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      THURSDAY, 27/06/2024 - Scope Ratings UK Ltd
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      Scope assigns AAA(SF) to tranche A of Colossus 2024-2 of Santander UK's synthetic securitisation

      Scope has assigned final ratings to tranches A to E and to class E credit-linked notes (series Colossus 2024-2) of Santander UK plc's synthetic securitisation programme.

      Rating action

      Scope Ratings UK Limited (Scope) has taken the following rating actions on Santander UK plc’s (series Colossus 2024-2) synthetic tranches and credit-linked notes (CLNs):

      Tranche A, GBP 1,275,634,243 (78.50%): assigned new rating AAASF

      Tranche B, GBP 44,687,823 (2.75%): assigned new rating AA-SF

      Tranche C, GBP 77,188,059 (4.75%): assigned new rating ASF

      Tranche D, GBP 40,626,472 (2.50%): assigned new rating BBB+SF

      Tranche E, GBP 97,500,000 (6.00%): assigned new rating BB+SF

      Tranche F, GBP 65,000,000 (4.00%): not rated

      Junior Tranche, GBP 24,375,177 (1.50%): not rated

      Class E CLN (XS2846981426), GBP 97,500,000 (6.00%): assigned new rating BB+SF

      Class F CLN (XS2846981699), GBP 65,000,000 (4.00%): not rated


      The ratings assigned by Scope to the tranches A to E (synthetic rated tranches) reflect the expected losses with respect to credit events under the final terms of the Colossus 2024-2 CLNs. The ratings on the synthetic rated tranches do not address potential losses resulting from the transaction’s early termination, any market risk, and any counterparty risk associated with the transaction.

      The ratings assigned by Scope to the class E CLNs reflect the expected loss associated with the payments contractually promised by an instrument on a particular payment date or by its legal maturity.

      The scheduled redemption date of the CLNs is 22 May 2034.

      Transaction overview

      Santander UK plc’s (Santander UK) synthetic securitisation credit linked note issuance programme is a series of synthetic securitisations of static portfolios composed of corporate loans granted to small and medium-size enterprises (SMEs) and commercial real estate (CRE) loans originated by Santander UK in the United Kingdom and British Crown Dependencies. Colossus 2024-2 reference portfolio comprises 878 reference obligations and 670 borrower groups. The reference portfolio notional amount is GBP 1,625m, 90% of which is SME exposures, while the remainder is CRE exposures.

      Top borrower group exposure is 1%a  as per the eligibility criteria, while top 10 borrower groups comprise 10% of the portfolio. 95.5% of the portfolio is denominated in GBP, and the rest is denominated in USD or EUR. Weighted average (WA) seasoning of the portfolio is 2.3 years, while the WA remaining life is 2.6 years. 38.5% of the portfolio is secured by commercial or residential properties with an LTV below 100%, while 10% of the portfolio was underwritten as income-producing real estate lending by Santander UK. The largest industry concentration is real estate (15.3%), followed by financial and insurance (15%) and professional, scientific and technical activities (13.8%). The reference portfolio exhibits WA one-year economic capital probability of default (PD) of 1.4% based on Santander UK's internal risk assessment.

      The transaction features six synthetic senior tranches which amortise pro-rata until the occurrence of the subordination event and a synthetic junior tranche which amortises sequentially after the senior tranches. Upon the occurrence of the subordination event, all synthetic tranches will amortise sequentially. Adjusted loss balance, which is equal to the sum of realised losses and defaulted amounts of not yet worked-out positions, are allocated to the synthetic tranches in reverse order of seniority. The pro-rata amortisation share for each synthetic senior tranche is determined by the ratio of the tranche adjusted notional amount, i.e. outstanding tranche notional amount minus tranche adjusted loss, to the aggregate adjusted notional amounts of the synthetic senior tranches.

      Principal amortisation of Class E CLNs and Class F CLNs mirror the amortisation of its related protected tranches E and F, respectively. The protection buyer (Santander UK) pays the tranche protection fees plus SONIA on the effective balance of the CLNs adjusted by losses.

      Credit events with respect to the obligations include failure to pay, bankruptcy of the reference entity, and restructuring. Upon the occurrence of a credit event, Santander UK determines an initial loss according to their provisions which is adjusted by the loss adjustment amount at the end of the work-out period, resulting in the final loss. The loss balance, which is different than the adjusted loss balance, is equal to the sum of realised losses and initial losses of not yet worked-out positions.

      Subordination event is triggered if: a) the loss balance is greater than 1.5% of the initial portfolio notional amount; or b) the cumulative unmatured losses are equal or greater than aggregate notional amount of junior tranche and protected tranches (adjusted by loss balances); or c) effective N is less than 50; or d) the aggregate RONA of performing obligations with a IFRS 9 PD of >5% is greater than 20% of the initial portfolio notional amount. Cumulative unmatured losses are defaulted amounts minus initial losses of not yet worked-out obligations. Effective N is the effective number of obligations.

      Rating rationale

      The ratings reflect the legal and financial structure of the transaction, the quality of the reference portfolio, the ability and incentives of Santander UK as the originator and servicer, and macroeconomic conditions. The rating on CLNs additionally reflects the exposures to transaction’s counterparties.

      The ratings account for the respective credit enhancement of the tranches and their pro-rata amortisation conditional on subordination event. The ratings also reflect the default risk of the reference portfolio and recoveries upon default. The ratings incorporate the sensitivity of the tranches to changes in analytical assumptions.

      The CLNs rating addresses the counterparty risk exposure to Santander UK as payer of the coupon and holder of the collateral account. In accordance with Scope’s Counterparty Risk Methodology, Scope has classified the transaction's exposure to Santander UK as 'excessive'. Accordingly, class E CLNs ratings are currently capped at Scope’s Santander UK rating.

      Key rating drivers

      Experienced originator and servicer (positive)1. Santander UK is an experienced corporate and CRE loan lender in the UK with a longstanding track record and well-tested processes and models. (ESG factor)

      Static portfolio (positive)1. The portfolio will start amortising immediately after closing, reducing the risk of credit quality migration and change in the portfolio characteristics compared to revolving transactions.

      Credit enhancement (positive)1. All rated tranches benefit from hard credit enhancement provided by subordination at closing and losses are allocated in reverse order of seniority. Amortisation among the synthetic senior tranches is pro-rata subject to subordination event upon which they become sequential. The synthetic junior tranche amortises fully sequentially.

      UK macroeconomic outlook (negative)3. Short-term risks for UK corporates and real estate sector stay elevated in 2024-2025 due to tight monetary and credit conditions amidst sticky inflation.

      Unsecured exposures (negative)2. Scope only considers obligations backed by commercial or residential properties with an LTV below 100% as secured. 61.5% of the reference portfolio is classified as unsecured at closing according to this classification, for which Scope expects lower recovery rates compared to the rest of the portfolio.

      Sensitive tranches (negative)1. Mezzanine tranches are more sensitive to the timing and level of the amortisation, and exhibit more volatile performance than the most senior tranche.

      One or more key drivers of the credit rating action are considered an ESG factor.

      Rating-change drivers

      Positive. Increased credit enhancement from pool deleveraging along with lower default rates or higher recovery rates than expected may lead to upgrades.

      Negative. Worse-than-expected default and recovery performance of the assets may result in downgrades.

      Quantitative analysis and assumptions

      Scope’s analysis represents a long-term view on the portfolio’s credit performance and incorporates the credit quality of the reference portfolio, security and collateral backing the loans, and amortisation profiles. Scope has used a concentrated-portfolio approach and analysed the portfolio on a loan-by-loan basis using a Monte Carlo simulation. For each loan, Scope assumed: i) a specific default probability; ii) a specific recovery upon default; and iii) asset correlations between the loans.

      Scope derived loan-by-loan probabilities of default from Santander UK’s one-year economic probability of default. The derived probabilities of default were adjusted based on aspects such as Scope’s due diligence of the originator’s risk systems and processes, vintage data for defaults and market-wide data regarding corporate insolvencies and write-offs in the UK.

      The Monte Carlo simulation produced a non-parametric probability distribution of portfolio default rates for the transaction. This distribution exhibits a mean lifetime default rate of 4.8% over a weighted average life of 2.8 years and an implicit coefficient of variation of 81%.

      Scope assumed WA recovery rates under rating-conditional scenarios of AAA through B to be respectively 74%, 85%, 91%, 95%, 97% and 98% for secured loans and 24%, 27%, 30%, 34%, 37% and 40% for unsecured loans. The secured recovery rate assumptions reflect the collateral type haircuts and LTVs of the loans. Scope classified loans as secured if backed by commercial or residential properties with LTVs below 100%, while the rest of loans are classified as unsecured.

      The resulting default probability-weighted recovery rates are 45.8% at the AAA rating category stress and 66.5% at the B rating category stress, reflecting the distribution of secured and unsecured loans in the portfolio.

      Scope applied a correlation framework which is appropriate for transactions involving multi-sector and multi-region loans. The maximum correlation can be split into: 2.5% for all loans; 6.25% for pairs of loans sharing the same country; 10% for pairs of secured loans sharing the same region; and 25% for pairs of loans sharing the same sector.

      Scope applied further recovery and correlation stresses to the exposures belonging to the top five borrower groups, i.e. an additional 10% haircut to rating-conditional recovery rates and an additional pair-wise correlation of 20%.

      Sensitivity analysis

      Scope tested the resilience of the credit ratings against deviations in the main input parameters: the portfolio mean default rate and the portfolio recovery rate. This analysis has the sole purpose of illustrating the sensitivity of the credit ratings to input assumptions and is not indicative of expected or likely scenarios. The following shows how the results for each rated tranche and each CLN change compared to the assigned ratings when the assumed portfolio mean default rate increases by 50% or the portfolio’s expected recovery rate reduces by 50%, respectively:

      • Tranche A: sensitivity to mean default rate, zero notches; sensitivity to recovery rates, zero notches;
         
      • Tranche B: sensitivity to mean default rate, zero notches; sensitivity to recovery rates, one notch;
         
      • Tranche C: sensitivity to mean default rate, one notch; sensitivity to recovery rates, three notches;
         
      • Tranche D: sensitivity to mean default rate, one notch; sensitivity to recovery rates, three notches;
         
      • Tranche E: sensitivity to mean default rate, two notches; sensitivity to recovery rates, four notches;
         
      • Class E CLN: sensitivity to mean default rate, two notches; sensitivity to recovery rates, four notches.

      a. Percentages and weighted averages are based on initial portfolio notional amount and reference obligation notional amounts (RONA) unless stated otherwise.

      Rating driver references
      1. Transaction documentation and supporting material (Confidential)
      2.  Loan-by-loan data tape of the reference portfolio (Confidential)
      3. Scope has completed a monitoring review of the United Kingdom

      Stress testing
      Stress testing was considered in the quantitative analysis by considering scenarios that stress factors, like defaults and Credit-Rating-adjusted recoveries, contributing to sensitivity of Credit Ratings and consider the likelihood of severe collateral losses or impaired cash flows. The impact on the rated instruments is weighted by the assumptions of the likelihood of the events in such scenarios occurring.

      Cash flow analysis
      Scope Ratings primarily analysed the distribution of portfolio losses and its impact on the rated instrument, with the use of Scope Ratings’ Portfolio Model Version 1.1.
      Scope Ratings performed a cash flow analysis of the transaction with the use of Scope Ratings’ Cash Flow Model Version 2.0, incorporating relevant asset assumptions, and taking into account the transaction’s main structural features, such as the instruments’ priority of payments, the instruments’ size and coupons. The outcome of the analysis is an expected loss rate and an expected weighted average life for the instruments based on the generated cash flows.

      Methodology
      The methodologies used for these Credit Ratings, (SME ABS Rating Methodology, 16 May 2024; General Structured Finance Rating Methodology, 6 March 2024; Counterparty Risk Methodology, 13 July 2023), are available on https://scoperatings.com/governance-and-policies/rating-governance/methodologies.
      The models used for these Credit Ratings are (Cash Flow Model Version 2.0, Portfolio Model Version 1.1), available in Scope Ratings’ list of models, published under https://scoperatings.com/governance-and-policies/rating-governance/methodologies.
      Information on the meaning of each Credit Rating category, including definitions of default, recoveries, Outlooks and Under Review, can be viewed in ‘Rating Definitions - Credit Ratings, Ancillary and Other Services’, published on https://www.scoperatings.com/governance-and-policies/rating-governance/definitions-and-scales. Historical default rates of the entities rated by Scope Ratings can be viewed in the Credit Rating performance report at https://scoperatings.com/governance-and-policies/regulatory/uk-regulation. A comprehensive clarification of Scope Ratings’ definitions of default and Credit Rating notations can be found at https://www.scoperatings.com/governance-and-policies/rating-governance/definitions-and-scales. Guidance and information on how environmental, social or governance factors (ESG factors) are incorporated into the Credit Rating can be found in the respective sections of the methodologies or guidance documents provided on https://scoperatings.com/governance-and-policies/rating-governance/methodologies.

      Solicitation, key sources and quality of information
      The Rated Entity and/or its Related Third Parties participated in the Credit Rating process.
      The following substantially material sources of information were used to prepare the Credit Ratings: public domain, the Rated Entity, the Rated Entities’ Related Third Parties, third parties and Scope Ratings’ internal sources.
      Scope Ratings considers the quality of information available to Scope Ratings on the Rated Entity or instrument to be satisfactory. The information and data supporting these Credit Ratings originate from sources Scope Ratings considers to be reliable and accurate. Scope Ratings does not, however, independently verify the reliability and accuracy of the information and data.
      Scope Ratings has not received a third-party asset due diligence assessment/asset audit. Scope Ratings has performed its own analysis of the data quality, based on information received from the Rated Entity or Related Third Parties, which is not and should be not deemed equivalent to the performance of due diligence or an audit. The internal analysis was considered when preparing the Credit Ratings and it has no impact on the Credit Rating.
      Prior to the issuance of the Credit Rating action, the Rated Entity was given the opportunity to review the Credit Ratings and the principal grounds on which the Credit Ratings are based. Following that review, the Credit Ratings were not amended before being issued.

      Regulatory disclosures
      These Credit Ratings are issued by Scope Ratings UK Limited at 52 Grosvenor Gardens, London, United Kingdom, SW1W 0AU, Tel +44 20 7824 5180. The Credit Ratings are EU-endorsed.
      Lead analyst: Mirac Ugur, Senior Analyst
      Person responsible for approval of the Credit Ratings: Antonio Casado, Managing Director
      The Credit Ratings were first released by Scope Ratings on 27 June 2024.

      Potential conflicts
      See www.scoperatings.com under Governance & Policies/Regulatory for a list of potential conflicts of interest disclosures related to the issuance of Credit Ratings, as well as a list of Ancillary Services and certain non-Credit Rating Agency services provided to Rated Entities and/or Related Third Parties. 

      Conditions of use / exclusion of liability
      © 2024 Scope SE & Co. KGaA and all its subsidiaries including Scope Ratings GmbH, Scope Ratings UK Limited, Scope Fund Analysis GmbH, and Scope ESG Analysis GmbH (collectively, Scope). All rights reserved. The information and data supporting Scope’s ratings, rating reports, rating opinions and related research and credit opinions originate from sources Scope considers to be reliable and accurate. Scope does not, however, independently verify the reliability and accuracy of the information and data. Scope’s ratings, rating reports, rating opinions, or related research and credit opinions are provided ‘as is’ without any representation or warranty of any kind. In no circumstance shall Scope or its directors, officers, employees and other representatives be liable to any party for any direct, indirect, incidental or other damages, expenses of any kind, or losses arising from any use of Scope’s ratings, rating reports, rating opinions, related research or credit opinions. Ratings and other related credit opinions issued by Scope are, and have to be viewed by any party as, opinions on relative credit risk and not a statement of fact or recommendation to purchase, hold or sell securities. Past performance does not necessarily predict future results. Any report issued by Scope is not a prospectus or similar document related to a debt security or issuing entity. Scope issues credit ratings and related research and opinions with the understanding and expectation that parties using them will assess independently the suitability of each security for investment or transaction purposes. Scope’s credit ratings address relative credit risk, they do not address other risks such as market, liquidity, legal, or volatility. The information and data included herein is protected by copyright and other laws. To reproduce, transmit, transfer, disseminate, translate, resell, or store for subsequent use for any such purpose the information and data contained herein, contact Scope Ratings GmbH at Lennéstraße 5, D-10785 Berlin.

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