSIDERATIONS

     Variations in Yield to Maturity. The degree to which the actual yield of
your Certificates may vary from the anticipated yield will depend upon:

     the price of your Certificates, including the amount of any premium or
     discount;

     the degree to which the timing of payments on your Certificates is
     sensitive to the prepayment experience of the Loans and the application of
     a portion of the excess interest on the Loans as principal on the
     Certificates;

     the timing of delinquencies, defaults and losses on the Loans to the extent
     not covered by the credit enhancement, including the Certificate Insurance
     Policy; and

     a change in the required level of overcollateralization or a change in the
     delinquency or loss levels with respect to the Loans or a change in the
     portion of the excess interest requirements used to determine an increase
     or decrease in such required level of overcollateralization.

     The allocation of a portion of the excess interest on the Loans as an
additional payment of principal on the Certificates as described in this
Prospectus Supplement will accelerate the principal amortization of the
Certificates relative to the speed at which principal is paid on the Loans.
However, any reduction in the required level of overcollateralization will slow
the principal amortization of the Certificates. See "Prepayment and Yield
Considerations" in this Prospectus Supplement.

     Unpredictability of Prepayments and its Effect on Yields. Approximately
68.76% of the Loans by Cut-Off Date Statistical Principal Balance provide that
the borrowers may, without penalty, prepay their Loans in whole or in part at
any time. We cannot predict the rate at which borrowers will repay their Loans.
A prepayment of a Loan would result in a prepayment on the related Certificates.

     If you purchase your Certificates at a discount and principal is repaid
     slower than you anticipate, then your yield may be lower than you
     anticipate.

     If you purchase your Certificates at a premium and principal is repaid
     faster than you anticipate, then your yield may be lower than you
     anticipate.

     The rate of prepayments on the Loans will be sensitive to prevailing
     interest rates. Generally, if prevailing interest rates decline
     significantly below the interest rates on the Loans, those Loans are more
     likely to prepay than if prevailing rates remain above the interest rates
     on such Loans. Conversely, if prevailing interest rates rise significantly,
     the prepayments on the Loans are likely to decrease.

     So long as credit enhancement is available, liquidations of defaulted loans
     generally will have the same effect on the related Certificates as a
     prepayment of a Loan.


                                      S-12




<PAGE>


     If the rate of default and the amount of losses on the Loans related to
     your Certificates are higher than you expect, then your yield may be lower
     than you expect.

     The yield to maturity on the Class A-6IO Certificates will be extremely
     sensitive to the timing of principal distributions on the Class A-6
     Certificates, because interest distributions on the Class A-6IO
     Certificates are based on a notional balance that is equal to the principal
     balance of the Class A-6 Certificates.

     See "Prepayment and Yield Considerations" in this Prospectus Supplement.

LIMITED LIQUIDITY

     A secondary market for the Offered Certificates may not develop or, if it
does develop, it may not provide you with liquidity of investment or continue
while your Certificates are outstanding. See "Risk Factors--Limited Liquidity"
in the accompanying Prospectus.

INTEREST RATES ON THE CLASS A-1, CLASS A-3, CLASS A-4, CLASS A-5 AND CLASS A-6
CERTIFICATES ARE SUBJECT TO LIMITS

     The yield on the Class A-1, Class A-3, Class A-4, Class A-5 and Class A-6
Certificates may be adversely affected by the application of an "available funds
cap" described under "Description of the Offered Certificates - Pass-Through
Rates." The prepayment of Loans with higher interest rates may result in a lower
"available funds cap." If on any Distribution Date the application of the
"available funds cap" results in an interest distribution lower than the
interest that would otherwise have accrued on a Certificate during the related
Accrual Period, the value of your Certificates may decline.

     Although you will be entitled to receive on subsequent Distribution Dates
the amount of any interest shortfall resulting from the application of the
"available funds cap" on the Certificates, there is no assurance that funds will
be available. The failure to distribute such amount carried forward on
subsequent Distribution Dates due to lack of funds will not be covered by the
Certificate Insurance Policy. In addition, the ratings of the Certificates do
not address the likelihood of the distribution of such amounts carried forward.

ADEQUACY OF CREDIT ENHANCEMENT

     Ratings of Certificate Insurer. Any reduction in a rating assigned to the
financial strength of the Certificate Insurer may result in a reduction in the
rating of the Class A Certificates. Future events may reduce the rating of the
Certificate Insurer or impair the ability of the Certificate Insurer to pay
claims for Insured Payments under the Certificate Insurance Policy. In that
event, the Certificate Insurer might not have the ability to cover delays or
shortfalls in payments of interest or ultimate principal due on the
Certificates. For information regarding the Certificate Insurance Policy and the
Certificate Insurer, see "The Certificate Insurance Policy" and "The Certificate
Insurer" in this Prospectus Supplement.

     Loan Delinquencies, Defaults and Losses. Delinquencies, if not advanced by
the Servicer, defaults and losses on the Loans will reduce the credit
enhancement available from the overcollateralization feature. If amounts
available from this credit enhancement are not adequate to protect against the
delinquencies, defaults and losses experienced on the Loans, then delays or
shortfalls in payments of interest or principal due on the Certificates will
occur, unless such delays or shortfalls are covered under the Certificate
Insurance Policy.

     Availability of Excess Interest for Overcollateralization. The Loans are
expected to accrue more interest than is needed to pay interest on the Offered
Certificates because the net weighted average interest rate on the Loans is
expected to be higher than the weighted average pass-through rate on the Offered
Certificates. If the Loans generate more interest than is needed to pay interest
on the Offered Certificates and certain fees and expenses of the Trust, the
remaining interest will be used first to cover losses and delinquencies
experienced by the Loans, if any. After these financial obligations of the Trust
have been satisfied, a certain portion of the available excess interest will be
used to create and maintain overcollateralization. We cannot assure you,
however, that enough excess interest will be generated to compensate for
interest losses or shortfalls in payments on the Loans or to maintain the
required level of overcollateralization.


                                      S-13




<PAGE>


     The excess interest available on any Distribution Date will be affected by
the actual amount of interest received, collected or recovered in respect of the
Loans during the preceding month and by the weighted average of the pass-through
rates on the Offered Certificates for the related Distribution Date. Such amount
will be influenced by changes in the weighted average of the loan interest rates
and of the pass-through rates on such Classes of Certificates resulting from
prepayments and liquidations of the related Loans and payments made in reduction
of the principal balances of the Classes of Certificates.

     The Pooling and Servicing Agreement will require the Trustee to make a
claim for an Insured Payment under the Certificate Insurance Policy as to which
the Trustee has determined that an Insured Payment will be necessary. Investors
in the Class A Certificates should realize that, under extreme loss or
delinquency scenarios, they may temporarily receive no distributions of
principal.

     If the protection afforded by overcollateralization is insufficient and if
the Certificate Insurer is unable to meet its obligations under the Certificate
Insurance Policy, then you could experience a loss on your investment.

UNDERWRITING GUIDELINES

     The Transferor's underwriting standards are intended to assess the
creditworthiness of the borrower and the value of the property and to evaluate
the adequacy of such property as collateral for the loan. In comparison to first
lien mortgage loans that conform to the underwriting guidelines of FNMA or
FHLMC, the Loans have generally been underwritten or re-underwritten with more
lenient underwriting criteria. For example, the Loans may have been made to
borrowers having imperfect credit histories, ranging from minor delinquencies to
bankruptcies, or borrowers with higher ratios of monthly mortgage payments to
income or higher ratios of total monthly credit payments to income. Accordingly,
the Loans will likely experience higher, and possibly substantially higher,
rates of delinquencies, defaults and losses than the rates experienced by loans
underwritten according to FNMA or FHLMC guidelines.

     Furthermore, changes in the values of the Properties may have a greater
effect on the delinquency, foreclosure, bankruptcy and loss experience of the
Loans than on mortgage loans originated according to FNMA or FHLMC guidelines.
No assurance can be given that the values of the Properties have remained or
will remain at the levels in effect on the dates of origination of the related
Loans.

     See "--Adequacy of Credit Enhancement" above, and "Description of the
Loans--Credit and Underwriting Guidelines" in this Prospectus Supplement.

REALIZATION UPON DEFAULTED LOANS

     Adequacy of Security and Severity of Losses. Assuming that the Properties
provide adequate security for the Loans, substantial delays in recoveries may
occur from the foreclosure or liquidation of defaulted Loans. No assurance can
be given that the values of the Properties have remained or will remain at the
levels in effect on the dates of origination of the related Loans. If the Loans
are secured by Manufactured Homes, we would expect that the value of the
Manufactured Homes would decrease over time. Further, liquidation expenses (such
as legal fees, real estate taxes, and maintenance and preservation expenses)
will reduce the proceeds payable on the Loans and thereby reduce the security
for the Loans. In the event any of the Properties fail to provide adequate
security for the related Loan, you may experience a loss if the Certificate
Insurer were unable to perform its obligations under the Certificate Insurance
Policy. See "Servicing of the Loans--Realization Upon or Sale of Defaulted
Loans" in this Prospectus Supplement, and "Certain Legal Aspects of Residential
Loans--Foreclosure on Mortgages" in the accompanying Prospectus.

     Application of Bankruptcy Laws. The application of federal and state laws,
including bankruptcy and debtor relief laws, may interfere with or adversely
affect the ability to realize upon the Properties, enforce deficiency judgments
or pursue collection litigation with respect to defaulted Loans. As a
consequence, borrowers who have defaulted on their Loans and have sought, or are
considering seeking, relief under bankruptcy or debtor relief laws will have
substantially less incentive to repay their Loans, and such Loans will likely
experience more severe losses, which may be total losses. See "--Adequacy of
Credit Enhancement" above and "--Legal Considerations--Legal Compliance and
Regulation" below.


                                      S-14




<PAGE>


GEOGRAPHIC CONCENTRATION

     Mortgaged Properties and Manufactured Homes located in Alabama, Louisiana
and Tennessee secure approximately 31.30%, 15.98% and 13.17%, respectively, of
the Loans by Cut-Off Date Statistical Principal Balance. This geographic
concentration might magnify the effect on the pool of Loans of adverse economic
conditions or of special hazards in these areas and therefore might increase the
rate of delinquencies, defaults and losses on the Loans more than would be the
case if the Mortgaged Properties and Manufactured Homes were more geographically
diversified. See "Description of the Loans" in this Prospectus Supplement.

SEASONING OF LOANS

     Defaults on loans tend to occur at higher rates during the early years of
the loans. Most of the Loans were originated within twelve months prior to sale
to the Trust. As a result, the Trust may experience higher rates of default than
if the Loans had been outstanding for a longer period of time.

BORROWER MAY BE UNABLE TO MAKE BALLOON PAYMENTS

     Approximately 12.85% of the Loans by Cut-Off Date Statistical Principal
Balance have monthly payments based on an amortization which would require the
payment of a substantial portion of the principal balance of such Loans at
maturity. The ability of a borrower to make such a payment may depend on the
borrower's ability to obtain refinancing of the balance due on the Loan at
maturity. An increase in interest rates over the interest rate on the Loan may
have an adverse effect on the borrower's ability to obtain refinancing and to
pay the required payment due at maturity.

SUBORDINATE LOANS

     Approximately 8.33% of the Loans by Cut-Off Date Statistical Principal
Balance evidence a lien that is subordinate to the rights of the lender under a
senior loan. The proceeds from any liquidation, insurance or condemnation
proceedings will be available to satisfy the outstanding principal balance of
such junior loans only to the extent that the claims of such senior loans have
been satisfied in full, including any foreclosure costs. In circumstances where
the Servicer determines that it would be uneconomical to foreclose on the
related Property, the Servicer may write off the entire outstanding principal
balance of the related Loan as bad debt. The foregoing considerations will be
particularly applicable to junior loans that have high combined loan-to-value
ratios because in such cases, the Servicer is more likely to determine that
foreclosure would be uneconomical. You should consider the risk that to the
extent losses on Loans are not covered by available credit enhancement, such
losses will be borne by the holders of the Certificates.

LEGAL CONSIDERATIONS

     Insolvency of Transferor. If the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
("FDIC") is appointed receiver or conservator of the Transferor, the FDIC's
administrative expenses may have priority over the interest of the Trust and/or
the Trustee in the Loans. In addition, the Federal Deposit Insurance Act, as
amended by the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery and Enforcement Act of
1989, gives the FDIC certain powers in its capacity as a receiver or conservator
of the Transferor that if exercised could result in delays or reductions in
distributions of principal and interest on the Certificates, unless such
distributions are covered under the Certificate Insurance Policy.

     Salient among the FDIC's powers as receiver or conservator is the power to
disaffirm or repudiate any of the Transferor's contracts or leases the
performance of which would be burdensome and the disaffirmance or repudiation of
which would promote the orderly administration of the Transferor's affairs. It
is unclear whether the FDIC can utilize this power to repudiate the transfer of
the Loans to the Depositor and administer the Loans as part of any receivership
or conservatorship of the Transferor. Any attempt by the FDIC to repudiate the
transfer of the Loans to the Depositor in a receivership or conservatorship of
the Transferor, even if unsuccessful, could result in delays or reductions in
distributions of principal and interest on the Certificates, unless such
distributions are covered under the Certificate Insurance Policy.

     The FDIC recently proposed a statement of policy outlining the
circumstances under which the FDIC will not seek to repudiate transfers made as
part of a securitization, such as the transfer of the Loans to the Depositor.
Although that statement of policy is not yet final, much of it merely reiterates
pre-existing law, and substantive


                                      S-15




<PAGE>


changes are not expected. The transfer of the Loans to the Depositor has been
structured with the specific intent to satisfy the requirements of the proposed
statement of policy.

     See "Description of the Loans--Assignment of Loans" in this Prospectus
Supplement.

     Bankruptcy of Other Parties. In the event a bankruptcy or insolvency of the
Servicer, the bankruptcy trustee or receiver may have the power to prevent the
Certificate Insurer, the Trustee or the Depositor from appointing a successor
Servicer.

     In addition, 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 lender to realize upon its security. See
"Certain Legal Aspects of Residential Loans" in the Prospectus.

     Legal Compliance and Regulation. Federal and state laws regulate the
underwriting, origination, servicing and collection of the Loans. These laws
will likely change over time and may become more restrictive or stringent with
respect to certain of these activities of the Servicer and Transferor.
Violations of these Federal and state laws may limit the ability of the Servicer
to collect principal or interest on the Loans, may entitle the borrowers to a
refund of amounts previously paid, and may subject the Servicer or the
Transferor to damages and administrative sanctions. The inability to collect
principal or interest on the Loans because of violations of Federal or state
laws will likely cause the Loans to experience higher rates of delinquencies,
defaults and losses. An assessment of damages or sanctions against the Servicer
or the Transferor may adversely affect the ability of the Servicer to service
the Loans or the Transferor to repurchase or replace defective Loans. See "Risk
Factors--Certain Other Legal Considerations Regarding Residential Loans" in the
accompanying Prospectus. The Transferor will be required to repurchase or
replace any Loan that did not comply with applicable Federal and state laws. See
"--Limitations on the Transferor and Servicer" below.

RISKS ASSOCIATED WITH YEAR 2000 COMPLIANCE

     We are aware of the issues associated with the programming code in existing
computer systems as the year 2000 approaches. The "year 2000 problem" is
pervasive and complex; virtually every computer operation will be affected in
some way by the rollover of the two-digit year value to 00. The issue is whether
the computer systems will properly recognize date-sensitive information when the
year changes to 2000. Systems that do not properly recognize such information
could generate erroneous data or cause a system to fail.

     The Servicer and the Trustee will certify that they are committed either to
(i) implement modifications to its existing systems to the extent required to
cause them to be year 2000 ready or (ii) acquire computer systems that are year
2000 ready in each case prior to January 1, 2000. However, we have not made any
independent investigation of the computer systems of the Servicer or the
Trustee. If computer problems result from the failure to complete such efforts
on time, or if the computer systems of Servicer or the Trustee are not fully
year 2000 ready, then the resulting disruptions in the collection or
distribution of receipts on the Loans could materially and adversely affect your
investment.

     With respect to the year 2000 problem, DTC has informed members of the
financial community that it has developed and is implementing a program so that
its systems, as they relate to the timely payment of distributions, including
principal and interest payments, to security holders, book-entry deliveries, and
settlement of trades within DTC, continue to function appropriately on and after
January 1, 2000. This program includes a technical assessment and a remediation
plan, each of which is complete. Additionally, DTC's plan includes a testing
phase, which is expected to be completed within appropriate time frames.

     However, DTC's ability to perform properly its services is also dependent
upon other parties, including but not limited to, its participating
organizations, through which you will hold your Certificates, as well as the
computer systems of third party service providers. DTC has informed the
financial community that it is contacting and will continue to contact third
party vendors from whom DTC acquires services to:

     impress upon them the importance of such services being year 2000
     compliant; and

     determine the extent of their efforts for year 2000 remediation, and, as
     appropriate, testing, of their services.

     In addition, DTC has stated that it is in the process of developing such
contingency plans as it deems appropriate.


                                      S-16




<PAGE>


     If problems associated with the year 2000 problem were to occur with
respect to DTC and the services described above, you could experience delays or
shortfalls in the payments due on your Certificates.

LIMITATIONS ON THE TRANSFEROR AND SERVICER

     Dependence on Servicer. The amount and timing of distributions on the
Certificates generally will be dependent upon the Servicer to perform its
servicing obligations in an adequate and timely manner. See "Servicing of the
Loans" in this Prospectus Supplement. If the Servicer fails to perform its
servicing obligations, such failure may result in the termination of the
Servicer. Such termination and subsequent transfer of daily collection
activities will likely increase the rates of delinquencies, defaults and losses
on the Loans.

     Ability to Repurchase or Replace Defective Loans. If the Transferor fails
to cure a material breach of its Loan representations and warranties with
respect to any Loan in a timely manner, then the Transferor is required to
repurchase or replace such defective Loan. See "Description of
Loans--Representations and Warranties of the Transferor" in this Prospectus
Supplement. The Transferor may not be capable of repurchasing or replacing any
defective Loans, for financial or other reasons. The Transferor's inability to
repurchase or replace defective Loans would likely cause the Loans to experience
higher rates of delinquencies, defaults and losses. See "--Adequacy of Credit
Enhancement" above.

OTHER RISKS

     See "Risk Factors" in the accompanying Prospectus for a description of
certain other risks and special considerations that may be applicable to your
Certificates.

                            DESCRIPTION OF THE LOANS

GENERAL

     On or about May 27, 1999 (the "Closing Date"), PaineWebber Mortgage
Acceptance Corporation IV (the "Depositor) will acquire from New South Federal
Savings Bank (the "Transferor") a pool of loans (the "Loans"), having an
aggregate unpaid principal balance as of May 1, 1999 (the "Cut-Off Date")
expected to be approximately $436,889,824, subject to a permitted variance of
plus or minus 5%. The Depositor will then transfer the Loans to the Trust
pursuant to the Pooling and Servicing Agreement. The Trust will be entitled to
all scheduled payments of principal and interest due in respect of the Loans
after the Cut-Off Date, and all unscheduled principal collections on the Loans
on or after the Cut-Off Date.

     The Mortgage Loans are evidenced by Mortgage Notes (each, a "Mortgage
Note"), secured by mortgages or deeds of trust (the "Mortgages") on the
Mortgaged Properties of which approximately 8.33% by Cut-Off Date Statistical
Principal Balance are second lien Mortgages. The Manufactured Housing Contracts,
representing approximately 6.29% of the Loans by Cut-Off Date Statistical
Principal Balance, are secured by Manufactured Homes that are not real estate.

CHARACTERISTICS OF THE LOANS

     Set forth below is certain statistical information regarding
characteristics of only a portion of the Loans to be transferred to the Trust
that have been identified as of the date of this Prospectus Supplement. This
portion consists of Loans having an aggregate principal balance of $436,889,824
(the "Cut-Off Date Statistical Principal Balance") as of the Cut-Off Date. The
Transferor may transfer Loans to the Depositor, or other Loans may be
substituted for those Loans identified in this Prospectus Supplement and
transferred to the Depositor, who in turn may transfer such Loans to the Trust
on the Closing Date. The Transferor expects that the total pool of Loans will
have an aggregate principal balance of approximately $436,889,824 (the "Original
Pool Principal Balance") as of the Cut-Off Date, subject to a permitted variance
of plus or minus 5%. Unless the context indicates otherwise, any numerical or
statistical information presented in this Prospectus Supplement is based upon
the characteristics of such portion of the total pool of Loans that comprise the
Cut-Off Date Statistical Principal Balance.

     The information set forth below does not take into account any unidentified
Loans as of the date of this Prospectus Supplement. In addition, before the
Closing Date, the Transferor may substitute comparable loans for any of the
Loans identified as of the date of this Prospectus Supplement; provided,
however, that the aggregate


                                      S-17




<PAGE>


principal balance of such Loans will not exceed 5% of the Original Pool
Principal Balance. As a result, the statistical information presented below
regarding the characteristics of the portion of Loans to be included in the
Trust may vary in certain respects from comparable information based on the
actual composition of the Loans included in the Trust on the Closing Date. In
addition, after the Cut-Off Date, the characteristics of the actual Loans may
materially vary from the information below due to a number of factors, including
prepayments after the Cut-Off Date or the substitution or repurchase of Loans
after the Closing Date.

     The Loans have original terms to stated maturity of up to 30 years. The
Loans were selected by the Transferor from the loans in the Transferor's
portfolio using a selection process believed by the Transferor not to be adverse
to the Certificateholders or to the Certificate Insurer. As of the Cut-Off Date,
the average unpaid principal balance of the Loans was approximately $55,733. As
of the Cut-Off Date, the weighted average interest rate of the Loans was
approximately 9.70% per annum. The weighted average "Combined Loan-to-Value
Ratio" (or "CLTV") (calculated by dividing the sum of (x) if applicable, any
outstanding first lien balance as of the date of origination of the related Loan
plus (y) the unpaid principal balance of such Loan as of the Cut-Off Date, by
the Value of such Property at origination) of the Loans was approximately
80.30%. "Value" in connection with a Mortgaged Property means the lesser of the
appraised value of the Mortgaged Property or, if applicable, the purchase price
of the Mortgaged Property, or in connection with a Manufactured Home, the stated
cash sale price of such Manufactured Home, including sales and other taxes,
plus, to the extent financed, filing and recording fees imposed by law, premiums
for related insurance and prepaid finance charges. The weighted average
remaining term to maturity was approximately 240 months and the latest scheduled
maturity of any Loan is May, 2029; however the actual date on which any Loan is
paid in full may be earlier than the stated maturity date due to unscheduled
payments of principal.

     As of the Cut-Off Date, all of the Loans were secured by Mortgaged
Properties or Manufactured Homes. Based on information supplied by the borrowers
in connection with their loan applications at origination, Properties securing
approximately 96.29% of the Loans by Cut-Off Date Statistical Principal Balance
will be owner occupied primary residences and Properties securing approximately
3.71% of the Loans by Cut-Off Date Statistical Principal Balance will be
non-owner occupied or second homes.

     Approximately 31.24% of the Loans by Cut-Off Date Statistical Principal
Balance provide for penalties upon full prepayment during the first two, three,
four or five years after origination thereof. Each of the Loans is subject to a
due-on-sale clause. See "Certain Legal Aspects of Residential Loans" in the
Prospectus.

     Except for approximately 12.85% of the Loans by Cut-Off Date Statistical
Principal Balance, the scheduled monthly payment on each Loan includes interest
plus an amount that will amortize the outstanding principal balance of the Loan
over its remaining term.

STATISTICAL INFORMATION

     Set forth below is a description of certain additional characteristics of
the Loans as of the Cut-Off Date (except as otherwise indicated). Dollar amounts
and percentages may not add up to totals due to rounding.


                                      S-18




<PAGE>


                        GEOGRAPHIC DISTRIBUTION OF LOANS

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                    % OF CUT-OFF
                                      AGGREGATE   DATE STATISTICAL
                          NUMBER OF   PRINCIPAL      PRINCIPAL
JURISDICTION               LOANS       BALANCE        BALANCE
- ------------              ---------   ----------  ----------------
<S>                        <C>      <C>                <C>
Alabama ...............    2,657    $136,749,429       31.30%
Louisiana .............    1,404      69,818,613       15.98
Tennessee .............      905      57,555,028       13.17
Florida ...............      607      36,576,418        8.37
Mississippi ...........      802      36,147,151        8.27
Georgia ...............      458      27,093,557        6.20
Arkansas ..............      203      11,096,012        2.54
North Carolina ........      116       8,966,072        2.05
Illinois ..............       73       7,300,905        1.67
Ohio ..................       89       6,671,603        1.53
Virginia ..............       92       5,667,040        1.30
Texas .................       60       5,472,548        1.25
South Carolina ........       95       5,297,649        1.21
Massachusetts .........       27       4,769,437        1.09
Kentucky ..............       52       2,924,289        0.67
Indiana ...............       42       2,659,830        0.61
California ............       23       2,291,083        0.52
Connecticut ...........       15       1,704,478        0.39
New York ..............       16       1,287,554        0.29
New Jersey ............        8       1,133,392        0.26
Washington ............       12         834,960        0.19
Arizona ...............        9         710,110        0.16
Colorado ..............       11         433,026        0.10
Wisconsin .............        6         430,241        0.10
Oregon ................        3         409,978        0.09
Missouri ..............        8         404,632        0.09
Michigan ..............        8         361,313        0.08
West Virginia .........        9         352,386        0.08
New Mexico ............        6         269,738        0.06
Oklahoma ..............        4         258,699        0.06
Kansas ................        2         257,980        0.06
Nevada ................        4         235,690        0.05
Minnesota .............        5         207,947        0.05
Rhode Island ..........        1         158,644        0.04
Utah ..................        2         154,793        0.04
Pennsylvania ..........        2         102,003        0.02
Maryland ..............        1          67,711        0.02
Delaware ..............        1          29,842        0.01
Idaho .................        1          28,044        0.01
                           -----     -----------      ------
  Total ...............    7,839     $436,889,82      100.00%
                           =====     ===========      ======
</TABLE>


                                      S-19




<PAGE>


                               PRINCIPAL BALANCES

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                 % OF CUT-OFF
                                                    AGGREGATE   DATE STATISTICAL
                                        NUMBER OF   PRINCIPAL      PRINCIPAL
RANGE OF PRINCIPAL BALANCES               LOANS       BALANCE        BALANCE
- ---------------------------             ---------   ----------  ----------------
<S>                                      <C>      <C>                <C>
$      0.01 - $ 10,000.00..............       87   $    699,287        0.16%
$ 10,000.01 - $ 15,000.00..............      296      3,838,052        0.88
$ 15,000.01 - $ 20,000.00..............      442      7,836,962        1.79
$ 20,000.01 - $ 30,000.00..............    1,198     30,336,735        6.94
$ 30,000.01 - $ 40,000.00..............    1,269     44,630,560       10.22
$ 40,000.01 - $ 50,000.00..............    1,148     51,836,991       11.87
$ 50,000.01 - $100,000.00..............    2,602    177,166,695       40.55
$100,000.01 - $250,000.00..............      741    101,973,952       23.34
$250,000.01 - $500,000.00..............       54     17,375,250        3.98
$500,000.01 - $1M......................        2      1,195,340        0.27
                                           -----   ------------      ------
  Total...............................     7,839   $436,889,824      100.00%
                                           =====   ============      ======
</TABLE>

     As of the Cut-Off Date, the average unpaid principal balance of the Loans
was approximately $55,733.


                                  LIEN PRIORITY

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                 % OF CUT-OFF
                                                    AGGREGATE   DATE STATISTICAL
                                        NUMBER OF   PRINCIPAL      PRINCIPAL
LIEN PRIORITY                             LOANS       BALANCE        BALANCE
- -------------                           ---------   ----------  ----------------
<S>                                      <C>      <C>              <C>
First Lien............................     6,455   $400,503,846       91.67%
Second Lien...........................     1,384     36,385,979        8.33
                                           -----   ------------      ------
  Total...............................     7,839   $436,889,824      100.00%
                                           =====   ============      ======
</TABLE>




                                      S-20




<PAGE>






                           CURRENT LOAN INTEREST RATES

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                 % OF CUT-OFF
                                                    AGGREGATE   DATE STATISTICAL
                                        NUMBER OF   PRINCIPAL      PRINCIPAL
RANGE OF LOAN INTEREST RATES              LOANS      BALANCE        BALANCE
- ----------------------------            ---------   ----------  ----------------
<S>                                      <C>      <C>              <C>
 6.001% -  7.000% .....................     108   $  5,618,622      1.29%
 7.001% -  8.000% .....................     337     21,762,924       4.98
 8.001% -  9.000% .....................   1,606    106,615,932      24.40
 9.001% - 10.000% .....................   2,440    149,616,163      34.25
10.001% - 11.000% .....................   2,131    108,048,847      24.73
11.001% - 12.000% .....................     846     33,695,129       7.71
12.001% - 13.000% .....................     271      8,413,664       1.93
13.001% - 14.000% .....................      68      2,146,381       0.49
14.001% - 15.000% .....................      20        641,503       0.15
15.001% - 16.000% .....................      10        270,738       0.06
16.001% - 17.000% .....................       2         59,921       0.01
                                          -----   ------------    ------
  Total................................   7,839   $436,889,824    100.00%
                                          =====   ============    ======
</TABLE>
As of the Cut-Off Date, the weighted average interest rates of the Loans was
approximately 9.70% per annum.


                          COMBINED LOAN-TO-VALUE RATIOS

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                 % OF CUT-OFF
                                                    AGGREGATE   DATE STATISTICAL
                                        NUMBER OF   PRINCIPAL      PRINCIPAL
RANGE OF COMBINED LOAN-TO-VALUE RATIO     LOANS      BALANCE        BALANCE
- -------------------------------------   ---------   ----------  ----------------
<S>                                      <C>      <C>               <C>
 10.001% -  15.000% ..................        5   $    151,669       0.03%
 15.001% -  20.000% ..................       13        364,609       0.08
 20.001% -  25.000% ..................       24        487,141       0.11
 25.001% -  30.000% ..................       27        741,155       0.17
 30.001% -  35.000% ..................       49      1,462,562       0.33
 35.001% -  40.000% ..................       63      1,997,353       0.46
 40.001% -  45.000% ..................      102      3,841,895       0.88
 45.001% -  50.000% ..................      135      5,358,966       1.23
 50.001% -  55.000% ..................      148      6,634,063       1.52
 55.001% -  60.000% ..................      218      9,787,902       2.24
 60.001% -  65.000% ..................      300     16,748,904       3.83
 65.001% -  70.000% ..................      445     23,110,951       5.29
 70.001% -  75.000% ..................      759     43,542,801       9.97
 75.001% -  80.000% ..................    1,606    105,363,065      24.12
 80.001% -  85.000% ..................    1,451     84,385,484      19.32
 85.001% -  90.000% ..................    1,226     79,900,517      18.29
 90.001% -  95.000% ..................      344     18,750,535       4.29
 95.001% - 100.000% ..................      864     31,387,618       7.18
100.001% - 105.000% ..................       60      2,872,636       0.66
                                          -----   ------------     ------
  Total...............................    7,839   $436,889,824     100.00%
                                          =====   ============     ======
</TABLE>

     As of the Cut-Off Date, the weighted average Combined Loan-to-Value Ratio
of the Loans was approximately 80.30%.

     Notwithstanding the information in the above table, in no event will any
Loan transferred to the Trust have a Combined Loan-to-Value Ratio as of the
Cut-Off date in excess of 100%.



                                      S-21




<PAGE>





                                OCCUPANCY STATUS

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                 % OF CUT-OFF
                                                    AGGREGATE   DATE STATISTICAL
                                        NUMBER OF   PRINCIPAL      PRINCIPAL
OCCUPANCY                                 LOANS      BALANCE        BALANCE
- ---------                               ---------   ----------  ----------------
<S>                                      <C>      <C>               <C>
Owner Occupied........................   7,536     $420,691,154      96.29%
Non-Owner Occupied....................     137        8,205,291       1.88
Second Home...........................     166        7,993,380       1.83
                                         -----     ------------     ------
  Total...............................   7,839     $436,889,824     100.00%
                                         =====     ============     ======
</TABLE>



                                 PROPERTY TYPES

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                 % OF CUT-OFF
                                                    AGGREGATE   DATE STATISTICAL
                                        NUMBER OF   PRINCIPAL      PRINCIPAL
PROPERTY TYPE                             LOANS      BALANCE        BALANCE
- -------------                           ---------   ----------  ----------------
<S>                                      <C>      <C>               <C>
Single Family.........................    7,054     $402,546,634     92.14%
Two to Four Family....................        9          947,563      0.22
Townhouse.............................       61        5,727,557      1.31
Condominium...........................        6          207,208      0.05
Manufactured Housing..................      709       27,460,862      6.29
                                          -----     ------------    ------
  Total...............................    7,839     $436,889,824    100.00%
                                          =====     ============    ======
</TABLE>



                                    LOAN AGE

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                 % OF CUT-OFF
                                                    AGGREGATE   DATE STATISTICAL
                                        NUMBER OF   PRINCIPAL      PRINCIPAL
RANGE OF LOAN AGE (IN MONTHS)             LOANS      BALANCE        BALANCE
- -----------------------------           ---------   ----------  ----------------
<S>                                      <C>      <C>               <C>
 0  -  6...............................   3,094    $169,991,667      38.91%
 6+ - 12...............................   2,327     146,226,387      33.47
12+ - 18...............................   1,370      72,580,196      16.61
18+ - 24...............................     610      29,780,044       6.82
Over 24................................     438      18,311,531       4.19
                                          -----    ------------     ------
  Total................................   7,839    $436,889,824     100.00%
                                          =====    ============     ======
</TABLE>

     As of the Cut-Off Date, the weighted average number of months since
origination of the Loans was approximately 10 months.



                                      S-22




<PAGE>


                           REMAINING TERMS TO MATURITY

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                 % OF CUT-OFF
                                                    AGGREGATE   DATE STATISTICAL
RANGE OF REMAINING TERMS TO MATURITY     NUMBER OF   PRINCIPAL      PRINCIPAL
(IN YEARS)                                 LOANS      BALANCE        BALANCE
- -----------------------------           ---------   ----------  ----------------
<S>                                      <C>      <C>               <C>
 Up to 5...............................      86   $  1,408,597       0.32%
 5+ - 10...............................     890     48,733,250      11.15
10+ - 15...............................   3,871    169,159,752      38.72
15+ - 18...............................      35      1,664,923       0.38
18+ - 20...............................     757     40,470,435       9.26
20+ - 25...............................     128      5,166,824       1.18
25+ - 30...............................   2,072    170,286,044      38.98
                                          -----   ------------     ------
  Total................................   7,839   $436,889,824     100.00%
                                          =====   ============     ======
</TABLE>

     As of the Cut-Off Date, the weighted average remaining term to maturity of
the Loans was approximately 240 months.

     The information set forth in the preceding section "Description of the
Loans" has been based upon information provided by the Transferor and tabulated
by the Depositor. None of the Depositor, the Underwriters, the Trustee or the
Certificate Insurer make any representation as to the accuracy or completeness
of such information.

ASSIGNMENT OF LOANS

     Pursuant to the Pooling and Servicing Agreement, the Depositor will sell,
transfer, assign, set over and otherwise convey without recourse to the Trust in
trust for the benefit of the Certificateholders and the Certificate Insurer all
right, title and interest in and to each Loan. Each such transfer will convey
all right, title and interest in and to each Loan including (a) scheduled
principal and interest payments due after the Cut-Off Date and (b) principal
prepayments in full and curtailments (i.e., partial prepayments) and other
principal collections received on or after the Cut-Off Date.

     In connection with such transfer and assignment, the Transferor will
deliver to the Trustee on the Closing Date certain Loan documents (collectively,
with respect to each Loan, the "Trustee's Loan File") with respect to each Loan.
The Servicer will not be obligated to record assignments of mortgages in those
jurisdictions as to which an opinion of counsel is rendered that such
recordation is not necessary to protect the interests of the assignee of the
Loans secured by Mortgaged Properties in such jurisdictions.

     If the Trustee or the Certificate Insurer during the process of reviewing
the Trustee's Loan Files finds any document constituting a part of a Trustee's
Loan File which is not executed, has not been received or is unrelated to the
Loans, or that any Loan does not conform to its requirements or to the
description thereof as set forth in the schedule appearing as an exhibit to the
Pooling and Servicing Agreement (the "Loan Schedule"), the Trustee or the
Certificate Insurer, as applicable, is required to promptly so notify the
Trustee, the Servicer, the Transferor and the Certificate Insurer. The
Transferor agrees to use reasonable efforts to cause to be remedied a material
defect in a document constituting part of a Trustee's Loan File of which it is
so notified by the Trustee or the Certificate Insurer. If, however, within 90
days after the Trustee's or the Certificate Insurer's notice to it respecting
such defect the Transferor has not caused to be remedied the defect and the
defect materially and adversely affects the value of the Loan or the interest of
the Certificateholders or the Certificate Insurer in such Loan, the Transferor
will be required to either (i) substitute in lieu of such Loan a Qualified
Substitute Loan and, if the then unpaid principal balance of such Qualified
Substitute Loan is less than the principal balance of such Loan as of the date
of such substitution plus accrued and unpaid interest on such amount, deliver to
the Servicer as part of the related monthly remittance remitted by the Servicer
the amount of any such shortfall plus any unreimbursed Servicing Advances made
by the Servicer with respect to such defective Loan (the "Substitution
Adjustment") or (ii) purchase such Loan at a price (the "Purchase Price") equal
to the unpaid principal balance of such Loan as of the date of purchase, plus
the greater of (x) all accrued and unpaid interest on the unpaid principal
balance of such Loan to the scheduled payment date for such Loan in the related
Due Period or (y) 30 days' interest on such balance, computed at such


                                      S-23




<PAGE>


Loan's interest rate, plus the amount of any unreimbursed Servicing Advances
made by the Servicer with respect to such defective Loan, which Purchase Price
is required to be deposited in the Collection Account on the next succeeding
Determination Date after deducting therefrom any amounts received in respect of
such repurchased Loan or Loans and being held in the Collection Account for
future distribution to the extent such amounts have not yet been applied to
principal or interest on such Loan or Loans.

     A "Qualified Substitute Loan" is any Loan or Loans which (i) relates or
relate to a detached one-family residence or to the same type of residential
dwelling as the deleted Loan and in each case has or have the same or a better
lien priority as the deleted Loan with a borrower having the same or better
traditionally ranked credit status and is an owner-occupied Property or has the
same occupancy status as the Property securing the deleted Loan, (ii) matures or
mature no later than (and not more than one year earlier than) the deleted Loan,
(iii) has or have a Combined Loan-to-Value Ratio or Combined Loan-to-Value
Ratios at the time of such substitution no higher than the Combined
Loan-to-Value Ratio of the deleted Loan, (iv) has or have an unpaid principal
balance or principal balances (after application of all payments received on or
prior to the date of substitution) (which will be the unpaid principal balance
or principal balances thereof) not substantially less and not more than the
unpaid principal balance of the deleted Loan as of such date, (v) has or have an
interest rate borne by the deleted Loan, (vi) satisfies or satisfy the criteria
set forth from time to time in the definition of "qualified replacement
mortgage" in Section 860G(a)(4) of the Code (or any successor statute thereto),
(vii) has or have an applicable borrower or borrowers with the same or better
traditionally ranked credit status as the borrower or borrowers under the
deleted Loan for which it is to be substituted and (viii) complies or comply as
of the date of substitution with each representation and warranty set forth in
the Pooling and Servicing Agreement.

REPRESENTATIONS AND WARRANTIES OF THE TRANSFEROR

     The Transferor will represent, among other things, with respect to each
Loan, as of the Closing Date, the following:

          (a) The information set forth in the Loan Schedule with respect to
     each Loan is complete, true and correct as of the Cut-Off Date;

          (b) Immediately prior to the sale of the Loans to the Depositor, the
     Transferor had good and marketable title to each Loan subject to no prior
     lien or interest of any nature;

          (c) Immediately upon the transfer and assignment by the Depositor to
     the Trustee, the Trust will hold good and marketable title to, and be the
     sole owner of, each Loan, subject to no liens, charges, mortgages,
     encumbrances or rights of others; and

          (d) As of the Cut-Off Date, less than 1% of the Loans are 30 or more
     days delinquent; and no Loan is more than 59 days delinquent.

          Pursuant to the Pooling and Servicing Agreement, upon the discovery by
     any of the Certificateholders, the Servicer, the Transferor, the
     Certificate Insurer or the Trustee that any of the representations and
     warranties of the Transferor have been breached in any material respect as
     of the Closing Date, with the result that the value of the Loan or the
     interests of the Certificateholders in the related Loan or the interests of
     the Certificate Insurer were materially and adversely affected
     (notwithstanding that such representation and warranty was made to the
     Transferor's best knowledge), the party discovering such breach is required
     to give prompt written notice to the others of such breach.

     Within 60 days of the earlier to occur of the Transferor's discovery or its
receipt of written notice of any such breach, the Transferor will be required
to:

          (a) promptly cure such breach in all material respects;

          (b) remove the applicable Loan and substitute one or more Qualified
     Substitute Loans and, if the unpaid principal balance of such Qualified
     Substitute Loans as of the date of such substitution is less than the
     unpaid principal balance, plus accrued and unpaid interest thereon of the
     replaced Loans as of the date of substitution, deposit the Substitution
     Adjustment in the Collection Account; or

          (c) purchase such Loan at the Purchase Price and deposit such Purchase
     Price into the Certificate Account on the next succeeding Determination
     Date after deducting any amounts received in respect of such repurchased


                                      S-24




<PAGE>


     Loan or Loans and being held in the Certificate Account for future
     distribution to the extent such amounts have not yet been applied to
     principal or interest on such Loan;

provided, however, that any substitution of one or more Qualified Substitute
Loans pursuant to the preceding clause (b) must be effected not later than two
years after the Closing Date. The obligation of the Transferor to cure such
breach or to substitute or purchase any Loan will constitute the sole remedy
respecting a material breach of any such representation or warranty to the
Certificateholders, the Trustee and the Certificate Insurer.

                         THE TRANSFEROR AND THE SERVICER

GENERAL

     New South Federal Savings Bank ("New South") is the Transferor and Servicer
under the Pooling and Servicing Agreement. New South is a federally chartered
savings bank with its principal place of business in Birmingham, Alabama, and is
a wholly owned subsidiary of New South Bancshares, Inc., a Delaware corporation.
As of March 31, 1999, New South had total assets of approximately $1.1 billion,
net loans of approximately $880 million, deposits of approximately $827 million
and capital of approximately $83 million. At March 31, 1999, New South's
regulatory capital measures, determined under the regulatory reporting
requirement of the Office of Thrift Supervision, were as follows: core capital
7.60% and total risk based capital 10.96%.

     The Transferor will sell and assign each Loan to the Depositor in
consideration for the net proceeds from the sale of the Offered Certificates,
and for the Class X-IO, Class Z-IO and Class R Certificates, which will
initially be retained by the Transferor.

     The Offered Certificates will not represent an interest in or obligation
of, nor are the Loans guaranteed by, the Transferor or any of its affiliates.

     The Servicer may utilize one or more subservicers (each, a "Subservicer")
in the performance of the administrative and servicing obligations of the
Servicer under the Pooling and Servicing Agreement, but no such subservicing
arrangement will discharge the Servicer from its obligations under the Pooling
and Servicing Agreement.

     The Trustee may remove the Servicer, and the Servicer may resign, only in
accordance with the terms of the Pooling and Servicing Agreement. In addition,
the Servicer may also be removed by the Certificate Insurer if certain
delinquency and loan loss triggers specified in the Certificate Insurance
Agreement have been met. No removal or resignation will become effective until
the Trustee or a successor servicer has assumed the Servicer's responsibilities
and obligations in accordance therewith. Any collections received by the
Servicer after its removal or resignation will be endorsed by it to the Trustee
and remitted directly to the Trustee.

CREDIT AND UNDERWRITING GUIDELINES

     The following is a brief description of New South's underwriting guidelines
(the "Guidelines") as they are currently in effect. The Guidelines are revised
continuously based on opportunities and prevailing conditions in the
nonconforming credit residential mortgage market, as well as in the expected
market for securities backed by such loans. New South has informed the Depositor
that it believes that the Guidelines are consistent with standards generally
used by lenders in the business of making loans based on non-conforming credits.

     Loans originated by correspondent originators generally will have been
originated in accordance with New South's Guidelines.

     In certain cases, the Guidelines may not be followed where New South
believes it appropriate as a result of the existence of other compensating
factors.

     The underwriting process is intended to assess both the prospective
borrower's ability to repay and the adequacy of the real property as collateral
for the loan granted. New South's Guidelines permit the origination and purchase
of loans with multi-tiered credit characteristics tailored to individual credit
profiles. In general, New South's Guidelines require an analysis of the equity
in the collateral, the payment history and debt-to-income ratio of the borrower,
the property type, and the characteristics of the underlying first mortgage, if
any. A lower maximum CLTV is required for lower gradations of credit quality.


                                      S-25




<PAGE>


     New South's Guidelines permit the origination or purchase of fixed or
adjustable rate loans that either fully amortize over a period generally not to
exceed 30 years or, in the case of a balloon loan, generally amortize based on a
30-year or less amortization schedule with a due date and a "balloon" payment at
the end of a term that can be no greater than 15 years.

     The homes pledged to secure loans may be either owner occupied (which
includes second homes) or non-owner occupied investor properties which, in
either case, are single-family residences (which may be detached, part of a
two-or four-family dwelling, manufactured homes, condominium units or units in a
planned unit development). Commercial properties or agricultural land are not
generally accepted as collateral; however, they may be added as additional
security.

     New South's Guidelines generally require that the CLTV of a Loan generally
not exceed 95%. A second lien loan in an amount of $50,000 or less may have a
CLTV of up to 95%, and a second lien loan in an amount of $25,000 or less may
have a CLTV of up to 100%. New South's Guidelines do not permit the origination
or purchase of loans where the senior mortgagee may share in any appreciation in
the value of the related Mortgaged Property.

     In most cases, the value of each property proposed as security for a loan
is determined by a full appraisal. A limited appraisal, conducted on a drive-by
basis, is sometimes utilized for loans with CLTVs under 50%. Appraisals are
performed by professional appraisers who have been approved by New South or who
are employed by an appraisal service company approved by New South. New South
evaluates appraisers based on established criteria and appraisal requirements,
and maintains a current approved appraiser list.

     New South's Guidelines provide for the origination of loans under two
programs: (a) a full verification program for salaried or self-employed
borrowers and (b) a non-income verification program for self-employed borrowers
only. Under the full verification program, each mortgage applicant is required
to provide, and New South or its designee generally verifies, certain personal
financial information. The applicant's total monthly obligations (including
principal and interest on each mortgage, other loans, charge accounts and all
other scheduled indebtedness) generally (in the absence of countervailing
considerations, such as relatively high income, significant disposable income or
a relatively low CLTV) should not exceed 45% of the applicant's gross monthly
income (as certified by the borrower on the application). Applicants who are
salaried employees must provide current employment information in addition to
recent employment history. New South or its designee generally verifies this
information for salaried borrowers based on written confirmation from employers
or a combination of two of the following: the most recent pay stub, the most
recent W-2 tax form or telephone confirmation from the employer. Self-employed
applicants are required to provide personal and business financial statements
and signed copies of complete federal income tax returns (including schedules)
filed for the most recent two years. Unverifiable income may be considered if an
applicant's standard of living indicates substantial financial resources and the
applicant has a good credit record. Under the non-income verification program,
two years' history of self employment plus proof of current self-employed status
is required.

     A credit report by an independent, nationally recognized credit reporting
agency reflecting the applicant's complete credit history is required.
Verification is required to be obtained of the senior loan balance, if any, the
payment status of the senior loans and whether local taxes, interest, insurance
and assessments are included in the applicant's monthly payment. All taxes and
assessments not included in the payment are required to be verified as current.

     A poor credit history may not disqualify an applicant if, in New South's
judgment, there are offsetting factors, such as the applicant's ability to pay
and a relatively low CLTV.

     In connection with purchase-money loans, New South's Guidelines require an
acceptable source of down payment funds and verification of the source of the
down payment funds.

     New South's Guidelines generally require title insurance coverage issued by
an approved American Land Title Association ("ALTA") or California Land Title
Association ("CLTA") title insurance company on each Loan it originates or
purchases. The applicant is required to secure property insurance in an amount
equal to the lesser of (a) an amount sufficient to cover the new loan and any
prior loan and (b) the cost of rebuilding the subject property (which generally
does not include land value).

     Approximately 6.29% of the Loans, by Cut-Off Date Statistical Principal
Balance, are secured by Manufactured Homes and were originated by the
Manufactured Housing Division of New South. The Manufactured Housing


                                      S-26




<PAGE>


Division originates loans predominantly on an indirect basis through a network
of approved dealers, although approximately 20% of its loans are originated on a
direct basis. The underwriting guidelines used by the Manufactured Housing
Division require borrowers to make a minimum down payment of 5% of the purchase
price of the home. The maximum loan amount is generally 95% of the purchase
price plus closing costs. A minimum Credit Score (using the lower of two
repositories) of 625 is generally required. The credit score ("Credit Score") of
a borrower is a numerical representation of a borrower's credit risk or credit
worthiness based on a methodology developed by Fair Isaac and Company and
generally ranges from a low of 200 to a high of 800. The weighted average Credit
Score for Loans secured by Manufactured Homes is approximately 680 as of the
Cut-Off Date. Borrowers also must typically provide verification that they have
been employed at their current position for at least one year and that their
total debt-to-income ratio does not exceed 41%.

     Approximately 3.10% of the Loans, by Cut-Off Date Statistical Principal
Balance, were originated by Avondale Funding Corporation ("Avondale"). Such
Loans were closed by a subsidiary of New South in 1999 in connection with a
corporate acquisition by New South of certain assets and businesses of Avondale.
Avondale originates first mortgages, closed end second mortgages, and home
equity lines of credit through a distribution of correspondent and broker
channels. Using an automated decision process that reviews the customer's credit
risk score and other credit attributes, Avondale is able to quickly render a
risk based priced credit decision through the Internet. Avondale approves first
mortgage loans up to a loan-to-value ratio of 80% and second mortgages up to a
CLTV of 100%. Approximately 50% of the first mortgages originated by Avondale
are purchase transactions and the remainder are either rate/term refinances or
cash out refinances. The minimum Credit Score required of borrowers for (i)
first mortgages is 620 and (ii) closed end second mortgages is 600. The weighted
average Credit Score for Loans originated by Avondale is approximately 715 as of
the Cut-Off Date. These Loans were not underwritten in accordance with the
Guidelines.

     Approximately 11.31% of the Loans, by Cut-Off Date Statistical Principal
Balance, were purchased by the Transferor from Republic Bank of Florida. Such
Loans were originated and underwritten by Republic Bank pursuant to standards
that are similar to the Guidelines.


                                      S-27




<PAGE>


DELINQUENCY AND LOSS EXPERIENCE

     The following tables set forth the delinquency and loss experience of the
Transferor's servicing portfolio of fixed rate and adjustable rate loans
generally similar in type to the Loans as of the dates indicated below. The
Transferor's portfolio of loans may differ significantly from the Loans included
in the Trust Fund in such characteristics as interest rates, principal balances,
geographic distribution, Combined Loan-to-Value Ratios and other relevant
characteristics. There can be no assurance that the delinquency and loss
experience on the Loans (many of which have been originated or acquired by the
Transferor during the past twelve months) will be consistent with the historical
information provided below. The rates of delinquencies and losses on the Loans
may be higher than the historical information presented below.

                      DELINQUENCY EXPERIENCE ON SERVICER'S
                          SERVICING PORTFOLIO OF LOANS
                             (DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS)

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                    AT DECEMBER 31, 1997                       AT DECEMBER 31, 1998
                         ------------------------------------------   --------------------------------------
                                                 PERCENT   PERCENT                        PERCENT   PERCENT
                            NO.      DOLLAR       BY NO.  BY DOLLAR      NO.     DOLLAR    BY NO.  BY DOLLAR
                         OF LOANS    AMOUNT      OF LOANS   AMOUNT    OF LOANS   AMOUNT   OF LOANS  AMOUNT
                         --------    ------      -------- ---------   --------   ------   -------- ---------
<S>                        <C>      <C>           <C>      <C>       <C>       <C>         <C>      <C>
Total  Portfolio (1) ...   8,403    $375,177       N/A       N/A      10,384    $498,201    N/A      N/A
                           -----    --------       ---       ---      ------    --------    --
Period of Delinquency
  30-59 days ...........      73    $  3,262       0.87%     0.87%        62    $  3,133    0.60%    0.63%
  60-89 days ...........      26       1,508       0.31      0.40         23       1,360    0.22     0.27
  90 days or more ......      22         925       0.26      0.25         55       2,492    0.53     0.50
                             ---    --------       ----      ----        ---    --------    ----     ----
Total delinquent loans..     121    $  5,695       1.44%     1.52%       140    $  6,985    1.35%    1.40%
Loans in foreclosure ...      49       2,710       0.58      0.72         65       2,784    0.63     0.56
                             ---    --------       ----      ----        ---    --------    ----     ----
  Total ................     170    $  8,405       2.02%     2.24%       205    $  9,769    1.98%    1.96%
                             ===    ========       ====      ====        ===    ========    ====     ====

<CAPTION>
                                    AT MARCH 31, 1999
                         ------------------------------------------
                                                 PERCENT   PERCENT
                            NO.      DOLLAR       BY NO.  BY DOLLAR
                         OF LOANS    AMOUNT      OF LOANS   AMOUNT
                         --------    ------      -------- ---------
<S>                        <C>      <C>           <C>      <C>
Total  Portfolio (1) ...  10,782    $524,074       N/A       N/A
                          ------    --------       ---       ---
Period of Delinquency
  30-59 days ..........       64    $  3,219       0.59%     0.61%
  60-89 days ...........      17         723       0.16      0.14
  90 days or more ......      60       3,048       0.56      0.58
                             ---    --------       ----      ----
Total delinquent loans..     141    $  6,990       1.31%     1.33%
Loans in foreclosure ...      63       2,909       0.58      0.56
                             ---    --------       ----      ----
  Total ................     204   $   9,899       1.89%     1.89%
                             ===    ========       ====      ====

</TABLE>

- --------------------------

(1)  The information presented represents only the Servicer's one-to-four family
     residential mortgage loan portfolios that consisted primarily of performing
     loans at the time the Servicer began servicing such loans.


                                REAL ESTATE OWNED
                             (DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS)

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                             DECEMBER 31, 1997  DECEMBER 31, 1998     MARCH 31, 1999
                             -----------------  -----------------     ---------------
                              NO. OF  DOLLAR      NO. OF  DOLLAR      NO. OF   DOLLAR
                               LOANS  AMOUNT       LOANS  AMOUNT       LOANS   AMOUNT
                              ------  ------      ------  ------      ------   ------
<S>                             <C>    <C>          <C>   <C>            <C>   <C>
Real Estate Owned.........      18     $734         43    $2,313         60    $3,011

</TABLE>
                                      S-28




<PAGE>


                     LOAN LOSS EXPERIENCE ON THE SERVICER'S
                          SERVICING PORTFOLIO OF LOANS
                             (DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS)

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                 AT DECEMBER 31, 1997  AT DECEMBER 31, 1998  AT MARCH 31, 1999
                                 --------------------  --------------------  -----------------
<S>                                 <C>                <C>                   <C>
Total Portfolio(1)(2)...........        $375,177             $498,201            $524,074
   Gross Losses(3)..............             $85                 $352                $110
   Recoveries(4)................             $27                  $50                 $26
   Net Losses(5)................             $58                 $302                 $84
Annualized Loan Losses..........           0.02%                0.06%               0.06%
</TABLE>

(1)  The information presented represents only the Servicer's one-to-four family
     residential mortgage loan portfolios that consisted primarily of performing
     loans at the time the Servicer began servicing such loans.

(2)  Aggregate principal balance of the loans outstanding on the last day of the
     period.

(3)  Actual losses incurred on liquidated properties for each respective period.
     Losses are calculated after repayment of all principal, foreclosure costs
     and accrued interest to the date of liquidation.

(4)  Recoveries from liquidation proceeds and deficiency judgments.

(5)  Gross losses minus recoveries.

     The above delinquency and foreclosure experience statistics are calculated
on the basis of the total home equity loan portfolio serviced by the Transferor
as of the dates indicated, all of which loans were originated or acquired by the
Transferor. Such statistics are not cumulative. Because the total amount of
loans serviced by the Transferor has increased over these periods as a result of
new originations, the delinquency and foreclosure percentages shown above are
lower than they would be if such loans had been outstanding for a longer period
of time. Because the Trust Fund consists of a fixed pool of Loans, the actual
delinquency and foreclosure percentages with respect to the Loans may be higher,
and could be significantly higher, than the delinquency and foreclosure
percentages indicated above.

                       PREPAYMENT AND YIELD CONSIDERATIONS

GENERAL

     The yield to maturity of a Class A Certificate will depend on the price
paid by the related Certificateholder for such Class A Certificate, the related
Pass-Through Rate and the rate and timing of principal payments (including
payments in excess of the scheduled monthly payment, prepayments in full or
terminations, liquidations and repurchases) on the Loans. Approximately 31.24%
of the Loans by Cut-Off Date Statistical Principal Balance provide for the
payment of a penalty in connection with prepayment in full during the first two,
three, four or five years after origination thereof.

     The rate of principal prepayments on the Loans will be influenced by a
variety of economic, tax, geographic, demographic, social, legal and other
factors, and has fluctuated considerably in recent years. In addition, the rate
of principal prepayments may differ among Loans at any time because of specific
factors relating to such Loans, such as the age of the Loans, the geographic
location of the related Properties and the extent of the related borrowers'
equity in such Properties, and changes in the borrowers' housing needs, job
transfers and employment. In general, if prevailing interest rates fall
significantly below the interest rates at the time of origination, Loans may be
subject to higher prepayment rates than if prevailing interest rates remain at
or above those at the time such Loans were originated. Conversely, if prevailing
interest rates rise appreciably above the interest rates at the time of
origination, Loans may experience a lower prepayment rate than if prevailing
interest rates remained at or below those existing at the time such loans were
originated. There can be no assurance as to the prepayment rate of the Loans or
that the Loans will conform to the prepayment experience of other loans or to
any past prepayment experience or any published prepayment forecast.

     In general, if a Class A Certificate is purchased at a premium over its
face amount and payments of principal of such Class A Certificate occur at a
rate faster than that assumed at the time of purchase, the purchaser'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 from its face
amount and payments of principal of such Class A Certificate occur at a rate


                                      S-29




<PAGE>


that is slower than that assumed at the time of purchase, the purchaser's actual
yield to maturity will be lower than originally anticipated.

     The rate and timing of defaults on the Loans will also affect the rate and
timing of principal payments on the Loans and thus the yield on the Class A
Certificates. There can be no assurance as to the rate of losses or
delinquencies on any of the Loans. To the extent that any losses are incurred on
any of the Loans that are not covered by excess interest or an Insured Payment,
the Class A Certificateholders will bear the risk of losses resulting from
default by borrowers. See "Risk Factors" herein and in the Prospectus.

     The yield to maturity on the Class A-6IO Certificates will be extremely
sensitive to the timing of principal distributions on the Class A-6
Certificates, because interest distributions on the Class A-6IO Certificates are
based on a notional balance that is equal to the principal balance of the Class
A-6 Certificates.

     The yield to maturity on the Class A-1, Class A-3, Class A-4, Class A-5 and
Class A-6 Certificates will be adversely affected if their Pass-Through Rates
are limited by the available funds cap described under "Description of the
Offered Certificates--Pass-Through Rates" in this Prospectus Supplement, and if
sufficient funds are not available in later periods to reimburse for the
resulting shortfalls.

     The effective yield to holders of Offered Certificates (other than the
Class A-1 Certificates) will be lower than the yield otherwise produced by their
Pass-Through Rates and purchase prices, because while interest will accrue
during each Accrual Period, the distribution of such interest will not be made
until the Distribution Date immediately following such Accrual Period, and
principal paid on any Distribution Date will not bear interest during the period
from the end of such Accrual Period to the Distribution Date that follows.

     "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 to
the investor thereof of each dollar distributed in reduction of principal of
such security (assuming no losses). The weighted average life of the Class A
Certificates will be influenced by, among other factors, the rate of principal
payments on the Loans.

     The primary source of information available to investors concerning the
Class A Certificates will be the monthly statements discussed under "Description
of the Offered Certificates-Reports to Certificateholders" in this Prospectus
Supplement which will include information as to the outstanding Certificate
Principal Balance of the 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 such 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.

     Prepayments on loans such as the Loans are commonly measured relative to a
prepayment standard or model. The model used in this Prospectus Supplement is
the prepayment assumption (the "Prepayment Assumption"), which represents an
assumed rate of prepayment each month relative to the then outstanding principal
balance of the pool of loans for the life of such loans. A 100% Prepayment
Assumption assumes a constant prepayment rate ("CPR") of 4.0% per annum of the
outstanding principal balance of such loans in the first month of the life of
the loans and an additional approximate 1.91% (precisely 21/11 multiplied by
1.00%) per annum in each month thereafter until the twelfth month; beginning in
the twelfth month and in each month thereafter during the life of the loans, a
CPR of 25.0% per annum each month is assumed. As used in the tables below, a 0%
Prepayment Assumption assumes a prepayment rate equal to 0% of the Prepayment
Assumption (i.e., no prepayments). Correspondingly, a 75% Prepayment Assumption
assumes a prepayment rate equal to 75% of the Prepayment Assumption, and so
forth. The Prepayment Assumption does not purport to be an historical
description of prepayment experience or a prediction of the anticipated rate of
prepayment of any pool of loans, including the Loans. Neither the Transferor,
the Depositor nor the Underwriters make any representations about the
appropriateness of the Prepayment Assumption or the CPR.

MODELING ASSUMPTIONS

     For purposes of preparing the tables below, the following assumptions (the
"Modeling Assumptions") have been made:


                                      S-30




<PAGE>



          (i) all scheduled principal payments on the Loans are timely received
     on the first day of a Due Period, which will begin on the first day of each
     month and end on the thirtieth day of the month, with the first Due Period
     for the Loans commencing on May 1, 1999, and no delinquencies or losses
     occur on the Loans;

          (ii) the scheduled payments on the Loans have been calculated on the
     outstanding principal balance (prior to giving effect to prepayments), the
     Loan interest rate and the remaining term to stated maturity such that the
     Loans will fully amortize by their remaining term to stated maturity;

          (iii) the scheduled payments on the Loans with balloon payments have
     been calculated on the outstanding principal balance (prior to giving
     effect to prepayments), the Loan interest rate and the remaining amortizing
     term and all outstanding principal is due on the maturity date which will
     occur earlier than the fully amortized term;

          (iv) all scheduled payments of interest and principal in respect of
     the Loans have been made through the Cut-Off Date;

          (v) all Loans prepay monthly at the specified percentages of the
     Prepayment Assumption, no optional or other early termination of the
     Offered Certificates occurs (except with respect to the calculation of the
     "Weighted Average Life-to-Call (Years)" figures in the following tables)
     and no substitutions or repurchases of the Loans occur;

          (vi) all prepayments in respect of the Loans include 30 days' accrued
     interest thereon;

          (vii) the Closing Date for the Offered Certificates is May 27, 1999;

          (viii) each year will consist of twelve 30-day months (with respect to
     the Class A-1 Certificates, interest will be calculated on the basis of a
     360 day year and the actual number of days elapsed):

          (ix) cash distributions are received by the holders of the Offered
     Certificates on the 25th day of each month, commencing in June 1999;

          (x) the Pass-Through Rate for each Class of Offered Certificates
     (other than the Class A-1 Certificates) is as described on the cover page
     of this Prospectus Supplement;

          (xi) the Pass-Through Rate on the Class A-1 Certificates will remain
     constant at 5.011% per annum;

          (xii) the additional fees deducted from the interest collections in
     respect of the Loans include the Servicing Fee, Trustee Fee and the
     insurance premium payable to the Certificate Insurer;

          (xiii) no reinvestment income from any account is earned and available
     for distribution;

          (xiv) the Overcollateralization Target Amount prior to the Stepdown
     Date is equal to 3.10% of the aggregate outstanding principal balance of
     the Loans as of the Cut-Off Date and on or after the Stepdown Date, is
     equal to 6.20% of the then outstanding aggregate principal balance of the
     Loans; and

          (xv) the pool consists of Loans having the following characteristics:


                                      S-31




<PAGE>


                          ASSUMED LOAN CHARACTERISTICS

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                 REMAINING
                    CUT-OFF DATE                AMORTIZATION          BALLOON
                     PRINCIPAL      LOAN RATE      TERM   SEASONING    TERM
         SUB-POOL     BALANCE           %        (MONTHS)  (MONTHS)  (MONTHS)
         --------   ------------    ---------   ---------- --------- --------
           <S>  <C>                <C>            <C>        <C>      <C>
             1    $35,326,942.96     10.1912%       170        2       N/A
             2    $42,287,990.13     19.8391%       166        7       N/A
             3    $42,889,362.63     69.6766%       161       12       N/A
             4    $42,535,396.86     10.1448%       149       24       N/A
             5    $41,960,745.40     49.8317%       230       10       N/A
             6    $28,215,017.64     68.7803%       352        1       N/A
             7    $34,931,865.94     99.2729%       352        4       N/A
             8    $58,112,277.44     49.3072%       352        7       N/A
             9    $54,490,794.14     19.7891%       345       14       N/A
            10    $26,699,827.22     29.9273%       354        5       138
            11    $29,439,604.00     09.9495%       339       17       128
</TABLE>



                                      S-32




<PAGE>



     The following tables indicate at the specified percentages of the
Prepayment Assumption the corresponding weighted average lives of each Class of
Certificates.

              PERCENTAGE OF ORIGINAL CERTIFICATE PRINCIPAL BALANCE
            AT THE FOLLOWING PERCENTAGES OF PREPAYMENT ASSUMPTION (1)

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                         CLASS A-1 CERTIFICATES
                                    --------------------------------
PAYMENT DATE                         0%   50%   75%  100% 125%  150%
- ----------------------------------  ---   ---  ---   ---  ---   ---
<S>                                 <C>   <C>  <C>   <C>  <C>   <C>
Initial Percent...................  100   100  100   100  100   100
May 2000..........................   84    38   15     0    0     0
May 2001..........................   70     0    0     0    0     0
May 2002..........................   61     0    0     0    0     0
May 2003..........................   50     0    0     0    0     0
May 2004..........................   38     0    0     0    0     0
May 2005..........................   26     0    0     0    0     0
May 2006..........................   12     0    0     0    0     0
May 2007..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2008..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2009..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2010..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2011..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2012..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2013..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2014..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2015..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2016..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2017..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2018..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2019..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2020..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2021..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2022..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2023..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2024..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2025..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2026..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2027..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2028..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2029..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
Weighted Average Life-to-Maturity
  (Years) (2)..................... 3.95  0.85 0.63  0.50 0.41  0.35
Weighted Average Life-to-Call
  (Years) (2)..................... 3.95  0.85 0.63  0.50 0.41  0.35
</TABLE>
- ----------------------
(1) All percentages are rounded to the nearest 1%.

(2) The weighted average life of a Class is determined by (a) multiplying the
    amount of each distribution of principal thereof by the number of years from
    the date of issuance to the related Distribution Date, (b) summing the
    results and (c) dividing the sum by the aggregate distributions of principal
    referred to in clause (a) and rounding to two decimal places.

                              --------------------

     These tables have been prepared based on the Modeling Assumptions
(including the assumptions regarding the characteristics and performance of the
Loans which may differ from their actual characteristics and performance) and
should be read in conjunction with such assumptions.



                                      S-33




<PAGE>



              PERCENTAGE OF ORIGINAL CERTIFICATE PRINCIPAL BALANCE
            AT THE FOLLOWING PERCENTAGES OF PREPAYMENT ASSUMPTION (1)

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                         CLASS A-2 CERTIFICATES
                                    --------------------------------
PAYMENT DATE                         0%   50%   75%  100% 125%  150%
- ----------------------------------  ---   ---  ---   ---  ---   ---
<S>                                 <C>   <C>  <C>   <C>  <C>   <C>
Initial Percent...................  100   100  100   100  100   100
May 2000..........................  100   100  100    92   69    47
May 2001..........................  100    81   42     5    0     0
May 2002..........................  100    37    0     0    0     0
May 2003..........................  100     0    0     0    0     0
May 2004..........................  100     0    0     0    0     0
May 2005..........................  100     0    0     0    0     0
May 2006..........................  100     0    0     0    0     0
May 2007..........................   99     0    0     0    0     0
May 2008..........................   84     0    0     0    0     0
May 2009..........................   68     0    0     0    0     0
May 2010..........................   28     0    0     0    0     0
May 2011..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2012..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2013..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2014..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2015..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2016..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2017..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2018..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2019..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2020..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2021..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2022..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2023..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2024..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2025..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2026..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2027..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2028..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
Weighted Average
  Life-to-Maturity (Years) (2)....10.33  2.77 1.94  1.50 1.22  1.02
Weighted Average Life-to-Call
  (Years) (2).....................10.33  2.77 1.94  1.50 1.22  1.02
</TABLE>
- ----------------------
(1) All percentages are rounded to the nearest 1%.

(2) The weighted average life of a Class is determined by (a) multiplying the
    amount of each distribution of principal thereof by the number of years from
    the date of issuance to the related Distribution Date, (b) summing the
    results and (c) dividing the sum by the aggregate distributions of principal
    referred to in clause (a) and rounding to two decimal places.

                               -------------------

     These tables have been prepared based on the Modeling Assumptions
(including the assumptions regarding the characteristics and performance of the
Loans which may differ from their actual characteristics and performance) and
should be read in conjunction with such assumptions.



                                      S-34




<PAGE>





              PERCENTAGE OF ORIGINAL CERTIFICATE PRINCIPAL BALANCE
            AT THE FOLLOWING PERCENTAGES OF PREPAYMENT ASSUMPTION (1)

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                         CLASS A-3 CERTIFICATES
                                    --------------------------------
PAYMENT DATE                         0%   50%   75%  100% 125%  150%
- ----------------------------------  ---   ---  ---   ---  ---   ---
<S>                                 <C>   <C>  <C>   <C>  <C>   <C>
Initial Percent...................  100   100  100   100  100   100
May 2000..........................  100   100  100   100  100   100
May 2001..........................  100   100  100   100   71    40
May 2002..........................  100   100   87    43    5     0
May 2003..........................  100   100   47     5    0     0
May 2004..........................  100    69   15     0    0     0
May 2005..........................  100    43    0     0    0     0
May 2006..........................  100    21    0     0    0     0
May 2007..........................  100     5    0     0    0     0
May 2008..........................  100     0    0     0    0     0
May 2009..........................  100     0    0     0    0     0
May 2010..........................  100     0    0     0    0     0
May 2011..........................   87     0    0     0    0     0
May 2012..........................   68     0    0     0    0     0
May 2013..........................   52     0    0     0    0     0
May 2014..........................   45     0    0     0    0     0
May 2015..........................   37     0    0     0    0     0
May 2016..........................   29     0    0     0    0     0
May 2017..........................   21     0    0     0    0     0
May 2018..........................   11     0    0     0    0     0
May 2019..........................    4     0    0     0    0     0
May 2020..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2021..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2022..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2023..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2024..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2025..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2026..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2027..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2028..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
Weighted Average
  Life-to-Maturity (Years) (2)....15.07  5.89 4.03  3.00 2.35  1.94
Weighted Average Life-to-Call
  (Years) (2).....................15.07  5.89 4.03  3.00 2.35  1.94
- ---------------------
</TABLE>

(1) All percentages are rounded to the nearest 1%.

(2) The weighted average life of a Class is determined by (a) multiplying the
    amount of each distribution of principal thereof by the number of years from
    the date of issuance to the related Distribution Date, (b) summing the
    results and (c) dividing the sum by the aggregate distributions of principal
    referred to in clause (a) and rounding to two decimal places.

                           --------------------------

     These tables have been prepared based on the Modeling Assumptions
(including the assumptions regarding the characteristics and performance of the
Loans which may differ from their actual characteristics and performance) and
should be read in conjunction with such assumptions.



                                      S-35




<PAGE>





              PERCENTAGE OF ORIGINAL CERTIFICATE PRINCIPAL BALANCE
            AT THE FOLLOWING PERCENTAGES OF PREPAYMENT ASSUMPTION (1)

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                         CLASS A-4 CERTIFICATES
                                    --------------------------------
PAYMENT DATE                         0%   50%   75%  100% 125%  150%
- ----------------------------------  ---   ---  ---   ---  ---   ---
<S>                                 <C>   <C>  <C>   <C>  <C>   <C>
Initial Percent...................  100   100  100   100  100   100
May 2000..........................  100   100  100   100  100   100
May 2001..........................  100   100  100   100  100   100
May 2002..........................  100   100  100   100  100    40
May 2003..........................  100   100  100   100   37     0
May 2004..........................  100   100  100    45    0     0
May 2005..........................  100   100   80     0    0     0
May 2006..........................  100   100   38     0    0     0
May 2007..........................  100   100   12     0    0     0
May 2008..........................  100    79    0     0    0     0
May 2009..........................  100    47    0     0    0     0
May 2010..........................  100     7    0     0    0     0
May 2011..........................  100     0    0     0    0     0
May 2012..........................  100     0    0     0    0     0
May 2013..........................  100     0    0     0    0     0
May 2014..........................  100     0    0     0    0     0
May 2015..........................  100     0    0     0    0     0
May 2016..........................  100     0    0     0    0     0
May 2017..........................  100     0    0     0    0     0
May 2018..........................  100     0    0     0    0     0
May 2019..........................  100     0    0     0    0     0
May 2020..........................   93     0    0     0    0     0
May 2021..........................   76     0    0     0    0     0
May 2022..........................   57     0    0     0    0     0
May 2023..........................   36     0    0     0    0     0
May 2024..........................   13     0    0     0    0     0
May 2025..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2026..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2027..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2028..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
Weighted Average
  Life-to-Maturity (Years) (2)....23.26  9.89 6.85  5.00 3.88  3.05
Weighted Average Life-to-Call
  (Years) (2).....................23.26  9.89 6.85  5.00 3.88  3.05
</TABLE>
- ----------------------
(1) All percentages are rounded to the nearest 1%.

(2) The weighted average life of a Class is determined by (a) multiplying the
    amount of each distribution of principal thereof by the number of years from
    the date of issuance to the related Distribution Date, (b) summing the
    results and (c) dividing the sum by the aggregate distributions of principal
    referred to in clause (a) and rounding to two decimal places.

                           --------------------------

     These tables have been prepared based on the Modeling Assumptions
(including the assumptions regarding the characteristics and performance of the
Loans which may differ from their actual characteristics and performance) and
should be read in conjunction with such assumptions.



                                      S-36




<PAGE>


              PERCENTAGE OF ORIGINAL CERTIFICATE PRINCIPAL BALANCE
            AT THE FOLLOWING PERCENTAGES OF PREPAYMENT ASSUMPTION (1)

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                          CLASS A-5 CERTIFICATES
                                    ----------------------------------
PAYMENT DATE                         0%   50%     75%  100% 125%  150%
- ----------------------------------  ---   ---    ---   ---  ---   ---
<S>                                 <C>   <C>    <C>   <C>  <C>   <C>
Initial Percent...................  100   100    100   100  100   100
May 2000..........................  100   100    100   100  100   100
May 2001..........................  100   100    100   100  100   100
May 2002..........................  100   100    100   100  100   100
May 2003..........................  100   100    100   100  100    82
May 2004..........................  100   100    100   100   83    42*
May 2005..........................  100   100    100   100   53*   23*
May 2006..........................  100   100    100    72   34*   13*
May 2007..........................  100   100    100    58*  27*   11*
May 2008..........................  100   100     89    42*  18*    5*
May 2009..........................  100   100     69*   29*  10*    1*
May 2010..........................  100   100     47*   17*   4*    0
May 2011..........................  100    76*    30*    9*   0     0
May 2012..........................  100    59*    20*    4*   0     0
May 2013..........................  100    46*    14*    2*   0     0
May 2014..........................  100    37*    10*    0    0     0
May 2015..........................  100    30*     6*    0    0     0
May 2016..........................  100    24*     4*    0    0     0
May 2017..........................  100    19*     2*    0    0     0
May 2018..........................  100    14*     0     0    0     0
May 2019..........................  100    11*     0     0    0     0
May 2020..........................  100     8*     0     0    0     0
May 2021..........................  100     5*     0     0    0     0
May 2022..........................  100     3*     0     0    0     0
May 2023..........................  100     2*     0     0    0     0
May 2024..........................  100     0      0     0    0     0
May 2025..........................   88     0      0     0    0     0
May 2026..........................   63*    0      0     0    0     0
May 2027..........................   33*    0      0     0    0     0
May 2028..........................    3*    0      0     0    0     0
May 2029..........................    0     0      0     0    0     0
Weighted Average
  Life-to-Maturity (Years) (2)....27.43 14.88  11.44  8.86 6.86  5.33
Weighted Average Life-to-Call
  (Years) (2).....................26.26 11.77   9.46  7.09 5.55  4.47
</TABLE>
- ----------------------
(1) All percentages are rounded to the nearest 1%.

(2) The weighted average life of a Class is determined by (a) multiplying the
    amount of each distribution of principal thereof by the number of years from
    the date of issuance to the related Distribution Date, (b) summing the
    results and (c) dividing the sum by the aggregate distributions of principal
    referred to in clause (a) and rounding to two decimal places.

*   Indicates that the cash flows are contingent on the optional termination
    provision not being exercised.

                            ------------------------

     These tables have been prepared based on the Modeling Assumptions
(including the assumptions regarding the characteristics and performance of the
Loans which may differ from their actual characteristics and performance) and
should be read in conjunction with such assumptions.



                                      S-37




<PAGE>


              PERCENTAGE OF ORIGINAL CERTIFICATE PRINCIPAL BALANCE
            AT THE FOLLOWING PERCENTAGES OF PREPAYMENT ASSUMPTION (1)


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                         CLASS A-6 CERTIFICATES
                                    --------------------------------
PAYMENT DATE                         0%   50%   75%  100% 125%  150%
- ----------------------------------  ---   ---  ---   ---  ---   ---
<S>                                 <C>   <C>  <C>   <C>  <C>   <C>
Initial Percent...................  100   100  100   100  100   100
May 2000..........................  100   100  100   100  100   100
May 2001..........................  100   100  100   100  100   100
May 2002..........................  100   100  100   100  100   100
May 2003..........................   99    93   90    87   85    83
May 2004..........................   97    86   81    76   71    66*
May 2005..........................   94    75   66    59   51*   43*
May 2006..........................   90    63   52    42   33*   24*
May 2007..........................   78    36   24    15*   8*    3*
May 2008..........................   65    20   11     5*   2*    0
May 2009..........................   53    11    5*    1*   0     0
May 2010..........................   29     4    1*    0    0     0
May 2011..........................   14     1*   0     0    0     0
May 2012..........................   10     1*   0     0    0     0
May 2013..........................    7     0    0     0    0     0
May 2014..........................    6     0    0     0    0     0
May 2015..........................    5     0    0     0    0     0
May 2016..........................    4     0    0     0    0     0
May 2017..........................    3     0    0     0    0     0
May 2018..........................    3     0    0     0    0     0
May 2019..........................    2     0    0     0    0     0
May 2020..........................    2     0    0     0    0     0
May 2021..........................    1     0    0     0    0     0
May 2022..........................    1     0    0     0    0     0
May 2023..........................    1     0    0     0    0     0
May 2024..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2025..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2026..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2027..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
May 2028..........................    0     0    0     0    0     0
Weighted Average
  Life-to-Maturity (Years) (2)....10.18  7.41 6.79  6.34 5.99  5.70
Weighted Average Life-to-Call
  (Years) (2).....................10.18  7.39 6.73  6.06 5.24  4.50
</TABLE>
- ---------------------
(1) All percentages are rounded to the nearest 1%.

(2) The weighted average life of a Class is determined by (a) multiplying the
    amount of each distribution of principal thereof by the number of years from
    the date of issuance to the related Distribution Date, (b) summing the
    results and (c) dividing the sum by the aggregate distributions of principal
    referred to in clause (a) and rounding to two decimal places.

*   Indicates that the cash flows are contingent on the optional termination
    provision not being exercised.

                             ---------------------

     These tables have been prepared based on the Modeling Assumptions
(including the assumptions regarding the characteristics and performance of the
Loans which may differ from their actual characteristics and performance) and
should be read in conjunction with such assumptions.



                                      S-38




<PAGE>



     None of the Certificate Insurer, the Trustee, the Depositor, the
Underwriters or New South will be liable to any investor for any loss or damage
incurred by such investor as a result of a reduced rate of return experienced by
such investor relative to the Pass-Through Rate, upon reinvestment of the funds
received in connection with any premature repayment of principal on the
Certificates, including, without limitation, any such repayment resulting from
prepayments, liquidations, or repurchases of, or substitutions for, any Loan.

YIELD SENSITIVITY OF THE CLASS A-6IO CERTIFICATES

     INVESTORS PURCHASING THE CLASS A-6IO CERTIFICATES SHOULD CONSIDER THE RISK
THAT A RAPID RATE OF PAYMENTS IN RESPECT OF PRINCIPAL (INCLUDING PREPAYMENTS) ON
THE LOANS WHICH RESULT IN A REDUCTION OF THE CERTIFICATE PRINCIPAL BALANCE OF
THE CLASS A-6 CERTIFICATES COULD RESULT IN THE FAILURE OF SUCH INVESTORS TO
FULLY RECOVER THEIR INITIAL INVESTMENTS. THE YIELD TO INVESTORS IN THE CLASS
A-6IO CERTIFICATES WILL BE HIGHLY SENSITIVE TO THE RATE OF PRINCIPAL PAYMENTS
(INCLUDING PREPAYMENTS) OR THE ALLOCATION OF REALIZED LOSSES ON THOSE LOANS, TO
THE EXTENT SUCH PAYMENTS REDUCE THE CERTIFICATE PRINCIPAL BALANCE OF THE CLASS
A-6 CERTIFICATES. AN INVESTOR THAT PURCHASES ANY OF THE CLASS A-6IO
CERTIFICATES, WHICH HAVE NO PRINCIPAL BALANCE, SHOULD CONSIDER THE RISK THAT A
FASTER THAN ANTICIPATED RATE OF PRINCIPAL PAYMENTS ON THE LOANS WILL RESULT IN
AN ACTUAL YIELD THAT IS LOWER THAN SUCH INVESTOR'S EXPECTED YIELD AND SHOULD
CONSIDER THE RISK THAT A RAPID RATE OF PRINCIPAL PAYMENTS ON THE LOANS COULD
RESULT IN THE FAILURE OF SUCH INVESTOR TO FULLY RECOVER ITS INITIAL INVESTMENT.

     Based upon the Modeling Assumptions and the further assumptions that (i)
the Class A-6IO Certificates will be purchased on May 27, 1999, for an aggregate
purchase price of 14.34768% of the initial Notional Amount and (ii) the initial
Notional Amount of the Class A-6IO Certificates which is applicable to the
Distribution Date occurring in June 1999 will equal the Certificate Principal
Balance of the Class A-6 Certificates, the table below (the "Principal Payment
Sensitivity Table") sets forth the sensitivity of the Class A-6IO Certificates
to various rates of prepayment on the Loans of the pre-tax yield to maturity.
Notwithstanding the prepayment rates reflected in the table on the Principal
Payment Sensitivity Table, it is not expected that the Loans will prepay at a
constant percentage of Prepayment Assumption until maturity, that all of the
Loans will prepay at the same percentage of Prepayment Assumption or that there
will be no defaults or delinquencies on the Loans. As a result of these factors,
the pre-tax yields to maturity of the Class A-6IO Certificates are likely to
differ from those shown in the Principal Payment Sensitivity Table, even if all
the Loans prepay at the indicated assumed rate of prepayment.

   Timing of changes in the rate of prepayments may significantly affect the
actual yield to maturity to investors, even if the average rate of principal
prepayments is consistent with the expectations of investors. Investors must
make their own decisions as to the appropriate prepayment assumption to be used
in deciding whether to purchase any Class A-6IO Certificates.

             SENSITIVITY TO PRINCIPAL PAYMENTS OF PRE-TAX YIELDS TO
            OPTIONAL TERMINATION DATE OF THE CLASS A-6IO CERTIFICATES

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                     PERCENTAGE OF THE PREPAYMENT ASSUMPTION
                                                  ---------------------------------------------
                                                     0%     150%     287%     288%      295%
                                                  ------   ------   ------   ------   -------
<S>                                               <C>      <C>      <C>      <C>      <C>
Pre-Tax Yield to Optional Termination Date(1).... 6.9000%  6.9000%  6.9000%  2.7411%  (1.8225)%
</TABLE>
- -----------------------------
(1) Represented on a corporate bond equivalent basis.


                     DESCRIPTION OF THE OFFERED CERTIFICATES

GENERAL

     The Depositor will issue its Home Equity Asset Backed Certificates, Series
1999-1 on the Closing Date, pursuant to the Pooling and Servicing Agreement.

     The Offered Certificates, together with the Class X-IO, Class Z-IO and
Class R Certificates, will represent in the aggregate the entire beneficial
interest in a Trust, the assets of which (such assets collectively, the "Trust
Fund")


                                      S-39




<PAGE>


include: (i) the Loans; (ii) any REO Properties; and (iii) such funds or assets
as from time to time are deposited in the Certificate Account.

     The Certificates will consist of 10 classes (each, a "Class") to be
designated as: (i) the Class A-1, Class A-2, Class A-3, Class A-4, Class A-5 and
Class A-6 Certificates (collectively, the "Principal Balance Certificates");
(ii) the Class A-6IO (and, collectively with the Principal Balance Certificates,
the "Class A Certificates"); (iii) Class X-IO and Class Z-IO Certificates (and,
collectively with the Class A Certificates, the "REMIC Regular Certificates");
and (iv) the Class R Certificates (the "REMIC Residual Certificates"). Only the
Class A Certificates (collectively, the "Offered Certificates") are offered
hereby.

     The Class X-IO, Class Z-IO and Class R Certificates (collectively, the
"Private Certificates") have not been registered under the Securities Act and
are not offered hereby. Accordingly, to the extent this Prospectus Supplement
contains information regarding the terms of the Private Certificates, such
information is provided because of its potential relevance to a prospective
purchaser of an Offered Certificate.

REGISTRATION AND DENOMINATIONS

     The Class A Certificates will be issued only in book-entry form, in
denominations of $25,000 initial principal balance with integral multiples of
$1,000 in excess of that amount, except that one Certificate for each Class may
be issued in a different amount.

     Each Class of Class A Certificates will initially be represented by a
single physical certificate in each case registered in the name of Cede, as
nominee of DTC, which will be the "Holder" or "Certificateholder" of the Class A
Certificates as such terms are used in the Pooling and Servicing Agreement. No
Beneficial Owner will be entitled to receive a certificate representing such
person's interest in the Class A Certificates, except as set forth under
"Definitive Certificates" below. Before any termination of the book-entry
provisions, distributions on the Class A Certificates will be made to persons
with beneficial ownership interests in the Class A Certificates only through The
Depository Trust Company ("DTC") and participants of DTC in the United States,
or Cedelbank or The Euroclear System, or indirectly through participants in such
systems in Europe. Unless and until definitive Class A Certificates are issued
under the limited circumstances described under "Description of the
Securities--Book-Entry Registration of Securities" in the Prospectus, all
references to actions taken by Certificateholders or holders shall, in the case
of Class A Certificates, refer to actions taken by DTC upon instructions from
its participating organizations ("Participants"), and all references herein to
distributions, notices, reports and statements to Certificateholders or holders
shall, in the case of Class A Certificates, refer to distributions, notices,
reports and statements to DTC or Cede, as the registered holder of the Class A
Certificates, as the case may be, for distribution to persons with beneficial
ownership interest in the Class A Certificates in accordance with DTC
procedures.

DEFINITIVE CERTIFICATES

     Each Class A Certificate, which will be issued initially as a Book-Entry
Certificate, will be converted to a physical certificate (a "Definitive
Certificate" ) and reissued to the Beneficial Owners or their nominees, rather
than to DTC or its nominee, only if (a) the Depositor or the Servicer advises
the Trustee in writing that DTC is no longer willing or able to discharge
properly its responsibilities as depository with respect to the Book-Entry
Certificates and the Depositor or the Servicer is unable to locate a qualified
successor or (b) the Servicer, at its option, elects to terminate the book-entry
system through DTC.

     Upon the occurrence of any event described in the immediately preceding
paragraph, DTC will be required to notify all its participants of the
availability through DTC of Definitive Certificates. Upon delivery of Definitive
Certificates, the Trustee will reissue the Book-Entry Certificates as Definitive
Certificates to Beneficial Owners. Distributions of principal of, and interest
on, the Book-Entry Certificates will thereafter be made by the Trustee, or a
paying agent on behalf of the Trustee, directly to holders of Definitive
Certificates in accordance with the procedures set forth in the Pooling and
Servicing Agreement.

     Definitive Certificates will be transferable and exchangeable at the
offices of the Trustee or the certificate registrar. No service charge will be
imposed for any registration of transfer or exchange, but the Trustee may
require payment by the Beneficial Owner of a sum sufficient to cover any tax or
other governmental charge imposed in connection therewith.


                                      S-40




<PAGE>



CERTIFICATE PRINCIPAL BALANCES AND NOTIONAL AMOUNT

     On the Closing Date, the respective Classes of Principal Balance
Certificates will have the Certificate Principal Balances indicated on the cover
of this Prospectus Supplement (in each case, subject to a permitted variance of
plus or minus 5%).

     The "Certificate Principal Balance" of any Class of Principal Balance
Certificates outstanding at any time will be the then aggregate stated principal
amount thereof. On each Distribution Date, the Certificate Principal Balance of
each Class of Principal Balance Certificates will be reduced by any
distributions of principal made on such Class of Certificates on such
Distribution Date. See "--Distributions" below.

     The Class A-6IO Certificates will not have a Certificate Principal Balance.
The Class A-6IO Certificates will represent the right to receive distributions
of interest accrued as described in this Prospectus Supplement on a notional
amount ("Notional Amount") equal to the aggregate Certificate Principal Balance
of the Class A-6 Certificates outstanding from time to time. The Notional Amount
of the Class A-6IO Certificates after the Distribution Date in May 2001 will be
zero.

     The Class X-IO Certificates will not have a Certificate Principal Balance.
The Class X-IO Certificates will be entitled to receive the Class X-IO
Distribution Amount as described under "--Distributions--Application of the
Available Distribution Amount" below.

     The Class Z-IO Certificates will not have a Certificate Principal Balance
or a Notional Amount. The Class Z-IO Certificates will be entitled to receive
the Class Z-IO Distribution Amount described under "--Distributions--Application
of the Available Distribution Amount" below.

     The Class R Certificates will not have a Certificate Principal Balance or a
Notional Amount.

     A Class of Offered Certificates will be considered to be outstanding until
its Certificate Principal Balance or Notional Amount is reduced to zero.

PASS-THROUGH RATES

     The "Pass-Through Rates" applicable to the Class A-2, Class A-3, Class A-4,
Class A-5, Class A-6 and Class A-6IO Certificates will, for any Distribution
Date, at all times be equal to the respective fixed rates set forth on the cover
of this Prospectus Supplement, subject to an available funds cap for all such
Classes other than Class A-2 and Class A-6IO. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the
fixed rates set forth on the cover of this Prospectus Supplement for the Class
A-2, Class A-3, Class A-4, Class A-5 and Class A-6 Certificates will increase by
0.50% per annum on the first day of the Accrual Period during which the Optional
Termination Date occurs.

     With respect to the available funds cap described above, if any such
Class's Uncapped Pass-Through Rate would be greater than the Weighted Average
Net Loan Rate, the available funds capped rate will equal the rate determined
for each such Class by taking (A) all interest that accrued on the Loans at
their respective Net Loan Rates and was due in the related Due Period, less (B)
all interest accrued on the Class A-2 and Class A-6IO Certificates for such
Distribution Date, and less (C) all interest accrued on the Class A-1, Class
A-3, Class A-4, Class A-5 and Class A-6 Certificates, in each case only if their
respective Uncapped Pass-Through Rates are less than or equal to the Weighted
Average Net Loan Rate, divided by (D) the sum of the Certificate Principal
Balance of such Class and the Certificate Principal Balance of each other Class
of Class A Certificates whose accrued interest is not included in clauses (B) or
(C) above, and multiplied by (E) 12. In the event that the capped rate
determined as described in the preceding sentence would be in excess of the
Uncapped Pass-Through Rate of any such Class, then such capped rate will be
recalculated so that interest accrued on such Class for such Distribution Date
at its Uncapped Pass-Through Rate will be included in clause (B) above. This
calculation will be repeated as appropriate so that in no event will the capped
rate so calculated exceed any such Class's Uncapped Pass-Through Rate. The
capped rate determined as described above is referred to as the "Fixed Rate
Available Funds Cap Rate." The "Uncapped Pass-Through Rate" is, in the case of
the Class A-1 Certificates, the Class A-1 LIBOR Rate described below and, in the
case of the Class A-3, Class A-4, Class A-5 and Class A-6 Certificates, the
applicable uncapped fixed Pass-Through Rates set forth on the cover of this
Prospectus Supplement.

     The Pass-Through Rate applicable to the Class A-1 Certificates for any
Distribution Date will be equal to the London interbank offered rate for
one-month U.S. dollar deposits ("LIBOR") (calculated as described under
"--Calculation of LIBOR" below) as of the second business day prior to the
preceding Distribution Date, or prior to the Cut-Off Date in the case of the
first Distribution Date (the "LIBOR Determination Date") plus a margin of 0.09%


                                      S-41




<PAGE>


(or, commencing with the Accrual Period in which the Optional Termination Date
occurs, 0.59%) per annum (the "Class A-1 LIBOR Rate"), subject to an available
funds cap. The available funds capped rate will apply when the Class A-1
Certificates are determined to be one of the Classes whose interest will be
capped after determining the Fixed Rate Available Funds Cap Rate as described in
the prior paragraph. In that event, the capped rate on the Class A-1
Certificates will be determined by taking the amount of interest that would
accrue on the Certificate Principal Balance of the Class A-1 Certificates at the
Fixed Rate Available Funds Cap Rate (assuming that interest were to accrue on
the Class A-1 Certificates on the basis of a 360-day year consisting of twelve
30-day months) and converting such amount of interest into a per annum rate
calculated on the basis of a 360-day year and the actual number of days elapsed
in the Accrued Period for the applicable Distribution Date (i.e., multiplying
such amount of interest by 360 and dividing that amount by such actual number of
days). The resulting rate is referred to as the "Class A-1 Available Funds Cap
Rate." The applicable Pass-Through Rate on the Class A-1 Certificates for any
Distribution Date is referred to as the "Class A-1 Pass-Through Rate."

     Interest distributable on each Distribution Date will be interest accrued
during the period (each, the related "Accrual Period" for the applicable Class)
from, in the case of the Class A-1 Certificates, the preceding Distribution Date
(or the Closing Date, in the case of first Distribution Date) to and including
the day preceding such current Distribution Date and, in the case of all other
Certificates, the first day of the preceding calendar month to and including the
last day of the preceding calendar month. Interest will accrue throughout an
Accrual Period only on the Certificate Principal Balance or Notional Amount at
the end of the related Accrual Period, notwithstanding that the Certificate
Principal Balance or Notional Amount may be higher during a portion of such
Accrual Period, any principal distributed during such Accrual Period being
deemed to have been distributed at the beginning of such Accrual Period.

     Interest with respect to the Class A-2, Class A-3, Class A-4, Class A-5,
Class A-6 and Class A-6IO Certificates on each Distribution Date will accrue on
the basis of a 360-day year consisting of twelve 30-day months. Interest with
respect to the Class A-1 Certificates on each Distribution Date will accrue on
the basis of the actual number of days during an Accrual Period over a 360-day
year. The "Weighted Average Net Loan Rate" for any Distribution Date is the
weighted average of the Net Loan Rates for all the Loans (based on their
interest rates and weighted on the basis of their respective unpaid principal
balances as of the first day of the prior calendar month).

     The "Net Loan Rate" with respect to any Loan is, in general, a per annum
rate equal to the Loan's interest rate in effect from time to time, minus
0.6725% per annum, which equals the sum of (i) the applicable Servicing Fee
Rate, (ii) the per annum rate at which the monthly Trustee Fee is calculated and
(iii) the per annum rate at which the premium payable to the Certificate Insurer
is calculated (such sum, the "Administrative Fee Rate").

     The "Due Period" for each Distribution Date or Determination Date is the
period that begins on the 1st day of the calendar month preceding the month in
which such Distribution Date or Determination Date occurs and ends on and
includes the last day of such preceding month.

     If on any Distribution Date the applicable Pass-Through Rate for any Class
of Class A-3, Class A-4, Class A-5 and Class A-6 Certificates is equal to the
related Fixed Rate Available Funds Cap Rate, an amount equal to the resulting
Fixed Rate Interest Carryover for such Class will be distributed to the
applicable Class on subsequent Distribution Dates to the extent interest accrued
on the Loans at their respective Net Loan Rates exceeds interest accrued on the
Certificates during the related Accrual Period, and sufficient funds are
available therefor. The "Fixed Rate Interest Carryover" for any Distribution
Date and any Class of Class A-3, Class A-4, Class A-5 and Class A-6 Certificates
subject to a Fixed Rate Available Funds Cap Rate will equal the sum of (i) the
difference between (a) the amount of interest such Class would be entitled to
receive on such Distribution Date without regard to the applicable Fixed Rate
Available Funds Cap Rate and (b) the amount of interest actually distributed to
such Class with respect to such Distribution Date, (ii) the portion of any
amount calculated pursuant to clause (i) remaining unpaid from prior
Distribution Dates and (iii) interest accrued thereon at the applicable Uncapped
Pass-Through Rate without regard to the related Fixed Rate Available Funds Cap
Rate.

     If on any Distribution Date the Class A-1 Pass-Through Rate is less than
the Class A-1 LIBOR Rate, an amount equal to the Class A-1 LIBOR Interest
Carryover will be distributed on subsequent Distribution Dates to the Class A-1
Certificates from any excess of the amount accrued on the Loans at their respect
Net Loan Rates over interest accrued on the Certificates during the related
Accrual Periods, to the extent sufficient funds are available therefor. The
"Class A-1 LIBOR Interest Carryover" for any Distribution Date will equal the
sum of (i) the difference between (a) the amount of interest the Class A-1
Certificates would be entitled to receive on such Distribution Date at the
applicable Class A-1 LIBOR Rate and (b) the amount of interest actually
distributed to the Class A-1


                                      S-42




<PAGE>


Certificates on such Distribution Date, (ii) the portion of any amount
calculated pursuant to clause (i) remaining unpaid from prior Distribution Dates
and (iii) interest accrued thereon at the then-applicable Class A-1 LIBOR Rate.

     Any Class A-1 LIBOR Interest Carryover or Fixed Rate Interest Carryover
currently distributable to any Class will be part of the interest entitlement of
such Class payable in the priority specified under "--Application of the
Available Distribution Amount" below. No Class A-1 LIBOR Interest Carryover or
Fixed Rate Interest Carryover will be paid to any Class of Certificates after
the Certificate Principal Balance of such Class has been reduced to zero. The
Certificate Insurer will not be required to make any Insured Payments with
respect to the Class A-1 LIBOR Interest Carryovers and the Fixed Rate Interest
Carryovers.

DISTRIBUTIONS

     General. Distributions on or with respect to the Certificates will be made
by the Trustee, to the extent of available funds, on the 25th day of each month
or, if any such 25th day is not a business day, then on the next succeeding
business day, commencing in June 1999 (each, a "Distribution Date"). Except as
otherwise described below, all such distributions will be made to the persons
(the "Certificateholders") in whose names the Certificates are registered at the
close of business on the related Record Date and, as to each such person, will
be made by wire transfer in immediately available funds to the account specified
by the Certificateholder at a bank or other entity having appropriate facilities
therefor, if such Certificateholder owns Certificates having an aggregate
denomination of $5,000,000 provides the Trustee with written wiring instructions
no less than five business days prior to the related Record Date, or otherwise
by check mailed to such Certificateholder. Until Definitive Certificates are
issued in respect thereof, Cede & Co. will be the registered holder of the
Offered Certificates. See "--Registration and Denominations" above. The final
distribution on any Certificate will be made in like manner, but only upon
presentation and surrender of such Certificate at the location that will be
specified in a notice of the pendency of such final distribution. All
distributions made on or with respect to a Class of Certificates will be
allocated pro rata among such Certificates based on their respective percentage
interests in such Class.

     With respect to any Distribution Date and any Class of Certificates, the
"Record Date" will be the last business day of the calendar month immediately
preceding the month in which such Distribution Date occurs.

     Available Distribution Amount. With respect to any Distribution Date,
distributions of interest on and principal of the Certificates will be made from
the Available Distribution Amount for such Distribution Date. The "Available
Distribution Amount" for any Distribution Date will, in general, equal (i) the
Servicer Remittance Amount relating to such Distribution Date, minus (ii) the
sum of the (A) Trustee Fee for such Distribution Date and (B) the amount owed to
the Certificate Insurer as a premium for the Certificate Insurance Policy for
such Distribution Date.

     Application of the Available Distribution Amount. On each Distribution
Date, the Trustee will apply the Available Distribution Amount and any Insured
Payment for such date for the following purposes and in the following order of
priority:

          (1) to pay interest to the holders of the Class A-1, Class A-2, Class
     A-3, Class A-4, Class A-5, Class A-6 and Class A-6IO Certificates, up to an
     amount equal to, and pro rata as among such Classes in accordance with, all
     Distributable Certificate Interest;

          (2) to pay as principal of the Class A-6 Certificates, in an amount up
     to the lesser of (i) the Principal Distribution Amount and (ii) the Class
     A-6 Lockout Distribution Amount, until the Certificate Principal Balance of
     the Class A-6 Certificates has been reduced to zero;

          (3) to pay as principal of the Class A-1, Class A-2, Class A-3, Class
     A-4, Class A-5 and Class A-6 Certificates, in that order, in an aggregate
     amount up to the Principal Distribution Amount remaining after the
     distribution on such Distribution Date pursuant to clause (2) above, until
     the Certificate Principal Balance of each such Class has been reduced to
     zero, such that no amount will be distributed on any Class of Certificates
     pursuant to this clause (3) while any Principal Balance Certificate having
     a lower numerical designation remains outstanding;

     The lesser of (a) the Available Distribution Amount remaining after the
distributions are made in priorities (1) through (3) above and (b) the Class
Z-IO Distribution Amount (the lesser of clauses (a) and (b) is the "Available
Turbo Amount") will be allocated as follows:

          (4) to the Certificate Insurer, the amount of all Insured Payments and
     other payments made by the Certificate Insurer pursuant to the Certificate
     Insurance Agreement which have not been previously repaid


                                      S-43




<PAGE>


     together with interest thereon at the rate set forth in the Certificate
     Insurance Agreement (the "Reimbursement Amount") as of such Distribution
     Date;

     The lesser of (a) the amount of the Available Turbo Amount remaining after
the distribution is made in priority (4) above and (b) the Overcollateralization
Deficiency Amount for such Distribution Date (the lesser of clauses (a) and (b)
is the "Class A Turbo Amount" will be allocated as follows:

          (5) to pay as principal of the Class A-6 Certificates, an amount up to
     the Class A-6 Lockout Turbo Amount until the Certificate Principal Balance
     of the Class A-6 Certificates has been reduced to zero;

          (6) to pay as principal of the Class A-1, Class A-2, Class A-3, Class
     A-4, Class A-5 and Class A-6 Certificates, in that order, until the
     Certificate Principal Balance of each such Class has been reduced to zero,
     such that no amount will be distributed on any Class of Certificates
     pursuant to this clause (6) while any Principal Balance Certificate having
     a lower numerical designation remains outstanding;

     The Available Distribution Amount remaining after the distributions in
priorities (1) through (6) are made will be allocated as follows:

          (7) to the Class A-1, Class A-3, Class A-4, Class A-5 and Class A-6
     Certificates, any Class A-1 LIBOR Interest Carryover or Fixed Rate Interest
     Carryover for such Distribution Date, pro rata in accordance with their
     respective entitlements to such amounts of each such Class of Certificates;

          (8) to the Class X-IO Certificates, the Class X-IO Distribution
     Amount;

          (9) to the Class X-IO Certificates, the Class X-IO Carryover Amount

          (10) to the Class Z-IO Certificates, the Class Z-IO Distribution
     Amount;

          (11) to the Class Z-IO Certificates, the Class Z-IO Carryover Amount;
     and

          (12) to the Class R Certificates, any remaining amounts.

     Notwithstanding the priorities set forth above, if the Certificate Insurer
has defaulted under the Certificate Insurance Policy, then on any Distribution
Date on which the Overcollateralization Amount has been reduced to zero, any
amounts payable to the holders of the Class A Certificates in respect of
principal on such Distribution Date will be distributed pro rata in proportion
to the Certificate Principal Balances of such Classes, and not pursuant to the
priorities set forth in clauses (2), (3), (5) and (6) above.

     Allocation of Net Prepayment Interest Shortfalls. On each Distribution
Date, Net Prepayment Interest Shortfalls will be allocated to reduce the amount
of interest otherwise distributable on the Class A, Class X-IO and Class Z-IO
Certificates. Such allocation will be made based on the Distributable
Certificate Interest for such Payment Date for the Class A Certificates
(determined using Uncapped Pass-Through Rates in the case of the Class A-1,
Class A-3, Class A-4, Class A-5 and Class A-6 Certificates), and the Class X-IO
Distribution Amount and the Class Z-IO Distribution Amount for such Distribution
Date.

RELATED DEFINITIONS

     For purposes of this Prospectus Supplement, the following terms shall have
the following meanings:

     "Certificate Insurance Agreement." The agreement among the Certificate
Insurer, the Depositor and the Transferor, pursuant to which the Certificate
Insurance Policy will be issued.

     "Class A-6 Lockout Distribution Amount." With respect to any Distribution
Date, the product of (a) the applicable Class A-6 Lockout Percentage for such
date and (b) the Class A-6 Lockout Pro Rata Distribution Amount for such date.

     "Class A-6 Lockout Percentage." With respect to each Distribution Date as
follows:


                                      S-44




<PAGE>



<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                   DISTRIBUTION DATES      LOCKOUT PERCENTAGE
                   ------------------      ------------------
            <S>                               <C>
            June 1999 - May 2002 .............   0%
            June 2002 - May 2004 .............  45%
            June 2004 - May 2005 .............  80%
            June 2005 - May 2006 ............. 100%
            June 2006 and thereafter.......... 300%
</TABLE>

     "Class A-6 Lockout Pro Rata Distribution Amount." With respect to any
Distribution Date, an amount equal to the product of (a) a fraction, the
numerator of which is the Certificate Principal Balance of the Class A-6
Certificates immediately prior to such Distribution Date and the denominator of
which is the aggregate Certificate Principal Balance of all the Principal
Balance Certificates immediately prior to such Distribution Date and (b) the
Principal Distribution Amount for such Distribution Date.

     "Class A-6 Lockout Pro Rata Turbo Amount." With respect to any Distribution
Date, an amount equal to the product of (a) a fraction, the numerator of which
is the Certificate Principal Balance of the Class A-6 Certificates immediately
prior to such Distribution Date and the denominator of which is the aggregate
Certificate Principal Balance of all the Principal Balance Certificates
immediately prior to such Distribution Date and (b) the Class A Turbo Amount for
such Distribution Date.

     "Class A-6 Lockout Turbo Amount." With respect to any Distribution Date,
the product of (a) the applicable Class A-6 Lockout Percentage for such date and
(b) the Class A-6 Lockout Pro Rata Turbo Amount for such date.

     "Class X-IO Carryover Amount." With respect to any Distribution Date, the
portion of all Class X-IO Distribution Amounts from prior Distribution Dates
that remain undistributed.

     "Class X-IO Distribution Amount." With respect to any Distribution Date, an
amount equal to (i) all interest accrued on the Loans at the Reduced Weighted
Average Net Loan Rate during the related Due Period, less (ii) the Class X-IO
Certificate's allocable share (calculated as described above under "--Allocation
of Net Prepayment Interest Shortfalls") of any Net Prepayment Interest
Shortfalls for such Distribution Date), and less (iii) the aggregate
Distributable Certificate Interest on the Class A Certificates for the such
Distribution Date but determined by using their applicable Uncapped Pass-Through
Rates for such Distribution Date rather than their applicable Pass-Through Rates
for such Distribution Date.

     "Class Z-IO Carryover Amount." With respect to any Distribution Date, the
portion of all Class Z-IO Distribution Amounts from prior Distribution Dates
that remain undistributed.

     "Class Z-IO Distribution Amount." With respect to any Distribution Date, an
amount equal to the lesser of (i) the product of (A) the aggregate unpaid
principal balance of the Loans as of the beginning of the prior calendar month
and (B) 1.93% per annum and (ii) (A) all interest accrued on the Loans at the
Weighted Average Net Loan Rate, less (B) the Class Z-IO Certificate's allocable
share (calculated as described above under "--Allocation of Net Prepayment
Interest Shortfalls") of any Net Prepayment Interest Shortfalls for such
Distribution Date, and less (C) the aggregate Distributable Certificate Interest
on the Class A Certificates for such Distribution Date but determined by using
their applicable Uncapped Pass-Through Rates for such Distribution Date rather
than their applicable Pass-Through Rates for such Distribution Date.

     "Distributable Certificate Interest." With respect to each Class of Class A
Certificates for each Distribution Date is equal to interest at the Pass-Through
Rate applicable to such Class of Certificates for such Distribution Date accrued
on the related Certificate Balance or Notional Amount during the related Accrual
Period, as the case may be, outstanding immediately prior to such Distribution
Date, reduced by such Class of Certificate's allocable share (calculated as
described above under "--Allocation of Net Prepayment Interest Shortfalls") of
any Net Prepayment Interest Shortfalls for such Distribution Date. Distributable
Certificate Interest will be calculated on the basis of a 360-day year
consisting of twelve 30-day months, except that such interest calculated with
respect to the Class A-1 Certificates will be based on a 360-day year and the
actual number of days elapsed.

     "Foreclosure Profits" With respect to any Distribution Date, the excess, if
any, of (i) Net Liquidation Proceeds in respect of each Loan that became a
Liquidated Loan in the Due Period prior to such Distribution Date over (ii) the
sum of the unpaid principal balance of each such Liquidated Loans plus accrued
and unpaid interest.


                                      S-45




<PAGE>


     "Insurance Proceeds." The proceeds paid by any insurer pursuant to any
insurance policy covering a Loan to the extent such proceeds are not applied to
the restoration of the related Property or released to the related borrower.
Insurance Proceeds do not include "Insured Payments."

     "Liquidated Loan." In general, a defaulted Loan as to which the Servicer
has determined that all amounts that it expects to recover on such Loan have
been recovered (exclusive of any possibility of a deficiency judgment).

     "Liquidated Loan Loss." With respect to any Distribution Date, the
aggregate of the amount of losses with respect to each Loan which became a
Liquidated Loan in the Due Period prior to such Distribution Date, equal to the
excess of (i) the unpaid principal balance of each such Liquidated Loan, plus
accrued interest thereon, over (ii) Net Liquidation Proceeds with respect to
such Liquidated Loan. To the extent of the Available Distribution Amount, a
Liquidated Loan Loss will be recovered by the holders of the Certificates, on
the Distribution Date which immediately follows the event of loss. Any
Liquidated Loan Loss that results in a Subordination Deficit will require
payment of an Insured Payment if not otherwise available from the Available
Distribution Amount.

     "Liquidation Proceeds." The amounts received by the Servicer (including
Insurance Proceeds) in connection with the liquidation of a defaulted or
written-down Loan or property acquired in respect thereof, other than amounts
required to be paid to the borrower pursuant to the terms of such Loan or to be
applied otherwise pursuant to law.

     "Net Foreclosure Profits." With respect to any Distribution Date, the
excess, if any, of (i) the aggregate Foreclosure Profits for such Distribution
Date, over (ii) the Liquidated Loan Loss for such Distribution Date.

     "Net Liquidation Proceeds." With respect to any defaulted Loan, the
Liquidation Proceeds with respect to such Loan, net of the sum of (i) expenses
incurred by the Servicer in connection with the liquidation of any defaulted
Loan and (ii) any unreimbursed Periodic Advances made by the Servicer with
respect to such defaulted Loan.

     "Net Prepayment Interest Shortfalls." With respect to any Distribution
Date, the excess of (i) the Prepayment Interest Shortfalls for such Distribution
Date and (ii) the Compensating Interest paid by the Servicer for such
Distribution Date.

     "Overcollateralization Amount." With respect to each Distribution Date, the
excess, if any, of (i) the aggregate Principal Balance of the Loans as of the
close of business on the last day of the related Due Period over (ii) the
aggregate Certificate Principal Balance of the Offered Certificates as of such
Distribution Date (after taking into account the distribution of the Principal
Distribution Amount but not any Class A Turbo Amount on such Distribution Date).

     "Overcollateralization Deficiency Amount." With respect to any Distribution
Date, the excess, if any, of the related Overcollateralization Target Amount for
such Distribution Date over the related Overcollateralization Amount for such
Distribution Date.

     "Overcollateralization Target Amount." "The greatest of (a)(i) prior to the
date no earlier than the Distribution Date in June 2002 (whenever such date
occurs, "Stepdown Date"), an amount equal to 3.10% of the aggregate outstanding
principal balance of the Loans as of the Cut-Off Date or (ii) on or after the
Stepdown Date, an amount equal to 6.20% of the then outstanding aggregate
principal balance of the Loans, (b) the greater of (i) 0.50% of the aggregate
outstanding principal balance of the Loans as of the Cut-Off-Date or (ii) an
amount equal to the sum of the aggregate outstanding principal balance of the
three largest Loans and (c) the excess if any, of (i) two times one-half of the
aggregate outstanding principal balance of the Loans which are 90 days or more
delinquent (including Loans in foreclosure or as to which Properties securing
any Loans are acquired upon foreclosure) over (ii) three times the Class Z-IO
Distribution Amount for such Distribution Date.

     "Principal Distribution Amount." With respect to any Distribution Date, the
sum, without duplication, of (a) the amount allocable to principal collected by
the Servicer in respect of the Loans during the related Due Period, including
all full and partial principal prepayments, (b) the unpaid principal balance of
each Loan that was purchased from the Trust Fund during the related Due Period,
(c) the portion of any Substitution Adjustment allocable to principal paid by
the Transferor in connection with a substitution of a Loan during the related
Due Period, and (d) all Net Liquidation Proceeds and Insurance Proceeds
collected by the Servicer during the related Due Period (to the extent allocable
to principal).

     "Reduced Weighted Average Net Loan Rate." With respect to any Distribution
Date, the Weighted Average Net Loan Rate minus 1.93% per annum.


                                      S-46




<PAGE>


     "Subordination Deficit." For the Loans and any Distribution Date, the
excess, if any, of (a) the aggregate of the Certificate Principal Balance of all
Principal Balance Certificates on such Distribution Date, after taking into
account the payment of the related Principal Distribution Amount, but not any
Class A Turbo Amount, on such Distribution Date except for amounts payable under
the Certificate Insurance Policy over (b) the aggregate unpaid principal balance
of the Loans as of the end of the related Due Period.

CALCULATION OF LIBOR

     On each Distribution Date, LIBOR will be established by the Trustee. As to
the Accrual Period relating to the Class A-1 Certificates, LIBOR will equal, for
any Accrual Period, the rate for United States dollar deposits for one month
that appears on the Telerate Screen Page 3750 as of 11:00 a.m., London, England
time, on the second LIBOR Business Day prior to the first day of such Accrual
Period. With respect to the first Interest Period, LIBOR will equal the rate for
United States dollar deposits for one month that appears on the Telerate Screen
Page 3750 as of 11:00 a.m., London, England time, two LIBOR Business Days prior
to the Closing Date. If such rate does not appear on such page (or such other
page as may replace such page on such service, or if such service is no longer
offered, such other service for displaying LIBOR or comparable rates as may be
reasonably selected by the Trustee after consultation with the Servicer), the
rate will be the Reference Bank Rate. If no such quotations can be obtained and
no Reference Bank Rate is available, LIBOR will be LIBOR applicable to the
preceding Distribution Date.

     "Telerate Page 3750" means the display page so designated on the Bridge
Telerate Service (or such other page as may replace page 3750 on such service
for the purpose of displaying London interbank offered rates of major banks). If
such rate does not appear on such page (or such other page as may replace such
page on such service, or if such service is no longer offered, such other
service for displaying LIBOR or comparable rates as may be selected by the
Issuer after consultation with the Trustee), the rate will be the Reference Bank
Rate.

     "Reference Bank Rate" will be, with respect to any Accrual Period, as
follows: the arithmetic mean (rounded upwards, if necessary, to the nearest one
sixteenth of one percent) of the offered rates for United States dollar deposits
for one month which are offered by the Reference Banks (which shall be four
major banks specified in the Pooling and Servicing Agreement) as of 11:00 a.m.,
London, England time, on the second LIBOR Business Day prior to the first day of
such Accrual Period to prime banks in the London interbank market for a period
of one month in amounts approximately equal to the outstanding Certificate
Principal Balance of the Class A-1 Certificates; provided, that at least two
such Reference Banks provide such rate. If fewer than two offered rates appear,
the Reference Bank 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 Servicer, as of 11:00 a.m., New York 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 outstanding Certificate Principal Balance of the
Class A-1 Certificates. If no such quotations can be obtained, the Reference
Bank Rate will be the Reference Bank Rate applicable to the preceding Accrual
Period.

     "LIBOR Business Day" means any day other than (i) a Saturday or a Sunday or
(ii) a day on which banking institutions in the city of London, England are
required or authorized by law to be closed.

     The establishment of LIBOR as to each Accrual Period by the Trustee and the
Trustee's calculation of the rate of interest applicable to the Class A-1
Certificates for the related Accrual Period will, in the absence of manifest
error, be final and binding.

TERMINATION; PURCHASE OF LOANS

     The Trust Fund will terminate upon notice to the Trustee of either: (a) the
later of the distribution to Certificateholders of the final payment or
collection with respect to the last Loan, or the disposition of all funds with
respect to the last Loan and the remittance of all funds due under the Pooling
and Servicing Agreement and the payment of all amounts due and payable to the
Certificate Insurer and the Trustee or (b) mutual consent of the Servicer, the
Certificate Insurer and all Certificateholders in writing.

     In addition, the Servicer may, at its option (with the consent of the
Certificate Insurer if such termination would cause an Insured Payment to be
required to be made under the Certificate Insurance Policy), and at its sole
cost and expense (and if such option is not exercised by the Servicer, the
Certificate Insurer may, in accordance with the provisions of the Pooling and
Servicing Agreement, at its option and at its sole cost and expense), terminate
the Trust on the first date on which the aggregate unpaid principal balance of
the Loans, as of such date of determination, is less than 10% of the Original
Pool Principal Balance of the Loans by purchasing, on the next


                                      S-47




<PAGE>


succeeding Distribution Date, all of the Loans at a price equal to the sum of
(a) the greater of (i) 100% of the unpaid principal balance of each outstanding
Loan and each related Property acquired on behalf of the Certificateholders in
respect of a defaulted Loan through foreclosure, deed-in-lieu of foreclosure,
repossession or otherwise (upon acquisition, an "REO Property") and (ii) the
fair market value (disregarding accrued interest) of the Loans and REO
Properties, determined as the average of three written bids (copies of which are
to be delivered to the Trustee and the Certificate Insurer by the Servicer and
the reasonable cost of which may be deducted from the final purchase price) made
by nationally recognized dealers and based on a valuation process which would be
used to value comparable loans and REO property, (b) the greater of aggregate
amount of accrued and unpaid interest on the unpaid principal balances of the
Loans to the applicable scheduled payment dates for the Loans in the related Due
Period or 30 days' accrued interest on such balances at their interest rates,
and (c) any unreimbursed amounts due to the Certificate Insurer under the
Pooling and Servicing Agreement or the Certificate Insurance Agreement. No such
termination is permitted without the prior written consent of the Certificate
Insurer if such termination would result in a draw on the Certificate Insurance
Policy.

REPORT TO CERTIFICATEHOLDERS

     Pursuant to the Pooling and Servicing Agreement, on each Distribution Date
the Trustee will deliver to the Certificate Insurer, each Certificateholder and
the Depositor a written report, based solely on information provided by the
Servicer, containing information including:

     the amount of the distributions made on such Distribution Date with respect
     to the Class A Certificates;

     the amount of such distributions allocable to principal, separately
     identifying the aggregate amount of any prepayments of principal or other
     unscheduled recoveries of principal included with such distribution;

     the amount of such distributions allocable to interest;

     the amount of any Liquidation Proceeds net of any expenses incurred in
     connection with such liquidation included in such distributions;

     the Certificate Principal Balance of each Class A Certificate (or, in the
     case of the Class A-6IO Certificate, the Notional Amount), after giving
     effect to any principal payments made on such Distribution Date;

     the amount of any Insured Payment included in such distributions on such
     Distribution Date;

     (a) the amount of the Overcollateralization Amount and the
     Overcollateralization Target Amount and (b) any Subordination Deficit on
     such Distribution Date;

     the total of any Substitution Adjustments and any Purchase Price amounts
     included in each such distribution;

     the amounts, if any, of any related Liquidated Loan Losses for the related
     Due Period and all prior Due Periods;

     the total number of Loans and their aggregate outstanding principal
     balances, together with the number, aggregate outstanding principal
     balances of such Loans and the percentage (based on the aggregate
     outstanding principal balances of the Loans) of the Loans (A) one month
     delinquent, (B) two or more months delinquent and (C) as to which
     repossession or foreclosure proceedings have been commenced; and

     the Weighted Average Net Loan Rate for the Loans for such Distribution
     Date.

                             SERVICING OF THE LOANS

THE SERVICER

     New South Federal Savings Bank will act as the Servicer of the Trust Fund.
See "The Transferor and the Servicer" in this Prospectus Supplement. All
references in this Prospectus Supplement to the "Servicer" shall mean "Master
Servicer" for purposes of the accompanying Prospectus.


                                      S-48




<PAGE>


COLLECTION AND OTHER SERVICING PROCEDURES; LOAN MODIFICATIONS

   The Servicer will be obligated under the Pooling and Servicing Agreement to
service and administer the Loans, on behalf of the Trust, for the benefit of the
Certificateholders and the Certificate Insurer in accordance with the terms of
the Pooling and Servicing Agreement, and will have full power and authority to
do any and all things in connection with such servicing and administration which
it may deem necessary or desirable. The Servicer may perform any of its
obligations under the Pooling and Servicing Agreement through one or more
subservicers. Notwithstanding any such subservicing arrangement, the Servicer
will remain liable for its servicing duties and obligations under the Pooling
and Servicing Agreement as if the Servicer alone were servicing the Loans. The
Servicer will be obligated under the Pooling and Servicing Agreement to make
reasonable efforts to collect all payments called for under the terms and
provisions of the Loans and will be obligated, consistent with the other terms
of the Pooling and Servicing Agreement, to follow such collection procedures as
it would normally follow with respect to loans comparable to the Loans and which
are required to generally conform to the mortgage servicing practices of prudent
mortgage lending institutions which service mortgage and manufactured housing
loans of the same type as the Loans for their own account in the jurisdictions
in which the related Properties are located. Consistent with the above, the
Servicer will be permitted, in its discretion, to (i) waive any prepayment
penalty, late payment charge or other charge in connection with any Loan, and
(ii) arrange a schedule, running for no more than 180 days after the due date of
any installment due under the related Loan, for the liquidation of delinquent
items.

PAYMENTS ON THE LOANS

   The Pooling and Servicing Agreement provides that the Servicer, for the
benefit of the Certificateholders and the Certificate Insurer, shall establish
and maintain one or more Collection Accounts (each, a "Collection Account"), and
that each Collection Account will generally be a trust account maintained with a
depository institution acceptable to each Rating Agency and the Certificate
Insurer (any such account, an "Eligible Account"). The Certificate Insurer, in
its sole discretion, may direct the Servicer to close such Collection Account
and to establish and maintain a replacement Collection Account that is an
Eligible Account. The Pooling and Servicing Agreement permits the Servicer to
direct any depository institution maintaining a Collection Account to invest the
funds in such Collection Account in certain government securities and other
investment grade obligations specified in the Pooling and Servicing Agreement
("Permitted Investments"), that mature, unless payable on demand, no later than
the Business Day preceding the date on which the Servicer is required to
transfer any amounts included in such funds from such Collection Account to the
Certificate Account described below.

   The Servicer is obligated to deposit or cause to be deposited in the
Collection Account on a daily basis, amounts representing the following payments
received and collections made by it: (i) all scheduled payments of principal and
interest on the Loans due after the Cut-Off Date, (ii) all unscheduled principal
payments and other principal collections on the Loans received on or after the
Cut-Off Date; (iii) all Liquidation Proceeds and all Insurance Proceeds to the
extent such proceeds are not to be applied to the restoration of the related
Mortgaged Property or released to the related borrower in accordance with the
express requirements of law or in accordance with prudent and customary
servicing practices; (iv) all net revenues with respect to a Property held by
the Trust Fund; (v) all other amounts required to be deposited in the Collection
Account pursuant to the Pooling and Servicing Agreement; (vi) any amounts
payable in connection with the purchase of any Loan and the amount of
substitution adjustment as provided in the Pooling and Servicing Agreement; and
(vii) any amounts expressly required to be deposited in connection with net
losses realized on investments of funds in the Collection Account. The Pooling
and Servicing Agreement further provides that all funds deposited in any
Collection Account that are to be included in the Servicer Remittance Amount
related to a particular Distribution Date be transferred to the Certificate
Account not later than the close of business on the third day prior to such
Distribution Date (the "Servicer Remittance Date").

   The Trustee will be obligated to establish and maintain on behalf of the
Certificateholders an account (the "Certificate Account"), which is required to
be an Eligible Account, into which the Servicer will deposit or cause to be
deposited the Servicer Remittance Amount on the Servicer Remittance Date.

   Subject to the Servicer's determination that such advance would ultimately be
recoverable, the Servicer is required to deposit into the Certificate Account no
later than the Servicer Remittance Date an amount equal to the sum of (a) the
interest portion of the scheduled monthly payments on each Loan due by the
related due date but not received by the Servicer as of the close of business on
the related Determination Date, net of the Servicing Fee, and (b) with respect
to each REO Property which was acquired during or prior to the related Due
Period and as to which


                                      S-49




<PAGE>


an REO Property disposition did not occur during the related Due Period, an
amount equal to the excess, if any, of interest on the unpaid principal balance
of the Loan related to such REO Property at the related Loan Interest Rate, net
of the Servicing Fee, for the related Due Period for the related Loan over the
net income from the REO Property to be transferred to the Certificate Account
for such Distribution Date pursuant to the Pooling and Servicing Agreement (the
"Periodic Advance"). Such Periodic Advances by the Servicer are reimbursable to
the Servicer subject to certain conditions and restrictions and are intended to
provide both sufficient funds for the payment of interest to the Offered
Certificates and to pay the premium due the Certificate Insurer.

     Subject to the Servicer's determination that such advance would ultimately
be recoverable, and that a prudent mortgage lender would make a like advance if
it or an affiliate owned the related Loan, the Servicer is required to advance
amounts with respect to the Loans ("Servicing Advances") constituting
"out-of-pocket" costs and expenses relating to (a) the preservation, restoration
and protection of the Property, (b) enforcement proceedings, including
foreclosures, (c) expenditures relating to the purchase or maintenance of a
first lien not included in the Trust on the Property and (d) certain other
customary amounts described in the Pooling and Servicing Agreement. Such
Servicing Advances by the Servicer are reimbursable to the Servicer subject to
certain conditions and restrictions.

     The Servicer will not be required to make any Periodic Advance or Servicing
Advance which it determines would be a nonrecoverable Periodic Advance or
nonrecoverable Servicing Advance (each, a "Nonrecoverable Advance"). A Periodic
Advance or Servicing Advance is "nonrecoverable" if in the good faith judgment
of the Servicer, such Periodic Advance or Servicing Advance is not ultimately
recoverable. In the event that, notwithstanding the Servicer's good faith
determination at the time such Servicing Advance was made, that it would not be
a Nonrecoverable Advance, in the event such Servicing Advance becomes a
Nonrecoverable Advance, the Servicer will be entitled to reimbursement for such
Servicing Advance from the Trust Fund.

     Not later than the close of business on the Servicer Remittance Date, the
Servicer is required to remit to the Certificate Account, without any right of
reimbursement, an amount equal to the lesser of (a) the aggregate of the
Prepayment Interest Shortfalls for the related Distribution Date resulting from
principal prepayments during the related Due Period and (b) its aggregate
Servicing Fees received in the related Due Period (the "Compensating Interest").
With respect to any Distribution Date and any Loan, the "Prepayment Interest
Shortfall" will be an amount equal to the excess, if any, of (a) 30 days'
interest on the outstanding principal balance of such Loan at a per annum rate
equal to its interest rate, less any reduction as a result of a bankruptcy
proceeding (a "Deficient Valuation") and/or any reduction by a court of the
monthly payment due on such Loan (a "Debt Service Reduction"), and less the rate
at which the Servicing Fee is calculated, over (b) the amount of interest
actually remitted by the borrower in connection with such principal prepayment
in full less the Servicing Fee for such Loan in such month.

     The "Servicer Remittance Amount" for a Servicer Remittance Date is equal to
the sum of (i) all unscheduled collections of principal and interest on the
Loans collected by the Servicer during the related Due Period and all scheduled
monthly payments on the Loans in the case of Loans due on the related due date
and received on or prior to the Determination Date, (ii) all Periodic Advances
made by the Servicer with respect to interest payments due to be received on the
Loans in the case of the related due date, (iii) the amount of Compensating
Interest with respect to Loans that prepay during the related Due Period, and
(iv) any other amounts required to be placed in a Collection Account by the
Servicer in respect of the Loans pursuant to the Pooling and Servicing Agreement
but excluding the following:

          (a) amounts received on particular Loans as late payments of interest
     and respecting which the Servicer has previously made an unreimbursed
     Periodic Advance;

          (b) the portion of Liquidation Proceeds used to reimburse any
     unreimbursed Periodic Advances made with respect to the Loans by the
     Servicer;

          (c) those portions of each payment of interest on a particular Loan
     which represent the Servicing Fee;

          (d) that portion of Liquidation Proceeds and proceeds received in
     respect of any REO Property which represents any unpaid Servicing Fee;

          (e) all income from Permitted Investments that is held in the
     Collection Account for the account of the Servicer;

          (f) all amounts in respect of late fees, assumption fees, prepayment
     penalties and similar fees;


                                      S-50




<PAGE>


          (g) certain other amounts which are reimbursable to the Servicer, as
     provided in the Pooling and Servicing Agreement; and

          (h) that portion of Net Foreclosure Profits with respect to Loans
     otherwise due to the Servicer.

REALIZATION UPON OR SALE OF DEFAULTED LOANS

     Except as described below, the Servicer will be required to foreclose upon
or otherwise comparably convert the ownership of Properties securing such of the
Loans as come into and continue in default and as to which no satisfactory
arrangements can be made for collection of delinquent payments. In connection
with such foreclosure or other conversion, the Servicer will be required to
follow accepted servicing procedures. However, the Servicer will not be required
to expend its own funds in connection with any foreclosure or to restore any
damaged Property unless it determines that (i) such foreclosure and/or
restoration will increase the proceeds of liquidation of the Loan to
Certificateholders after reimbursement to itself for such expenses and (ii) such
expenses will be recoverable to it through Liquidation Proceeds (respecting
which it will reimburse itself for such expense prior to the deposit in the
Collection Account of such proceeds).

     The Servicer will be permitted to foreclose against the Property securing a
defaulted Loan either by foreclosure, by sale, by strict foreclosure, and in the
case of Manufactured Homes, repossession, and in the event a deficiency judgment
is available against the borrower or any other person, may proceed for the
deficiency.

     In the event that title to any Property is acquired in foreclosure or by
deed in lieu of foreclosure, the deed or certificate of sale will be required to
be issued to the Trustee, or to the Servicer on behalf of the Trustee, the
Certificate Insurer and the Certificateholders. Notwithstanding any such
acquisition of title and cancellation of the related Loan, such Loan is required
to be considered to be a Loan held in the Trust Fund until such time as the
related Property is sold and such Loan becomes a Liquidated Loan. Consistent
with the foregoing, for purposes of all calculations under the Pooling and
Servicing Agreement, so long as such Loan is an outstanding Loan:

          (i) It will be assumed that, notwithstanding that the indebtedness
     evidenced by the related Mortgage Note or Manufactured Housing Contract
     will have been discharged, such Mortgage Note or Manufactured Housing
     Contract and the related amortization schedule in effect at the time of any
     such acquisition of title (after giving effect to any previous partial
     prepayments and before any adjustment thereto by reason of any bankruptcy
     or similar proceeding or any moratorium or similar waiver or grace period)
     remain in effect, except that such schedule will be adjusted to reflect the
     application of proceeds received in any month pursuant to the succeeding
     clause.

          (ii) Net proceeds (after payment of Servicer's expenses related to
     disposition) from such Property received in any month will be deemed to
     have been received first in payment of the accrued interest that remained
     unpaid on the date that title to the related Property was acquired by the
     Trust, with the excess thereof, if any, being deemed to have been received
     in respect of the delinquent principal installments that remained unpaid on
     such date. Thereafter, net proceeds from such Property received in any
     month will be required be applied to the payment of installments of
     principal and accrued interest on such Loan deemed to be due and payable in
     accordance with the terms of such Mortgage Note or Manufactured Housing
     Contract and such amortization schedule. If such net proceeds exceed the
     then unpaid REO Property amortization, the excess will be treated as a
     partial principal prepayment received in respect of such Loan.

          (iii) Only that portion of such net proceeds on such a Loan allocable
     to interest that bears the same relationship to the total amount of net
     proceeds allocable to interest as the rate at which the Servicing Fee is
     determined bears to the interest rate borne by such Loan will be required
     to be allocated to the Servicing Fee with respect to such Loan.

     In the event that the Trust Fund acquires any Property as aforesaid or
otherwise in connection with a default or imminent default on a Loan, such
Property will be required to be disposed of by or on behalf of the Trust Fund
prior to the close of the third calendar year after its acquisition by the Trust
Fund unless (a) the Trustee and the Certificate Insurer have received an opinion
of counsel to the effect that the holding by the Trust Fund of such Property
subsequent to such period (and specifying the period beyond such period for
which the Property may be held) will not cause any of the Trust REMICs to be
subject to the tax on prohibited transactions imposed by Code Section
860F(a)(1), otherwise subject the Trust Fund or any of the Trust REMICs to tax
or cause any of the Trust REMICs to fail to qualify as a REMIC at any time that
any Certificates are outstanding, or (b) the Trustee (at the Servicer's expense)
or the Servicer will have applied for, prior to the expiration of such period,
an extension of such period in


                                      S-51




<PAGE>


the manner contemplated by Code Section 856(e)(3), in which case the original
period will be extended by the applicable extension period. The Servicer will
also be required to ensure that the Property is administered so that it
constitutes "foreclosure property" within the meaning of Code Section 860G(a)(8)
at all times, that the sale of such property does not result in the receipt by
the Trust Fund of any income from non-permitted assets as described in Code
Section 860F(a)(2)(B), and that the Trust Fund does not derive any "net income
from foreclosure property" within the meaning of Code Section 860G(c)(2), with
respect to such property.

   In lieu of foreclosing upon any defaulted Loan, the Servicer may, in its
discretion, permit the assumption of such Loan if, in the Servicer's judgment,
such default is unlikely to be cured and if the assuming borrower satisfies the
Servicer's underwriting guidelines with respect to loans owned by the Servicer.
In connection with any such assumption, the interest rate of the related
Mortgage Note or Manufactured Housing Contract and the payment terms will not be
permitted to be changed. Any fee collected by the Servicer for entering into an
assumption agreement will be retained by the Servicer as servicing compensation.
Alternatively, the Servicer may encourage the refinancing of any defaulted Loan
by the borrower.

   Notwithstanding the foregoing, prior to instituting foreclosure proceedings
or accepting a deed-in-lieu of foreclosure with respect to any Property, the
Servicer will be required to make, or cause to be made, inspection of the
Property in accordance with accepted servicing procedures, and, with respect to
environmental hazards, substantially comparable to such procedures as are
required by the provisions of the Federal National Mortgage Association's
Selling and Servicing Guide applicable to single-family homes or manufactured
homes, as applicable, and in effect on the date hereof. The Servicer will be
entitled to rely upon the results of any such inspection made by others. In
cases where the inspection reveals that such Property is potentially
contaminated with or affected by hazardous wastes or hazardous substances, the
Servicer will be required to promptly give written notice of such fact to the
Certificate Insurer and the Trustee. The Servicer may not commence foreclosure
proceedings or accept a deed-in-lieu of foreclosure for any Property where such
inspection reveals potential contamination by hazardous waste without obtaining
the consent of the Certificate Insurer.

SERVICING FEES AND OTHER COMPENSATION AND PAYMENT OF EXPENSES

   As compensation for its activities as Servicer under the Pooling and
Servicing Agreement, the Servicer will be entitled with respect to each Loan to
the Servicing Fee, which will be payable monthly from amounts on deposit in the
Collection Account. The "Servicing Fee" will be an amount equal to interest at
one-twelfth of the Servicing Fee Rate for such Loan on the unpaid principal
balance of such Loan at the end of the applicable Due Period. The "Servicing Fee
Rate" with respect to each Loan will be 0.50% per annum. In addition, the
Servicer will be entitled to receive, as additional servicing compensation, to
the extent permitted by applicable law and the related Mortgage Notes or
Manufactured Housing Contract, any late payment charges, prepayment penalties,
assumption fees or similar items. The Servicer will also be entitled to withdraw
from the Collection Account any interest or other income earned on deposits
therein. The Servicer will be required to pay all expenses incurred by it in
connection with its servicing activities under the Pooling and Servicing
Agreement and will not be entitled to reimbursement therefor except as
specifically provided in the Pooling and Servicing Agreement.

   The Servicer may recover Periodic Advances and Servicing Advances from the
Collection Account to the extent permitted by the Pooling and Servicing
Agreement and by the terms of the Loans or, if not recovered from the borrower
on whose behalf such Periodic Advance or Servicing Advance was made, from late
collections on the related Loan, including Liquidation Proceeds, released
mortgaged property proceeds, Insurance Proceeds and such other amounts as may be
collected by the Servicer from the borrower or otherwise relating to the Loan,
or, in the case of Periodic Advances, from late collections of interest on any
Loan. In the event a Periodic Advance or a Servicing Advance becomes a
Nonrecoverable Advance, the Servicer may be reimbursed for such advance from the
Collection Account.

ENFORCEMENT OF DUE-ON-SALE CLAUSES

   When a Property has been or is about to be conveyed by the borrower, the
Servicer will be required, to the extent it has knowledge of such conveyance or
prospective conveyance, to exercise its rights to accelerate the maturity of the
related Loan under any "due-on-sale" clause contained in the related Mortgage,
Mortgage Note or Manufactured Housing Contract; provided, however, that the
Servicer is not permitted to exercise any such right if the "due-on-sale"
clause, in the reasonable belief of the Servicer, is not enforceable under
applicable law. In such event, the Servicer may enter into an assumption and
modification agreement with the person to whom such


                                      S-52




<PAGE>


Property has been or is about to be conveyed, pursuant to which such person
becomes liable under the Mortgage Note or Manufactured Housing Contract and,
unless prohibited by applicable law or the Mortgage, Mortgage Note or
Manufactured Housing Contract, the borrower remains liable thereon; provided,
however, that the interest rate borne by the related Mortgage Note or
Manufactured Housing Contract and the payment terms may not be changed. The
Servicer is also authorized, except as provided in the Pooling and Servicing
Agreement, to enter into a substitution of liability agreement with such person,
pursuant to which the original borrower is released from liability and such
person is substituted as borrower and becomes liable under the Mortgage Note or
Manufactured Housing Contract.

MAINTENANCE OF INSURANCE POLICIES AND ERRORS AND OMISSIONS AND
FIDELITY COVERAGE

   Generally, the underwriting requirements of the Transferor require borrowers
to obtain fire and casualty insurance as a condition to approving the related
Loan, but the existence and/or maintenance of such fire and casualty insurance
is not in all cases monitored by the Transferor. Title insurance is not required
on all Loans. The Servicer will be required to cause such insurance to be
maintained with respect to the Loans. Accordingly, if a Property suffers any
hazard or casualty losses, or if the borrower thereunder is found not to have
clear title to such Property, Certificateholders may bear the risk of loss
resulting from a default by the related borrower to the extent such losses are
not covered by foreclosure or liquidation proceeds on such defaulted Loan or by
the applicable credit enhancement for the Certificates. To the extent that the
related Mortgage documents or Manufactured Housing Contracts require the
borrower under a Loan to maintain a fire and hazard insurance policy with
extended coverage on the related Property in an amount not less than the lesser
of the full insurable value of such Property or the unpaid principal balance of
such Loan and any senior liens, the Servicer will be required to monitor the
status of such insurance in varying degrees based upon certain characteristics
of the related Loans, and will be required to cause such insurance to be
maintained on a case-by-case basis. Further, with respect to each property
acquired by the Trust by foreclosure, by deed in lieu of foreclosure or
repossession, the Servicer will be required to maintain or cause to be
maintained fire and hazard insurance thereon with extended coverage in an amount
at least equal to the lesser of (i) the full insurable value of the improvements
that are a part of such Property and (ii) the unpaid principal balance owing on
the related Loan at the time of such foreclosure, deed in lieu of foreclosure or
repossession, plus accrued interest thereon and related liquidation expenses.
Such insurance on a Property acquired by foreclosure, deed in lieu of
foreclosure or repossession may not, however, be less than the minimum amount
required to fully compensate for any loss or damage on a replacement cost basis.

   Any cost incurred by the Servicer in maintaining any insurance will not, for
the purpose of calculating distributions to the Certificateholders, be added to
the unpaid principal balance of the related Loan, notwithstanding that the terms
of such Loan may so permit. No earthquake or other additional insurance other
than flood insurance will be, under the Pooling and Servicing Agreement,
required to be maintained by any borrower or the Servicer, other than pursuant
to the terms of the related Mortgage documents or Manufactured Housing Contracts
and such applicable laws and regulations as may at any time be in force and as
may require such additional insurance. The Servicer will also be required under
the Pooling and Servicing Agreement to maintain in force (i) a policy or
policies of insurance covering errors and omissions in the performance of its
obligations as Servicer and (ii) a fidelity bond in respect of its officers,
employees or agents.

   No pool insurance policy, blanket hazard insurance policy, special hazard
insurance policy, bankruptcy bond or repurchase bond will be required to be
maintained with respect to the Mortgage Loans or Manufactured Housing Contracts,
nor will any Loan be insured by any government or government agency.

SERVICER REPORTS

   The Servicer is required to deliver to the Certificate Insurer and the
Trustee not later than the last day of the third month following the end of the
Servicer's fiscal year (beginning with March 31, 2000), a certificate of an
officer stating that (i) a review of the activities of the Servicer during the
preceding fiscal year and of the performance under the Pooling and Servicing
Agreement has been made under such officers' supervision, and (ii) to the best
of such officers' knowledge, based on such review, the Servicer has fulfilled
all its obligations under the Pooling and Servicing Agreement for such year, or,
if there has been a default in the fulfillment of any such obligation,
specifying each such default known to such officers and the nature and status
thereof including the steps being taken by the Servicer to remedy such default.


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<PAGE>


     Not later than the last day of the third month following the end of the
Servicer's fiscal year (beginning with March 31, 2000), the Servicer, at its
expense, is required to cause to be delivered to the Certificate Insurer and the
Trustee from a firm of independent certified public accountants (who may also
render other services to the Servicer) a statement to the effect that such firm
has examined certain documents and records relating to the servicing of the
Loans during the preceding calendar year (or such longer period from the Closing
Date to the end of the following calendar year) and that, on the basis of such
examination conducted substantially in compliance with generally accepted
auditing standards and the requirements of the Uniform Single Attestation
Program for Mortgage Bankers or the Audit Program for Mortgages serviced for
FHLMC, such servicing has been conducted in compliance with the Pooling and
Servicing Agreement except for such significant exceptions or errors in records
that, in the opinion of such firm, generally accepted auditing standards and the
Uniform Single Audit Program for Mortgage Bankers or the Attestation Program for
Mortgages serviced for FHLMC require it to report, in which case such exceptions
and errors will be required to be so reported.

REMOVAL AND RESIGNATION OF SERVICER

     The Trustee, only at the direction of the Certificate Insurer or the
holders of more than 50% (by Certificate Principal Balance) of the Principal
Balance Certificates with the consent of the Certificate Insurer, may remove the
Servicer upon the occurrence and continuation beyond any applicable grace period
of an event described below:

          (a) any failure by the Servicer to remit to the Trustee any payment
     required to be made by the Servicer or to deliver a report required under
     the terms of the Pooling and Servicing Agreement which continues unremedied
     beyond any grace period permitted by the Certificate Insurer;

          (b) the failure by the Servicer to make any required Servicing Advance
     or Periodic Advance;

          (c) any failure on the part of the Servicer duly to observe or perform
     in any material respect any other of the covenants or agreements on the
     part of the Servicer contained in the Pooling and Servicing Agreement, or
     the breach of any representation and warranty set forth in the Pooling and
     Servicing Agreement, which continues unremedied for a period of 30 days
     after the date on which written notice of such failure or breach, requiring
     the same to be remedied, has been given to the Servicer or the Certificate
     Insurer by the Depositor or the Trustee, or to the Servicer, the
     Certificate Insurer and the Trustee by any Certificateholder or the
     Certificate Insurer;

          (d) a decree or order of a court or agency or supervisory authority
     having jurisdiction in an involuntary case under any present or future
     federal or state bankruptcy, insolvency or similar law or for the
     appointment of a conservator or receiver or liquidator in any insolvency,
     readjustment of debt, marshalling of assets and liabilities or similar
     proceedings, or for the winding-up or liquidation of its affairs, has been
     entered against the Servicer and such decree or order has have remained in
     force, undischarged or unstayed for a period of 60 days;

          (e) the Servicer consents to the appointment of a conservator or
     receiver or liquidator in any insolvency, readjustment of debt, marshalling
     of assets and liabilities or similar proceedings of or relating to the
     Servicer or of or relating to all or substantially all of the Servicer's
     property;

          (f) the Servicer admits in writing its inability to pay its debts as
     they become due, file a petition to take advantage of any applicable
     insolvency or reorganization statute, make an assignment for the benefit of
     its creditors, or voluntarily suspend payment of its obligations; or

          (g) the delinquency or loss experience of the Loan pool exceeds
     certain levels established by the Certificate Insurer.

     The Servicer may not assign its obligations under the Pooling and Servicing
Agreement nor resign from the obligations and duties thereby imposed on it
except by mutual consent of the Certificate Insurer and the Trustee, or upon the
determination that the Servicer's duties thereunder are no longer permissible
under applicable law and such incapacity cannot be cured by the Servicer without
the incurrence, in the reasonable judgment of the Certificate Insurer, of
unreasonable expense. No such resignation will become effective until a
successor has assumed the Servicer's responsibilities and obligations in
accordance with the Pooling and Servicing Agreement.

     Upon removal or resignation of the Servicer, the Trustee has agreed to be
the Successor Servicer (the "Successor Servicer"), provided, however, that the
transfer of servicing will be effected over a period of time not to exceed 90
days. Immediately upon such resignation or removal, the Trustee, as Successor
Servicer, will be obligated to make Periodic Advances and Servicing Advances and
certain other advances unless it determines


                                      S-54




<PAGE>


reasonably and in good faith that such advances would not be recoverable. If,
however, the Trustee is unwilling or unable to act as Successor Servicer, or if
more than 50% (by Certificate Principal Balance) of the holders of the Principal
Balance Certificates with the consent of the Certificate Insurer or the
Certificate Insurer so requests, the Trustee will be required to appoint, or
petition a court of competent jurisdiction to appoint, in accordance with the
provisions of the Pooling and Servicing Agreement and subject to the approval of
the Certificate Insurer any established loan servicing institution acceptable to
the Certificate Insurer having a net worth of not less than $15,000,000 as the
Successor Servicer in the assumption of all or any part of the responsibilities,
duties or liabilities of the Servicer.

   The Trustee and any other Successor Servicer in such capacity is entitled to
the same reimbursement for advances and no more than the same servicing
compensation as the Servicer. See "--Servicing Fees and Other Compensation and
Payment of Expenses" above.

AMENDMENT

   The Pooling and Servicing Agreement may be amended from time to time by the
Depositor, the Servicer and the Trustee by written agreement, upon the prior
written consent of the Certificate Insurer (which consent may not be withheld
if, in the opinion of counsel addressed to the Trustee and the Certificate
Insurer, failure to amend would adversely affect the interests of the
Certificateholders unless such consent would adversely affect the interests of
the Certificate Insurer), without notice to, or consent of, the
Certificateholders, to cure any ambiguity, to correct or supplement any
provisions therein, to comply with any changes in the Code, or to make any other
provisions with respect to matters or questions arising under the Pooling and
Servicing Agreement which may not be inconsistent with the provisions of the
Pooling and Servicing Agreement, provided that such action would not, as
evidenced by an opinion of counsel delivered to, but not obtained at the expense
of, the Trustee, adversely affect in any material respect the interests of any
Certificateholder of any outstanding Class of Certificates (or 100% of the Class
of Certificateholders so affected has consented); and provided, further, that no
such amendment may reduce in any manner the amount of, or delay the timing of,
payments received on Loans which are required to be distributed on any
Certificate without the consent of such Certificateholder, or change the rights
or obligations of any other party to the Pooling and Servicing Agreement without
the consent of such party.

   The Pooling and Servicing Agreement may be amended from time to time by the
Depositor, the Servicer and the Trustee with the consent of the Certificate
Insurer (which consent may not be withheld if, in the opinion of counsel
addressed to the Trustee and the Certificate Insurer, failure to amend would
adversely affect the interests of the Certificateholders unless such consent
would adversely affect the interests of the Certificate Insurer), and the
holders of a majority of the Class A Certificates (by Certificate Principal
Balance) for the purpose of adding any provisions to or changing in any manner
or eliminating any of the provisions of the Pooling and Servicing Agreement or
of modifying in any manner the rights of the Certificateholders; provided,
however, that no such amendment may be made unless the Trustee and the
Certificate Insurer receive an opinion of counsel, at the expense of the party
requesting the change, that such change will not adversely affect the status of
any portion of the Trust Fund constituting a REMIC or a grantor trust or cause a
tax to be imposed on the Trust Fund or any portion of the Trust Fund
constituting a REMIC or a grantor trust, and provided further, that no such
amendment may reduce in any manner the amount of, or delay the timing of,
payments received on Loans which are required to be distributed on any
Certificate without the consent of the holder of such Certificate or reduce the
percentage for each Class the holders of which are required to consent to any
such amendment without the consent of the holders of 100% of each Class of
Certificates affected thereby.

                                   THE TRUSTEE

   The Chase Manhattan Bank, a New York banking corporation, has been named
Trustee pursuant to the Pooling and Servicing Agreement. The Trustee will serve
initially as the custodian of the Trustee's Loan Files. The Pooling and
Servicing Agreement provides that the Trustee will be entitled to a fee, which
fee will include the expenses of the Trustee (including transition expenses) to
the extent such expenses are not paid by the Servicer (the "Trustee Fee") in
respect of its services as Trustee.

   The Trustee is required at all times to be a banking association organized
and doing business under the laws of any State or the United States of America
subject to supervision or examination by federal or state authority, authorized
under such laws to exercise corporate trust powers, having a combined capital
and surplus of at least $50,000,000, whose long-term deposits, if any, are rated
at least "BBB" by S&P and "Baa2" by Moody's, or such


                                      S-55




<PAGE>


lower long-term debt rating as may be approved in writing by the Certificate
Insurer and reasonably acceptable to the Certificate Insurer. If at any time the
Trustee ceases to be eligible in accordance with the provisions described in
this paragraph, it will be required to resign immediately in the manner and with
the effect specified in the Pooling and Servicing Agreement.

   Any resignation or removal of the Trustee and appointment of a successor
trustee will become effective upon the acceptance of appointment by a successor
trustee acceptable to the Certificate Insurer.

   The Trustee, or any trustee or trustees hereafter appointed, may resign at
any time in the manner set forth in the Pooling and Servicing Agreement. Upon
receiving notice of resignation, the Servicer will be required to promptly
appoint a successor trustee or trustees meeting the eligibility requirements set
forth above in the manner set forth in the Pooling and Servicing Agreement. The
Servicer will deliver a copy of the instrument used to appoint a successor
trustee to the Certificateholders, the Certificate Insurer, the Transferor and
the Depositor, and upon acceptance of appointment by a successor trustee in the
manner provided in the Pooling and Servicing Agreement, the Servicer will give
notice thereof to the Certificateholders. If no successor trustee has been
appointed and has accepted appointment within 30 days after the giving of such
notice of resignation, the resigning trustee may petition any court of competent
jurisdiction for the appointment of a successor trustee. Such court may
thereupon, after such notice, if any, as it may deem proper and prescribe,
appoint a successor trustee.

   If the Trustee fails to perform in accordance with the terms of the Pooling
and Servicing Agreement, the Certificate Insurer or the Servicer with the
consent of the Certificate Insurer, may remove the Trustee under the conditions
set forth in the Pooling and Servicing Agreement and appoint a successor trustee
in the manner set forth in such agreement.

   At any time, for the purpose of meeting any legal requirements of any
jurisdiction in which any part of the Trust Fund or the Trust or property
securing the same may at the time be located, the Servicer and the Trustee
acting jointly shall have the power and shall execute and deliver all
instruments to appoint one or more persons approved by the Trustee to act as
co-trustee or co-trustees, jointly with the Trustee, or separate trustee or
separate trustees, of all or any part of the Trust Fund, including the Trust,
and to vest in such person or persons, in such capacity, such title to the Trust
Fund or the Trust, or any part thereof, and, subject to the provisions of the
Pooling and Servicing Agreement, such powers, duties, obligations, rights and
trusts as the Servicer and the Trustee may consider necessary or desirable.

                        THE CERTIFICATE INSURANCE POLICY

   The following summary of the terms of the Certificate Insurance Policy does
not purport to be complete and is qualified in its entirety by reference to the
Certificate Insurance Policy. The information in this section regarding the
Certificate Insurance Policy has been supplied by the Certificate Insurer for
inclusion herein. Only the Class A Certificates will be entitled to the benefit
of the Certificate Insurance Policy to be issued by the Certificate Insurer.

   On the Closing Date, the Certificate Insurer will issue the Certificate
Insurance Policy in favor of the Trustee. The Certificate Insurance Policy will
unconditionally and irrevocably guarantee Insured Payments on the Class A
Certificates.

   The Certificate Insurer's obligation under the Certificate Insurance Policy
will be discharged to the extent that funds are received by the Trustee for
distribution to the holders, whether or not such funds are properly distributed
by the Trustee.

   "Insured Payment" means (x) with respect to any Distribution Date the excess,
if any, of (i) the sum of (a) the amount of interest accrued on the Principal
Balances or Notional Balance of the related Class A Certificates, at the
applicable Pass-Through Rate during the related Accrual Period, (b) the
Subordination Deficit and (c) any related Preference Amounts (without
duplication) over (ii) the Total Available Funds for such Distribution Date and
(y) on the final Distribution Date, the outstanding Certificate Principal
Balance of all Principal Balance Certificates then outstanding, to the extent
not otherwise paid on such date. The Certificate Insurer will not make any
Insured Payment in respect of Relief Act Shortfalls, Net Prepayment Interest
Shortfalls, Class A-1 LIBOR Interest Carryovers and Fixed Rate Interest
Carryovers. The Certificate Insurance Policy expires and terminates without any
action on the part of the Certificate Insurer or any other person on the date
that is one year and one day following the date on which the Class A
Certificates have been paid in full.


                                      S-56




<PAGE>


     "Preference Amount" means any amount previously distributed to a holder of
a Class A Certificate that is recoverable and sought to be recovered as a
voidable preference by a trustee in bankruptcy pursuant to the United States
Bankruptcy Code (11 U.S.C.) as amended from time to time, in accordance with a
final non-appealable order of a court having competent jurisdiction.

     "Principal Balance" means as of any date of determination and with respect
to each Class of Class A Certificates, the principal balance of the related
Class of Class A Certificates on the Closing Date less any amounts actually
distributed as principal thereon on all prior Distribution Dates.

     "Relief Act Shortfalls" are interest shortfalls resulting from the
application of the Soldiers' and Sailors' Civil Relief Act of 1940, as amended.
See "Certain Legal Aspects of Residential Loans--Soldiers' and Sailors' Civil
Relief Act of 1940" in the Prospectus.

     "Total Available Funds" with respect to each Class of Class A Certificates
and on any Distribution Date is the Available Distribution Amount.

     The Certificate Insurance Policy will be non-cancelable.

     The Certificate Insurance Policy will be issued pursuant to, and shall be
construed under, the laws of the State of New York, without giving effect to the
conflict of laws principles thereof.

     THE CERTIFICATE INSURANCE POLICY IS NOT COVERED BY THE PROPERTY/CASUALTY
INSURANCE SECURITY FUND SPECIFIED IN ARTICLE 76 OF THE NEW YORK INSURANCE LAW.

                             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 Transferor, the Depositor, the Servicer, the
Trustee, the Underwriters or any of their respective affiliates as to the
accuracy or completeness of such 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, 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, 1998 and December 31, 1997 and for each of the
years in the three-year period ended December 31, 1998 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 Securities
and Exchange Commission (the "Commission") on March 30, 1999; Commission File
No. 1-10777) and the unaudited consolidated financial statements of the
Certificate Insurer and subsidiaries as of March 31, 1999 and for the periods
ending March 31, 1999 and March 31, 1998, included in the Quarterly Report on
Form 10-Q of Ambac Financial Group, Inc. for the period ended March 31, 1999
(which was filed with the Commission on May 12, 1999) are hereby incorporated by
reference into this Prospectus Supplement and shall be deemed to be a part
hereof. Any statement contained in a document incorporated herein by reference
shall be modified or superseded for the purposes of this Prospectus Supplement
to the extent that a statement contained herein by reference herein also
modified or supersedes such 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 Securities Exchange Act of
1934, as amended, 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 such documents.

     The following table sets forth the capitalization of the Certificate
Insurer as of December 31, 1996, December 31, 1997, December 31, 1998 and March
31, 1999, respectively, in conformity with generally accepted accounting
principles.


                                      S-57




<PAGE>



                           AMBAC ASSURANCE CORPORATION
                              CAPITALIZATION TABLE
                              (DOLLARS IN MILLIONS)

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                     DECEMBER 31,  DECEMBER 31,  DECEMBER 31,   MARCH 31,
                        1996          1997          1998          1999
                       ------        ------        ------        ------
                                                               (unaudited)
<S>                       <C>            <C>          <C>           <C>
Unearned premium.......     $995         $1,184       $1,303        $1,324
Other liabilities......      259            562          548           544
                          ------         ------       ------        ------

Total Liabilities......   $1,254         $1,746       $1,851        $1,868
                          ------         ------       ------        ------
Stockholder's equity(1)

  Common stock.........      $82            $82          $82           $82
  Additional paid-in
  capital..............      515            521          541           541
  Accumulated other
  comprehensive income        66            118          138           112
  Retained earnings....      992          1,180        1,405         1,467
                          ------         ------       ------        ------

Total stockholder's
equity................    $1,655         $1,901       $2,166        $2,202
                          ------         ------       ------        ------
Total liabilities and
stockholder's equity..    $2,909         $3,647       $4,017        $4,070
                          ======         ======       ======        ======
- -----------------------
</TABLE>
(1)  Components of stockholder's equity have been restated for all periods
     presented to reflect "Accumulated other comprehensive income" in accordance
     with the Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 130 "Reporting
     Comprehensive Income" adopted by the Certificate Insurer effective January
     1, 1998. As this new standard only requires additional information in the
     financial statements, it does not affect the Certificate Insurer's
     financial position or results of operations.

     For additional financial information concerning the Certificate Insurer,
see the audited and unaudited financial statements of the Certificate Insurer
incorporated by reference herein. 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, 1998 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, 17th
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 Insurance Policy" and "The
Certificate Insurer" in the Prospectus Supplement and in the financial
statements incorporated herein by reference.

                     CERTAIN FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSEQUENCES

GENERAL

     The Trustee will make elections to treat designated portions of the Trust
Fund as separate "real estate mortgage investment conduits" ("REMICs") for
federal income tax purposes. The portion of the Trust Fund consisting of (i) the
regular interests in one of such REMICs, (ii) the rights of the Principal
Balance Certificates to receive interest to the extent their respective
Pass-Through Rates currently exceed or previously exceeded the interest rate
paid on such regular interests, which has been set at 3.5% per annum, and (iii)
the rights of the Class A-6IO Certificates to receive interest distributions
will be treated as a grantor trust. The interest described in clauses (ii) and
(iii) of the preceding sentence (in each case, a "Basis Risk Arrangement") is
payable from amounts otherwise distributable on or in respect of the Class X-IO
and Class Z-IO Certificates. The Principal Balance Certificates will represent
the "regular interests" in such REMIC and (together with the A-6IO Certificates)
in the right to receive such basis risk payments. The beneficial owner of a
Principal Balance Certificate will be required to allocate its purchase price
between such regular interest and the right to receive such basis risk payments.
See "--Taxation of Basis Risk


                                      S-58




<PAGE>


Arrangements" below. The Class R Certificates will represent the "residual
interest" in each of the REMICs in the Trust. Upon issuance of the Offered
Certificates, Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft, special tax counsel to the
Depositor, will deliver its opinion generally to the effect that, assuming
compliance with all provisions of the Pooling Agreement, for federal income tax
purposes, each portion of the Trust Fund as to which a REMIC election is made
will qualify as a REMIC under the Code and the portion of the Trust Fund not so
designated will be treated as a grantor trust. See "Certain Federal Income Tax
Consequences--REMICs" in the accompanying prospectus.

   The regular interests represented by the Principal Balance Certificates
generally will be treated as newly originated debt instruments for federal
income tax purposes. Beneficial owners of the Principal Balance Certificates
will be required to report income on such regular interests in accordance with
the accrual method of accounting. The Class A-6IO Certificates may be treated as
debt instruments to the extent described below under "Basis Risk Arrangements."

   The REMIC regular interests represented by the Principal Balance Certificates
each bear interest at 3.5% per annum. The remainder of the interest on each
Principal Balance Certificate at its Pass-Through Rate is paid in the grantor
trust portion of the Trust Fund from payments of interest on the Loans that
otherwise would have been distributed to the Class X-IO or Class Z-IO
Certificates (or applied as an Available Turbo Amount). As a result, such
regular interests may be treated as issued with original issue discount based on
the portion of the investor's purchase price for the Principal Balance
Certificate allocable to such regular interest. See "--Discount and Premium"
below. The portion of such purchase price allocable to the Basis Risk
Arrangement related to such Principal Balance Certificate is amortizable over
the life of such Principal Balance Certificate (see "--Taxation of Basis Risk
Arrangements" below) as an offset to such additional original issue discount.
Any such amortization of the purchase price allocable to a Basis Risk
Arrangement would be treated as a miscellaneous itemized deduction subject to
limitations on deductibility by individuals. Accordingly, the Principal Balance
Certificates may not be suitable investments for individual investors.

   For purposes of accruing original issue discount, determining whether such
original issue discount is de minimis and amortizing any premium, the 100%
Prepayment Assumption will be used. See "Prepayment and Yield
Considerations--General" in this Prospectus Supplement. No representation is
made as to the rate, if any, at which the Loans will prepay.

CHARACTERIZATION OF INVESTMENTS IN OFFERED CERTIFICATES

   Generally, except to the extent noted below, the regular interests
represented by the Principal Balance Certificates will be "real estate assets"
within the meaning of Section 856(c)(4)(A) of the Code in the same proportion
that the assets of the Trust would be so treated. In addition, interest
(including original issue discount, if any) on the regular interests represented
by the Principal Balance Certificates will be interest described in Section
856(c)(3)(B) of the Code to the extent that such Certificates are treated as
"real estate assets" within the meaning of Section 856(c)(4)(A) of the Code. The
regular interests represented by the Principal Balance Certificates will also
generally be considered loans secured by an interest in real property which is
residential real property as described in Section 7701(a)(19)(C) of the Code. If
95% or more of the Loans are treated as assets described in Section 856(c)(4)(A)
or Section 7701(a)(19)(C) of the Code, the regular interests represented by the
Principal Balance Certificates will be treated as such assets in their entirety.
Furthermore, notwithstanding the foregoing, a Principal Balance Certificate will
not be treated as meeting the foregoing real estate asset and income tests to
the extent of an investor's basis, if any, allocable to, or amounts received
under, a Basis Risk Arrangement and the Class A-6IO Certificates will not be
entitled to such treatment at all. As a result of the Basis Risk Arrangements,
the Offered Certificates will not be treated as "qualified mortgages" for
another REMIC under Section 860G(a)(3)(C) of the Code, but the Principal Balance
Certificates should be treated as "permitted assets" for a financial asset
securitization investment trust under Section 860L(c) of the Code. See "Certain
Federal Income Tax Consequences--REMICs--Characterization of Investments in
REMIC Securities" in the accompanying Prospectus.

TAXATION OF BASIS RISK ARRANGEMENTS

   Except as set forth below, each holder of an Offered Certificate will be
treated for federal income tax purposes as having entered into a notional
principal contract pursuant to its right to receive payments with respect to
interest under the applicable Basis Risk Arrangement on the date it purchases
its Certificate. The Internal Revenue Service (the "IRS") has issued final
regulations under Section 446 of the Code relating to notional principal
contracts (the "Swap Regulations").


                                      S-59




<PAGE>


   In general, the holders of the Principal Balance Certificates must allocate
the price they pay for the Principal Balance Certificates between their regular
interest and the Basis Risk Arrangement, and all of a Class A-6IO
Certificateholder's purchase price will be allocable to the Basis Risk
Arrangement. The portion of such purchase price allocable to such rights would
be treated as a cap premium (the "Cap Premium") paid by the related
Certificateholders. A beneficial owner of an Offered Certificate would be
required to amortize the Cap Premium under a level payment method as if the Cap
Premium represented the present value of a series of equal payments made over
the life of the applicable Basis Risk Arrangement (adjusted to take into account
decreases in notional principal amount, if any), discounted at a rate equal to
the rate used to determine the amount of the Cap Premium (or some other
reasonable rate). Prospective purchasers of Offered Certificates should consult
their own tax advisors regarding the appropriate method of amortizing any Cap
Premium. The Swap Regulations treat a nonperiodic payment made under a cap
contract as a loan for federal income tax purposes if the payment is
"significant." It is not known whether any Cap Premium, particularly the Cap
Premium with respect to the Class A-6IO Certificates, would be treated in whole
or in part as a loan under the Swap Regulations. If the Class A-6IO Certificates
were treated in whole or in part as a loan under these rules, the holder's yield
with respect to such loan would be treated as original issue discount.

   Under the Swap Regulations, (i) all taxpayers must recognize periodic
payments with respect to a notional principal contract under the accrual method
of accounting, and (ii) any periodic payments received under the applicable
Basis Risk Arrangement must be netted against payments, if any, deemed made as a
result of the Cap Premiums over the recipient's taxable year, rather than
accounted for on a gross basis. Net income or deduction with respect to net
payments under a notional principal contract for a taxable year should
constitute ordinary income or ordinary deduction. The IRS could contend the
amount is capital gain or loss, but such treatment is unlikely, at least in the
absence of further regulations. Any regulations requiring capital gain or loss
treatment presumably would apply only prospectively.

   Any amount of proceeds from the sale, redemption or retirement of a Principal
Balance Certificate that is considered to be allocated to rights under the
applicable Basis Risk Arrangement, or the entire such proceeds with respect to
the Class A-6IO Certificates, would be considered a "termination payment" under
the Swap Regulations. It is anticipated that the Trustee will account for any
termination payments for reporting purposes in accordance with the Swap
Regulations, as described below.

   Termination Payments. Any amount of sales proceeds that is considered to be
allocated to the selling beneficial owner's rights under the applicable Basis
Risk Arrangement in connection with the sale or exchange of an Offered
Certificate would be considered a "termination payment" under the Swap
Regulations allocable to the related Offered Certificate. A Certificateholder
will have gain or loss from such a termination of the applicable Basis Risk
Arrangement equal to (i) any termination payment it received or is deemed to
have received minus (ii) the unamortized portion of any Cap Premium paid (or
deemed paid) by the beneficial owner upon entering into or acquiring its
interest in the related Basis Risk Arrangement.

   Gain or loss realized upon the termination of the applicable Basis Risk
Arrangement will generally be treated as capital gain or loss. Moreover, in the
case of a bank or thrift institution, Code Section 582(c) would likely not apply
to treat such gain or loss as ordinary.

   Application of the Straddle Rules. A Principal Balance Certificate
representing beneficial ownership of the corresponding regular interest and the
related Basis Risk Arrangement may constitute positions in a straddle, in which
case, the straddle rules of Code Section 1092 would apply. A selling beneficial
owner's capital gain or loss with respect to such regular interest would be
short-term because the holding period would be tolled under the straddle rules.
Similarly, capital gain or loss realized in connection with the termination of
the applicable Basis Risk Arrangement would be short-term. If the holder of a
Principal Balance Certificate incurred or continued indebtedness to acquire to
hold such Certificate, the holder would generally be required to capitalize a
portion of the interest paid on such indebtedness until termination of the
applicable Basis Risk Arrangement.

   For further information regarding the federal income tax consequences of
investing in the Offered Certificates, see "Certain Federal Income Tax
Consequences--REMICs" in the accompanying Prospectus.

                              ERISA CONSIDERATIONS

   The Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, as amended ("ERISA"),
and the Code impose certain restrictions on (a) employee benefit plans (as
defined in Section 3(3) of ERISA), (b) plans described in section


                                      S-60




<PAGE>


4975(e)(1) of the Code, including individual retirement accounts or Keogh plans,
(c) any entities whose underlying assets include plan assets by reason of a
plan's investment in such entities (each, a "Plan") and (d) persons who have
certain specified relationships to such Plans ("Parties-in-Interest" under ERISA
and "Disqualified Persons" under the Code). Moreover, based on the reasoning of
the United States Supreme Court in John Hancock Life Ins. Co. v. Harris Trust
and Savings. Bank, 114 S. Ct. 517 (1993), an insurance company's general account
may be deemed to include assets of the Plans investing in the general account
(e.g., through the purchase of an annuity contract), and the insurance company
might be treated as a Party-in-Interest with respect to a Plan by virtue of such
investment. ERISA also imposes certain duties on persons who are fiduciaries of
Plans subject to ERISA and prohibits certain transactions between a Plan and
Parties-in-Interest or Disqualified Persons with respect to such Plans. There
are certain exemptions issued by the United States Department of Labor (the
"DOL") that may be applicable to an investment by an ERISA Plan in the
Certificates, including Prohibited Transaction Class Exemption 83-1 ("PTE
83-1"). For further discussion of PTE 83-1, including the necessary conditions
to its applicability and other important factors to be considered by an ERISA
Plan contemplating investing in the Certificates, see "ERISA Considerations" in
the Prospectus.

     The U.S. Department of Labor has granted an individual administrative
exemption to PaineWebber Incorporated (Prohibited Transaction Exemption 90-36,
55 Fed. Reg. 25903 (1990) (the "PWI Exemption") and on April 3, 1996, the DOL
issued to First Union an individual administrative exemption, Prohibited
Transaction Exemption 96-22, 61 Fed. Reg. 14827 (the "First Union Exemption" and
together with the PWI Exemption, the "Exemptions"), from certain of the
prohibited transaction rules of ERISA with respect to the initial purchase, the
holding and the subsequent resale by an ERISA Plan of certificates in
pass-through trusts that meet the conditions and requirements of either of the
Exemptions. Among the conditions that must be satisfied for the Exemptions to
apply are the following:

          1. The Acquisition of the Offered Certificates by a Plan is on terms
     (including the price for the Offered Certificates) that are at least as
     favorable to the Plan as they would be in an arm's length transaction with
     an unrelated party;

          2. The rights and interests evidenced by the Offered Certificates
     acquired by the Plan are not subordinated to the rights and interests
     evidenced by other certificates of the Trust;

          3. The Offered Certificates acquired by the Plan have received a
     rating at the time of such acquisition that is in one of the three highest
     generic rating categories from either S&P, Moody's, Fitch IBCA, Inc. or
     Duff & Phelps Credit Rating Co.

          4. The sum of all payments made to the Underwriters in connection with
     the distribution of the Offered Certificates represents not more than
     reasonable compensation for underwriting the Offered Certificates. The sum
     of all payments made to and retained by the Servicer represents not more
     than reasonable compensation for the Servicer's services under the
     Agreement and reimbursement of the Servicer's reasonable expenses in
     connection therewith;

          5. The Trustee must not be an affiliate of any other member of the
     Restricted Group (as defined below); and

          6. The Plan investing in the Offered Certificates is an "accredited
     investor" as defined in Rule 501(a)(1) of Regulation D of the Securities
     Act of 1933, as amended.

     The Trust Fund also must meet the following requirements:

          a. The corpus of the Trust Fund must consist solely of assets of the
     type which have been included in other investment pools;

          b. certificates in such other investment pools must have been rated in
     one of the three highest rating categories of S&P, Moody's, Fitch IBCA,
     Inc. or Duff & Phelps, Credit Rating Co. for at least one year prior to the
     Plan's acquisition of certificates; and

          c. certificates evidencing interests in such other investment pools
     must have been purchased by investors other than plans for at least one
     year prior to any Plan's acquisition of Offered Certificates.

     In order for an Exemption to apply to certain self-dealing/conflict of
interest prohibited transactions that may occur when a Plan fiduciary causes the
Plan to acquire Offered Certificates, the Exemption requires, among other


                                      S-61




<PAGE>


matters, that: (i) in the case of an acquisition in connection with the initial
issuance of Certificates, at least fifty percent of each class of certificates
in which Plans have invested is acquired by persons independent of the
Restricted Group and at least fifty percent of the aggregate interest in the
Trust Fund is acquired by persons independent of the Restricted Group (as
defined below); (ii) such fiduciary (or its affiliate) is an obligor with
respect to 5 percent or less of the fair market value of the obligations
contained in the Trust; (iii) the Plan's investment in Offered Certificates does
not exceed twenty-five percent (25%) of all of the certificates outstanding at
the time of the acquisition and (iv) immediately after the acquisition, no more
than twenty-five percent (25%) of the assets of the Plan are invested in
certificates representing an interest in one or more trusts containing assets
sold or serviced by the same entity.

   The Exemptions do not apply to certain prohibited transactions in the case of
Plans sponsored by an Underwriter, the Trustee, the Servicer, any obligor with
respect to the Loans included in the Trust, any entity deemed to be a "sponsor"
of the Trust Fund as such term is defined in the exemption, or any affiliate of
any such party (the "Restricted Group").

   Subject to the foregoing and the assumption that none of the Loans actually
included in the Trust Fund will have a Combined Loan-to-Value Ratio in excess of
100%, the Depositor believes that the Exemption will apply to the acquisition
and holding of the Offered Certificates by Plans and that all conditions of such
exemption other than those within the control of the investors have been met.

   Before purchasing an Offered Certificate, a fiduciary of an ERISA Plan should
make its own determination as to the availability of the exemptive relief
provided in the Exemption or the availability of any other prohibited
transaction exemptions (including PTE 83-1), and whether the conditions of any
such exemption will be applicable to the Offered Certificates. Any fiduciary of
an ERISA Plan considering whether to purchase an Offered Certificate should also
carefully review with its own legal advisors the applicability of the fiduciary
duty and prohibited transaction provisions of ERISA and the Code to such
investment. See "ERISA Considerations" in the Prospectus.

   A governmental plan as defined in Section 3(32) of ERISA is not subject to
ERISA, or Code Section 4975. However, such a governmental plan may be subject to
a federal, state, or local law, which is, to a material extent, similar to the
provisions of ERISA or Code Section 4975 ("Similar Law"). A fiduciary of a
governmental plan should make its own determination as to the need for and the
availability of any exemptive relief under Similar Law.

   The sale of Offered Certificates to an ERISA Plan is in no respect a
representation by the Depositor or the Underwriter, that this investment meets
all relevant legal requirements with respect to investments by ERISA Plans
generally or any particular ERISA Plan, or that this 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 the Secondary Mortgage Market Enhancement Act of 1984 ("SMMEA"),
as amended.

   Institutions subject to the jurisdiction of the Office of the Comptroller of
the Currency, the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation, the Office of Thrift Supervision, the National
Credit Union Administration or state banking or insurance authorities should
review applicable rules, supervisory policies and guidelines of these agencies
before purchasing any of the Offered Certificates, since such Offered
Certificates may be deemed to be unsuitable investments under one or more of
these rules, policies and guidelines and certain restrictions may apply to such
investments. It should also be noted that certain states have enacted
legislation limiting to varying extents the ability of certain entities (in
particular, insurance companies) to invest in mortgage related securities.
Investors should consult with their own legal advisors in determining whether
and to what extent the Offered Certificates constitute legal investments for
such investors. See "Legal Investment" in the Prospectus.

                                 USE OF PROCEEDS

   Substantially all of the net proceeds to be received from the sale of the
Offered Certificates will be applied by the Depositor to the purchase price of
the Loans from the Transferor.


                                      S-62




<PAGE>


                                  UNDERWRITING

   Subject to the terms and conditions set forth in the Underwriting Agreement
among the Depositor, PaineWebber Incorporated ("PWI") and First Union Capital
Markets Corp. ("First Union" and, together with PWI, the "Underwriters"), the
Depositor has agreed to sell to the Underwriters, and PWI and First Union have
agreed to purchase from the Depositor, 70% and 30%, respectively, of the
Certificate Principal Balance or Notional Amount of each Class of Offered
Certificates.

   The Depositor has been advised by the Underwriters that they propose
initially to offer the Offered Certificates to the public at the prices set
forth on the cover of this Prospectus Supplement, and to certain dealers at such
prices less the initial selling concession set forth below for each Class. The
Underwriters may allow, and such dealers may reallow, a selling concession not
in excess of that set forth below for each Class. After the initial public
offering of the Offered Certificates, the public offering price and such selling
concessions and reallowances may be changed.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                         CLASS A-1      CLASS A-2      CLASS A-3      CLASS A-4
                        CERTIFICATES   CERTIFICATES   CERTIFICATES   CERTIFICATES
                        ------------   ------------   ------------   ------------
<S>                        <C>            <C>            <C>            <C>
Selling Concessions....    0.0450%        0.0600%        0.1050%        0.1800%
Reallowances...........    0.0315%         0.042%        0.0735%        0.1260%

<CAPTION>
                         CLASS A-5      CLASS A-6     CLASS A-6IO
                        CERTIFICATES   CERTIFICATES   CERTIFICATES
                        ------------   ------------   ------------
<S>                        <C>            <C>            <C>
Selling Concessions....    0.2250%        0.1950%        0.1339%
Reallowances...........    0.1575%        0.1365%        0.0937%
</TABLE>

   Until the distribution of the Offered Certificates is completed, rules of the
Commission may limit the ability of the Underwriters and certain selling group
members to bid for and purchase the Offered Certificates. As an exception to
these rules, the Underwriters are permitted to engage in certain transactions
that stabilize the price of the Offered Certificates. Such transactions consist
of bids or purchases for the purpose of pegging, fixing or maintaining the price
of the Offered Certificates.

   If the Underwriters create a short position in the Offered Certificates in
connection with the offering, i.e., if they sell more Offered Certificates than
are set forth on the cover page of this Prospectus Supplement, the Underwriters
may reduce that short position by purchasing Offered Certificates in the open
market.

   In general, purchase of a security for the purpose of stabilization or to
reduce a short position could cause the price of the security to be higher than
it might be in the absence of such purchases.

   Neither the Depositor nor the Underwriters makes any representation or
prediction as to the direction or magnitude of any effect that the transactions
described above may have on the price of the Offered Certificates. In addition,
neither the Depositor nor the Underwriters makes any representation that the
Underwriters will engage in such transactions or that such transactions, once
commenced, will not be discontinued without notice.

   There is currently no secondary market for the Offered Certificates. There
can be no assurance that a secondary market for the Offered Certificates will
develop or, if it does develop, that it will continue.

   The Depositor has agreed to indemnify the Underwriters against, or make
contributions to the Underwriters with respect to, certain liabilities,
including liabilities under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended.

   The Depositor is an affiliate of PaineWebber Incorporated. Any obligations of
PaineWebber Incorporated are the sole responsibility of PaineWebber Incorporated
and do not create any obligations on the part of any of its affiliates.

                                     EXPERTS

   The consolidated financial statements of the Certificate Insurer, Ambac
Assurance Corporation and subsidiaries, as of December 31, 1998 and 1997 and for
each of the years in the three-year period ended December 31, 1998, are
incorporated by reference in this Prospectus Supplement and in the registration
statement in reliance upon the report


                                      S-63




<PAGE>


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.

                                     RATINGS

   It is a condition to the original issuance of the Class A Certificates (other
than the Class A-6IO) that they will receive ratings of "AAA" by Standard &
Poor's Ratings Services, a division of The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. ("S&P")
and "Aaa" Moody's Investors Service, Inc. ("Moody's", and together with S&P, the
"Rating Agencies") and that the Class A-6IO Certificates receive a rating of
"AAAr" by S&P and "Aaa" by Moody's. S&P assigns the additional rating of "r" to
highlight classes of securities that S&P believes may experience high volatility
or high variability in expected returns due to non-credit risks. The ratings
assigned to the Class A Certificates will be based on the financial strength
rating of the Certificate Insurer. Explanations of the significance of such
ratings may be obtained from Standard & Poor's, a division of The McGraw-Hill
Companies, Inc., 25 Broadway, New York, New York 10004 and Moody's Investor's
Service Inc., 99 Church Street, New York, New York 10007. Such ratings will be
the views only of such rating agencies. There is no assurance that any such
ratings will continue for any period of time or that such ratings will not be
revised or withdrawn. Any such revision or withdrawal of such ratings may have
an adverse effect on the market price of the Offered Certificates. A securities
rating addresses the likelihood of the receipt by the Certificateholders of
distributions on the Offered Certificates. The ratings on the Offered
Certificates do not constitute statements regarding the possibility that the
Certificateholders might realize a lower than anticipated yield. Additionally,
the ratings of the Certificates do not address the likelihood of the
distribution of any Class A-1 LIBOR Interest Carryover or Fixed Rate Interest
Carryover. A securities 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 securities rating should be evaluated
independently of similar ratings on different securities.

                                  LEGAL MATTERS

   The validity of the Offered Certificates and certain federal income tax
matters will be passed upon for the Depositor and the Underwriters by
Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft, New York, New York. Certain legal matters
relating to the Certificate Insurer and the Certificate Insurance Policy will be
passed upon for the Certificate Insurer by Thacher, Proffitt & Wood, New York,
New York.



                                      S-64




<PAGE>


               INDEX OF DEFINED TERMS


<TABLE>
<S>                                           <C>
Accrual Period.....................................S-42
Administrative Fee Rate............................S-42
ALTA...............................................S-26
Available Distribution Amount.................S-6, S-43
Available Turbo Amount.............................S-43
Avondale...........................................S-27
Basis Risk Arrangement.............................S-58
Beneficial Owner....................................S-9
Book-Entry Certificates.............................S-9
Business Day........................................S-5
Cap Premium........................................S-60
Cedelbank...........................................S-9
Certificate Account................................S-49
Certificate Insurance Agreement....................S-44
Certificate Insurance Policy........................S-9
Certificate Insurer...........................S-4, S-57
Certificate Principal Balance......................S-41
Certificateholder..................................S-40
Certificateholders.................................S-43
Certificates........................................S-5
Class..............................................S-40
Class A Certificates..........................S-5, S-40
Class A Turbo Amount...............................S-44
Class A-1 Available Funds Cap Rate.................S-42
Class A-1 LIBOR Interest Carryover.................S-42
Class A-1 LIBOR Rate...............................S-42
Class A-1 Pass-Through Rate........................S-42
Class A-6 Lockout Distribution Amount..............S-44
Class A-6 Lockout Percentage.......................S-44
Class A-6 Lockout Pro Rata Distribution Amount.....S-45
Class A-6 Lockout Pro Rata Turbo Amount............S-45
Class A-6 Lockout Turbo Amount.....................S-45
Class X-IO Carryover Amount........................S-45
Class X-IO Distribution Amount.....................S-45
Class Z-IO Carryover Amount........................S-45
Class Z-IO Distribution Amount.....................S-45
Closing Date..................................S-4, S-17
CLTA...............................................S-26
CLTV...............................................S-18
Code...............................................S-10
Collection Account.................................S-49
Combined Loan-to-Value Ratio.......................S-18
Commission.........................................S-57
Compensating Interest..............................S-50
CPR................................................S-30
Credit Score.......................................S-27
Cut-Off Date..................................S-4, S-17
Cut-Off Date Statistical Principal Balance....S-7, S-17
Debt Service Reduction.............................S-50
Deficient Valuation................................S-50
Definitive Certificate.............................S-40
Depositor.....................................S-4, S-17
Determination Date..................................S-5
Distributable Certificate Interest.................S-45
Distribution Date.............................S-5, S-43
DOL................................................S-61
DTC...........................................S-9, S-40
Due Period....................................S-5, S-42
Eligible Account...................................S-49
ERISA..............................................S-60
Euroclear...........................................S-9
Exemptions.........................................S-61
FDIC...............................................S-15
First Union........................................S-63
First Union Exemption..............................S-61
Fixed Rate Available Funds Cap Rate................S-41
Fixed Rate Interest Carryover......................S-42
Foreclosure Profits................................S-45
Guidelines.........................................S-25
Holder.............................................S-40
Insurance Proceeds.................................S-46
Insured Payment...............................S-9, S-56
IRS................................................S-59
LIBOR..............................................S-41
LIBOR Business Day.................................S-47
LIBOR Determination Date...........................S-41
Liquidated Loan....................................S-46
Liquidated Loan Loss...............................S-46
Liquidation Proceeds...............................S-46
Loan Schedule......................................S-23
Loans.........................................S-7, S-17
Manufactured Homes..................................S-7
Manufactured Housing Contracts...                  .S-7
Modeling Assumptions...............................S-30
Moody's......................................S-10, S-64
Mortgage Loans......................................S-7
Mortgage Note......................................S-17
Mortgaged Properties................................S-7
Mortgages..........................................S-17
Net Foreclosure Profits............................S-46
Net Liquidation Proceeds...........................S-46
Net Loan Rate......................................S-42
Net Prepayment Interest Shortfalls.................S-46
New South.....................................S-4, S-25
Nonrecoverable Advance.............................S-50
Notional Amount....................................S-41
Offered Certificates..........................S-5, S-40
Optional Termination Date...........................S-8
Original Pool Principal Balance....................S-17
Overcollateralization Amount.......................S-46
Overcollateralization Deficiency Amount............S-46
Overcollateralization Target Amount................S-46
Participants.......................................S-40
Pass-Through Rates.................................S-41
Periodic Advance...................................S-50
</TABLE>


                       S-65




<PAGE>


<TABLE>
<S>                                           <C>

Permitted Investments..............................S-49
Plan...............................................S-61
Pooling and Servicing Agreement.....................S-4
Preference Amount..................................S-57
Prepayment Assumption..............................S-30
Prepayment Interest Shortfall......................S-50
Principal Balance..................................S-57
Principal Balance Certificates.....................S-40
Principal Distribution Amount......................S-46
Private Certificates...............................S-40
Properties..........................................S-7
PTE 83-1...........................................S-61
Purchase Price.....................................S-23
PWI................................................S-63
PWI Exemption......................................S-61
Qualified Substitute Loan..........................S-24
Rating Agencies..............................S-10, S-64
Record Date........................................S-43
Reduced Weighted Average Net Loan Rate.............S-46
Reference Bank Rate................................S-47
Reimbursement Amount...............................S-44
Relief Act Shortfalls..............................S-57
REMIC Regular Certificates.........................S-40
REMIC Residual Certificates........................S-40
REMICs.............................................S-58
REO Property.......................................S-48
Restricted Group...................................S-62
S&P..........................................S-10, S-64
Servicer............................................S-4
Servicer Remittance Amount.........................S-50
Servicer Remittance Date...........................S-49
Servicing Advances.................................S-50
Servicing Fee......................................S-52
Servicing Fee Rate.................................S-52
Similar Law........................................S-62
SMMEA..............................................S-62
Stepdown Date......................................S-46
Subordination Deficit..............................S-47
Subservicer........................................S-25
Substitution Adjustment............................S-23
Successor Servicer.................................S-54
Swap Regulations...................................S-59
Telerate Page 3750.................................S-47
Total Available Funds..............................S-57
Transferor....................................S-4, S-17
Trust...............................................S-4
Trust Fund.........................................S-39
Trustee.............................................S-4
Trustee Fee........................................S-55
Trustee's Loan File................................S-23
Uncapped Pass-Through Rate.........................S-41
Underwriters.......................................S-63
Value..............................................S-18
Weighted average life..............................S-30
Weighted Average Net Loan Rate.....................S-42
</TABLE>


                          S-66






<PAGE>

PROSPECTUS
MAY 24, 1999

                 PAINEWEBBER MORTGAGE ACCEPTANCE CORPORATION IV
                                   Depositor

                           ASSET-BACKED CERTIFICATES
                               ASSET-BACKED NOTES
                              (Issuable in Series)

     Principal and interest with respect to Securities will be payable monthly,
quarterly, semiannually or at such other intervals on the dates specified in the
related Prospectus Supplement.

     The mortgage pass-through certificates ('Certificates') or mortgaged-backed
notes ('Notes') offered hereby (together, 'Securities') and by Supplements to
this Prospectus will be offered from time to time in one or more series (each, a
'Series'). Each Series of Securities will represent in the aggregate the entire
beneficial ownership interest in a Trust Fund consisting primarily of a
segregated pool of various types of single-family and multifamily residential
mortgage loans, home improvement contracts, cooperative apartment loans or
manufactured housing conditional sales contracts and installment loan agreements
(collectively, the 'Residential Loans'), or beneficial interests therein (which
may include Mortgage Securities as defined herein), pass-through or
participation certificates issued or guaranteed by the Government National
Mortgage Association ('GNMA'), the Federal National Mortgage Association
('FNMA') or the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation ('FHLMC') (any such
certificates, 'Agency Securities'). Information regarding a Series of Securities
and the composition of the related Trust Fund will be furnished at the time of
offering in a Prospectus Supplement.

     Each Series of Securities will include one or more classes. Each class of
Securities of any Series will represent the right, which right may be senior to
the rights of one or more of the other classes of the Certificates, to receive a
specified portion of payments of principal and interest on the Residential Loans
or Agency Securities in the related Trust Fund in the manner described herein
and in the related Prospectus Supplement. A Series may include one or more
classes of Securities entitled to principal distributions, with
disproportionate, nominal or no interest distributions, or to interest
distributions, with disproportionate, nominal or no principal distributions. See
'Description of the Securities.' A Series may include two or more classes of
Securities which differ as to the timing, sequential order or amount of
distributions of principal or interest or both. If so specified in the related
Prospectus Supplement, the Trust Fund for a Series of Securities may include
insurance policies, surety bonds, guarantees, letters of credit, reserve funds,
cash accounts, reinvestment income or other types of credit support, or any
combination thereof. See 'Description of Credit Support.'

     FOR A DISCUSSION OF CERTAIN RISKS ASSOCIATED WITH AN INVESTMENT IN THE
SECURITIES, SEE THE INFORMATION UNDER 'RISK FACTORS' ON PAGE 16.

     The only obligations of the Depositor with respect to a Series of
Securities will be pursuant to its representations and warranties as described
herein. The Master Servicer with respect to a Series of Securities evidencing
interests in a Trust Fund including Residential Loans will be named in the
related Prospectus Supplement. The principal obligations of a Master Servicer
will be limited to its contractual servicing obligations, and, to the extent
described in the related Prospectus Supplement, its obligation to make certain
cash advances in the event of payment delinquencies on the Residential Loans.

     Each Trust Fund will be held in trust for the benefit of the holders of the
related Series of Securities as more fully described herein. With respect to
each Series of Certificates, if specified in the related Prospectus Supplement,
one or more elections may be made to treat the related Trust Fund as a 'real
estate mortgage investment conduit' ('REMIC') for federal income tax purposes.
See 'Certain Federal Income Tax Consequences.'

                              PAINEWEBBER INCORPORATED



<PAGE>

     THE SECURITIES OF EACH SERIES WILL NOT REPRESENT AN INTEREST IN OR
OBLIGATION OF THE DEPOSITOR, THE MASTER SERVICER, THE TRUSTEE OR ANY OF THEIR
RESPECTIVE AFFILIATES, EXCEPT AS SET FORTH HEREIN AND IN THE RELATED PROSPECTUS
SUPPLEMENT. NEITHER THE SECURITIES NOR, EXCEPT AS SET FORTH HEREIN OR IN THE
RELATED PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT, ANY UNDERLYING RESIDENTIAL LOAN (OTHER THAN
RESIDENTIAL LOANS IDENTIFIED AS FHA LOANS OR VA LOANS IN THE RELATED PROSPECTUS
SUPPLEMENT) OR ANY MORTGAGE SECURITY, WILL BE INSURED OR GUARANTEED BY ANY
GOVERNMENTAL AGENCY OR INSTRUMENTALITY. ALTHOUGH PAYMENT OF PRINCIPAL AND
INTEREST ON AGENCY SECURITIES WILL BE GUARANTEED AS DESCRIBED HEREIN AND IN THE
RELATED PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT BY GNMA, FNMA OR FHLMC, THE CERTIFICATES OF ANY
SERIES EVIDENCING INTERESTS IN A TRUST FUND INCLUDING SUCH AGENCY SECURITIES
WILL NOT BE SO GUARANTEED.

     THESE SECURITIES HAVE NOT BEEN APPROVED OR DISAPPROVED BY THE SECURITIES
AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION OR ANY STATE SECURITIES COMMISSION, NOR HAS THE
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION OR ANY STATE SECURITIES COMMISSION PASSED
UPON THE ACCURACY OR ADEQUACY OF THIS PROSPECTUS. ANY REPRESENTATION TO THE
CONTRARY IS A CRIMINAL OFFENSE.

     The Securities may be offered through one or more different methods,
including offerings through underwriters, as more fully described under 'Plans
of Distribution' and in the related Prospectus Supplement. The Depositor may
retain or hold for sale, from time to time, one or more classes of a Series of
Securities.

     The Depositor does not intend to list any of the Securities on any
securities exchange and has not made any other arrangement for secondary trading
of the Securities. With respect to each Series, all of the Securities of each
class offered hereby will be rated in one of the four highest rating categories
by one or more nationally recognized statistical rating organizations. There
will have been no public market for any Series of Securities prior to the
offering thereof. No assurance can be given that such a market will develop as a
result of such an offering.

     The Securities are offered when, as and if delivered to and accepted by the
underwriters subject to prior sale, withdrawal or modification of the offer
without notice, the approval of counsel and other conditions. Retain this
Prospectus for future reference. This Prospectus may not be used to consummate
sales of the securities offered hereby unless accompanied by a Prospectus
Supplement.

     NO PERSON HAS BEEN AUTHORIZED TO GIVE ANY INFORMATION OR TO MAKE ANY
REPRESENTATIONS OTHER THAN THOSE CONTAINED IN THIS PROSPECTUS OR THE RELATED
PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT AND, IF GIVEN OR MADE, SUCH INFORMATION OR REPRESENTATIONS
MUST NOT BE RELIED UPON. THIS PROSPECTUS AND THE RELATED PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT
DO NOT CONSTITUTE AN OFFER TO SELL OR A SOLICITATION OF AN OFFER TO BUY ANY
SECURITIES OTHER THAN THE SECURITIES OFFERED HEREBY AND THEREBY NOR AN OFFER OF
THE SECURITIES TO ANY PERSON IN ANY STATE OR OTHER JURISDICTION IN WHICH SUCH
OFFER WOULD BE UNLAWFUL. THE DELIVERY OF THIS PROSPECTUS OR THE RELATED
PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT AT ANY TIME DOES NOT IMPLY THAT INFORMATION THEREIN IS
CORRECT AS OF ANY TIME SUBSEQUENT TO THEIR RESPECTIVE DATE.

                             AVAILABLE INFORMATION

     The Depositor is subject to the informational requirements of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and in accordance therewith files reports and
other information with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the
'Commission'). Such reports and other information filed by the Depositor can be
inspected and copied at the public reference facilities maintained by the
Commission at its Public Reference Section, 450 Fifth Street, N.W., Washington,
D.C. 20549, and its Regional Offices located as follows: Chicago Regional
Office, Suite 1400, Northwestern Atrium Center, 500 West Madison Street,
Chicago, Illinois 60661; New York Regional Office, Seven World Trade Center, New
York, New York 10048. Copies of such material can also be obtained from the
Public Reference Section of the Commission, 450 Fifth Street, N.W., Washington,
D.C. 20549, at prescribed rates. The Depositor does not intend to send any
financial reports to Securityholders. The Commission also maintains a site on
the

                                       2



<PAGE>

World Wide Web at 'http://www.sec.gov' at which users can view and download
copies of reports, proxy and information statements and other information filed
electronically through the Electronic Data Gathering, Analysis and Retrieval
('EDGAR') system. The Depositor has filed the Registration Statement, including
all exhibits thereto, through the EDGAR system and therefore such materials
should be available by logging onto the Commission's Web site. The Commission
maintains computer terminals providing access to the EDGAR system at each of the
offices referred to above.

     This Prospectus does not contain all of the information set forth in the
Registration Statement (of which this Prospectus forms a part) and exhibits
thereto which the Depositor has filed with the Commission under the Securities
Act of 1933 and to which reference is hereby made.

     Copies of FHLMC's most recent Offering Circular for FHLMC Certificates,
FHLMC's most recent Information Statement and any subsequent information
statement, any supplement to any information statement relating to FHLMC and any
quarterly report made available by FHLMC after December 31, 1983 can be obtained
by writing or calling the FHLMC Investor Inquiry Department at 8200 Jones Branch
Drive, Mail Stop 319, McLean, Virginia 22102 (800-336-3672). The Depositor did
not participate in the preparation of FHLMC's Offering Circular, Information
Statement or any supplement and, accordingly, makes no representation as to the
accuracy or completeness of the information set forth therein.

     Copies of FNMA's most recent Prospectus for FNMA Certificates are available
from FNMA's Mortgage Backed Securities Office, 3900 Wisconsin Avenue, N.W.,
Washington, D.C. 20016 (202-752-6547). FNMA's annual report and quarterly
financial statements, as well as other financial information, are available from
FNMA's Office of the Treasurer, 3900 Wisconsin Avenue, N.W., Washington, D.C.
20016 (202-752-7000) or the Office of the Vice President of Investor Relations,
3900 Wisconsin Avenue, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20016 (202-752-7000). The
Depositor did not participate in the preparation of FNMA's Prospectus and,
accordingly, makes no representations as to the accuracy or completeness of the
information set forth therein.

                           REPORTS TO SECURITYHOLDERS

     The Master Servicer or the Trustee (as specified in the related Prospectus
Supplement) will furnish to all registered holders of Securities of the related
Series monthly, quarterly, semi-annually or at such other intervals specified in
the related Prospectus Supplement, reports and annual statements containing
information with respect to each Trust Fund described herein and in the related
Prospectus Supplement. See 'Description of the Securities -- Statements to
Securityholders' herein.

               INCORPORATION OF CERTAIN INFORMATION BY REFERENCE

     With respect to each Series of Securities offered hereby, there are
incorporated herein and in the related Prospectus Supplement by reference all
documents and reports filed or caused to be filed by the Depositor pursuant to
Section 13(a), 13(c), 14 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, prior
to the termination of the offering of the related Series of Securities, that
relate specifically to such related Series of Securities. The Depositor will
provide or cause to be provided without charge to each person to whom this
Prospectus and a related Prospectus Supplement is delivered in connection with
the offering of one or more classes of such Series of Securities, upon written
or oral request of such person, a copy of any or all such reports incorporated
herein by reference, in each case to the extent such reports relate to one or
more of such classes of such Series of Securities, other than the exhibits to
such documents, unless such exhibits are specifically incorporated by reference
in such documents. Requests should be directed in writing to PaineWebber
Mortgage Acceptance Corporation IV, 1285 Avenue of the Americas, New York, New
York 10019 or by telephone at (212) 713-2000.

              PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT OR CURRENT REPORT ON FORM 8-K

     The Prospectus Supplement or Current Report on Form 8-K relating to the
Securities of each Series to be offered hereunder will, among other things, set
forth with respect to such Securities, as appropriate: (i) a description of the
class or classes of Securities and the Security Interest Rate or method of
determining the rate or the amount of interest, if any, to be paid to each such
class; (ii) the

                                       3



<PAGE>

aggregate principal amount and Distribution Dates relating to such Series and,
if applicable, the initial and final scheduled Distribution Dates for each
class; (iii) information as to the assets comprising the Trust Fund, including
the general characteristics of the Trust Fund Assets included therein and, if
applicable, the insurance policies, surety bonds, guarantees, letters of credit,
reserve funds, cash accounts, reinvestment income or other instruments or
agreements included in the Trust Fund or otherwise, and the amount and source of
any reserve account or cash account; (iv) the circumstances, if any, under which
the Trust Fund may be subject to early termination; (v) the method used to
calculate the amount of principal to be distributed with respect to each class
of Securities; (vi) the order of application of distributions to each of the
classes within such Series, whether sequential, pro rata, or otherwise; (vii)
additional information with respect to the method of distribution of such
Securities; (viii) whether one or more REMIC elections will be made and
designation of the regular interests and residual interests; (ix) the aggregate
original percentage ownership interest in the Trust Fund to be evidenced by each
class of Securities; (x) information as to the Trustee; (xi) information as to
the nature and extent of subordination with respect to any class of Securities
that is subordinate in right of payment to any other class; and (xii)
information as to the Master Servicer.

     UNTIL 90 DAYS AFTER THE DATE OF EACH PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT, ALL DEALERS
EFFECTING TRANSACTIONS IN THE SECURITIES COVERED BY SUCH PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT,
WHETHER OR NOT PARTICIPATING IN THE DISTRIBUTION THEREOF, MAY BE REQUIRED TO
DELIVER SUCH PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT AND THIS PROSPECTUS. THIS IS IN ADDITION TO
THE OBLIGATION OF DEALERS TO DELIVER A PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT AND THE PROSPECTUS
WHEN ACTING AS UNDERWRITERS OF THE SECURITIES COVERED BY SUCH PROSPECTUS
SUPPLEMENT AND WITH RESPECT TO THEIR UNSOLD ALLOTMENTS OR SUBSCRIPTIONS.

                                       4





<PAGE>

                   TABLE OF CONTENTS
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                  PAGE
                                                  ----
<S>                                               <C>
AVAILABLE INFORMATION..........................     2
REPORTS TO SECURITYHOLDERS.....................     3
INCORPORATION OF CERTAIN INFORMATION BY
  REFERENCE....................................     3
PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT OR CURRENT REPORT ON
  FORM 8-K.....................................     3
SUMMARY OF TERMS...............................     7
RISK FACTORS...................................    16
     Limited Liquidity.........................    16
     Limited Assets............................    16
     Credit Enhancement........................    16
     Prepayment and Yield Considerations.......    17
     Balloon Payments..........................    17
     Nature of Mortgages.......................    17
     Environmental Risks.......................    18
     Certain Other Legal Considerations
       Regarding Residential Loans.............    19
     Rating of the Securities..................    19
     Book-Entry Registration...................    20
     Certain Home Improvement Contracts........    21
     Mortgage Loans Underwritten as
       Non-Conforming Credits May Experience
       Relatively Higher Losses................    21
     Trust Fund Assets May Include Delinquent
       and Sub-Performing Residential Loans....    21
     Pre-Funding Accounts......................    21
     Other Considerations......................    22
     Risks Associated With Year 2000
       Compliance..............................    22
THE TRUST FUNDS................................    22
     Residential Loans.........................    22
     Agency Securities.........................    28
     Stripped Agency Securities................    31
     Additional Information Concerning the
       Trust Funds.............................    31
USE OF PROCEEDS................................    33
YIELD CONSIDERATIONS...........................    33
MATURITY AND PREPAYMENT CONSIDERATIONS.........    34
THE DEPOSITOR..................................    36
RESIDENTIAL LOAN PROGRAM.......................    36
     Underwriting Standards....................    36
     Qualifications of Unaffiliated Sellers....    37
     Representations by Unaffiliated Sellers;
       Repurchases.............................    38
     Sub-Servicing.............................    39
DESCRIPTION OF THE SECURITIES..................    41
     General...................................    41
     Assignment of Trust Fund Assets...........    42
     Deposits to the Trust Account.............    45
     Pre-Funding Account.......................    46
     Payments on Residential Loans.............    46
     Payments on Agency Securities.............    47
     Distributions.............................    47
     Principal and Interest on the
       Securities..............................    48
     Available Distribution Amount.............    50
     Subordination.............................    50
     Advances..................................    53
     Statements to Securityholders.............    54
     Book-Entry Registration of Securities.....    55
     Collection and Other Servicing
       Procedures..............................    58
     Realization Upon Defaulted Residential
       Loans...................................    59
     Retained Interest, Administration
       Compensation and Payment of Expenses....    60
     Evidence as to Compliance.................    61
     Certain Matters Regarding the Master
       Servicer, the Depositor and the
       Trustee.................................    62
     Deficiency Events.........................    64
     Events of Default.........................    65
     Amendment.................................    68
     Termination...............................    69
     Voting Rights.............................    69
DESCRIPTION OF PRIMARY INSURANCE COVERAGE......    69
     Primary Credit Insurance Policies.........    70
     FHA Insurance and VA Guarantees...........    70
     Primary Hazard Insurance Policies.........    72
DESCRIPTION OF CREDIT SUPPORT..................    73
     Pool Insurance Policies...................    74
     Special Hazard Insurance Policies.........    75
     Bankruptcy Bonds..........................    77
     Reserve Funds.............................    77
     Cross-Support Provisions..................    78
     Letter of Credit..........................    78
     Insurance Policies and Surety Bonds.......    78
     Excess Spread.............................    78
     CERTAIN LEGAL ASPECTS OF RESIDENTIAL
       LOANS...................................    79
     General...................................    79
     Mortgage Loans............................    79
     Cooperative Loans.........................    80
     Tax Aspects of Cooperative Ownership......    81
     Manufactured Housing Contracts Other Than
       Land Contracts..........................    81
     Foreclosure on Mortgages..................    83
</TABLE>
                         5




<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                  PAGE
                                                  ----
<S>                                               <C>
     Foreclosure on Cooperative
       Shares..................................    85
     Repossession with respect to Manufactured
       Housing Contracts that are not Land
       Contracts...............................    86
     Rights of Redemption with respect to
       Residential Properties..................    87
     Notice of Sale; Redemption Rights with
       respect to manufactured homes...........    87
     Anti-Deficiency Legislation, Bankruptcy
       Laws and Other Limitations on Lenders...    87
     Junior Mortgages..........................    90
     Consumer Protection Laws with respect to
       Home Improvement and Manufactured
       Housing Contracts.......................    90
     Other Limitations.........................    91
     Enforceability of Certain Provisions......    91
     Prepayment Charges and Prepayments........    92
     Subordinate Financing.....................    93
     Applicability of Usury Laws...............    93
     Alternative Mortgage Instruments..........    93
     Environmental Legislation.................    94
     Soldiers' and Sailors' Civil Relief Act of
       1940....................................    95
CERTAIN FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSEQUENCES........    96
     General...................................    96
     REMICs....................................    96
     Taxation of Owners of Regular
       Securities..............................    99
     Taxation of Owners of Residual
       Securities..............................   106
     Taxes That May Be Imposed on the REMIC
       Pool....................................   112
     Taxation of Certain Foreign Investors.....   114
     Grantor Trust Funds.......................   116
     Standard Securities.......................   116
     Stripped Securities.......................   119
     Partnership Trust Funds...................   122
     Taxation of Owners of Partnership
       Securities..............................   123
STATE AND OTHER TAX CONSEQUENCES...............   128
ERISA CONSIDERATIONS...........................   128
LEGAL INVESTMENT...............................   131
PLANS OF DISTRIBUTION..........................   133
LEGAL MATTERS..................................   134
FINANCIAL INFORMATION..........................   134
RATING.........................................   134
INDEX OF DEFINED TERMS.........................   136
</TABLE>
                         6




<PAGE>

                                SUMMARY OF TERMS

     The following summary of certain pertinent information is qualified in its
entirety by reference to the more detailed information appearing elsewhere in
this Prospectus and in each Prospectus Supplement with respect to the Series
offered thereby and the terms and provisions of the related Pooling and
Servicing Agreement (the 'Pooling and Servicing Agreement') or Trust Agreement
(the 'Trust Agreement'; each Pooling and Servicing Agreement or Trust Agreement,
an 'Agreement') to be prepared and delivered in connection with the offering of
such Series. Unless otherwise specified, capitalized terms used and not defined
in this Summary of Terms have the meanings ascribed to them in this Prospectus
and in the related Prospectus Supplement.

<TABLE>
<S>                                      <C>
Securities Offered.....................  Mortgage pass-through certificates ('Certificates') or mortgage- backed
                                         notes ('Notes,' and together with the Certificates, the 'Securities').

Depositor..............................  PaineWebber Mortgage Acceptance Corporation IV (the 'Depositor'), a
                                         Delaware corporation, is a wholly-owned limited purpose finance
                                         subsidiary of PaineWebber Group Inc. The Depositor's principal offices
                                         are located at 1285 Avenue of the Americas, New York, New York 10019 and
                                         its telephone number is (212) 713-2000. See 'The Depositor.'

Master Servicer........................  The entity or entities named as Master Servicer (the 'Master Servicer')
                                         for each Series of Securities evidencing interests in a Trust Fund
                                         including Residential Loans as specified in the related Prospectus
                                         Supplement. See 'Description of the Securities -- Certain Matters
                                         Regarding the Master Servicer, the Depositor and the Trustee.'

Trustees...............................  The trustee or indenture trustee (the 'Trustee') for each Series of
                                         Securities will be named in the related Prospectus Supplement. The owner
                                         trustee (the 'Owner Trustee') for each Series of Notes will be named in
                                         the Prospectus Supplement. See 'Description of the Securities -- Certain
                                         Matters Regarding the Master Servicer, the Depositor and The Trustee.'

Issuer of Notes........................  With respect to each Series of Notes, the issuer (the 'Issuer') will be
                                         the Depositor or an owner trust established by it for the purpose of
                                         issuing such Series of Notes. Each such owner trust will be created
                                         pursuant to a trust agreement (the 'Owner Trust Agreement') between the
                                         Depositor, acting as depositor, and the Owner Trustee. Each Series of
                                         Notes will represent indebtedness of the Issuer and will be issued
                                         pursuant to an indenture between the Issuer and the Trustee (the
                                         'Indenture') whereby the Issuer will pledge the Trust Fund to secure the
                                         Notes under the lien of the Indenture. As to each Series of Notes where
                                         the Issuer is an owner trust, the ownership of the Trust Fund will be
                                         evidenced by certificates (the 'Equity Certificates') issued under the
                                         Owner Trust Agreement, which, unless otherwise specified in the
                                         Prospectus Supplement, are not offered hereby. The Notes will represent
                                         nonrecourse obligations solely of the Issuer, and the proceeds of the
                                         Trust Fund will be the sole source of payments on the Notes, except as
                                         described herein under 'Description of Credit Support' and in the
                                         related section in the Prospectus Supplement.
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                                       7



<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<S>                                      <C>
Description of Securities..............  Each Series of Securities will include one or more classes. Each Series
                                         of Securities (including any class or classes of Securities of such
                                         Series not offered hereby) will represent either (i) with respect to
                                         each Series of Certificates, in the aggregate the entire beneficial
                                         ownership interest in, or (ii) with respect to each Series of Notes,
                                         indebtedness of, a segregated pool of Residential Loans or Agency
                                         Securities, or beneficial interests therein (which may include Mortgage
                                         Securities as defined herein) (each, a 'Trust Fund Asset'), and certain
                                         other assets described below (together, all such Trust Fund Assets and
                                         other assets with respect to a Series of Securities shall constitute a
                                         'Trust Fund'). Unless otherwise specified in the related Prospectus
                                         Supplement, each class of Securities will have a stated principal amount
                                         (a 'Security Principal Balance') and will be entitled to distributions
                                         of interest thereon based on a specified interest rate (the 'Security
                                         Interest Rate'). The Security Interest Rate may vary for each class of
                                         Securities and may be fixed, variable or adjustable. The related
                                         Prospectus Supplement will specify the Security Interest Rate for each
                                         Series of Securities or each class thereof, or the method for
                                         determining the Security Interest Rate.

                                         If so provided in the related Prospectus Supplement, a Series of
                                         Securities evidencing interests in a Trust Fund including Residential
                                         Loans may include one or more classes of Securities (collectively, the
                                         'Senior Securities') which are senior to one or more classes of
                                         Securities (collectively, the 'Subordinate Securities') in respect of
                                         certain distributions of principal and interest and allocations of
                                         losses on the Residential Loans to the extent and in the manner provided
                                         in the related Prospectus Supplement. Credit enhancement may also be
                                         provided with respect to any Series by means of various insurance
                                         policies, surety bonds, guarantees, letters of credit, reserve funds,
                                         cash accounts, reinvestment income or other types of credit support, or
                                         any combination of the foregoing, as described herein and in the related
                                         Prospectus Supplement. See 'Description of Credit Support' herein.

                                         A Series may include one or more classes of Securities that (i) may be
                                         entitled to principal distributions, with disproportionate, nominal or
                                         no interest distributions, (ii) may be entitled to interest
                                         distributions, with disproportionate, nominal or no principal
                                         distributions ('Strip Securities'), (iii) may be entitled to receive
                                         distributions only of prepayments of principal throughout the lives of
                                         the Securities or during specified periods, (iv) may be subordinated in
                                         the right to receive distributions of scheduled payments of principal,
                                         prepayments of principal, interest or any combination thereof to one or
                                         more other classes of Securities of such Series throughout the lives of
                                         the Securities or during specified periods, (v) may be entitled to
                                         receive such distributions only after the occurrence of events specified
                                         in the related Prospectus Supplement, (vi) may be entitled to receive
                                         distributions in accordance with a schedule or formula or on the basis
                                         of collections from designated portions of the assets in the related
                                         Trust Fund, (vii) as to Securities entitled to distributions
</TABLE>

                                       8



<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<S>                                      <C>
                                         allocable to interest, may be entitled to receive interest at a fixed
                                         rate or a rate that is subject to change from time to time, and (viii)
                                         as to Securities entitled to distributions allocable to interest, may be
                                         entitled to distributions allocable to interest only after the
                                         occurrence of events specified in the related Prospectus Supplement and
                                         may accrue interest until such events occur, in each case as specified
                                         in the related Prospectus Supplement. The timing and amounts of such
                                         distributions may vary among classes, over time, or otherwise as
                                         specified in the related Prospectus Supplement. In addition, a Series
                                         may include two or more classes of Securities which differ as to timing,
                                         sequential order or amount of distributions of principal or interest, or
                                         both, or which may include one or more classes of Securities ('Accrual
                                         Securities'), as to which accrued interest will not be distributed but
                                         rather will be added to the Security Principal Balance thereof on each
                                         Distribution Date, as hereinafter defined, in the manner described in
                                         the related Prospectus Supplement.

                                         As to each Series relating only to Certificates, one or more elections
                                         may be made to treat the related Trust Fund or a designated portion
                                         thereof as a 'real estate mortgage investment conduit' or 'REMIC' as
                                         defined in the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (the 'Code'). If any such
                                         election is made as to any Series, one of the classes of Certificates
                                         comprising such Series will be designated as evidencing all 'residual
                                         interests' in the related REMIC as defined in the Code. See 'Description
                                         of the Securities.'

                                         The Securities will not represent an interest in or obligation of the
                                         Depositor or any affiliate thereof except as set forth herein, nor will
                                         the Securities, any Residential Loans (other than Residential Loans
                                         identified as FHA Loans or VA Loans in the related Prospectus
                                         Supplement) or Mortgage Securities be insured or guaranteed by any
                                         governmental agency or instrumentality. Although payment of principal
                                         and interest on Agency Securities will be guaranteed as described herein
                                         and in the related Prospectus Supplement by GNMA, FNMA or FHLMC, the
                                         Securities of any Series including such Agency Securities will not be so
                                         guaranteed.

Interest...............................  Interest on each class of Securities other than certain classes of Strip
                                         Securities or Accrual Securities (prior to the time when accrued
                                         interest becomes payable thereon) of each Series will accrue at the
                                         applicable Security Interest Rate on the outstanding Security Principal
                                         Balances thereof and will be distributed to Securityholders as provided
                                         in the related Prospectus Supplement (each of the specified dates on
                                         which distributions are to be made, a 'Distribution Date').
                                         Distributions with respect to interest on Strip Securities with no or,
                                         in certain cases, a nominal Security Principal Balance will be made on
                                         each Distribution Date on the basis of a notional amount as described
                                         herein and in the related Prospectus Supplement. Interest that has
                                         accrued but is not yet payable on any Accrual Securities will be added
                                         to the Security Principal Balance thereof on each Distribution Date.
</TABLE>

                                       9



<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<S>                                      <C>
                                         Distributions of interest with respect to one or more classes of
                                         Securities (or accruals thereof in the case of Accrual Securities) may
                                         be reduced to the extent of certain delinquencies or other contingencies
                                         described herein and in the related Prospectus Supplement. See 'Yield
                                         Considerations,' 'Maturity and Prepayment Considerations' and
                                         'Description of the Securities' herein.

Principal..............................  The Securities of each Series (other than certain Strip Securities)
                                         initially will have an aggregate Security Principal Balance equal to
                                         either (i) unless the related Prospectus Supplement provides otherwise,
                                         the outstanding principal balance of the Trust Fund Assets included in
                                         the related Trust Fund, as of the close of business on the first day of
                                         the month of formation of the related Trust Fund (the 'Cut-off Date'),
                                         after application of scheduled payments due on or before such date,
                                         whether or not received, or, (ii) if so specified in the related
                                         Prospectus Supplement with respect to a Series having more than one
                                         class of Securities, the total of the Cash Flow Values (as defined
                                         herein) of the Residential Loans as of such date. The Security Principal
                                         Balance of a Security represents the maximum dollar amount (exclusive of
                                         interest thereon) which the holder thereof is entitled to receive in
                                         respect of principal from future cash flow on the assets in the related
                                         Trust Fund. The initial Security Principal Balance of each class of
                                         Securities will be set forth on the cover of the related Prospectus
                                         Supplement. Except as otherwise specified in the related Prospectus
                                         Supplement, distributions in respect of principal on the Securities of
                                         each Series will be payable on each Distribution Date to the class or
                                         classes of Securities entitled thereto until the Security Principal
                                         Balance of such class has been reduced to zero, on a pro rata basis
                                         among all of the Securities of such class, in proportion to their
                                         respective outstanding Security Principal Balances, or in the priority
                                         and manner otherwise specified in the related Prospectus Supplement.
                                         Strip Securities not having a Security Principal Balance will not
                                         receive distributions in respect of principal. See 'The Trust Funds,'
                                         'Maturity and Prepayment Considerations' and 'Description of the
                                         Securities.'

The Trust Funds........................  Each Trust Fund will consist of a segregated pool of Residential Loans
                                         or Agency Securities and certain other assets as described herein and in
                                         the related Prospectus Supplement. Unless otherwise specified in the
                                         related Prospectus Supplement, all Trust Fund Assets will be purchased
                                         by the Depositor, either directly or through an affiliate, from
                                         unaffiliated sellers and will be deposited into the related Trust Fund
                                         as of the first day of the month in which the Securities evidencing
                                         interests therein are initially issued. In addition, if the related
                                         Prospectus Supplement so provides, the related Trust Fund Assets will
                                         include funds on deposit in an account (a 'Pre-Funding Account') which
                                         will be used to purchase additional Residential Loans during the period
                                         specified in the related Prospectus Supplement. See 'Description of the
                                         Securities -- Pre-Funding Accounts.'
</TABLE>

                                       10



<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<S>                                      <C>
A. Residential Loans...................  The Residential Loans will consist of (i) mortgage loans (the 'Mortgage
                                         Loans') secured by first or junior liens on one- to four-family
                                         residential properties (each, a 'Mortgaged Property,' collectively,
                                         'Mortgaged Properties') or mortgage loans (the 'Multifamily Loans')
                                         secured by first or junior liens on multifamily residential properties
                                         consisting of five or more dwelling units (also, 'Mortgaged
                                         Properties'), (ii) home improvement installment sales contracts and
                                         installment loan agreements (the 'Home Improvement Contracts') which may
                                         be unsecured or secured by a lien on the related Mortgaged Property or a
                                         Manufactured Home, which lien may be subordinated to one or more senior
                                         liens on the related Mortgaged Property, as described in the related
                                         Prospectus Supplement, (iii) one- to four-family first or junior lien
                                         closed end home equity loans for property improvement, debt
                                         consolidation or home equity purposes (the 'Home Equity Loans'), (iv)
                                         cooperative loans (the 'Cooperative Loans') secured primarily by shares
                                         in a private cooperative housing corporation (a 'Cooperative') which
                                         with the related proprietary lease or occupancy agreement give the owner
                                         thereof the right to occupy a particular dwelling unit in the
                                         Cooperative or (v) manufactured housing conditional sales contracts and
                                         installment loan agreements (the 'Manufactured Housing Contracts'),
                                         which may be secured by either liens on (a) new or used Manufactured
                                         Homes (as defined herein) or (b) the real property and any improvements
                                         thereon (the 'Mortgaged Property,' which may include the related
                                         Manufactured Home if deemed to be part of the real property under
                                         applicable state law) relating to a Manufactured Housing Contract as
                                         well as in certain cases a lien on a new or used Manufactured Home which
                                         is not deemed to be a part of the related real property under applicable
                                         state law (such Manufactured Housing Contracts that are secured by
                                         Mortgaged Property are referred to herein as 'Land Contracts'). The
                                         Mortgaged Properties, Cooperative shares (together with the right to
                                         occupy a particular dwelling unit evidenced thereby) and Manufactured
                                         Homes (collectively, the 'Residential Properties') may be located in any
                                         one of the fifty states, the District of Columbia or the Commonwealth of
                                         Puerto Rico. Unless otherwise specified in the related Prospectus
                                         Supplement, each Trust Fund will contain only one of the following types
                                         of residential loans: (1) fully amortizing loans with a fixed rate of
                                         interest (such rate, an 'Interest Rate') and level monthly payments to
                                         maturity; (2) fully amortizing loans with a fixed Interest Rate
                                         providing for level monthly payments, or for payments of interest that
                                         increase annually at a predetermined rate until the loan is repaid or
                                         for a specified number of years, after which level monthly payments
                                         resume; (3) fully amortizing loans with a fixed Interest Rate providing
                                         for monthly payments during the early years of the term that are
                                         calculated on the basis of an interest rate below the Interest Rate,
                                         followed by monthly payments of principal and interest that increase
                                         annually by a predetermined percentage over the monthly payments payable
                                         in the previous year until the loan is repaid or for a specified
</TABLE>
                                       11



<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<S>                                      <C>
                                         number of years, followed by level monthly payments; (4) fixed Interest
                                         Rate loans providing for level payments of principal and interest on the
                                         basis of an assumed amortization schedule and a balloon payment of
                                         principal at the end of a specified term; (5) fully amortizing loans
                                         with an Interest Rate adjusted periodically (with corresponding
                                         adjustments in the amount of monthly payments) to equal the sum (which
                                         may be rounded) of a fixed margin and an index as described in the
                                         related Prospectus Supplement, which may provide for an election, at the
                                         mortgagor's option during a specified period after origination of the
                                         loan, to convert the adjustable Interest Rate to a fixed Interest Rate,
                                         as described in the related Prospectus Supplement; (6) fully amortizing
                                         loans with an adjustable Interest Rate providing for monthly payments
                                         less than the amount of interest accruing on such loan and for such
                                         amount of interest accrued but not paid currently to be added to the
                                         principal balance of such loan; (7) adjustable Interest Rate loans
                                         providing for an election at the mortgagor's option, in the event of an
                                         adjustment to the Interest Rate resulting in an Interest Rate in excess
                                         of the Interest Rate at origination of the loan, to extend the term to
                                         maturity for such period as will result in level monthly payments to
                                         maturity; or (8) such other types of Residential Loans as may be
                                         described in the related Prospectus Supplement.

                                         If specified in the related Prospectus Supplement, the Residential Loans
                                         will be covered by standard hazard insurance policies with extended
                                         coverage insuring against losses due to fire and various other causes.
                                         If specified in the related Prospectus Supplement, the Residential Loans
                                         will be covered by flood insurance policies if the related Residential
                                         Property is located in a federally designated flood area and if such
                                         insurance is available. If specified in the related Prospectus
                                         Supplement, the Residential Loans will be covered by primary credit
                                         insurance policies or will be insured by the Federal Housing
                                         Administration (the 'FHA') or partially guaranteed by the Veterans
                                         Administration (the 'VA'). See 'Description of Primary Insurance
                                         Coverage.'

B. Agency Securities...................  The Agency Securities will consist of any combination of 'fully modified
                                         pass-through' mortgage-backed certificates ('GNMA Certificates')
                                         guaranteed by the Government National Mortgage Association ('GNMA'),
                                         guaranteed mortgage pass-through securities ('FNMA Certificates') issued
                                         by the Federal National Mortgage Association ('FNMA') and mortgage
                                         participation certificates ('FHLMC Certificates') issued by the Federal
                                         Home Loan Mortgage Corporation ('FHLMC').

C. Mortgage Securities.................  If specified in the related Prospectus Supplement, a Trust Fund may
                                         include previously issued asset-backed certificates, collateralized
                                         mortgage obligations or participation certificates (each, and
                                         collectively, 'Mortgage Securities') evidencing interests in, or
                                         collateralized by, Residential Loans or Agency Securities as defined
                                         herein.

D. Trust Account.......................  Each Trust Fund will include one or more accounts (collectively, the
                                         'Trust Account') established and maintained on behalf of the
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                                       12



<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<S>                                      <C>
                                         Securityholders into which the Master Servicer or the Trustee will, to
                                         the extent described herein and in the related Prospectus Supplement,
                                         deposit all payments and collections received or advanced with respect
                                         to the related Trust Fund Assets. A Trust Account may be maintained as
                                         an interest bearing or a non-interest bearing account, or funds held
                                         therein may be invested in certain short-term high-quality obligations.
                                         See 'Description of the Securities -- Deposits to the Trust Account.'

E. Credit Support......................  If so specified in the Prospectus Supplement, one or more classes of
                                         Securities within any Series evidencing interests in a Trust Fund that
                                         includes Residential Loans may be covered by any combination of a surety
                                         bond, a guarantee, letter of credit, an insurance policy, a bankruptcy
                                         bond, a reserve fund, a cash account, reinvestment income, subordination
                                         of one or more classes of Securities in a Series (or, with respect to
                                         any Series of Notes, the related Equity Certificates) to the extent
                                         provided in the related Prospectus Supplement, cross-support between
                                         Securities evidencing beneficial ownership in different asset groups
                                         within the same Trust Fund or another type of credit support to provide
                                         partial or full coverage for certain defaults and losses relating to the
                                         Residential Loans. The amount and types of coverage, the identification
                                         of the entity providing the coverage (if applicable), the terms of any
                                         subordination and related information with respect to each type of
                                         credit support, if any, will be set forth in the related Prospectus
                                         Supplement for a Series of Securities. If specified in the related
                                         Prospectus Supplement, the coverage provided by one or more forms of
                                         credit support may apply concurrently to two or more separate Trust
                                         Funds. If applicable, the related Prospectus Supplement will identify
                                         the Trust Funds to which such credit support relates and the manner of
                                         determining the amount of the coverage provided thereby and the
                                         application of such coverage to the identified Trust Funds. See
                                         'Description of Credit Support' and 'Description of the
                                         Securities -- Subordination.'

Servicing and Advances.................  The Master Servicer, directly or through sub-servicers, will service and
                                         administer the Residential Loans included in a Trust Fund and, unless
                                         the related Prospectus Supplement provides otherwise, in connection
                                         therewith (and pursuant to the terms of the related Mortgage Securities,
                                         if applicable) will be obligated to make certain cash advances with
                                         respect to delinquent scheduled payments on the Residential Loans or
                                         will be obligated to make such cash advances only to the extent that the
                                         Master Servicer determines that such advances will be recoverable (any
                                         such advance, an 'Advance'). Advances made by the Master Servicer will
                                         be reimbursable to the extent described herein and in the related
                                         Prospectus Supplement. The Prospectus Supplement with respect to any
                                         Series may provide that the Master Servicer will obtain a cash advance
                                         surety bond, or maintain a cash advance reserve fund, to cover any
                                         obligation of the Master Servicer to make advances. The obligor on any
                                         such surety bond will be named, and the terms applicable to any such
                                         cash advance
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<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<S>                                      <C>
                                         reserve fund will be described in the related Prospectus Supplement. See
                                         'Description of the Securities -- Advances.'

Optional Termination...................  If so specified in the related Prospectus Supplement, a Series of
                                         Securities may be subject to optional early termination ('Optional
                                         Termination') through the repurchase of the assets in the related Trust
                                         Fund by the party entitled to effect such termination, under the
                                         circumstances and in the manner set forth herein under 'Description of
                                         the Securities -- Termination' herein and the related section in the
                                         related Prospectus Supplement.

Certain Federal Income Tax
  Consequences.........................  The Certificates of each Series offered hereby will constitute either
                                         (i) interests ('Grantor Trust Certificates') in a Trust Fund treated as
                                         a grantor trust under applicable provisions of the Code, or (ii)
                                         'regular interests' ('REMIC Regular Certificates') or 'residual
                                         interests' ('REMIC Residual Certificates') in a Trust Fund treated as a
                                         REMIC under Sections 860A through 860G of the Code. Notes will represent
                                         indebtedness of the related Trust Fund.

                                         Investors are advised to consult their tax advisors and to review
                                         'Certain Federal Income Tax Consequences' herein and in the related
                                         Prospectus Supplement.

ERISA Considerations...................  A fiduciary of a retirement plan or other employee benefit plan or
                                         arrangement, including an individual retirement account or annuity or a
                                         Keogh plan and any bank collective investment fund or insurance company
                                         general or separate account in which such plans, accounts, annuities or
                                         arrangements are invested, that is subject to Title I of the Employee
                                         Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, as amended ('ERISA'), or Section
                                         4975 of the Code should carefully review with its counsel whether the
                                         purchase or holding of Securities could give rise to a transaction that
                                         is prohibited or is not otherwise permissible either under ERISA or
                                         Section 4975 of the Code. Plan investors are advised to consult their
                                         counsel and to review 'ERISA Considerations' herein and in the related
                                         Prospectus Supplement.

Legal Investment.......................  The Prospectus Supplement for each Series of Securities will specify
                                         which, if any, of the Securities offered thereby constitute at the date
                                         of issuance 'mortgage related securities' for purposes of the Secondary
                                         Mortgage Market Enhancement Act of 1984, as amended ('SMMEA').
                                         Institutions whose investment activities are subject to review by
                                         federal or state authorities should consult with their counsel or the
                                         applicable authorities to determine whether and to what extent a class
                                         of Securities constitutes a legal investment for them. See 'Legal
                                         Investment.'

Use of Proceeds........................  The Depositor will use the net proceeds from the sale of each Series for
                                         one or more of the following purposes: (i) to purchase the related Trust
                                         Fund Assets, (ii) to repay indebtedness which has been incurred to
                                         obtain funds to acquire such Trust Fund Assets, (iii) to establish any
                                         Reserve Funds described in the related Prospectus Supplement and (iv) to
                                         pay costs of
</TABLE>

                                       14



<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<S>                                      <C>
                                         structuring, guaranteeing and issuing such Securities. If so specified
                                         in the related Prospectus Supplement, the purchase of the Trust Fund
                                         Assets for a Series may be effected by an exchange of Securities with
                                         the Depositor of such Trust Fund Assets. See 'Use of Proceeds.'

Ratings................................  Unless otherwise specified in the related Prospectus Supplement, it will
                                         be a requirement for issuance of any Series that the Securities offered
                                         by this Prospectus and such Prospectus Supplement be rated by at least
                                         one Rating Agency in one of its four highest applicable rating
                                         categories. The rating or ratings applicable to Securities of each
                                         Series offered hereby and by the related Prospectus Supplement will be
                                         as set forth in the related Prospectus Supplement. A securities rating
                                         should be evaluated independently of similar ratings on different types
                                         of securities. A security rating does not address the effect that the
                                         rate of prepayments on Residential Loans comprising or underlying the
                                         Trust Fund Assets may have on the yield to investors in the Securities.
                                         See 'Risk Factors.'
</TABLE>

                                       15





<PAGE>

                                  RISK FACTORS

     Investors should consider, among other things, the following factors in
connection with the purchase of the Securities offered hereby and by the related
Prospectus Supplement.

LIMITED LIQUIDITY

     There can be no assurance that a secondary market for the Securities of any
Series will develop or, if it does develop, that it will provide holders with
liquidity of investment or will continue while Securities of such Series remain
outstanding. The market value of Securities of each Series will fluctuate with
changes in prevailing rates of interest. Consequently, sale of the Securities by
a holder in any secondary market that may develop may be at a discount from par
value or from its purchase price. Holders of Securities have no optional
redemption rights. Unless otherwise provided in the related Prospectus
Supplement, PaineWebber expects to make a secondary market in the Securities
offered hereby, but is not obligated to do so.

LIMITED ASSETS

     The Depositor does not have, nor is it expected to have, any significant
assets. Unless otherwise specified in the related Prospectus Supplement, the
Securities of a Series will be payable solely from the Trust Fund for such
Securities and will not have any claim against or security interest in the Trust
Fund for any other Series. There will be no recourse to the Depositor or any
other person for any failure to receive distributions on the Securities.
Furthermore, at the times set forth in the related Prospectus Supplement,
certain Trust Fund Assets and/or any balance remaining in the Trust Account
immediately after making all payments due on the Securities of such Series,
after making adequate provision for future payments on certain classes of
Securities and after making any other payments specified in the related
Prospectus Supplement, may be promptly released or remitted to the Depositor,
the Master Servicer, any credit enhancement provider or any other person
entitled thereto and will no longer be available for making payments to
Securityholders. Consequently, holders of Securities of each Series must rely
solely upon payments with respect to the Trust Fund Assets and the other assets
constituting the Trust Fund for a Series of Securities, including, if
applicable, any amounts available pursuant to any credit enhancement for such
Series, for the payment of principal of and interest on the Securities of such
Series.

     The Securities will not represent an interest in or obligation of the
Depositor, the Master Servicer or any of their respective affiliates. The only
obligations, if any, of the Depositor with respect to the Trust Fund Assets and
the other assets constituting the Trust Fund for a Series of Securities, or the
Securities of any Series will be pursuant to certain representations and
warranties. The Depositor does not have, and is not expected in the future to
have, any significant assets with which to meet any obligation to repurchase
Trust Fund Assets with respect to which there has been a breach of any
representation or warranty. If, for example, the Depositor were required to
repurchase a Residential Loan, its only sources of funds to make such repurchase
would be from funds obtained (i) from the enforcement of a corresponding
obligation, if any, on the part of the seller or originator of such Residential
Loan, or (ii) from a reserve account or similar credit enhancement established
to provide funds for such repurchases. The Master Servicer's servicing
obligations under the related Agreement may include its limited obligation to
make certain advances in the event of delinquencies on the Residential Loans,
but only to the extent deemed recoverable. To the extent described in the
related Prospectus Supplement, the Depositor, Master Servicer or Trustee will be
obligated under certain limited circumstances to purchase or act as a
remarketing agent with respect to a convertible Residential Loan upon the
conversion of the interest rate thereon to a fixed rate.

CREDIT ENHANCEMENT

     Although credit enhancement is intended to reduce the risk of delinquent
payments or losses to holders of Securities entitled to the benefit thereof, the
amount of such credit enhancement will be limited, as set forth in the related
Prospectus Supplement, and may decline and could be depleted under certain
circumstances prior to the payment in full of the related Series of Securities,
and as a result

                                       16



<PAGE>

Securityholders may suffer losses. Moreover, such credit enhancement may not
cover all potential losses or risks. For example, credit enhancement may or may
not cover, or may cover only in part, fraud or negligence by a loan originator
or other parties. See 'Description of Credit Support.'

PREPAYMENT AND YIELD CONSIDERATIONS

     The timing of principal payments of the Securities of a Series will be
affected by a number of factors, including the following: (i) the extent of
prepayments of the Residential Loans and, in the case of Agency Securities, the
underlying loans related thereto, comprising the Trust Fund, which prepayments
may be influenced by a variety of factors, (ii) the manner of allocating
principal and/or payment among the classes of Securities of a Series as
specified in the related Prospectus Supplement, (iii) the exercise by the party
entitled thereto of any right of optional termination and (iv) the rate and
timing of payment defaults and losses incurred with respect to the Trust Fund
Assets. Prepayments of principal may also result from repurchases of Trust Fund
Assets due to material breaches of the Unaffiliated Seller's (as defined
herein), originator's, Depositor's or Master Servicer's representations and
warranties, as applicable. The yield to maturity experienced by a holder of
Securities may be affected by the rate of prepayment of the Residential Loans
comprising or underlying the Trust Fund Assets. See 'Yield Considerations' and
'Maturity and Prepayment Considerations.'

     Interest payable on the Securities of a Series on a Distribution Date will
include all interest accrued during the period specified in the related
Prospectus Supplement. In the event interest accrues over a period ending two or
more days prior to a Distribution Date, the effective yield to Securityholders
will be reduced from the yield that would otherwise be obtainable if interest
payable on the Certificates were to accrue through the day immediately preceding
each Distribution Date, and the effective yield (at par) to Securityholders will
be less than the indicated coupon rate. See 'Description of the
Securities -- Distributions' and ' -- Principal and Interest on the Securities.'

BALLOON PAYMENTS

     Certain of the Residential Loans as of the Cut-off Date may not be fully
amortizing over their terms to maturity and, thus, will require principal
payments (i.e., balloon payments) at their stated maturity. Residential Loans
with balloon payments involve a greater degree of risk because the ability of a
borrower to make a balloon payment typically will depend upon its ability either
to timely refinance the loan or to timely sell the related Residential Property.
The ability of a borrower 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 borrower's equity in the related Residential
Property, the financial condition of the borrower and tax laws.

NATURE OF MORTGAGES

     There are several factors that could adversely affect the value of the
Residential Properties such that the outstanding balance of the related
Residential Loans, together with any senior financing on the Residential
Properties, if applicable, would equal or exceed the value of the Residential
Properties. Among the factors that could adversely affect the value of the
Residential Properties are an overall decline in the residential real estate
market in the areas in which the Residential Properties are located or a decline
in the general condition of the Residential Properties as a result of failure of
borrowers to adequately maintain the Residential Properties or of natural
disasters that are not necessarily covered by insurance, such as earthquakes and
floods. In the case of Home Improvement Contracts or other Residential Loans
that are secured by junior liens, such decline could extinguish the value of the
interest of a junior mortgagee in the Residential Property before having any
effect on the interest of the related senior mortgagee. If such a decline
occurs, the actual rates of delinquencies, foreclosures and losses on all
Residential Loans could be higher than those currently experienced in the
mortgage lending industry in general.

     Even assuming that the Residential Properties provide adequate security for
the Residential Loans, substantial delays could be encountered with the
liquidation of defaulted Residential Loans and corresponding delays in the
receipt of related proceeds by Securityholders could occur. An action to

                                       17



<PAGE>

foreclose on a Residential Property securing a Residential Loan is regulated by
state statutes and rules and is subject to many of the delays and expenses of
other lawsuits if defenses or counterclaims are interposed, sometimes requiring
several years to complete. Furthermore, in some states an action to obtain a
deficiency judgment is not permitted following a nonjudicial sale of a
Residential Property. In the event of a default by a borrower, these
restrictions, among other things, may impede the ability of the Master Servicer
to foreclose on or sell the Residential Property or to obtain liquidation
proceeds sufficient to repay all amounts due on the related Residential Loan. In
addition, the Master Servicer will be entitled to deduct from related
liquidation proceeds all expenses reasonably incurred in attempting to recover
amounts due on defaulted Residential Loans and not yet reimbursed, including
payments to senior lienholders, legal fees and costs of legal action, real
estate taxes and maintenance and preservation expenses.

     Liquidation expenses with respect to defaulted loans do not vary directly
with the outstanding principal balances of the loan at the time of default.
Therefore, assuming that a servicer took the same steps in realizing upon a
defaulted loan having a small remaining principal balance as it would in the
case of a defaulted loan having a large remaining principal balance, the amount
realized after expenses of liquidation would be smaller as a percentage of the
outstanding principal of the small loan than would be the case with the
defaulted loan having a large remaining principal balance. Since the mortgages
and deeds of trust securing certain Mortgage Loans, Multifamily Loans and Home
Improvement Contracts will be primarily junior liens subordinate to the rights
of the mortgagee under the related senior mortgage(s) or deed(s) of trust, the
proceeds from the liquidation, insurance or condemnation proceeds will be
available to satisfy the outstanding balance of such junior lien only to the
extent that the claims of the senior mortgagees have been satisfied in full,
including any related foreclosure costs. In addition, a junior mortgagee may not
foreclose on the property securing a junior mortgage unless it forecloses
subject to any senior mortgage, in which case it must either pay the entire
amount due on any senior mortgage to the related senior mortgagee at or prior to
the foreclosure sale or undertake the obligation to make payments on any such
senior mortgage in the event the mortgagor is in default thereunder. The Trust
Fund will not have any source of funds to satisfy any senior mortgages or make
payments due to any senior mortgagees, although the Master Servicer or Sub-
Servicer may, at its option, advance such amounts to the extent deemed
recoverable and prudent. In the event that such proceeds from a foreclosure or
similar sale of the related Mortgaged Property are insufficient to satisfy all
senior liens and the Mortgage Loan, Multifamily Loan or Home Improvement
Contract in the aggregate, the Trust Fund, as the holder of the junior lien,
and, accordingly, holders of one or more classes of the Securities, to the
extent not covered by credit enhancement, are likely to (i) incur losses in
jurisdictions in which a deficiency judgment against the borrower is not
available, and (ii) incur losses if any deficiency judgment obtained is not
realized upon. In addition, the rate of default of junior mortgage loans,
multifamily loans and home improvement contracts may be greater than that of
mortgage loans secured by first liens on comparable properties.

     Applicable state laws generally regulate interest rates and other charges,
require certain disclosures, and require licensing of certain originators and
servicers of Residential Loans. In addition, most states have other laws, public
policy and general principles of equity relating to the protection of consumers,
unfair and deceptive practices and practices which may apply to the origination,
servicing and collection of the Residential Loans. Depending on the provisions
of the applicable law and the specific facts and circumstances involved,
violations of these laws, policies and principles may limit the ability of the
Master Servicer to collect all or part of the principal of or interest on the
Residential Loans, may entitle the borrower to a refund of amounts previously
paid and, in addition, could subject the Master Servicer to damages and
administrative sanctions. See 'Certain Legal Aspects of Residential Loans.'

ENVIRONMENTAL RISKS

     Real property pledged as security to a lender may be subject to certain
environmental risks. Under the laws of certain states, contamination of a
property may give rise to a lien on the property to assure the costs of cleanup.
In several states, such a lien has priority over the lien of an existing
mortgage against such property. In addition, under the laws of some states and
under the federal Comprehensive

                                       18



<PAGE>

Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act of 1980 ('CERCLA'), a
lender may be liable, as an 'owner' or 'operator,' for costs of addressing
releases or threatened releases of hazardous substances that require remedy on a
property, if agents or employees of the lender have become sufficiently involved
in the operations of the borrower, regardless of whether the environmental
damage or threat was caused by a prior owner. A lender also risks such liability
on foreclosure of the related property. See 'Risk Factors -- Environmental
Risks' and 'Certain Legal Aspects of Residential Loans -- Environmental
Legislation.'

CERTAIN OTHER LEGAL CONSIDERATIONS REGARDING RESIDENTIAL LOANS

     The Residential Loans may also be subject to federal laws, including:

          (i) the Federal Truth in Lending Act and Regulation Z promulgated
     thereunder, which require certain disclosures to the borrowers regarding
     the terms of the Residential Loans;

          (ii) the Equal Credit Opportunity Act and Regulation B promulgated
     thereunder, which prohibit discrimination on the basis of age, race, color,
     sex, religion, marital status, national origin, receipt of public
     assistance or the exercise of any right under the Consumer Credit
     Protection Act, in the extension of credit;

          (iii) the Fair Credit Reporting Act, which regulates the use and
     reporting of information related to the borrower's credit experience; and

          (iv) for Residential Loans that were originated or closed after
     November 7, 1989, the Home Equity Loan Consumer Protection Act of 1988,
     which requires additional disclosures, limits changes that may be made to
     the loan documents without the borrower's consent and restricts a lender's
     ability to declare a default or to suspend or reduce a borrower's credit
     limit to certain enumerated events.

     The Riegle Act. Certain mortgage loans are subject to the Riegle Community
Development and Regulatory Improvement Act of 1994 (the 'Riegle Act') which
incorporates the Home Ownership and Equity Protection Act of 1994. These
provisions impose additional disclosure and other requirements on creditors with
respect to non-purchase money mortgage loans with high interest rates or high
up-front fees and charges. The provisions of the Riegle Act apply on a mandatory
basis to all mortgage loans originated on or after October 1, 1995. These
provisions can impose specific statutory liabilities upon creditors who fail to
comply with their provisions and may affect the enforceability of the related
loans. In addition, any assignee of the creditor would generally be subject to
all claims and defenses that the consumer could assert against the creditor,
including, without limitation, the right to rescind the mortgage loan.

     The Home Improvement Contracts are also subject to the Preservation of
Consumers' Claims and Defenses regulations of the Federal Trade Commission and
other similar federal and state statutes and regulations (collectively, the
'Holder in Due Course Rules'), which protect the homeowner from defective
craftsmanship or incomplete work by a contractor. These laws permit the obligor
to withhold payment if the work does not meet the quality and durability
standards agreed to by the homeowner and the contractor. The Holder in Due
Course Rules have the effect of subjecting any assignee of the seller in a
consumer credit transaction to all claims and defenses which the obligor in the
credit sale transaction could assert against the seller of the goods.

     Violations of certain provisions of these federal laws may limit the
ability of the Master Servicer to collect all or part of the principal of or
interest on the Residential Loans and in addition could subject the Trust Fund
to damages and administrative enforcement. See 'Certain Legal Aspects of
Residential Loans.'

RATING OF THE SECURITIES

     Unless otherwise specified in the related Prospectus Supplement, it will be
a condition to the issuance of a class of Securities that they be rated in one
of the four highest rating categories by the Rating Agency identified in the
related Prospectus Supplement. Any such rating would be based on among other
things, the adequacy of the value of the Trust Fund Assets and any credit
enhancement

                                       19



<PAGE>

with respect to such class and such Rating Agency's assessment solely of the
likelihood that holders of a class of Securities will receive payments to which
such Securityholders are entitled under the related Agreement. Such rating will
not constitute an assessment of the likelihood that principal prepayments on the
related Residential Loans will be made, the degree to which such prepayments
might differ from that originally anticipated or the likelihood of early
optional termination of the Series of Securities. Such rating shall not be
deemed a recommendation to purchase, hold or sell Securities, inasmuch as it
does not address market price or suitability for a particular investor. Such
rating will not address the possibility that prepayment at higher or lower rates
than anticipated by an investor may cause such investor to experience a lower
than anticipated yield or that an investor purchasing a Security at a
significant premium might fail to recoup its initial investment under certain
prepayment scenarios.

     There is also no assurance that any such rating will remain in effect for
any given period of time or that it may not be lowered or withdrawn entirely by
the Rating Agency in the future if in its judgment circumstances in the future
so warrant. In addition to being lowered or withdrawn due to any erosion in the
adequacy of the value of the Trust Fund Assets or any credit enhancement with
respect to a Series, such rating might also be lowered or withdrawn, among other
reasons, because of an adverse change in the financial or other condition of a
credit enhancement provider or a change in the rating of such credit enhancement
provider's long term debt.

     The amount, type and nature of credit enhancement, if any, established with
respect to a class of Securities will be determined on the basis of criteria
established by each Rating Agency rating classes of such Series. Such criteria
are sometimes based upon an actuarial analysis of the behavior of similar loans
in a larger group. Such analysis is often the basis upon which each Rating
Agency determines the amount of credit enhancement required with respect to each
such class. There can be no assurance that the historical data supporting any
such actuarial analysis will accurately reflect future experience nor any
assurance that the data derived from a large pool of similar loans accurately
predicts the delinquency, foreclosure or loss experience of any particular pool
of Residential Loans. No assurance can be given that the values of any
Residential Properties have remained or will remain at their levels on the
respective dates of origination of the related Residential Loans. If the
residential real estate markets should experience an overall decline in property
values such that the outstanding principal balances of the Residential Loans in
a particular Trust Fund and any secondary financing on the related Residential
Properties become equal to or greater than the value of the Residential
Properties, the rate of delinquencies, foreclosures and losses could be higher
than those now generally experienced in the mortgage lending industry. In
addition, adverse economic conditions (which may or may not affect real property
values) may affect the timely payment by mortgagors of scheduled payments of
principal and interest on the Residential Loans and, accordingly, the rates of
delinquencies, foreclosures and losses with respect to any Trust Fund. To the
extent that such losses are not covered by credit enhancement, such losses will
be borne, at least in part, by the holders of one or more classes of the
Securities of the related Series. See 'Rating.'

BOOK-ENTRY REGISTRATION

     If issued in book-entry form, such registration may reduce the liquidity of
the Securities in the secondary trading market since investors may be unwilling
to purchase Securities for which they cannot obtain physical certificates. Since
transactions in Certificates can be effected only through the Depository Trust
Company ('DTC'), participating organizations ('Participants'), Financial
Intermediaries and certain banks, the ability of a Certificateholder to pledge a
Certificate to persons or entities that do not participate in the DTC system, or
otherwise to take action in respect of such Securities, may be limited due to
lack of a physical certificate representing the Securities.

     In addition, Securityholders may experience some delay in their receipt of
distributions of interest and principal on the Certificates since distributions
are required to be forwarded by the Trustee to DTC and DTC will then be required
to credit such distributions to the accounts of Participants which thereafter
will be required to credit them to the accounts of Securityholders either
directly or indirectly through Financial Intermediaries. See 'Description of the
Securities -- Book-Entry Registration of Securities' herein.

                                       20



<PAGE>

CERTAIN HOME IMPROVEMENT CONTRACTS

     Contracts Unsecured. The obligations of a borrower under an unsecured Home
Improvement Contract will not be secured by an interest in the related real
estate or otherwise, and the related Trust Fund, as the owner of such unsecured
Home Improvement Contract, will be a general unsecured creditor as to such
obligations. As a consequence, in the event of a default under an unsecured Home
Improvement Contract, the related Trust Fund will have recourse only against the
obligor's (the 'Obligor') assets generally, along with all other general
unsecured creditors of the Obligor. In a bankruptcy or insolvency proceeding
relating to an Obligor on an unsecured Home Improvement Contract, the
obligations of the Obligor under such unsecured Home Improvement Contract may be
discharged in their entirety, notwithstanding the fact that the portion of such
Obligor's assets made available to the related Trust Fund as a general unsecured
creditor to pay amounts due and owing thereunder are sufficient to pay such
amounts in whole or part. An Obligor on an unsecured Home Improvement Contract
may not demonstrate the same degree of concern over performance of the Obligor's
obligations under such unsecured Home Improvement Contract as if such
obligations were secured by the real estate owned by such Obligor.

MORTGAGE LOANS UNDERWRITTEN AS NON-CONFORMING CREDITS MAY EXPERIENCE RELATIVELY
HIGHER LOSSES

     If so specified in the related Prospectus Supplement, the single family
Mortgage Loans assigned and transferred to the related Trust Fund may include
Mortgage Loans underwritten in accordance with the underwriting standards for
'non-conforming credits,' which include borrowers whose creditworthiness and
repayment ability do not satisfy FNMA or FHLMC underwriting guidelines. A
Mortgage Loan made to a 'non-conforming credit' means a residential loan that is
ineligible for purchase by FNMA or FHLMC due to borrower credit characteristics,
property characteristics, loan documentation guidelines or other characteristics
that do not meet FNMA or FHLMC underwriting guidelines, including a loan made to
a borrower whose creditworthiness and repayment ability do not satisfy such FNMA
or FHLMC underwriting guidelines and a borrower who may have a record of major
derogatory credit items such as default on a prior residential loan, credit
write-offs, outstanding judgments or prior bankruptcies. Because the borrowers
on such Mortgage Loans are less creditworthy than borrowers who meet FNMA or
FHLMC underwriting guidelines, delinquencies and foreclosures can be expected to
be more prevalent with respect to such Mortgage Loans than with respect to
residential loans originated in accordance with FNMA or FHLMC underwriting
guidelines. As a result, changes in the values of the Mortgaged Properties may
have a greater effect on the loss experience of such Mortgage Loans than on
residential loans originated in accordance with FNMA or FHLMC underwriting
guidelines. If the values of the Mortgaged Properties decline after the dates of
origination of such Mortgage Loans, the rate of losses on such Mortgage Loans
may increase and such increase may be substantial. See 'Residential Loan
Program -- Underwriting Standards.'

TRUST FUND ASSETS MAY INCLUDE DELINQUENT AND SUB-PERFORMING RESIDENTIAL LOANS

     If so specified in the related Prospectus Supplement, the Trust Fund Assets
in the related Trust Fund may include Residential Loans that are delinquent or
sub-performing. Credit enhancement provided with respect to a particular Series
of Certificates may not cover all losses related to such delinquent or
sub-performing Residential Loans. Prospective investors should consider the risk
that the inclusion of such Residential Loans in the Trust Fund for a Series may
cause the rate of defaults and prepayments on the Residential Loans to increase
and, in turn, may cause losses to exceed the available credit enhancement for
such Series and affect the yield on the Securities of such Series. See 'The
Trust Funds -- Residential Loans.'

PRE-FUNDING ACCOUNTS

     If so provided in the related Prospectus Supplement, on the date of
issuance of the Securities ('Closing Date') the Depositor will deposit an amount
(the 'Pre-Funded Amount') specified in such Prospectus Supplement into the
Pre-Funding Account. The Pre-Funded Amount will be used to

                                       21



<PAGE>

purchase Residential Loans ('Subsequent Loans') within a period commencing from
the Closing Date and ending on a date not more than three months after the
Closing Date (such period, the 'Funding Period') from the Depositor (which, in
turn, will acquire such Subsequent Loans from the seller or sellers specified in
the related Prospectus Supplement). To the extent that the entire Pre-Funded
Amount has not been applied to the purchase of Subsequent Loans by the end of
the related Funding Period, any amounts remaining in the Pre-Funding Account
will be distributed as a prepayment of principal to Securityholders on the
Distribution Date immediately following the end of the Funding Period, in the
amounts and pursuant to the priorities set forth in the related Prospectus
Supplement.

OTHER CONSIDERATIONS

     There is no assurance that the market value of the Trust Fund Assets or any
other assets of a Trust Fund will at any time be equal to or greater than the
principal amount of the Securities of the related Series then outstanding, plus
accrued interest thereon. Moreover, upon an event of default under the Agreement
for a Series and a sale of the assets in the Trust Fund or upon a sale of the
assets of a Trust Fund for a Series of Securities, the Trustee, the Master
Servicer, the credit enhancer, if any, and any other service provider specified
in the related Prospectus Supplement generally will be entitled to receive the
proceeds of any such sale to the extent of unpaid fees and other amounts owing
to such persons under the related Agreement prior to distributions to
Securityholders. Upon any such sale, the proceeds thereof may be insufficient to
pay in full the principal of and interest on the Securities of such Series.

RISKS ASSOCIATED WITH YEAR 2000 COMPLIANCE

     The Depositor is aware of the issues associated with the programming code
in existing computer systems as the millennium (year 2000) approaches, the 'year
2000 problem' is pervasive and complex; virtually every computer operation will
be affected in some way by the rollover of the two digit year value to 00. The
issue is whether computer systems will properly recognize date-sensitive
information when the year changes to 2000. Systems that do not properly
recognize such information could generate erroneous data or cause a system to
fail. In the event that the computer systems of the Master Servicer or any
Special Servicer, with respect to any Series of Securities, are not fully year
2000 compliant, the resulting disruptions in the collection or distribution of
receipts on the related Mortgage Loans could materially adversely affect the
holders of the Securities.

                                THE TRUST FUNDS

     Each Trust Fund Asset will be selected by the Depositor for inclusion in a
Trust Fund from among those purchased, either directly or through affiliates,
from sellers not affiliated with the Depositor (any such sellers of Residential
Loans, hereinafter 'Unaffiliated Sellers'), or, if provided in the related
Prospectus Supplement, from sellers affiliated with the Depositor.

RESIDENTIAL LOANS

     The Residential Loans will consist of mortgage loans (the 'Mortgage Loans')
secured by first or junior liens on one- to four-family residential properties
(each, a 'Mortgaged Property,' collectively, 'Mortgaged Properties') (which may
include Mortgage Securities) or mortgage loans (the 'Multifamily Loans') secured
by first or junior liens on multifamily residential properties consisting of
five or more dwelling units (also, 'Mortgaged Properties'), home improvement
installment sales contracts and installment loan agreements (the 'Home
Improvement Contracts') which may be unsecured or secured by a lien on the
related Mortgaged Property or a Manufactured Home, which lien may be
subordinated to one or more senior liens on the related Mortgaged Property,
cooperative loans (the 'Cooperative Loans') secured primarily by shares in the
related private cooperative housing corporation (a 'Cooperative') that, with the
related proprietary lease or occupancy agreement, give the owner thereof the
right to occupy a particular dwelling unit (each, a 'Cooperative Unit') in the
Cooperative or manufactured housing conditional sales contracts and installment
loan agreements (the 'Manufactured Housing Contracts'), which may be secured by
either liens on (a) new or used Manufactured Homes or

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<PAGE>

(b) the real property and any improvements thereon (the 'Mortgaged Property,'
which may include the related Manufactured Home if deemed to be part of the real
property under applicable state law) relating to a Manufactured Housing Contract
as well as in certain cases a lien on a new or used Manufactured Home which is
not deemed to be a part of the related real property under applicable state law
(such Manufactured Housing Contracts that are secured by Mortgaged Property are
referred to herein as 'Land Contracts'). The Mortgaged Properties, Cooperative
shares (together with the right to occupy a particular Cooperative Unit
evidenced thereby) and Manufactured Homes (collectively, the 'Residential
Properties') may be located in any one of the fifty states, the District of
Columbia or the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico. Unless otherwise provided in the
related Prospectus Supplement, each Trust Fund will contain (and any
participation interest in any of the foregoing will relate to) only one of the
following types of Residential Loans:

          (1) Fully amortizing loans with a fixed rate of interest (such rate,
     an 'Interest Rate') and level monthly payments to maturity;

          (2) Fully amortizing loans with a fixed Interest Rate providing for
     level monthly payments, or for payments of interest only during the early
     years of the term, followed by monthly payments of principal and interest
     that increase annually at a predetermined rate until the loan is repaid or
     for a specified number of years, after which level monthly payments resume;

          (3) Fully amortizing loans with a fixed Interest Rate providing for
     monthly payments during the early years of the term that are calculated on
     the basis of an interest rate below the Interest Rate, followed by monthly
     payments of principal and interest that increase annually by a
     predetermined percentage over the monthly payments payable in the previous
     year until the loan is repaid or for a specified number of years, followed
     by level monthly payments;

          (4) Fixed Interest Rate loans providing for level payments of
     principal and interest on the basis of an assumed amortization schedule and
     a balloon payment of principal at the end of a specified term;

          (5) Fully amortizing loans with an Interest Rate adjusted periodically
     ('ARM Loans') (with corresponding adjustments in the amount of monthly
     payments), to equal the sum (which may be rounded) of a fixed margin and an
     index as described in the related Prospectus Supplement, which may provide
     for an election, at the mortgagor's option during a specified period after
     origination of the loan, to convert the adjustable Interest Rate to a fixed
     Interest Rate, as described in the related Prospectus Supplement;

          (6) Fully amortizing loans with an adjustable Interest Rate providing
     for monthly payments less than the amount of interest accruing on such loan
     and for such amount of interest accrued but not paid currently to be added
     to the principal balance of such loan;

          (7) ARM Loans providing for an election at the mortgagor's option, in
     the event of an adjustment to the Interest Rate resulting in an Interest
     Rate in excess of the Interest Rate at origination of the loan, to extend
     the term to maturity for such period as will result in level monthly
     payments to maturity; or

          (8) Such other types of Residential Loans as may be described in the
     related Prospectus Supplement.

     If specified in the related Prospectus Supplement, the Trust Fund
underlying a Series of Securities may include previously issued asset-backed
certificates, collateralized mortgage obligations or participation certificates
(each, and collectively, 'Mortgage Securities'), evidencing interests in, or
collateralized by, Residential Loans or Agency Securities as described herein.
The Mortgage Securities may have been issued previously by the Depositor or an
affiliate thereof, a financial institution or other entity engaged generally in
the business of lending or a limited purpose corporation organized for the
purpose of, among other things, establishing trusts, acquiring and depositing
loans into such trusts, and selling beneficial interests in such trusts. If the
Mortgage Securities have been issued by an entity other than the Depositor or
its affiliates, such Mortgage Securities will have been (a) acquired in bona
fide secondary market transactions from persons other than the issuer thereof or
its affiliates and (b)(i) offered and distributed to the public pursuant to an
effective registration statement or (ii) purchased in a transaction not
involving any public offering from a person who is not an affiliate of the
issuer of such

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<PAGE>

securities at the time of sale (nor an affiliate thereof at any time during the
preceding three months); provided, a period of two years elapsed since the later
of the date the securities were acquired from such issuer or from an affiliate
of the issuer. Except as otherwise set forth in the related Prospectus
Supplement, such Mortgage Securities will be generally similar to Securities
offered hereunder. As to any such Series of Securities, the related Prospectus
Supplement will include a description of such Mortgage Securities and any
related credit enhancement, and the Residential Loans underlying such Mortgage
Securities will be described together with any other Residential Loans included
in the Trust Fund relating to such Series. As to any such Series of Securities,
as used herein the term 'Residential Loans' includes the Residential Loans
underlying such Mortgage Securities. Notwithstanding any other reference herein
to the Master Servicer, with respect to a Series of Securities as to which the
Trust Fund includes Mortgage Securities, the entity that services and
administers such Mortgage Securities on behalf of the holders of such Securities
may be referred to as the 'Manager,' if so specified in the related Prospectus
Supplement. References herein to advances to be made and other actions to be
taken by the Master Servicer in connection with the Residential Loans may
include such advances made and other actions taken pursuant to the terms of such
Mortgage Securities.

     If so specified in the related Prospectus Supplement, certain Residential
Loans may contain provisions prohibiting prepayments for a specified period
after their origination date (a 'Lockout Period'), prohibiting prepayments
entirely or requiring the payment of a prepayment penalty upon prepayment in
full or in part.

     If so specified in the related Prospectus Supplement, the Trust Fund Assets
in the related Trust Fund may include Residential Loans that are delinquent or
sub-performing. The inclusion of such Residential Loans in the Trust Fund for a
Series may cause the rate of defaults and prepayments on the Residential Loans
to increase and, in turn, may cause losses to exceed the available credit
enhancement for such Series and affect the yield on the Certificates of such
Series.

MORTGAGE LOANS

     The Mortgage Loans will be evidenced by promissory notes (the 'Mortgage
Notes') secured by mortgages or deeds of trust (the 'Mortgages') creating first
or junior liens on the Mortgaged Properties. The Mortgage Loans will be secured
by one- to four-family residences, including detached and attached dwellings,
townhouses, rowhouses, individual condominium units, individual units in
planned-unit developments and individual units in de minimus planned-unit
developments. If so provided in the related Prospectus Supplement, the Mortgage
Loans will be insured by the FHA ('FHA Loans') or partially guaranteed by the VA
('VA Loans'). See 'The Trust Funds -- Residential Loans -- FHA Loans and VA
Loans' and 'Description of Primary Insurance Coverage -- FHA Insurance and VA
Guarantees.'

     Certain of the Mortgage Loans may be secured by junior liens, and the
related senior liens ('Senior Liens') may not be included in the mortgage pool.
The primary risk to holders of Mortgage Loans secured by junior liens is the
possibility that adequate funds will not be received in connection with a
foreclosure of the related Senior Liens to satisfy fully both the Senior Liens
and the Mortgage Loan. In the event that a holder of a Senior Lien forecloses on
a Mortgaged Property, the proceeds of the foreclosure or similar sale will be
applied first to the payment of court costs and fees in connection with the
foreclosure, second to real estate taxes, third in satisfaction of all
principal, interest, prepayment or acceleration penalties, if any, and any other
sums due and owing to the holder of the Senior Liens. The claims of the holders
of Senior Liens will be satisfied in full out of proceeds of the liquidation of
the Mortgage Loan, if such proceeds are sufficient, before the Trust Fund as
holder of the junior lien receives any payments in respect of the Mortgage Loan.
If the Master Servicer were to foreclose on any Mortgage Loan, it would do so
subject to any related Senior Liens. In order for the debt related to the
Mortgage Loan to be paid in full at such sale, a bidder at the foreclosure sale
of such Mortgage Loan would have to bid an amount sufficient to pay off all sums
due under the Mortgage Loan and the Senior Liens or purchase the Mortgaged
Property subject to the Senior Liens. In the event that such proceeds from a
foreclosure or similar sale of the related Mortgaged Property are insufficient
to satisfy all Senior Liens and the Mortgage Loan in the aggregate, the Trust
Fund, as the holder of the junior lien, and, accordingly, holders of one or more
classes of the Securities bear (i) the risk of delay in distributions

                                       24



<PAGE>

while a deficiency judgment against the borrower is obtained and (ii) the risk
of loss if the deficiency judgment is not realized upon. Moreover, deficiency
judgments may not be available in certain jurisdictions. In addition, a junior
mortgagee may not foreclose on the property securing a junior mortgage unless it
forecloses subject to the senior mortgages.

     Liquidation expenses with respect to defaulted junior mortgage loans do not
vary directly with the outstanding principal balance of the loan at the time of
default. Therefore, assuming that a servicer took the same steps in realizing
upon a defaulted junior mortgage loan having a small remaining principal balance
as it would in the case of a defaulted junior mortgage loan having a large
remaining principal balance, the amount realized after expenses of liquidation
would be smaller as a percentage of the outstanding principal balance of the
small junior mortgage loan than would be the case with the defaulted junior
mortgage loan having a large remaining principal balance. Because the average
outstanding principal balance of the Mortgage Loans is smaller relative to the
size of the average outstanding principal balance of the loans in a typical pool
of conventional first priority mortgage loans, liquidation proceeds may also be
smaller as a percentage of the principal balance of a Mortgage Loan than would
be the case in a typical pool of conventional first priority mortgage loans.

MULTIFAMILY LOANS

     The Multifamily Loans will be evidenced by Mortgage Notes secured by
Mortgages creating first or junior liens on rental apartment buildings or
projects containing five or more dwelling units. Unless otherwise specified in
the related Prospectus Supplement, Multifamily Loans will have had original
terms to stated maturity of not more than 30 years. If so provided in the
related Prospectus Supplement, the Multifamily Loans will be FHA Loans.
Mortgaged Properties which secure Multifamily Loans may include high-rise,
mid-rise and garden apartments. See 'The Trust Funds -- Residential Loans -- FHA
Loans and VA Loans' and 'Description of Primary Insurance Coverage -- FHA
Insurance and VA Guarantees.'

     If so provided in the related Prospectus Supplement, the Multifamily Loans
may contain provisions containing a Lockout Period, prohibiting prepayments
entirely or requiring the payment of a prepayment penalty upon prepayment in
full or in part. In the event that Securityholders will be entitled to all or a
portion of any prepayment penalties collected in respect of the related
Multifamily Loans, the related Prospectus Supplement will specify the method or
methods by which the prepayment penalties are calculated.

HOME EQUITY LOANS AND HOME IMPROVEMENT CONTRACTS

     As specified in the related Prospectus Supplement, the Home Equity Loans
will be secured by first or junior liens on the related Mortgaged Properties for
property improvement, debt consolidation or home equity purposes. The Home
Improvement Contracts will either be unsecured or secured by Mortgages on one-to
four-family, multifamily properties or manufactured housing which Mortgages are
generally subordinate to other mortgages on the same property. Except as
otherwise specified in the related Prospectus Supplement, the Home Improvement
Contracts will be fully amortizing and may have fixed or adjustable rates of
interest and may provide for other payment characteristics. If so provided in
the related Prospectus Supplement certain of the Home Improvement Contracts may
be FHA Loans. See 'The Trust Funds -- Residential Loans -- FHA Loans and VA
Loans' and 'Description of Primary Insurance Coverage -- FHA Insurance and VA
Guarantees.'

COOPERATIVE LOANS

     The Cooperative Loans will be evidenced by promissory notes (the
'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 Cooperative Units in the related
buildings.

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<PAGE>

MANUFACTURED HOUSING CONTRACTS

     The Manufactured Housing Contracts will consist of manufactured housing
conditional sales contracts and installment loan agreements each secured by a
Manufactured Home, or in the case of a Land Contract, by a lien on the real
estate to which the Manufactured Home is deemed permanently affixed and, in some
cases, the related Manufactured Home which is not real property under the
applicable state law. The Manufactured Homes securing the Manufactured Housing
Contracts will generally consist of manufactured homes within the meaning of 42
United States Code, Section 5402(6), which defines a 'Manufactured Home' as 'a
structure, transportable in one or more sections, which in the traveling mode,
is eight body feet or more in width or forty body feet or more in length, or,
when erected on site, is three hundred twenty or more square feet, and which is
built on a permanent chassis and 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; except that such term shall include any structure which meets
all the requirements of this paragraph except the size requirements and with
respect to which the manufacturer voluntarily files a certification required by
the Secretary of Housing and Urban Development and complies with the standards
established under this chapter.'

     If so provided in the related Prospectus Supplement, the Manufactured
Housing Contracts may be FHA Loans or VA Loans. See 'The Trust
Funds -- Residential Loans -- FHA Loans and VA Loans' and 'Description of
Primary Insurance Coverage -- FHA Insurance and VA Guarantees.'

BUYDOWN LOANS

     If provided in the related Prospectus Supplement, certain of the
Residential Loans may be subject to temporary buydown plans ('Buydown Loans'),
pursuant to which the monthly payments made by the borrower in the early years
of the Buydown Loan (the 'Buydown Period') will be less than the scheduled
payments on the Buydown Loan, the resulting difference to be made up from (i) an
amount contributed by the borrower, the seller of the Residential Property or
another source and placed in a custodial account and (ii) unless otherwise
specified in the related Prospectus Supplement, investment earnings on the
buydown funds. Generally, the borrower under each Buydown Loan will be qualified
at a reduced interest rate. Accordingly, the repayment of a Buydown Loan is
dependent on the ability of the borrower to make larger monthly payments after
the buydown funds have been depleted and, for certain Buydown Loans, during the
Buydown Period. See 'Residential Loan Program -- Underwriting Standards.'

FHA LOANS AND VA LOANS

     FHA Loans will be insured by the FHA as authorized under the National
Housing Act of 1934, as amended (the 'Housing Act'), and the United States
Housing Act of 1937, as amended. One- to four-family FHA Loans will be insured
under various FHA programs including the standard FHA 203-b programs to finance
the acquisition of one- to four-family housing units and the FHA 245 graduated
payment mortgage program. Such FHA Loans generally require a minimum down
payment of approximately 5% of the original principal amount of the FHA Loan. No
FHA Loan may have an interest rate or original principal balance exceeding the
applicable FHA limits at the time of origination of such FHA Loan. See
'Description of Primary Insurance Coverage -- FHA Insurance and VA Guarantees.'

     Home Improvement Contracts and Manufactured Housing Contracts that are FHA
Loans are insured by the FHA (as described in the related Prospectus Supplement,
up to an amount equal to 90% of the sum of the unpaid principal of the FHA Loan,
a portion of the unpaid interest and certain other liquidation costs) pursuant
to Title I of the Housing Act.

     There are two primary FHA insurance programs that are available for
Multifamily FHA Loans. Sections 221(d)(3) and (d)(4) of the Housing Act allow
HUD to insure multifamily loans that are secured by newly constructed and
substantially rehabilitated multifamily rental projects. Section 244 of the
Housing Act provides for co-insurance of such loans made under Sections
221(d)(3) and (d)(4) by

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<PAGE>

HUD/FHA and a HUD-approved co-insurer. Generally the term of such a multifamily
loan may be up to 40 years and the ratio of the loan amount to property
replacement cost can be up to 90%.

     Section 223(f) of the Housing Act allows HUD to insure multifamily loans
made for the purchase or refinancing of existing apartment projects that are at
least three years old. Section 244 also provides for co-insurance of mortgage
loans made under Section 223(f). Under Section 223(f), the loan proceeds cannot
be used for substantial rehabilitation work, but repairs may be made for up to,
in general, the greater of 15% of the value of the project and a dollar amount
per apartment unit established from time to time by HUD. In general the loan
term may not exceed 35 years and a loan-to-value ratio of no more than 85% is
required for the purchase of a project and 70% for the refinancing of a project.

     VA Loans will be partially guaranteed by the VA under the Servicemen's
Readjustment Act of 1944, as amended (the 'Servicemen's Readjustment Act'). The
Servicemen's Readjustment Act permits a veteran (or in certain instances the
spouse of a veteran) to obtain a mortgage loan guarantee by the VA covering
mortgage financing of the purchase of a one- to four-family dwelling unit at
interest rates permitted by the VA. The program has no mortgage loan limits,
requires no down payment from the purchasers and permits the guarantee of
mortgage loans of up to 30 years' duration. However, no VA Loan will have an
original principal amount greater than five times the partial VA guarantee for
such VA Loan. The maximum guarantee that may be issued by the VA under this
program will be set forth in the related Prospectus Supplement. See 'Description
of Primary Insurance Coverage -- FHA Insurance and VA Guarantees.'

LOAN-TO-VALUE RATIO

     The 'Loan-to-Value Ratio' of a Residential Loan at any given time is the
ratio, expressed as a percentage, of the then outstanding principal balance of
the Residential Loan, plus, in the case of a Mortgage Loan secured by a junior
lien, the outstanding principal balance of the related Senior Liens, to the
Collateral Value of the related Residential Property. Except as otherwise
specified in the Prospectus Supplement, the 'Collateral Value' of a Residential
Property or Cooperative Unit, other than with respect to Refinance Loans, is the
lesser of (a) the appraised value determined in an appraisal obtained by the
originator at origination of such loan and (b) the sales price for such
property. 'Refinance Loans' are loans made to refinance existing loans or loans
made to a borrower who was a tenant in a building prior to its conversion to
cooperative ownership. The 'Collateral Value' of the Residential Property
securing a Refinance Loan is the appraised value thereof determined in an
appraisal obtained at the time of origination of the Refinance Loan. Unless
otherwise specified in the related Prospectus Supplement, for purposes of
calculating the Loan-to-Value Ratio of a Manufactured Housing Contract relating
to a new Manufactured Home, the Collateral Value is no greater than the sum of a
fixed percentage of the list price of the unit actually billed by the
manufacturer to the dealer (exclusive of freight to the dealer site) including
'accessories' identified in the invoice (the 'Manufacturer's Invoice Price'),
plus the actual cost of any accessories purchased from the dealer, a delivery
and set-up allowance, depending on the size of the unit, and the cost of state
and local taxes, filing fees and up to three years prepaid hazard insurance
premiums. Unless otherwise specified in the related Prospectus Supplement, with
respect to used Manufactured Homes, the Collateral Value is the least of the
sales price, appraised value, and National Automobile Dealer's Association book
value plus prepaid taxes and hazard insurance premiums. The appraised value of a
Manufactured Home is based upon the age and condition of the manufactured
housing unit and the quality and condition of the mobile home park in which it
is situated, if applicable.

     Residential Properties may be subject to subordinate financing at the time
of origination. As is customary in residential lending, subordinate financing
may be obtained with respect to a Residential Property after the origination of
the Residential Loan without the lender's consent.

     No assurance can be given that values of the Residential Properties have
remained or will remain at their historic levels on the respective dates of
origination of the related Residential Loans. If the residential real estate
market were to experience an overall decline in property values such that the
outstanding principal balances of the Residential Loans, and any other financing
on the related Residential Properties, become equal to or greater than the value
of the Residential Properties, the actual rates of delinquencies, foreclosures
and losses may be higher than those now generally

                                       27



<PAGE>

experienced in the mortgage lending industry. In addition, adverse economic
conditions (which may or may not affect real property values) may affect the
timely payment by borrowers of scheduled payments of principal and interest on
the Residential Loans and, accordingly, the actual rates of delinquencies,
foreclosures and losses. To the extent that such losses are not covered by the
applicable insurance policies and other forms of credit support described herein
and in the related Prospectus Supplement, such losses will be borne, at least in
part, by the holders of one or more classes of the Securities of the related
Series. See 'Description of the Securities' and 'Description of Credit Support.'

AGENCY SECURITIES

     The Agency Securities will consist of any combination of 'fully modified
pass-through' mortgage-backed certificates guaranteed by the GNMA ('GNMA
Certificates'), guaranteed mortgage pass-through securities issued by the FNMA
('FNMA Certificates') and mortgage participation certificates issued by the
FHLMC ('FHLMC Certificates').

GNMA

     GNMA is a wholly-owned corporate instrumentality of the United States
within the Department of Housing and Urban Development. Section 306(g) of Title
III of the Housing Act authorizes GNMA to guarantee the timely payment of the
principal of and interest on certificates that are based on and backed by a pool
of FHA Loans, VA Loans or by pools of other eligible residential loans.

     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 guaranty under this subsection.' In order to meet
its obligations under such guaranty, GNMA is authorized, under Section 306(d) of
the Housing Act, to borrow from the United States Treasury with no limitations
as to amount, to perform its obligations under its guarantee.

GNMA CERTIFICATES

     Each GNMA Certificate will be a 'fully modified pass-through'
mortgage-backed certificate issued and serviced by an issuer approved by GNMA or
FNMA as a seller-servicer of FHA Loans or VA Loans, except as described below
with respect to Stripped Agency Securities (as defined below). The loans
underlying GNMA Certificates may consist of FHA Loans, VA Loans and other loans
eligible for inclusion in loan pools underlying GNMA Certificates. GNMA
Certificates may be issued under either or both of the GNMA I program and the
GNMA II program, as described in the related Prospectus Supplement. The
Prospectus Supplement for Certificates of each Series evidencing interests in a
Trust Fund including GNMA Certificates will set forth additional information
regarding the GNMA guaranty program, the characteristics of the pool underlying
such GNMA Certificates, the servicing of the related pool, the payment of
principal and interest on GNMA Certificates to the extent not described herein
and other relevant matters with respect to the GNMA Certificates.

     Except as otherwise specified in the related Prospectus Supplement or as
described below with respect to Stripped Agency Securities, each GNMA
Certificate will provide for the payment, by or on behalf of the issuer, to the
registered holder of such GNMA Certificate of monthly payments of principal and
interest equal to the holder's proportionate interest in the aggregate amount of
the monthly principal and interest payments on each related FHA Loan or VA Loan,
less servicing and guaranty fees aggregating the excess of the interest on such
FHA Loan or VA Loan over the GNMA Certificates pass-through rate. In addition,
each payment to a holder of a GNMA Certificate will include proportionate
pass-through payments to such holder of any prepayments of principal of the FHA
Loans or VA Loans underlying the GNMA Certificate and the holder's proportionate
interest in the remaining principal balance in the event of a foreclosure or
other disposition of any such FHA Loan or VA Loan.

     The GNMA Certificates do not constitute a liability of, or evidence any
recourse against, the issuer of the GNMA Certificates, the Depositor or any
affiliates thereof, and the only recourse of a registered holder, such as the
Trustee, is to enforce the guaranty of GNMA.

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<PAGE>

     GNMA will have approved the issuance of each of the GNMA Certificates
included in a Trust Fund in accordance with a guaranty agreement or contract
between GNMA and the issuer of such GNMA Certificates. Pursuant to such
agreement, such issuer, in its capacity as servicer, is required to perform
customary functions of a servicer of FHA Loans and VA Loans, including
collecting payments from borrowers and remitting such collections to the
registered holder, maintaining escrow and impoundment accounts of borrowers for
payments of taxes, insurance and other items required to be paid by the
borrower, maintaining primary hazard insurance, and advancing from its own funds
in order to make timely payments of all amounts due on the GNMA Certificate,
even if the payments received by such issuer on the loans backing the GNMA
Certificate are less than the amounts due thereon. If the issuer is unable to
make payments on a GNMA Certificate as they become due, it must promptly notify
GNMA and request GNMA to make such payment. Upon such notification and request,
GNMA will make such payments directly to the registered holder of the GNMA
Certificate. In the event no payment is made by the issuer and the issuer fails
to notify and request GNMA to make such payment, the registered holder of the
GNMA Certificate has recourse against only GNMA to obtain such payment. The
Trustee or its nominee, as registered holder of the GNMA Certificates included
in a Trust Fund, is entitled to proceed directly against GNMA under the terms of
the guaranty agreement or contract relating to such GNMA Certificates for any
amounts that are not paid when due under each GNMA Certificate.

     The GNMA Certificates included in a Trust Fund may have other
characteristics and terms, different from those described above so long as such
GNMA Certificates and underlying residential loans meet the criteria of the
Rating Agency or Agencies. Such GNMA Certificates and underlying residential
loans will be described in the related Prospectus Supplement.

FNMA

     FNMA is a federally chartered and stockholder-owned corporation organized
and existing under the Federal National Mortgage Association Charter Act, as
amended (the 'Charter Act'). FNMA 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.

     FNMA provides funds to the mortgage market by purchasing mortgage loans
from lenders. FNMA acquires funds to purchase loans from many capital market
investors, thereby expanding the total amount of funds available for housing.
Operating nationwide, FNMA helps to redistribute mortgage funds from
capital-surplus to capital-short areas. In addition, FNMA issues mortgage-backed
securities primarily in exchange for pools of mortgage loans from lenders. FNMA
receives fees for its guaranty of timely payment of principal and interest on
its mortgage-backed securities.

FNMA CERTIFICATES

     FNMA Certificates are Guaranteed Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates
typically issued pursuant to a prospectus which is periodically revised by FNMA.
FNMA Certificates represent fractional undivided interests in a pool of mortgage
loans formed by FNMA. Each mortgage loan must meet the applicable standards of
the FNMA purchase program. Mortgage loans comprising a pool are either provided
by FNMA from its own portfolio or purchased pursuant to the criteria of the FNMA
purchase program. Mortgage loans underlying FNMA Certificates included in a
Trust Fund will consist of conventional mortgage loans, FHA Loans or VA Loans.
The Prospectus Supplement for Securities of each Series evidencing interests in
a Trust Fund including FNMA Certificates will set forth additional information
regarding the FNMA program, the characteristics of the pool underlying such FNMA
Certificates, the servicing of the related pool, payment of principal and
interest on the FNMA Certificates to the extent not described herein and other
relevant matters with respect to the FNMA Certificates.

     Except as described below with respect to Stripped Agency Securities, FNMA
guarantees to each registered holder of a FNMA Certificate that it will
distribute amounts representing such holder's proportionate share of scheduled
principal and interest at the applicable pass-through rate provided for

                                       29



<PAGE>

by such FNMA Certificate on the underlying mortgage loans, whether or not
received, and such holder's proportionate share of the full principal amount of
any prepayment or foreclosed or other finally liquidated mortgage loan, whether
or not such principal amount is actually recovered.

     The obligations of FNMA under its guarantees are obligations solely of FNMA
and are not backed by, nor entitled to, the full faith and credit of the United
States. If FNMA were unable to satisfy such obligations, distributions to the
holders of FNMA Certificates would consist solely of payments and other
recoveries on the underlying loans and, accordingly, monthly distributions to
the holders of FNMA Certificates would be affected by delinquent payments and
defaults on such loans.

     FNMA Certificates evidencing interests in pools of mortgage loans formed on
or after May 1, 1985 (other than FNMA Certificates backed by pools containing
graduated payment mortgage loans or multifamily loans) are available in
book-entry form only. With respect to a FNMA Certificate issued in book-entry
form, distributions thereon will be made by wire, and with respect to a fully
registered FNMA Certificate, distributions thereon will be made by check.

     The FNMA Certificates included in a Trust Fund may have other
characteristics and terms, different from those described above, so long as such
FNMA Certificates and underlying mortgage loans meet the criteria of the Rating
Agency or Rating Agencies rating the Certificates of such Series. Such FNMA
Certificates and underlying mortgage loans will be described in the related
Prospectus Supplement.

FHLMC

     FHLMC is a corporate instrumentality of the United States created pursuant
to Title III of the Emergency Home Finance Act of 1970, as amended (the 'FHLMC
Act'). FHLMC was established primarily for the purpose of increasing the
availability of mortgage credit for the financing of needed housing. It seeks to
provide an enhanced degree of liquidity for residential mortgage investments
primarily by assisting in the development of secondary markets for conventional
mortgages. The principal activity of FHLMC currently consists of the purchase of
first lien, conventional residential mortgage loans or participation interests
in such mortgage loans and the resale of the mortgage loans so purchased in the
form of mortgage securities, primarily FHLMC Certificates. FHLMC is confined to
purchasing, so far as practicable, mortgage loans and participation interests
therein which it deems to be of such quality, type and class as to meet
generally the purchase standards imposed by private institutional mortgage
investors.

FHLMC CERTIFICATES

     Each FHLMC Certificate represents an undivided interest in a pool of
residential loans that may consist of first lien conventional residential loans,
FHA Loans or VA Loans ('FHLMC Certificate Group'). Each such mortgage loan must
meet the applicable standards set forth in the FHLMC Act. A FHLMC Certificate
Group may include whole loans, participation interests in whole loans and
undivided interests in whole loans and/or participations comprising another
FHLMC Certificate Group. The Prospectus Supplement for Securities of each Series
evidencing interests in a Trust Fund including FHLMC Certificates will set forth
additional information regarding the FHLMC guaranty program, the characteristics
of the pool underlying such FHLMC Certificate, the servicing of the related
pool, payment of principal and interest on the FHLMC Certificate to the extent
not described herein and other relevant matters with respect to the FHLMC
Certificates.

     Except as described below with respect to Stripped Agency Securities, FHLMC
guarantees to each registered holder of a FHLMC Certificate the timely payment
of interest on the underlying mortgage loans to the extent of the applicable
pass-through rate on the registered holder's pro rata share of the unpaid
principal balance outstanding on the underlying mortgage loans in the FHLMC
Certificate Group represented by such FHLMC Certificate, whether or not
received. FHLMC also guarantees to each registered holder of a FHLMC Certificate
collection by such holder of all principal on the underlying mortgage loans,
without any offset or deduction, to the extent of such holder's pro rata share
thereof, but does not, except if and to the extent specified in the related
Prospectus Supplement, guarantee the timely payment of scheduled principal.
Pursuant to its guarantees, FHLMC also

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<PAGE>

guarantees ultimate collection of scheduled principal payments, prepayments of
principal and the remaining principal balance in the event of a foreclosure or
other disposition of a mortgage loan. FHLMC may remit the amount due on account
of its guarantee of collection of principal at any time after default on an
underlying mortgage loan, but not later than 30 days following the latest of (i)
foreclosure sale, (ii) payment of the claim by any mortgage insurer and (iii)
the expiration of any right of redemption, but in any event no later than one
year after demand has been made upon the mortgagor for accelerated payment of
principal. In taking actions regarding the collection of principal after default
on the mortgage loans underlying FHLMC Certificates, including the timing of
demand for acceleration, FHLMC reserves the right to exercise its servicing
judgment with respect to the mortgage loans in the same manner as for mortgage
loans which it has purchased but not sold. The length of time necessary for
FHLMC to determine that a mortgage loan should be accelerated varies with the
particular circumstances of each mortgagor, and FHLMC has not adopted servicing
standards that require that the demand be made within any specified period.

     FHLMC Certificates are not guaranteed by the United States or by any
Federal Home Loan Bank and do not constitute debts or obligations of the United
States or any Federal Home Loan Bank. The obligations of FHLMC under its
guarantee are obligations solely of FHLMC and are not backed by, nor entitled
to, the full faith and credit of the United States. If FHLMC were unable to
satisfy such obligations, distributions to holders of FHLMC Certificates would
consist solely of payments and other recoveries on the underlying mortgage loans
and, accordingly, monthly distributions to holders of FHLMC Certificates would
be affected by delinquent payments and defaults on such Mortgage Loans.

     The FHLMC Certificates included in a Trust Fund may have other
characteristics and terms, different from those described above, so long as such
FHLMC Certificates and underlying mortgage loans meet the criteria of the Rating
Agency or Rating Agencies rating the Securities of such Series. Such FHLMC
Certificates and underlying mortgage loans will be described in the related
Prospectus Supplement.

STRIPPED AGENCY SECURITIES

     The GNMA Certificates, FNMA Certificates or FHLMC Certificates may be
issued in the form of certificates ('Stripped Agency Securities') which
represent an undivided interest in all or part of either the principal
distributions (but not the interest distributions) or the interest distributions
(but not the principal distributions), or in some specified portion of the
principal or interest distributions (but not all of such distributions), on an
underlying pool of mortgage loans or certain other GNMA Certificates, FNMA
Certificates or FHLMC Certificates. GNMA, FNMA or FHLMC, as applicable, will
guarantee each Stripped Agency Security to the same extent as such entity
guarantees the underlying securities backing such Stripped Agency Securities or
to the extent described above with respect to a Stripped Agency Security backed
by a pool of mortgage loans, unless otherwise specified in the related
Prospectus Supplement. The Prospectus Supplement for Securities of each Series
evidencing interests in a Trust Fund including Stripped Agency Securities will
set forth additional information regarding the characteristics of the assets
underlying such Stripped Agency Securities, the payments of principal and
interest on the Stripped Agency Securities and other relevant matters with
respect to the Stripped Agency Securities.

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION CONCERNING THE TRUST FUNDS

     Each Prospectus Supplement relating to a Series of Securities will contain
information, as of the date of such Prospectus Supplement, if applicable and to
the extent specifically known to the Depositor, with respect to the Residential
Loans or Agency Securities contained in the related Trust Fund, including, but
not limited to (i) the aggregate outstanding principal balance and the average
outstanding principal balance of the Trust Fund Assets as of the applicable
Cut-off Date, (ii) the types of related Residential Properties (e.g., one- to
four-family dwellings, multifamily residential properties, shares in
Cooperatives and the related proprietary leases or occupancy agreements,
condominiums and planned-unit development units, vacation and second homes and
new or used Manufactured Homes), (iii) the original terms to maturity, (iv) the
outstanding principal balances, (v) the origination dates, (vi) with respect to
Multifamily Loans, the Lockout Periods and prepayment penalties, (vii) the
loan-to-value

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<PAGE>

ratios or, with respect to Residential Loans secured by a junior lien, the
combined loan-to-value ratios at origination, (viii) the Interest Rates or range
of Interest Rates borne by the Residential Loans or residential loans underlying
the Agency Securities, (ix) the geographical distribution of the Residential
Properties on a state-by-state basis, (x) the fixed Security Interest Rate, or
the initial Security Interest Rate in the case of a Series or class of
Securities with a variable or adjustable Security Interest Rate, (xi) the number
and aggregate principal balance of Buydown Loans, if any, (xii) the Retained
Interest, if any, (xiii) with respect to ARM Loans, the adjustment dates, the
highest, lowest and weighted average margin, and the maximum Interest Rate
variations at the time of adjustments and over the lives of the ARM Loans, and
(xiv) information as to the payment characteristics of the Residential Loans. If
specific information respecting the Trust Fund Assets is not known to the
Depositor at the time a Series of Securities is initially offered, more general
information of the nature described above will be provided in the related
Prospectus Supplement, and specific information will be set forth in a report
made available at or before the issuance of such Securities, which information
will be included in a report on Form 8-K which will be available to purchasers
of the related Securities at or before the initial issuance thereof and will be
filed with the Commission within fifteen days after the initial issuance of such
Securities. If Mortgage Loans are added to or deleted from a Trust Fund after
the date of the related Prospectus Supplement, such addition or deletion will be
noted in a report on Form 8-K.

     The Depositor will cause the Residential Loans comprising each Trust Fund
(or Mortgage Securities evidencing interests therein) to be assigned to the
Trustee for the benefit of the holders of the Certificates of the related
Series. The Master Servicer will service the Residential Loans comprising any
Trust Fund, either directly or through other servicing institutions (each, a
'Sub-Servicer'), pursuant to a Pooling and Servicing Agreement or Servicing
Agreement among itself, the Depositor and the Trustee (each, a 'Servicing
Agreement'), and will receive a fee for such services. See 'Residential Loan
Program' and 'Description of the Securities.' With respect to Residential Loans
serviced through a Sub-Servicer, the Master Servicer will remain liable for its
servicing obligations under the related Servicing Agreement as if the Master
Servicer alone were servicing such Residential Loans.

     The Depositor will assign the Residential Loans to the related Trustee on a
non-recourse basis. Unless otherwise specified in the related Prospectus
Supplement, the obligations of the Depositor with respect to the Residential
Loans will be limited to certain representations and warranties made by it. See
'Description of the Securities -- Assignment of Trust Fund Assets.' The
obligations of the Master Servicer with respect to the Residential Loans will
consist principally of its contractual servicing obligations under the related
Servicing Agreement (including its obligation to enforce certain purchase and
other obligations of Sub-Servicers or Unaffiliated Sellers, or both, as more
fully described herein under 'Residential Loan Program -- Representations by
Unaffiliated Sellers; Repurchases'; ' -- Sub-Servicing' and 'Description of the
Securities -- Assignment of Trust Fund Assets') and, unless otherwise provided
in the related Prospectus Supplement, its obligation to make certain cash
advances in the event of delinquencies in payments on or with respect to the
Residential Loans in amounts described herein under 'Description of the
Securities -- Advances' or pursuant to the terms of any Mortgage Securities. Any
obligation of the Master Servicer to make advances may be subject to
limitations, to the extent provided herein and in the related Prospectus
Supplement.

     The Depositor will cause the Agency Securities comprising each Trust Fund
to be registered in the name of the Trustee or its nominee on the books of the
issuer or guarantor or its agent or, in the case of Agency Securities issued
only in book-entry form, through the Federal Reserve System, in accordance with
the procedures established by the issuer or guarantor for registration of such
certificates with a member of the Federal Reserve System, and distributions on
such securities to which the Trust Fund is entitled will be made directly to the
Trustee. The Trustee will administer the Trust Fund Assets comprising any Trust
Fund including Agency Securities pursuant to a Trust Agreement between the
Depositor and the Trustee, and will receive a fee for such service. The Agency
Securities and any moneys attributable to distributions on such Agency
Securities will not be subject to any right, charge, security interest, lien or
claim of any kind in favor of the Trustee or any person claiming through it. The
Trustee will not have the power or authority to assign, transfer, pledge or
otherwise dispose of any assets of any Trust Fund to any person, except to a
successor trustee, to the Depositor or the Securityholders to the extent they
are entitled thereto or to such other persons as may be specified in the related
Prospectus Supplement and except for its power and authority to invest assets of
the Trust

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<PAGE>

Fund in Permitted Instruments (as hereinafter defined) in compliance with the
Trust Agreement. The Trustee will have no responsibility for distributions on
the Securities, other than to pass through all distributions received with
respect to the Agency Securities to the holders of the related Securities
without deduction, other than for any applicable trust administration fee
payable to the Trustee, certain expenses of the Trustee, if any, in connection
with legal actions relating to the Agency Securities, any applicable withholding
tax required to be withheld by the Trustee and as otherwise described in the
related Prospectus Supplement.

                                USE OF PROCEEDS

     The Depositor will apply all or substantially all of the net proceeds from
the sale of each Series of Securities for one or more of the following purposes:
(i) to purchase the related Trust Fund Assets, (ii) to repay indebtedness which
has been incurred to obtain funds to acquire such Trust Fund Assets, (iii) to
establish any Reserve Funds or other funds described in the related Prospectus
Supplement and (iv) to pay costs of structuring, guaranteeing and issuing such
Securities, including the costs of obtaining credit support, if any. If so
specified in the related Prospectus Supplement, the purchase of the Trust Fund
Assets for a Series may be effected by an exchange of Securities with the seller
of such Trust Fund Assets.

                              YIELD CONSIDERATIONS

     Unless otherwise specified in the related Prospectus Supplement, each
monthly or other periodic interest payment on a Trust Fund Asset is calculated
as one-twelfth of the applicable interest rate multiplied by the unpaid
principal balance thereof. The amount of such interest payment distributed (or
accrued in the case of Accrual Securities) to Securityholders (other than
holders of Strip Securities) with respect to each Trust Fund Asset will be
similarly calculated for the applicable period, based on the applicable Security
Interest Rate. In the case of Strip Securities, except as otherwise described in
the related Prospectus Supplement, such distributions of Stripped Interest will
be made in the manner and amount described in the related Prospectus Supplement.
The Securities of each Series may bear a fixed, variable or adjustable Security
Interest Rate.

     The effective yield to Securityholders will be below the yield otherwise
produced by the applicable Security Interest Rate (or as to a Strip Security,
the distributions of interest thereon ('Stripped Interest')) and purchase price
paid by the investors, because while interest will accrue on each Trust Fund
Asset from the first day of each month (unless otherwise provided in the related
Prospectus Supplement), the distribution of such interest (or the accrual
thereof in the case of Accrual Securities) will not be made until the
Distribution Date occurring in the month or other periodic interval (as
specified in the related Prospectus Supplement) following the month or other
period of accrual in the case of Residential Loans, and in later months in the
case of Agency Securities and in the case of a Series of Securities having
Distribution Dates occurring at intervals less frequently than monthly.

     Unless otherwise provided in the related Prospectus Supplement, when a full
prepayment is made on a Residential Loan, the borrower is charged interest only
for the number of days actually elapsed from the due date of the preceding
monthly payment up to the date of such prepayment, instead of for a full month
and accordingly, the effect of such prepayments is to reduce the aggregate
amount of interest collected that is available for distribution to
Securityholders. However, if so provided in the related Prospectus Supplement,
certain of the Residential Loans may contain provisions limiting prepayments
thereof or requiring the payment of a prepayment penalty upon prepayment in full
or in part. Unless otherwise provided in the Prospectus Supplement, the
prepayment penalty collected with respect to the Residential Loans will be
applied to offset such shortfalls in interest collections on the related
Distribution Date. Holders of Agency Securities are entitled to a full month's
interest in connection with prepayments in full of the underlying residential
loans. Unless otherwise specified in the related Prospectus Supplement, partial
principal prepayments are applied on the first day of the month following
receipt, with no resulting reduction in interest payable by the borrower for the
month in which the partial principal prepayment is made. Unless provided
otherwise in the related Prospectus Supplement, neither the Trustee, the Master
Servicer nor the Depositor will be obligated to fund shortfalls in interest
collections resulting from full prepayments. Full and partial prepayments
collected

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<PAGE>

during the applicable Prepayment Period will be available for distribution to
Securityholders on the related Distribution Date. Unless otherwise provided in
the related Prospectus Supplement, a 'Prepayment Period' in respect of any
Distribution Date will commence in the case of Distribution Dates that occur
monthly, on the first day of the preceding calendar month and, in the case of
Distribution Dates that occur less frequently than monthly, on the first day of
the month in which the immediately preceding Distribution Date occurred (or,
with respect to the first Prepayment Period, the Cut-off Date) and will end in
both cases on the last day of the preceding calendar month. See 'Maturity and
Prepayment Considerations' and 'Description of the Securities.'

     Even assuming that the Mortgaged Properties provide adequate security for
the Mortgage Loans, substantial delays could be encountered in connection with
the liquidation of defaulted Mortgaged Loans and corresponding delays in the
receipt of related proceeds by Securityholders could occur. An action to
foreclose on a Mortgaged Property securing a Mortgaged Loan is regulated by
state statutes and rules and is subject to many of the delays and expenses of
other lawsuits if defenses or counterclaims are interposed, sometimes requiring
several years to complete. Furthermore, in some states an action to obtain a
deficiency judgment is not permitted following a nonjudicial sale of a property.
In the event of a default by a borrower, these restrictions among other things,
may impede the ability of the Master Servicer to foreclose on or sell the
Mortgaged Property or to obtain liquidation proceeds sufficient to repay all
amounts due on the related Mortgaged Loan. In addition, the Master Servicer will
be entitled to deduct from related liquidation proceeds all expenses reasonably
incurred in attempting to recover amounts due on defaulted Mortgaged Loans and
not yet reimbursed, including payments to senior lienholders, legal fees and
costs of legal action, real estate taxes and maintenance and preservation
expenses.

     Liquidation expenses with respect to defaulted mortgage loans do not vary
directly with the outstanding principal balance of the loan at the time of
default. Therefore, assuming that a servicer took the same steps in realizing
upon a defaulted mortgage loan having a small remaining principal balance as it
would in the case of a defaulted mortgage loan having a large remaining
principal balance, the amount realized after expenses of liquidation would be
smaller as a percentage of the remaining principal balance of the small mortgage
loan than would be the case with the other defaulted mortgage loan having a
large remaining principal balance.

     Applicable state laws generally regulate interest rates and other charges,
require certain disclosures, and require licensing of certain originators and
servicers of Residential Loans. In addition, most have other laws, public policy
and general principles of equity relating to the protection of consumers, unfair
and deceptive practices and practices which may apply to the origination,
servicing and collection of the Residential Loans. Depending on the provisions
of the applicable law and the specific facts and circumstances involved,
violations of these laws, policies and principles may limit the ability of the
Master Servicer to collect all or part of the principal of or interest on the
Residential Loans, may entitle the borrower to a refund of amounts previously
paid and, in addition, could subject the Trustee or Master Servicer to damages
and administrative sanctions which could reduce the amount of distributions
available to holders of the Certificates.

     The Prospectus Supplement for each Series of Securities may set forth
additional information regarding yield considerations.

                     MATURITY AND PREPAYMENT CONSIDERATIONS

     The original terms to maturity of the Trust Fund Assets in a given Trust
Fund may vary depending upon the type of Residential Loans or the residential
loans underlying the Agency Securities included therein. Each Prospectus
Supplement will contain information with respect to the type and maturities of
the Trust Fund Assets in the related Trust Fund. Unless otherwise specified in
the related Prospectus Supplement, the Residential Loans or residential loans
underlying the Agency Securities may be prepaid in full or in part at any time
without penalty. The prepayment experience on the Residential Loans or
residential loans underlying the Agency Securities will affect the life of the
related Securities. The average life of a Security refers to the average amount
of time that will elapse from the date of issuance of a Security until the
principal amount of such Security has been reduced to zero. The average life of
the Securities will be affected by, among other things, the rate at which
principal on the related

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<PAGE>

Residential Loans is paid, which may be in the form of scheduled amortization
payments or unscheduled prepayments and liquidations due to default, casualty,
insurance, condemnation and similar sources. If substantial principal
prepayments on the Residential Loans are received, the actual average life of
the Securities may be significantly shorter than would otherwise be the case. As
to any Series of Securities, based on the public information with respect to the
residential lending industry, it may be anticipated that a significant number of
the related Residential Loans will be paid in full prior to stated maturity.

     Prepayments on residential loans are commonly measured relative to a
prepayment standard or model. For certain Series of Securities comprised of more
than one class, or as to other types of Series where applicable, the Prospectus
Supplement will describe the prepayment standard or model used in connection
with the offering of such Series and, if applicable, will contain tables setting
forth the projected weighted average life of the Securities of such Series and
the percentage of the initial Security Principal Balance that would be
outstanding on specified Distribution Dates based on the assumptions stated in
the Prospectus Supplement, including assumptions that prepayments on the related
Residential Loans or residential loans underlying the Agency Securities are made
at rates corresponding to various percentages of the prepayment standard or
model specified in the Prospectus Supplement.

     It is unlikely that prepayment of the Trust Fund Assets will conform to any
model specified in the related Prospectus Supplement. The rate of principal
prepayments on pools of residential loans is influenced by a variety of
economic, social, geographic, demographic and other factors, including homeowner
mobility, economic conditions, enforceability of due-on-sale clauses, market
interest rates and the availability of funds, the existence of lockout
provisions and prepayment penalties, the inclusion of delinquent or
sub-performing Residential Loans in the Trust Fund Assets, the relative tax
benefits associated with the ownership of property and, in the case of
Multifamily Loans, the quality of management of the property. The rate of
prepayments of conventional residential loans has fluctuated significantly in
recent years. In general, however, if prevailing interest rates fall
significantly below the interest rates on the Trust Fund Assets, such Trust Fund
Assets are likely to be the subject of higher principal prepayments than if
prevailing rates remain at or above the interest rates borne by such Trust Fund
Assets.

     Other factors that might be expected to affect the prepayment rate of
Securities backed by junior lien mortgage loans or Home Improvement Contracts
include the amounts of, and interest rates on, the underlying senior mortgage
loans, and the use of first mortgage loans as long-term financing for home
purchase and subordinate mortgage loans as shorter-term financing for a variety
of purposes, including home improvement, education expenses and purchases of
consumer durables such as automobiles. In addition, any future limitations on
the right of borrowers to deduct interest payments on junior liens that are home
equity loans for federal income tax purposes may increase the rate of
prepayments on such Residential Loans.

     In addition, acceleration of payments on the Residential Loans or
residential loans underlying the Agency Securities as a result of certain
transfers of the underlying properties is another factor affecting prepayment
rates. Unless otherwise provided in the related Prospectus Supplement, all
Residential Loans, except for FHA Loans and VA Loans, will contain 'due-on-sale'
provisions permitting the lender to accelerate the maturity of the Residential
Loan upon sale or certain transfers by the borrower with respect to the
underlying Residential Property. Conventional residential loans that underlie
FHLMC Certificates and FNMA Certificates may contain, and in certain cases must
contain, 'due-on-sale' clauses permitting the lender to accelerate the unpaid
balance of the loan upon transfer of the property by the borrower. FHA Loans and
VA Loans and all residential loans underlying GNMA Certificates contain no such
clause and may be assumed by the purchaser of the property. In addition,
Multifamily Loans may contain 'due-on-encumbrance' clauses permitting the lender
to accelerate the maturity of the Multifamily Loan upon further encumbrance by
the borrower of the underlying Residential Property. In general, where a
'due-on-sale' or 'due-on-encumbrance' clause is contained in a conventional
residential loan under a FHLMC or the FNMA program, the lender's right to
accelerate the maturity of the residential loan upon transfer or further
encumbrance of the property must be exercised, so long as such acceleration is
permitted under applicable law.

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     With respect to a Series of Securities evidencing interests in a Trust Fund
including Residential Loans, unless otherwise provided in the related Prospectus
Supplement, the Master Servicer generally will enforce any provision limiting
prepayments and any due-on-sale or due-on-encumbrance clause, to the extent it
has knowledge of the conveyance or encumbrance or the proposed conveyance or
encumbrance of the underlying Residential Property and reasonably believes that
it is entitled to do so under applicable law; provided, however, that the Master
Servicer will not take any enforcement action that would impair or threaten to
impair any recovery under any related insurance policy. See 'Description of the
Securities -- Collection and Other Servicing Procedures' and 'Certain Legal
Aspects of Residential Loans -- Enforceability of Certain Provisions' and
'Prepayment Charges and Prepayments' for a description of certain provisions of
each Pooling and Servicing Agreement and certain legal developments that may
affect the prepayment experience on the Residential Loans. See also 'Description
of the Securities -- Termination' for a description of the possible early
termination of any Series of Securities. See also 'Residential Loan
Program -- Representations by Unaffiliated Sellers; Repurchases' and
'Description of the Securities -- Assignment of Trust Fund Assets' for a
description of the obligation of the Unaffiliated Sellers, the Master Servicer
and the Depositor to repurchase Residential Loans under certain circumstances.

     With respect to a Series of Securities evidencing interests in a Trust Fund
including Agency Securities, principal prepayments may also result from guaranty
payments and from the exercise by the issuer or guarantor of the related Agency
Securities of any right to repurchase the underlying residential loans. The
Prospectus Supplement relating to each Series of Securities will describe the
circumstances and the manner in which such optional repurchase right, if any,
may be exercised.

     In addition, certain Mortgage Securities included in the Trust Fund may be
backed by underlying Residential Loans having differing interest rates.
Accordingly, the rate at which principal payments are received on the related
Securities will, to a certain extent, depend on the interest rates on such
underlying Residential Loans.

     The Prospectus Supplement for each Series of Securities may set forth
additional information regarding related maturity and prepayment considerations.

                                 THE DEPOSITOR

     PaineWebber Mortgage Acceptance Corporation IV, the Depositor, is a
Delaware corporation organized on April 23, 1987, as a wholly-owned limited
purpose finance subsidiary of PaineWebber Group Inc. The Depositor maintains its
principal office at 1285 Avenue of the Americas, New York, New York. Its
telephone number is (212) 713-2000.

     The Depositor does not have, nor is it expected in the future to have, any
significant assets. It is not expected that the Depositor will have any business
operations other than acquiring and pooling residential loans and agency
securities, offering Certificates of the type described herein or other
mortgage- or asset-related securities, and related activities.

     Neither the Depositor nor any of the Depositor's affiliates will insure or
guarantee distributions on the Securities of any Series.

                            RESIDENTIAL LOAN PROGRAM

     The Residential Loans will have been purchased by the Depositor, either
directly or through affiliates, from sellers. Unless otherwise specified in the
related Prospectus Supplement, all Residential Loans will have been originated
in general accordance with the criteria specified below. The underwriting
standards applicable to Residential Loans underlying Mortgage Securities may
vary substantially from the underwriting standards set forth below.

UNDERWRITING STANDARDS

     Unless otherwise specified in the related Prospectus Supplement, each
seller will represent and warrant that all Residential Loans originated and/or
sold by it to the Depositor or one of its affiliates will have been underwritten
in general accordance with standards consistent with those utilized by

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<PAGE>

mortgage lenders generally during the period of origination for similar types of
loans. As to any Residential Loan insured by the FHA or partially guaranteed by
the VA, the seller will represent that it has complied with underwriting
policies of the FHA or the VA, as the case may be.

     Underwriting standards are applied by or on behalf of a lender to evaluate
the borrower's credit standing and repayment ability, and the value and adequacy
of the Residential Property as collateral. In general, a prospective borrower
applying for a Residential Loan is required to fill out a detailed application
designed to provide to the underwriting officer pertinent credit information,
including the principal balance and payment history with respect to any senior
mortgage, if any. Unless otherwise specified in the related Prospectus
Supplement, a verification of the borrower's income will be obtained from an
independent source and, as part of the description of the borrower's financial
condition, the borrower generally is required to provide a current list of
assets and liabilities and a statement of income and expenses, as well as an
authorization to apply for a credit report which summarizes the borrower's
credit history with local merchants and lenders and any record of bankruptcy.
Unless otherwise specified in the related Prospectus Supplement, an employment
verification is obtained from an independent source (typically the borrower's
employer) which verification reports the length of employment with that
organization, the current salary, and whether it is expected that the borrower
will continue such employment in the future. If a prospective borrower is
self-employed, the borrower may be required to submit copies of signed tax
returns. The borrower may also be required to authorize verification of deposits
at financial institutions where the borrower has demand, savings or brokerage
accounts.

     In determining the adequacy of the property to be used as collateral, an
appraisal will generally be made of each property considered for financing. The
appraiser is generally required to inspect the property, issue a report on its
condition and, if applicable, verify that construction, if new, has been
completed. The appraisal is based on the market value of comparable homes, the
estimated rental income (if considered applicable by the appraiser) and the cost
of replacing the home.

     Once all applicable employment, credit and property information is
received, a determination generally is made as to whether the prospective
borrower has sufficient monthly income available (i) to meet the borrower's
monthly obligations on the proposed mortgage loan (generally determined on the
basis of the monthly payments due in the year of origination) and other expenses
related to the property (such as property taxes and hazard insurance) and (ii)
to meet monthly housing expenses and other financial obligations and monthly
living expenses. The underwriting standards applied by Sellers, particularly
with respect to the level of loan documentation and the mortgagor's income and
credit history, may be varied in appropriate cases where factors such as low
loan-to-value ratios, or combined-loan-to-value ratios, as applicable, or other
favorable and compensating credit factors exist.

     The underwriting guidelines with respect to some Unaffiliated Sellers' loan
programs may be less stringent than those of FNMA or FHLMC, primarily in that
they generally may permit the borrower to have a higher debt-to-income ratio and
a larger number of derogatory credit items than do the guidelines of FNMA or
FHLMC. These underwriting guidelines are intended to provide for the origination
of single family mortgage loans for non-conforming credits. A mortgage loan made
to a 'non-conforming credit' means a mortgage loan that is ineligible for
purchase by FNMA or FHLMC due to borrower credit characteristics that do not
meet FNMA or FHLMC underwriting guidelines, including a loan made to a borrower
whose creditworthiness and repayment ability do not satisfy such FNMA or FHLMC
underwriting guidelines or a borrower who may have a record of major derogatory
credit items such as default on a prior mortgage loan, credit write-offs,
outstanding judgments and prior bankruptcies. Accordingly, Mortgage Loans
underwritten pursuant to these guidelines are likely to experience rates of
delinquency and foreclosure that are higher, and may be substantially higher,
than mortgage loans originated in accordance with FNMA or FHLMC underwriting
guidelines.

QUALIFICATIONS OF UNAFFILIATED SELLERS

     Unless otherwise specified in the related Prospectus Supplement, each
Unaffiliated Seller will be required to satisfy the qualifications set forth
herein. Each Unaffiliated Seller must be an institution experienced in
originating and servicing the types of residential loans sold by it for
inclusion in a Trust Fund in accordance with accepted practices and prudent
guidelines, and must maintain satisfactory

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<PAGE>

facilities to originate and service those loans. Unless otherwise specified in
the related Prospectus Supplement, each Unaffiliated Seller must be a
seller/servicer approved by either FNMA or FHLMC, and must be a mortgagee
approved by the FHA or an institution the deposit accounts in which are insured
by the Bank Insurance Fund ('BIF') or Savings Association Insurance Fund
('SAIF') of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (the 'FDIC'). In addition,
each Unaffiliated Seller must satisfy certain criteria as to financial stability
evaluated on a case by case basis by the Depositor.

REPRESENTATIONS BY UNAFFILIATED SELLERS; REPURCHASES

     Each Unaffiliated Seller will have made representations and warranties in
respect of the Residential Loans sold by such Unaffiliated Seller. Unless
otherwise provided in the related Prospectus Supplement, such representations
and warranties include, among other things: (i) that title insurance (or in the
case of Residential Properties located in areas where such policies are
generally not available, an attorney's certificate of title) and any FHA
insurance, VA guarantee and any required hazard and primary credit insurance was
effective at the origination of each Residential Loan, and that each policy (or
certificate of title) remained in effect on the date of purchase of the
Residential Loan from the Unaffiliated Seller by or on behalf of the Depositor;
(ii) that the Unaffiliated Seller had good title to each such Residential Loan
and such Residential Loan was subject to no offsets, defenses, counterclaims or
rights of rescission except to the extent that any buydown agreement described
herein may forgive certain indebtedness of a borrower; (iii) if the Trust Fund
includes Mortgage Loans, that each Mortgage constituted a valid lien on the
Mortgaged Property (subject only to permissible title insurance exceptions and
Senior Liens, if any); (iv) if the Trust Fund includes Manufactured Housing
Contracts, each Manufactured Housing Contract creates a valid, subsisting and
enforceable first priority security interest in the Manufactured Home covered
thereby; (v) that the Residential Property was free from damage and was in good
repair; (vi) that there were no delinquent tax or assessment liens against the
Residential Property; (vii) that each Residential Loan was current as to all
required payments; and (viii) that each Residential Loan was made in compliance
with, and is enforceable under, all applicable local, state and federal laws and
regulations in all material respects.

     In certain cases, the representations and warranties of an Unaffiliated
Seller in respect of a Residential Loan may have been made as of the date on
which such Unaffiliated Seller sold the Residential Loan to the Depositor or its
affiliate. A substantial period of time may have elapsed between such date and
the date of initial issuance of the Series of Securities evidencing an interest
in such Residential Loan. Since the representations and warranties of an
Unaffiliated Seller do not address events that may occur following the sale of a
Residential Loan by such Unaffiliated Seller, its repurchase obligation
described below will not arise if the relevant event that would otherwise have
given rise to such an obligation occurs after the date of such sale to or on
behalf of the Depositor.

     The only representations and warranties, if any, to be made for the benefit
of holders of Securities in respect of any Residential Loan relating to the
period commencing on the date of sale of such Residential Loan to the Depositor
or its affiliates will be certain limited representations of the Depositor and
of the Master Servicer described below under 'Description of the Securities --
Assignment of Trust Fund Assets.' If the Master Servicer is also an Unaffiliated
Seller of Residential Loans with respect to a particular Series, such
representations will be in addition to the representations and warranties made
by the Master Servicer in its capacity as an Unaffiliated Seller.

     The Master Servicer will promptly notify the relevant Unaffiliated Seller
of any breach of any representation or warranty made by it in respect of a
Residential Loan which materially and adversely affects the interests of the
Securityholders in such Residential Loan. If such Unaffiliated Seller cannot
cure such breach within 60 days (or such other time period set forth in the
related Prospectus Supplement) from the date on which the Unaffiliated Seller
was notified of such breach, then such Unaffiliated Seller will be obligated to
repurchase such Residential Loan from the Trustee within 90 days (or such other
time period set forth in the related Prospectus Supplement) from the date on
which the Unaffiliated Seller was notified of such breach, at the Purchase Price
therefor. As to any Residential Loan, unless otherwise specified in the related
Prospectus Supplement, the 'Purchase Price' is equal to the sum of (i) the
unpaid principal balance thereof, (ii) unpaid accrued interest on the Stated
Principal Balance (as defined below) from the date as to which interest was last
paid by the borrower to the end

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<PAGE>

of the calendar month in which the purchase is to occur at a rate equal to the
Net Mortgage Rate minus the rate at which the Sub-Servicer's servicing fee is
calculated if the Sub-Servicer is the purchaser, (iii) any unpaid servicing fees
and certain unreimbursed servicing expenses payable or reimbursable to the
Master Servicer with respect to such Residential Loan, (iv) any unpaid Retained
Interest with respect to such Residential Loan, (v) any Realized Losses incurred
with respect to such Residential Loan, as described below under 'Description of
the Certificates -- Subordination,' and (vi) if applicable, any expenses
reasonably incurred or to be incurred by the Master Servicer or the Trustee in
respect of the breach or defect giving rise to a purchase obligation. If so
provided in the related Prospectus Supplement, an Unaffiliated Seller, rather
than repurchase a Residential Loan as to which a breach has occurred, will have
the option, within a specified period after initial issuance of the related
Series of Securities, to cause the removal of such Residential Loan from the
Trust Fund and substitute in its place one or more other Residential Loans, in
accordance with the standards described in the related Prospectus Supplement.
The Master Servicer or the Trustee, unless otherwise specified in the related
Prospectus Supplement, will be required under the applicable Servicing Agreement
to use its best efforts to enforce such obligations of the Unaffiliated Seller
for the benefit of the Trustee and the holders of the Securities, following the
practices it would employ in its good faith business judgment were it the owner
of such Residential Loan. Unless otherwise specified in the related Prospectus
Supplement, this repurchase or substitution obligation will constitute the sole
remedy available to holders of Securities or the Trustee for a breach of
representation by an Unaffiliated Seller. For each Series with respect to which
a REMIC election is to be made, unless the related Prospectus Supplement
provides otherwise, the Master Servicer will be obligated to pay any prohibited
transaction tax which may arise in connection with such repurchase or
substitution. See 'Description of the Securities -- General.'

     The 'Stated Principal Balance' of any Mortgage Loan as of any date of
determination is equal to the principal balance thereof as of the Cut-off Date,
after application of all scheduled principal payments due on or before the
Cut-off Date, whether or not received, reduced by all amounts, including
advances by the Master Servicer, 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 (as hereinafter defined) thereon has been
(or, if it had not been covered by any form of credit support, would have been)
allocated to one or more class of Securities on or before the date of
determination.

     Neither the Depositor nor the Master Servicer (unless the Master Servicer
is an Unaffiliated Seller) will be obligated to purchase or substitute for a
Residential Loan if an Unaffiliated Seller defaults on its obligation to do so,
and no assurance can be given that Unaffiliated Sellers will carry out such
obligations with respect to Residential Loans. To the extent that a breach of
the representations and warranties of an Unaffiliated Seller also constitutes a
breach of a representation made by the Depositor, the Depositor may have a
repurchase or substitution obligation as described below under 'Description of
the Securities -- Assignment of Trust Fund Assets.' Any Residential Loan that is
not repurchased or substituted for shall remain in the related Trust Fund and
any losses thereon shall be borne by Securityholders, to the extent not covered
by credit enhancement.

SUB-SERVICING

     Any Master Servicer may delegate its servicing obligations in respect of a
Residential Loan to Sub-Servicers pursuant to a sub-servicing agreement (a
'Sub-Servicing Agreement'), which will be consistent with the terms of the
Servicing Agreement relating to the Trust Fund that includes such Residential
Loan. Although each Sub-Servicing Agreement will be a contract solely between
the Master Servicer and the Sub-Servicer, the Pooling and Servicing Agreement
pursuant to which a Series of Securities is issued will provide that, if for any
reason the Master Servicer for such Series of Securities is no longer acting in
such capacity, the Trustee or any successor Master Servicer must recognize the
Sub-Servicer's rights and obligations under such Sub-Servicing Agreement.

     With the approval of the Master Servicer, a Sub-Servicer may delegate its
servicing obligations to third-party servicers, but such Sub-Servicer will
remain primarily liable for such obligations under the related Sub-Servicing
Agreement. Each Sub-Servicer will be required to perform the customary functions
of a servicer of residential loans, including collecting payments from borrowers
and remitting

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<PAGE>

such collections to the Master Servicer; maintaining FHA insurance, any VA
guarantee, and primary hazard and credit insurance as described herein and in
any related Prospectus Supplement, and filing and settling claims thereunder,
subject in certain cases to the right of the Master Servicer to approve in
advance any such settlement; maintaining escrow or impoundment accounts of
borrowers for payment of taxes, insurance and other items required to be paid by
the borrower pursuant to the Residential Loan; processing assumptions or
substitutions, although, unless otherwise specified in the related Prospectus
Supplement, the Master Servicer generally is required to exercise due-on-sale
and due-on-encumbrance clauses to the extent such exercise is permitted by law
and would not adversely affect insurance coverage; attempting to cure
delinquencies; effecting foreclosures or repossessions; inspecting and managing
Residential Properties under certain circumstances; and maintaining accounting
records relating to the Residential Loans. The Master Servicer will be
responsible for filing and settling claims in respect of Residential Loans in a
particular Trust Fund under any applicable pool insurance policy, bankruptcy
bond, special hazard insurance policy or letter of credit. See 'Description of
Credit Support.' To the extent specified in the related Prospectus Supplement, a
Sub-Servicer will also be obligated to make advances in respect of delinquent
installments of principal and interest on Residential Loans, as described more
fully under 'Description of the Securities -- Payments on Residential Loans' and
in respect of certain taxes and insurance premiums not paid on a timely basis by
borrowers.

     As compensation for its servicing duties, each Sub-Servicer will be
entitled to a monthly servicing fee (to the extent the related Residential Loan
payment has been collected) in the amount set forth in the related Prospectus
Supplement. Each Sub-Servicer is also entitled to collect and retain, as part of
its servicing compensation late charges provided in the Mortgage Note,
Cooperative Note or Manufactured Housing Contract or related instruments. If so
provided in the related Prospectus Supplement, a Sub-Servicer may be entitled to
any prepayment penalties and a Retained Interest in certain Residential Loans.
Each Sub-Servicer will be reimbursed by the Master Servicer for certain
expenditures which it makes, generally to the same extent the Master Servicer
would be reimbursed under a Pooling and Servicing Agreement. See 'Description of
the Securities -- Retained Interest, Administration Compensation and Payment of
Expenses.'

     Each Sub-Servicer may be required to agree to indemnify the Master Servicer
for any liability or obligation sustained by the Master Servicer in connection
with any act or failure to act by the Sub-Servicer in its servicing capacity.
Unless otherwise provided in the related Prospectus Supplement, each
Sub-Servicer is required to maintain a fidelity bond and an errors and omissions
policy with respect to its officers, employees and other persons acting on its
behalf or on behalf of the Master Servicer.

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<PAGE>

                         DESCRIPTION OF THE SECURITIES

     The Certificates of each Series evidencing interests in a Trust Fund
including Residential Loans will be issued pursuant to a separate Pooling and
Servicing Agreement among the Depositor, the Master Servicer and the Trustee and
the Securities of each Series evidencing interests in a Trust Fund including
Agency Securities will be issued pursuant to a separate Trust Agreement ('Trust
Agreement') between the Depositor and the Trustee. Each Series of Notes (or, in
certain instances, two or more Series of Notes) will be issued pursuant to an
Indenture between the related Issuer and the Trustee. The related Trust Fund
will be created pursuant to an Owner Trust Agreement (the 'Owner Trust
Agreement'; an Owner Trust Agreement, Pooling and Servicing Agreement, Servicing
Agreement, Indenture, an 'Agreement') between the Depositor and the Owner
Trustee. As to each Series of Notes where the Issuer is an Owner Trust, the
ownership of the Trust Fund will be evidenced by certificates (the 'Equity
Certificates') issued under the Owner Trust Agreement, which, unless otherwise
specified in the Prospectus Supplement, are not offered thereby. Forms of each
of the Agreements are filed as exhibits to the Registration Statement of which
this Prospectus is a part. The Agreement relating to each Series of Securities
will be filed as an exhibit to a report on Form 8-K to be filed with the
Commission within fifteen days after the initial issuance of such Securities and
a copy thereof will be available for inspection at the corporate trust office of
the Trustee specified in the related Prospectus Supplement (the 'Corporate Trust
Office'). The following summaries describe certain provisions of the Agreements.
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 the
Agreement for each Trust Fund and the related Prospectus Supplement.

GENERAL

     The Certificates of each Series (including any class of Certificates not
offered hereby) will be issued in fully registered form only and will represent
the entire beneficial ownership interest in the Trust Fund created pursuant to
the related Agreement. Unless otherwise specified in the related Prospectus
Supplement, each Series of Notes covered by a particular Indenture will evidence
indebtedness of a separate Trust Fund created pursuant to the related Owner
Trust Agreement. As to each Series, the Securities will be issued in authorized
denominations evidencing a portion of all of the Securities of such Series (a
'Percentage Interest'), as set forth in the related Prospectus Supplement. Each
Trust Fund will consist of (i) such Residential Loans (including any Mortgage
Securities) or Agency Securities (exclusive of any portion of interest payments
relating thereto retained by the Depositor, any of its affiliates or its
predecessor in interest (the 'Retained Interest') and exclusive of principal and
interest due on or before the Cut-off Date) as from time to time are subject to
the Agreement; (ii) such funds or assets as from time to time are deposited in
the Trust Account described below and any other account held for the benefit of
Securityholders ('Securityholders'); (iii) with respect to Trust Funds that
include Residential Loans, (a) property acquired by foreclosure or deed in lieu
of foreclosure of Mortgage Loans on behalf of the Securityholders, or, in the
case of Manufactured Housing Contracts that are not Land Contracts, by
repossession; (b) any Primary Credit Insurance Policies and Primary Hazard
Insurance Policies (as defined under 'Description of Primary Insurance
Coverage'); (c) any combination of a Pool Insurance Policy, a Bankruptcy Bond, a
special hazard insurance policy or other type of credit support (as defined
under 'Description of Credit Support'); and (d) the rights of the Trustee to any
cash advance reserve fund or surety bond as described under 'Advances'; (iv) if
specified in the related Prospectus Supplement, the Reserve Fund and (v) any
other assets as described in the related Prospectus Supplement. The Securities
will be transferable and exchangeable for Securities of the same class and
Series in authorized denominations at the Corporate Trust Office. No service
charge will be made for any registration of exchange or transfer of Securities
on the Certificate Register ('Certificate Register') maintained by the
Certificate Registrar ('Certificate Registrar'), but the Depositor may require
payment of a sum sufficient to cover any tax or other governmental charge.

     Each Series of Securities may consist of either (i) a single class of
Securities; (ii) two or more classes of Securities, one or more classes of which
('Senior Securities') will be senior in right of payment to one or more of the
other classes ('Subordinate Securities') to the extent described in the related
Prospectus Supplement (any such Series, a 'Senior/Subordinate Series'); (iii)
two or more

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<PAGE>

classes of Securities, one or more classes of 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 ('Strip Securities'); (iv) two or more classes of
Securities that differ as to the timing, sequential order or amount of
distributions of principal or interest or both, which may include one or more
classes of Securities ('Accrual Securities') with respect to which accrued
interest will not be distributed but rather will be added to the Security
Principal Balance thereof on each Distribution Date for the period described in
the related Prospectus Supplement; or (v) other types of classes of Securities,
as described in the related Prospectus Supplement. Credit support for each
Series of Securities evidencing interests in a Trust Fund that includes
Residential Loans will be provided by a Pool Insurance Policy, a special hazard
insurance policy, a Bankruptcy Bond, a letter of credit, a Reserve Fund or a
similar credit support instrument as described under 'Description of Credit
Support,' by the subordination of one or more classes of Securities as described
under 'Description of the Securities -- Subordination,' or by any combination of
the foregoing.

     Each class of Securities (other than certain Strip Securities) will have a
Security Principal Balance and, unless otherwise provided in the related
Prospectus Supplement, will be entitled to payments of interest thereon based on
a specified Security Interest Rate. See 'Principal and Interest on the
Securities' below. The Security Interest Rates of the various classes of
Securities of each Series may differ, and as to some classes may be in excess of
the lowest Net Interest Rate in a Trust Fund; however, the weighted average of
the Security Interest Rates on the Securities based on their respective Security
Principal Balances will not exceed the lowest Net Interest Rate. The specific
percentage ownership interests of each class of Securities and the minimum
denomination per Security will be set forth in the related Prospectus
Supplement. As to any Mortgage Loan, the 'Net Interest Rate' is equal to the
Interest Rate minus the sum of the Administration Fee Rate and the rate at which
the Retained Interest, if any is calculated (the 'Retained Interest Rate').

     If so provided in the related Prospectus Supplement relating to a Series of
Certificates, one or more elections may be made to treat the related Trust Fund,
or designated portions thereof, as a 'real estate mortgage investment conduit'
(a 'REMIC') as defined in the Code. If such an election is made with respect to
a Series, one of the classes will be designated as evidencing all 'residual
interests' in the related REMIC as defined under the Code. All other classes of
Securities in such a Series will constitute 'regular interests' in the related
REMIC as defined in the Code. As to each Series, all of the Securities of each
class offered hereby will be rated in one of the four highest rating categories
by one or more Rating Agencies. As to each Series of Certificates as to which a
REMIC election is to be made, the Trustee or the Master Servicer, if any, will
be obligated to take all actions required in order to comply with applicable
laws and regulations and, unless otherwise specified in the related Prospectus
Supplement, will be obligated to pay any prohibited transaction taxes or
contribution taxes arising out of a breach of its obligations with respect to
such compliance without any right of reimbursement therefor from the Trust Fund
or from any Certificateholder. Unless otherwise provided in the related
Prospectus Supplement, a prohibited transaction tax or contribution tax
resulting from any other cause will be charged against the related Trust Fund,
resulting in a reduction in amounts otherwise distributable to
Certificateholders. See 'Certain Federal Income Tax
Consequences -- REMICs -- Taxes that may be Imposed on the REMIC
Pool -- Prohibited Transactions.'

ASSIGNMENT OF TRUST FUND ASSETS

     At the time of issuance of each Series of Securities, the Depositor will
cause the assets comprising the related Trust Fund or Mortgage Securities being
included in the related Trust Fund to be assigned to the Trustee, together with
all principal and interest received by or on behalf of the Depositor with
respect to the Trust Fund Assets after the applicable Cut-off Date, other than
principal and interest due on or before the applicable Cut-off Date and other
than any Retained Interest. The Residential Loan or Agency Security documents
described below will be delivered to the Trustee (or to the custodian
hereinafter referred to). The Trustee will, concurrently with such assignment,
deliver the Securities to the Depositor in exchange for the Trust Fund Assets.
Each Trust Fund Asset will be identified in a schedule appearing as an exhibit
to the related Agreement. Such schedule will include, among other things,
information as to the outstanding principal balance of each Trust Fund Asset
after application of

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<PAGE>

payments due on or before the Cut-off Date, the maturity of the Mortgage Note,
Cooperative Note, Manufactured Housing Contract or Agency Securities, the Net
Interest Rate, any Retained Interest, with respect to a Series of Securities
evidencing interests in a Trust Fund including Agency Securities, the
pass-through rate on the Agency Securities, and with respect to a Series of
Securities evidencing interests in Residential Loans, information respecting the
Interest Rate, the current scheduled payment of principal and interest, the
original Loan-to-Value Ratio and certain other information.

MORTGAGE LOANS AND MULTIFAMILY LOANS

     The Depositor will, as to each Mortgage Loan (other than Mortgage Loans
underlying any Mortgage Securities) and Multifamily Loan, deliver or cause to be
delivered to the Trustee (or to the custodian) the mortgage file for each
Mortgage Loan, containing legal documents relating to such Mortgage Loan,
including the Mortgage Note endorsed without recourse to the order of the
Trustee, the Mortgage with evidence of recording indicated thereon (except for
any Mortgage not returned from the public recording office, in which case the
Depositor will deliver or cause to be delivered a copy of such Mortgage
certified by the related Unaffiliated Seller that it is a true and complete copy
of the original of such Mortgage submitted for recording) and an assignment in
recordable form of the Mortgage to the Trustee. Unless otherwise provided in the
related Prospectus Supplement, the Depositor will promptly cause the assignment
of each related Mortgage Loan and Multifamily Loan to be recorded in the
appropriate public office for real property records, except in states where, in
the opinion of counsel acceptable to the Trustee, such recording is not required
to protect the Trustee's interest in the Mortgage Loan or Multifamily Loan
against the claim of any subsequent transferee or any successor to or creditor
of the Depositor or the originator of such Mortgage Loan.

HOME EQUITY LOANS AND HOME IMPROVEMENT CONTRACTS

     Unless otherwise provided in the related Prospectus Supplement, the
Depositor will, as to each Home Equity Loan and Home Improvement Contract,
deliver or cause to be delivered to the Trustee (or to the custodian) the note
endorsed to the order of the Trustee, with respect to Home Equity Loans and
secured Home Improvement Contracts, the Mortgage with evidence of recording
indicated thereon (except for any Mortgage not returned from the public
recording office, in which case the Depositor will deliver or cause to be
delivered a copy of such Mortgage certified by the related Unaffiliated Seller
that it is a true and complete copy of the original of such Mortgage submitted
for recording) and, with respect to Home Equity Loans and secured Home
Improvement Contracts, an assignment in recordable form of the Mortgage to the
Trustee. Unless otherwise provided in the related Prospectus Supplement, the
Depositor will promptly cause the assignment of each related Home Equity Loan
and secured Home Improvement Contract to be recorded in the appropriate public
office for real property records, except in states where, in the opinion of
counsel acceptable to the Trustee, such recording is not required to protect the
Trustee's interest in the Home Equity Loan and Home Improvement Contract against
the claim of any subsequent transferee or any successor to or creditor of the
Depositor or the originator of such Home Equity Loan or Home Improvement
Contract. With respect to unsecured Home Improvement Contracts, the Depositor or
Unaffiliated Seller, under the related Agreement, will transfer physical
possession of the Home Improvement Contracts to the Trustee or a designated
custodian or, in the case of an Unaffiliated Seller, may retain possession of
the Home Improvement Contracts as custodian for the Trustee. In addition, the
Depositor will cause to be made, an appropriate filing of a UCC-1 financing
statement in the appropriate states to give notice of the Trustee's ownership of
the Home Improvement Contracts. Unless otherwise specified in the related
Prospectus Supplement, the Home Improvement Contracts will not be stamped or
otherwise marked to reflect their assignment from the Unaffiliated Seller or the
Depositor, as the case may be, 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 such assignment, the Trustee's interest in
the contracts could be defeated.

COOPERATIVE LOANS

     The Depositor will, as to each Cooperative Loan, deliver or cause to be
delivered to the Trustee (or to the custodian) the related Cooperative Note, the
original security agreement, the proprietary lease or

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<PAGE>

occupancy agreement, the related stock certificate and related stock powers
endorsed in blank, and a copy of the original filed financing statement together
with an assignment thereof to the Trustee in a form sufficient for filing. The
Depositor will promptly cause the assignment and financing statement of each
related Cooperative Loan to be filed in the appropriate public office, except in
states where in the opinion of counsel acceptable to the Trustee, such filing is
not required to protect the Trustee's interest in the Cooperative Loan against
the claim of any subsequent transferee or any successor to or creditor of the
Depositor or the originator of such Cooperative Loan.

MANUFACTURED HOUSING CONTRACTS

     Unless otherwise provided in the related Prospectus Supplement, the
Depositor will, as to each Manufactured Housing Contract, deliver or cause to be
delivered to the Trustee (or to the custodian) the original Manufactured Housing
Contract and copies of documents and instruments related to each Manufactured
Housing Contract and the security interest in the Manufactured Home securing
each Manufactured Housing Contract.

AGENCY SECURITIES

     Agency Securities will be registered in the name of the Trustee or its
nominee on the books of the issuer or guarantor or its agent or, in the case of
Agency Securities issued only in book-entry form, through the Federal Reserve
System, in accordance with the procedures established by the issuer or guarantor
for registration of such certificates with a member of the Federal Reserve
System, and distributions on such securities to which the Trust Fund is entitled
will be made directly to the Trustee.

REVIEW OF RESIDENTIAL LOANS

     The Trustee (or the custodian) will review the Residential Loan documents
within 45 days (or such other period specified in the Prospectus Supplement)
after receipt thereof, and the Trustee (or such custodian) will hold such
documents in trust for the benefit of the Securityholders. Unless otherwise
specified in the related Prospectus Supplement, if any such document is found to
be missing or defective in any material respect, the Trustee (or such custodian)
shall immediately notify the Master Servicer and the Depositor, and the Master
Servicer shall immediately notify the applicable Unaffiliated Seller. If the
Unaffiliated Seller cannot cure the omission or defect within 90 days (or such
other period specified in the Prospectus Supplement) after receipt of such
notice, the Unaffiliated Seller will be obligated to repurchase the related
Residential Loan from the Trustee at the Purchase Price or, in certain cases,
substitute for such Residential Loan. There can be no assurance that an
Unaffiliated Seller will fulfill this repurchase or substitution obligation.
Although the Master Servicer or Trustee is obligated to enforce such obligation
to the extent described above under 'Residential Loan Program -- Representations
by Unaffiliated Sellers; Repurchases', neither the Master Servicer nor the
Depositor will be obligated to repurchase or substitute for such Residential
Loan if the Unaffiliated Seller defaults on its obligation. Unless otherwise
specified in the related Prospectus Supplement, this repurchase or substitution
obligation, if applicable, constitutes the sole remedy available to the
Securityholders or the Trustee for omission of, or a material defect in, a
constituent document.

     The Trustee will be authorized to appoint a custodian pursuant to a
custodial agreement to maintain possession of and review the documents relating
to the Residential Loans as agent of the Trustee.

     Unless otherwise provided in the related Prospectus Supplement, with
respect to Residential Loans, except as to Mortgage Loans underlying any
Mortgage Securities, in a Trust Fund, the Depositor will make representations
and warranties as to the types and geographical distribution of such Residential
Loans and as to the accuracy in all material respects of certain identifying
information furnished to the Trustee in respect of each such Residential Loan
(e.g., original Loan-to-Value Ratio, principal balance as of the Cut-off Date,
Interest Rate and maturity). In addition, unless otherwise provided in the
related Prospectus Supplement, the Depositor will represent and warrant that, as
of the Cut-off Date for the related Series of Securities, no Residential Loan
was currently more than 30 days delinquent as to payment of principal and
interest and no Residential Loan was 30 days or more

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<PAGE>

delinquent more than once during the previous 12 months. Upon a breach of any
such representation of the Depositor that materially and adversely affects the
interests of the Securityholders in a Residential Loan, the Depositor will be
obligated either to cure the breach in all material respects, repurchase the
Residential Loan at the Purchase Price or, if provided in the related Prospectus
Supplement, substitute for such Residential Loan.

     With respect to any Series of Securities evidencing interests in a Trust
Fund including Residential Loans as to which credit support is provided by means
of a pool insurance policy, in addition to making the representations and
warranties described above, the Depositor or the Unaffiliated Seller will, to
the extent required by the Rating Agency or Agencies, represent and warrant to
the Trustee for such Series of Securities that no action, inaction or event has
occurred and no state of facts exists or has existed on or prior to the date of
the initial issuance of the Securities that has resulted or will result in the
exclusion from, denial of or defense to coverage under any applicable primary
credit insurance policy, pool insurance policy, special hazard insurance policy
or bankruptcy bond, irrespective of the cause of such failure of coverage but
excluding any failure of an insurer to pay by reason of the insurer's own breach
of its insurance policy or its financial inability to pay (such representation
being referred to herein as the 'insurability representation'). See 'Description
of Primary Insurance Coverage' and 'Description of Credit Support' herein and in
the related Prospectus Supplement for information regarding the extent of
coverage under the aforementioned insurance policies. As described in the
related Prospectus Supplement, upon a breach of the insurability representation
that materially and adversely affects the interests of the Securityholders in a
Residential Loan, the Depositor or the Unaffiliated Seller may be obligated
either to cure the breach in all material respects or to purchase such
Residential Loan at the Purchase Price, subject to the limitations specified in
the related Prospectus Supplement. The related Prospectus Supplement may provide
that the performance of the Depositor of its obligation to repurchase
Residential Loans following a breach of its insurability representation will be
ensured in the manner specified therein.

     The related Prospectus Supplement may provide that, the obligation to
repurchase or, other than with respect to the insurability representation, if
applicable, to substitute Residential Loans as described above constitutes the
sole remedy available to the Securityholders or the Trustee for any breach of
the Depositor's representations.

     The Master Servicer will make certain representations and warranties
regarding its authority to enter into, and its ability to perform its
obligations under, the related Pooling and Servicing Agreement. Upon the
occurrence of an Event of Default under the related Pooling and Servicing
Agreement for which the Master Servicer is responsible, the Master Servicer will
be obligated to remedy such Event of Default within the time period set forth in
the related Pooling and Servicing Agreement or be subject to termination
pursuant thereto. See 'Description of the Securities -- Events of Default'
herein.

DEPOSITS TO THE TRUST ACCOUNT

     The Master Servicer or the Trustee shall, as to each Trust Fund, establish
and maintain or cause to be established and maintained a separate Trust Account
or Trust Accounts for the collection of payments on the related Trust Fund
Assets, which must either be (i) maintained with a federal or state chartered
depository institution, and in a manner, satisfactory to each Rating Agency
rating the Securities of such Series at the time any amounts are held on deposit
therein or (ii) maintained with a federal or state chartered depository
institution, the deposits in which are insured by the BIF or the SAIF (to the
limits established by the FDIC) and any uninsured deposits in which are
otherwise secured such that the Securityholders have a claim with respect to the
funds in the Trust Account or a perfected first priority security interest
against any collateral securing such funds that is superior to the claims of any
other depositors or general creditors of the depository institution with which
the Trust Account is maintained. The collateral eligible to secure amounts in
the Trust Account is limited to United States government securities and other
high quality investments ('Permitted Instruments'). A Trust Account may be
maintained as an interest bearing or non-interest bearing account, or the funds
held therein may be invested pending the distribution on each succeeding
Distribution Date in Permitted Instruments. Unless otherwise provided in the
related Prospectus Supplement, the Trustee or the Master Servicer will be
entitled to receive any such interest or other income earned on funds in the
Trust Account as

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<PAGE>

additional compensation for administration of the Trust Fund Assets. In respect
of any Series of Securities having Distribution Dates occurring less frequently
than monthly, the Master Servicer may obtain from an obligor named in the
related Prospectus Supplement a guaranteed investment contract to assure a
specified rate of return on funds held in the Trust Account. If permitted by
each Rating Agency rating the Securities of such Series, a Trust Account may
contain funds relating to more than one Series of Securities.

     In the event that a Sub-Servicer is servicing one or more Residential Loans
in a Trust Fund, the Sub-Servicer will establish and maintain a separate account
or accounts (a 'Sub-Servicing Account'), which may be interest bearing or
non-interest bearing and which shall comply with the standards for Trust
Accounts set forth above, and which is otherwise acceptable to the Master
Servicer. The Sub-Servicer is required to credit to the related Sub-Servicing
Account on a daily basis the amount of all proceeds of Residential Loans
received by the Sub-Servicer, less its servicing compensation, its Retained
Interest, if any, and unreimbursed expenses and advances to which it is entitled
pursuant to the related Sub-Servicing Agreement. As specified in the related
Prospectus Supplement, the Sub-Servicer shall remit to the Master Servicer all
funds held in the Sub-Servicing Account with respect to each Residential Loan
and any amount required to be advanced pursuant to the related Sub-Servicing
Agreement on a monthly basis.

PRE-FUNDING ACCOUNT

     If so provided in the related Prospectus Supplement, the Master Servicer
will establish and maintain a Pre-Funding Account, in the name of the related
Trustee on behalf of the related Securityholders, into which the Depositor will
deposit the Pre-Funded Amount on the related Closing Date. The Pre-Funded Amount
will be used by the related Trustee to purchase Subsequent Loans from the
Depositor from time to time during the Funding Period. The Funding Period, if
any, for a Trust Fund will begin on the related Closing Date and will end on the
date specified in the related Prospectus Supplement, which in no event will be
later than the date that is three months after the Closing Date. Any amounts
remaining in the Pre-Funding Account at the end of the Funding Period will be
distributed to the related Securityholders in the manner and priority specified
in the related Prospectus Supplement, as a prepayment of principal of the
related Securities.

PAYMENTS ON RESIDENTIAL LOANS

     The Master Servicer will deposit or cause to be deposited in the Trust
Account for each Trust Fund including Residential Loans as and when received
(or, in the case of Advances on or before the applicable Distribution Date),
unless otherwise provided in the related Agreement, the following payments and
collections received or made by or on behalf of the Master Servicer subsequent
to the Cut-off Date (unless otherwise specified in the related Prospectus
Supplement, other than payments due on or before the Cut-off Date and exclusive
of any amounts representing a Retained Interest):

          (i) all payments on account of principal, including principal
     prepayments, on the Residential Loans;

          (ii) all payments on account of interest on the Residential Loans,
     exclusive of any portion thereof representing interest in excess of the Net
     Interest Rate (unless such excess amount is required to be deposited
     pursuant to the related Agreement) and, if provided in the related
     Prospectus Supplement, prepayment penalties;

          (iii) all proceeds of any Primary Hazard Insurance Policies and any
     special hazard insurance policy (to the extent such proceeds are not
     applied to the restoration of the property or released to the borrower in
     accordance with the Master Servicer's normal servicing procedures), any
     Primary Credit Insurance Policy, any FHA Insurance, VA Guarantee, any
     Bankruptcy Bond and any Pool Insurance Policy (as hereinafter defined)
     (collectively, 'Insurance Proceeds'), other than proceeds that represent
     reimbursement of the Master Servicer's costs and expenses incurred in
     connection with presenting claims under the related insurance policies, and
     all other cash amounts received, by foreclosure, eminent domain,
     condemnation or otherwise, in connection with the liquidation of defaulted
     Residential Loans included in the related Trust Fund ('Liquidation
     Proceeds'), together

                                       46



<PAGE>

     with the net proceeds on a monthly basis with respect to any properties
     acquired for the benefit of Securityholders by deed in lieu of foreclosure
     or repossession;

          (iv) any Advances made as described below under 'Advances';

          (v) all amounts required to be transferred to the Trust Account from a
     Reserve Fund, if any, as described below under 'Subordination';

          (vi) all proceeds of any Residential Loan or property in respect
     thereof purchased by the Master Servicer, the Depositor, any Sub-Servicer
     or any Unaffiliated Seller as described under 'Residential Loan
     Program -- Representations by Unaffiliated Sellers; Repurchases' and
     'Description of the Certificates -- Assignment of Trust Fund Assets' above,
     exclusive of the Retained Interest, if any, in respect of such Residential
     Loan, and all proceeds of any Residential Loan repurchased as described
     under 'Termination' below;

          (vii) all payments required to be deposited in the Trust Account with
     respect to any deductible clause in any blanket insurance policy described
     under 'Description of Primary Insurance Coverage -- Primary Hazard
     Insurance Policies';

          (viii) any amount required to be deposited by the Trustee or the
     Master Servicer in connection with losses realized on investments of funds
     held in the Trust Account;

          (ix) any amounts required to be transferred to the Trust Account
     pursuant to any guaranteed investment contract;

          (x) any distributions received on any Mortgage Securities included in
     the related Trust Fund; and

          (xi) any other amount required to be deposited in the Trust Account
     pursuant to the Agreement.

PAYMENTS ON AGENCY SECURITIES

     The Agency Securities included in a Trust Fund will be registered in the
name of the Trustee so that all distributions thereon will be made directly to
the Trustee. The Trustee will deposit or cause to be deposited into the Trust
Account for each Trust Fund including Agency Securities as and when received,
unless otherwise provided in the related Trust Agreement, all distributions
received by the Trustee with respect to the related Agency Securities (other
than payments due on or before the Cut-off Date and exclusive of any trust
administration fee and amounts representing the Retained Interest, if any).

DISTRIBUTIONS

     Distributions of principal and interest on the Securities of each Series
will be made by or on behalf of the Trustee or the Master Servicer on the dates
(each, a 'Distribution Date') and at the intervals (which may be monthly,
quarterly, semi-annual or other intervals) specified in the related Prospectus
Supplement, to the persons in whose names the Securities are registered at the
close of business on the record date ('Record Date') specified in the Prospectus
Supplement. The amount of each distribution will be determined as of the close
of business on each Determination Date specified in the related Prospectus
Supplement. Distributions will be made either by wire transfer in immediately
available funds to the account of a Securityholder at a bank or other entity
having appropriate facilities therefor, if such Securityholder has so notified
the Trustee or the Master Servicer and holds Securities in any requisite amount
specified in the related Prospectus Supplement, or by check mailed to the
address of the person entitled thereto as it appears on the Security Register;
provided, however, that the final distribution in retirement of the Securities
will be made only upon presentation and surrender of the Securities at the
office or agency of the Security Registrar specified in the notice to
Securityholders of such final distribution. Unless otherwise specified in the
Prospectus Supplement, all distributions made to the holders of Securities of
any Series on each Distribution Date will be made on a pro rata basis among the
Securityholders of record on the next preceding Record Date (other than in
respect of the final distribution), based on the aggregate Percentage Interest
represented by their respective Securities.

                                       47



<PAGE>

FINAL DISTRIBUTION DATE

     With respect to any Series consisting of classes having sequential
priorities for distributions of principal, the 'Final Distribution Date' for
each such class of Securities is the latest Distribution Date on which the
Security Principal Balance thereof is expected to be reduced to zero, based on
certain assumptions, including the assumption that no prepayments or defaults
occur with respect to the related Trust Fund Assets, as further or as otherwise
specified in the related Prospectus Supplement. Since the rate of distribution
of principal of any such class of Securities will depend upon, among other
things, the rate of payment (including prepayments) of the principal of the
Trust Fund Assets, the actual last Distribution Date for any class of Securities
could occur significantly earlier than its Final Distribution Date. The rate of
payments on the Trust Fund Assets for any Series of Securities will depend upon
their particular characteristics, as well as on the prevailing level of interest
rates from time to time and other economic factors, and no assurance can be
given as to the actual prepayment experience of the Trust Fund Assets. See
'Maturity and Prepayment Considerations.' In addition, substantial losses on the
Trust Fund Assets in a given period, even though within the limits of the
protection afforded by the instruments described under 'Description of Credit
Support,' or by the Subordinate Securities in the case of a Senior/Subordinate
Series, may cause the actual last Distribution Date of certain classes of
Securities to occur after their Final Distribution Date.

SPECIAL DISTRIBUTIONS

     With respect to any Series of Securities with Distribution Dates occurring
at intervals less frequently than monthly, the Securities may be subject to
special distributions under the circumstances and in the manner described below
if and to the extent provided in the related Prospectus Supplement. If
applicable, the Master Servicer will be required to make or cause to be made
special distributions allocable to principal and interest on Securities of a
Series out of, and to the extent of, the amount available therefor in the
related Trust Account, on the day specified in the related Prospectus
Supplement, in the amount described below if, as a result of substantial
payments of principal on the Trust Fund Assets, low rates then available for
reinvestment of payments on such Trust Fund Assets, substantial Realized Losses
or some combination thereof, and based on the assumptions specified in the
related Agreement, it is determined that the amount anticipated to be on deposit
in the Trust Account on the next Distribution Date or on some intervening date
as provided in the related Prospectus Supplement, together with, if applicable,
the amount available to be withdrawn from any related Reserve Fund, may be
insufficient to make required distributions on the Securities of such Series on
such Distribution Date or such intervening date as may be provided in the
related Prospectus Supplement. The amount of any special distribution that is
allocable to principal will not exceed the amount that would otherwise be
distributed as principal on the next Distribution Date from amounts then on
deposit in the Trust Account. All special distributions will include interest at
the applicable Trust Interest Rate on the amount of the special distribution
allocable to principal to the date specified in the related Prospectus
Supplement.

     All special distributions of principal will be made in the same priority
and manner as distributions in respect of principal on the Securities on a
Distribution Date. Special distributions of principal with
respect to Securities of the same class will be made on a pro rata basis. Notice
of any special distributions will be given by the Master Servicer or Trustee
prior to the special distribution date.

PRINCIPAL AND INTEREST ON THE SECURITIES

     Each class of Securities (other than certain classes of Strip Securities)
may have a different Security Interest Rate, which may be a fixed, variable or
adjustable Security Interest Rate. The related Prospectus Supplement will
specify the Security Interest Rate for each class, or in the case of a variable
or adjustable Security Interest Rate, the method for determining the Security
Interest Rate. Unless otherwise specified in the related Prospectus Supplement,
interest on the Securities will be calculated on the basis of a 360-day year
consisting of twelve 30-day months.

     As to each Series of Securities, with respect to each Distribution Date,
interest accruing with respect to each Security (the 'Accrued Security
Interest'), other than a Strip Security, will be equal to

                                       48



<PAGE>

interest on the outstanding Security Principal Balance thereof immediately prior
to the Distribution Date, at the applicable Security Interest Rate, for a period
of time corresponding to the intervals between the Distribution Dates for such
Series. As to each Strip Security, the Stripped Interest with respect to any
Distribution Date will equal the amount described in the related Prospectus
Supplement for the related period. Unless otherwise specified in the related
Prospectus Supplement, the Accrued Security Interest on each Security of a
Series will be reduced, in the event of shortfalls in collections of interest
resulting from prepayments of Residential Loans that are not covered by payments
by the Master Servicer out of its servicing fees or by application of prepayment
penalties, with such shortfall allocated among all of the Securities of that
Series in proportion to the respective amounts of Accrued Security Interest that
would have been payable thereon absent such reductions and absent any
delinquencies or losses. See 'Yield Considerations' and 'Maturity and Prepayment
Considerations.' Unless otherwise provided in the related Prospectus Supplement,
neither the Trustee, the Master Servicer nor the Depositor will be obligated to
fund shortfalls in interest collections resulting from prepayments. Unless
otherwise specified in the related Prospectus Supplement, distributions of
Accrued Security Interest that would otherwise be payable on any class of
Accrual Securities of a Series will be added to the Security Principal Balance
thereof on each Distribution Date until the Security Principal Balance of the
Securities of all other classes of such Series having a Final Distribution Date
prior to the Final Distribution Date of such class of Accrual Securities has
been reduced to zero, and actual payments of interest on the Accrual Securities
will be made thereafter. See ' -- Distributions -- Final Distribution Date.'

     Unless the related Prospectus Supplement provides otherwise, each Security
will have a 'Security Principal Balance' that, at any time, will equal the
maximum amount that the holder will be entitled to receive in respect of
principal out of the future cash flow on the Trust Fund Assets and other assets
included in the related Trust Fund. With respect to each such Security,
distributions generally will be applied to accrued and currently payable
interest thereon, and thereafter to principal. The outstanding Security
Principal Balance of a Security will be reduced to the extent of distributions
in respect of principal thereon, and in the case of Securities evidencing
interests in a Trust Fund that includes Residential Loans, by the amount of any
Realized Losses, as defined below, allocated thereto.

     Unless the related Prospectus Supplement provides otherwise, the initial
aggregate Security Principal Balance of all classes of Securities of a Series
will equal the aggregate outstanding principal balance of the related Trust Fund
Assets as of the applicable Cut-off Date. The initial aggregate Security
Principal Balance of a Series and each class thereof will be specified in the
related Prospectus Supplement. Alternatively, the initial Security Principal
Balance for a Series of Securities may equal the initial aggregate 'Cash Flow
Value' of the related Trust Fund Assets as the applicable Cut-off Date. The
aggregate Cash Flow Value of the Trust Fund Assets will be the Security
Principal Balance of the Certificates of such Series which, based on certain
assumptions (including the assumption that no defaults occur on the Trust Fund
Assets), can be supported by either the future scheduled payments on the Trust
Fund Assets (with the interest thereon adjusted to the Net Interest Rate), or
the proceeds of the prepayment of such Trust Fund Assets, together with
reinvestment earnings thereon, if any, at the applicable Assumed Reinvestment
Rate, and amounts available to be withdrawn from any Reserve Fund for such
Series, as further or as otherwise specified in the Prospectus Supplement
relating to a Series of Securities. The 'Assumed Reinvestment Rate' for a Series
of Securities will be the highest rate permitted by the Rating Agency or
Agencies, or a rate insured pursuant to a guaranteed investment contract or
similar arrangement satisfactory to such Rating Agency or Agencies. If the
Assumed Reinvestment Rate is so insured, the Prospectus Supplement relating to a
Series of Securities will set forth the terms of such arrangement. The aggregate
of the initial Cash Flow Values of the Trust Fund Assets included in the Trust
Fund for a Series of Certificates will be at least equal to the aggregate
Security Principal Balance of the Securities of such Series at the date of
initial issuance thereof.

     With respect to any Series as to which the initial Security Principal
Balance is calculated on the basis of Cash Flow Values of the Trust Fund Assets,
the amount of principal distributed for such Series on each Distribution Date
will generally be calculated on the basis of (i) the decline in the aggregate
Cash Flow Values of the Trust Fund Assets during the related Due Period,
calculated in the manner prescribed in the related Agreement, minus (ii) with
respect to any Realized Loss incurred during the related Due Period and not
covered by any of the instruments described under 'Description of Credit

                                       49



<PAGE>

Support,' the portion of the Cash Flow Value of the Trust Fund Assets
corresponding to such Realized Loss; or as otherwise provided in the related
Prospectus Supplement as to any such Series which is a Senior/Subordinate
Series. Unless the related Prospectus Supplement provides otherwise, the 'Due
Period' applicable to any Distribution Date will commence on the second day of
the month in which the immediately preceding Distribution Date occurs, or on the
day after the Cut-off Date in the case of the first Due Period, and will end on
the first day of the month of the related Distribution Date.

     Unless otherwise provided in the related Prospectus Supplement,
distributions in respect of principal will be made on each Distribution Date to
the class or classes of Security entitled thereto until the Security Principal
Balance of such class has been reduced to zero. In the case of a Series of
Securities that include two or more classes of Securities, the timing,
sequential order and amount of distributions (including distributions among
multiple classes of Senior Securities or Subordinate Securities) in respect of
principal on each such class shall be as provided in the related Prospectus
Supplement. Distributions in respect of principal of any class of Securities
will be made on a pro rata basis among all of the Securities of such class.

AVAILABLE DISTRIBUTION AMOUNT

     Unless otherwise specified in the related Prospectus Supplement, all
distributions on the Certificates of each Series on each Distribution Date will
be made from the following amounts (collectively, the 'Available Distribution
Amount'):

          (i) the total amount of all cash on deposit in the related Trust
     Account as of the corresponding Determination Date exclusive of:

             (a) all monthly payments collected but due during a Due Period
        subsequent to the applicable Due Period;

             (b) all prepayments and any related prepayment penalties, and other
        unscheduled recoveries of principal and related payments of interest
        thereon, received subsequent to the related Prepayment Period; and

             (c) all other amounts in the Trust Account which are payable or
        reimbursable to the Depositor, the Master Servicer or the Trustee with
        respect to such Distribution Date;

          (ii) if so provided in the related Prospectus Supplement, any Advances
     made with respect to such Distribution Date;

          (iii) if so provided in the related Prospectus Supplement, any
     payments in respect of interest shortfalls resulting from principal
     prepayments;

          (iv) if so provided in the related Prospectus Supplement, all net
     income received in connection with the operation of any Residential
     Property acquired on behalf of the Securityholders through deed in lieu of
     foreclosure or repossession; and

          (v) if the related Prospectus Supplement so provides, interest or
     reinvestment income on amounts on deposit in the Trust Account (which may
     include income provided under a guaranteed investment contract).

     On each Distribution Date for a Series of Securities, the Trustee or the
Master Servicer will withdraw or cause to be withdrawn from the Trust Account
the entire Available Distribution Amount and distribute the same or cause the
same to be distributed to the related Securityholders in the manner set forth
herein and in the Prospectus Supplement.

SUBORDINATION

     A Senior/Subordinate Series will consist of one or more classes of Senior
Securities and one or more classes of Subordinate Securities, as specified in
the related Prospectus Supplement. Unless otherwise specified in the related
Prospectus Supplement, only the Senior Securities will be offered hereby.
Subordination of the Subordinate Securities of any Series will be effected by
either of the two following methods, or by any other alternative method as may
be described in the related Prospectus Supplement.

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<PAGE>

SHIFTING INTEREST SUBORDINATION

     With respect to any Series of Certificates as to which credit support is
provided by shifting interest subordination, in the event of any Realized Losses
on Residential Loans not in excess of the limitations described below, the
rights of the Subordinate Certificateholders to receive distributions with
respect to the Residential Loans will be subordinate to the rights of the Senior
Certificateholders. With respect to any defaulted Residential Loan that is
finally liquidated, through foreclosure sale, disposition of the related
Residential Property if acquired on behalf of the Certificateholders by deed in
lieu of foreclosure, repossession, or otherwise, the amount of loss realized, if
any (a 'Realized Loss'), will equal the portion of the unpaid principal balance
remaining after application of all principal amounts recovered (net of amounts
reimbursable to the Master Servicer for related expenses). With respect to
certain Residential Loans the principal balances of which have been reduced in
connection with bankruptcy proceedings, the amount of such reduction will be
treated as a Realized Loss.

     All Realized Losses will be allocated to the Subordinate Certificates of
the related Series, until the Security Principal Balance of the Subordinate
Certificates thereof has been reduced to zero. Any additional Realized Losses
will be allocated to the Senior Certificates (or, if such Series includes more
than one class of Senior Certificates, either on a pro rata basis among all of
the Senior Certificates in proportion to their respective outstanding
Certificate Principal Balances or as otherwise provided in the related
Prospectus Supplement). With respect to certain Realized Losses resulting from
physical damage to Residential Properties which are generally of the same type
as are covered under a special hazard insurance policy ('Special Hazard
Losses'), the amount thereof that may be allocated to the Subordinate
Certificates of the related Series may be limited to an amount (the 'Special
Hazard Subordination Amount') specified in the related Prospectus Supplement.
See 'Description of Credit Support -- Special Hazard Insurance Policies.' If so,
any Special Hazard Losses in excess of the Special Hazard Subordination Amount
will be allocated among all outstanding classes of Certificates of the related
Series, either on a pro rata basis in proportion to their outstanding
Certificate Principal Balances, regardless of whether any Subordinate
Certificates remain outstanding, or as otherwise provided in the related
Prospectus Supplement.

     Any allocation of a Realized Loss to a Certificate will be made by reducing
the Security Principal Balance thereof as of the Distribution Date following the
Prepayment Period in which such Realized Loss was incurred. If so provided in
the related Prospectus Supplement, in the event of a Realized Loss, the Senior
Certificateholders may be entitled to receive a distribution in respect of
principal, to be paid from and to the extent of funds otherwise distributable to
the Subordinate Certificateholders, equal to the amount, if any, by which (i)
the then applicable Senior Percentage (as defined below) times the Scheduled
Principal Balance (as defined below) of the related Residential Loan exceeds
(ii) the total amount of the related unscheduled recovery which is allocable to
principal (the 'Unrecovered Senior Portion'). Payments to the Senior
Certificateholders in respect of any Unrecovered Senior Portion on any
Distribution Date will only be made with respect to Realized Losses incurred in
connection with Residential Loans that were finally liquidated during the
preceding Prepayment Period and will not be made as to any Special Hazard Losses
in excess of the Special Hazard Subordination Amount, if applicable. As with any
other distribution in respect of principal, any payment to the holders of Senior
Certificates attributable to an Unrecovered Senior Portion will be applied to
reduce the Security Principal Balance thereof. At any given time, the percentage
corresponding to the ratio of the Security Principal Balance of the Senior
Certificates to the Security Principal Balances of all of the Certificates is
the 'Senior Percentage,' determined in the manner set forth in the related
Prospectus Supplement. As specified in the related Prospectus Supplement, the
'Scheduled Principal Balance' of any Residential Loan as of any date of
determination is equal to the unpaid principal balance thereof as of the date of
determination, reduced by the principal portion of all monthly payments due but
unpaid as of the date of determination.

     As set forth above, the rights of holders of the various classes of
Certificates of any Series to receive distributions of principal and interest is
determined by the aggregate Security Principal Balance of each such class. The
Security Principal Balance of any Certificate will be reduced by all amounts
previously distributed on such Certificate in respect of principal, and by any
Realized Losses allocated thereto. However, to the extent so provided in the
related Prospectus Supplement, holders of Senior

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<PAGE>

Certificates may be entitled to receive a disproportionately larger amount of
prepayments received in certain circumstances, which will have the effect (in
the absence of offsetting losses) of accelerating the amortization of the Senior
Certificates and increasing the respective percentage ownership interest
evidenced by the Subordinate Certificates in the related Trust Fund (with a
corresponding decrease in the Senior Percentage), as well as preserving the
availability of the subordination provided by the Subordinate Certificates. In
addition, as set forth above, Realized Losses will be first allocated to
Subordinate Certificates by reduction of the Security Principal Balance thereof,
which will have the effect of increasing the respective ownership interest
evidenced by the Senior Certificates in the related Trust Fund. If there were no
Realized Losses or prepayments of principal on any of the Residential Loans, the
respective rights of the holders of Certificates of any Series to future
distributions would not change.

CASH FLOW SUBORDINATION

     With respect to any Series of Securities as to which credit support is
provided by cash flow subordination, in the event of losses on the Residential
Loans not in excess of the Available Subordination Amount, the rights of the
Subordinate Securityholders to receive distributions of principal and interest
with respect to the Residential Loans will be subordinate to the rights of the
Senior Securityholders. The 'Available Subordination Amount' at any time is
equal to the difference between the then applicable Maximum Subordination Amount
and the 'Cumulative Subordination Payments' at such time. At the time of any
determination, Cumulative Subordination Payments equal the aggregate of amounts
paid to the Senior Securityholders that, but for the subordination provisions,
would otherwise have been payable to the Subordinate Securityholders. The
Available Subordination Amount will decrease whenever amounts otherwise payable
to the Subordinate Securityholders are paid to the Senior Securityholders
(including amounts withdrawn from the Reserve Fund and paid to the Senior
Securityholders), and will increase whenever there is distributed to the
Subordinate Securityholders amounts in respect of which subordination payments
have previously been paid to the Senior Securityholders (which will occur only
when subordination payments in respect of delinquencies and certain other
deficiencies have been recovered). The 'Maximum Subordination Amount' initially
will equal a fixed percentage amount specified in the related Prospectus
Supplement of the aggregate initial principal balance of the Residential Loans
in the related Trust Fund, and will periodically be adjusted in accordance with
a formula specified in the Prospectus Supplement.

     The protection afforded to the Senior Securityholders from the
subordination provisions described herein will be effected both by the
preferential right of the Senior Securityholders to receive current
distributions from the Trust Fund (subject to the limitations described herein)
and by the establishment and maintenance of a cash reserve fund (the 'Reserve
Fund'). The Reserve Fund may be funded by an initial cash deposit on the date of
the initial issuance of the related Series of Securities (the 'Initial Deposit')
and by deposits of amounts otherwise due on the Subordinate Securities to the
extent set forth in the related Prospectus Supplement.

     Amounts in the Reserve Fund (other than earnings thereon) will be withdrawn
for distribution to Senior Securityholders as may be necessary to make full
distributions to such holders on a particular Distribution Date, as described
above. If on any Distribution Date, after giving effect to the distributions to
the Senior Securityholders on such date, the amount of the Reserve Fund exceeds
the amount required to be held therein (the 'Specified Reserve Fund Balance'),
such excess will be withdrawn and distributed in the manner specified in the
related Prospectus Supplement.

     In the event the Reserve Fund is depleted before the Available
Subordination Amount is reduced to zero, the Senior Securityholders will
nevertheless have a preferential right to receive current distributions from the
Trust Fund to the extent of the then Available Subordination Amount. However,
under these circumstances, should current distributions be insufficient, the
Senior Securityholders could suffer shortfalls of amounts due to them. The
Senior Securityholders will bear their proportionate share of any losses
realized on the Trust Fund in excess of the Available Subordination Amount.

     Amounts remaining in the Reserve Fund after the Available Subordination
Amount is reduced to zero will no longer be subject to any claims or rights of
the Senior Securityholders of such Series.

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<PAGE>

     Funds in the Reserve Fund may be invested as provided in the related
Agreement in Permitted Instruments that mature according to a schedule set forth
in the related Agreement. The earnings or losses on such investments will be
applied in the manner described in the related Prospectus Supplement.

     The time necessary for the Reserve Fund to reach the Specified Reserve Fund
Balance will be affected by the prepayment, foreclosure, and delinquency
experience of the Residential Loans and therefore cannot accurately be
predicted.

SUBORDINATION AND CASH FLOW VALUES

     In the event that the Security Principal Balances of the various classes of
Securities comprising a Senior/Subordinate Series are based upon the Cash Flow
Value of the Residential Loans, a shortfall in amounts distributable to Senior
Securityholders on any Distribution Date will occur to the extent that the
Senior Percentage of the decline in the Cash Flow Value of the Residential Loans
during the related Deposit Period exceeds all collections and, if so provided in
the related Prospectus Supplement, Advances in respect of the Residential Loans,
minus Accrued Security Interest on the Security Principal Balances of the Senior
Securities for such Distribution Date. The loss attributable to any liquidated
Residential Loan shall be equal to the excess, if any, of the Cash Flow Value of
such Residential Loan over all net proceeds recovered and allocable to
principal. The 'Deposit Period' with respect to any Distribution Date is the
period commencing on the day following the Determination Date immediately
preceding the related Determination Date and ending on the related Determination
Date.

     Because the Cash Flow Value of a Residential Loan will never exceed the
outstanding principal balance thereof, prepayments in full and liquidations of
the Residential Loans may result in proceeds attributable to principal in excess
of the corresponding Cash Flow Value decline. Any excess will be applied to
offset losses realized during the related Deposit Period (as such losses are
described in the immediately preceding paragraph) in respect of other liquidated
Residential Loans without affecting the remaining subordination, and such excess
may, if so provided in the related Prospectus Supplement, be deposited in a
Reserve Fund for future distributions.

ADVANCES

     With respect to any Series of Securities evidencing interests in a Trust
Fund that includes Residential Loans, other than a Senior/Subordinate Series,
unless otherwise provided in the related Prospectus Supplement, the Master
Servicer will be obligated to advance on or before each Distribution Date, from
its own funds, or from amounts held for future distribution in the Trust Account
that are not included in the Available Distribution Amount for such Distribution
Date (any such advance, an 'Advance'), in an amount equal to the aggregate of
payments of principal and interest (adjusted to the applicable Net Interest
Rate) that were due during the related Due Period and that were delinquent (and
not advanced by any Sub-Servicer) on the Determination Date. Any amounts held
for future distribution and so used shall be replaced by the Master Servicer on
or before any future Distribution Date to the extent that funds in the Trust
Account on such Distribution Date shall be less than payments to Securityholders
required to be made on such date. Unless otherwise specified in a Prospectus
Supplement relating to a Series of Securities, the obligation of the Master
Servicer to make Advances will be subject to the good faith determination of the
Master Servicer that such advances will be reimbursable from related late
collections, Insurance Proceeds or Liquidation Proceeds. See 'Description of
Credit Support.' As specified in the related Prospectus Supplement with respect
to any Series of Securities as to which the Trust Fund includes Mortgage
Securities, the Master Servicer's advancing obligations, if any, will be
pursuant to the terms of such Mortgage Securities, as may be supplemented by the
terms of the applicable Pooling and Servicing Agreement.

     With respect to a Senior/Subordinate Series in which subordination is
effected through the 'shifting interest' method, previously described herein,
unless otherwise provided in the related Prospectus Supplement, the Master
Servicer will make an Advance on each Distribution Date from its own funds or
from funds held in the Trust Account that are not included in the Available
Distribution Amount for such Distribution Date, in an aggregate amount equal to
the lesser of (a) the total of all amounts

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<PAGE>

required to be distributed on each class of Senior Securities on such
Distribution Date that remain after applying towards such payment the entire
Available Distribution Amount, including funds otherwise payable to the
Subordinate Securityholders, and (b) the aggregate of payments of principal and
interest (adjusted to the applicable Net Interest Rate) that were due during the
related Due Period but were delinquent on the related Determination Date and
were not advanced by any Sub-Servicer. With respect to a Senior/Subordinated
Series in which subordination is effected through the 'cash flow' method
previously described herein, unless otherwise provided in the related Prospectus
Supplement, the Master Servicer may be obligated to make Advances in the manner
provided in the preceding paragraph. In either case, so long as the Security
Principal Balance of the Subordinate Securities in the case of subordination
effected through the 'shifting interest' method, or the Available Subordination
Amount in the case of subordination effected through the 'cash flow' method, has
not been reduced to zero, the Master Servicer will be obligated to make such
Advances regardless of recoverability from the related Residential Loans.
Thereafter, such 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, Liquidation Proceeds, or otherwise, unless otherwise
specified in the related Prospectus Supplement. See 'Description of Primary
Insurance Coverage' and 'Description of Credit Support.'

     If Distribution Dates for any Series of Securities occur less frequently
than each month, Advances shall be made on the intervening dates specified in
the related Prospectus Supplement.

     Advances are intended to maintain a regular flow of scheduled interest and
principal payments to Securityholders, rather than to guarantee or insure
against losses. Unless otherwise specified in a Prospectus Supplement relating
to a Series of Securities, Advances will be reimbursable to the Master Servicer,
without interest, out of related recoveries on the Residential Loans respecting
which such amounts were advanced, or, to the extent that the Master Servicer
shall determine that any such Advance previously made will not be ultimately
recoverable from Insurance Proceeds or Liquidation Proceeds (a 'Nonrecoverable
Advance'), from any cash available in the Trust Account. If so specified in the
related Prospectus Supplement, the obligations of the Master Servicer to make
Advances may be secured by a cash advance reserve fund or a surety bond.
Information regarding the characteristics of, and the identity of any obligor
of, any such surety bond, will be set forth in the related Prospectus
Supplement.

STATEMENTS TO SECURITYHOLDERS

     Unless otherwise provided in the related Prospectus Supplement, on each
Distribution Date, the Master Servicer or the Trustee will forward or cause to
be forwarded to each Securityholder of the related Series and to the Depositor a
statement including the following information (in the case of information
furnished pursuant to (i), (ii) and (iii) below, the amounts shall be expressed
as a dollar amount per minimum denomination Security):

          (i) the amount of such distribution, if any, allocable to principal,
     separately identifying the aggregate amount of principal prepayments and,
     if applicable, related prepayment penalties received during the related
     Prepayment Period;

          (ii) the amount of such distribution, if any, allocable to interest;

          (iii) the amount of administration and servicing compensation received
     by or on behalf of the Trustee, Master Servicer and any Sub-Servicer with
     respect to such Distribution Date and such other customary information as
     the Master Servicer or the Trustee deems necessary or desirable to enable
     Securityholders to prepare their tax returns or which a Securityholder
     reasonably requests for such purpose;

          (iv) if applicable, the aggregate amount of any Advances included in
     such distribution and the aggregate amount of any unreimbursed Advances as
     of the close of business on such Distribution Date;

          (v) the Security Principal Balance of a minimum denomination Security,
     and the aggregate Security Principal Balance of all of the Securities of
     that Series, after giving effect to the amounts distributed on such
     Distribution Date;

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<PAGE>

          (vi) the number and aggregate principal balance of any Residential
     Loans in the related Trust Fund (a) delinquent one month, (b) delinquent
     two or more months and (c) as to which repossession or foreclosure
     proceedings have been commenced;

          (vii) with respect to any Residential Property acquired through
     foreclosure, deed in lieu of foreclosure or repossession during the
     preceding calendar month, the loan number and principal balance of the
     related Residential Loan as of the close of business on the Distribution
     Date in such month and the date of acquisition thereof;

          (viii) the book value of any Residential Property acquired through
     foreclosure, deed in lieu of foreclosure or repossession as of the close of
     business on the last business day of the calendar month preceding the
     Distribution Date;

          (ix) the aggregate Scheduled Principal Balance and Stated Principal
     Balance of the Mortgage Loans at the close of business on such Distribution
     Date;

          (x) in the case of Securities with a variable Security Interest Rate,
     the Security Interest Rate applicable to such Distribution Date, as
     calculated in accordance with the method specified in the Prospectus
     Supplement relating to such Series;

          (xi) in the case of Securities with an adjustable Security Interest
     Rate, for statements to be distributed in any month in which an adjustment
     date occurs, the adjusted Security Interest Rate applicable to the next
     succeeding Distribution Date;

          (xii) as to any Series including one or more classes of Accrual
     Securities, the interest accrued on each such class with respect to such
     Distribution Date and added to the Security Principal Balance thereof;

          (xiii) the amount deposited in the Reserve Fund, if any, on such
     Distribution Date;

          (xiv) the amount remaining in the Reserve Fund, if any, as of the
     close of business on such Distribution Date, after giving effect to
     distributions made on such Distribution Date;

          (xv) as to any Series that includes credit support, the amount of
     remaining coverage of each Insurance Instrument (as defined under
     'Collection and Other Servicing Procedures') included therein as of the
     close of business on such Distribution Date, or, in the case of a
     Senior/Subordinate Series, information as to the remaining amount of
     protection against losses afforded to the Senior Securityholders by the
     subordination provisions and information regarding any shortfalls in
     payments to the Senior Security which remain outstanding; and

          (xvi) with respect to any Series of Securities as to which the Trust
     Fund includes Mortgage Securities, certain additional information as
     required under the related Pooling and Servicing Agreement or Trust
     Agreement, as applicable.

     Within a reasonable period of time after the end of each calendar year, the
Master Servicer or the Trustee will furnish or cause to be furnished a report to
every person who was a holder of record of a Security at any time during such
calendar year setting forth the aggregate of amounts reported pursuant to (i),
(ii) and (iii) above for such calendar year or in the event such person was a
holder of record during a portion of such calendar year, for the applicable
portion of such year.

     The related Prospectus Supplement may provide that additional information
with respect to a Series of Securities will be included in such statements. In
addition, the Master Servicer or the Trustee shall file with the Internal
Revenue Service and furnish to holders of Securities such statements or
information as may be required by the Code or applicable procedures of the
Internal Revenue Service.

BOOK-ENTRY REGISTRATION OF SECURITIES

     As described in the Prospectus Supplement, if not issued in fully
registered form, each class of Certificates will be registered as book-entry
certificates (the 'Book-Entry Securities'). Persons acquiring beneficial
ownership interests in the Securities ('Security Owners') will hold their
Securities through the Depository Trust Company ('DTC') in the United States, or
Cedelbank ('CEDEL') or The Euroclear System ('Euroclear') (in Europe) if they
are participants ('Participants') of such systems, or indirectly through
organizations which are Participants in such systems. The Book-Entry

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<PAGE>

Securities will be issued in one or more certificates which equal the aggregate
principal balance of the Securities and will initially be registered in the name
of Cede & Co., the nominee of DTC. CEDEL and Euroclear will hold omnibus
positions on behalf of their Participants through customers' securities accounts
in CEDEL's and Euroclear's names on the books of their respective depositaries
which in turn will hold such positions in customers' securities accounts in the
depositaries' names on the books of DTC. Citibank, N.A. will act as depositary
for CEDEL and the Brussels, Belgium branch of Morgan Guarantee Trust Company of
New York ('Morgan') will act as depositary for Euroclear (in such capacities,
individually the 'Relevant Depositary' and collectively the 'European
Depositaries'). Except as described below, no Security Owner will be entitled to
receive a physical certificate representing such Security (a 'Definitive
Security'). Unless and until Definitive Securities are issued, it is anticipated
that the only 'Securityholders' of the Securities will be Cede & Co., as nominee
of DTC. Security Owners are only permitted to exercise their rights indirectly
through Participants and DTC.

     The Security Owner's ownership of a Book-Entry Security will be recorded on
the records of the brokerage firm, bank, thrift institution or other financial
intermediary (each, a 'Financial Intermediary') that maintains the Security
Owner's account for such purpose. In turn, the Financial Intermediary's
ownership of such Book-Entry Security 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 Security Owner's
Financial Intermediary is not a Participant and on the records of CEDEL or
Euroclear, as appropriate).

     Security Owners will receive all distributions of principal of, and
interest on, the Securities from the Trustee through DTC and Participants. While
the Securities are outstanding (except under the circumstances described below),
under the rules, regulations and procedures creating and affecting DTC and its
operations (the 'Rules'), DTC is required to make book-entry transfers among
Participants on whose behalf it acts with respect to the Securities and is
required to receive and transmit distributions of principal of, and interest on,
the Securities. Participants and indirect participants with whom Security Owners
have accounts with respect to securities are similarly required to make
book-entry transfers and receive and transmit such distributions on behalf of
their respective Security Owners. Accordingly, although Security Owners will not
possess certificates, the Rules provide a mechanism by which Security Owners
will receive distributions and will be able to transfer their interest.

     Security Owners will not receive or be entitled to receive certificates
representing their respective interests in the Securities, except under the
limited circumstances described below. Unless and until Definitive Securities
are issued, Security Owners who are not Participants may transfer ownership of
Securities only through Participants and indirect participants by instructing
such Participants and indirect participants to transfer Securities, by
book-entry transfer, through DTC for the account of the purchasers of such
Certificates, which account is maintained with their respective Participants.
Under the 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 Security
Owners.

     Because of time zone differences, credits of Securities received in CEDEL
or Euroclear as a result of a transaction with a Participant will be made during
subsequent securities settlement processing and dated the business day following
the DTC settlement date. Such credits or any transactions in such Certificates
settled during such processing will be reported to the relevant Euroclear or
CEDEL Participants on such business day. Cash received in CEDEL or Euroclear as
a result of sales of Certificates by or through a CEDEL Participant (as defined
herein) or Euroclear Participant (as defined herein) to a DTC Participant will
be received with value on the DTC settlement date but will be available in the
relevant CEDEL or Euroclear cash account only as of the business day following
settlement in DTC.

     Transfers between Participants will occur in accordance with the Rules.
Transfers between CEDEL Participants and Euroclear Participants will occur in
accordance with their respective rules and operating procedures.

     Cross-market transfers between persons directly or indirectly through DTC,
on the one hand, and directly or indirectly through CEDEL Participants or
Euroclear Participants, on the other, will be

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<PAGE>

effected in DTC in accordance with the Rules on behalf of the relevant European
international clearing system by the Relevant Depositary; however, such cross
market transactions will require delivery of instructions to the relevant
European international clearing system by the counterparty in such system in
accordance with its rules and procedures and within its established deadlines
(European time). The relevant European international clearing system will, if
the transaction meets its settlement requirements, deliver instructions to the
Relevant Depositary to take action to effect final settlement on its behalf by
delivering or receiving Securities to DTC, and making or receiving payment in
accordance with normal procedures for same day funds settlement applicable to
DTC. CEDEL Participants and Euroclear Participants may not deliver instructions
directly to the European Depositaries.

     CEDEL is incorporated under the laws of Luxembourg as a professional
depository. CEDEL holds securities for its participating organizations ('CEDEL
Participants') and facilitates the clearance and settlement of securities
transactions between CEDEL Participants through electronic book-entry changes in
accounts of CEDEL Participants, thereby eliminating the need for physical
movement of certificates. Transactions may be settled in CEDEL in any of 28
currencies, including United States dollars. CEDEL provides to its CEDEL
Participants, among other things, services for safekeeping, administration,
clearance and settlement of internationally traded securities and securities
lending and borrowing. CEDEL interfaces with domestic markets in several
countries. As a professional depository, CEDEL is subject to regulation by the
Luxembourg Monetary Institute. CEDEL participants are recognized financial
institutions around the world, including underwriters, securities brokers and
dealers, banks, trust companies, clearing corporations and certain other
organizations. Indirect access to CEDEL is also available to others, such as
banks, brokers, dealers and trust companies that clear through or maintain a
custodial relationship with a CEDEL Participant, either directly or indirectly.

     Euroclear was created in 1968 to hold securities for its participants
('Euroclear Participants') and to clear and settle transactions between
Euroclear Participants through simultaneous electronic book-entry delivery
against payment, thereby eliminating the need for physical movement of
certificates and any risk from lack of simultaneous transfers of securities and
cash. Transactions may be settled in any of 32 currencies, including United
States dollars. Euroclear includes various other services, including securities
lending and borrowing and interfaces with domestic markets in several countries
generally similar to the arrangements for cross-market transfers with DTC
described above. Euroclear is operated by the Brussels, Belgium office of
Morgan, under contract with Euroclear Clearance Systems S.C., a Belgium
cooperative corporation (the 'Euroclear Cooperative'). All operations are
conducted by Morgan, and all Euroclear securities clearance accounts and
Euroclear cash accounts are accounts with the Euroclear Operator, not the
Euroclear Cooperative. The Euroclear Cooperative establishes policy for
Euroclear on behalf of Euroclear Participants. Euroclear Participants include
banks (including central banks), securities brokers and dealers and other
professional financial intermediaries. Indirect access to Euroclear is also
available to other firms that clear through or maintain a custodial relationship
with a Euroclear Participant, either directly or indirectly.

     Morgan is the Belgian branch of a New York banking corporation which is a
member bank of the Federal Reserve System. As such, 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 Morgan are governed by
the Terms and Conditions Governing Use of Euroclear and the related Operating
Procedures of the Euroclear System and applicable Belgian law (collectively, the
'Terms and Conditions'). The Terms and Conditions govern transfers of securities
and cash within Euroclear, withdrawals of securities and cash from Euroclear,
and receipts of payments with respect to securities in Euroclear. All securities
in Euroclear are held on a fungible basis without attribution of specific
certificates to specific securities clearance accounts. The Euroclear Operator
acts under the Terms and Conditions only on behalf of Euroclear Participants,
and has no record of or relationship with persons holding through Euroclear
Participants.

     Under a book-entry format, beneficial owners of the Book-Entry Securities
may experience some delay in their receipt of payments, since such payments will
be forwarded by the Trustee to Cede & Co. Distributions with respect to
Securities held through CEDEL or Euroclear will be credited to the cash accounts
of CEDEL Participants or Euroclear Participants in accordance with the relevant
system's

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<PAGE>

rules and procedures, to the extent received by the Relevant Depositary. Such
distributions will be subject to tax reporting in accordance with the relevant
United States tax laws and regulations. See 'Certain Federal Income Tax
Consequences' herein. Because DTC can only act on behalf of Financial
Intermediaries, the ability of a beneficial owner to pledge Book-Entry
Securities to persons or entities that do not participate in the Depository
system, or otherwise take actions in respect of such Book-Entry Securities, may
by limited due to the lack of physical certificates for such Book-Entry
Securities. In addition, issuance of the Book-Entry Securities in book-entry
form may reduce the liquidity of such Securities in the secondary market since
certain potential investors may be unwilling to purchase Securities for which
they cannot obtain physical certificates.

     Unless otherwise specified in the related Prospectus Supplement, monthly
and annual reports on the Trust Fund will be provided to Cede & Co., as nominee
of DTC, and may be made available by Cede & Co. to beneficial owners upon
request, in accordance with the rules, regulations and procedures creating and
affecting the Depository, and to the Financial Intermediaries to whose DTC
accounts the Book-Entry Securities of such beneficial owners are credited.

     It is the Depositor's understanding that, unless and until Definitive
Securities are issued, DTC will take any action permitted to be taken by the
holders of the Book-Entry Securities under the applicable 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 such actions are taken
on behalf of Financial Intermediaries whose holdings include such Book-Entry
Securities. CEDEL or the Euroclear Operator, as the case may be, will take any
other action permitted to be taken by a Securityholder under the applicable
Agreement on behalf of a CEDEL Participant or Euroclear Participant only in
accordance with its relevant rules and procedures and subject to the ability of
the Relevant Depositary to effect such actions on its behalf through DTC. DTC
may take actions, at the direction of the related Participants, with respect to
some Securities which conflict with actions taken with respect to other
Securities.

     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 such event and the availability through DTC of
Definitive Securities. Upon surrender by DTC of the global certificate or
certificates representing the Book-Entry Securities and instructions for
reregistration, the Trustee will issue Definitive Securities, and thereafter the
Trustee will recognize the holders of such Definitive Securities as
Securityholders under the applicable Agreement.

     Although DTC, CEDEL and Euroclear have agreed to the foregoing procedures
in order to facilitate transfers of Securities among Participants of DTC, CEDEL
and Euroclear, they are under no obligation to perform or continue to perform
such procedures and such procedures may be discontinued at any time.

     None of the Master Servicer, the Depositor or the Trustee will have any
responsibility for any aspect of the records relating, to or payments made on
account of beneficial ownership interests of the Book-Entry Certificates held by
Cede & Co., as nominee for DTC, or for maintaining, supervising or reviewing any
records relating to such beneficial ownership interests.

COLLECTION AND OTHER SERVICING PROCEDURES

RESIDENTIAL LOANS

     The Master Servicer, directly or through Sub-Servicers, will make
reasonable efforts to collect all required payments under the Residential Loans
and will follow or cause to be followed such collection procedures as it would
follow with respect to the servicing of residential loans that are comparable to
the Residential Loans and held for its own account, provided such procedures are
consistent with the related Agreement and any insurance policy, bond or other
instrument described under 'Description of Primary Insurance Coverage' or
'Description of Credit Support' (any such instrument providing, or insofar as it
provides, coverage as to losses resulting from physical damage, a 'Hazard
Insurance Instrument,' any such instrument providing, or insofar as it provides,
coverage as to credit or other risks, a 'Credit Insurance Instrument,' and
collectively, an 'Insurance Instrument'). With respect to any Series of
Securities as to which the Trust Fund includes Mortgage Securities, the Master
Servicer's

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servicing and administration obligations, if any, will be pursuant to the terms
of such Mortgage Securities.

     In any case in which a Residential Property has been, or is about to be,
conveyed, or in the case of a multifamily Residential Property, encumbered, by
the borrower, the Master Servicer will, to the extent it has knowledge of such
conveyance, encumbrance, or proposed conveyance or encumbrance, exercise or
cause to be exercised its rights to accelerate the maturity of such Residential
Loan under any due-on-sale or due-on-encumbrance clause applicable thereto, but
only if the exercise of such rights is permitted by applicable law and will not
impair or threaten to impair any recovery under any related Insurance
Instrument. If these conditions are not met or if the Master Servicer or
Sub-Servicer reasonably believes it is unable under applicable law to enforce
such due-on-sale or due-on-encumbrance clause, the Master Servicer or
Sub-Servicer will enter into or cause to be entered into an assumption and
modification agreement with the person to whom such property has been conveyed,
encumbered or is proposed to be conveyed or encumbered, pursuant to which such
person becomes liable under the Mortgage Note, Cooperative Note, Home
Improvement Contract or Manufactured Housing Contract and, to the extent
permitted by applicable law, the borrower remains liable thereon and provided
that coverage under any Insurance Instrument with respect to such Residential
Loan is not adversely affected. The Master Servicer is also authorized to enter
into a substitution of liability agreement with such person, pursuant to which
the original borrower is released from liability and such person is substituted
as the borrower and becomes liable under the Mortgage Note, Cooperative Note or
Contract. In connection with any such assumption, the Interest Rate, the amount
of the monthly payment or any other term affecting the amount or timing of
payment on the Residential Loan may not be changed. Any fee collected by or on
behalf of the Master Servicer for entering into an assumption agreement will be
retained by or on behalf of the Master Servicer as additional compensation for
administering of the Trust Fund Assets. See 'Certain Legal Aspects of
Residential Loans -- Enforceability of Certain Provisions' and ' -- Prepayment
Charges and Prepayments.' The Master Servicer shall notify the Trustee and any
custodian that any such assumption or substitution agreement has been completed.

AGENCY SECURITIES

     The Trust Agreement will require the Trustee, if it has not received a
distribution with respect to any Agency Security by the fifth business day after
the date on which such distribution was due and payable pursuant to the terms of
such Agency Security, to request the issuer or guarantor, if any, of such Agency
Security to make such payment as promptly as possible and legally permitted and
to take such legal action against such issuer or guarantor as the Trustee deems
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 such legal action will be
reimbursable to the Trustee out of the proceeds of any such action and will be
retained by the Trustee prior to the deposit of any remaining proceeds in the
Trust Account pending distribution thereof to Securityholders of the related
Series. In the event that the proceeds of any such legal action may be
insufficient to reimburse the Trustee for its legal fees and expenses, the
Trustee will be entitled to withdraw from the Trust Account an amount equal to
such expenses incurred by it, in which event the Trust Fund may realize a loss
up to the amount so charged.

REALIZATION UPON DEFAULTED RESIDENTIAL LOANS

     As servicer of the Residential Loans, the Master Servicer, on behalf of
itself, the Trustee and the Securityholders, will present claims to the insurer
under each Insurance Instrument, to the extent specified in the related
Prospectus Supplement, and will take such reasonable steps as are necessary to
receive payment or to permit recovery thereunder with respect to defaulted
Residential Loans. As set forth above, all collections by or on behalf of the
Master Servicer under any Insurance Instrument, other than amounts to be applied
to the restoration of a Residential Property or released to the borrower, are to
be deposited in the Trust Account for the related Trust Fund, subject to
withdrawal as heretofore described. Unless otherwise provided in the Prospectus
Supplement relating to a Series of Securities, the Master Servicer will not
receive payment under any letter of credit included as an

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Insurance Instrument with respect to a defaulted Residential Loan unless all
Liquidation Proceeds and Insurance Proceeds which it deems to be finally
recoverable have been realized; however, the Master Servicer will be entitled to
reimbursement for any unreimbursed advances and reimbursable expenses
thereunder.

     If any property securing a defaulted Residential Loan is damaged and
proceeds, if any, from the related Hazard Insurance Instrument are insufficient
to restore the damaged property to a condition sufficient to permit recovery
under the related Credit Insurance Instrument, if any, the Master Servicer is
not required to expend its own funds to restore the damaged property unless it
determines (i) that such restoration will increase the proceeds to
Securityholders on liquidation of the Residential Loan after reimbursement of
the Master Servicer for its expenses and (ii) that such expenses will be
recoverable by it from related Insurance Proceeds or Liquidation Proceeds.

     If recovery on a defaulted Residential Loan under any related Credit
Insurance Instrument is not available for the reasons set forth in the preceding
paragraph, or for any other reason, the Master Servicer nevertheless will be
obligated to follow or cause to be followed such normal practices and procedures
as it deems necessary, and appropriate for the type of defaulted Residential
Loan, or advisable to realize upon the defaulted Residential Loan. If the
proceeds of any liquidation of the property securing the defaulted Residential
Loan are less than the outstanding principal balance of the defaulted
Residential Loan (or the Cash Flow Value of such Mortgage Loan in the event that
Security Principal Balances are based upon Cash Flow Values), the amount of any
liens senior thereto plus interest accrued thereon at the Net Interest Rate
plus, the aggregate amount of expenses incurred by the Master Servicer in
connection with such proceedings and which are reimbursable under the related
Agreement, the Trust Fund will realize a loss in the amount of such difference.
If the Master Servicer recovers Insurance Proceeds which, when added to any
related Liquidation Proceeds and after deduction of certain expenses
reimbursable to the Master Servicer, exceed the outstanding principal balance of
the defaulted Residential Loan together with accrued interest at the Net
Interest Rate, the Master Servicer will be entitled to withdraw or cause to be
withdrawn from the Trust Account amounts representing its normal administration
compensation on such Residential Loan. In the event that the Master Servicer has
expended its own funds to restore damaged property and such funds have not been
reimbursed under any Insurance Instrument, it will be entitled to withdraw from
the Trust Account out of related Liquidation Proceeds or Insurance Proceeds an
amount equal to such expenses incurred by it, in which event the Trust Fund may
realize a loss up to the amount so charged. Because Insurance Proceeds cannot
exceed deficiency claims and certain expenses incurred by the Master Servicer,
no such payment or recovery will result in a recovery to the Trust Fund which
exceeds the principal balance of the defaulted Residential Loan together with
accrued interest thereon at the Net Interest Rate. In addition, when property
securing a defaulted Residential Loan can be resold for an amount exceeding the
outstanding principal balance of the related Residential Loan together with
accrued interest and expenses, it may be expected that, if retention of any such
amount is legally permissible, the insurer will exercise its right under any
related pool insurance policy to purchase such property and realize for itself
any excess proceeds. See 'Description of Primary Insurance Coverage' and
'Description of Credit Support.'

     With respect to collateral securing a Cooperative Loan, any prospective
purchaser will generally have to obtain the approval of the board of directors
of the relevant Cooperative before purchasing the shares and acquiring rights
under the proprietary lease or occupancy agreement securing that Cooperative
Loan. See 'Certain Legal Aspects of Residential Loans -- Foreclosure on
Cooperatives.' This approval is usually based on the purchaser's income and net
worth and numerous other factors. The necessity of acquiring such approval could
limit the number of potential purchasers for those shares and otherwise limit
the Master Servicer's ability to sell, and realize the value of, those shares.

RETAINED INTEREST, ADMINISTRATION COMPENSATION AND PAYMENT OF EXPENSES

     The Prospectus Supplement for a Series of Securities will specify whether
there will be any Retained Interest in any of the Trust Fund Assets. If so, the
Retained Interest will be established on a loan-by-loan or security-by-security
basis and will be specified in the related Agreement or in an exhibit to the
related Agreement. A Retained Interest in a Trust Fund Asset represents a
specified portion of

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the interest payable thereon. The Retained Interest will be deducted from
related payments as received and will not be part of the related Trust Fund.
Unless otherwise provided in the related Prospectus Supplement, any partial
recovery of interest on a Residential Loan, after deduction of all applicable
administration fees, will be allocated between Retained Interest, if any, and
interest at the Net Interest Rate on a pro rata basis.

     Unless otherwise specified in the related Prospectus Supplement, the
primary administration compensation of the Master Servicer (or in the case of a
Trust Fund consisting of Agency Securities, the Trustee) with respect to a
Series of Securities will come from the monthly payment to it, with respect to
each interest payment on a Trust Fund Asset, at a rate equal to one-twelfth of
the difference between the Interest Rate and the sum of the Net Interest Rate
and the Retained Interest Rate, if any (the 'Administration Fee Rate'), times
the scheduled principal balance of such Trust Fund Asset. Notwithstanding the
foregoing, with respect to a Series of Securities as to which the Trust Fund
includes Mortgage Securities, the compensation payable to the Master Servicer or
Manager for servicing and administering such Mortgage Securities on behalf of
the holders of such Securities may be based on a percentage per annum described
in the related Prospectus Supplement of the outstanding balance of such Mortgage
Securities and may be retained from distributions thereon, if so specified in
the related Prospectus Supplement. Any Sub-Servicer will receive a portion of
the Master Servicer's primary compensation as its sub-servicing compensation.
Since any Retained Interest and the primary compensation of the Master Servicer
(or the Trustee) are percentages of the outstanding principal balance of each
Trust Fund Asset, such amounts will decrease as the Trust Fund Assets amortize.

     As additional compensation in connection with a Series of Securities
relating to Residential Loans, the Master Servicer or the Sub-Servicers, if any,
will retain all assumption fees and late payment charges, if any, to the extent
collected from borrowers, and, if so provided in the related Prospectus
Supplement, any prepayment fees collected from the borrowers and any excess
recoveries realized upon liquidation of a defaulted Residential Loan. Unless
otherwise provided in the related Prospectus Supplement, any interest or other
income that may be earned on funds held in the Trust Account pending monthly,
quarterly, semiannual or other periodic distributions, as applicable, or any
Sub-Servicing Account may be paid as additional compensation to the Trustee, the
Master Servicer or the Sub-Servicers, as the case may be.

     With respect to a Series of Securities relating to Residential Loans, the
Master Servicer will pay from its administration compensation certain expenses
incurred in connection with its servicing of the Residential Loans, including,
without limitation, amounts payable to any Sub-Servicer, payment of the premiums
and fees associated with any Pool Insurance Policy, special hazard insurance
policy, Bankruptcy Bond or, to the extent specified in the related Prospectus
Supplement, other insurance policy or credit support, payment of the fees and
disbursements of the Trustee and independent accountants, and payment of
expenses incurred in connection with distributions and reports to
Securityholders, and payment of any other expenses as described in the related
Prospectus Supplement.

     It is anticipated that the administration compensation will in all cases
exceed such expenses. The Master Servicer is entitled to reimbursement for
certain expenses incurred by it in connection with the liquidation of defaulted
Residential Loans, including under certain circumstances reimbursement of
expenditures incurred by it in connection with the restoration of Residential
Properties, such right of reimbursement being prior to the rights of
Securityholders to receive any related Liquidation Proceeds. The Master Servicer
is also entitled to reimbursement from the Trust Account for Advances, if
applicable. With respect to a Series of Securities relating to Agency
Securities, the Trustee shall pay all expenses incurred in administration
thereof, subject to the limitations described in the related Prospectus
Supplement.

EVIDENCE AS TO COMPLIANCE

     Each Agreement will generally provide that on or before a specified date in
each year, beginning with the first such date that occurs at least six months
after the Cut-off Date, the Master Servicer, in the case of a Pooling and
Servicing Agreement, or the Trustee, in the case of a Trust Agreement, at its
expense shall cause a firm of independent public accountants (who may also
render other services to the Master Servicer, the Depositor, the Trustee or any
affiliate thereof) which is a member of the American

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Institute of Certified Public Accountants to furnish a statement to the
Depositor and, in the case of a Pooling and Servicing Agreement, to the Trustee,
to the effect that such firm as part of their examination of the financial
statements of the Master Servicer or the Trustee, as the case may be, has
performed tests in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles
regarding the records and documents relating to residential loans or agency
securities serviced and that their examination disclosed no exceptions that, in
their opinion, were material. In rendering such statement, such firm may rely,
as to matters relating to direct servicing of Residential Loans by
Sub-Servicers, upon comparable statements for examinations conducted
substantially in compliance with generally accepted accounting principles in the
residential loan servicing industry (rendered within one year of such statement)
of independent public accountants with respect to the related Sub-Servicer.

     Each Agreement will also provide for delivery to the Depositor and, in the
case of a Servicing Agreement, to the Trustee, on or before a specified date in
each year, of an annual statement signed by two officers of the Master Servicer,
in the case of a Pooling and Servicing Agreement, or of the Trustee, in the case
of a Trust Agreement, to the effect that, to the best of such officers'
knowledge, the Master Servicer or the Trustee, as the case may be, has fulfilled
its obligations under such Agreement throughout the preceding year.

CERTAIN MATTERS REGARDING THE MASTER SERVICER, THE DEPOSITOR AND THE TRUSTEE

THE MASTER SERVICER

     The Master Servicer under each Servicing Agreement will be identified in
the related Prospectus Supplement. Each such Servicing Agreement will provide
that the Master Servicer may resign from its obligations and duties under the
Servicing Agreement with the prior written approval of the Depositor and the
Trustee and shall resign upon a determination that its duties thereunder are no
longer permissible under applicable law. No such resignation will become
effective until a successor master servicer meeting the eligibility requirements
set forth in the Servicing Agreement has assumed, in writing, the Master
Servicer's obligations and responsibilities under the Pooling and Servicing
Agreement.

     Each Servicing Agreement will further provide that neither the Master
Servicer nor any director, officer, employee, or agent of the Master Servicer
shall be under any liability to the related Trust Fund or Securityholders for
any action taken or for refraining from the taking of any action in good faith
pursuant to the Servicing Agreement, or for errors in judgment; provided,
however, that neither the Master Servicer nor any such person shall be protected
against any liability for any breach of warranties or representations made in
the Servicing Agreement or against any specific liability imposed on the Master
Servicer by the terms of the Servicing Agreement or by reason of willful
misfeasance, bad faith or gross negligence in the performance of duties
thereunder or by reason of reckless disregard of obligations and duties
thereunder. The Master Servicer and any director, officer, employee or agent of
the Master Servicer may rely in good faith on any document of any kind prima
facie properly executed and submitted by any person respecting any matters
arising under the related Servicing Agreement. Each Servicing Agreement will
further provide that the Master Servicer and any director, officer, employee or
agent of the Master Servicer will be entitled to indemnification by the Trust
Fund and will be held harmless against any loss, liability, or expense incurred
in connection with any legal action relating to the Servicing Agreement or the
Securities, the Pool Insurance Policy, the special hazard insurance policy and
the Bankruptcy Bond, if any, other than any loss, liability, or expense related
to any specific Residential Loan or Residential Loans (except any such loss,
liability, or expense otherwise reimbursable pursuant to the Servicing
Agreement) and any loss, liability, or expense incurred by reason of willful
misfeasance, bad faith or gross negligence in the performance of duties
thereunder or by reason of reckless disregard of obligations and duties
thereunder. In addition, each Servicing Agreement will provide that the Master
Servicer will be under no obligation to appear in, prosecute, or defend any
legal action which is not incidental to its duties under the Servicing Agreement
and which in its opinion may involve it in any expense or liability. The Master
Servicer may, however, in its discretion undertake any such action which it may
deem necessary or desirable with respect to the Servicing Agreement and the
rights and duties of the parties thereto and the interests of the
Securityholders thereunder. In such event, the legal expenses and costs of such
action and any liability resulting

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therefrom will be expenses, costs and liabilities of the Trust Fund and the
Master Servicer will be entitled to be reimbursed therefor out of the Trust
Account, such right of reimbursement being prior to the rights of
Securityholders to receive any amount in the Trust Account.

     Any entity into which the Master Servicer may be merged, consolidated or
converted, or any entity resulting from any merger, consolidation or conversion
to which the Master Servicer is a party, or any entity succeeding to the
business of the Master Servicer, will be the successor of the Master Servicer
under each Servicing Agreement, provided that the successor or surviving entity
meets the qualifications specified in the related Prospectus Supplement.

     If the Prospectus Supplement so provides, the Master Servicer's duties may
be terminated upon payment of a termination fee as specified therein, and the
Master Servicer may be replaced with a successor meeting the qualifications
specified in the Prospectus Supplement.

THE DEPOSITOR

     Each Servicing Agreement, Owner Trust Agreement and Trust Agreement will
provide that neither the Depositor nor any director, officer, employee, or agent
of the Depositor shall be under any liability to the related Trust Fund or
Securityholders for any action taken or for refraining from the taking of any
action in good faith pursuant to such Agreement, or for errors in judgment;
provided, however, that neither the Depositor nor any such person shall be
protected against any liability for any breach of warranties or representations
made in the Agreement or against any specific liability imposed on the Depositor
by the terms of the Agreement or by reason of willful misfeasance, bad faith or
gross negligence in the performance of duties thereunder or by reason of
reckless disregard of obligations and duties thereunder. The Depositor and any
director, officer, employee or agent of the Depositor may rely in good faith on
any document of any kind prima facie properly executed and submitted by any
person respecting any matters arising under the related Agreement. Each
Agreement will further provide that the Depositor and any director, officer,
employee or agent of the Depositor will be entitled to indemnification by the
Trust Fund and will be held harmless against any loss, liability, or expense
incurred in connection with any legal action relating to the Agreement or the
Securities, the Pool Insurance Policy, the special hazard insurance policy and
the Bankruptcy Bond, if any, or the Agency Securities, if any, other than any
loss, liability, or expense related to any specific Residential Loan or
Residential Loans (except any such loss, liability, or expense otherwise
reimbursable pursuant to the Agreement) and any loss, liability, or expense
incurred by reason of willful misfeasance, bad faith or gross negligence in the
performance of duties thereunder or by reason of reckless disregard of
obligations and duties thereunder. In addition, each Agreement will provide that
the Depositor will be under no any obligation to appear in, prosecute, or defend
any legal action which is not incidental to its duties under such Agreement and
which in its opinion may involve it in any expense or liability. The Depositor
may, however, in its discretion undertake any such action which it may deem
necessary or desirable with respect to the related Agreement and the rights and
duties of the parties thereto and the interests of the Securityholders
thereunder. In such event, the legal expenses and costs of such action and any
liability resulting therefrom will be expenses, costs and liabilities of the
Trust Fund, and the Depositor will be entitled to be reimbursed therefor out of
the Trust Account, such right of reimbursement being prior to the rights of
Securityholders to receive any amount in the Trust Account.

     Any entity into which the Depositor may be merged, consolidated or
converted, or any entity resulting from any merger, consolidation or conversion
to which the Depositor is a party, or any entity succeeding to the business of
the Depositor will be the successor of the Depositor under each Agreement.

THE TRUSTEES

     The Trustee for any Series of Securities (or, Trustees, in the case of an
issuance of Notes) will be a corporation possessing corporate trust powers
having a combined capital and surplus of at least $50,000,000 and subject to
supervision or examination by federal or state authority and identified in the
related Prospectus Supplement. The commercial bank or trust company serving as
Trustee may have normal banking relationships with the Depositor and its
affiliates and the Master Servicer, if any, and its

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affiliates. For the purpose of meeting the legal requirements of certain local
jurisdictions, the Depositor and the Trustee acting jointly shall have the power
to appoint co-trustees or separate trustees of all or any part of the Trust
Fund. In the event of such appointment, all rights, powers, duties and
obligations conferred or imposed upon the Trustee by the Agreement relating to
such Series shall be conferred or imposed upon the Trustee and such separate
trustee or co-trustee jointly, or, in any jurisdiction in which the Trustee
shall be incompetent or unqualified to perform certain acts, singly upon such
separate trustee or co-trustee who shall exercise and perform such rights,
powers, duties and obligations solely at the direction of the Trustee.

     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 such under the
Agreement or if the Trustee becomes insolvent, incapable of acting or a receiver
or similar person shall be appointed to take control of its affairs. In such
circumstances, the Depositor will be obligated to appoint a successor Trustee.
The holders of Securities evidencing not less than 51% of the Percentage
Interests of any Series of Securities may at any time remove the Trustee and
appoint a successor Trustee by written instrument in accordance with additional
procedures set forth in the related Agreement. Any resignation or removal of the
Trustee and appointment of a successor Trustee does not become effective until
acceptance of the appointment by a successor Trustee.

DUTIES OF THE TRUSTEES

     The Trustee will make no representations as to the validity or sufficiency
of any Agreement, the Securities, any Trust Fund Asset or related document other
than the certificate of authentication, and does not assume any responsibility
for their correctness. The Trustee under any Agreement is not accountable for
the use or application by or on behalf of the Master Servicer of any funds paid
to the Master Servicer in respect of the Securities, the Trust Fund Assets, or
deposited into or withdrawn from the Trust Account or any other account by or on
behalf of the Depositor or the Master Servicer. If no Event of Default (as
hereinafter defined) has occurred and is continuing, the Trustee is required to
perform only those duties specifically required under the related Agreement.
However, upon receipt of the various certificates, reports or other instruments
required to be furnished to it under an Agreement, the Trustee is required to
examine such documents and to determine whether they conform to the requirements
of the Agreement.

     Each Agreement will further provide that neither the Trustee nor any
director, officer, employee, or agent of the Trustee shall be under any
liability to the related Trust Fund or Securityholders for any action taken or
for refraining from the taking of any action in good faith pursuant to the
Agreement, or for errors in judgment; provided, however, that neither the
Trustee nor any such person shall be protected against specific liability
imposed on the Trustee by the terms of the Agreement or by reason of willful
misfeasance, bad faith or gross negligence in the performance of duties
thereunder or by reason of reckless disregard of obligations and duties
thereunder. The Trustee and any director, officer, employee or agent of the
Trustee may rely in good faith on any document of any kind prima facie properly
executed and submitted by any person respecting any matters arising under the
related Agreement. Each Agreement will further provide that the Trustee and any
director, officer, employee or agent of the Trustee will be entitled to
indemnification by the Trust Fund and will be held harmless against any loss,
liability, or expense incurred in connection with any legal action relating to
the Agreement, the Securities or the Agency Securities, if any other than any
loss, liability, or expense incurred by reason of willful misfeasance, bad faith
or gross negligence in the performance of duties thereunder or by reason of
reckless disregard of obligations and duties thereunder.

DEFICIENCY EVENTS

     With respect to each Series of Securities with Distribution Dates occurring
at intervals less frequently than monthly, and with respect to each Series of
Securities including two or more classes with sequential priorities for
distribution of principal, the following provisions will apply unless otherwise
specified in the related Prospectus Supplement.

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     A deficiency event (a 'Deficiency Event') with respect to the Securities of
any such Series is the inability to distribute to holders of one or more classes
of Securities of such Series, in accordance with the terms thereof and the
related Agreement, any distribution of principal or interest thereon when and as
distributable, in each case because of the insufficiency for such purpose of the
funds then held in the related Trust Fund.

     Upon the occurrence of a Deficiency Event, the Trustee or Master Servicer,
as set forth in the related Prospectus Supplement, will be required to determine
whether or not the application on a monthly basis (regardless of frequency of
regular Distribution Dates) of all future scheduled payments on the Residential
Loans included in the related Trust Fund and other amounts receivable with
respect to such Trust Fund towards payments on such Securities in accordance
with the priorities as to distributions of principal and interest set forth in
such Securities will be sufficient to make distributions of interest at the
applicable Security Interest Rates and to distribute in full the principal
balance of each such Security on or before the latest Final Distribution Date of
any outstanding Securities of such Series.

     The Trustee or Master Servicer will obtain and rely upon an opinion or
report of a firm of independent accountants of recognized national reputation as
to the sufficiency of the amounts receivable with respect to such Trust Fund to
make such distributions on the Securities, which opinion or report will be
conclusive evidence as to such sufficiency. Prior to making any such
determination, distributions on the Securities shall continue to be made in
accordance with their terms.

     In the event that the Trustee or Master Servicer makes a positive
determination, the Trustee or Master Servicer will apply all amounts received in
respect of the related Trust Fund (after payment of expenses of the Trust Fund)
to distributions on the Securities of such Series in accordance with their
terms, except that such distributions shall be made monthly and without regard
to the amount of principal that would otherwise be distributable on any
Distribution Date. Under certain circumstances following such positive
determination, the Trustee or Master Servicer may resume making distributions on
such Securities expressly in accordance with their terms.

     If the Trustee or Master Servicer is unable to make the positive
determination described above, the Trustee or Master Servicer will apply all
amounts received in respect of the related Trust Fund (after payment of
expenses) to monthly distributions on the Certificates of such Series pro rata,
without regard to the priorities as to distribution of principal set forth in
such Securities, and such Securities will, to the extent permitted by applicable
law, accrue interest at the highest Security Interest Rate borne by any Security
of such Series, or in the event any class of such Series shall have an
adjustable or variable Security Interest Rate, at the weighted average Security
Interest Rate, calculated on the basis of the maximum Security Interest Rate
applicable to the class having the initial Security Principal Balance of the
Securities of that class. In such event, the holders of Securities evidencing a
majority of the voting rights may direct the Trustee to sell the related Trust
Fund, any such direction being irrevocable and binding upon the holders of all
Securities of such Series and upon the owners of any residual interests in such
Trust Fund. In the absence of such a direction, the Trustee may not sell all or
any portion of the Trust Fund.

EVENTS OF DEFAULT

POOLING AND SERVICING AGREEMENTS

     Events of default ('Events of Default') under each Pooling and Servicing
Agreement will generally consist of (i) any failure by the Master Servicer to
distribute or cause to be distributed to Certificateholders
('Certificateholders') any required payment which continues unremedied for five
days after the giving of written notice of such failure to the Master Servicer
by the Trustee or the Depositor, or to the Master Servicer, the Depositor and
the Trustee by the holders of Certificates evidencing not less than 25% of the
Percentage Interests in the related Trust Fund; (ii) any failure by the Master
Servicer duly to observe or perform in any material respect any of its other
covenants or agreements in the Agreement which continues unremedied for sixty
days after the giving of written notice of such failure to the Master Servicer
by the Trustee or the Depositor, or to the Master Servicer, the Depositor and
the Trustee by the holders of Certificates evidencing not less than 25% of the

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Percentage Interests in the related Trust Fund; and (iii) certain events of
insolvency, readjustment of debt, marshalling of assets and liabilities or
similar proceedings and certain actions by or on behalf of the Master Servicer
indicating its insolvency or inability to pay its obligations. A default
pursuant to the terms of any Mortgage Securities included in any Trust Fund will
not constitute an Event of Default under the related Pooling and Servicing
Agreement.

     So long as an Event of Default under a Pooling and Servicing Agreement
remains unremedied, the Depositor or the Trustee may, and at the direction of
holders of Certificates evidencing not less than 25% of the Percentage Interests
shall, by notice in writing to the Master Servicer terminate all of the rights
and obligations of the Master Servicer under the Pooling and Servicing Agreement
and in and to the Residential Loans and the proceeds thereof. Upon receipt by
the Master Servicer of such written notice, all authority and power of the
Master Servicer under this Pooling and Servicing Agreement shall pass to and be
vested in the Trustee, and the Trustee shall be authorized and empowered to
execute and deliver, on behalf of the Master Servicer, as attorney-in-fact, or
otherwise, any and all documents and other instruments, and to do or accomplish
all other acts or things necessary or appropriate to effect the purposes of such
termination. Upon receipt by the Master Servicer of notice of termination, the
Trustee will succeed to all the responsibilities, duties and liabilities of the
Master Servicer under the Pooling and Servicing Agreement (except that if the
Trustee is prohibited by law from obligating itself to make advances regarding
delinquent Residential Loans, then the Trustee will not be so obligated) and
will be entitled to similar compensation arrangements. In the event that the
Trustee is unwilling, it may, or if it is unable or if the holders of
Certificates evidencing not less than 25% of the Percentage Interests request in
writing, it shall appoint, or petition a court of competent jurisdiction for the
appointment of, a residential loan servicing institution with a net worth of at
least $10,000,000 to act as successor to the Master Servicer under the Pooling
and Servicing Agreement. Pending such appointment, the Trustee is obligated to
act in such capacity. The Trustee and such successor may agree upon the
administration compensation to be paid, which in no event may be greater than
the compensation to the Master Servicer under the Pooling and Servicing
Agreement.

     No Certificateholder will have the right under any Pooling and Servicing
Agreement to institute any proceeding with respect thereto unless: (i) such
holder previously has given to the Trustee written notice of an Event of Default
or of a default by the Depositor or the Trustee in the performance of any
obligation under the Pooling and Servicing Agreement, and of the continuance
thereof; (ii) the holders of Certificates evidencing not less than 25% of the
Percentage Interests have made written request upon the Trustee to institute
such proceeding in its own name as Trustee thereunder and have offered to the
Trustee reasonable indemnity as it may require against the costs, expenses and
liabilities to be incurred thereby; and (iii) the Trustee for sixty days after
receipt of such notice, request and offer of indemnity has neglected or refused
to institute any such proceeding. The Trustee, however, is under no obligation
to exercise any of the trusts or powers vested in it by any Pooling and
Servicing Agreement or to make any investigation of matters arising thereunder
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 Certificates
covered by such Pooling and Servicing Agreement, unless such Certificateholders
have offered to the Trustee reasonable security or indemnity against the costs,
expenses and liabilities which may be incurred therein or thereby.

SERVICING AGREEMENT

     Unless otherwise provided in the related Prospectus Supplement for a Series
of Notes, a 'Servicing Default' under the related Servicing Agreement generally
will include: (i) any failure by the Master Servicer to make a required deposit
to the Security Account or, if the Master Servicer is so required, to distribute
to the holders of any class of Notes or Equity Certificates of such Series any
required payment which continues unremedied for five business days (or other
period of time described in the related Prospectus Supplement) after the giving
of written notice of such failure to the Master Servicer by the Trustee or the
Issuer; (ii) any failure by the Master Servicer duly to observe or perform in
any material respect any other of its covenants or agreements in the Servicing
Agreement with respect to such Series of Securities which continues unremedied
for 45 days after the giving of written notice of such failure to the Master
Servicer by the Trustee or the Issuer; (iii) certain events of insolvency,

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readjustment of debt, marshalling of assets and liabilities or similar
proceedings regarding the Master Servicer and certain actions by the Master
Servicer indicating its insolvency or inability to pay its obligations and (iv)
any other Servicing Default as set forth in the Servicing Agreement.

     So long as a Servicing Default remains unremedied, either the Depositor or
the Trustee may, by written notification to the Master Servicer and to the
Issuer or the Trustee or Trust Fund, as applicable, terminate all of the rights
and obligations of the Master Servicer under the Servicing Agreement (other than
any right of the Master Servicer as Noteholder or as holder of the Equity
Certificates and other than the right to receive servicing compensation and
expenses for servicing the Mortgage Loans during any period prior to the date of
such termination), whereupon the Trustee will succeed to all responsibilities,
duties and liabilities of the Master Servicer under such Servicing Agreement
(other than the obligation to purchase Mortgage Loans under certain
circumstances) and will be entitled to similar compensation arrangements. In the
event that the Trustee would be obligated to succeed the Master 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 an
approved mortgage servicing institution with a net worth of at least $10,000,000
to act as successor to the Master Servicer under the Servicing Agreement (unless
otherwise set forth in the Servicing Agreement). Pending such appointment, the
Trustee is obligated to act in such capacity. The Trustee and such successor may
agree upon the servicing compensation to be paid, which in no event may be
greater than the compensation to the initial Master Servicer under the Servicing
Agreement.

INDENTURE

     Unless otherwise provided in the related Prospectus Supplement for a Series
of Notes, an Event of Default under the Indenture generally will include: (i) a
default for five days or more (or other period of time described in the related
Prospectus Supplement) in the payment of any principal of or interest on any
Note of such Series; (ii) failure to perform any other covenant of the Issuer or
the Trust Fund in the Indenture which continues for a period of thirty days
after notice thereof is given in accordance with the procedures described in the
related Prospectus Supplement; (iii) any representation or warranty made by the
Issuer or the Trust Fund in the Indenture or in any certificate or other writing
delivered pursuant thereto or in connection therewith with respect to or
affecting such Series having been incorrect in a material respect as of the time
made, and such breach is not cured within thirty days after notice thereof is
given in accordance with the procedures described in the related Indenture; (iv)
certain events of bankruptcy, insolvency, receivership or liquidation of the
Issuer or the Trust Fund; or (v) any other Event of Default provided with
respect to Notes of that Series.

     If an Event of Default with respect to the Notes of any Series at the time
outstanding occurs and is continuing, the Trustee or the holders of a majority
of the then aggregate outstanding amount of the Notes of such Series may declare
the principal amount (or, if the Notes of that Series are Accrual Securities,
such portion of the principal amount as may be specified in the terms of that
Series, as provided in the related Prospectus Supplement) of all the Notes of
such Series to be due and payable immediately. Such declaration may, under
certain 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 with respect to any Series of Notes, the
Notes of such Series have been declared to be due and payable, the Trustee may,
in its discretion, notwithstanding such acceleration, elect to maintain
possession of the collateral securing the Notes of such Series and to continue
to apply payments on such collateral as if there had been no declaration of
acceleration if such collateral continues to provide sufficient funds for the
payment of principal of and interest on the Notes of such Series as they would
have become due if there had not been such 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 (a) the holders of 100% of the
then aggregate outstanding amount of the Notes of such Series consent to such
sale, (b) the proceeds of such sale or liquidation are sufficient to pay in full
the principal of and accrued interest, due and unpaid, on the outstanding Notes
of such Series at the date of such sale or (c) the Trustee determines that such
collateral would not be sufficient on an ongoing basis to make all payments on
such Notes as such payments would have become due if such Notes had

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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 such
Series.

     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 any such liquidation for unpaid fees and expenses. As a
result, upon the occurrence of such an Event of Default, the amount available
for payments to the Noteholders 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 Noteholders after the occurrence of such an
Event of Default.

     In the event the principal of the Notes of a Series is declared due and
payable, as described above, the holders of any such Notes issued at a discount
from par may be entitled to receive no more than an amount equal to the unpaid
principal amount thereof less the amount of such discount that is unamortized.

     No Noteholder or holder of an Equity Certificate generally will have any
right under an Owner Trust Agreement or Indenture to institute any proceeding
with respect to such Agreement unless (a) such holder previously has given to
the Trustee written notice of default and the continuance thereof, (b) the
holders of Notes or Equity Certificates of any class evidencing not less than
25% of the aggregate Percentage Interests constituting such class (i) have made
written request upon the Trustee to institute such proceeding in its own name as
Trustee thereunder and (ii) have offered to the Trustee reasonable indemnity,
(c) the Trustee has neglected or refused to institute any such proceeding for 60
days after receipt of such request and indemnity and (d) no direction
inconsistent with such written request has been given to the Trustee during such
60 day period by the Holders of a majority of the Note Balances of such class.
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 Notes or Equity Certificates covered by such
Agreement, unless such holders have offered to the Trustee reasonable security
or indemnity against the costs, expenses and liabilities which may be incurred
therein or thereby.

AMENDMENT

     Each Agreement may be amended by the Depositor, the Trustee and, in the
case of a Pooling and Servicing Agreement, the Master Servicer, (i) to cure any
ambiguity, (ii) to correct or supplement any provision therein which may be
inconsistent with any other provision therein, (iii) to make any other
provisions with respect to matters or questions arising under the Agreement and
(iv) if such amendment, as evidenced by an opinion of counsel, is reasonably
necessary to comply with any requirements imposed by the Code (or any successor
or mandatory statutes) or any temporary or final regulation, revenue ruling,
revenue procedure or other written official announcement or interpretation
relating to federal income tax law or any proposed such action which, if made
effective, would apply retroactively to the Trust Fund at least from the
effective date of such amendment, each without the consent of any of the
Certificateholders of the related Series, provided that such action (other than
an amendment described in (iv) above) will not adversely affect in any material
respect the interests of any holder of the Certificates covered by the
Agreement. Each Agreement may also be amended, subject to certain restrictions
to continue favorable tax treatment of the entity by the Depositor, the Trustee
and, in the case of a Pooling and Servicing Agreement the Master Servicer, with
the consent of the holders of Certificates evidencing not less than 51% of the
Percentage Interests of the related Series for any purpose; provided, however,
that no such amendment may (a) reduce in any manner the amount of, or delay the
timing of, payments received on Trust Fund Assets which are required to be
distributed on any Certificate without the consent of the holder of such
Certificate, or (b) reduce the aforesaid percentage of Percentage Interests
required for the consent to any such amendment without the consent of the
holders of all Certificates of the related Series then outstanding.

     With respect to each Series of Notes, each related Servicing Agreement or
Indenture may be amended by the parties thereto without the consent of any of
the holders of the Notes covered by such Agreement, to cure any ambiguity, to
correct, modify or supplement any provision therein, or to make

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any other provisions with respect to matters or questions arising under the
Agreement which are not inconsistent with the provisions thereof, provided that
such action will not adversely affect in any material respect the interests of
any holder of Notes covered by the Agreement. Each Agreement may also be amended
by the parties thereto with the consent of the holders of Notes evidencing not
less than 66 2/3% of the voting rights, for any purpose; provided, however, that
no such amendment may (i) reduce in any manner the amount of or delay the timing
of, payments received on Trust Fund Assets which are required to be distributed
on any Note without the consent of the holder of such Note, (ii) adversely
affect in any material respect the interests of the holders of any class of
Notes in a manner other than as described in (i), without the consent of the
holders of Notes of such class evidencing not less than 66 2/3% of the aggregate
voting rights of such class or (iii) reduce the aforesaid percentage of voting
rights required for the consent to any such amendment without the consent of the
holders of all Notes covered by such Agreement then outstanding. The voting
rights evidenced by any Note will be the portion of the voting rights of all of
the Notes in the related Series allocated in the manner described in the related
Prospectus Supplement.

TERMINATION

     The obligations created by the Agreement for each Series of Securities will
terminate upon payment to the Securityholders of that Series of all amounts held
in the Trust Account and required to be paid to the Securityholders pursuant to
such Agreement, following the final payment or other liquidation, including the
disposition of all property acquired upon foreclosure or repossession, of the
last Trust Fund Asset remaining in the related Trust Fund or, the purchase of
all of the assets of the Trust Fund by the party entitled to effect such
termination, under the circumstances and in the manner set forth in the related
Prospectus Supplement, whichever occurs first. In no event, however, will the
trust created by the Agreement continue beyond the period specified in the
related Prospectus Supplement. Written notice of termination of the Agreement
will be given to each Securityholder, and the final distribution will be made
only upon surrender and cancellation of the Securities at an office or agency
appointed by the Trustee which will be specified in the notice of termination.

     Any such purchase of assets of the Trust Fund shall be made at a price
equal to (a) in the case of a Series of Securities evidencing interests in a
Trust Fund that includes Residential Loans, the sum of (i) 100% of the unpaid
principal balance of each outstanding Residential Loan (net of any unreimbursed
Advances attributable to principal) as of the date of such purchase plus accrued
interest thereon at the Net Interest Rate to the first day of the month of such
purchase, plus (ii) the appraised value of any property acquired in respect of
any defaulted Residential Loan (but not more than the unpaid principal balance
of that Residential Loan) together with accrued interest at the applicable Net
Interest Rate to the first day of the month of such purchase less the good faith
estimate of the Master Servicer of liquidation expenses to be incurred in
connection with its disposal thereof, and (b) in the case of a Series of
Securities evidencing interests in a Trust Fund that includes Agency Securities
or Mortgage Securities, the sum of 100% of the unpaid principal balance of each
outstanding Trust Fund Asset as of the day of such purchase plus accrued
interest thereon at the Net Interest Rate to the first day of the month of such
purchase, or at such other price as may be specified in the related Prospectus
Supplement. The exercise of the right to purchase the assets of the Trust Fund
as set forth in the preceding paragraph will effect early retirement of the
Securities of that Series.

VOTING RIGHTS

     If so provided in the related Agreement, a provider of credit support may
be entitled to direct certain actions of the Master Servicer and the Trustee or
to exercise certain rights of the Master Servicer, the Trustee or the holders of
Securities.

                   DESCRIPTION OF PRIMARY INSURANCE COVERAGE

     If provided in the related Prospectus Supplement, each Residential Loan
will be covered by a Primary Hazard Insurance Policy (as defined herein) and, if
required as described in the related Prospectus Supplement, a Primary Credit
Insurance Policy. In addition, if provided in the related

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Prospectus Supplement, a Trust Fund may include any combination of a Pool
Insurance Policy, a special hazard insurance policy, a Bankruptcy Bond or
another form of credit support, as described under 'Description of Credit
Support.'

     The following is only a brief description of certain insurance policies and
does not purport to summarize or describe all of the provisions of these
policies. Such insurance is subject to underwriting and approval of individual
Residential Loans by the respective insurers.

PRIMARY CREDIT INSURANCE POLICIES

     If provided in the related Prospectus Supplement and as set forth under
'Description of the Securities -- Realization Upon Defaulted Residential Loans,'
the Master Servicer will maintain or cause to be maintained in accordance with
the underwriting standards adopted by the Depositor a Primary Credit Insurance
Policy ('Primary Credit Insurance Policy') with respect to each Residential Loan
(other than Multifamily Loans, FHA Loans, and VA Loans) for which such insurance
is required. While the terms and conditions of Primary Credit Insurance Policies
differ, each Primary Credit Insurance Policy generally will cover losses up to
an amount equal to the excess of the outstanding principal balance of a
defaulted Residential Loan (plus accrued and unpaid interest thereon and certain
approved expenses) over a specified percentage of the Collateral Value of the
related Residential Property.

     The Master Servicer will cause to be paid the premium for each Primary
Credit Insurance Policy on a timely basis. The Master Servicer, or the related
Sub-Servicer, if any, will exercise its best reasonable efforts to be named the
insured or a loss payee under any Primary Credit Insurance Policy. The ability
to assure that insurance proceeds are appropriately applied may be dependent
upon its being so named, or upon the extent to which information in this regard
is furnished by borrowers. All amounts collected by the Master Servicer under
any such policy will be deposited in the Trust Account. The Master Servicer will
not cancel or refuse to renew any such Primary Credit Insurance Policy in effect
at the time of the initial issuance of the Securities that is required to be
kept in force under the related Agreement unless the Master Servicer uses its
best efforts to obtain a replacement Primary Credit Insurance Policy for such
canceled or nonrenewed policy maintained with an insurer the claims-paying
ability of which is acceptable to the Rating Agency or Agencies for pass-through
certificates having the same rating as the Securities on their date of issuance.

     As conditions precedent to the filing or payment of a claim under a Primary
Credit Insurance Policy, the insured typically will be required, in the event of
default by the borrower, among other things, to: (i) advance or discharge (a)
hazard insurance premiums and (b) as necessary and approved in advance by the
insurer, real estate taxes (if applicable), protection and preservation expenses
and foreclosure and related costs; (ii) in the event of any physical loss or
damage to the Residential Property, have the Residential Property restored to at
least its condition at the effective date of the Primary Credit Insurance Policy
(ordinary wear and tear excepted); and (iii) tender to the insurer good and
merchantable title to, and possession of, the Residential Property.

FHA INSURANCE AND VA GUARANTEES

     Residential Loans designated in the related Prospectus Supplement as
insured by the FHA will be insured by the FHA as authorized under the United
States Housing Act of 1934, as amended ('FHA Insurance'). Certain Residential
Loans will be insured under various FHA programs including the standard FHA
203(b) program to finance the acquisition of one- to four-family housing units,
the FHA 245 graduated payment mortgage program and the FHA Title I Program.
These programs generally limit the principal amount and interest rates of the
mortgage loans insured. The Prospectus Supplement for Securities of each Series
evidencing interests in a Trust Fund including FHA Loans will set forth
additional information regarding the regulations governing the applicable FHA
insurance programs. Except as otherwise specified in the related Prospectus
Supplement, the following describes FHA insurance programs and regulations as
generally in effect with respect to FHA Loans.

     The insurance premiums for FHA Loans are collected by lenders approved by
the Department of Housing and Urban Development ('HUD') or by the Master
Servicer or any Sub-Servicer and are paid to the FHA. The regulations governing
FHA single-family mortgage insurance programs provide that

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insurance benefits are payable either upon foreclosure (or other acquisition of
possession) and conveyance of the mortgaged premises to the United States of
America or upon assignment of the defaulted Loan to the United States of
America. With respect to a defaulted FHA-insured Residential Loan, the Master
Servicer or any Sub-Servicer is limited in its ability to initiate foreclosure
proceedings. When it is determined, either by the Master Servicer or any
Sub-Servicer or HUD, that default was caused by circumstances beyond the
mortgagor's control, the Master Servicer or any Sub-Servicer is expected to make
an effort to avoid foreclosure by entering, if feasible, into one of a number of
available forms of forbearance plans with the mortgagor. Such plans may involve
the reduction or suspension of regular mortgage payments for a specified period,
with such payments to be made upon or before the maturity date of the mortgage,
or the recasting of payments due under the mortgage up to or, other than
Residential Loans originated under the Title I Program of the FHA, beyond the
maturity date. In addition, when a default caused by such circumstances is
accompanied by certain other criteria, HUD may provide relief by making payments
to the Master Servicer or any Sub-Servicer in partial or full satisfaction of
amounts due under the Residential Loan (which payments are to be repaid by the
mortgagor to HUD) or by accepting assignment of the loan from the Master
Servicer or any Sub-Servicer. With certain exceptions, at least three full
monthly installments must be due and unpaid under the FHA Loan, and HUD must
have rejected any request for relief from the mortgagor before the Master
Servicer or any Sub-Servicer may initiate foreclosure proceedings.

     HUD has the option, in most cases, to pay insurance claims in cash or in
debentures issued by HUD. Currently, claims are being paid in cash, and claims
have not been paid in debentures since 1965. HUD debentures issued in
satisfaction of FHA insurance claims bear interest at the applicable HUD
debentures interest rate. Unless otherwise provided in the related Prospectus
Supplement, the Master Servicer or any Sub-Servicer of each FHA-insured single
family Loan will be obligated to purchase any such debenture issued in
satisfaction of such Residential Loan upon default for an amount equal to the
principal amount of any such debenture.

     Other than in relation to the Title I Program of the FHA, the amount of
insurance benefits generally paid by the FHA is equal to the entire unpaid
principal amount of the defaulted Residential Loan adjusted to reimburse the
Master Servicer or Sub-Servicer for certain costs and expenses and to deduct
certain amounts received or retained by the Master Servicer or Sub-Servicer
after default. When entitlement to insurance benefits results from foreclosure
(or other acquisition of possession) and conveyance to HUD, the Master Servicer
or Sub-Servicer is compensated for no more than two-thirds of its foreclosure
costs, and is compensated for interest accrued and unpaid prior to such date but
in general only to the extent it was allowed pursuant to a forbearance plan
approved by HUD. When entitlement to insurance benefits results from assignment
of the Residential Loan to HUD, the insurance payment includes full compensation
for interest accrued and unpaid to the assignment date. The insurance payment
itself, upon foreclosure of an FHA-insured Residential Loan, bears interest from
a date 30 days after the borrower's first uncorrected failure to perform any
obligation to make any payment due under the mortgage and, upon assignment, from
the date of assignment to the date of payment of the claim, in each case at the
same interest rate as the applicable HUD debenture interest rate as described
above.

     Residential Loans designated in the related Prospectus Supplement as
guaranteed by the VA will be partially guaranteed by the VA under the
Serviceman's Readjustment Act of 1944, as amended (a 'VA Guaranty Policy'). The
Serviceman's Readjustment Act of 1944, as amended, permits a veteran (or in
certain instances the spouse of a veteran) to obtain a mortgage loan guarantee
by the VA covering mortgage financing of the purchase of a one- to four-family
dwelling unit at interest rates permitted by the VA ('VA Guarantee'). The
program has no mortgage loan limits, requires no down payment from the purchaser
and permits the guarantee of mortgage loans of up to 30 years' duration.
However, no Residential Loan guaranteed by the VA will have an original
principal amount greater than five times the partial VA guarantee for such
Residential Loan. The Prospectus Supplement for Securities of each Series
evidencing interests in a Trust Fund including VA Loans will set forth
additional information regarding the regulations governing the applicable VA
insurance programs.

     With respect to a defaulted VA guaranteed Residential Loan, the Master
Servicer or Sub-Servicer is, absent exceptional circumstances, authorized to
announce its intention to foreclose only when the

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default has continued for three months. Generally, a claim for the guarantee is
submitted after liquidation of the Residential Property.

     The amount payable under the guarantee will be the percentage of the
VA-insured Residential Loan originally guaranteed applied to indebtedness
outstanding as of the applicable date of computation specified in the VA
regulations. Payments under the guarantee will be equal to the unpaid principal
amount of the Residential Loan, interest accrued on the unpaid balance of the
Residential Loan to the appropriate date of computation and limited expenses of
the mortgagee, but in each case only to the extent that such amounts have not
been recovered through liquidation of the Residential Property. The amount
payable under the guarantee may in no event exceed the amount of the original
guarantee.

PRIMARY HAZARD INSURANCE POLICIES

     Unless otherwise provided in the Prospectus Supplement in respect of a
Series, the related Servicing Agreement will require the Master Servicer to
cause the borrower on each Residential Loan to maintain a hazard insurance
policy (a 'Primary Hazard Insurance Policy') providing for coverage of the
standard form of fire insurance policy with extended coverage customary in the
state in which the Residential Property is located. Unless otherwise specified
in the related Prospectus Supplement, such coverage in general will equal the
lesser of the principal balance owing on such Residential Loan and the amount
necessary to fully compensate for any damage or loss to the improvements on the
Residential Property on a replacement cost basis, but in either case not less
than the amount necessary to avoid the application of any co-insurance clause
contained in the policy. The Master Servicer, or the related Sub-Servicer, if
any, will exercise its best reasonable efforts to be named as an additional
insured under any Primary Hazard Insurance Policy and under any flood insurance
policy referred to below. The ability to assure that hazard insurance proceeds
are appropriately applied may be dependent upon its being so named, or upon the
extent to which information in this regard is furnished by borrowers. All
amounts collected by the Master Servicer under any such policy (except for
amounts to be applied to the restoration or repair of the Residential Property
or released to the borrower in accordance with the Master Servicer's normal
servicing procedures, subject to the terms and conditions of the related
Mortgage and Mortgage Note) will be deposited in the Trust Account. Each
Servicing Agreement provides that the Master Servicer may satisfy its obligation
to cause each borrower to maintain such a hazard insurance policy by the Master
Servicer's maintaining a blanket policy insuring against hazard losses on the
Residential Loans. If such blanket policy contains a deductible clause, the
Master Servicer will deposit in the Trust Account all sums which would have been
deposited therein but for such clause. The Master Servicer also is required to
maintain a fidelity bond and errors and omissions policy with respect to its
officers and employees that provides coverage against losses that may be
sustained as a result of an officer's or employee's misappropriation of funds or
errors and omissions in failing to maintain insurance, subject to certain
limitations as to amount of coverage, deductible amounts, conditions, exclusions
and exceptions.

     In general, the standard form of fire and extended coverage policy covers
physical damage to or destruction of the improvements of the property by fire,
lightning, explosion, smoke, windstorm and hail, and riot, strike and civil
commotion, subject to the conditions and exclusions specified in each policy.
Although the policies relating to the Residential 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 thereof are dictated by respective state laws, and
most such 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 certain cases, vandalism. The foregoing list is merely indicative of
certain kinds of uninsured risks and is not intended to be all-inclusive. When a
Residential Property is located at origination in a federally designated flood
area, each Servicing Agreement requires the Master Servicer to cause the
borrower to acquire and maintain flood insurance in an amount equal in general
to the lesser of (i) the amount necessary to fully compensate for any damage or
loss to the improvements which are part of the Residential Property on a
replacement cost basis and (ii) the

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maximum amount of insurance available under the federal flood insurance program,
whether or not the area is participating in the program.

     The hazard insurance policies covering the Residential Properties typically
contain a co-insurance clause that in effect requires the insured at all times
to carry insurance of a specified percentage (generally 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 insured's coverage falls below this
specified percentage, such clause generally 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 less physical depreciation and (ii) such
proportion of the loss as the amount of insurance carried bears to the specified
percentage of the full replacement cost of such improvements.

     The Master Servicer will not require that a hazard or flood insurance
policy be maintained for any Cooperative Loan. Generally, the Cooperative is
responsible for maintenance of hazard insurance for the property owned by the
Cooperative, and the tenant-stockholders of that Cooperative do not maintain
individual hazard insurance policies. To the extent, however, that a Cooperative
and the related borrower on a Cooperative Note do not maintain such insurance or
do not maintain adequate coverage or any insurance proceeds are not applied to
the restoration of the damaged property, damage to such borrower's Cooperative
apartment or such Cooperative's building could significantly reduce the value of
the collateral securing such Cooperative Note.

     Since the amount of hazard insurance the Master Servicer will cause to be
maintained on the improvements securing the Residential Loans will decline as
the principal balances owing thereon decrease, and since residential properties
have historically appreciated in value over time, the effect of co-insurance in
the event of partial loss may be that hazard insurance proceeds may be
insufficient to restore fully the damaged property. Under the terms of the
Residential Loans, borrowers are required to present claims to insurers under
hazard insurance policies maintained on the Residential Properties. The Master
Servicer, on behalf of the Trustee and Certificateholders, is obligated to
present or cause to be presented claims under any blanket insurance policy
insuring against hazard losses on Residential Properties. The ability of the
Master Servicer to present or cause to be presented such claims is dependent
upon the extent to which information in this regard is furnished to the Master
Servicer by borrowers. However, if provided in the related Prospectus
Supplement, to the extent of the amount available to cover hazard losses under
the special hazard insurance policy for a Series, Certificateholders will not
suffer loss by reason of delinquencies or foreclosures following hazard losses,
whether or not subject to co-insurance claims.

                         DESCRIPTION OF CREDIT SUPPORT

     If so provided in the related Prospectus Supplement, the Trust Fund that
includes Residential Loans for a Series of Securities may include credit support
for such Series or for one or more classes of Securities comprising such Series,
which credit support may consist of any combination of the following separate
components, any of which may be limited to a specified percentage of the
aggregate principal balance of the Residential Loans covered thereby or a
specified dollar amount: a Pool Insurance Policy, a special hazard insurance
policy, a Bankruptcy Bond, a reserve fund, or a similar credit support
instrument. Alternatively, if so specified in the Prospectus Supplement for a
Series of Securities, credit support may be provided by subordination of one or
more classes of Securities, in combination with or in lieu of any one or more of
the instruments set forth above. See 'Description of the Securities --
Subordination.' The amount and type of credit support with respect to a Series
of Securities or with respect to one or more classes of Securities comprising
such Series, and the obligors on such credit support, will be set forth in the
related Prospectus Supplement.

     To the extent provided in the related Prospectus Supplement and the
Agreement, credit support may be periodically reduced based on the aggregate
outstanding principal balance of the Residential Loans covered thereby.

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POOL INSURANCE POLICIES

     If so specified in the Prospectus Supplement relating to a Series of
Securities, the Master Servicer will exercise its best reasonable efforts to
maintain or cause to be maintained a Pool Insurance Policy ('Pool Insurance
Policy') in full force and effect, unless coverage thereunder has been exhausted
through payment of claims. The Pool Insurance Policy for any Series of
Securities will be issued by the Pool Insurer ('Pool Insurer') named in the
related Prospectus Supplement. Each Pool Insurance Policy will, subject to the
limitations described below, provide coverage in an amount equal to a percentage
(specified in the related Prospectus Supplement) of the aggregate principal
balance of the Residential Loans on the Cut-off Date. The Master Servicer will
pay the premiums for each Pool Insurance Policy on a timely basis unless, as
described in the related Prospectus Supplement, the payment of such fees is
otherwise provided. The Master Servicer will present or cause to be presented
claims under each Pool Insurance Policy to the Pool Insurer on behalf of itself,
the Trustee and the Securityholders. Pool Insurance Policies, however, are not
blanket policies against loss, since claims thereunder may be made only upon
satisfaction of certain conditions, as described below and, if applicable, in
the related Prospectus Supplement.

     Pool Insurance Policies do not cover losses arising out of the matters
excluded from coverage under Primary Credit Insurance Policies, FHA Insurance or
VA Guarantees or losses due to a failure to pay or denial of a claim under a
Primary Credit Insurance Policy, FHA Insurance or VA Guarantee, irrespective of
the reason therefor.

     Pool Insurance Policies in general provide that no claim may be validly
presented thereunder with respect to a residential loan unless (i) an acceptable
Primary Credit Insurance Policy, in the event that the initial Collateral Value
of the Residential Loan exceeded 80%, has been kept in force until such
Collateral Value is reduced to 80%; (ii) premiums on the Primary Hazard
Insurance Policy have been paid by the insured and real estate taxes (if
applicable) and foreclosure, protection and preservation expenses have been
advanced by or on behalf of the insured, as approved by the Pool Insurer; (iii)
if there has been physical loss or damage to the Residential Property, it has
been restored to its physical condition at the time the Residential Loan became
insured under the Pool Insurance Policy, subject to reasonable wear and tear;
and (iv) the insured has acquired good and merchantable title to the Residential
Property, free and clear of all liens and encumbrances, except permitted
encumbrances, including any right of redemption by or on behalf of the borrower,
and if required by the Pool Insurer, has sold the property with the approval of
the Pool Insurer.

     Assuming the satisfaction of these conditions, the Pool Insurer typically
has the option to either (i) acquire the property securing the defaulted
Residential Loan for a payment equal to the principal balance thereof plus
accrued and unpaid interest at the Interest Rate to the date of acquisition and
certain expenses described above advanced by or on behalf of the insured, on
condition that the Pool Insurer must be provided with good and merchantable
title to the Residential Property (unless the property has been conveyed
pursuant to the terms of the applicable Primary Credit Insurance Policy) or (ii)
pay the amount by which the sum of the principal balance of the defaulted
Residential Loan and accrued and unpaid interest at the Interest Rate to the
date of the payment of the claim and such expenses exceeds the proceeds received
from a sale of the Residential Property that the Pool Insurer has approved. In
both (i) and (ii), the amount of payment under a Pool Insurance Policy will be
reduced by the amount of such loss paid under any Primary Credit Insurance
Policy.

     Unless earlier directed by the Pool Insurer, a claim under a Pool Insurance
Policy generally must be filed (i) in the case when a Primary Credit Insurance
Policy is in force, within a specified number of days (typically, 60 days) after
the claim for loss has been settled or paid thereunder, or after acquisition by
the insured or a sale of the property approved by the Pool Insurer, whichever is
later, or (ii) in the case when a Primary Credit Insurance Policy is not in
force, within a specified number of days (typically, 60 days) after acquisition
by the insured or a sale of the property approved by the Pool Insurer. A claim
must be paid within a specified period (typically, 30 days) after the claim is
made by the insured.

     Unless otherwise specified in the Prospectus Supplement relating to a
Series of Securities, the amount of coverage under each Pool Insurance Policy
will be reduced over the life of the Securities of such Series by the aggregate
dollar amount of claims paid less the aggregate of the net amounts realized by
the Pool Insurer upon disposition of all acquired properties. The amount of
claims paid includes

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certain expenses incurred by the Master Servicer as well as accrued interest on
delinquent Residential Loans to the date of payment of the claim. However,
Securityholders may experience a shortfall in the amount of interest distributed
in connection with the payment of claims under a Pool Insurance Policy, because
the Pool Insurer is required to remit only unpaid interest through the date a
claim is paid, rather than unpaid interest through the end of the month in which
such claim is paid. In addition, Securityholders may experience losses in
connection with payments made under a Pool Insurance Policy to the extent that
the Master Servicer expends funds for the purpose of enabling it to make a claim
under such Pool Insurance Policy. Such expenditures could include amounts
necessary to cover real estate taxes and to repair the related Residential
Property. The Master Servicer will be reimbursed for such expenditures from
amounts that otherwise would be distributed to Securityholders, and such
expenditures will not be covered by payments made under the related Pool
Insurance Policy. See 'Certain Legal Aspects of Residential Loans -- Foreclosure
on Mortgages' and ' -- Repossession with respect to Manufactured Housing
Contracts.' Accordingly, if aggregate net claims paid under a Pool Insurance
Policy reach the applicable policy limit, coverage under that Pool Insurance
Policy will be exhausted and any further losses will be borne by Securityholders
of the related Series.

     In the event that a Pool Insurer ceases to be a Qualified Insurer (such
term being defined to mean a private mortgage guaranty insurance company duly
qualified as such under applicable laws and approved as an insurer by FHLMC,
FNMA, or any successor entity, and having a claims-paying ability acceptable to
the Rating Agency or Agencies) ('Qualified Insurer'), the Master Servicer will
use its best reasonable efforts to obtain or cause to be obtained from another
Qualified Insurer a replacement insurance policy comparable to the Pool
Insurance Policy with a total coverage equal to the then outstanding coverage of
such Pool Insurance Policy; provided, however, that, unless otherwise provided
in the related Prospectus Supplement, if the cost of the replacement policy is
greater than the cost of such Pool Insurance Policy, the coverage of the
replacement policy may be reduced to a level such that its premium rate does not
exceed the premium rate on such Pool Insurance Policy. However, in the event
that the Pool Insurer ceases to be a Qualified Insurer solely because it ceases
to be approved as an insurer by FHLMC, FNMA, or any successor entity, the Master
Servicer will review, or cause to be reviewed, the financial condition of the
Pool Insurer with a view towards determining whether recoveries under the Pool
Insurance Policy are jeopardized for reasons related to the financial condition
of the Pool Insurer. If the Master Servicer determines that recoveries are so
jeopardized, it will exercise its best reasonable efforts to obtain from another
Qualified Insurer a replacement policy as described above, subject to the same
cost limitation.

     Because each Pool Insurance Policy will require that the property subject
to a defaulted Residential Loan be restored to its original condition prior to
claiming against the Pool Insurer, such policy will not provide coverage against
hazard losses. As set forth above, the Primary Hazard Insurance Policies
covering the Residential Loans typically exclude from coverage physical damage
resulting from a number of causes and, even when the damage is covered, may
afford recoveries that are significantly less than full replacement cost of such
losses. Further, a special hazard insurance policy will not cover all risks, and
the coverage thereunder will be limited in amount. Certain hazard risks will, as
a result, be uninsured and will therefore be borne by the Securityholders.

SPECIAL HAZARD INSURANCE POLICIES

     If so specified in the Prospectus Supplement with respect to a Series of
Securities, the Master Servicer will obtain a special hazard insurance policy
for such Series, issued by the insurer specified in such Prospectus Supplement
(the 'Special Hazard Insurer') covering any Special Hazard Amount (as defined
below). The Master Servicer will be obligated to exercise its best reasonable
efforts to keep or cause to be kept a special hazard insurance policy in full
force and effect, unless coverage thereunder has been exhausted through payment
of claims; provided, however, that the Master Servicer will be under no
obligation to maintain such policy in the event that a Pool Insurance Policy
covering such Series is no longer in effect or if otherwise provided in the
related Prospectus Supplement. The Master Servicer will be obligated to pay the
premiums on each special hazard insurance policy on a timely basis unless, as
described in the related Prospectus Supplement, payment of such premiums is
otherwise provided for. Claims under each special hazard insurance policy will
generally be limited to (i) a

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percentage set forth in the Prospectus Supplement (expected to be not greater
than 1%) of the aggregate principal balance as of the Cut-off Date of the
Residential Loans comprising the related Trust Fund, (ii) twice the unpaid
principal balance as of the Cut-off Date of the largest Residential Loan in the
Trust Fund, or (iii) the greatest aggregate principal balance of Residential
Loans secured by Residential Properties located in any one California postal zip
code area, whichever is the greatest (the 'Special Hazard Amount').

     As more specifically provided in the related Prospectus Supplement, each
special hazard insurance policy will, subject to limitations of the kind
described below, typically protect holders of Securities of the related Series
from (i) loss by reason of damage to Residential Properties caused by certain
hazards (including earthquakes and mudflows) not insured against under the
Primary Hazard Insurance Policies or a flood insurance policy if the property is
in a federally designated flood area and (ii) loss from partial damage caused by
reason of the application of the co-insurance clause contained in the Primary
Hazard Insurance Policies. Special hazard insurance policies will typically not
cover losses such as those occasioned by normal wear and tear, war, civil
insurrection, certain governmental actions, errors in design, faulty workmanship
or materials (except under certain circumstances), nuclear or chemical reaction
or contamination, flood (if the property is located in a federally designated
flood area) and certain other risks.

     Subject to the foregoing limitations, each special hazard insurance policy
will typically provide that, when there has been damage to property securing a
defaulted Residential Loan acquired by the insured and to the extent the damage
is not covered by the related Primary Hazard Insurance Policy or flood insurance
policy, the insurer will pay the lesser of (i) the cost of repair to the
property and (ii) upon transfer of the property to the insurer, the unpaid
principal balance of such Residential Loan at the time of acquisition of the
property by foreclosure, deed in lieu of foreclosure or repossession, plus
accrued interest at the Interest Rate to the date of claim settlement and
certain expenses incurred by or on behalf of the Master Servicer with respect to
the property. The amount of coverage under the special hazard insurance policy
will be reduced by the sum of (a) the unpaid principal balance plus accrued
interest and certain expenses paid by the insurer, less any net proceeds
realized by the insurer from the sale of the property, plus (b) any amount paid
as the cost of repair of the property.

     Typically, restoration of the property with the proceeds described under
clause (i) of the immediately preceding paragraph will satisfy the condition
under a Pool Insurance Policy that the property be restored before a claim
thereunder may be validly presented with respect to the defaulted Residential
Loan secured by such property. The payment described under clause (ii) of the
immediately preceding paragraph will render unnecessary presentation of a claim
in respect of such Residential Loan under a Pool Insurance Policy. Therefore, so
long as the Pool Insurance Policy remains in effect, the payment by the insurer
of either of the above alternative amounts will not affect the total insurance
proceeds paid to Securityholders, but will affect the relative amounts of
coverage remaining under any special hazard insurance policy and any Pool
Insurance Policy.

     The sale of a Residential Property must typically be approved by the
Special Hazard Insurer under any special hazard insurance policy and funds
received by the insured in excess of the unpaid principal balance of the
Residential Loan plus interest thereon to the date of sale plus certain expenses
incurred by or on behalf of the Master Servicer with respect to the property
(not to exceed the amount actually paid by the Special Hazard Insurer) must be
refunded to such Special Hazard Insurer and, to that extent, coverage under the
special hazard insurance policy will be restored. If aggregate claim payments
under a special hazard insurance policy reach the policy limit, coverage
thereunder will be exhausted and any further losses will be borne by the
Securityholders.

     A claim under a special hazard insurance policy generally must be filed
within a specified number of days (typically, 60 days) after the insured has
acquired good and merchantable title to the property, and a claim payment is
generally payable within a specified number of days (typically, 30 days) after a
claim is accepted by the Special Hazard Insurer. Special hazard insurance
policies generally provide that no claim may be paid unless Primary Hazard
Insurance Policy premiums, flood insurance premiums (if the property is located
in a federally designated flood area) and, as approved by the Special Hazard
Insurer, real estate property taxes (if applicable), property protection and
preservation expenses and foreclosure costs have been paid by or on behalf of
the insured, and unless the insured has maintained

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the Primary Hazard Insurance Policy and, if the property is located in a
federally designated flood area, flood insurance, as required by the special
hazard insurance policy.

     If a special hazard insurance policy is canceled or terminated for any
reason (other than the exhaustion of total policy coverage), the Master Servicer
will be obligated to use its best reasonable efforts to obtain or cause to be
obtained from another insurer a replacement policy comparable to such special
hazard insurance policy with a total coverage that is equal to the then existing
coverage of such special hazard insurance policy; provided, however, that,
unless otherwise provided in the related Prospectus Supplement, if the cost of
the replacement policy is greater than the cost of such special hazard insurance
policy, the coverage of the replacement policy may be reduced to a level such
that its premium rate does not exceed the premium rate on such special hazard
insurance policy.

     Since each special hazard insurance policy is designed to permit full
recoveries under a Pool Insurance Policy in circumstances in which such
recoveries would otherwise be unavailable because property has been damaged by a
cause not insured against by a Primary Hazard Insurance Policy and thus would
not be restored, each Pooling and Servicing Agreement will provide that, if the
related Pool Insurance Policy shall have lapsed or terminated or been exhausted
through payment of claims, the Master Servicer will be under no further
obligation to maintain the special hazard insurance policy.

BANKRUPTCY BONDS

     If so specified in the Prospectus Supplement with respect to a Series of
Securities, the Master Servicer will obtain a bond (a 'Bankruptcy Bond') for
such Series. The obligor on, and the amount of coverage of, any such Bankruptcy
Bond will be set forth in the related Prospectus Supplement. The Master Servicer
will exercise its best reasonable efforts to maintain or cause to be maintained
the Bankruptcy Bond in full force and effect, unless coverage thereunder has
been exhausted through payment of claims. The Master Servicer will pay or cause
to be paid the premiums for each Bankruptcy Bond on a timely basis, unless, as
described in the Prospectus Supplement, payment of such premiums is otherwise
provided for. Subject to the limit of the dollar amount of coverage provided,
each Bankruptcy Bond will cover certain losses resulting from an extension of
the maturity of a Residential Loan, or a reduction by the bankruptcy court of
the principal balance of or the Interest Rate on a Residential Loan, and the
unpaid interest on the amount of a principal reduction during the pendency of a
proceeding under the United States Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C. Sections 101 et
seq. (the 'Bankruptcy Code'). See 'Certain Legal Aspects of Residential
Loans -- Foreclosure on Mortgages' and ' -- Repossession with respect to
Manufactured Housing Contracts.'

RESERVE FUNDS

     If so provided in the related Prospectus Supplement, the Depositor will
deposit or cause to be deposited in an account (a 'Reserve Fund') any
combination of cash, one or more irrevocable letters of credit or one or more
Permitted Instruments 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 such Prospectus Supplement. In the
alternative or in addition to such deposit, to the extent described in the
related Prospectus Supplement, a Reserve Fund may be funded through application
of a portion of the interest payment on each Mortgage Loan or of all or a
portion of amounts otherwise payable on the Subordinate Securities. Amounts in a
Reserve Fund may be distributed to Securityholders, or applied to reimburse the
Master Servicer for outstanding Advances, or may be used for other purposes, in
the manner and to the extent specified in the related Prospectus Supplement.
Unless otherwise provided in the related Prospectus Supplement, any such Reserve
Fund will not be deemed to be part of the related Trust Fund.

     Amounts deposited in any Reserve Fund for a Series will be invested in
Permitted Instruments by, or at the direction of, the Master Servicer or any
other person named in the related Prospectus Supplement.

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CROSS-SUPPORT PROVISIONS

     If so provided in the related Prospectus Supplement, the Residential Loans
for a Series of Securities may be divided into separate groups, each supporting
a separate class or classes of Securities of a Series, and credit support may be
provided by cross-support provisions requiring that distributions be made on
Securities evidencing interests in one group of Mortgage Loans prior to
distributions on Securities evidencing interests in a different group of
Mortgage Loans within the Trust Fund. The Prospectus Supplement for a Series
that includes a cross-support provision will describe the manner and conditions
for applying such provisions.

     The coverage provided by one or more forms of credit support may apply
concurrently to two or more related Trust Funds. If applicable, the related
Prospectus Supplement will identify the Trust Funds to which such credit support
relates and the manner of determining the amount of the coverage provided
thereby and of the application of such coverage to the identified Trust Funds.

LETTER OF CREDIT

     If so provided in the Prospectus Supplement for a Series of Securities, the
Residential Loans in the related Trust Fund will be covered by one or more
letters of credit, issued by a bank or financial institution specified in such
Prospectus Supplement (the 'L/C Bank'). Under a letter of credit, the L/C Bank
will be obligated to honor draws thereunder in an aggregate fixed dollar amount,
net of unreimbursed payments thereunder, equal to the percentage specified in
the related Prospectus Supplement of the aggregate principal balance of the
Residential Loans on the related Cut-off Date or one or more classes of
Securities. If so specified in the related Prospectus Supplement, the letter of
credit may permit draws in the event of only certain types of losses. The amount
available under the letter of credit will, in all cases, be reduced to the
extent of the unreimbursed payments thereunder.

INSURANCE POLICIES AND SURETY BONDS

     If so provided in the Prospectus Supplement for a Series of Certificates,
one or more classes of Securities of such Series will be covered by insurance
policies and/or surety bonds provided by one or more insurance companies or
sureties. Such instruments may cover, with respect to one or more classes of
Securities of the related Series, timely distributions of interest and/or full
distributions of principal on the basis of a schedule of principal distributions
set forth in or determined in the manner specified in the related Prospectus
Supplement.

EXCESS SPREAD

     If so provided in the Prospectus Supplement for a Series of Securities, a
portion of the interest payment on each Mortgage Loan may be applied to reduce
the principal balance of one or more classes of Securities to provide or
maintain a cushion against losses on the related Residential Loans.

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                   CERTAIN LEGAL ASPECTS OF RESIDENTIAL LOANS

     The following discussion contains general summaries of certain legal
aspects of loans secured by residential properties. Because such legal aspects
are governed by applicable state law (which laws may differ substantially), the
summaries do not purport to be complete nor to reflect the laws of any
particular state, nor to encompass the laws of all states in which the security
for the Residential Loans is situated. The summaries are qualified in their
entirety by reference to the applicable federal and state laws governing the
Residential Loans. In this regard, the following discussion does not fully
reflect federal regulations with respect to FHA Loans and VA Loans. See 'The
Trust Funds -- Residential Loans' and 'Description of Primary Insurance
Coverage -- FHA Insurance and VA Guarantees.'

GENERAL

     All of the Residential Loans, except as described below, are loans to
homeowners and all of the Mortgage Loans and Multifamily Loans are evidenced by
notes or bonds and secured by instruments which may be mortgages, deeds of
trust, security deeds or deeds to secure debt, depending upon the type of
security instrument customary to grant a security interest in real property in
the state in which the Residential Property is located. If specified in the
Prospectus Supplement relating to a Series of Securities, a Trust Fund may also
contain (i) Home Improvement Contracts evidenced by promissory notes, which may
be secured by an interest in the related Mortgaged Property, (ii) Cooperative
Loans evidenced by promissory notes secured by security interests in shares
issued by private, cooperative housing corporations and in the related
proprietary leases or occupancy agreements granting exclusive rights to occupy
specific dwelling units in the related buildings or (iii) Manufactured Housing
Contracts evidencing both (a) the obligation of the obligor to repay the loan
evidenced thereby and (b) the grant of a security interest in the related
Manufactured Home or with respect to Land Contracts, a lien on the real estate
(the 'Mortgaged Property') to which the related Manufactured Homes are deemed to
be affixed, and including in some cases a security interest in the related
Manufactured Home, to secure repayment of such loan. Unless otherwise specified
in the Prospectus Supplement, any of the foregoing types of encumbrance will
create a lien upon, or grant a title interest in, the subject property, the
priority of which will depend on the terms of the particular security
instrument, the knowledge of the parties to such instruments, as well as the
order of recordation or filing of the instrument in the appropriate public
office. Such a lien is generally not prior to the lien for real estate taxes and
assessments and other charges imposed under governmental police powers.

MORTGAGE LOANS

     The Mortgage Loans and Multifamily Loans will be secured by either
mortgages, deeds of trust, security deeds or deeds to secure debt depending upon
the type of security instrument customary to grant a security interest according
to the prevailing practice in the state in which the property subject to a
Mortgage Loan or Multifamily Loan is located. Any of the foregoing types of
encumbrance creates a lien upon or conveys title to the real property encumbered
by such instrument and represents the security for the repayment of an
obligation that is customarily evidenced by a promissory note. Such a lien is
generally not prior to the lien for real estate taxes and assessments and other
charges imposed under governmental police powers. Priority with respect to these
security instruments depends on their terms and generally on the order of
recording with the applicable state, county or municipal office. There are two
parties to a mortgage, the mortgagor, who is the borrower and usually the owner
of the subject property or the land trustee (as described below), 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 the case of a
land trust, title to the property is held by a land trustee under a land trust
agreement, while the owner is the beneficiary of the land trust; at origination
of a mortgage loan, 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 normally has three parties, the trustor (similar to a
mortgagor), who is the owner of the subject property and may or may not be the
borrower, the beneficiary (similar to a mortgagee), who is the lender, and the
trustee, a third-party grantee. Under a deed of trust, the trustor grants the
property, irrevocably until the debt is paid, in trust, generally with a power
of sale, to the trustee to secure payment of the obligation. A security deed and
a deed to secure debt are special types

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of deeds which indicate on their face that they are granted to secure an
underlying debt. By executing a security deed or deed to secure debt, the
grantor conveys title to, as opposed to merely creating a lien upon, the subject
property to the grantee until such time as the underlying debt is repaid. The
mortgagee's authority under a mortgage and the trustee's authority under a deed
of trust, security deed or deed to secure debt are governed by the law of the
state in which the real property is located, the express provisions of the
mortgage, deed of trust, security deed or deed to secure debt and, in some
cases, with respect to deeds of trust, the directions of the beneficiary.

COOPERATIVE LOANS

     The Cooperative owns all the real property or some interest therein
sufficient to permit it to own 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 a blanket mortgage on the
cooperative apartment building and/or underlying land, as is generally 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 meeting these blanket mortgage or rental obligations. A blanket mortgage is
ordinarily incurred by the Cooperative in connection with either the
construction or purchase of the Cooperative's apartment building or the
obtaining of capital by the Cooperative. The interests of the occupants under
proprietary leases or occupancy agreements as to which the Cooperative is the
landlord are generally subordinate to the interests of the holder of the blanket
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 its blanket
mortgage, the mortgagee holding the blanket 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. Also, a blanket 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 final
maturity. The inability of the Cooperative to refinance such a mortgage and its
consequent inability to make such 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 termination of the Cooperative's interest in the property and
termination of all proprietary leases and occupancy agreements. In either event,
foreclosure by the holder of the blanket mortgage or the termination of the
underlying lease could eliminate or significantly diminish the value of any
collateral held by the lender that financed the purchase by an individual
tenant-stockholder of Cooperative shares or, in the case of the Trust Fund, the
collateral securing the Cooperative Loans.

     The Cooperative is owned by tenant-stockholders who, through ownership of
stock, shares or membership certificates in the corporation, receive proprietary
leases or occupancy agreements which confer exclusive rights to occupy specific
units. Generally, a tenant-stockholder of a Cooperative must make a monthly
payment to the Cooperative representing such tenant-stockholder's pro rata share
of the Cooperative's payments for its blanket mortgage, real property taxes,
maintenance expenses and other capital or ordinary expenses. An ownership
interest in a Cooperative and accompanying occupancy rights is financed through
a Cooperative share loan evidenced by a promissory 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 Cooperative shares. The lender
generally takes possession of the share 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 and local offices to perfect the lender's interest in its
collateral. Subject to the limitations discussed below, upon default of the
tenant-stockholder, the lender may sue for judgment on the promissory 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 Cooperative
Shares' below.

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TAX ASPECTS OF COOPERATIVE OWNERSHIP

     In general, a 'tenant-stockholder' (as defined in Section 216(b)(2) of the
Code) of a corporation that qualifies as a 'cooperative housing corporation'
within the meaning of Section 216(b)(1) of the Code is allowed a deduction for
amounts paid or accrued within his taxable year to the corporation representing
his proportionate share of certain interest expenses and certain real estate
taxes allowable as a deduction under Section 216(a) of the Code to the
corporation under Sections 163 and 164 of the Code. In order for a corporation
to qualify under Section 216(b)(1) of the Code for its taxable year in which
such items are allowable as a deduction to the corporation, such 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 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 such section for any particular year. In the event that such 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 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 Code, the likelihood that such a failure would be permitted to continue over
a period of years appears remote.

MANUFACTURED HOUSING CONTRACTS OTHER THAN LAND CONTRACTS

     Under the laws of most states, manufactured housing constitutes personal
property and is subject to the motor vehicle registration laws of the state or
other jurisdiction in which the unit is located. In a few states, where
certificates of title are not required for the perfection of security interests
in manufactured homes, security interests are perfected by the filing of a
financing statement under Article 9 of the UCC which has been adopted by all
states. Such financing statements are effective for five years and must be
renewed at the end of each five years. The certificate of title laws adopted by
the majority of states provide that ownership of motor vehicles and manufactured
housing shall be evidenced by a certificate of title issued by the motor
vehicles department (or a similar entity) of such state. In the states which
have enacted certificate of title laws, a security interest in a unit of
manufactured housing, so long as it is not attached to land in so permanent a
fashion as to become a fixture, is generally perfected by the recording of such
interest on the certificate of title to the unit in the appropriate motor
vehicle registration office or by delivery of the required documents and payment
of a fee to such office, depending on state law.

     The Master Servicer will be required to obtain possession of the
certificate of title but, unless otherwise specified in the related Prospectus
Supplement, will not be required to effect such notation or delivery of the
required documents and fees. The failure to effect such notation and delivery or
the taking of action under the wrong law (for example, under a motor vehicle
title statute rather than under the UCC), is likely to cause the Trustee not to
have a perfected 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 may, under certain circumstances, 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, including a trustee in bankruptcy claiming an interest in the
home under applicable state real estate law, notwithstanding compliance with the
requirements described above. In order to perfect a security interest in a
manufactured home under real estate laws, the holder of the security interest
must file either a 'fixture filing' under the provisions of the UCC or a real
estate mortgage under the real estate laws of the state where the home is
located. These filings must be made in the real estate records office of the
county where the home is located. Generally, Manufactured Housing Contracts will
contain provisions prohibiting the obligor from permanently attaching the
Manufactured Home to its site. So long as the obligor does not violate this
agreement, 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 perfect the security interest in the Manufactured Home. If,
however, a Manufactured Home is permanently attached to its

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site, other parties, including a trustee in bankruptcy, could obtain an interest
in the Manufactured Home which is prior to the security interest originally
retained by the seller and transferred to the Depositor.

     The Depositor will assign or cause to be assigned a security interest in
the Manufactured Homes to the Trustee, on behalf of the Securityholders. Unless
otherwise specified in the related Prospectus Supplement, neither the Depositor,
the Master Servicer nor the Trustee will amend the certificates of title to
identify the Trustee, on behalf of the Securityholders, as the new secured party
and, accordingly, the Depositor or the Unaffiliated Seller will continue to be
named as the secured party on the certificates of title relating to the
Manufactured Homes. In most states, such assignment is an effective conveyance
of such security interest without amendment of any lien noted on the related
certificate of title and the new secured party, therefore, succeeds to the
Depositor's rights as the secured party. However, in some states there exists a
risk that, in the absence of an amendment to the certificate of title, such
assignment of the security interest might not be held effective against
creditors of the Depositor or Unaffiliated Seller.

     In the absence of fraud, forgery or permanent affixation of the
Manufactured Home to its site by the Manufactured Home owner, or administrative
error by state recording officials, the notation of the lien of the Depositor on
the certificate of title or delivery of the required documents and fees or, in
states where a security interest in manufactured homes is perfected pursuant to
Article 9 of the UCC, the filing of a financing statement (and continuation
statements before the end of each five year period) will be sufficient to
protect the Trustee against the rights of subsequent purchasers of a
Manufactured Home or subsequent lenders who take a security interest in the
Manufactured Home. If there are any Manufactured Homes as to which the Depositor
has failed to perfect or cause to be perfected the security interest assigned to
the Trust Fund, such security interest would be subordinate to, among others,
subsequent purchasers for value of Manufactured Homes, holders of perfected
security interests, and a trustee in bankruptcy. There also exists a risk in not
identifying the Trustee, on behalf of the Securityholders as the new secured
party on the certificate of title that, through fraud or negligence, the
security interest of the Trustee could be released.

     In the event that the owner of a Manufactured Home moves it to a state
other than the state in which such Manufactured Home initially is registered,
under the laws of most states the perfected security interest in the
Manufactured Home would continue for four months after such relocation and
thereafter until the owner re-registers the Manufactured Home in such state. If
the owner were to relocate a Manufactured Home to another state and re-register
the Manufactured Home in such state, and if the Depositor did not take steps to
re-perfect its security interest in such state, the security interest in the
Manufactured Home would cease to be perfected. A majority of states generally
require surrender of a certificate of title to re-register a Manufactured Home;
accordingly, if the Depositor holds the certificate of title to such
Manufactured Home, it must surrender possession of such certificate. In the case
of Manufactured Homes registered in states which provide for notation of lien,
the Depositor would receive notice of surrender if the security interest in the
Manufactured Home is noted on the certificate of title. Accordingly, the
Depositor could re-perfect its security interest in the Manufactured Home in the
state of relocation. In states which do not require a certificate of title for
registration of a manufactured home, re-registration could defeat perfection.
Similarly, when an obligor under a manufactured housing conditional sales
contract sells a manufactured home, the obligee must surrender possession of the
certificate of title or it will receive notice as a result of its lien noted
thereon and accordingly will have an opportunity to require satisfaction of the
related manufactured housing conditional sales contract before release of the
lien. Under the Servicing Agreement, the Master Servicer will be obligated to
take such steps, at the Master Servicer's expense, as are necessary to maintain
perfection of security interests in the Manufactured Homes.

     Under the laws of most states, statutory liens, such as liens for repairs
performed on a Manufactured Home and liens for personal property taxes take
priority even over a perfected security interest. In addition, certain liens
arising as a matter of federal law, such as federal tax liens, also take
priority over a perfected security interest. The Depositor will obtain the
representation of the Unaffiliated Seller that it has no knowledge of any such
liens with respect to any Manufactured Home securing a Contract. However, such
liens could arise at any time during the term of a Contract. No notice will be
given to the Trustee or Securityholders in the event such a lien arises.

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FORECLOSURE ON MORTGAGES

     Foreclosure of a mortgage is generally accomplished by judicial action.
Generally, the action is initiated by the service of legal pleadings upon all
parties having an interest of record in the real property. Delays in completion
of the foreclosure may occasionally result from difficulties in locating
necessary parties defendant. When the mortgagee's right to foreclose is
contested, the legal proceedings necessary to resolve the issue can be time
consuming. After the completion of a judicial foreclosure, the court generally
issues a judgment of foreclosure and appoints a referee or other court officer
to conduct the sale of the property.

     An action to foreclose a mortgage is an action to recover the mortgage debt
by enforcing the mortgagee's rights under the mortgage in and to the mortgaged
property. It is regulated by statutes and rules and subject throughout to the
court's equitable powers. Generally, a mortgagor is bound by the terms of the
mortgage note and the mortgage as made and cannot be relieved from its own
default. However, since a foreclosure action is equitable in nature and is
addressed to a court of equity, the court may relieve a mortgagor of a default
and deny the mortgagee foreclosure on proof that the mortgagor's default was
neither willful nor in bad faith and that the mortgagee's action was such as to
establish a waiver, or fraud, bad faith, oppressive or unconscionable conduct as
to warrant a court of equity to refuse affirmative relief to the mortgagee.
Under certain circumstances a court of equity may relieve the mortgagor from an
entirely technical default where such default was not willful.

     A foreclosure action or sale pursuant to a power of sale is subject to most
of the delays and expenses of other lawsuits if defenses or counterclaims are
interposed, sometimes requiring up to several years to complete. Moreover, a
non-collusive, regularly conducted foreclosure sale or sale pursuant to a power
of sale may be challenged as a fraudulent conveyance, regardless of the parties'
intent, if a court determines that the sale was for less than fair consideration
and such sale occurred while the mortgagor was insolvent and within one year (or
within the state statute of limitations if the trustee in bankruptcy elects to
proceed under state fraudulent conveyance law) of the filing of bankruptcy.
Similarly, a suit against the debtor on the mortgage note may take several years
and, generally, is a remedy alternative to foreclosure, the mortgagee being
precluded from pursuing both at the same time. In some states, mortgages may
also be foreclosed by advertisement pursuant to a power of sale provided in the
mortgage. Foreclosure of a mortgage by advertisement is essentially similar to
foreclosure of a deed of trust by nonjudicial power of sale.

     Foreclosure of a deed of trust is generally accomplished by a non-judicial
trustee's sale under a specific provision in the deed of trust which authorizes
the trustee to sell the property upon default by the borrower under the terms of
the note or deed of trust. In some states, prior to such sale, the trustee must
record a notice of default and send a copy to the borrower-trustor and to any
person who has recorded a request for a copy of a notice of default and notice
of sale. In addition, in some states the trustee must provide notice to any
other individual having an interest in the real property, including any junior
lienholder. In some states, the trustor, borrower, or any 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 to the extent allowed by applicable law.
Generally, state law controls the amount of foreclosure expenses and costs,
including attorneys' fees, which may be recovered by a lender. Certain states
require that a notice of sale must be posted in a public place and, in most
states, published for a specific period of time in a specified manner prior to
the date of the trustee's sale. In addition, some state laws require that a copy
of the notice of sale be posted on the property, recorded and sent to all
parties having an interest in the real property. In certain states, foreclosure
under a deed of trust may also be accomplished by judicial action in the manner
provided for foreclosure of mortgages.

     In case of foreclosure under either a mortgage or a deed of trust, the sale
by the referee or other designated officer or by the trustee is generally a
public sale. However, because of the difficulty potential third party purchasers
at the sale might 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 the
foreclosure sale. In some states, potential buyers may be further unwilling to
purchase a property at a foreclosure sale as a result of the 1980 decision of
the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit in Durrett v.

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Washington National Insurance Company. The court in Durrett held that even a
non-collusive, regularly conducted foreclosure sale was a fraudulent transfer
under section 67 of the former Bankruptcy Act (section 548 of the current
Bankruptcy Code) and, therefore, could be rescinded in favor of the bankrupt's
estate, if (i) the foreclosure sale was held while the debtor was insolvent and
not more than one year prior to the filing of the bankruptcy petition, and (ii)
the price paid for the foreclosed property did not represent 'fair
consideration' ('reasonably equivalent value' under the Bankruptcy Code).
However, on May 23, 1994, Durrett was effectively overruled by the United States
Supreme Court in BFP v. Resolution Trust Corporation, as Receiver for Imperial
Federal Savings and Loan Association, et al., in which the Court held that
' `reasonably equivalent value', for foreclosed property, is the price in face
received at the foreclosure sale, so long as all the requirements of the State's
foreclosure law have been complied with.' The Supreme Court decision, however,
may not be controlling as to whether a non-collusive, regularly conducted
foreclosure can be avoided as a fraudulent conveyance under applicable state
law, if a court determines that the sale was for less than 'fair consideration'
under applicable state law. For these reasons, it is common for the lender to
purchase the property from the trustee or referee for an amount equal to the
principal amount of the mortgage or deed of trust plus accrued and unpaid
interest and the expenses of foreclosure. Generally, state law controls the
amount of foreclosure costs and expenses, including attorneys' and trustee's
fees, which may be recovered by a lender. In some states there is a statutory
minimum purchase price which the lender may offer for the property. Thereafter,
subject to the right of the borrower in some states to remain in possession
during the redemption period, the lender will assume ownership of the mortgaged
property and, therefore, the burdens of ownership, including obtaining casualty
insurance, paying taxes and making such repairs at its own expense as are
necessary to render the property suitable for sale. Depending upon market
conditions, the ultimate proceeds of the sale of the property may not equal the
lender's investment in the property. Any loss may be reduced by the receipt of
any mortgage insurance proceeds, if any.

     A junior mortgagee may not foreclose on the property securing a junior
mortgage 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 in the event the mortgagor
is in default thereunder, in either event adding the amounts expended to the
balance due on the junior loan, and may be subrogated to the rights of the
senior mortgagees. In addition, in the event that the foreclosure of a junior
mortgage triggers the enforcement of a 'due-on-sale' clause, the junior
mortgagee may be required to pay the full amount of the senior mortgages to the
senior mortgagees. Accordingly, with respect to those Mortgage Loans which are
junior mortgage loans, if the 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 under which the sale was
conducted. Any remaining proceeds are generally 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
generally 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 separate legal proceedings.

     In foreclosure, courts have imposed general equitable principles. The
equitable principles are generally designed to relieve the borrower from the
legal effect of his 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 substituted their judgment for
the lender's judgment and have required that lenders reinstate loans or recast
payment schedules in order to accommodate borrowers who are suffering from
temporary financial disability. In other cases, courts have limited the right of
a lender to foreclose if the default under the mortgage instrument is not
monetary, such as the borrower's failure to adequately maintain the property or
the borrower's execution of a second mortgage or deed of trust affecting 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 or mortgages receive
notices in addition to the statutorily-prescribed minimums. For the most part,

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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 mortgage having a
power of sale, does not involve sufficient state action to afford constitutional
protections to the borrower.

     In addition, certain states impose a statutory lien for associated costs on
property that is the subject of a cleanup action by the state on account of
hazardous wastes or hazardous substances released or disposed of on the
property. Such a lien may have priority over all subsequent liens on the
property and, in certain of these states, will have priority over prior recorded
liens, including the lien of a mortgage. In addition, under federal
environmental legislation and possibly under state law in a number of states, a
secured party that takes a deed in lieu of foreclosure or acquires a mortgaged
property at a foreclosure sale may be liable for the costs of cleaning up a
contaminated site. Although such costs could be substantial, it is unclear
whether they would be imposed on a secured lender on residential properties. In
the event that title to a Residential Property was acquired on behalf of
Securityholders and cleanup costs were incurred in respect of the Residential
Property, such Securityholders might realize a loss if such costs were required
to be paid by the related Trust Fund.

FORECLOSURE ON COOPERATIVE SHARES

     The Cooperative shares and proprietary lease or occupancy agreement owned
by the tenant-stockholder and pledged to the lender are, in almost all cases,
subject to 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, and may be canceled by the Cooperative, even while pledged,
for failure by the tenant-stockholder to pay rent or other obligations or
charges owed by such tenant-stockholder, including mechanics' liens against the
Cooperative apartment building incurred by such tenant-stockholder. Commonly,
rent and other obligations and charges arising under a proprietary lease or
occupancy agreement which are owed to the cooperative are made liens upon the
shares to which the proprietary lease or occupancy agreement relates. In
addition, the proprietary lease or occupancy agreement generally permits the
Cooperative to terminate such lease or agreement in the event the
tenant-stockholder fails to make payments or defaults in the performance of
covenants required thereunder. Typically, the lender and the Cooperative enter
into a recognition agreement which, together with any lender protection
provisions contained in the proprietary lease, 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 generally provides that, in the event that the
tenant-stockholder has defaulted under the proprietary lease or occupancy
agreement, the Cooperative will take no action to terminate such 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 Cooperative
apartment, subject, however, to the Cooperative's right to sums due under such
proprietary lease or occupancy agreement or which have become liens on the
shares relating to the proprietary lease or occupancy agreement. The total
amount owed to the Cooperative by the tenant-stockholder, which the lender
generally cannot restrict and does not monitor, could reduce the value of the
collateral below the outstanding principal balance of the Cooperative Loan and
accrued and unpaid interest thereon.

     Recognition agreements also provide that in the event of a foreclosure on a
Cooperative Loan, the lender must obtain the approval or consent of the
Cooperative as required by the proprietary lease before transferring the
Cooperative shares or assigning the proprietary lease. Generally, the lender is
not limited in any rights it may have to dispossess the tenant-stockholders.

     Foreclosure on the Cooperative shares is accomplished by a sale in
accordance with the provisions of Article 9 of the 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,

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time, place and terms of the sale. Generally, a sale conducted according to the
usual practice of similar parties selling similar collateral will be considered
reasonably conducted.

     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, generally 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. Conversely,
if a portion of the indebtedness remains unpaid, the tenant-stockholder is
generally responsible for the deficiency. See 'Anti-Deficiency Legislation and
Other Limitations on Lenders' below.

REPOSSESSION WITH RESPECT TO MANUFACTURED HOUSING CONTRACTS THAT ARE NOT LAND
CONTRACTS

     Repossession of manufactured housing is governed by state law. So long as a
manufactured home has not become so attached to real estate that it would be
treated as a part of the real estate under the law of the state where it is
located, repossession of such home in the event of a default by the obligor will
generally be governed by the UCC. Article 9 of the UCC provides the statutory
framework for the repossession of manufactured housing. While the UCC as adopted
by the various states may vary in certain small particulars, the general
repossession procedure established by the UCC is as follows:

          (i) Except in those few states where the debtor must receive notice of
     his right to cure his default (typically 30 days to bring the account
     current), repossession can commence immediately upon default without prior
     notice. Repossession may be effected either through self-help (peaceable
     retaking without court order), voluntary repossession or through judicial
     process (repossession pursuant to court-issued writ of replevin). The
     self-help and/or voluntary repossession methods are more commonly employed,
     and are accomplished simply by retaking possession of the manufactured
     home. In cases where the debtor objects or raises a defense to
     repossession, a court order must be obtained from the appropriate state
     court, and the manufactured home must then be repossessed in accordance
     with that order. Whether the method employed is self-help, voluntary
     repossession or judicial repossession, the repossession can be accomplished
     either by an actual physical removal of the manufactured home to a secure
     location for refurbishment and resale or by removing the occupants and
     their belongings from the manufactured home and maintaining possession of
     the manufactured home on the location where the occupants were residing.
     Various factors may affect whether the manufactured home is physically
     removed or left on location, such as the nature and term of the lease of
     the site on which it is located and the condition of the unit. In many
     cases, leaving the manufactured home on location is preferable, in the
     event that the home is already set up, because the expenses of retaking and
     redelivery will be saved. However, in those cases where the home is left on
     location, expenses for site rentals will usually be incurred.

          (ii) Once repossession has been achieved, preparation for the
     subsequent disposition of the manufactured home can commence. The
     disposition may be by public or private sale, upon notice to the debtor,
     and the method, manner, time, place and terms of the sale must be
     commercially reasonable. The UCC and consumer protection laws in most
     states place restrictions on repossession sales, including requiring prior
     notice to the debtor.

          (iii) Sale proceeds are to be applied first to repossession expenses
     (expenses incurred in retaking, storage, preparing for sale to include
     refurbishing costs and selling) and then to satisfaction of the
     indebtedness. While some states impose prohibitions or limitations on
     deficiency judgments if the net proceeds from resale do not cover the full
     amount of the indebtedness, the deficiency may be sought from the debtor in
     the form of a deficiency judgment in those states which do not prohibit or
     limit such judgments. The deficiency judgment is a personal judgment
     against the debtor for the shortfall. Occasionally, after resale of a
     manufactured home and payment of all expenses and indebtedness, there is a
     surplus of funds. In that case, the UCC requires the party suing for the
     deficiency judgment to remit the surplus to the debtor. Because the
     defaulting owner of a manufactured home generally has very little capital
     or income available following repossession,

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     a deficiency judgment may not be sought in many cases or, if obtained, will
     be settled at a significant discount in light of the defaulting owner's
     strained financial condition.

RIGHTS OF REDEMPTION WITH RESPECT TO RESIDENTIAL PROPERTIES

     The purposes of a foreclosure action are to enable the mortgagee to realize
upon its security and to bar the mortgagor, and all persons who have an interest
in the property which is subordinate to the foreclosing mortgagee, from
exercising their 'equity of redemption.' The doctrine of equity of redemption
provides that, until the property covered by a mortgage has been sold in
accordance with a properly conducted foreclosure and foreclosure sale, parties
having an interest which is subordinate to that of the foreclosing mortgagee may
redeem the property by paying the entire debt with interest. In addition, in
some states, when a foreclosure action has been commenced, the redeeming party
must pay certain costs of such action. Parties having an equity of redemption
must generally be made parties and duly summoned to the foreclosure action in
order for their equity of redemption to be barred.

     Equity of redemption which is a non-statutory right that must be exercised
prior to foreclosure sale, should be distinguished from statutory rights of
redemption. In some states, after sale pursuant to a deed of trust or
foreclosure of a mortgage, the trustor or mortgagor and certain foreclosed
junior lienors are given a statutory period in which to redeem the property from
the foreclosure sale. In some states, redemption may occur only upon payment of
the foreclosure sales price, 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. The effect of a statutory right of redemption is to
diminish the ability of the lender to sell the foreclosed property. The exercise
of a right of redemption would defeat the title of any purchaser subsequent to
foreclosure or sale under a deed of trust. Consequently, the practical effect of
a right of redemption is to force the lender to retain the property and pay the
expenses of ownership and maintenance of the property until the redemption
period has expired. In some states, there is no right to redeem property after a
trustee's sale under a deed of trust.

NOTICE OF SALE; REDEMPTION RIGHTS WITH RESPECT TO MANUFACTURED HOMES

     While state laws do not usually require notice to be given debtors prior to
repossession, many states do require delivery of a notice of default and of the
debtor's right to cure defaults before repossession. The law in most states also
requires that the debtor be given notice of sale prior to the resale of the home
so that the owner may redeem at or before resale. In addition, the sale must
comply with the requirements, including the notice requirements, of the UCC.

ANTI-DEFICIENCY LEGISLATION, BANKRUPTCY LAWS AND OTHER LIMITATIONS ON LENDERS

     Certain states have imposed statutory prohibitions which limit the remedies
of a beneficiary under a deed of trust or a mortgagee under a mortgage. In some
states, statutes limit the right of the beneficiary or mortgagee to obtain a
deficiency judgment against the borrower following foreclosure or sale under a
deed of trust. 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.
Other statutes require the beneficiary or mortgagee to exhaust the security
afforded under a deed of trust or mortgage by foreclosure in an attempt to
satisfy the full debt before bringing a personal action against the borrower. In
certain other states, the lender has the option of bringing a personal action
against the borrower on the debt without first exhausting such security; however
in some of these states, the lender, following judgment on such personal action,
may be deemed to have elected a remedy and may be precluded from exercising
remedies with respect to the security. Consequently, the practical effect of the
election requirement, in those states permitting such election, is that lenders
will usually proceed against the security first rather than bringing a personal
action against the borrower. Finally, other statutory provisions limit any
deficiency judgment against the former borrower following a judicial sale to the
excess of the outstanding debt over the fair market value of the property at the
time of the public sale. The purpose of these statutes is generally to prevent a
beneficiary or a mortgagee from obtaining a large deficiency judgment against
the former borrower as a result of low or no bids at the judicial sale.

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     In addition to anti-deficiency and related legislation, numerous other
federal and state statutory provisions, including the Bankruptcy Code and state
laws affording relief to debtors, may interfere with or affect the ability of a
secured mortgage lender to obtain payment of a mortgage loan, to realize upon
collateral and/or enforce a deficiency judgment. For example, under the
Bankruptcy Code, virtually all actions (including foreclosure actions and
deficiency judgment proceedings) are automatically stayed upon the filing of a
bankruptcy petition, and, usually, no interest or principal payments are made
during the course of the bankruptcy case. Foreclosure of an interest in real
property of a debtor in a case under the Bankruptcy Code can typically occur
only if the bankruptcy court vacates the stay; an action the bankruptcy court
may be reluctant to take, particularly if the debtor has the prospect of
restructuring his or her debts and the mortgage collateral is not deteriorating
in value. The delay and the consequences thereof caused by such automatic stay
can be significant. Also, under the Bankruptcy Code, the filing of a petition in
bankruptcy by or on behalf of a junior lienor (a subordinate lender secured by a
mortgage on the property) may stay the senior lender from taking action to
foreclose out such junior lien.

     A homeowner may file for relief under the Bankruptcy Code under any of
three different chapters of the Bankruptcy Code. Under Chapter 7, the assets of
the debtor are liquidated and a lender secured by a lien may 'bid in' (i.e., bid
up to the amount of the debt) at the sale of the asset. (See ' -- Foreclosure on
Mortgages.') A homeowner may also file for relief under Chapter 11 of the
Bankruptcy Code and reorganize his or her debts through his or her
reorganization plan. Alternatively, a homeowner may file for relief under
Chapter 13 of the Bankruptcy Code and address his or her debts in a
rehabilitation plan. (Chapter 13 is often referred to as the 'wage earner
chapter' or 'consumer chapter' because most individuals seeking to restructure
their debts file for relief under Chapter 13 rather than under Chapter 11.)

     A reorganzation plan under Chapter 11 and a rehabilitation plan under
Chapter 13 of the Bankruptcy Code may each allow a debtor to cure a default with
respect to a mortgage loan on such debtor's residence by paying arrearages
within a reasonable time period and to deaccelerate and reinstate the original
mortgage loan payment schedule, even though the lender accelerated the loan and
a final judgment of foreclosure had been entered in state court (provided no
sale of the property had yet occurred) prior to the filing of the debtor's
petition under the Bankruptcy Code. Courts have approved Chapter 11 plans that
have allowed curing of defaults over a number of years. In certain
circumstances, defaults may be cured over a number of years even if the full
amount due under the original loan is never repaid, notwithstanding objection by
the mortgagee. Under a Chapter 13 plan, curing of defaults must be accomplished
within the five year maximum term permitted for repayment plans.

     Generally, a repayment plan filed in a case under Chapter 13 may not modify
the claim of a mortgage lender if the borrower elects to retain the property,
the property is the borrower's principal residence and the property is the
lender's only collateral. Notwithstanding the forgoing restrictions, if the last
payment on the original payment schedule of a mortgage loan secured only by the
debtor's principal residence is due before the final date for payment under such
debtor's Chapter 13 plan (which date could be up to five years after the debtor
emerges from bankruptcy), under a case recently decided by an intermediate
appellate court, the debtor's rehabilitation plan could modify the terms of the
loan by bifurcating an undersecured lender's claim into a secured and an
unsecured component in the same manner as if the debtor were a debtor in a case
under Chapter 11 (see the following paragraph). While this decision is contrary
to a prior decision of a more senior appellate court in another jurisdiction, it
is possible that the intermediate court's decision will become the accepted
interpretation in view of the language of the applicable statutory provision. If
this interpretation is adopted by a court considering the treatment in a
Chapter 13 repayment plan of a home equity loan, the home equity loan could be
restructured as if the bankrupcy case were under Chapter 11 if the final payment
is due within five years of the debtor's emergence from bankruptcy.

     In a case under Chapter 11, provided certain substantive and procedural
safeguards are met, the amount and terms of a mortgage loan secured by property
of the debtor, including the debtor's principal residence, may be modified.
Under the Bankruptcy Code, the outstanding amount of a loan secured by the real
property may be reduced to the then-current value of the property as determined
by the court

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(with a corresponding partial reduction of the amount of the lender's security
interest) if the value is less than the amount due on the loan, leaving the
lender a general unsecured creditor for the difference between such value of the
collateral and the outstanding balance of the loan. A borrower's unsecured
indebtedness will typically be discharged in full upon payment of a
substantially reduced amount. Other modifications may include a reduction in the
amount of each scheduled payment, which reduction may result from a reduction in
the rate of interest and/or the alteration of the repayment schedule (with or
without affecting the unpaid principal balance of the loan), and/or an extension
(or reduction) of the final maturity date. State statutes and general principles
of equity may also provide a mortgagor with means to halt a foreclosure
proceeding or sale and to force a restructuring of a mortgage loan on terms a
lender would not otherwise accept. Because many of the Mortgage Loans will have
loan-to-value ratios in excess of 100% at origination (or such loan-to-value
ratios otherwise may exceed 100% in cases where the market value declined
subsequent to origination), a potentially significant portion of the unpaid
principal amount of the related Mortgage Loan would likely be treated as
unsecured indebtedness in a case under Chapter 11.

     In a bankruptcy or similar proceeding of a mortgagor, action may be taken
seeking the recovery, as a preferential transfer or on other grounds, of any
payments made by the mortgagor under the related mortgage loan. Payments on
long-term debt may be protected from recovery as preferences if they are
payments in the ordinary course of business made on debts incurred in the
ordinary course of business or if the value of the collateral exceeds the debt
at the time of payment. Whether any particular payment would be protected
depends upon the facts specific to a particular transaction.

     A trustee in bankruptcy, in some cases, may be entitled to collect its
costs and expenses in preserving or selling the mortgaged property ahead of
payment to the lender. In certain circumstances, subject to the court's
approval, a debtor in a case under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code may have
the power to grant liens senior to the lien of a mortgage. Moreover, the laws of
certain states also give priority to certain tax and mechanics liens over the
lien of a mortgage. Under the Bankruptcy Code, if the court finds that actions
of the mortgagee have been unreasonable and inequitable, the lien of the related
mortgage may be subordinated to the claims of unsecured creditors.

     Various proposals to amend the Bankruptcy Code in ways that could adversely
affect the value of the Mortgage Loans have been considered by Congress, and
more such proposed legislation may be considered in the future. No assurance can
be given that any particular proposal will or will not be enacted into law, or
that any provision so enacted will not differ materially from the proposals
described above.

     The Code provides priority to certain tax liens over the lien of the
mortgage. This may have the effect of delaying or interfering with the
enforcement of rights in respect of a defaulted Mortgage Loan. In addition,
substantive requirements are imposed upon mortgage lenders in connection with
the origination and the servicing of mortgage loans by numerous federal and some
state consumer protection laws. The laws include the federal Truth-in-Lending
Act, (and Regulation Z), Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act (and Regulation
X), Equal Credit Opportunity Act (and Regulation B), Fair Credit Billing Act,
Fair Credit Reporting Act, Fair Housing Act, Housing and Community Development
Act, Home Mortgage Disclosure Act, Federal Trade Commission Act, Fair Debt
Collection Practices Act, Uniform Consumer Credit Code, Consumer Credit
Protection Act, Riegle Act, and related statutes and regulations. These federal
laws impose specific statutory liabilities upon lenders who originate mortgage
loans and who fail to comply with the provisions of the law. In some cases, this
liability may affect assignees of the mortgage loans.

FOR COOPERATIVE LOANS

     Generally, Article 9 of the UCC governs foreclosure on Cooperative shares
and the related proprietary lease or occupancy agreement. Some courts have
interpreted section 9-504 of the UCC to prohibit a deficiency award unless the
creditor establishes that the sale 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 conducted in a commercially
reasonable manner.

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JUNIOR MORTGAGES

     Some of the Mortgage Loans, Multifamily Loans and Home Improvement
Contracts may be secured by junior mortgages or deeds of trust, which are junior
to senior mortgages or deeds of trust which are not part of the Trust Fund. The
rights of the Certificateholders as the holders of a junior deed of trust or a
junior mortgage are subordinate in lien priority and in payment priority to
those of the holder of the senior mortgage or deed of trust, including the prior
rights of the senior mortgagee or beneficiary to receive and apply hazard
insurance and condemnation proceeds and, upon default of the mortgagor, to cause
a foreclosure on the property. Upon completion of the foreclosure proceedings by
the holder of the senior mortgage or the sale pursuant to the deed of trust, the
junior mortgagee's or junior beneficiary's lien will be extinguished unless the
junior lienholder satisfies the defaulted senior loan or asserts its subordinate
interest in a property in foreclosure proceedings. See ' -- Foreclosure on
Mortgages' herein.

     Furthermore, the terms of the junior mortgage or deed of trust are
subordinate to the terms of the senior mortgage or deed of trust. In the event
of a conflict between the terms of the senior mortgage or deed of trust and the
junior mortgage or deed of trust, the terms of the senior mortgage or deed of
trust will govern generally. Upon a failure of the mortgagor or trustor to
perform any of its obligations, the senior mortgagee or beneficiary, subject to
the terms of the senior mortgage or deed of trust, may have the right to perform
the obligation itself. Generally, all sums so expended by the mortgagee or
beneficiary become part of the indebtedness secured by the mortgage or deed of
trust. To the extent a senior mortgagee expends such sums, such sums will
generally have priority over all sums due under the junior mortgage.

CONSUMER PROTECTION LAWS WITH RESPECT TO HOME IMPROVEMENT AND MANUFACTURED
HOUSING CONTRACTS

     Numerous Federal and state consumer protection laws impose substantial
requirements upon creditors involved in consumer finance. These laws include the
federal Truth-in-Lending Act (and Regulation Z), Real Estate Settlement
Procedures Act (and Regulation X), Equal Credit Opportunity Act (and Regulation
B), Fair Credit Billing Act, Fair Credit Reporting Act, Fair Housing Act,
Housing and Community Development Act, Home Mortgage Disclosure Act, Federal
Trade Commission Act, Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, Uniform Consumer
Credit Code, Consumer Credit Protection Act, Riegle Act, and related statutes
and regulations. These laws can impose specific statutory liabilities upon
creditors who fail to comply with their provisions and may affect the
enforceability of the contract.

     Contracts often contain provisions obligating the obligor to pay late
charges if payments are not timely made. In certain cases, Federal and state law
may specifically limit the amount of late charges that may be collected. Unless
otherwise provided in the related Prospectus Supplement, under an Agreement,
late charges will be retained by the Master Servicer as additional servicing
compensation, and any inability to collect these amounts will not affect
payments to Certificateholders.

     Courts have imposed general equitable principles upon repossession and
litigation involving deficiency balances. These equitable principles are
generally designed to relieve a consumer from the legal consequences of a
default.

     In several cases, consumers have asserted that the remedies provided
secured parties under the UCC and related laws violate the due process
protections provided under the 14th Amendment to the Constitution of the United
States. For the most part, courts have upheld the notice provisions of the UCC
and related laws as reasonable or have found that the repossession and resale by
the creditor does not involve sufficient state action to afford constitutional
protection to consumers.

     The so-called 'Holder-in-Due-Course' Rule of the Federal Trade Commission
(the 'FTC Rule') has the effect (subject to any applicable limitations imposed
by the Riegle Act) of subjecting a seller (and certain related creditors and
their assignees (to the extent the liability of such parties is not limited by
the provisions of the Riegle Act)) in a consumer credit transaction and any
assignee of the creditor to all claims and defenses which the debtor in the
transaction could assert against the seller of the goods. Liability under the
FTC Rule is limited to the amounts paid by a debtor on the contract, and the
holder of the contract may also be unable to collect amounts still due
thereunder.

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     Most of the Manufactured Housing Contracts and certain of the Home
Improvement Contracts in the Trust Fund will be subject to the requirements of
the FTC Rule. Accordingly, the Trustee, as holder of Manufactured Housing
Contracts, will be subject to any claims or defenses that the purchaser of the
related manufactured home may assert against the seller of the manufactured
home, subject to a maximum liability equal to the amounts paid by the obligor on
the Contract. If an obligor is successful in asserting any such claim or
defense, and if the Unaffiliated Seller had or should have had knowledge of such
claim or defense, the Master Servicer will have the right to require the
Unaffiliated Seller to repurchase the Contract because of a breach of its
Unaffiliated Seller's representation and warranty that no claims or defenses
exist which would affect the obligor's obligation to make the required payments
under the Contract. The Unaffiliated Seller would then have the right to require
the originating dealer to repurchase the Contract from it and might also have
the right to recover from the dealer for any losses suffered by the Unaffiliated
Seller with respect to which the dealer would have been primarily liable to the
obligor.

OTHER LIMITATIONS

     In addition to the laws limiting or prohibiting deficiency judgments,
numerous other statutory provisions, including Federal bankruptcy laws and
related state laws, may interfere with or affect the ability of a lender to
realize upon collateral and/or enforce a deficiency judgment. For example, in a
proceeding under the Federal bankruptcy law, a court may prevent a lender from
repossessing a home. In the case of an individual eligible for relief in a
proceeding under Chapter 11 of the Federal bankruptcy law, as part of the
rehabilitation plan under Chapter 11, a court may reduce the amount of the
secured indebtedness to the market value of the home at the time of bankruptcy
(as determined by the court), leaving the party providing financing as a general
unsecured creditor for the remainder of the indebtedness. A bankruptcy court may
also reduce the payments due under a contract or change the rate of interest and
time of repayment of the indebtedness pursuant to a Chapter 11 plan of
reorganization. Generally, any plan filed in a proceeding under Chapter 13 of
the Federal bankruptcy law must provide for the full payment of the claim of the
lender without changing the terms of payment if the borrower elects to retain
the property, the property is the borrower's principal residence and the
property is the lender's only collateral.

ENFORCEABILITY OF CERTAIN PROVISIONS

     Unless the Prospectus Supplement indicates otherwise, all the related
Residential Loans, except for FHA Loans and VA 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 without the prior
consent of the mortgagee. The enforceability of these clauses has been impaired
in various ways in certain states by statute or decisional law. The ability of
mortgage lenders and their assignees and transferees to enforce due-on-sale
clauses was addressed by the Garn-St. Germain Depository Institutions Act of
1982 (the 'Garn-St. Germain Act') which was enacted on October 15, 1982. This
legislation, subject to certain exceptions, preempts state constitutional,
statutory and case law that prohibits the enforcement of due-on-sale clauses.
The Garn-St. Germain Act does 'encourage' lenders to permit assumptions 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.

MORTGAGE LOANS

     Exempted from this preemption pursuant to the Garn-St. Germain Act are
mortgage loans (originated other than by federal savings and loan associations
and federal savings banks) that were made or assumed during the period beginning
on the date a state, by statute or final appellate court decision having
statewide effect, prohibited the exercise of due-on-sale clauses and ending on
October 15, 1982 ('Window Period Loans'). However, this exception applies only
to transfers of property underlying Window Period Loans occurring between
October 15, 1982 and October 15, 1985 and does not restrict enforcement of a
due-on-sale clause in connection with current transfers or property underlying
Window Period Loans unless the property underlying such Window Period Loan is
located in one of the three 'window period states' identified below. Due-on-sale
clauses contained in

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Mortgage Loans originated by federal savings and loan associations or federal
savings banks are fully enforceable pursuant to regulations of the Federal Home
Loan Bank Board, predecessor to the Office of Thrift Supervision, which preempt
state law restrictions on the enforcement of due-on-sale clauses. Mortgage Loans
originated by such institutions are therefore not deemed to be Window Period
Loans.

     With the expiration of the exemption for Window Period Loans on October 15,
1985, due-on-sale clauses have become generally enforceable except in those
states whose legislatures exercised their authority to regulate the
enforceability of such clauses with respect to mortgage loans that were (i)
originated or assumed during the 'window period', which ended in all cases not
later than October 15, 1982, and (ii) originated by lenders other than national
banks, federal savings institutions and federal credit unions. FHLMC has taken
the position in its published mortgage servicing standards that, out of a total
of eleven 'window period states', three states (Michigan, New Mexico and Utah)
have enacted statutes extending, on various terms and for varying periods, the
prohibition on enforcement of due-on-sale clauses with respect to certain
categories of Window Period Loans. The Garn-St. Germain Act also sets forth nine
specific instances in which a mortgage lender covered by the Garn-St. Germain
Act (including federal savings and loan associations and federal savings banks)
may not exercise a due-on-sale clause, notwithstanding 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, the creation of
a junior encumbrance and other instances where regulations promulgated by the
Director of the Office of Thrift Supervision (successor to the Federal Home Loan
Bank Board) prohibit such enforcement. To date no such regulations have been
issued. Regulations promulgated under the Garn-St. Germain Act prohibit the
imposition of a prepayment penalty upon the acceleration of a loan pursuant to a
due-on-sale clause.

     The inability to enforce a due-on-sale clause may result in a Mortgage 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 upon the average
life of the Mortgage Loans related to a Series and the number of such Mortgage
Loans which may be outstanding until maturity.

TRANSFER OF MANUFACTURED HOMES

     Generally, manufactured housing contracts contain provisions prohibiting
the sale or transfer of the related manufactured homes without the consent of
the obligee on the contract and permitting the acceleration of the maturity of
such contracts by the obligee on the contract upon any such sale or transfer
that is not consented to. Unless otherwise provided in the related Prospectus
Supplement, the Master Servicer will, to the extent it has knowledge of such
conveyance or proposed conveyance, exercise or cause to be exercised its rights
to accelerate the maturity of the related Contracts through enforcement of
'due-on-sale' clauses, subject to applicable state law. In certain cases, the
transfer may be made by a delinquent obligor in order to avoid a repossession
proceeding with respect to a Manufactured Home.

     In the case of a transfer of a Manufactured Home as to which the Master
Servicer desires to accelerate the maturity of the related Contract, the Master
Servicer's ability to do so will depend on the enforceability under state law of
the 'due-on-sale' clause. The Garn-St. Germain Act preempts, subject to certain
exceptions and conditions, state laws prohibiting enforcement of 'due-on-sale'
clauses applicable to the Manufactured Homes. Consequently, in some cases the
Master Servicer may be prohibited from enforcing a 'due-on-sale' clause in
respect of certain Manufactured Homes.

PREPAYMENT CHARGES AND PREPAYMENTS

     Generally, conventional mortgage loans, Cooperative Loans, Home Improvement
and Manufactured Housing Contracts, residential owner occupied FHA loans and VA
loans may be prepaid in full or in part without penalty. Generally, multifamily
residential loans, including multifamily FHA Loans, may contain provisions
limiting prepayments on such loans, including prohibiting prepayment for a
specified period after origination, prohibiting partial prepayments entirely or
requiring the payment of a prepayment penalty upon prepayment in full or in
part.

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     The laws of certain states may render prepayment fees unenforceable after a
Mortgage Loan has been outstanding for a certain number of years, or may limit
the amount of any prepayment fee to a specified percentage of the original
principal amount of the Mortgage Loan, to a specified percentage of the
outstanding principal balance of a Mortgage Loan, or to a fixed number of
months' interest on the prepaid amount. In certain states, prepayment fees
payable on default or other involuntary acceleration of a Residential Loan may
not be enforceable against the related mortgagor or obligor. Some state
statutory provisions may also treat certain prepayment fees as usurious if in
excess of statutory limits.

SUBORDINATE FINANCING

     When the mortgagor encumbers mortgaged property with one or more junior
liens, the senior lender is subjected to additional risk. First, the mortgagor
may have difficulty servicing and repaying multiple loans. In addition, if the
junior loan permits recourse to the mortgagor (as junior loans often do) and the
senior loan does not, a mortgagor may be more likely to repay sums due on the
junior loan than those on the senior loan. Second, acts of the senior lender
that prejudice the junior lender or impair the junior lender's security may
create a superior equity in favor of the junior lender. For example, if the
mortgagor and the senior lender agree to an increase in the principal amount of
or the interest rate payable on the senior loan, the senior lender may lose its
priority to the extent an existing junior lender is harmed or the mortgagor is
additionally burdened. Third, if the mortgagor defaults on the senior loan
and/or any junior loan or loans, the existence of junior loans and actions taken
by junior lenders can impair the security available to the senior lender and can
interfere with or delay the taking of action by the senior lender. Moreover, the
bankruptcy of a junior lender may operate to stay foreclosure or similar
proceedings by the senior lender.

APPLICABILITY OF USURY LAWS

     Title V of the Depository Institutions Deregulation and Monetary Control
Act of 1980, enacted in March 1980 ('Title V'), provides that state usury
limitations shall not apply to certain types of residential first mortgage loans
originated by certain lenders after March 31, 1980. A similar federal statute
was in effect with respect to mortgage loans made during the first three months
of 1980. The statute authorized any state to reimpose interest rate limits by
adopting, before April 1, 1983, a law or constitutional provision which
expressly rejects application of the federal law. In addition, even where Title
V is not so rejected, any state is authorized by the law to adopt a provision
limiting discount points or other charges on mortgage loans covered by Title V.
Certain states have taken action to reimpose interest rate limits and/or to
limit discount points or other charges.

     The Depositor has been advised by counsel that a court interpreting Title V
would hold that mortgage loans related to a Series originated on or after
January 1, 1980 are subject to federal preemption. Therefore, in a state that
has not taken the requisite action to reject application of Title V or to adopt
a provision limiting discount points or other charges prior to origination of
such mortgage loans, any such limitation under such state's usury law would not
apply to such mortgage loans.

     In any state in which application of Title V has been expressly rejected or
a provision limiting discount points or other charges is adopted, no Mortgage
Loans originated after the date of such state action will be eligible for
inclusion in a Trust Fund if such Mortgage Loans bear interest or provide for
discount points or charges in excess of permitted levels. No Mortgage Loan
originated prior to January 1, 1980 will bear interest or provide for discount
points or charges in excess of permitted levels.

ALTERNATIVE MORTGAGE INSTRUMENTS

     ARM Loans originated by non-federally chartered lenders have historically
been subject to a variety of restrictions. Such restrictions differed from state
to state, resulting in difficulties in determining whether a particular
alternative mortgage instrument originated by a state-chartered lender complied
with applicable law. These difficulties were simplified substantially as a
result of the enactment of Title VIII of the Garn-St. Germain Act ('Title
VIII'). Title VIII provides that, notwithstanding any state law to the contrary,
(i) state-chartered banks may originate 'alternative mortgage instruments'
(including ARM Loans) in accordance with regulations promulgated by the
Comptroller of the

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Currency with respect to origination of alternative mortgage instruments by
national banks, (ii) state-chartered credit unions may originate alternative
mortgage instruments in accordance with regulations promulgated by the National
Credit Union Administration with respect to origination of alternative mortgage
instruments by federal credit unions and (iii) all other non-federally chartered
housing creditors, including without limitation state-chartered savings and loan
associations, 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
Office of Thrift Supervision, with respect to origination of alternative
mortgage instruments by federal savings and loan associations. Title VIII
further 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 such provisions. Certain
states have taken such action.

ENVIRONMENTAL LEGISLATION

     Under the federal Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and
Liability Act, as amended ('CERCLA'), and under state law in certain 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 certain 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 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
(the 'Conservation Act') amended, among other things, the provisions of CERCLA
with respect to lender liability and the secured creditor exemption. The
Conservation Act offers protection to lenders by defining certain activities in
which a lender can engage and still have the benefit of the secured creditor
exemption. A lender will be deemed to have participated in the management of a
mortgaged property, and will lose the secured creditor exemption, if it actually
participates in the operational affairs of the property of the borrower. 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
if it exercises decision-making control over the borrower's environmental
compliance and hazardous substance handling and disposal practices, or assumes
day-to-day management of all operational functions of the mortgaged property.
The Conservation Act also provides that a lender may 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 certain 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. Such cleanup costs may be substantial. It is possible that
such cleanup costs could become a liability of a Trust Fund and reduce the
amounts otherwise distributable to the holders of the related Series of
Certificates. Moreover, certain federal statutes and certain states by statute
impose a lien for any cleanup costs incurred by such state on the property that
is the subject of such cleanup costs (an 'Environmental Lien'). All subsequent
liens on such property generally are subordinated to such 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 such an Environmental Lien could be
adversely affected.

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     Unless otherwise provided in the related Prospectus Supplement, the
mortgage loan seller with respect to any Mortgage Loan included in a Trust Fund
for a particular Series of Securities will represent as to the material
compliance of the related Residential Property with applicable environmental
laws and regulations as of the date of transfer and assignment of such Mortgage
Loan to the Trustee. In addition, unless otherwise provided in the related
Prospectus Supplement, the related Agreement will provide that the Master
Servicer and any Special Servicer ('Special Servicer') acting on behalf of the
Trustee, may not acquire title to a Residential Property or take over its
operation unless the Master Servicer (or Special Servicer) has previously
determined, based on a report prepared by a person who regularly conducts
environmental audits, that (a) there are no circumstances present at the
Residential Property relating to substances for which some action relating to
their investigation or clean-up could be required or that it would be in the
best economic interest of the Trust Fund to take such actions with respect to
the affected Residential Property and (b) that the Residential Property is in
compliance with applicable environmental laws or that it would be in the best
economic interest of the Trust Fund to take the actions necessary to comply with
such laws. See 'Description of the Securities -- Realization Upon Defaulted
Mortgage Loans.'

SOLDIERS' AND SAILORS' CIVIL RELIEF ACT OF 1940

     Generally, under the terms of the Soldiers' and Sailors' Civil Relief Act
of 1940, as amended (the 'Relief Act'), a mortgagor who enters military service
after the origination of such mortgagor's Mortgage Loan or Contract (including a
mortgagor who was in reserve status and is called to active duty after
origination of the Mortgage Loan), may not be charged interest (including fees
and charges) above an annual rate of 6% during the period of such mortgagor's
active duty status, unless a court orders otherwise upon application of the
lender. The Relief Act applies to mortgagors who are members of the Army, Navy,
Air Force, Marines, National Guard, Reserves, Coast Guard, and officers of the
U.S. Public Health Service assigned to duty with the military. Because the
Relief Act applies to mortgagors who enter military service (including
reservists who are called to active duty) after origination of the related
Mortgage Loan, no information can be provided as to the number of loans that may
be affected by the Relief Act. Application of the Relief Act would adversely
affect, for an indeterminate period of time, the ability of the Master Servicer
to collect full amounts of interest on certain of the Mortgage Loans. Any
shortfalls in interest collections resulting from the application of the Relief
Act would result in a reduction of the amounts distributable to the holders of
the related Series of Securities, and would not be covered by advances or,
unless otherwise specified in the related Prospectus Supplement, any form of
credit support provided in connection with such Securities. In addition, the
Relief Act imposes limitations that would impair the ability of the Master
Servicer to foreclose on an affected Mortgage Loan or enforce rights under a
Contract during the mortgagor's period of active duty status, and, under certain
circumstances, during an additional three month period thereafter. Thus, in the
event that such a Mortgage Loan or Contract goes into default, there may be
delays and losses occasioned thereby.

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                    CERTAIN FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSEQUENCES

GENERAL

     The following is a general discussion of the anticipated material federal
income tax consequences of the purchase, ownership and disposition of the
Securities offered hereunder. 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 of 1986, as amended (the 'Code'), and
does not purport to discuss all federal income tax consequences that may be
applicable to particular categories of investors, some of which (such as banks,
insurance companies and foreign investors) may be subject to special rules.
Further, 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. In addition to the federal income tax consequences
described herein, 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 are advised
to consult their own 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 securities of four general types: (i)
securities ('REMIC Securities') representing interests in a Trust Fund, or a
portion thereof, that the Trustee will elect to have treated as a real estate
mortgage investment conduit (the 'REMIC') under Sections 860A through 860G (the
'REMIC Provisions') of the Code, (ii) securities ('Grantor Trust Securities')
representing interests in a Trust Fund ('Grantor Trust Fund') as to which no
such election will be made, (iii) securities ('Partnership Securities')
representing interests in a Trust Fund ('Partnership Trust Fund') which is
treated as a partnership or, if owned by a single beneficial owner, ignored for
federal income tax purposes, and (iv) securities ('Debt Securities')
representing indebtedness of a Partnership Trust Fund for federal income tax
purposes. The Prospectus Supplement for each Series of Securities will indicate
which of the foregoing treatments will apply to such Series and, if a REMIC
election (or elections) will be made for the related Trust Fund, will identify
all 'regular interests' and 'residual interests' in the REMIC. For purposes of
this tax discussion, (i) references to a 'Securityholder' or a 'holder' are to
the beneficial owner of a Security, (ii) references to 'REMIC Pool' are to an
entity or portion thereof as to which a REMIC election will be made and (iii)
unless indicated otherwise in the applicable Prospectus Supplement, references
to 'Mortgage Loans' include Agency Securities and Private Mortgage-Backed
Securities.

     The following discussion is based in part upon the rules governing original
issue discount that are set forth in Sections 1271-1273 and 1275 of the Code and
in the Treasury regulations issued thereunder (the 'OID Regulations'), and in
part upon the REMIC Provisions and the Treasury regulations issued thereunder
(the 'REMIC Regulations'). The OID Regulations do not adequately address certain
issues relevant to, and in some instances provide that they are not applicable
to, securities such as the Securities.

REMICS

CLASSIFICATION OF REMICS

     Upon the issuance of each Series of REMIC Securities, Cadwalader,
Wickersham & Taft, special counsel to the Depositor, will deliver its opinion
generally to the effect that, assuming compliance with all provisions of the
related Pooling and Servicing Agreement, the related Trust Fund (or each
applicable portion thereof) will qualify as a REMIC and the REMIC Securities
offered with respect thereto will be considered to evidence ownership of
'regular interests' ('Regular Securities') or 'residual interests' ('Residual
Securities') in that REMIC within the meaning of the REMIC Provisions.

     In order for the REMIC Pool to qualify as a REMIC, there must be ongoing
compliance on the part of the REMIC Pool with the requirements set forth in the
Code. The REMIC Pool must fulfill an asset test, which requires that no more
than a de minimis portion of the assets of the REMIC Pool, as of the close of
the third calendar month beginning after the 'Startup Day' (which for purposes
of this

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discussion is the date of issuance of the REMIC Securities) and at all times
thereafter, may consist of assets other than 'qualified mortgages' and
'permitted investments.' The REMIC Regulations provide a safe harbor pursuant to
which the de minimis requirement will be met if at all times the aggregate
adjusted basis of the nonqualified assets is less than 1% of the aggregate
adjusted basis of all the REMIC Pool's assets. An entity that fails to meet the
safe harbor may nevertheless demonstrate that it holds no more than a de minimis
amount of nonqualified assets. A REMIC Pool also must provide 'reasonable
arrangements' to prevent its residual interests from being held by 'disqualified
organizations' or agents thereof and must furnish applicable tax information to
transferors or agents that violate this requirement. The Pooling and Servicing
Agreement with respect to each Series of REMIC Securities will contain
provisions meeting these requirements. See 'Taxation of Owners of Residual
Securities -- Tax-Related Restrictions on Transfer of Residual
Securities -- Disqualified Organizations.'

     A 'qualified mortgage' is any obligation that is principally secured by an
interest in real property and that is either transferred to the REMIC Pool on
the Startup Day or is purchased by the REMIC Pool within a three-month period
thereafter pursuant to a fixed price contact in effect on the Startup Day.
Qualified mortgages include whole mortgage loans, such as the Mortgage Loans,
and, generally, certificates of beneficial interest in a grantor trust that
holds mortgage loans and regular interests in another REMIC, such as lower-tier
regular interests in a tiered REMIC. The REMIC Regulations specify that loans
secured by timeshare interests and shares held by a tenant stockholder in a
cooperative housing corporation can be qualified mortgages. A qualified mortgage
includes a qualified replacement mortgage, which is any property that would have
been treated as a qualified mortgage if it were transferred to the REMIC Pool on
the Startup Day and that is received either (i) in exchange for any qualified
mortgage within a three-month period thereafter or (ii) in exchange for a
'defective obligation' within a two-year period thereafter. A 'defective
obligation' includes (i) a mortgage in default or as to which default is
reasonably foreseeable, (ii) a mortgage as to which a customary representation
or warranty made at the time of transfer to the REMIC Pool has been breached,
(iii) a mortgage that was fraudulently procured by the mortgagor, and (iv) a
mortgage that was not in fact principally secured by real property (but only if
such mortgage is disposed of within 90 days of discovery). A Mortgage Loan that
is 'defective' as described in clause (iv) that is not sold or, if within two
years of the Startup Day, exchanged, within 90 days of discovery, ceases to be a
qualified mortgage after such 90-day period.

     'Permitted investments' include cash flow investments, qualified reserve
assets, and foreclosure property. A cash flow investment is an investment,
earning a return in the nature of interest, of amounts received on or with
respect to qualified mortgages for a temporary period, not exceeding 13 months,
until the next scheduled distribution to holders of interests in the REMIC Pool.
A qualified reserve asset is any intangible property held for investment that is
part of any reasonably required reserve maintained by the REMIC Pool to provide
for payments of expenses of the REMIC Pool or amounts due on the regular or
residual interests in the event of defaults (including delinquencies) on the
qualified mortgages, lower than expected reinvestment returns, prepayment
interest shortfalls and certain other contingencies. The reserve fund will be
disqualified if more than 30% of the gross income from the assets in such fund
for the year is derived from the sale or other disposition of property held for
less than three months, unless required to prevent a default on the regular
interests caused by a default on one or more qualified mortgages. A reserve fund
must be reduced 'promptly and appropriately' as payments on the Mortgage Loans
are received. Foreclosure property is real property acquired by the REMIC Pool
in connection with the default or imminent default of a qualified mortgage and
generally not held beyond the close of the third calendar year following the
year of acquisition, with one extension available from the Internal Revenue
Service.

     In addition to the foregoing requirements, the various interests in a REMIC
Pool also must meet certain requirements. All of the interests in a REMIC Pool
must be either of the following: (i) one or more classes of regular interests or
(ii) a single class of residual interests on which distributions, if any, are
made pro rata. A regular interest is an interest in a REMIC Pool that is issued
on the Startup Day with fixed terms, is designated as a regular interest, and
unconditionally entitles the holder to receive a specified principal amount (or
other similar amount), and provides that interest payments (or other similar
amounts), if any, at or before maturity either are payable based on a fixed rate
or a qualified

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variable rate, or consist of a specified, nonvarying portion of the interest
payments on qualified mortgages. Such a specified portion may consist of a fixed
number of basis points, a fixed percentage of the total interest, or a qualified
variable rate, inverse variable rate or difference between two fixed or
qualified variable rates on some or all of the qualified mortgages. The
specified principal amount of a regular interest that provides for interest
payments consisting of a specified, nonvarying portion of interest payments on
qualified mortgages may be zero. A residual interest is an interest in a REMIC
Pool other than a regular interest that is issued on the Startup Day and that is
designated as a residual interest. An interest in a REMIC Pool may be treated as
a regular interest even if payments of principal with respect to such interest
are subordinated to payments on other regular interests or the residual interest
in the REMIC Pool, and are dependent on the absence of defaults or delinquencies
on qualified mortgages or permitted investments, lower than reasonably expected
returns on permitted investments, unanticipated expenses incurred by the REMIC
Pool or prepayment interest shortfalls. Accordingly, the Regular Securities of a
Series will constitute one or more classes of regular interests, and the
Residual Securities with respect to that Series will constitute a single class
of residual interests with respect to each REMIC Pool.

     If an entity electing to be treated as a REMIC fails to comply with one or
more of the ongoing requirements of the Code for such status during any taxable
year, the Code provides that the entity will not be treated as a REMIC for such
year and thereafter. In that event, such entity may be taxable as a corporation
under Treasury regulations, and the related REMIC Securities may not be accorded
the status or given the tax treatment described below. Although the Code
authorizes the Treasury Department to issue regulations providing relief in the
event of an inadvertent termination of REMIC status, no such regulations have
been issued. Any such relief, moreover, may be accompanied by sanctions, such as
the imposition of a corporate tax on all or a portion of the Trust Fund's income
for the period in which the requirements for such status are not satisfied. The
Pooling and Servicing Agreement with respect to each REMIC Pool will include
provisions designed to maintain the Trust Fund's status as a REMIC under the
REMIC Provisions. It is not anticipated that the status of any Trust Fund as a
REMIC will be terminated.

CHARACTERIZATION OF INVESTMENTS IN REMIC SECURITIES

     In general, the REMIC Securities will be treated as 'real estate assets'
within the meaning of Section 856(c)(4)(A) of the Code and assets described in
Section 7701(a)(19)(C) of the Code in the same proportion that the assets of the
REMIC Pool underlying such Securities would be so treated. Moreover, if 95% or
more of the assets of the REMIC Pool qualify for either of the foregoing
treatments at all times during a calendar year, the REMIC Securities will
qualify for the corresponding status in their entirety for that calendar year.
If the assets of the REMIC Pool include Buydown Loans, it is possible that the
percentage of such assets constituting 'loans . . . secured by an interest in
real property which is . . . residential real property' for purposes of Code
Section 7701(a)(19)(C)(v) may be required to be reduced by the amount of the
related funds paid thereon (the 'Buydown Funds'). Interest (including original
issue discount) on the Regular Securities and income allocated to the class of
Residual Securities will be interest described in Section 856(c)(3)(B) of the
Code to the extent that such Securities are treated as 'real estate assets'
within the meaning of Section 856(c)(4)(A) of the Code. In addition, the Regular
Securities will be 'qualified mortgages' within the meaning of Section
860G(a)(3) of the Code if transferred to another REMIC on its Startup Day in
exchange for regular or residual interests therein, and will be 'permitted
assets' within the meaning of Section 860L(c) for a financial asset
securitization investment trust. The determination as to the percentage of the
REMIC Pool's assets that constitute assets described in the foregoing sections
of the Code will be made with respect to each calendar quarter based on the
average adjusted basis of each category of the assets held by the REMIC Pool
during such calendar quarter. The REMIC will report those determinations to
Securityholders in the manner and at the times required by applicable Treasury
regulations. The Small Business Job Protection Act of 1996 (the 'SBJPA of 1996')
repealed the reserve method of bad debts of domestic building and loan
associations and mutual savings banks, and thus has eliminated the asset
category of 'qualifying real property loans' in former Code Section 593(d) for
taxable years beginning after December 31, 1995. The requirements in the SBJPA
of 1996 that such institutions must 'recapture' a portion of their existing bad
debt reserves is suspended if a certain portion of their assets

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are maintained in 'residential loans' under Code Section 7701(a)(19)(C)(v), but
only if such loans were made to acquire, construct or improve the related real
property and not for the purpose of refinancing. However, no effort will be made
to identify the portion of the Mortgage Loans of any Series meeting this
requirement, and no representation is made in this regard.

     The assets of the REMIC Pool will include, in addition to Mortgage Loans,
payments on Mortgage Loans held pending distribution on the REMIC Securities and
property acquired by foreclosure held pending sale, and may include amounts in
reserve accounts. It is unclear whether property acquired by foreclosure held
pending sale and amounts in reserve accounts would be considered to be part of
the Mortgage Loans, or whether such assets (to the extent not invested in assets
described in the foregoing sections) otherwise would receive the same treatment
as the Mortgage Loans for purposes of all of the foregoing sections. The REMIC
Regulations do provide, however, that payments on Mortgage Loans held pending
distribution are considered part of the Mortgage Loans for purposes of Section
856(c)(4)(A) of the Code. Furthermore, foreclosure property will qualify as
'real estate assets' under Section 856(c)(4)(A) of the Code.

TIERED REMIC STRUCTURES

     For certain Series of REMIC Securities, two or more separate elections may
be made to treat designated portions of the related Trust Fund as REMICs
('Tiered REMICs') for federal income tax purposes. Upon the issuance of any such
Series of REMIC Securities, Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft will deliver its
opinion generally to the effect that, assuming compliance with all provisions of
the related Pooling and Servicing Agreement, the Tiered REMICs will each qualify
as a REMIC and the REMIC Securities issued by the Tiered REMICs, respectively,
will be considered to evidence ownership of Regular Securities or Residual
Securities in the related REMIC within the meaning of the REMIC Provisions.

     Solely for purposes of determining whether the REMIC Securities will be
'real estate assets' within the meaning of Section 856(c)(4)(A) of the Code and
'loans secured by an interest in real property' under Section 7701(a)(19)(C) of
the Code, and whether the income on such Securities is interest described in
Section 856(c)(3)(B) of the Code, the Tiered REMICs will be treated as one
REMIC.

TAXATION OF OWNERS OF REGULAR SECURITIES

GENERAL

     In general, interest, original issue discount, and market discount on a
Regular Security will be treated as ordinary income to a holder of the Regular
Security (the 'Regular Securityholder'), and principal payments on a Regular
Security will be treated as a return of capital to the extent of the Regular
Securityholder's basis in the Regular Security allocable thereto. Regular
Securityholders must use the accrual method of accounting with regard to Regular
Securities, regardless of the method of accounting otherwise used by such
Regular Securityholder.

ORIGINAL ISSUE DISCOUNT

     Regular Securities may be issued with 'original issue discount' within the
meaning of Code Section 1273(a). Holders of any Class or Subclass of Regular
Securities having original issue discount generally must include original issue
discount in ordinary income for federal income tax purpose as it accrues, in
accordance with a constant yield method that takes into account the compounding
of interest, in advance of the receipt of the cash attributable to such income.
The following discussion is based in part on temporary and final Treasury
regulations issued on February 2, 1994, as amended on June 14, 1996, (the 'OID
Regulations') under Code Section 1271 through 1273 and 1275 and in part on the
provisions of the 1986 Act. Regular Securityholders should be aware, however,
that the OID Regulations do not adequately address certain issues relevant to
prepayable securities, such as the Regular Securities. To the extent such issues
are not addressed in such regulations, it is anticipated that the Trustee will
apply the methodology described in the Conference Committee Report to the 1986
Act. No assurance can be

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provided that the Internal Revenue Service will not take a different position as
to those matters not currently addressed by the OID Regulations. Moreover, the
OID Regulations include an anti-abuse rule allowing the Internal Revenue Service
to apply or depart from the OID Regulations where necessary or appropriate to
ensure a reasonable tax result in light of the applicable statutory provisions.
A tax result will not be considered unreasonable under the anti-abuse rule in
the absence of a substantial effect on the present value of a taxpayer's tax
liability. Investors are advised to consult their own tax advisors as to the
discussion therein and the appropriate method for reporting interest and
original issue discount with respect to the Regular Securities.

     Each Regular Security (except to the extent described below with respect to
a Regular Security on which principal is distributed in a single installment or
by lots of specified principal amounts upon the request of a Securityholder or
by random lot (a 'Non-Pro Rata Security')) will be treated as a single
installment obligation for purposes of determining the original issue discount
includible in a Regular Securityholder's income. The total amount of original
issue discount on a Regular Security is the excess of the 'stated redemption
price at maturity' of the Regular Security over its 'issue price.' The issue
price of a Class of Regular Securities offered pursuant to this Prospectus
generally is the first price at which a substantial amount of such Class is sold
to the public (excluding bond houses, brokers and underwriters). Although
unclear under the OID Regulations, it is anticipated that the Trustee will treat
the issue price of a Class as to which there is no substantial sale as of the
issue date or that is retained by the Depositor as the fair market value of the
Class as of the issue date. The issue price of a Regular Security also includes
any amount paid by an initial Regular Securityholder for accrued interest that
relates to a period prior to the issue date of the Regular Security, unless the
Regular Securityholder elects on its federal income tax return to exclude such
amount from the issue price and to recover it on the first Distribution Date.
The stated redemption price at maturity of a Regular Security always includes
the original principal amount of the Regular Security, but generally will not
include distributions of interest if such distributions constitute 'qualified
stated interest.' Under the OID Regulations, qualified stated interest generally
means interest payable at a single fixed rate or a qualified variable rate (as
described below) provided that such interest payments are unconditionally
payable at intervals of one year or less during the entire term of the Regular
Security. Because there is no penalty or default remedy in the case of
nonpayment of interest with respect to a Regular Security, it is possible that
no interest on any Class of Regular Securities will be treated as qualified
stated interest. However, except as provided in the following three sentences or
in the applicable Prospectus Supplement, because the underlying Mortgage Loans
provide for remedies in the event of default, it is anticipated that the Trustee
will treat interest with respect to the Regular Securities as qualified stated
interest. Distributions of interest on Regular Securities with respect to which
deferred interest will accrue, will not constitute qualified stated interest, in
which case the stated redemption price at maturity of such Regular Securities
includes all distributions of interest as well as principal thereon. Likewise,
it is anticipated that the Trustee will treat an interest-only Class or a Class
on which interest is substantially disproportionate to its principal amount (a
so-called 'super-premium' Class) as having no qualified stated interest. Where
the interval between the issue date and the first Distribution Date on a Regular
Security is shorter than the interval between subsequent Distribution Dates, the
interest attributable to the additional days will be included in the stated
redemption price at maturity.

     Under a de minimis rule, original issue discount on a Regular Security will
be considered to be zero if such original issue discount is less than 0.25% of
the stated redemption price at maturity of the Regular Security multiplied by
the weighted average maturity of the Regular Security. For this purpose, the
weighted average maturity of the Regular Security is computed as the sum of the
amounts determined by multiplying the number of full years (i.e., rounding down
partial years) from the issue date until each distribution in reduction of
stated redemption price at maturity is scheduled to be made by a fraction, the
numerator of which is the amount of each distribution included in the stated
redemption price at maturity of the Regular Security and the denominator of
which is the stated redemption price at maturity of the Regular Security. The
Conference Committee Report to the 1986 Act provides that the schedule of such
distributions should be determined in accordance with the assumed rate of
prepayment of the Mortgage Loans (the 'Prepayment Assumption') and the
anticipated reinvestment rate, if any, relating to the Regular Securities. The
Prepayment Assumption with respect to a Series of Regular Securities will be set
forth in the applicable Prospectus Supplement.

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Holders generally must report de minimis original issue discount pro rata as
principal payments are received, and such income will be capital gain if the
Regular Security is held as a capital asset. Under the OID Regulations, however,
Regular Securityholders may elect to accrue all de minimis original issue
discount as well as market discount and market premium, under the constant yield
method. See 'Election to Treat All Interest Under the Constant Yield Method.'

     A Regular Securityholder generally must include in gross income for any
taxable year the sum of the 'daily portions', as defined below, of the original
issue discount on the Regular Security accrued during an accrual period for each
day on which it holds the Regular Security, including the date of purchase but
excluding the date of disposition. The Trustee will treat the monthly period
ending on the day before each Distribution Date as the accrual period. With
respect to each Regular Security, a calculation will be made of the original
issue discount that accrues during each successive full accrual period (or
shorter period from the date of original issue) that ends on the day before the
related Distribution Date on the Regular Security. The Conference Committee
Report to the 1986 Act states that the rate of accrual of original issue
discount is intended to be based on the Prepayment Assumption. The original
issue discount accruing in a full accrual period would be the excess, if any, of
(i) the sum of (a) the present value of all of the remaining distributions to be
made on the Regular Security as of the end of that accrual period, and (b) the
distributions made on the Regular Security during the accrual period that are
included in the Regular Security's stated redemption price at maturity, over
(ii) the adjusted issue price of the Regular Security at the beginning of the
accrual period. The present value of the remaining distributions referred to in
the preceding sentence is calculated based on (i) the yield to maturity of the
Regular Security at the issue date, (ii) events (including actual prepayments)
that have occurred prior to the end of the accrual period, and (iii) the
Prepayment Assumption. For these purposes, the adjusted issue price of a Regular
Security at the beginning of any accrual period equals the issue price of the
Regular Security, increased by the aggregate amount of original issue discount
with respect to the Regular Security that accrued in all prior accrual periods
and reduced by the amount of distributions included in the Regular Security's
stated redemption price at maturity that were made on the Regular Security in
such prior periods. The original issue discount accruing during any accrual
period (as determined in this paragraph) will then be divided by the number of
days in the period to determine the daily portion of original issue discount for
each day in the period. With respect to an initial accrual period shorter than a
full accrual period, the daily portions of original issue discount must be
determined according to an appropriate allocation under any reasonable method.

     Under the method described above, the daily portions of original issue
discount required to be included in income by a Regular Securityholder generally
will increase to take into account prepayments on the Regular Securities as a
result of prepayments on the Mortgage Loans that exceed the Prepayment
Assumption, and generally will decrease (but not below zero for any period) if
the prepayments are slower than the Prepayment Assumption. As increase in
prepayments on the Mortgage Loans with respect to a Series of Regular Securities
can result in both a change in the priority of principal payments with respect
to certain Classes of Regular Securities and either an increase or decrease in
the daily portions of original issue discount with respect to such Regular
Securities.

     In the case of a Non-Pro Rata Security, it is anticipated that the Trustee
will determine the yield to maturity of such Security based upon the anticipated
payment characteristics of the Class as a whole under the Prepayment Assumption.
In general, the original issue discount accruing on each Non-Pro Rata Security
in a full accrual period would be its allocable share of the original issue
discount with respect to the entire Class, as determined in accordance with the
preceding paragraph. However, in the case of a distribution in retirement of the
entire unpaid principal balance of any Non-Pro Rata Security (or portion of such
unpaid principal balance), (a) the remaining unaccrued original issue discount
allocable to such Security (or to such portion) will accrue at the time of such
distribution, and (b) the accrual of original issue discount allocable to each
remaining Security of such Class (or the received) will be adjusted by reducing
the present value of the remaining payments on such Class and the adjusted issue
price of such Class to the extent attributable to the portion of the unpaid
principal balance thereof that was distributed. The Depositor believes that the
foregoing treatment is consistent with the 'pro rata prepayment' rules of the
OID Regulations, but with the rate of accrual of original

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issue discount determined based on the Prepayment Assumption for the Class as a
whole. Investors are advised to consult their tax advisors as to this treatment.

ACQUISITION PREMIUM

     A purchaser of a Regular Security at a price greater than its adjusted
issue price but less than its stated redemption price at maturity will be
required to include in gross income the daily portions of the original issue
discount on the Regular Security reduced pro rata by a fraction, the numerator
of which is the excess of its purchase price over such adjusted issue price and
the denominator of which is the excess of the remaining stated redemption price
at maturity over the adjusted issue price. Alternatively, such a subsequent
purchaser may elect to treat all such acquisition premium under the constant
yield method, as described below under the heading 'Election to Treat All
Interest Under the Constant Yield Method.'

VARIABLE RATE REGULAR SECURITIES

     Regular Securities may provide for interest based on a variable rate. Under
the OID Regulations, interest is treated as payable at a variable rate if,
generally, (i) the issue price does not exceed the original principal balance by
more than a specified amount and (ii) the interest compounds or is payable at
least annually at current values of (a) one or more 'qualified floating rates',
(b) a single fixed rate and one or more qualified floating rates, (c) a single
'objective rate', or (d) a single fixed rate and a single objective rate that is
a 'qualified inverse floating rate.' A floating rate is a qualified floating
rate if variations can reasonably be expected to measure contemporaneous
variations in the cost of newly borrowed funds, where such rate is subject to a
fixed multiple that is greater that 0.65 but not more than 1.35. Such rate may
also be increased or decreased by a fixed spread or subject to a fixed cap or
floor, or a cap or floor that is not reasonably expected as of the issue date to
affect the yield of the instrument significantly. An objective rate is any rate
(other than a qualified floating rate) that is determined using a single fixed
formula and that is based on objective financial or economic information,
provided that such information is not (i) within the control of the issuer or a
related party or (ii) unique to the circumstances of the issuer or a related
party. A qualified inverse floating rate is a rate equal to a fixed rate minus a
qualified floating rate that inversely reflects contemporaneous variations in
the cost of newly borrowed funds; an inverse floating rate that is not a
qualified inverse floating rate may nevertheless be an objective rate. A Class
of Regular Securities may be issued under this Prospectus that does not have a
variable rate under the foregoing rules, for example, a Class that bears
different rates at different times during the period it is outstanding such that
it is considered significantly 'front-loaded' or 'back-loaded' within the
meaning of the OID Regulations. It is possible that such a Class may be
considered to bear 'contingent interest' within the meaning of the OID
Regulations. The OID Regulations, as they relate to the treatment of contingent
interest, are by their terms not applicable to Regular Securities. However, if
final regulations dealing with contingent interest with respect to Regular
Securities apply the same principles as the OID Regulations, such regulations
may lead to different timing of income inclusion that would be the case under
the OID Regulations. Furthermore, application of such principles could lead to
the characterization of gain on the sale of contingent interest Regular
Securities as ordinary income. Investors should consult their tax advisors
regarding the appropriate treatment of any Regular Security that does not pay
interest at a fixed rate or variable rate as described in this paragraph.

     Under the REMIC Regulations, a Regular Security (i) bearing a rate that
qualifies as a variable rate under the OID Regulations that is tied to current
values of a variable rate (or the highest, lowest or average of two or more
variable rates, including a rate based on the average cost of funds of one or
more financial institutions), or a positive or negative multiple of such a rate
(plus or minus a specified number of basis points), or that represents a
weighted average of rates on some or all of the Mortgage Loans, including such a
rate that is subject to one or more caps or floors, or (ii) bearing one or more
such variable rates for one or more periods, or one or more fixed rates for one
or more periods, and a different variable rate or fixed rate for other periods,
qualifies as a regular interest in a REMIC. Accordingly, unless otherwise
indicated in the applicable Prospectus Supplement, it is anticipated that

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the Trustee will treat Regular Securities that qualify as regular interests
under this rule in the same manner as obligations bearing a variable rate for
original issue discount reporting purposes.

     The amount of original issue discount with respect to a Regular Security
bearing a variable rate of interest will accrue in the manner described above
under 'Original Issue Discount', with the yield to maturity and future payments
on such Regular Security generally to be determined by assuming that interest
will be payable for the life of the Regular Security based on the initial rate
(or, if different, the value of the applicable variable rate as of the pricing
date) for the relevant Class. Unless required otherwise by applicable final
regulations, it is anticipated that the Trustee will treat such variable
interest as qualified stated interest, other than variable interest on an
interest-only or super-premium Class, which will be treated as non-qualified
stated interest includible in the stated redemption price at maturity. Ordinary
income reportable for any period will be adjusted based on subsequent changes in
the applicable interest rate index.

     Although unclear under the OID Regulations, unless required otherwise by
applicable final regulations, it is anticipated that the Trustee will treat
Regular Securities bearing an interest rate that is a weighted average of the
net interest rates on Mortgage Loans as having qualified stated interest, except
to the extent that initial 'teaser' rates cause sufficiently 'back-loaded'
interest to create more than de minimis original issue discount. The yield on
such Regular Securities for purposes of accruing original issue discount will be
a hypothetical fixed rate based on the fixed rates, in the case of fixed rate
Mortgage Loans, and initial 'teaser rates' followed by fully indexed rates, in
the case of adjustable rate Mortgage Loans. In the case of adjustable rate
Mortgage Loans, the applicable index used to compute interest on the Mortgage
Loans in effect on the pricing date (or possibly the issue date) will be deemed
to be in effect beginning with the period in which the first weighted average
adjustment date occurring after the issue date occurs. Adjustments will be made
in each accrual period either increasing or decreasing the amount of ordinary
income reportable to reflect the actual Pass-Through Rate on the Regular
Securities.

MARKET DISCOUNT

     A purchaser of a Regular Security also may be subject to the market
discount rules of Code Sections 1276 through 1278. Under these sections and the
principles applied by the OID Regulations in the context of original issue
discount, 'market discount' is the amount by which the purchaser's original
basis in the Regular Security (i) is exceeded by the then-current principal
amount of the Regular Security, or (ii) in the case of a Regular Security having
original issue discount, is exceeded by the adjusted issue price of such Regular
Security at the time of purchase. Such purchaser generally will be required to
recognize ordinary income to the extent of accrued market discount on such
Regular Security as distributions includible in the stated redemption price at
maturity thereof are received, in an amount not exceeding any such distribution.
Such market discount would accrue in a manner to be provided in Treasury
regulations and should take into account the Prepayment Assumption. The
Conference Committee Report to the 1986 Act provides that until such regulations
are issued, such market discount would accrue either (i) on the basis of a
constant interest rate, or (ii) in the ratio of stated interest allocable to the
relevant period to the sum of the interest for such period plus the remaining
interest as of the end of such period, or in the case of a Regular Security
issued with original issue discount, in the ratio of original issue discount
accrued for the relevant period to the sum of the original issue discount
accrued for such period plus the remaining original issue as of the end of such
period. Such purchaser also generally will be required to treat a portion of any
gain on a sale or exchange of the Regular Security 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 as partial distributions in reduction of the stated redemption
price at maturity were received. Such purchaser will be required to defer
deduction of a portion of the excess of the interest paid or accrued on
indebtedness incurred to purchase or carry a Regular Security over the interest
distributable thereon. The deferred portion of such interest expense in any
taxable year generally will not exceed the accrued market discount on the
Regular Security for such year. Any such deferred interest expense is, in
general, allowed as a deduction not later than the year in which the related
market discount income is recognized or the Regular Security is disposed of. As
an alternative

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to the inclusion of market discount in income on the foregoing basis, the
Regular Securityholder may elect to include market discount in income currently
as it accrues on all market discount instruments acquired by such Regular
Securityholder in that taxable year or thereafter, in which case the interest
deferral rule will not apply. See 'Election to Treat All Interest Under the
Constant Yield Method' below regarding an alternative manner in which such
election may be deemed to be made.

     By analogy to the OID Regulations, market discount with respect to a
Regular Security will be considered to be zero if such market discount is less
than 0.25% of the remaining stated redemption price at maturity of such Regular
Security multiplied by the weighted average maturity of the Regular Security
(determined as described above in the third paragraph under 'Original Issue
Discount') remaining after the date of purchase. It appears that de minimis
market discount would be reported in a manner similar to de minimis original
issue discount. See 'Original Issue Discount' above. Treasury regulations
implementing the market discount rules have not yet been issued, and therefore
investors should consult their own tax advisors regarding the application of
these rules. Investors should also consult Revenue Procedure 92-67 concerning
the elections to include market discount in income currently and to accrue
market discount on the basis of the constant yield method.

PREMIUM

     A Regular Security purchased at a cost greater than its remaining stated
redemption price at maturity generally is considered to be purchased at a
premium. If the Regular Securityholder holds such Regular Security as a 'capital
asset' within the meaning of Code Section 1221, the Regular Securityholder may
elect under Code Section 171 to amortize such premium under the constant yield
method. Such election will apply to all debt obligations acquired by the Regular
Securityholder at a premium held in that taxable year or thereafter, unless
revoked with the permission of the Internal Revenue Service. Final Treasury
regulations with respect to amortization of bond premiums do not by their terms
apply to obligations, such as the Regular Securities, which are prepayable as
described in Code Secion 1272(a)(6). However, the Conference Committee Report to
the 1986 Act indicates a Congressional intent that the same rules that apply to
the accrual of market discount on installment obligations will also apply to
amortizing bond premium under Code Section 171 on installment obligations such
as the Regular Securities, although it is unclear whether the alternatives to
the constant interest method described above under 'Market Discount' are
available. Amortizable bond premium will be treated as an offset to interest
income on a Regular Security, rather than as a separate deductible item. See
'Election to Treat All Interest Under the Constant Yield Method' below regarding
an alternative manner in which the Code Section 171 election may be deemed to be
made.

ELECTION TO TREAT ALL INTEREST UNDER THE CONSTANT YIELD METHOD

     A holder of a debt instrument such as a Regular Security may elect to treat
all interest that accrues on the instrument using the constant yield method,
with none of the interest being treated as qualified stated interest. For
purposes of applying the constant yield method to a debt instrument subject to
such an election, (i) 'interest' includes stated interest, original issue
discount, de minimis original issue discount, market discount and de minimis
market discount, as adjusted by any amortizable bond premium or acquisition
premium and (ii) the debt instrument is treated as if the instrument were issued
on the holder's acquisition date in the amount of the holder's adjusted basis
immediately after acquisition. It is unclear whether, for this purpose, the
initial Prepayment Assumption would continue to apply or if a new prepayment
assumption as of the date of the holder's acquisition would apply. A holder
generally may make such an election on an instrument by instrument basis or for
a class or group of debt instruments. However, if the holder makes such an
election with respect to a debt instrument with amortizable bond premium or with
market discount, the holder is deemed to have made elections to amortize bond
premium or to report market discount income currently as it accrues under the
constant yield method, respectively, for all premium bonds held or market
discount bonds acquired by the holder in the same taxable year or thereafter.
The election is made on the holder's federal income tax return for the year in
which the debt instrument is acquired and is irrevocable except with the
approval of the Internal Revenue Service. Investors should consult their own tax
advisors regarding the advisability of making such an election.

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TREATMENT OF LOSSES

     Regular Securityholders will be required to report income with respect to
Regular Securities on the accrual method of accounting, without giving effect to
delays or reductions in distributions attributable to defaults or delinquencies
on the Mortgage Loans, except to the extent it can be established that such
losses are uncollectible. Accordingly, the holder of a Regular Security,
particularly a Subordinate Security, may have income, or may incur a diminution
in cash flow as a result of a default or delinquency, but may not be able to
take a deduction (subject to the discussion below) for the corresponding loss
until a subsequent taxable year. In this regard, investors are cautioned that
while they may generally cease to accrue interest income if it reasonably
appears that the interest will be uncollectible, the Internal Revenue Service
may take the position that original issue discount must continue to be accrued
in spite of its uncollectibility until the debt instrument is disposed of in a
taxable transaction or becomes worthless in accordance with the rules of Code
Section 166. To the extent the rules of Code Section 166 regarding bad debts are
applicable, it appears that Regular Securityholders that are corporations or
that otherwise hold the Regular Securities in connection with a trade or
business should in general be allowed to deduct as an ordinary loss such loss
with respect to principal sustained during the taxable year on account of any
such Regular Securities becoming wholly or partially worthless, and that, in
general, Regular Securityholders that are not corporations and do not hold the
Regular Securities in connection with a trade or business should be allowed to
deduct as a short-term capital loss any loss sustained during the taxable year
on account of a portion of any such Regular Securities becoming wholly
worthless. Although the matter is not free from doubt, such non-corporate
Regular Securityholders should be allowed a bad debt deduction at such time as
the principal balance of such Regular Securities is reduced to reflect losses
resulting from any liquidated Mortgage Loans. The Internal Revenue Service,
however, could take the position that non-corporate holders will be allowed a
bad debt deduction to reflect such losses only after all the Mortgage Loans
remaining in the Trust Estate have been liquidated or the applicable Class of
Regular Securities has been otherwise retired. The Internal Revenue Service
could also assert that losses on the Regular Securities are deductible based on
some other method that may defer such deductions for all holders, such as
reducing future cashflow for purposes of computing original issue discount. This
may have the effect of creating 'negative' original issue discount which would
be deductible only against future positive original issue discount or otherwise
upon termination of the Class. Regular Securityholders are urged to consult
their own tax advisors regarding the appropriate timing, amount and character of
any loss sustained with respect to such Regular Securities. While losses
attributable to interest previously reported as income should be deductible as
ordinary losses by both corporate and non-corporate holders, the Internal
Revenue Service may take the position that losses attributable to accrued
original issue discount may only be deducted as capital losses in the case of
non-corporate holders who do not hold the Regular Securities in connection with
a trade or business. Special loss rules are applicable to banks and thrift
institutions, including rules regarding reserves for bad debts. Such taxpayers
are advised to consult their tax advisors regarding the treatment of losses on
Regular Securities.

SALE OR EXCHANGE OF REGULAR SECURITIES

     If a Regular Securityholder sells or exchanges a Regular Security, the
Regular Securityholder will recognize gain or loss equal to the difference, if
any, between the amount received and its adjusted basis in the Regular Security.
The adjusted basis of a Regular Security generally will equal the cost of the
Regular Security to the seller, increased by any original issue discount or
market discount previously included in the seller's gross income with respect to
the Regular Security and reduced by amounts included in the stated redemption
price at maturity of the Regular Security that were previously received by the
seller, by any amortized premium and by any recognized losses.

     Except as described above with respect to market discount, and except as
provided in this paragraph, any gain or loss on the sale or exchange of a
Regular Security realized by an investor who holds the Regular Security as a
capital asset will be capital gain or loss and will be long-term or short-term
depending on whether the Regular Security has been held for the applicable
holding period (described below). Such gain will be treated as ordinary income
(i) if a Regular Security is held as part of a 'conversion transaction' as
defined in Code Section 1258(c), up to the amount of interest that

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would have accrued on the Regular Securityholder's net investment in the
conversion transaction at 120% of the appropriate applicable Federal rate under
Code Section 1274(d) in effect at the time the taxpayer entered into the
transaction minus any amount previously treated as ordinary income with respect
to any prior disposition of property that was held as part of such transaction,
(ii) in the case of a non-corporate taxpayer, to the extent such taxpayer has
made an election under Code Section 163(d)(4) to have net capital gains taxed as
investment income at ordinary income rates, or (iii) to the extent that such
gain does not exceed the excess, if any, of (a) the amount that would have been
includible in the gross income of the holder if its yield on such Regular
Security were 110% of the applicable Federal rate as of the date of purchase,
over (b) the amount of income actually includible in the gross income of such
holder with respect to such Regular Security. In addition, gain or loss
recognized from the sale of a Regular Security by certain banks or thrift
institutions will be treated as ordinary income or loss pursuant to Code Section
582(c). Capital gains of non-corporate taxpayers generally are subject to a
lower maximum tax rate (20%) than ordinary income of such taxpayers (39.6%) for
capital assets held for more than one year. The maximum tax rate for
corporations is the same with respect to both ordinary income and capital gains.

TAXATION OF OWNERS OF RESIDUAL SECURITIES

TAXATION OF REMIC INCOME

     Generally, the 'daily portions' of REMIC taxable income or net loss will be
includible as ordinary income or loss in determining the federal taxable income
of holders of Residual Securities ('Residual Holders'), and will not be taxed
separately to the REMIC Pool. The daily portions of REMIC taxable income or net
loss of a Residual Holder are determined by allocating the REMIC Pool's taxable
income or net loss for each calendar quarter ratably to each day in such quarter
and by allocating such daily portion among the Residual Holders in proportion to
their respective holdings of Residual Securities in the REMIC Pool on such day.
REMIC taxable income is generally determined in the same manner as the taxable
income of an individual using the accrual method of accounting, except that (i)
the limitations on deductibility of investment interest expense and expenses for
the production of income do not apply, (ii)all bad loans will be deductible as
business bad debts, and (iii) the limitation on the deductibility of interest
and expenses related to tax-exempt income will apply. The REMIC Pool's gross
income includes interest, original issue discount income and market discount
income, if any, on the Mortgage Loans, reduced by amortization of any premium on
the Mortgage Loans, plus income from amortization of issue premium, if any, on
the Regular Securities, plus income on reinvestment of cash flows and reserve
assets, plus any cancellation of indebtedness income upon allocation of realized
losses to the Regular Securities. The REMIC Pool's deductions include interest
and original issue discount expense on the Regular Securities, servicing fees on
the Mortgage Loans, other administrative expenses of the REMIC Pool and realized
losses on the Mortgage Loans. The requirement that Residual Holders report their
pro rata share of taxable income or net loss of the REMIC Pool will continue
until there are no Securities of any class of the related Series outstanding.

     The taxable income recognized by a Residual Holder in any taxable year will
be affected by, among other factors, the relationship between the timing of
recognition of interest, original issue discount or market discount income or
amortization of premium with respect to the Mortgage Loans, on the one hand, and
the timing of deductions for interest (including original issue discount) or
income from amortization of issue premium on the Regular Securities, on the
other hand. In the event that an interest in the Mortgage Loans is acquired by
the REMIC Pool at a discount, and one or more of such Mortgage Loans is prepaid,
the prepayment may be used in whole or in part to make distributions in
reduction of principal on the Regular Securities, and (ii) the discount on the
Mortgage Loans which is includible in income may exceed the deduction allowed
upon such distributions on those Regular Securities on account of any unaccrued
original issue discount relating to those Regular Securities. When there is more
than one Class of Regular Securities that distribute principal sequentially,
this mismatching of income and deductions is particularly likely to occur in the
early years following issuance of the Regular Securities when distributions in
reduction of principal are being made in respect of earlier Classes of Regular
Securities to the extent that such Classes are not issued with substantial
discount or are issued at a premium. If taxable income attributable to such a
mismatching is realized, in

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general, losses would be allowed in later years as distributions on the later
maturing Classes of Regular Securities are made. Taxable income may also be
greater in earlier years than in later years as a result of the fact that
interest expense deductions, expressed as a percentage of the outstanding
principal amount of such a Series of Regular Securities, may increase over time
as distributions in reduction of principal are made on the lower yielding
Classes of Regular Securities, whereas, to the extent the REMIC Pool consists of
fixed rate Mortgage Loans, interest income with respect to any given Mortgage
Loan will remain constant over time as a percentage of the outstanding principal
amount of that loan. Consequently, Residual Holders must have sufficient other
sources of cash to pay any federal, state, or local income taxes due as a result
of such mismatching or unrelated deductions against which to offset such income,
subject to the discussion of 'excess inclusions' below under ' -- Limitations on
Offset or Exemption of REMIC Income.' The timing of such mismatching of income
and deductions described in this paragraph, if present with respect to a Series
of Securities, may have a significant adverse effect upon a Residual Holder's
after-tax rate of return. In addition, a Residual Holder's taxable income during
certain periods may exceed the income reflected by such Residual Holders for
such periods in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles.
Investors should consult their own accountants concerning the accounting
treatment of their investment in Residual Securities.

BASIS AND LOSSES

     The amount of any net loss of the REMIC Pool that may be taken into account
by the Residual Holder is limited to the adjusted basis of the Residual Security
as of the close of the quarter (or time of disposition of the Residual Security,
if earlier), determined without taking into account the net loss for the
quarter. The initial adjusted basis of a purchaser of a Residual Security is the
amount paid for such Residual Security. Such adjusted basis will be increased by
the amount of taxable income of the REMIC Pool reportable by the Residual Holder
and will be decreased (but not below zero), first, by a cash distribution from
the REMIC Pool and, second, by the amount of loss of the REMIC Pool reportable
by the Residual Holder. Any loss that is disallowed on account of this
limitation may be carried over indefinitely with respect to the Residual Holder
as to whom such loss was disallowed and may be used by such Residual Holder only
to offset any income generated by the same REMIC Pool.

     A Residual Holder will not be permitted to amortize directly the cost of
its Residual Security as an offset to its share of the taxable income of the
related REMIC Pool. However, the taxable income will not include cash received
by the REMIC Pool that represents a recovery of the REMIC Pool's basis in its
assets. Such recovery of basis by the REMIC Pool will have the effect of
amortization of the issue price of the Residual Securities over their life.
However, in view of the possible acceleration of the income of Residual Holders
described above under 'Taxation of REMIC Income', the period of time over which
such issue price is effectively amortized may be longer than the economic life
of the Residual Securities.

     A Residual Security may have a negative value if the net present value of
anticipated tax liabilities exceeds the present value of anticipated cash flows.
The REMIC Regulations appear to treat the issue price of such a residual
interest as zero rather than such negative amount for purposes of determining
the REMIC Pool's basis in its assets. The preamble to the REMIC Regulations
states that the Internal Revenue Service may provide future guidance on the
proper tax treatment of payments made by a transferor of such a residual
interest to induce the transferee to acquire the interest, and Residual Holders
should consult their own tax advisors in this regard.

     Further, to the extent that the initial adjusted basis of a Residual Holder
(other than an original holder) in the Residual Security is greater than the
corresponding portion of the REMIC Pool's basis in the Mortgage Loans, the
Residual Holder will not recover a portion of such basis until termination of
the REMIC Pool unless future Treasury regulations provide for periodic
adjustments to the REMIC income otherwise reportable by such holder. The REMIC
Regulations currently in effect do not so provide. See ' -- Treatment of Certain
Items of REMIC Income and Expense -- Market Discount' below regarding the basis
of Mortgage Loans to the REMIC Pool and 'Sale or Exchange of a Residual
Security' below regarding possible treatment of a loss upon termination of the
REMIC Pool as a capital loss.

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TREATMENT OF CERTAIN ITEMS OF REMIC INCOME AND EXPENSE

     Although it is anticipated that the Trustee will compute REMIC income and
expense in accordance with the Code and applicable regulations, the authorities
regarding the determination of specific items of income and expense are subject
to differing interpretations. The Depositor makes no representation as to the
specific method that will be used for reporting income with respect to the
Mortgage Loans and expenses with respect to the Regular Securities, and
different methods could result in different timing or reporting of taxable
income or net loss to Residual Holders or differences in capital gain versus
ordinary income.

     Original Issue Discount and Premium. Generally, the REMIC Pool's deductions
for original issue discount and income from amortization of issue premium will
be determined in the same manner as original issue discount income on Regular
Securities as described above under 'Taxation of Owners of Regular
Securities -- Original Issue Discount' and ' -- Variable Rate Regular
Securities', without regard to the de minimis rule described therein, and
' -- Premium.'

     Market Discount. The REMIC Pool will have market discount income in respect
of Mortgage Loans if, in general, the basis of the REMIC Pool in such Mortgage
Loans is exceeded by their unpaid principal balances. The REMIC Pool's basis in
such Mortgage Loans is generally the fair market value of the Mortgage Loans
immediately after the transfer thereof to the REMIC Pool. The REMIC Regulations
provide that such basis is equal in the aggregate to the issue prices of all
regular and residual interests in the REMIC Pool. The accrued portion of such
market discount would be recognized currently as an item of ordinary income in a
manner similar to original issue discount. Market discount income generally
should accrue in the manner described above under 'Taxation of Owners of Regular
Securities -- Market Discount.'

     Premium. Generally, if the basis of the REMIC Pool in the Mortgage Loans
exceeds the unpaid principal balances thereof, the REMIC Pool will be considered
to have acquired such Mortgage Loans at a premium equal to the amount of such
excess. As stated above, the REMIC Pool's basis in Mortgage Loans is the fair
market value of the Mortgage Loans, based on the aggregate of the issue prices
of the regular and residual interests in the REMIC Pool immediately after the
transfer thereof to the REMIC Pool. In a manner analogous to the discussion
above under 'Taxation of Owners of Regular Securities -- Premium,' a person that
holds a Mortgage Loan as a capital asset under Code Section 1221 may elect under
Code Section 171 to amortize premium on Mortgage Loans originated after
September 27, 1985 under the constant yield method. Amortizable bond premium
will be treated as an offset to interest income on the Mortgage Loans, rather
than as a separate deduction item. Because substantially all of the mortgagors
on the Mortgage Loans are expected to be individuals, Code Section 171 will not
be available for premium on Mortgage Loans originated on or prior to September
27, 1985. Premium with respect to such Mortgage Loans may be deductible in
accordance with a reasonable method regularly employed by the holder thereof.
The allocation of such premium pro rata among principal payments should be
considered a reasonable method; however, the Internal Revenue Service may argue
that such premium should be allocated in a different manner, such as allocating
such premium entirely to the final payment of principal.

LIMITATIONS ON OFFSET OR EXEMPTION OF REMIC INCOME

     A portion (or all) of the REMIC taxable income includible in determining
the federal income tax liability of a Residual Holder will be subject to special
treatment. That portion, referred to as the 'excess inclusion,' is equal to the
excess of REMIC taxable income for the calendar quarter allocable to a Residual
Security over the daily accruals for such quarterly period of (i) 120% of the
long-term applicable Federal rate that would have applied to the Residual
Security (if it were a debt instrument) on the Startup Day under Code Section
1274(d), multiplied by (ii) the adjusted issue price of such Residual Security
at the beginning of such quarterly period. For this purpose, the adjusted issue
price of a Residual Security at the beginning of a quarter is the issue price of
the Residual Security, plus the amount of such daily accruals of REMIC income
described in this paragraph for all prior quarters, decreased by any
distributions made with respect to such Residual Security prior to the beginning
of such quarterly period. Accordingly, the portion of the REMIC Pool's taxable
income that will be treated

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as excess inclusions will be a larger portion of such income as the adjusted
issue price of the Residual Securities diminishes.

     The portion of a Residual Holder's REMIC taxable income consisting of the
excess inclusions generally may not be offset by other deductions, including net
operating loss carryforwards, on such Residual Holder's return. However, net
operating loss carryovers are determined without regard to excess inclusion
income. Further, if the Residual Holder is an organization subject to the tax on
unrelated business income imposed by Code Section 511, the Residual Holder's
excess inclusions will be treated as unrelated business taxable income of such
Residual Holder for purposes of Code Section 511. In addition, REMIC taxable
income is subject to 30% withholding tax with respect to certain persons who are
not U.S. Persons (as defined below under 'Tax-Related Restrictions on Transfer
of Residual Securities -- Foreign Investors'), and the portion thereof
attributable to excess inclusions is not eligible for any reduction in the rate
of withholding tax (by treaty or otherwise). See 'Taxation of Certain Foreign
Investors -- Residual Securities' below. Finally, if a real estate investment
trust or a regulated investment company owns a Residual Security, a portion
(allocated under Treasury regulations yet to be issued) of dividends paid by the
real estate investment trust or regulated investment company could not be offset
by net operating losses of its shareholders, would constitute unrelated business
taxable income for tax-exempt shareholders, and would be ineligible for
reduction of withholding to certain persons who are not U.S. Persons. The SBJPA
of 1996 has eliminated the special rule permitting Section 593 institutions
('thrift institutions') to use net operating losses and other allowable
deductions to offset their excess inclusion income from Residual Securities that
have 'significant value' within the meaning of the REMIC Regulations, effective
for taxable years beginning after December 31, 1995, except with respect to
Residual Securities continuously held by a thrift institution since November 1,
1995.

     In addition, the SBJPA of 1996 provides three rules for determining the
effect of excess inclusions on the alternative minimum taxable income of a
Residual Holder. First, alternative minimum taxable income for a Residual Holder
is determined without regard to the special rule, discussed above, that taxable
income cannot be less than excess inclusions. Second, a Residual Holder's
alternative minimum taxable income for a taxable year cannot be less than the
excess inclusions for the year. Third, the amount of any alternative minimum tax
net operating loss deduction must be computed without regard to any excess
inclusions. These rules are effective for taxable years beginning after
December 31, 1986, unless a Residual Holder elects to have such rules apply only
to taxable years beginning after August 20, 1996.

TAX-RELATED RESTRICTIONS ON TRANSFER OF RESIDUAL SECURITIES

     Disqualified Organizations. If any legal or beneficial interest in a
Residual Security is transferred to a Disqualified Organization (as defined
below), a tax would be imposed in an amount equal to the product of (i) the
present value of the total anticipated excess inclusions with respect to such
Residual Security for periods after the transfer and (ii) the highest marginal
federal income tax rate applicable to corporations. The REMIC Regulations
provide that the anticipated excess inclusions are based on actual prepayment
experience to the date of the transfer and projected payments based on the
Prepayment Assumption. The present value rate equals the applicable Federal rate
under Code Section 1274(d) as of the date of the transfer for a term ending with
the last calendar quarter in which excess inclusions are expected to accrue.
Such rate is applied to the anticipated excess inclusions from the end of the
remaining calendar quarters in which they arise to the date of the transfer.
Such a tax generally would be imposed on the transferor of the Residual
Security, except that where such transfer is through an agent (including a
broker, nominee, or other middleman) for a Disqualified Organization, the tax
would instead be imposed on such agent. However, a transferor of a Residual
Security would in no event be liable for such tax with respect to a transfer if
the transferee furnished to the transferor an affidavit stating that the
transferee is not a Disqualified Organization and, as of the time of the
transfer, the transferor does not have actual knowledge that such affidavit is
false. The tax also may be waived by the Internal Revenue Service if the
Disqualified Organization promptly disposes of the Residual Security and the
transferor pays income tax at the highest corporate rate on the excess inclusion
for the period the Residual Security is actually held by the Disqualified
Organization.

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     In addition, if a 'Pass-Through Entity' (as defined below) has excess
inclusion income with respect to a Residual Security during a taxable year and a
Disqualified Organization is the record holder of an equity interest in such
entity, then a tax is imposed on such entity equal to the product of (i) the
amount of excess inclusions that are allocable to the interest in the
Pass-Through Entity during the period such interest is held by such Disqualified
Organization, and (ii) the highest marginal federal corporate income tax rate.
Such tax would be deductible from the ordinary gross income of the Pass-Through
Entity for the taxable year. The Pass-Through Entity would not be liable for
such tax if it has received an affidavit from such record holder that it is not
a Disqualified Organization or stating such holder's taxpayer identification
number and, during the period such person is the record holder of the Residual
Security, the Pass-Through Entity does not have actual knowledge that such
affidavit is false.

     For taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 1998, if an 'electing
large partnership' holds a Residual Security, all interests in the electing
large partnership are treated as held by Disqualified Organizations for purposes
of the tax imposed upon a Pass-Through Entity by Section 860E(c) of the Code. An
exception to this tax, otherwise available to a Pass-Through Entity that is
furnished certain affidavits by record holders of interests in the entity and
that does not know such affidavits are false, is not available to an electing
large partnership.

     For these purposes, (i) 'Disqualified Organization' means the United
States, any state or political subdivision thereof, any foreign government, any
international organization, any agency or instrumentality of any of the
foregoing (provided, that such term does not include an instrumentality if all
of its activities are subject to tax and a majority of its board of directors is
not selected by any such governmental entity), any cooperative organization
furnishing electric energy or providing telephone service or persons in rural
areas as described in Code Section 1381(a)(2)(C), and any organization (other
than a farmers' cooperative described in Code Section 531) that is exempt from
taxation under the Code unless such organization is subject to the tax on
unrelated business income imposed by Code Section 511, (ii) 'Pass-Through
Entity' means any regulated investment company, real estate investment trust,
common trust fund, partnership, trust or estate and certain corporations
operating on a cooperative basis. Except as may be provided in Treasury
regulations, any person holding an interest in a Pass-Through Entity as a
nominee for another will, with respect to such interest, be treated as a
Pass-Through Entity, and (iii) an 'electing large partnership' means any
partnership having more than 100 members during the preceding tax year (other
than certain service partnerships and commodity pools), which elects to apply
certain simplified reporting provisions under the Code.

     The Pooling and Servicing Agreement with respect to a Series will provide
that no legal or beneficial interest in a Residual Security may be transferred
or registered unless (i) the proposed transferee furnished to the transferor and
the Trustee an affidavit providing its taxpayer identification number and
stating that such transferee is the beneficial owner of the Residual Security
and is not a Disqualified Organization and is not purchasing such Residual
Security on behalf of a Disqualified Organization (i.e., as a broker, nominee or
middleman thereof) and (ii) the transferor provides a statement in writing to
the Trustee that it has no actual knowledge that such affidavit is false.
Moreover, the Pooling and Servicing Agreement will provide that any attempted or
purported transfer in violation of these transfer restrictions will be null and
void and will vest no rights in any purported transferee. Each Residual Security
with respect to a Series will bear a legend referring to such restrictions on
transfer, and each Residual Holder will be deemed to have agreed, as a condition
of ownership thereof, to any amendments to the related Pooling and Servicing
Agreement required under the Code or applicable Treasury regulations to
effectuate the foregoing restrictions. Information necessary to compute an
applicable excise tax must be furnished to the Internal Revenue Service and to
the requesting party within 60 days of the request, and the Seller or the
Trustee may charge a fee for computing and providing such information.

     Noneconomic Residual Interests. The REMIC Regulations would disregard
certain transfers of Residual Securities, in which case the transferor would
continue to be treated as the owner of the Residual Securities and thus would
continue to be subject to tax on its allocable portion of the net income of the
REMIC Pool. Under the REMIC Regulations, a transfer of a 'noneconomic residual
interest' (as defined below) to a Residual Holder (other than a Residual Holder
who is not a U.S. Person as defined below under 'Foreign Investors') is
disregarded for all federal income tax purposes if

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a significant purpose of the transferor is to impede the assessment or
collection of tax. A residual interest in a REMIC (including a residual interest
with a positive value at issuance) is a 'noneconomic residual interest' unless,
at the time of the transfer, (i) the present value of the expected future
distributions on the residual interest at least equals the product of the
present value of the anticipated excess inclusions and the highest corporate
income tax rate in effect for the year in which the transfer occurs, and (ii)
the transferor reasonably expects that the transferee will receive distributions
from the REMIC at or after the time at which taxes accrue on the anticipated
excess inclusions in an amount sufficient to satisfy the accrued taxes on each
excess inclusion. The anticipated excess inclusions and the present value rate
are determined in the same manner as set forth above under 'Disqualified
Organizations.' The REMIC Regulations explain that a significant purpose to
impede the assessment or collection of tax exists if the transferor, at the time
of the transfer, either knew or should have known that the transferee would be
unwilling or unable to pay taxes due on its share of the taxable income of the
REMIC. A safe harbor is provided if (i) the transferor conducted, at the time of
the transfer, a reasonable investigation of the financial condition of the
transferee and found that the transferee historically had paid its debts as they
came due and found no significant evidence to indicate that the transferee would
not continue to pay its debts as they came due in the future, and (ii) the
transferee represents to the transferor that it understands that, as the holder
of the non-economic residual interest, the transferee may incur liabilities in
excess of any cash flows generated by the interest and that the transferee
intends to pay taxes associated with holding the residual interest as they
become due. The Pooling and Servicing Agreement with respect to each Series of
Certificates will require the transferee of a Residual Security to certify to
the matters in the preceding sentence as part of the affidavit described above
under the heading 'Disqualified Organizations.'

     Foreign Investors. The REMIC Regulations provide that the transfer of a
Residual Security that has 'tax avoidance potential' to a 'foreign person' will
be disregarded for all federal tax purposes. This rule appears intended to apply
to a transferee who is not a 'U.S. Person' (as defined below), unless such
transferee's income is effectively connected with the conduct of a trade or
business within the United States. A Residual Security is deemed to have tax
avoidance potential unless, at the time of the transfer, (i) the future value of
expected distributions equals at least 30% of the anticipated excess inclusions
after the transfer, and (ii) the transferor reasonably expects that the
transferee will receive sufficient distributions from the REMIC Pool at or after
the time at which the excess inclusions accrue and prior to the end of the next
succeeding taxable year for the accumulated withholding tax liability to be
paid. If the non-U.S. Person transfers the Residual Security back to a U.S.
Person, the transfer will be disregarded and the foreign transferor will
continue to be treated as the owner unless arrangements are made so that the
transfer does not have the effect of allowing the transferor to avoid tax on
accrued excess inclusions.

     The Prospectus Supplement relating to the Certificates of a Series may
provide that a Residual Security may not be purchased by or transferred to any
person that is not a U.S. Person or may describe the circumstances and
restrictions pursuant to which such a transfer may be made. The term 'U.S.
Person' means a citizen or resident of the United States, a corporation or
partnership or other entity created or organized in or under the laws of the
United States, any State thereof or the District of Columbia (unless, in the
case of a partnership, Treasury regulations are adopted that provide otherwise),
including any entity treated as a corporation or partnership for federal income
tax purposes, an estate that is subject to U.S. federal income tax regardless of
the source of its income, or, generally, a trust if a court within the United
States is able to exercise primary supervision over the administration of such
trust, and one or more U.S. Persons have the authority to control all
substantial decisions of such trust (or, to the extent provided in applicable
Treasury regulations, certain trusts in existence on August 20, 1996, which are
eligible to elect to be treated as U.S. Persons).

SALE OR EXCHANGE OF A RESIDUAL SECURITY

     Upon the sale or exchange of a Residual Security, the Residual Holder will
recognize gain or loss equal to the excess, if any, of the amount realized over
the adjusted basis (as described above under 'Taxation of Owners of Residual
Securities -- Basis and Losses') of such Residual Holder in such Residual
Security at the time of the sale or exchange. In addition to reporting the
taxable income of the

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REMIC Pool, a Residual Holder will have taxable income to the extent that any
cash distribution to it from the REMIC Pool exceeds such adjusted basis on that
Distribution Date. Such income will be treated as gain from the sale or exchange
of the Residual Holder's Residual Security, in which case, if the Residual
Holder has an adjusted basis in its Residual Security remaining when its
interest in the REMIC Pool terminates, and if it holds such Residual Security as
a capital asset under Code Section 1221, then it will recognize a capital loss
at that time in the amount of such remaining adjusted basis.

     Any gain on the sale of a Residual Security will be treated as ordinary
income (i) if a Residual Security is held as part of a 'conversion transaction'
as defined in Code Section 1258(c), up to the amount of interest that would have
accrued on the Residual Holder's net investment in the conversion transaction at
120% of the appropriate applicable Federal rate in effect at the time the
taxpayer entered into the transaction minus any amount previously treated as
ordinary income with respect to any prior disposition of property that was held
as a part of such transaction or (ii) in the case of a non-corporate taxpayer,
to the extent such taxpayer has made an election under Code Section 163(d)(4) to
have net capital gains taxed as investment income at ordinary income rates. In
addition, gain or loss recognized from the sale of a Residual Security by
certain banks or thrift institutions will be treated as ordinary income or loss
pursuant to Code Section 582(c).

     The Conference Committee Report to the 1986 Act provides that, except as
provided in Treasury regulations yet to be issued, the wash sale rules of Code
Section 1091 will apply to dispositions of Residual Securities where the seller
of the Residual Security, during the period beginning six months before the sale
or disposition of the Residual Security and ending six months after such sale or
disposition, acquires (or enters into any other transaction that results in the
application of Code Section 1091) any residual interest in any REMIC or any
interest in a 'taxable mortgage pool' (such as a non-REMIC owner trust) that is
economically comparable to a Residual Security.

MARK TO MARKET REGULATIONS

     On December 24, 1996, the Internal Revenue Service issued final regulations
(the 'Mark to Market Regulations') under Code Section 475 relating to the
requirement that a securities dealer mark to market securities held for sale to
customers. This mark to market requirement applies to all securities of a
dealer, except to the extent that the dealer has specifically identified a
security as held for investment. The Mark to Market Regulations provide that,
for purposes of this mark to market requirement, a Residual Security is not
treated as a security and thus may not be marked to market. The Mark to Market
Regulations apply to all Residual Securities acquired on or after January 4,
1995.

TAXES THAT MAY BE IMPOSED ON THE REMIC POOL

PROHIBITED TRANSACTIONS

     Income from certain transactions by the REMIC Pool, called prohibited
transactions, will not be part of the calculation of income or loss includible
in the federal income tax returns of Residual Holders, but rather will be taxed
directly to the REMIC Pool at a 100% rate. Prohibited transactions generally
include (i) the disposition of a qualified mortgage other than for (a)
substitution within two years of the Startup Day for a defective (including a
defaulted) obligation (or repurchase in lieu of substitution of a defective
(including a defaulted) obligation at any time) or for any qualified mortgage
within three months of the Startup Day, (b) foreclosure, default, or imminent
default of a qualified mortgage, (c) bankruptcy or insolvency of the REMIC Pool,
or (d) a qualified (complete) liquidation, (ii) the receipt of income from
assets that are not the type of mortgages or investments that the REMIC Pool is
permitted to hold, (iii) the receipt of compensation for services, or (iv) the
receipt of gain from disposition of cash flow investments other than pursuant to
a qualified liquidation. Notwithstanding (i) and (iv), it is not a prohibited
transaction to sell REMIC Pool property to prevent a default on Regular
Securities as a result of a default on qualified mortgages or to facilitate a
clean-up call (generally, an optional termination to save administrative costs
when no more than a small percentage of the

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Securities is outstanding). The REMIC Regulations indicate that the modification
of a Mortgage Loan generally will not be treated as a disposition if it is
occasioned by a default or reasonably foreseeable default, an assumption of the
Mortgage Loan, the waiver of a due-on-sale or due-on-encumbrance clause, or the
conversion of an interest rate by a mortgagor pursuant to the terms of a
convertible adjustable rate Mortgage Loan.

CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE REMIC POOL AFTER THE STARTUP DAY

     In general, the REMIC Pool will be subject to a tax at a 100% rate on the
value of any property contributed to the REMIC Pool after the Startup Day.
Exceptions are provided for cash contributions to the REMIC Pool (i) during the
three months following the Startup Day, (ii) made to a qualified reserve fund by
a Residual Holder, (iii) in the nature of a guarantee, (iv) made to facilitate a
qualified liquidation or clean-up call, and (v) as otherwise permitted in
Treasury regulations yet to be issued. It is not anticipated that there will be
any contributions to the REMIC Pool after the Startup Day.

NET INCOME FROM FORECLOSURE PROPERTY

     The REMIC Pool will be subject of 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. Generally,
property acquired by deed in lieu of foreclosure would be treated as
'foreclosure property' until the close of the third calendar year following the
year of acquisition, with a possible extension. 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.
It is not anticipated that the REMIC Pool will have any taxable net income from
foreclosure property.

LIQUIDATION OF THE REMIC POOL

     If a REMIC Pool adopts a plan of complete liquidation, within the meaning
of Code Section 860F(a)(4)(A)(i), which may be accomplished by designating in
the REMIC Pool's final tax return a date on which such adoption is deemed to
occur, and sells all of its assets (other than cash) within a 90-day period
beginning on such date, the REMIC Pool will not be subject to the prohibited
transaction rules on the sale of its assets, provided that the REMIC Pool
credits or distributes in liquidation all of the sale proceeds plus its cash
(other than amounts retained to meet claims) to holders of Regular Securities
and Residual Holders within the 90-day period.

ADMINISTRATIVE MATTERS

     The REMIC Pool will be required to maintain its books on a calendar year
basis and to file federal income tax returns for federal income tax purposes in
a manner similar to a partnership. The form for such income tax return is Form
1066, U.S. Real Estate Mortgage Investment Conduit Income Tax Return. The
Trustee will be required to sign the REMIC Pool's returns. Treasury regulations
provide that, except where there is a single Residual Holder for an entire
taxable year, the REMIC Pool will be subject to the procedural and
administrative rules of the Code applicable to partnerships, including the
determination by the Internal Revenue Service of any adjustments to, among other
things, items of REMIC income, gain, loss, deduction, or credit in a unified
administrative proceeding. The Master Servicer will be obligated to act as 'tax
matters person', as defined in applicable Treasury regulations, with respect to
the REMIC Pool as agent of the Residual Holder holding the largest percentage
interest in the Residual Securities. If the Code or applicable Treasury
regulations do not permit the Master Servicer to act as tax matters person in
its capacity as agent of such Residual Holder, such Residual Holder or such
other person specified pursuant to Treasury regulations will be required to act
as tax matters person.

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LIMITATIONS ON DEDUCTION OF CERTAIN EXPENSES

     An investor who is an individual, estate, or trust will be subject to
limitation with respect to certain itemized deductions described in Code Section
67, to the extent that such itemized deductions, in the aggregate, do not exceed
2% of the investor's adjusted gross income. In addition, Code Section 68
provides that itemized deductions otherwise allowable for a taxable year of an
individual taxpayer will be reduced by the lesser of (i) 3% of the excess, if
any, of adjusted gross income over $124,500 for 1998 ($62,250 in the case of a
married individual filing a separate return) (as adjusted for inflation for
subsequent years), or (ii) 80% of the amount of itemized deductions otherwise
allowable for such year. In the case of a REMIC Pool, such deductions may
include deductions under Code Section 212 for the Servicing Fee and all
administrative and other expenses relating to the REMIC Pool, or any similar
expenses allocated to the REMIC Pool with respect to a regular interest it holds
in another REMIC. Such investors who hold REMIC Securities either directly or
indirectly through certain pass-through entities may have their pro rata share
of such expenses allocated to them as additional gross income, but may be
subject to such limitation on deductions. In addition, such expenses are not
deductible at all for purposes of computing the alternative minimum tax, and may
cause such investors to be subject to significant additional tax liability.
Temporary Treasury regulations provide that the additional gross income and
corresponding amount of expenses generally are to be allocated entirely to the
holders of Residual Securities in the case of a REMIC Pool that would not
qualify as a fixed investment trust in the absence of a REMIC election. However,
such additional gross income and limitation on deductions will apply to the
allocable portion of such expenses to holders of Regular Securities, as well as
holders of Residual Securities, where such Regular Securities are issued in a
manner that is similar to pass-through certificates in a fixed investment trust.
Unless indicated otherwise in the applicable Prospectus Supplement, all such
expenses will be allocable to the Residual Securities. In general, such
allocable portion will be determined based on the ratio that a REMIC
Securityholder's income, determined on a daily basis, bears to the income of all
holders of Regular Securities and Residual Securities with respect to a REMIC
Pool. As a result, individuals, estates or trusts holding REMIC Securities
(either directly or indirectly through a grantor trust, partnership, S
corporation, REMIC, or certain other pass-through entities described in the
foregoing temporary Treasury regulations) may have taxable income in excess of
the interest income at the pass-through rate on Regular Securities that are
issued in a single class or otherwise consistently with fixed investment trust
status or in excess of cash distributions for the related period on Residual
Securities.

TAXATION OF CERTAIN FOREIGN INVESTORS

REGULAR SECURITIES

     Interest, including original issue discount, distributable to Regular
Securityholders who are non-resident aliens, foreign corporations, or other
non-U.S. Persons (as defined below), will be considered 'portfolio interest'
and, therefore, generally will not be subject to 30% United States withholding
tax, provided that such non-U.S. Person (i) is not a '10-percent shareholder'
within the meaning of Code Section 871(h)(3)(B) or a controlled foreign
corporation described in Code Section 881(c)(3)(C) and (ii) provides the
Trustee, or the person who would otherwise be required to withhold tax from such
distributions under Code Section 1441 or 1442, with an appropriate statement,
signed under penalties of perjury, identifying the beneficial owner and stating,
among other things, that the beneficial owner of the Regular Security is a
Non-U.S. Person. If such statement, or any other required statement, is not
provided, 30% withholding will apply unless reduced or eliminated pursuant to an
applicable tax treaty or unless the interest on the Regular Security is
effectively connected with the conduct of a trade or business within the United
States by such Non-U.S. Person. In the latter case, such Non-U.S. Person will be
subject to United States federal income tax at regular rates. Investors who are
Non-U.S. Persons should consult their own tax advisors regarding the specific
tax consequences to them of owning a Regular Security. The term 'Non-U.S.
Person' means any person who is not a U.S. Person.

     The IRS recently issued final regulations (the 'New Regulations') which
would provide alternative methods of satisfying the beneficial ownership
certification requirement described above. The New Regulations will be effective
January 1, 2001, current witholding certificates will remain valid until the
earlier of December 31, 2000, or the date of expiration of the certificate under
the rules as currently in

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effect. The New Regulations would require, in the case of Regular Securities
held by a foreign partnership, that (x) the certification described above be
provided by the partners rather than by the foreign partnership and (y) the
partnership provide certain information, including a United States taxpayer
identification number. A look-through rule would apply in the case of tiered
partnerships. Non-U.S. Persons should consult their own tax advisors concerning
the application of the certification requirements in the New Regulations.

RESIDUAL SECURITIES

     The Conference Committee Report to the 1986 Act indicates that amounts paid
to Residual Holders who are Non-U.S. Persons generally should be treated as
interest for purposes of the 30% (or lower treaty rate) United States
withholding tax. Treasury regulations provide that amount distributed to
Residual Holders may qualify as 'portfolio interest', subject to the conditions
described in 'Regular Securities' above, but only to the extent that (i) the
Mortgage Loans were issued after July 18, 1984 and (ii) the Trust Estate or
segregated pool of assets therein (as to which a separate REMIC election will be
made), to which the Residual Security relates, consists of obligations issued in
'registered form' within the meaning of Code Section 163(f)(1). Generally,
Mortgage Loans will not be, but regular interests in another REMIC Pool will be,
considered obligations issued in registered form. Furthermore, Residual Holders
will not be entitled to any exemption from the 30% withholding tax (or lower
treaty rate) to the extent of that portion of REMIC taxable income that
constitutes an 'excess inclusion.' See 'Taxation of Owners of Residual
Securities -- Limitations on Offset or Exemption of REMIC Income.' If the
amounts paid to Residual Holders who are Non-U.S. Persons are effectively
connected with the conduct of a trade or business within the United States by
such Non-U.S. Persons, 30% (or lower treaty rate) withholding will not apply.
Instead, the amounts paid to such Non-U.S. Persons will be subject to United
States federal income tax at regular rates. If 30% (or lower treaty rate)
withholding is applicable, such amounts generally will be taken into account for
purposes of withholding only when paid or otherwise distributed (or when the
Residual Security is disposed of) under rules similar to withholding upon
disposition of debt instruments that have original issue discount. See
'Tax-Related Restrictions on Transfer of Residual Securities -- Foreign
Investors' above concerning the disregard of certain transfers having 'tax
avoidance potential.' Investors who are Non-U.S. Persons should consult their
own tax advisors regarding the specific tax consequences to them of owning
Residual Securities.

BACKUP WITHHOLDING

     Distributions made on the Regular Securities, and proceeds from the sale of
the Regular Securities to or through certain brokers, may be subject to a
'backup' withholding tax under Code Section 3406 of 31% on 'reportable payments'
(including interest distributions, original issue discount, and, under certain
circumstances, principal distributions) unless the Regular Holder complies with
certain reporting and/or certification procedures, including the provision of
its taxpayer identification number to the Trustee, its agent or the broker who
effected the sale of the Regular Security, or such Holder is otherwise an exempt
recipient under applicable provisions of the Code. Any amounts to be withheld
from distribution on the Regular Securities would be refunded by the Internal
Revenue Service or allowed as a credit against the Regular Holder's federal
income tax liability. The New Regulations will change certain of the rules
relating to certain presumptions currently available relating to information
reporting and backup withholding. Non-U.S. Persons are urged to contact their
own tax advisors regarding the application to them of backup withholding and
information reporting.

REPORTING REQUIREMENTS

     Reports of accrued interest, original issue discount and information
necessary to compute the accrual of market discount will be made annually to the
Internal Revenue Service and to individuals, estates, non-exempt and
non-charitable trusts, and partnerships who are either holders of record of
Regular Securities or beneficial owners who own Regular Securities through a
broker or middleman as nominee. All brokers, nominees and all other non-exempt
holders of record of Regular Securities (including corporations, non-calendar
year taxpayers, securities or commodities dealers, real estate investment
trusts, investment companies, common trust funds, thrift institutions and
charitable trusts)

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may request such information for any calendar quarter by telephone or in writing
by contacting the person designated in Internal Revenue Service Publication 938
with respect to a particular Series of Regular Securities. Holders through
nominees must request such information from the nominee.

     The Internal Revenue Service's Form 1066 has an accompanying Schedule Q,
Quarterly Notice to Residual Interest Holders of REMIC Taxable Income or Net
Loss Allocation. Treasury regulations require that Schedule Q be furnished by
the REMIC Pool to each Residual Holder by the end of the month following the
close of each calendar quarter (41 days after the end of a quarter under
proposed Treasury regulations) in which the REMIC Pool is in existence.

     Treasury regulations require that, in addition to the foregoing
requirements, information must be furnished quarterly to Residual Holders,
furnished annually, if applicable, to holders of Regular Securities, and filed
annually with the Internal Revenue Service concerning Code Section 67 expenses
(see 'Limitations on Deduction of Certain Expenses' above) allocable to such
holders. Furthermore, under such regulations, information must be furnished
quarterly to Residual Holders, furnished annually to holders of Regular
Securities, and filed annually with the Internal Revenue Service concerning the
percentage of the REMIC Pool's assets meeting the qualified asset tests
described above under 'Characterization of Investments in REMIC Securities.'

GRANTOR TRUST FUNDS

CLASSIFICATION OF GRANTOR TRUST FUNDS

     With respect to each Series of Grantor Trust Securities, Cadwalader,
Wickersham & Taft will deliver its opinion to the effect that, assuming
compliance with all provisions of the related Pooling and Servicing Agreement,
the related Grantor Trust Fund will be classified as a grantor trust under
subpart E, part I of subchapter J of the Code and not as a partnership, an
association taxable as a corporation, or a 'taxable mortgage pool' within the
meaning of Code Section 7701(i). Accordingly, each holder of a Grantor Trust
Security generally will be treated as the beneficial owner of an undivided
interest in the Mortgage Loans included in the Grantor Trust Fund.

STANDARD SECURITIES

GENERAL

     Where there is no Retained Interest with respect to the Mortgage Loans
underlying the Securities of a Series, and where such Securities are not
designated as 'Stripped Securities', the holder of each such Security in such
Series (referred to herein as 'Standard Securities') will be treated as the
owner of a pro rata undivided interest in the ordinary income and corpus
portions of the Grantor Trust Fund represented by its Standard Security and will
be considered the beneficial owner of a pro rata undivided interest in each of
the Mortgage Loans, subject to the discussion below under 'Recharacterization of
Servicing Fees.' Accordingly, the holder of a Standard Security of a particular
Series will be required to report on its federal income tax return its pro rata
share of the entire income from the Mortgage Loans represented by its Standard
Security, including interest at the coupon rate on such Mortgage Loans, original
issue discount (if any), prepayment fees, assumption fees, and late payment
charges received by the Servicer, in accordance with such Securityholder's
method of accounting. A Securityholder generally will be able to deduct its
share of the Servicing Fee and all administrative and other expenses of the
Trust Estate in accordance with its method of accounting, provided that such
amounts are reasonable compensation for services rendered to that Grantor Trust
Fund. However, investors who are individuals, estates or trusts who own
Securities, either directly or indirectly through certain pass-through entities,
will be subject to limitation with respect to certain itemized deductions
described in Code Section 67, including deductions under Code Section 212 for
the Servicing Fee and all such administrative and other expenses of the Grantor
Trust Fund, to the extent that such deductions, in the aggregate, do not exceed
two percent of an investor's adjusted gross income. In addition, Code Section 68
provides that itemized deductions otherwise allowable for a taxable year of an
individual taxpayer will be reduced by the lesser of (i) 3% of the excess, if
any, of adjusted gross income over $124,500 for 1998 ($62,250 in the case of a
married individual filing a separate return) (in each case, as adjusted for
inflation in subsequent years),

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or (ii) 80% of the amount of itemized deductions otherwise allowable for such
year. As a result, such investors holding Standard Securities, directly or
indirectly through a pass-through entity, may have aggregate taxable income in
excess of the aggregate amount of cash received on such Standard Securities with
respect to interest at the pass-through rate or as discount income on such
Standard Securities. In addition, such expenses are not deductible at all for
purposes of computing the alternative minimum tax, and may cause such investors
to be subject to significant additional tax liability. Moreover, where there is
Retained Interest with respect to the Mortgage Loans underlying a Series of
Securities or where the servicing fees are in excess of reasonable servicing
compensation, the transaction will be subject to the application of the
'stripped bond' and 'stripped coupon' rules of the Code, as described below
under 'Stripped Securities' and 'Recharacterization of Servicing Fees',
respectively.

TAX STATUS

          Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft has advised the Depositor that:

          1. A Standard Security owned by a 'domestic building and loan
     association' within the meaning of Code Section 7701(a)(19) will be
     considered to represent 'loans. . . secured by an interest in real property
     which is. . . residential real property' within the meaning of Code Section
     7701(a)(19)(C)(v), provided that the real property securing the Mortgage
     Loans represented by that Standard Security is of the type described in
     such section of the Code.

          2. A Standard Security owned by a real estate investment trust will be
     considered to represent 'real estate assets' within the meaning of Code
     Section 856(c)(4)(A) to the extent that the assets of the related Grantor
     Trust Fund consist of qualified assets, and interest income on such assets
     will be considered 'interest on obligations secured by mortgages on real
     property' to such extent within the meaning of Code Section 856(c)(3)(B).

          3. A Standard Security owned by a REMIC will be considered to
     represent an 'obligation (including any participation or certificate of
     beneficial ownership therein) which is principally secured by an interest
     in real property' within the meaning of Code Section 860G(a)(3)(A) to the
     extent that the assets of the related Grantor Trust Fund consist of
     'qualified mortgages' within the meaning of Code Section 860G(a)(3).

          4. A Standard Security owned by a 'financial asset securitization
     investment trust' within the meaning of Code Section 860L(a) will be
     considered to represent 'permitted assets' within the meaning of Code
     Section 860L(c) to the extent that the assets of related Grantor Trust Fund
     consist of 'debt instruments' or other permitted assets within the meaning
     of Code Section 860L(c).

          An issue arises as to whether Buydown Loans may be characterized in
     their entirety under the Code provisions cited in clauses 1 and 2 of the
     immediately preceding paragraph or whether the amount qualifying for such
     treatment must be reduced by the amount of the Buydown Funds. There is
     indirect authority supporting treatment of an investment in a Buydown Loan
     as entirely secured by real property if the fair market value of the real
     property securing the loan exceeds the principal amount of the loan at the
     time of issuance or acquisition, as the case may be. There is no assurance
     that the treatment described above is proper. Accordingly, Securityholders
     are urged to consult their own tax advisors concerning the effects of such
     arrangements on the characterization of such Securityholder's investment
     for federal income tax purposes.

PREMIUM AND DISCOUNT

     Securityholders are advised to consult with their tax advisors as to the
federal income tax treatment of premium and discount arising either upon initial
acquisition of Standard Securities or thereafter.

     Premium. The treatment of premium incurred upon the purchase of a Standard
Security will be determined generally as described above under
'REMICs -- Taxation of Owners of Residual Securities -- Premium.'

     Original Issue Discount. The original issue discount rules of Code Section
1271 through 1275 will be applicable to a Securityholder's interest in those
Mortgage Loans as to which the conditions for the

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application of those sections are met. Rules regarding periodic inclusion of
original issue discount income are applicable to mortgages of corporations
originated after May 27, 1969, mortgages of noncorporate mortgagors (other than
individuals) originated after July 1, 1982, and mortgages of individuals
originated after March 2, 1984. Under the OID Regulations, such original issue
discount could arise by the charging of points by the originator of the
mortgages in an amount greater than the statutory de minimis exception,
including a payment of points that is currently deductible by the borrower under
applicable Code provisions or, under certain circumstances, by the presence of
'teaser' rates on the Mortgage Loans. See 'Stripped Securities' below regarding
original issue discount on Stripped Securities.

     Original issue discount generally must be reported as ordinary gross income
as it accrues under a constant interest method that takes into account the
compounding of interest, in advance of the cash attributable to such income.
Unless indicated otherwise in the applicable Prospectus Supplement, no
prepayment assumption will be assumed for purposes of such accrual. However,
Code Section 1272 provides for a reduction in the amount of original issue
discount includible in the income of a holder of an obligation that acquires the
obligation after its initial issuance at a price greater than the sum of the
original issue price and the previously accrued original issue discount, less
prior payments of principal. Accordingly, if such Mortgage Loans acquired by a
Securityholder are purchased at a price equal to the then unpaid principal
amount of such Mortgage Loans, no original issue discount attributable to the
difference between the issue price and the original principal amount of such
Mortgage Loans (i.e., points) will be includible by such holder.

     Market Discount. Securityholders also will be subject to the market
discount rules to the extent that the conditions for application of those
sections are met. Market discount on the Mortgage Loans will be determined and
will be reported as ordinary income generally in the manner described above
under 'REMICs -- Taxation of Owners of Regular Securities -- Market Discount,'
except that the ratable accrual methods described therein will not apply.
Rather, the holder will accrue market discount pro rata over the life of the
Mortgage Loans, unless the constant yield method is elected. Unless indicated
otherwise in the applicable Prospectus Supplement, no prepayment assumption will
be assumed for purposes of such accrual.

RECHARACTERIZATION OF SERVICING FEES

     If the servicing fees paid to a Servicer were deemed to exceed reasonable
servicing compensation, the amount of such excess would represent neither income
nor a deduction to Securityholders. In this regard, there are no authoritative
guidelines for federal income tax purposes as to either the maximum amount of
servicing compensation that may be considered reasonable in the context of this
or similar transactions or whether, in the case of Standard Securities, the
reasonableness of servicing compensation should be determined on a weighted
average or loan-by-loan basis. If a loan-by-loan basis is appropriate, the
likelihood that such amount would exceed reasonable servicing compensation as to
some of the Mortgage Loans would be increased. Internal Revenue Service guidance
indicates that a servicing fee in excess of reasonable compensation ('excess
servicing') will cause the Mortgage Loans to be treated under the 'stripped
bond' rules. Such guidance provides safe harbors for servicing deemed to be
reasonable and requires taxpayers to demonstrate that the value of servicing
fees in excess of such amounts is not greater than the value of the services
provided.

     Accordingly, if the Internal Revenue Service's approach is upheld, a
Servicer who receives a servicing fee in excess of such amounts would be viewed
as retaining an ownership interest in a portion of the interest payments on the
Mortgage Loans. Under the rules of Code Section 1286, the separation of
ownership of the right to receive some or all of the interest payments on an
obligation from the right to receive some or all of the principal payments on
the obligation would result in treatment of such Mortgage Loans as 'stripped
coupons' and 'stripped bonds.' Subject to the de minimis rule discussed below
under 'Stripped Securities', each stripped bond or stripped coupon could be
considered for this purpose as a non-interest bearing obligation issued on the
date of issue of the Standard Securities, and the original issue discount rules
of the Code would apply to the holder thereof. While Securityholders would still
be treated as owners of beneficial interests in a grantor trust for federal
income tax purposes, the corpus of such trust could be viewed as excluding the
portion of the Mortgage Loans the ownership

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of which is attributed to the Servicer, or as including such portion as a second
class of equitable interest. Applicable Treasury regulations treat such an
arrangement as a fixed investment trust, since the multiple classes of trust
interests should be treated as merely facilitating direct investments in the
trust assets and the existence of multiple classes of ownership interests is
incidental to that purpose. In general, such a recharacterization should not
have any significant effect upon the timing or amount of income reported by a
Securityholder, except that the income reported by a cash method holder may be
slightly accelerated. See 'Stripped Securities' below for a further description
of the federal income tax treatment of stripped bonds and stripped coupons.

SALE OR EXCHANGE OF STANDARD SECURITIES

     Upon sale or exchange of a Standard Security, a Securityholder will
recognize gain or loss equal to the difference between the amount realized on
the sale and its aggregate adjusted basis in the Mortgage Loans and other assets
represented by the Security. In general, the aggregate adjusted basis will equal
the Securityholder's cost for the Standard Security, exclusive of accrued
interest, increased by the amount of any income previously reported with respect
to the Standard Security and decreased by the amount of any losses previously
reported with respect to the Standard Security and the amount of any
distributions (other than accrued interest) received thereon. Except as provided
above with respect to market discount on any Mortgage Loans, and except for
certain financial institutions subject to the provisions of Code Section 582(c),
any such gain or loss generally would be capital gain or loss if the Standard
Security was held as a capital asset. However, gain on the sale of a Standard
Security will be treated as ordinary income (i) if a Standard Security is held
as part of a 'conversion transaction' as defined in Code Section 1258(c), up to
the amount of interest that would have accrued on the Securityholder's net
investment in the conversion transaction at 120% of the appropriate applicable
Federal rate in effect at the time the taxpayer entered into the transaction
minus any amount previously treated as ordinary income with respect to any prior
disposition of property that was held as part of such transaction or (ii) in the
case of a non-corporate taxpayer, to the extent such taxpayer has made an
election under Code Section 163(d)(4) to have net capital gains taxed as
investment income at ordinary income rates. Capital gains of noncorporate
taxpayers generally are subject to a lower maximum tax rate (20%) than ordinary
income of such taxpayers (39.6%) for capital assets held for more than one year.
The maximum tax rate for corporations is the same with respect to both ordinary
income and capital gains.

STRIPPED SECURITIES

GENERAL

     Pursuant to Code Section 1286, the separation of ownership of the right to
receive some or all of the principal payments on an obligation from ownership of
the right to receive some or all of the interest payments results in the
creation of 'stripped bonds' with respect to principal payments and 'stripped
coupons' with respect to interest payments. For purposes of this discussion,
Securities that are subject to those rules will be referred to as 'Stripped
Securities.' The Securities will be subject to those rules if (i) the Depositor
or any of its affiliates retains (for its own account or for purposes of
resale), in the form of Retained Interest or otherwise, an ownership interest in
a portion of the payments on the Mortgage Loans, (ii) the Depositor or any of
its affiliates is treated as having an ownership interest in the Mortgage Loans
to the extent it is paid (or retains) servicing compensation in an amount
greater than reasonable consideration for servicing the Mortgage Loans (see
'Standard Securities -- Recharacterization of Servicing Fees' above), and (iii)
a Class of Securities are issued in two or more Classes or Subclasses
representing the right to non-pro-rata percentages of the interest and principal
payments on the Mortgage Loans.

     In general, a holder of a Stripped Security will be considered to own
'stripped bonds' with respect to its pro rata share of all or a portion of the
principal payments on each Mortgage Loan and/or 'stripped coupons' with respect
to its pro rata share of all or a portion of the interest payments on each
Mortgage Loan, including the Stripped Security's allocable share of the
servicing fees paid to a Servicer, to the extent that such fees represent
reasonable compensation for services rendered. See the discussion

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above under 'Standard Securities -- Recharacterization of Servicing Fees.'
Although not free from doubt, for purposes of reporting to Stripped
Securityholders, the servicing fees will be allocated to the classes of Stripped
Securities in proportion to the distributions to such Classes for the related
period or periods. The holder of a Stripped Security generally will be entitled
to a deduction each year in respect of the servicing fees, as described above
under 'Standard Securities -- General,' subject to the limitation described
therein.

     Code Section 1286 treats a stripped bond or a stripped coupon generally as
an obligation issued on the date that such stripped interest is purchased.
Although the treatment of Stripped Securities for federal income tax purposes is
not clear in certain respects, particularly where such Stripped Securities are
issued with respect to a Mortgage Pool containing variable-rate Mortgage Loans,
the Depositor has been advised by counsel that (i) the Grantor Trust Fund will
be treated as a grantor trust under subpart E, Part I of subchapter J of the
Code and not as an association taxable as a corporation or a 'taxable mortgage
pool' within the meaning of Code Section 7701(i), and (ii) each Stripped
Security should be treated as a single installment obligation for purposes of
calculating original issue discount and gain or loss on disposition. This
treatment is based on the interrelationship of Code Section 1286, Code Sections
1272 through 1275, and the OID Regulations. Although it is possible that
computations with respect to Stripped Securities could be made in one of the
ways described below under 'Possible Alternative Characterizations,' the OID
Regulations state, in general, that two or more debt instruments issued by a
single issuer to a single investor in a single transaction should be treated as
a single debt instrument. Accordingly, for original issue discount purposes, all
payments on any Stripped Securities should be aggregated and treated as though
they were made on a single debt instrument. The Pooling and Servicing Agreement
will require that the Trustee make and report all computations described below
using this aggregate approach, unless substantial legal authority requires
otherwise.

     Furthermore, Treasury regulations provide for treatment of a Stripped
Security as a single debt instrument issued on the date it is purchased for
purposes of calculating any original issue discount. In addition, under such
regulations, a Stripped Security that represents a right to payments of both
interest and principal may be viewed either as issued with original issue
discount or market discount (as described below), at a de minimis original issue
discount, or, presumably, at a premium. This treatment indicates that the
interest component of such a Stripped Security would be treated as qualified
stated interest under the OID Regulations, assuming it is not an interest-only
or super-premium Stripped Security. Further, these regulations provide that the
purchaser of such a Stripped Security will be required to account for any
discount as market discount rather than original issue discount if either (i)
the initial discount with respect to the Stripped Security was treated as zero
under the de minimis rule, or (ii) no more than 100 basis points in excess of
reasonable servicing is stripped off the related Mortgage Loans. Any such market
discount would be reportable as described above under 'REMICs -- Taxation of
Owners of Regular Securities -- Market Discount,' without regard to the de
minimis rule therein, assuming that a prepayment assumption is employed in such
computation.

STATUS OF STRIPPED SECURITIES

     No specific legal authority exists as to whether the character of the
Stripped Securities, for federal income tax purposes, will be the same as that
of the Mortgage Loans. Although the issue is not free from doubt, counsel has
advised the Depositor that Stripped Securities owned by applicable holders
should be considered to represent 'real estate assets' within the meaning of
Code Section 856(c)(4)(A), 'obligation[s]. . . principally secured by an
interest in real property' within the meaning of Code Section 860G(a)(3)(A), and
'loans. . . secured by an interest in real property' within the meaning of Code
Section 7701(a)(19)(C)(v), and interest (including original issue discount)
income attributable to Stripped Securities should be considered to represent
'interest on obligations secured by mortgages on real property' within the
meaning of Code Section 856(c)(3)(B), provided that in each case the Mortgage
Loans and interest on such Mortgage Loans qualify for such treatment. The
application of such Code provisions to Buydown Loans is uncertain. See 'Standard
Securities -- Tax Status' above.

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TAXATION OF STRIPPED SECURITIES

     Original Issue Discount. Except as described above under 'General,' each
Stripped Security will be considered to have been issued at an original issue
discount for federal income tax purposes. Original issue discount with respect
to a Stripped Security must be included in ordinary income as it accrues, in
accordance with a constant yield method that takes into account the compounding
of interest, which may be prior to the receipt of the cash attributable to such
income. Based in part on the issue discount required to be included in the
income of a holder of a Stripped Security (referred to in this discussion as a
'Stripped Securityholder') in any taxable year likely will be computed generally
as described above under 'REMICs -- Taxation of Owner of Regular
Securities -- Original Issue Discount' and ' -- Variable Rate Regular
Securities.' However, with the apparent exception of a Stripped Security
qualifying as a market discount obligation as described above under
' -- General,' the issue price of a Stripped Security will be the purchase price
paid by each holder thereof, and the stated redemption price at maturity will
include the aggregate amount of the payments to be made on the Stripped Security
to such Securityholder, presumably under the Prepayment Assumption, other than
qualified stated interest.

     If the Mortgage Loans prepay at a rate either faster or slower than that
under the Prepayment Assumption, a Securityholder's recognition of original
issue discount will be either accelerated or decelerated and the amount of such
original issue discount will be either increased or decreased depending on the
relative interests in principal and interest on each Mortgage Loan represented
by such Securityholder's Stripped Security. While the matter is not free from
doubt, the holder of a Stripped Security should be entitled in the year that it
becomes certain (assuming no further prepayments) that the holder will not
recover a portion of its adjusted basis in such Stripped Security to recognize a
loss (which may be a capital loss) equal to such portion of unrecoverable basis.

     As an alternative to the method described above, the fact that some or all
of the interest payments with respect to the Stripped Securities will not be
made if the Mortgage Loans are prepaid could lead to the interpretation that
such interest payments are 'contingent' within the meaning of the OID
Regulations. The OID Regulations, as they relate to the treatment of contingent
interest, are by their terms not applicable to prepayable securities such as the
Stripped Securities. However, if final regulations dealing with contingent
interest with respect to the Stripped Securities apply the same principles as
the OID Regulations, such regulations may lead to different timing of income
inclusion that would be the case under the OID Regulations. Furthermore,
application of such principles could lead to the characterization of gain on the
sale of contingent interest Stripped Securities as ordinary income. Investors
should consult their tax advisors regarding the appropriate tax treatment of
Stripped Securities.

     Sale or Exchange of Stripped Securities. Sale or exchange of a Stripped
Security prior to its maturity will result in gain or loss equal to the
difference, if any, between the amount received and the Securityholder's
adjusted basis in such Stripped Security, as described above under 'REMICs --
Taxation of Owners of Regular Securities -- Sale or Exchange of Regular
Securities.' To the extent that a subsequent purchaser's purchase price is
exceeded by the remaining payments on the Stripped Securities, such subsequent
purchaser will be required for federal income tax purposes to accrue and report
such excess as if it were original issue discount in the manner described above.
It is not clear for this purpose whether the assumed prepayment rate that is to
be used in the case of a Securityholder other than an original Securityholder
should be the Prepayment Assumption or a new rate based on the circumstances at
the date of subsequent purchase.

     Purchase of More Than One Class of Stripped Securities. When an investor
purchases more than one Class of Stripped Securities, it is currently unclear
whether for federal income tax purposes such Classes of Stripped Securities
should be treated separately or aggregated for purposes of the rules described
above.

     Possible Alternative Characterization. The characterizations of the
Stripped Securities discussed above are not the only possible interpretations of
the applicable Code provisions. For example, the Securityholder may be treated
as the owner of (i) one installment obligation consisting of such Stripped
Security's pro rata share of the payments attributable to principal on each
Mortgage Loan and a second installment obligation consisting of such Stripped
Security's pro rata share of the payments attributable to interest on each
Mortgage Loan, (ii) as many stripped bonds or stripped coupons as there are

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scheduled payments of principal and/or interest on each Mortgage Loan, or (iii)
a separate installment obligation for each Mortgage Loan, representing the
Stripped Security's pro rata share of payments of principal and/or interest to
be made with respect thereto. Alternatively, the holder of one or more Classes
of Stripped Securities may be treated as the owner of a pro rata fractional
undivided interest in each Mortgage Loan to the extent that such Stripped
Security, or Classes of Stripped Securities in the aggregate, represent the same
pro rata portion of principal and interest on each such Mortgage Loan, and a
stripped bond or stripped coupon (as the case may be), treated as an installment
obligation or contingent payment obligation, as to the remainder. Treasury
regulations regarding original issue discount on stripped obligations make the
foregoing interpretations less likely to be applicable. The preamble to such
regulations states that they are premised on the assumption that an aggregation
approach is appropriate for determining whether original issue discount on a
stripped bond or stripped coupon is de minimis, and solicits comments on
appropriate rules for aggregating stripped bonds and stripped coupons under Code
Section 1286.

     Because of these possible varying characterizations of Stripped Securities
and the resultant differing treatment of income recognition, Securityholders are
urged to consult their own tax advisors regarding the proper treatment of
Stripped Securities for federal income tax purposes.

REPORTING REQUIREMENTS AND BACKUP WITHHOLDING

     The Trustee will furnish, within a reasonable time after the end of each
calendar year, to each Securityholder at any time during such year, such
information (prepared on the basis described above) as is necessary to enable
such Securityholder to prepare its federal income tax returns. Such information
will include the amount of original issue discount accrued on Securities held by
persons other than Securityholders exempted from the reporting requirements.
However, the amount required to be reported by the Trustee may not be equal to
the proper amount of original issue discount required to be reported as taxable
income by a Securityholder, other than an original Securityholder that purchased
at the issue price. In particular, in the case of Stripped Securities, unless
provided otherwise in the applicable Prospectus Supplement, such reporting will
be based upon a representative initial offering price of each Class of Stripped
Securities. The Trustee will also file such original issue discount information
with the Internal Revenue Service. If a Securityholder fails to supply an
accurate taxpayer identification number or if the Secretary of the Treasury
determines that a Securityholder has not reported all interest and dividend
income required to be shown on his federal income tax return, 31% backup
withholding may be required in respect of any reportable payments, as described
above under 'REMICs -- Backup Withholding.'

TAXATION OF CERTAIN FOREIGN INVESTORS

     To the extent that a Security evidences ownership in Mortgage Loans that
are issued on or before July 18, 1984, interest or original issue discount paid
by the person required to withhold tax under Code Section 1441 or 1442 to
nonresident aliens, foreign corporations, or other Non-U.S. persons generally
will be subject to 30% United States withholding tax, or such lower rate as may
be provided for interest by an applicable tax treaty. Accrued original issue
discount recognized by the Securityholder on the sale or exchange of such a
Security also will be subject to federal income tax at the same rate.

     Treasury regulations provide that interest or original issue discount paid
by the Trustee or other withholding agent to a Non-U.S. Person evidencing
ownership interest in Mortgage Loans issued after July 18, 1984 will be
'portfolio interest' and will be treated in the manner, and such persons will be
subject to the same certification requirements, described above under
'REMICs -- Taxation of Certain Foreign Investors -- Regular Securities.'

PARTNERSHIP TRUST FUNDS

CLASSIFICATION OF PARTNERSHIP TRUST FUNDS

     With respect to each Series of Partnership Securities or Debt Securities,
Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft will deliver its opinion that the Trust Fund will
not be a taxable mortgage pool or an association (or publicly traded
partnership) taxable as a corporation for federal income tax purposes. This
opinion

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will be based on the assumption that the terms of the related Pooling and
Servicing Agreement and related documents will be complied with, and on
counsel's conclusion that the nature of the income of the Trust Fund will exempt
it from the rule that certain publicly traded partnerships are taxable as
corporations.

CHARACTERIZATION OF INVESTMENTS IN PARTNERSHIP SECURITIES AND DEBT SECURITIES

     For federal income tax purposes, (i) Partnership Securities and Debt
Securities held by a thrift institution taxed as a domestic building and loan
association will not constitute 'loans . . . secured by an interest in real
property which is. . . residential real property' within the meaning of Code
Section 7701(a)(19)(C)(v) and (ii) interest on Debt Securities held by a real
estate investment trust will not be treated as 'interest on obligations secured
by mortgages on real property or on interests in real property' within the
meaning of Code Section 856(c)(3)(B), and Debt Securities held by a real estate
investment trust will not constitute 'real estate assets' within the meaning of
Code Section 856(c)(4)(A), but Partnership Securities held by a real estate
investment trust will qualify under those sections based on the real estate
investments trust's proportionate interest in the assets of the Partnership
Trust Fund based on capital accounts.

TAXATION OF DEBT SECURITYHOLDERS

TREATMENT OF THE DEBT SECURITIES AS INDEBTEDNESS

     The Depositor will agree, and the Securityholders will agree by their
purchase of Debt Securities, to treat the Debt Securities as debt for federal
income tax purposes. No regulations, published rulings, or judicial decisions
exist that discuss the characterization for federal income tax purposes of
securities with terms substantially the same as the Debt Securities. However,
with respect to each Series of Debt Securities, Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft
will deliver its opinion that the Debt Securities will be classified as
indebtedness for federal income tax purposes. The discussion below assumes this
characterization of the Debt Securities is correct.

     If, contrary to the opinion of counsel, the IRS successfully asserted that
the Debt Securities were not debt for federal income tax purposes, the Debt
Securities might be treated as equity interests in the Partnership Trust, and
the timing and amount of income allocable to holders of such Debt Securities may
be different than as described in the following paragraph.

     Debt Securities generally will be subject to the same rules of taxation as
Regular Securities issued by a REMIC, as described above, except that (i) income
reportable on Debt Securities is not required to be reported under the accrual
method unless the holder otherwise uses the accrual method and (ii) the special
rule treating a portion of the gain on sale or exchange of a Regular Security as
ordinary income is inapplicable to Debt Securities. See 'REMICs -- Taxation of
Owners of Regular Securities' and ' -- Sale or Exchange of Regular Securities.'

TAXATION OF OWNERS OF PARTNERSHIP SECURITIES

TREATMENT OF THE PARTNERSHIP TRUST FUND AS A PARTNERSHIP

     If so specified in the applicable Prospectus Supplement, the Depositor will
agree, and the Securityholders will agree by their purchase of Securities, to
treat the Partnership Trust Fund (i) as a partnership for purposes of federal
and state income tax, franchise tax and any other tax measured in whole or in
part by income, with the assets of the partnership being the assets held by the
Partnership Trust Fund, the partners of the partnership being the
Securityholders (including the Depositor), and the Debt Securities (if any)
being debt of the partnership or (ii) if a single beneficial owner owns all of
the Partnership Securities in a Trust Fund, the Trust Fund will be ignored for
federal income tax purposes and the assets and Debt Securities of the Trust Fund
will be treated as assets and indebtedness of such owner.

     A variety of alternative characterizations are possible. For example,
because one or more of the classes of Partnership Securities have certain
features characteristic of debt, the Partnership Securities might be considered
debt of the Depositor or the Partnership Trust Fund. Any such characterization

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would not result in materially adverse tax consequences to Securityholders as
compared to the consequences from treatment of the Partnership Securities as
equity in a partnership, described below. The following discussion assumes that
the Partnership Securities represent equity interests in a partnership.

PARTNERSHIP TAXATION

     As a partnership, the Partnership Trust Fund will not be subject to federal
income tax. Rather, each Securityholder will be required to separately take into
account such holder's allocated share of income, gains, losses, deductions and
credits of the Partnership Trust Fund. It is anticipated that the Partnership
Trust Fund's income will consist primarily of interest earned on the Mortgage
Loans (including appropriate adjustments for market discount, original issue
discount and bond premium) as described above under ' -- Grantor Trust
Funds -- Standard Securities -- General,' and ' -- Premium and Discount') and
any gain upon collection or disposition of Mortgage Loans. The Partnership Trust
Fund's deductions will consist primarily of interest accruing with respect to
the Debt Securities, servicing and other fees, and losses or deductions upon
collection or disposition of Debt Securities.

     The tax items of a partnership are allocable to the partners in accordance
with the Code, Treasury regulations and the partnership agreement (here, the
Pooling and Servicing Agreement and related documents). The Pooling and
Servicing Agreement will provide, in general, that the Securityholders will be
allocated taxable income of the Partnership Trust Fund for each Due Period equal
to the sum of (i) the interest that accrues on the Partnership Securities in
accordance with their terms for such Due Period, including interest accruing at
the applicable pass-through rate for such Due Period and interest on amounts
previously due on the Partnership Securities but not yet distributed; (ii) any
Partnership Trust Fund income attributable to discount on the Mortgage Loans
that corresponds to any excess of the principal amount of the Partnership
Securities over their initial issue price; and (iii) any other amounts of income
payable to the Securityholders for such Due Period. Such allocation will be
reduced by any amortization by the Partnership Trust Fund of premium on Mortgage
Loans that corresponds to any excess of the issue price of Partnership
Securities over their principal amount. All remaining taxable income or net loss
of the Partnership Trust Fund will be allocated to the Depositor. Based on the
economic arrangement of the parties, this approach for allocating Partnership
Trust Fund income should be permissible under applicable Treasury regulations,
although no assurance can be given that the IRS would not require a greater
amount of income to be allocated to Securityholders. Moreover, even under the
foregoing method of allocation, Securityholders may be allocated income equal to
the entire pass-through rate plus the other items described above even though
the Trust Fund might not have sufficient cash to make current cash distributions
of such amount. Thus, cash basis holders will in effect be required to report
income from the Partnership Securities on the accrual basis and Securityholders
may become liable for taxes on Partnership Trust Fund income even if they have
not received cash from the Partnership Trust Fund to pay such taxes.

     All of the taxable income allocated to a Securityholder that is a pension,
profit-sharing or employee benefit plan or other tax-exempt entity (including an
individual retirement account) will constitute 'unrelated business taxable
income' generally taxable to such a holder under the Code.

     A share of expenses of the Partnership Trust Fund (including fees of the
Master Servicer but not interest expense) allocable to an individual, estate or
trust Securityholder would be miscellaneous itemized deductions subject to the
limitations described above under ' -- Grantor Trust Funds -- Standard
Securities -- General.' Accordingly, such deductions might be disallowed to the
individual in whole or in part and might result in such holder being taxed on an
amount of income that exceeds the amount of cash actually distributed to such
holder over the life of the Partnership Trust Fund.

     Discount income or premium amortization with respect to each Mortgage Loan
would be calculated in a manner similar to the description above under
' -- Grantor Trust Funds -- Standard Securities -- General' and ' -- Premium and
Discount.' Notwithstanding such description, it is intended that the Partnership
Trust Fund will make all tax calculations relating to income and allocations to
Securityholders on an aggregate basis with respect to all Mortgage Loans held by
the Partnership Trust Fund rather than on a Mortgage Loan-by-Mortgage Loan
basis. If the IRS were to require that such calculations be made separately for
each Mortgage Loan, the Partnership Trust Fund might be required

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to incur additional expense, but it is believed that there would not be a
material adverse effect on Securityholders.

DISCOUNT AND PREMIUM

     Unless indicated otherwise in the applicable Prospectus Supplement, it is
not anticipated that the Mortgage Loans will have been issued with original
issue discount and, therefore, the Partnership Trust Fund should not have
original issue discount income. However, the purchase price paid by the
Partnership Trust Fund for the Mortgage Loans may be greater or less than the
remaining principal balance of the Mortgage Loans at the time of purchase. If
so, the Mortgage Loans will have been acquired at a premium or discount, as the
case may be. See 'Grantor Trust Funds -- Standard Securities -- Premium and
Discount.' (As indicated above, the Partnership Trust Fund will make this
calculation on an aggregate basis, but might be required to recompute it on a
Mortgage Loan-by-Mortgage Loan basis).

     If the Partnership Trust Fund acquires the Mortgage Loans at a market
discount or premium, the Partnership Trust Fund will elect to include any such
discount in income currently as it accrues over the life of the Mortgage Loans
or to offset any such premium against interest income on the Mortgage Loans. As
indicated above, a portion of such market discount income or premium deduction
may be allocated to Securityholders.

SECTION 708 TERMINATION

     Under Section 708 of the Code, the Partnership Trust Fund will be deemed to
terminate for federal income tax purposes if 50% or more of the capital and
profits interests in the Partnership Trust Fund are sold or exchanged within a
12-month period. Such a termination would cause a deemed contribution of the
assets of a Partnership Trust Fund (the 'old partnership') to a new Partnership
Trust Fund (the 'new partnership') in exchange for interests in the new
partnership. Such interests would be deemed distributed to the partners of the
old partnership in liquidation thereof, which would not constitute a sale or
exchange. The Partnership Trust Fund will not comply with certain technical
requirements that might apply when such a constructive termination occurs. As a
result, the Partnership Trust Fund may be subject to certain tax penalties and
may incur additional expenses if it is required to comply with those
requirements. Furthermore, the Partnership Trust Fund might not be able to
comply due to lack of data.

DISPOSITION OF SECURITIES

     Generally, capital gain or loss will be recognized on a sale of Partnership
Securities in an amount equal to the difference between the amount realized and
the seller's tax basis in the Partnership Securities sold. A Securityholder's
tax basis in a Partnership Security will generally equal the holder's cost
increased by the holder's share of Partnership Trust Fund income (includible in
income) and decreased by any distributions received with respect to such
Partnership Security. In addition, both the tax basis in the Partnership
Securities and the amount realized on a sale of a Partnership Security would
include the holder's share of the Debt Securities and other liabilities of the
Partnership Trust Fund. A holder acquiring Partnership Securities at different
prices may be required to maintain a single aggregate adjusted tax basis in such
Partnership Securities, and, upon sale or other disposition of some of the
Partnership Securities, allocate a portion of such aggregate tax basis to the
Partnership Securities sold (rather than maintaining a separate tax basis in
each Partnership Security for purposes of computing gain or loss on a sale of
that Partnership Security).

     Any gain on the sale of a Partnership Security attributable to the holder's
share of unrecognized accrued market discount on the Mortgage Loans would
generally be treated as ordinary income to the holder and would give rise to
special tax reporting requirements. The Partnership Trust Fund does not expect
to have any other assets that would give rise to such special reporting
considerations. Thus, to avoid those special reporting requirements, the
Partnership Trust Fund will elect to include market discount in income as it
accrues.

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     If a Securityholder is required to recognize an aggregate amount of income
(not including income attributable to disallowed itemized deductions described
above) over the life of the Partnership Securities that exceeds the aggregate
cash distributions with respect thereto, such excess will generally give rise to
a capital loss upon the retirement of the Partnership Securities.

ALLOCATIONS BETWEEN TRANSFERORS AND TRANSFEREES

     In general, the Partnership Trust Fund's taxable income and losses will be
determined each Due Period and the tax items for a particular Due Period will be
apportioned among the Securityholders in proportion to the principal amount of
Partnership Securities owned by them as of the close of the last day of such Due
Period. As a result, a holder purchasing Partnership Securities may be allocated
tax items (which will affect its tax liability and tax basis) attributable to
periods before the actual transaction.

     The use of such a Due Period convention may not be permitted by existing
regulations. If a Due Period convention is not allowed (or only applies to
transfers of less than all of the partner's interest), taxable income or losses
of the Partnership Trust Fund might be reallocated among the Securityholders.
The Depositor will be authorized to revise the Partnership Trust Fund's method
of allocation between transferors and transferees to conform to a method
permitted by future regulations.

SECTION 731 DISTRIBUTIONS

     In the case of any distribution to a Securityholder, no gain will be
recognized to that Securityholder to the extent that the amount of any money
distributed with respect to such Security exceeds the adjusted basis of such
Securityholder's interest in the Security. To the extent that the amount of
money distributed exceeds such Securityholder's adjusted basis, gain will be
currently recognized. In the case of any distribution to a Securityholder, no
loss will be recognized except upon a distribution in liquidation of a
Securityholder's interest. Any gain or loss recognized by a Securityholder will
be capital gain or loss.

SECTION 754 ELECTION

     In the event that a Securityholder sells its Partnership Securities at a
profit (loss), the purchasing Securityholder will have a higher (lower) basis in
the Partnership Securities than the selling Securityholder had. The tax basis of
the Partnership Trust Fund's assets would not be adjusted to reflect that higher
(or lower) basis unless the Partnership Trust Fund were to file an election
under Section 754 of the Code. In order to avoid the administrative complexities
that would be involved in keeping accurate accounting records, as well as
potentially onerous information reporting requirements, the Partnership Trust
Fund will not make such election. As a result, Securityholders might be
allocated a greater or lesser amount of Partnership Trust Fund income than would
be appropriate based on their own purchase price for Partnership Securities.

ADMINISTRATIVE MATTERS

     The Trustee is required to keep or have kept complete and accurate books of
the Partnership Trust Fund. Such books will be maintained for financial
reporting and tax purposes on an accrual basis and the fiscal year of the
Partnership Trust Fund will be the calendar year. The Trustee will file a
partnership information return (IRS Form 1065) with the IRS for each taxable
year of the Partnership Trust Fund and will report each Securityholder's
allocable share of items of Partnership Trust Fund income and expense to holders
and the IRS on Schedule K-1. The Trustee will provide the Schedule K-1
information to nominees that fail to provide the Partnership Trust Fund with the
information statement described below and such nominees will be required to
forward such information to the beneficial owners of the Partnership Securities.
Generally, holders must file tax returns that are consistent with the
information return filed by the Partnership Trust Fund or be subject to
penalties unless the holder notifies the IRS of all such inconsistencies.

     Under Section 6031 of the Code, any person that holds Partnership
Securities as a nominee at any time during a calendar year is required to
furnish the Partnership Trust Fund with a statement

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containing certain information on the nominee, the beneficial owners and the
Partnership Securities so held. Such information includes (i) the name, address
and taxpayer identification number of the nominee and (ii) as to each beneficial
owner (x) the name, address and identification number of such person, (y)
whether such person is a United States person, a tax-exempt entity or a foreign
government, an international organization, or any wholly-owned agency or
instrumentality of either of the foregoing, and (z) certain information on
Partnership Securities that were held, bought or sold on behalf of such person
throughout the year. In addition, brokers and financial institutions that hold
Partnership Securities through a nominee are required to furnish directly to the
Trustee information as to themselves and their ownership of Partnership
Securities. A clearing agency registered under Section 17A of the Exchange Act
is not required to furnish any such information statement to the Partnership
Trust Fund. The information referred to above for any calendar year must be
furnished to the Partnership Trust Fund on or before the following January 31.
Nominees, brokers and financial institutions that fail to provide the
Partnership Trust Fund with the information described above may be subject to
penalties.

     The Depositor will be designated as the tax matters partner in the Pooling
and Servicing Agreement and, as such, will be responsible for representing the
Securityholders in any dispute with the IRS. The Code provides for
administrative examination of a partnership as if the partnership were a
separate and distinct taxpayer. Generally, the statute of limitations for
partnership items does not expire until three years after the date on which the
partnership information return is filed. Any adverse determination following an
audit of the return of the Partnership Trust Fund by the appropriate taxing
authorities could result in an adjustment of the returns of the Securityholders,
and, under certain circumstances, a Securityholder may be precluded from
separately litigating a proposed adjustment to the items of the Partnership
Trust Fund. An adjustment could also result in an audit of a Securityholder's
returns and adjustments of items not related to the income and losses of the
Partnership Trust Fund.

TAX CONSEQUENCES TO FOREIGN SECURITYHOLDERS

     It is not clear whether the Partnership Trust Fund would be considered to
be engaged in a trade or business in the United States for purposes of federal
withholding taxes with respect to Non-U.S. Persons, because there is no clear
authority dealing with that issue under facts substantially similar to those
described herein. However, for taxable years of a Partnership Trust Fund
commencing on or after January 1, 1998, securityholders who are Non-U.S. Persons
would in any event not be treated as engaged in a trade or business in the
United States if holding such Security (or other investing or trading in stock
or securities for the Holder's own account) is the only activity of the
securityholder within the United States and the securityholder is not a dealer
in securities. Accordingly, such securityholders will not be subject to
withholding tax pursuant to Section 1446 of the Code, at a rate of 35% for
Non-U.S. Persons that are taxable as corporations and 39.6% for all other
foreign holders. The Prospectus Supplement for an applicable Series will
describe whether an exception to the 30% United States withholding tax on
interest may apply to securityholders.

BACKUP WITHHOLDING

     Distributions made on the Partnership Securities and proceeds from the sale
of the Partnership Securities will be subject to a 'backup' withholding tax of
31% if, in general, the Securityholder fails to comply with certain
identification procedures, unless the holder is an exempt recipient under
applicable provisions of the Code.

     THE FEDERAL TAX DISCUSSIONS SET FORTH ABOVE ARE INCLUDED FOR GENERAL
INFORMATION ONLY AND MAY NOT BE APPLICABLE DEPENDING UPON A SECURITYHOLDER'S
PARTICULAR TAX SITUATION. PROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS SHOULD CONSULT THEIR TAX
ADVISORS WITH RESPECT TO THE TAX CONSEQUENCES TO THEM OF THE PURCHASE, OWNERSHIP
AND DISPOSITION OF REMIC SECURITIES, GRANTOR TRUST SECURITIES, PARTNERSHIP
SECURITIES AND DEBT SECURITIES, INCLUDING THE TAX CONSEQUENCES UNDER STATE,
LOCAL, FOREIGN AND OTHER TAX LAWS AND THE POSSIBLE EFFECTS OF CHANGES IN FEDERAL
OR OTHER TAX LAWS.

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                        STATE AND OTHER TAX CONSEQUENCES

     In addition to the federal income tax consequences described in 'Certain
Federal Income Tax Consequences,' potential investors should consider the state
and local tax consequences of the acquisition, ownership, and disposition of the
Securities 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 own tax advisors with
respect to the various tax consequences of investments in the Securities offered
hereunder.

                              ERISA CONSIDERATIONS

     Title I of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, as amended
('ERISA'), and Section 4975 of the Code impose certain requirements on
retirement plans and on certain other employee benefit plans and arrangements
(including for this purpose individual retirement accounts and annuities and
Keogh plans) which are subject thereto and on bank collective investment funds
and insurance company general and separate accounts in which such plans,
accounts or arrangements are invested (all of which are hereinafter referred to
as 'Plans') and on persons who are fiduciaries with respect to such Plans.
Certain employee benefit plans, such as governmental plans (as defined in
Section 3(32) of ERISA), and, if no election has been made under Section 410(d)
of the Code, church plans (as defined in Section 3(33) of ERISA), are not
subject to the ERISA requirements discussed herein. Accordingly, assets of such
plans may be invested in Securities without regard to the ERISA considerations
described below, subject to the provisions of applicable federal, state and
local law. Any such plan which is qualified and exempt from taxation under
Sections 401(a) and 501(a) of the Code, however, is subject to the prohibited
transaction rules set forth in Section 503 of the Code.

     In addition to the imposition of 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(a) of ERISA and Section 4975(c)(1)(A), (B), (C) and (D) of the Code
prohibit a broad range of transactions involving assets of a Plan and persons
('Parties in Interest' within the meaning of Section 3(14) of ERISA and
'Disqualified Persons' within the meaning of Section 4975(e)(2) of the Code,
collectively referred to as 'Parties in Interest') who have certain specified
relationships to the Plan. In addition, Section 406(b) of ERISA and Section
4975(c)(1)(E) and (F) of the Code impose certain prohibitions on Parties in
Interest who are fiduciaries with respect to the Plan. Certain Parties in
Interest that participate in a prohibited transaction may be subject to a
penalty imposed under Section 502(i) of ERISA or an excise tax pursuant to
Sections 4975(a) and (b) of the Code, unless a statutory or administrative
exemption is available.

     Certain transactions involving a Trust Fund might be deemed to constitute
prohibited transactions under ERISA and Section 4975 of the Code with respect to
a Plan that purchases Securities if the Residential Loans, Agency Securities,
Mortgage Securities and other assets included in such Trust Fund are deemed to
be assets of the Plan. The U.S. Department of Labor (the 'DOL') has promulgated
regulations at 29 C.F.R. 'SS'2510.3-101 (the 'DOL Regulations') defining the
term 'plan assets' for purposes of applying the general fiduciary responsibility
provisions of ERISA and the prohibited transaction provisions of ERISA and the
Code. Under the DOL Regulations, generally, when a Plan acquires an equity
interest in an entity (such as a Trust Fund), the Plan's assets include the
investment in the entity and an undivided interest in each of the underlying
assets of the entity, unless certain exceptions not applicable here apply, or
unless the equity participation in the entity by 'Benefit Plan Investors' is not
significant. For this purpose, in general, equity participation is considered
'significant' on any date if 25% or more of the value of any class of equity
interests is held by 'Benefit Plan Investors', which include Plans, as well as
any 'employee benefit plan' (as defined in Section 3(3) of ERISA) which is not
subject to Title I of ERISA, such as governmental plans (as defined in Section
3(32) of ERISA) and church plans (as defined in Section 3(33) of ERISA) which
have not made an election under Section 410(d) of the Code, and any entity whose
underlying assets include plan assets by reason of a Plan's investment in the
entity. Because of the factual nature of certain of the rules set forth therein,
neither Plans nor persons investing plan assets should acquire or hold
Securities in reliance upon the availability of any exception under the DOL
Regulations.

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     In addition, 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.' If Notes of a particular Series are deemed to be indebtedness under
applicable local law without any substantial equity features, an investing
Plan's assets would include such Notes, but would not, by reason of such
purchase, include the underlying assets of the related Trust Fund. However,
without regard to whether such Notes are treated as an equity interest for such
purposes, the purchase or holding of Notes by or on behalf of a Plan could be
considered to result in a prohibited transaction if the Issuer, the holder of an
Equity Certificate or any of their respective affiliates is or becomes a Party
in Interest with respect to such Plan, or if the Depositor, the Master Servicer,
the Indenture Trustee or the Owner Trustee has investment authority with respect
to the assets of such Plan.

     Any person who has discretionary authority or control respecting the
management or disposition of plan assets, and any person who provides investment
advice with respect to such assets for a fee, is a fiduciary of the investing
Plan. If the Residential Loans, Agency Securities, Mortgage Securities and other
assets included in a Trust Fund constitute plan assets, then any party
exercising management or discretionary control regarding those assets, such as
the Master Servicer or any Sub-Servicer, may be deemed to be a Plan 'fiduciary'
subject to the fiduciary requirements of ERISA and the prohibited transaction
provisions of ERISA and the Code with respect to the investing Plan. In
addition, if the assets included in a Trust Fund constitute plan assets, the
purchase or holding of Securities by a Plan, as well as the operation of the
related Trust Fund, may constitute or involve a prohibited transaction under
ERISA and the Code.

     Some of the transactions involving the Securities that might otherwise
constitute prohibited transactions under ERISA or the Code might qualify for
relief from the prohibited transaction rules under certain administrative
exemptions, which may be individual or class exemptions. The DOL issued an
individual exemption, Prohibited Transaction Exemption 90-36 (the 'Exemption'),
on June 25, 1990 to PaineWebber Incorporated, which generally exempts from the
application of the prohibited transaction provisions of Section 406 of ERISA,
and the excise taxes and civil penalties imposed on such prohibited transactions
pursuant to Section 4975(a) and (b) of the Code and Section 502(i) of ERISA,
certain transactions, among others, relating to the servicing and operation of
mortgage pools and the purchase, sale and holding of pass-through certificates,
such as a senior class of Certificates, underwritten by an Underwriter (as
hereinafter defined), provided that certain conditions set forth in the
Exemption are satisfied. For purposes of this Section 'ERISA Considerations,'
the term 'Underwriter' shall include (a) PaineWebber Incorporated, (b) any
person directly or indirectly, through one or more intermediaries, controlling,
controlled by or under common control with PaineWebber Incorporated and (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 with respect to a class of
Certificates.

     The 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 thereunder. First, the acquisition of Certificates
by a Plan must be on terms that are at least as favorable to the Plan as they
would be in an arm's-length transaction with an unrelated party. Second, the
Exemption only applies to Certificates evidencing rights and interests not
subordinated to the rights and interests evidenced by the other Certificates of
the same Series. Third, the Certificates at the time of acquisition by the Plan
must be rated in one of the three highest generic rating categories by Standard
& Poor's Ratings Services, Moody's Investors Service, Inc., Duff & Phelps Credit
Rating Co. or Fitch Investors Service, L.P. (collectively, 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
Trustee, the Master Servicer, any Sub-Servicer, the obligor on credit support
and any obligor with respect to Trust Fund Assets constituting more than 5% of
the aggregate unamortized principal balance of the Trust Fund Assets in the
related Trust Fund as of the date of initial issuance of the Certificates.
Fifth, the sum of all payments made to and retained by the Underwriter(s) must
represent not more than reasonable compensation for underwriting the
Certificates; the sum of all payments made to and retained by the Depositor
pursuant to the assignment of the Trust Fund Assets to the related Trust Fund
must represent not more than the fair market value of such obligations; and the
sum of all payments made to and retained by the Master Servicer and any
Sub-Servicer must represent not more than reasonable

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compensation for such person's services under the related Pooling and Servicing
Agreement and reimbursement of such person's reasonable expenses in connection
therewith. Sixth, the investing 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 of 1933, as amended.

     The Exemption also requires that the Trust Fund meet the following
requirements: (i) the Trust Fund must consist solely of assets of the type that
have been included in other investment pools; (ii) certificates evidencing
interests in such 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 a Plan or
with plan assets; and (iii) certificates evidencing interests in such other
investment pools must have been purchased by investors other than Plans for at
least one year prior to any acquisition of Certificates by or on behalf of a
Plan or with plan assets.

     A fiduciary of a Plan contemplating purchasing a Certificate must make its
own determination that the general conditions set forth above will be satisfied
with respect to such Certificate. However, to the extent that Certificates are
subordinate, the Exemption will not apply to an investment by a Plan. In
addition, the Exemption will not apply to an investment by a Plan during a
Funding Period unless certain additional conditions specified in the related
Prospectus Supplement are satisfied. Furthermore, any Certificates representing
a beneficial ownership in unsecured obligations will not satisfy the general
conditions of the Exemption.

     If the general conditions of the Exemption are satisfied, the Exemption may
provide an exemption from the restrictions imposed by Sections 406(a) and 407(a)
of ERISA (as well as the excise taxes imposed by Sections 4975(a) and (b) of the
Code by reason of Section 4975(c) of the 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 Plans. However, no
exemption is provided from the restrictions of Sections 406(a)(1)(E), 406(a)(2)
and 407 of ERISA for the acquisition or holding of a Certificate on behalf of an
'Excluded Plan' by any person who has discretionary authority or renders
investment advice with respect to the assets of such Excluded Plan. For purposes
of the Certificates, an 'Excluded Plan' is a Plan sponsored by any member of the
Restricted Group.

     If certain specific conditions of the Exemption are also satisfied, the
Exemption may provide an exemption from the restrictions imposed by Sections
406(b)(1) and (b)(2) of ERISA and the taxes imposed by Section 4975(c)(1)(E) of
the Code in connection with (1) the direct or indirect sale, exchange or
transfer of Certificates in the initial issuance of Certificates between the
Depositor or an Underwriter and a Plan when the person who has discretionary
authority or renders investment advice with respect to the investment of Plan
assets in the Certificates is (a) an obligor with respect to 5% or less of the
fair market value of the Trust Fund Assets or (b) an affiliate of such a person,
(2) the direct or indirect acquisition or disposition in the secondary market of
Certificates by a Plan and (3) the holding of Certificates by a Plan.

     Further, if certain specific conditions of the Exemption are satisfied, the
Exemption may provide an exemption from the restrictions imposed by Sections
406(a), 406(b) and 407(a) of ERISA, and the taxes imposed by Sections 4975(a)
and (b) of the Code by reason of Section 4975(c) of the Code for transactions in
connection with the servicing, management and operation of the related Trust
Fund. The Depositor expects that the specific conditions of the Exemption
required for this purpose will be satisfied with respect to the Certificates so
that the Exemption would provide an exemption from the restrictions imposed by
Sections 406(a) and (b) of ERISA (as well as the excise taxes imposed by
Sections 4975(a) and (b) of the Code by reason of Section 4975(c) of the Code)
for transactions in connection with the servicing, management and operation of
the related Trust Fund, provided that the general conditions of the Exemption
are satisfied.

     The Exemption also may provide an exemption from the restrictions imposed
by Sections 406(a) and 407(a) of ERISA, and the taxes imposed by Sections
4975(a) and (b) of the Code by reason of Section 4975(c) of the Code if such
restrictions are deemed to otherwise apply merely because a person is deemed to
be a Party in Interest with respect to an investing Plan by virtue of providing
services to the Plan (or by virtue of having certain specified relationships to
such a person) solely as a result of the Plan's ownership of Certificates.

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     Before purchasing a Certificate, a fiduciary of a Plan should itself
confirm (a) that the Certificates constitute 'certificates' for purposes of the
Exemption and (b) that the specific and general conditions and other applicable
requirements set forth 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, the Plan fiduciary should consider its general
fiduciary obligations under ERISA in determining whether to purchase any
Certificates on behalf of a Plan.

     In addition to the Exemption, a Plan fiduciary or other investor using plan
assets should consider the availability of certain class exemptions granted by
the DOL ('Class Exemptions'), which may provide relief from certain of the
prohibited transaction provisions of ERISA and the related excise tax provisions
of the Code, including Prohibited Transaction Class Exemption ('PTCE') 83-1,
regarding transactions involving mortgage pool investment trusts; PTCE 84-14,
regarding transactions effected by a 'qualified professional asset manager';
PTCE 90-1, regarding transactions by insurance company pooled separate accounts;
PTCE 91-38, regarding investments by bank collective investment funds; PTCE
95-60, regarding transactions by insurance company general accounts; and PTCE
96-23, regarding transactions effected by an 'in-house asset manager.'

     In addition to any exemption that may be available under PTCE 95-60 for the
purchase, sale and holding of the Securities by an insurance company general
account, the Small Business Job Protection Act of 1996 added a new Section
401(c) to ERISA, which provides certain exemptive relief from the provisions of
Part 4 of Title I of ERISA, including the prohibited transaction provisions
thereof, and Section 4975 of the Code for transactions involving an insurance
company general account. Pursuant to Section 401(c) of ERISA, the DOL is
required to issue final regulations ('401(c) Regulations') no later than
December 31, 1997 which are to provide guidance for the purpose of determining,
in cases where insurance policies supported by an insurer's general account are
issued to or for the benefit of a Plan on or before December 31, 1998, which
general account assets constitute plan assets. Section 401(c) of ERISA generally
provides that, until the date which is 18 months after the 401(c) Regulations
become final, no person shall be subject to liability under Part 4 of Title I of
ERISA and Section 4975 of the Code on the basis of a claim that the assets of an
insurance company general account constitute 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 which support insurance policies issued to a
Plan after December 31, 1998 or issued to Plans on or before December 31, 1998
for which the insurance company does not comply with the 401(c) Regulations may
be treated as plan assets. In addition, because Section 401(c) does not relate
to insurance company separate accounts, separate account assets are still
treated as plan assets of any Plan invested in such separate account. Insurance
companies contemplating the investment of general account assets in the
Securities should consult with their legal counsel with respect to the
applicability of Section 401(c) of ERISA, including the general account's
ability to continue to hold the Securities after the date which is 18 months
after the date the 401(c) Regulations become final. The DOL proposed such
regulations on December 22, 1997, but they have not yet been finalized.

     Any plan fiduciary which proposes to cause a Plan to purchase Securities
should consult with its counsel with respect to the potential applicability of
ERISA and Section 4975 of the Code to such investment and the availability of
the Exemption or any Class Exemption in connection therewith. There can be no
assurance that the Exemption or any other individual or Class Exemption will
apply with respect to any particular Plan that acquires or holds Securities or,
even if all of the conditions specified therein were satisfied, that such
exemption would apply to all transactions involving the Trust Fund. The
Prospectus Supplement with respect to a Series of Securities may contain
additional information regarding the application of the Exemption or any other
exemption with respect to the Securities offered thereby.

                                LEGAL INVESTMENT

     The Prospectus Supplement for each Series of Securities will specify which,
if any, of the classes of Securities offered thereby constitute 'mortgage
related securities' for purposes of the Secondary

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Mortgage Market Enhancement Act of 1984, as amended ('SMMEA'). Any class of
Securities offered hereby and by the related Prospectus Supplement that is not
initially rated in one of the two highest rating categories by at least one
Rating Agency or that represents an interest in a Trust Fund that includes
junior Residential Loans will not constitute 'mortgage related securities' for
purposes of SMMEA. The appropriate characterization of those Securities not
qualifying as 'mortgage related securities' ('Non-SMMEA Securities') under
various legal investment restrictions, and thus the ability of investors subject
to these restrictions to purchase such Securities, may be subject to significant
interpretive uncertainties. Accordingly, investors whose investment authority is
subject to legal restrictions should consult their own legal advisors to
determine whether and to what extent the Non-SMMEA Securities constitute legal
investments for them.

     Classes of Securities qualifying as 'mortgage related securities' will
constitute legal investments for persons, trusts, corporations, partnerships,
associations, business trusts and business entities (including, but not limited
to, state-chartered savings banks, commercial banks, savings and loan
associations and insurance companies, as well as trustees and state government
employee retirement systems) created pursuant to or existing under the laws of
the United States or of any state (including the District of Columbia and Puerto
Rico) 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 such entities. Pursuant to SMMEA, a
number of states enacted legislation, on or before the October 3, 1991 cutoff
for such enactments, limiting to varying extents the ability of certain entities
(in particular, insurance companies) to invest in 'mortgage related securities'
secured by liens on residential, or mixed residential and commercial properties,
in most cases by requiring the affected investors to rely solely upon existing
state law, and not SMMEA. Accordingly, the investors affected by such
legislation will be authorized to invest in Securities qualifying as 'mortgage
related securities' only to the extent provided in such 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 in 'mortgage related
securities' without limitation as to the percentage of their assets represented
thereby, federal credit unions may invest in such securities, and national banks
may purchase such securities for their own account without regard to the
limitations generally applicable to investment securities set forth in 12
U.S.C. 'SS' 24 (Seventh), subject in each case to such regulations as the
applicable federal regulatory authority may prescribe. In this connection, the
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (the 'OCC') amended 12 C.F.R. Part 1
to authorize national banks to purchase and sell for their own account, without
limitation as to a percentage of the bank's capital and surplus (but subject to
compliance with certain general standards in 12 C.F.R. 'SS' 1.5 concerning
'safety and soundness' and retention of credit information), certain 'Type IV
securities,' defined in 12 C.F.R. 'SS' 1.2(l) to include certain 'residential
mortgage-related securities.' As so defined, 'residential mortgage-related
security' means, in relevant part, 'mortgage related security' within the
meaning of SMMEA. The National Credit Union Administration ('NCUA') has adopted
rules, codified at 12 C.F.R. Part 703, which permit federal credit unions to
invest in 'mortgage related securities' under certain limited circumstances,
other than stripped mortgage related securities and residual interests in
mortgage related securities, unless the credit union has obtained written
approval from the NCUA to participate in the 'investment pilot program'
described in 12 C.F.R. 'SS' 703.140. The Office of Thrift Supervision (the
'OTS') has issued Thrift Bulletin 13a (December 1, 1998), 'Management of
Interest Rate Risk, Investment Securities and Derivative Activities,' which
thrift institutions subject to the jurisdiction of the OTS should consider
before investing in the Notes.

     All depository institutions considering an investment in the Securities
should review the 'Supervisory Policy Statement on Investment Securities and
End-User Derivatives Activities' (the '1998 Policy Statement') of the Federal
Financial Institutions Examination Council which has been adopted by the Board
of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, the OCC and the OTS effective May 26, 1998, and by the NUCA,
effective October 1, 1998. The 1998 Policy statement sets forth general
guidelines which depository institutions must follow in managing risks
(including market, credit, liquidity, operational (transaction), and legal
risks)

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applicable to all securities (including mortgage pass-through securities and
mortgage-derivative products) used for investment purposes.

     Institutions whose investment activities are subject to regulation by
federal or state authorities should review rules, policies and guidelines
adopted from time to time by such authorities before purchasing any Securities,
as certain Series or classes may be deemed unsuitable investments, or may
otherwise be restricted, under such rules, policies or guidelines (in certain
instances irrespective of SMMEA).

     The foregoing does not take into consideration the applicability of
statutes, rules, regulations, orders, guidelines or agreements generally
governing investments made by a particular investor, including, but not limited
to, 'prudent investor' provisions, percentage-of-assets limits, provisions which
may restrict or prohibit investment in securities which are not 'interest
bearing' or 'income paying,' and, with regard to any Securities issued in
book-entry form, provisions which may restrict or prohibit investments in
securities which are issued in book-entry form.

     Except as to the status of certain classes of Securities as 'mortgage
related securities,' no representation is made as to the proper characterization
of the Securities for legal investment purposes, financial institution
regulatory purposes, or other purposes, or as to the ability of particular
investors to purchase Securities under applicable legal investment restrictions.
The uncertainties described above (and any unfavorable future determinations
concerning legal investment or financial institution regulatory characteristics
of the Securities) may adversely affect the liquidity of the 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 their own legal advisors in determining
whether and to what extent the Securities 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 such investor.

                             PLANS OF DISTRIBUTION

     The Securities offered hereby and by the Supplements to this Prospectus
will be offered in Series. The distribution of the Securities may be effected
from time to time in one or more transactions, including negotiated
transactions, at a fixed public offering price or at varying prices to be
determined at the time of sale or at the time of commitment therefor. If so
specified in the related Prospectus Supplement, the Securities will be
distributed in a firm commitment underwriting, subject to the terms and
conditions of the underwriting agreement, by PaineWebber Incorporated
('PaineWebber') acting as underwriter with other underwriters, if any, named
therein. In such event, the Prospectus Supplement may also specify that the
underwriters will not be obligated to pay for any Securities agreed to be
purchased by purchasers pursuant to purchase agreements acceptable to the
Depositor. 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. The Prospectus Supplement
will describe any such compensation paid by the Depositor.

     Alternatively, the Prospectus Supplement may specify that the Securities
will be distributed by PaineWebber acting as agent or in some cases as principal
with respect to Securities which it has previously purchased or agreed to
purchase. If PaineWebber acts as agent in the sale of Securities, PaineWebber
will receive a selling commission with respect to each Series of Securities,
depending on market conditions, expressed as a percentage of the aggregate
principal balance of the related Residential Loans as of the Cut-off Date. The
exact percentage for each Series of Securities will be disclosed in the related
Prospectus Supplement. To the extent that PaineWebber elects to purchase
Securities as principal, PaineWebber may realize losses or profits based upon
the difference between its purchase price and the sales price. The Prospectus
Supplement with respect to any Series offered other than through underwriters
will contain information regarding the nature of such offering and any
agreements to be entered into between the Depositor and purchasers of Securities
of such Series.

     The Depositor will indemnify PaineWebber and any underwriters against
certain civil liabilities, including liabilities under the Securities Act of
1933, or will contribute to payments PaineWebber and any underwriters may be
required to make in respect thereof.

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     In the ordinary course of business, PaineWebber and the Depositor, or their
affiliates, may engage in various securities and financing transactions,
including repurchase agreements to provide interim financing of the Depositor's
residential loans pending the sale of such residential loans or interests
therein, including the Securities.

     The Depositor anticipates that the Securities will be sold primarily to
institutional investors. Purchasers of Securities, including dealers, may,
depending on the facts and circumstances of such purchases, be deemed to be
'underwriters' within the meaning of the Securities Act of 1933 in connection
with reoffers and sales by them of Securities. Securityholders should consult
with their legal advisors in this regard prior to any such reoffer or sale.

     As to each Series of Securities, only those classes rated in one of the
four highest rating categories by any Rating Agency will be offered hereby. Any
unrated class may be initially retained by the Depositor, and may be sold by the
Depositor at any time to one or more institutional investors.

                                 LEGAL MATTERS

     Certain legal matters in connection with the Securities will be passed upon
for the Depositor by Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft, New York, New York.

                             FINANCIAL INFORMATION

     A new Trust Fund will be formed with respect to each Series of Securities
and no Trust Fund will engage in any business activities or have any assets or
obligations prior to the issuance of the related Series of Securities.
Accordingly, no financial statements with respect to any Trust Fund will be
included in this Prospectus or in the related Prospectus Supplement.

                                     RATING

     Unless otherwise specified in the related Prospectus Supplement, it is a
condition to the issuance of the Securities of each Series offered hereby and by
the Prospectus Supplement that they shall have been rated in one of the four
highest rating categories by the nationally recognized statistical rating agency
or agencies (each, a 'Rating Agency') specified in the related Prospectus
Supplement.

     Any such rating would be based on, among other things, the adequacy of the
value of the Trust Fund Assets and any credit enhancement with respect to such
class and will reflect such Rating Agency's assessment solely of the likelihood
that holders of a class of Securities of such class will receive payments to
which such Securityholders are entitled under the related Agreement. Such rating
will not constitute an assessment of the likelihood that principal prepayments
on the related Residential Loans will be made, the degree to which the rate of
such prepayments might differ from that originally anticipated or the likelihood
of early optional termination of the Series of Securities. Such rating should
not be deemed a recommendation to purchase, hold or sell Securities, inasmuch as
it does not address market price or suitability for a particular investor. Such
rating will not address the possibility that prepayment at higher or lower rates
than anticipated by an investor may cause such investor to experience a lower
than anticipated yield or that an investor purchasing a Security at a
significant premium might fail to recoup its initial investment under certain
prepayment scenarios.

     There is also no assurance that any such rating will remain in effect for
any given period of time or that it may not be lowered or withdrawn entirely by
the Rating Agency in the future if in its judgment circumstances in the future
so warrant. In addition to being lowered or withdrawn due to any erosion in the
adequacy of the value of the Trust Fund Assets or any credit enhancement with
respect to a Series, such rating might also be lowered or withdrawn among other
reasons, because of an adverse change in the financial or other condition of a
credit enhancement provider or a change in the rating of such credit enhancement
provider's long term debt.

     The amount, type and nature of credit enhancement, if any, established with
respect to a Series of Securities will be determined on the basis of criteria
established by each Rating Agency rating classes of such Series. Such criteria
are sometimes based upon an actuarial analysis of the behavior of mortgage loans
in a larger group. Such analysis is often the basis upon which each Rating
Agency determines the

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amount of credit enhancement required with respect to each such class. There can
be no assurance that the historical data supporting any such actuarial analysis
will accurately reflect future experience nor any assurance that the data
derived from a large pool of mortgage loans accurately predicts the delinquency,
foreclosure or loss experience of any particular pool of Residential Loans. No
assurance can be given that values of any Residential Properties have remained
or will remain at their levels on the respective dates of origination of the
related Residential Loans. If the residential real estate markets should
experience an overall decline in property values such that the outstanding
principal balances of the Residential Loans in a particular Trust Fund and any
secondary financing on the related Residential Properties become equal to or
greater than the value of the Residential Properties, the rates of
delinquencies, foreclosures and losses could be higher than those now generally
experienced in the mortgage lending industry. In addition, adverse economic
conditions (which may or may not affect real property values) may affect the
timely payment by mortgagors of scheduled payments of principal and interest on
the Residential Loans and, accordingly, the rates of delinquencies, foreclosures
and losses with respect to any Trust Fund. To the extent that such losses are
not covered by credit enhancement, such losses will be borne, at least in part,
by the holders of one or more classes of the Security of the related Series.

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                             INDEX OF DEFINED TERMS

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1998 Policy Statement.........................................            132

                                   -4-
401(c) Regulations............................................            131

                                   -A-
Accrual Securities............................................          9, 42
Accrued Security Interest.....................................             48
Administration Fee Rate.......................................             61
Advance.......................................................         13, 53
Agency Securities.............................................              1
Agreement.....................................................          7, 41
ARM Loans.....................................................             23
Assumed Reinvestment Rate.....................................             49
Available Distribution Amount.................................             50
Available Subordination Amount................................             52
                                   -B-
Bankruptcy Bond...............................................             77
Bankruptcy Code...............................................             77
BIF...........................................................             38
Book-Entry Securities.........................................             55
Buydown Funds.................................................             98
Buydown Loans.................................................             26
Buydown Period................................................             26

                                   -C-
Cash Flow Value...............................................             49
CEDEL.........................................................             55
CEDEL Participants............................................             57
CERCLA........................................................         19, 94
Certificate Register..........................................             41
Certificate Registration......................................             41
Certificateholder.............................................             65
Certificates..................................................              1
Charter Act...................................................          9, 29
Class Exemptions..............................................            131
Closing Date..................................................             21
Code..........................................................          9, 96
Collateral Value..............................................             27
Commission....................................................              2
Conservation Act..............................................             94
Cooperative...................................................         11, 22
Cooperative Housing Corporation...............................             81
Cooperative Loans.............................................         11, 22
Cooperative Notes.............................................             25
Cooperative Unit..............................................             22
Corporate Trust Office........................................             41
Credit Insurance Instrument...................................             58
Cumulative Subordination Payments.............................             52
Cut-off Date..................................................             10
</TABLE>

                                      136



<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                         PAGE
                                                                         ----
<S>                                                             <C>
                                    -D-
Debt Securities...............................................            96
defective obligation..........................................            97
Deficiency Event..............................................            65
Definitive Security...........................................            55
Deposit Period................................................            53
Depositor.....................................................             7
Disqualified Organization.....................................           110
Disqualified Persons..........................................           128
Distribution Date.............................................         9, 47
DOL...........................................................           128
DOL Regulations...............................................           128
DTC...........................................................        20, 55
Due Period....................................................            55

                                   -E-
EDGAR.........................................................             3
Environmental Lien............................................            94
Equity Certificates...........................................         7, 41
equity interest...............................................           129
equity of redemption..........................................            87
ERISA.........................................................       14, 128
Euroclear.....................................................            55
Euroclear Cooperative.........................................            57
Euroclear Participants........................................            57
European Depositaries.........................................            56
Events of Default.............................................            65
excess inclusion..............................................           108
excess servicing..............................................           118
Excluded Plan.................................................           130
Exemption.....................................................           129
Exemption Rating Agencies.....................................           129

                                -F-
FDIC..........................................................            38
FHA...........................................................            12
FHA Insurance.................................................            70
FHA Loans.....................................................            24
FHLMC.........................................................         1, 12
FHLMC Act.....................................................            30
FHLMC Certificate Group.......................................            30
FHLMC Certificates............................................        12, 28
Final Distribution Date.......................................            48
Financial Intermediary........................................            56
FNMA..........................................................         1, 12
FNMA Certificates.............................................        12, 28
FTC Rule......................................................            90
Funding Period................................................            22

                                -G-
Garn-St. Germain Act..........................................            91
GNMA..........................................................         1, 12
GNMA Certificates.............................................        12, 28
Grantor Trust Certificates....................................            14
Grantor Trust Fund............................................            96
</TABLE>
                                      137



<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                         PAGE
                                                                         ----
<S>                                                                 <C>
Grantor Trust Securities......................................            96

                                     -H-
Hazard Insurance Instrument...................................            58
holder........................................................            94
Holder in Due Course Rules....................................        19, 90
Home Equity Loans.............................................            11
Home Improvement Contracts....................................        11, 22
Housing Act...................................................            26
HUD...........................................................            70

                                     -I-
Indenture.....................................................             7
Initial Deposit...............................................            52
insurability representation...................................            45
Insurance Instrument..........................................            58
Insurance Proceeds............................................            47
Interest Rate.................................................        11, 23
issue price...................................................           100
Issuer........................................................             7

                                      -L-
L/C Bank......................................................            78
Land Contracts................................................        11, 23
Liquidation Proceeds..........................................            46
Loan-to-Value Ratio...........................................            27
Lockout Period................................................            24

                                      -M-
Manager.......................................................             21
Manufactured Home.............................................             26
Manufactured Housing Contracts................................         11, 22
Manufacturer's Invoice Price..................................             27
Mark to Market Regulations....................................            112
market discount...............................................            103
Master Servicer...............................................              7
Maximum Subordination Amount..................................             52
Morgan........................................................             56
Mortgage Loans................................................     11, 22, 96
Mortgage Notes................................................             24
mortgage related securities...................................        14, 132
Mortgage Securities...........................................         12, 23
Mortgaged Properties..........................................     11, 22, 23
Mortgaged Property............................................ 11, 22, 23, 79
Mortgages.....................................................             24
Multifamily Loans.............................................         11, 22

                                   -N-
NCUA..........................................................           132
Net Interest Rate.............................................            42
new partnership...............................................           125
New Regulations...............................................           114
non-conforming credit.........................................        21, 37
Non-Pro Rata Security.........................................           100
</TABLE>

                                      138



<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                         PAGE
                                                                         ----
<S>                                                                <C>
Nonrecoverable Advance........................................            54
Non-SMMEA Securities..........................................           132
Non-US Persons................................................           114
Notes.........................................................          1, 7
                                    -O-
Obligor.......................................................            21
OCC...........................................................           132
OID Regulations...............................................        96, 99
old partnership...............................................           125
Optional Termination..........................................            14
OTS...........................................................           132
Owner Trust Agreement.........................................         7, 41
Owner Trustee.................................................             7

                                     -P-
PaineWebber...................................................           133
Participants..................................................        20, 55
Parties in Interest...........................................           128
Partnership Securities........................................            96
Partnership Trust Fund........................................            96
Pass-Through Entity...........................................           110
Percentage Interest...........................................            41
Permitted Instruments.........................................            45
permitted investments.........................................            97
Plans.........................................................           128
Pool Insurer..................................................            74
Pool Insurance Policy.........................................            74
Pooling and Servicing Agreement...............................             7
Pre-Funded Amount.............................................            21
Pre-Funding Account...........................................            10
Prepayment Assumption.........................................           100
Prepayment Period.............................................            34
Primary Credit Insurance Policy...............................            70
Primary Hazard Insurance Policy...............................            72
PTCE..........................................................           131
Purchase Price................................................            38

                                     -Q-
Qualified Insurer.............................................            75
Qualifed Mortgage.............................................            97

                                     -R-
Rating Agency.................................................           134
real estate assets............................................       98, 119
real estate mortgage investment conduit.......................      1, 9, 42
Realized Loss.................................................            51
Record Date...................................................            47
Refinance Loans...............................................            27
regular interests.............................................        42, 96
Regular Securities............................................            96
Regular Securityholder........................................            99
Relevant Depositary...........................................            56
Relief Act....................................................            95
REMIC.........................................................  1, 9, 42, 96
</TABLE>

                                      139



<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                          PAGE
                                                                          ----
<S>                                                             <C>
REMIC Pool....................................................            96
REMIC Provisions..............................................            96
REMIC Regular Certificates....................................            14
REMIC Regulations.............................................            96
REMIC Residual Certificates...................................            14
REMIC Securities..............................................            96
Reserve Fund..................................................        52, 77
Residential Loans.............................................         1, 24
Residential Properties........................................        11, 23
Residual Holders..............................................           106
residual interests............................................            14
Residual Securities...........................................            96
Restricted Group..............................................           129
Retained Interest.............................................            41
Retained Interest Rate........................................            42
Riegle Act....................................................            19
Rules.........................................................            55

                                  -S-
SAIF..........................................................            38
SBJPA of 1996.................................................            98
Scheduled Principal Balance...................................            51
Securities....................................................          1, 7
Security Interest Rate........................................             8
Security Owners...............................................            55
Security Principal Balance....................................         8, 49
Securityholder................................................            41
Senior Liens..................................................        24, 54
Senior Percentage.............................................            51
Senior Securities.............................................         8, 41
Senior/Subordinate Series.....................................            41
Series........................................................             1
Servicemen's Readjustment Act.................................            27
Servicing Agreement...........................................            32
SMMEA.........................................................       14, 132
Servicing Default.............................................            66
Special Hazard Amount.........................................            76
Special Hazard Insurer........................................            75
Special Hazard Losses.........................................            51
Special Hazard Subordination Amount...........................            51
Special Servicer..............................................            95
Specified Reserve Fund Balance................................            52
Standard Securities...........................................           116
Startup Day...................................................            96
Stated Principal Balance......................................            39
Strip Securities..............................................         8, 42
Stripped Agency Securities....................................            31
Stripped Interest.............................................            33
Stripped Securities...........................................        8, 119
Stripped Securityholder.......................................           121
Subordinate Securities........................................         8, 41
Subsequent Loans..............................................            21
Sub-Servicer..................................................            22
Sub-Servicing Account.........................................            46
Sub-Servicing Agreement.......................................            39
</TABLE>

                                      140



<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                         PAGE
                                                                         ----
<S>                                                             <C>
                                   -T-
Terms and Conditions..........................................            57
thrift institutions...........................................           109
Tiered REMICs.................................................            99
Title V.......................................................            93
Title VIII....................................................            93
Trust Account.................................................            12
Trust Agreement...............................................         7, 41
Trust Fund....................................................             8
Trust Fund Asset..............................................             8
Trustee.......................................................             7

                                     -U-
U.S. Person...................................................           111
Unaffiliated Sellers..........................................            22
Underwriter...................................................           129
Unrecovered Senior Portion....................................            51

                                     -V-
VA............................................................            12
VA Guarantee..................................................            71
VA Guaranty Policy............................................            71
VA Loans......................................................            24

                                     -W-
Window Period Loans...........................................            91
</TABLE>

                                    141





<PAGE>

===================================          ===================================

     YOU SHOULD RELY ON THE INFORMATION CONTAINED OR INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE
IN THIS PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT AND THE ATTACHED PROSPECTUS. WE HAVE NOT
AUTHORIZED ANYONE TO PROVIDE YOU WITH DIFFERENT INFORMATION.

     WE ARE NOT OFFERING THESE CERTIFICATES IN ANY STATE WHERE THE OFFER IS NOT
PERMITTED.
                            ------------------------
                               TABLE OF CONTENTS
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                              PAGE
                                                                                                              ----
<S>                                                                                                           <C>
                                              PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT
Summary....................................................................................................    S-4
Risk Factors...............................................................................................   S-12
Description Of The Loans...................................................................................   S-17
The Transferor And The Servicer............................................................................   S-25
Prepayment And Yield Considerations........................................................................   S-29
Description Of The Offered Certificates....................................................................   S-39
Servicing Of The Loans.....................................................................................   S-48
The Trustee................................................................................................   S-55
The Certificate Insurance Policy...........................................................................   S-56
The Certificate Insurer....................................................................................   S-57
Certain Federal Income Tax Consequences....................................................................   S-58
ERISA Considerations.......................................................................................   S-60
Legal Investment...........................................................................................   S-62
Use Of Proceeds............................................................................................   S-62
Underwriting...............................................................................................   S-63
Experts....................................................................................................   S-63
Ratings....................................................................................................   S-64
Legal Matters..............................................................................................   S-64
Index of Defined Terms.....................................................................................   S-65

                                                    PROSPECTUS
Available Information......................................................................................     2
Reports to Securityholders.................................................................................     3
Incorporation of Certain Information by Reference..........................................................     3
Prospectus Supplement or Current Report on Form 8-K........................................................     3
Summary of Terms...........................................................................................     7
Risk Factors...............................................................................................    16
The Trust Funds............................................................................................    22
Use of Proceeds............................................................................................    33
Yield Considerations.......................................................................................    33
Maturity and Prepayment Considerations.....................................................................    34
The Depositor..............................................................................................    36
Residential Loan Program...................................................................................    36
Description of the Securities..............................................................................    41
Description of Primary Insurance Coverage..................................................................    69
Description of Credit Support..............................................................................    73
Certain Legal Aspects of Residential Loans.................................................................    79
Certain Federal Income Tax Consequences....................................................................    96
State and Other Tax Consequences...........................................................................   128
ERISA Considerations.......................................................................................   128
Legal Investment...........................................................................................   131
Plans of Distribution......................................................................................   133
Legal Matters..............................................................................................   134
Financial Information......................................................................................   134
Rating.....................................................................................................   134
Index of Defined Terms.....................................................................................   136
</TABLE>
                            ------------------------
     DEALERS WILL BE REQUIRED TO DELIVER A PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT AND PROSPECTUS
WHEN ACTING AS UNDERWRITERS OF THESE CERTIFICATES AND WITH RESPECT TO THEIR
UNSOLD ALLOTMENTS OR SUBSCRIPTIONS. IN ADDITION, ALL DEALERS SELLING THESE
CERTIFICATES WILL DELIVER A PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT AND PROSPECTUS UNTIL AUGUST
22, 1999.


                           $436,889,824 (APPROXIMATE)

                                     [LOGO]

                                 NEW SOUTH HOME
                              EQUITY TRUST 1999-1

                               HOME EQUITY ASSET
                              BACKED CERTIFICATES,
                                 SERIES 1999-1

                              PAINEWEBBER MORTGAGE
                           ACCEPTANCE CORPORATION IV
                                  (DEPOSITOR)

                               NEW SOUTH FEDERAL
                                  SAVINGS BANK
                           (TRANSFEROR AND SERVICER)

                                     [LOGO]

                   ------------------------------------------
                             PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT
                   ------------------------------------------

                            PAINEWEBBER INCORPORATED

                              FIRST UNION CAPITAL
                                 MARKETS CORP.

                                  MAY 24, 1999

===================================          ===================================



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