In a statement marking the 24 May transaction, the specialist lender said the deal had attracted significant interest with tranches over-subscribed and the deal wholly sold to real money accounts.
The portfolio composition was in line with previous deals, with low investor (17.6 per cent), interest-only (17 per cent) and non-metro exposures (16.8 per cent). A total of 16 domestic and offshore investors invested in the transaction.
Bluestone’s Asia Pacific CEO, Campbell Smyth, said the company’s focus on its specialist lending product portfolio had been a successful strategy that had sustained a year-on-year growth rate of over 100 per cent, since they returned to market in 2013.
“This is a result of channelling our efforts to support start-ups and self-employed borrowers, being in tune with their evolving demands and consistently providing products that are highly appealing to the sector,” he said.
Mr Smyth attributes the substantial product uptake to Bluestone’s focus on designing products for the self-employed sector and finding solutions that don’t discriminate based on trading history. Bluestone Mortgages expects product uptake to increase in the future as the SME sector evolves.
[Related: Non-bank prices $1bn RMBS transaction]