Filed Pursuant to Rule 424B5
                                                     Registration No. 333-119047


Prospectus Supplement dated January 12, 2005 (to Prospectus dated September 23,
2004)

$144,443,000

ACE SECURITIES CORP. HOME EQUITY LOAN TRUST, SERIES 2005-SD1
ASSET BACKED PASS-THROUGH CERTIFICATES

ACE SECURITIES CORP.
Depositor

OCWEN FEDERAL BANK FSB
OPTION ONE MORTGAGE CORPORATION
SELECT PORTFOLIO SERVICING, INC.
Servicers

WELLS FARGO BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION
Master Servicer

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
YOU SHOULD  CONSIDER  CAREFULLY  THE RISK FACTORS  BEGINNING ON PAGE S-8 IN THIS
PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT.

This  prospectus   supplement  may  be  used  to  offer  and  sell  the  Offered
Certificates only if accompanied by the prospectus.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

OFFERED CERTIFICATES    The trust created for the Series  2005-SD1  certificates
                        will hold a pool of first and junior lien fixed-rate and
                        adjustable-rate,   one-  to   four-family,   residential
                        mortgage  loans.  The trust will  issue five  classes of
                        Offered  Certificates.  You  can  find a list  of  these
                        classes,   together  with  their   initial   certificate
                        principal balances and pass-through  rates, in the table
                        below.   Credit  enhancement  for  all  of  the  Offered
                        Certificates  will be  provided  in the  form of  excess
                        interest,    arrearages,    overcollateralization    and
                        subordination. In addition, the Offered Certificates may
                        also benefit from a series of interest rate cap payments
                        pursuant to a cap agreement which is intended  partially
                        to mitigate interest rate risk.

                           INITIAL CERTIFICATE
         CLASS             PRINCIPAL BALANCE(1)        PASS-THROUGH RATE
- ------------------------   --------------------   ------------------------------
A-1.....................       $112,394,000       One-Month LIBOR + 0.40%(2)(3)
M-1.....................       $ 15,279,000       One-Month LIBOR + 0.75% (2)(3)
M-2.....................       $  7,826,000       One-Month LIBOR + 1.25% (2)(3)
M-3.....................       $  7,081,000       One-Month LIBOR + 3.50% (2)(3)
M-4.....................       $  1,863,000       One-Month LIBOR + 3.00% (2)(3)

- ----------
(1)  Approximate.

(2)  The  pass-through  rate for  each  class of  Offered  Certificates  will be
     subject to the Net WAC  Pass-Through  Rate as described in this  prospectus
     supplement under "Description of the Certificates-Pass-Through Rates."

(3)  After the optional termination date, the margin applicable to the Class A-1
     Certificates will increase by 100% and the margins  applicable to the Class
     M-1, Class M-2, Class M-3 and Class M-4 Certificates will increase by 50%.

The  certificates  offered by this  prospectus  supplement  will be purchased by
Deutsche  Bank  Securities  Inc.  from the  Depositor,  and are being offered by
Deutsche  Bank  Securities  Inc.  from  time to time for sale to the  public  in
negotiated  transactions  or otherwise at varying prices to be determined at the
time  of  sale.  Proceeds  to  the  Depositor  from  the  sale  of  the  Offered
Certificates will be approximately 99.73% of their initial Certificate Principal
Balance before deducting expenses.

NEITHER  THE  SECURITIES  AND  EXCHANGE  COMMISSION  NOR  ANY  STATE  SECURITIES
COMMISSION HAS APPROVED OR DISAPPROVED OF THE OFFERED CERTIFICATES OR DETERMINED
THAT THIS PROSPECTUS  SUPPLEMENT OR THE PROSPECTUS IS TRUTHFUL OR COMPLETE.  ANY
REPRESENTATION TO THE CONTRARY IS A CRIMINAL OFFENSE.

THE ATTORNEY  GENERAL OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK HAS NOT PASSED ON OR ENDORSED THE
MERITS OF THIS OFFERING. ANY REPRESENTATION TO THE CONTRARY IS UNLAWFUL.

                            DEUTSCHE BANK SECURITIES



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

YOU SHOULD RELY ONLY ON THE INFORMATION  CONTAINED IN THIS DOCUMENT. WE HAVE NOT
AUTHORIZED ANYONE TO PROVIDE YOU WITH DIFFERENT INFORMATION.

We provide  information  to you about the Offered  Certificates  in two separate
documents that progressively provide more detail:

o    the accompanying  prospectus,  which provides general information,  some of
     which may not apply to this series of certificates; and

o    this  prospectus  supplement,  which  describes the specific  terms of this
     series of certificates.

Ace Securities  Corp.'s  principal  offices are located at 6525 Morrison  Blvd.,
Suite  318,  Charlotte,  North  Carolina  28211,  and its  telephone  number  is
704-365-0569.

                                Table of Contents

                              Prospectus Supplement

SUMMARY OF PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT...............................................1
RISK FACTORS...................................................................8
USE OF PROCEEDS...............................................................18
THE MORTGAGE POOL.............................................................18
YIELD ON THE CERTIFICATES.....................................................56
DESCRIPTION OF THE CERTIFICATES...............................................72
THE SERVICERS.................................................................92
THE MASTER SERVICER..........................................................104
THE TRUSTEE..................................................................105
THE SECURITIES ADMINISTRATOR.................................................105
THE CUSTODIAN................................................................106
THE CREDIT RISK MANAGER......................................................106
POOLING AND SERVICING AGREEMENT..............................................106
THE CAP AGREEMENT AND THE CAP PROVIDER.......................................111
FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSEQUENCES..............................................114
METHOD OF DISTRIBUTION.......................................................117
SECONDARY MARKET.............................................................117
LEGAL OPINIONS...............................................................118
RATINGS......................................................................118
LEGAL INVESTMENT.............................................................118
CONSIDERATIONS FOR BENEFIT PLAN INVESTORS....................................119
ANNEX I......................................................................I-1



                                       II



                        SUMMARY OF PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT

     The following summary is a very broad overview of the certificates  offered
by this  prospectus  supplement  and the  accompanying  prospectus  and does not
contain  all  of the  information  that  you  should  consider  in  making  your
investment  decision.  To  understand  the  terms of the  Offered  Certificates,
carefully read this entire  prospectus  supplement  and the entire  accompanying
prospectus.

Title of Series............  ACE Securities Corp. Home Equity Loan Trust, Series
                             2005-SD1, Asset Backed Pass-Through Certificates.

Cut-off Date...............  As of the close of business on November 30, 2004.

Closing Date...............  On or about January 14, 2005.

Depositor..................  Ace Securities Corp., a Delaware  corporation.  See
                             "The Depositor" in the prospectus.

Originators................  GE Mortgage Services, LLC, a North Carolina limited
                             liability  company,  with respect to  approximately
                             38.20% of the mortgage  loans,  Option One Mortgage
                             Corporation, a California corporation, with respect
                             to  approximately  20.84% of the mortgage loans, NC
                             Capital Corporation, a California Corporation, with
                             respect  to  approximately  14.08% of the  mortgage
                             loans  and  National  City  Mortgage  Co.,  an Ohio
                             corporation,  with respect to approximately  11.83%
                             of the mortgage  loans,  in each case, by aggregate
                             principal  balance  as of  the  Cut-off  Date.  The
                             remainder of the mortgage loans were  originated by
                             various originators,  none of which have originated
                             more than 10% of the mortgage loans.

Master Servicer............  Wells Fargo Bank, National Association,  a national
                             banking association.

Servicers..................  Ocwen  Federal  Bank  FSB,  a  federally  chartered
                             savings bank, with respect to approximately  73.55%
                             of  the   mortgage   loans,   Option  One  Mortgage
                             Corporation, a California corporation, with respect
                             to  approximately  20.84% of the mortgage loans and
                             Select   Portfolio   Servicing,    Inc.,   a   Utah
                             corporation, with respect to approximately 5.61% of
                             the  mortgage  loans,  in each  case  by  aggregate
                             principal  balance as of the Cut-off Date. See "The
                             Servicers" in this prospectus supplement.

Trustee....................  HSBC Bank USA,  National  Association,  a  national
                             banking  association,  will be the  trustee  of the
                             trust.   See  "The  Trustee"  in  this   prospectus
                             supplement.

Securities Administrator...  Wells Fargo Bank, National  Association will be the
                             securities   administrator.   See  "The  Securities
                             Administrator" in this prospectus supplement.

Custodian..................  Wells Fargo Bank,  National  Association.  See "The
                             Custodian" in this prospectus supplement.

                                      S-1



Distribution Dates.........  Distributions on the Offered  Certificates  will be
                             made on the 25th day of each month, or, if that day
                             is  not a  business  day,  on the  next  succeeding
                             business day, beginning in January 2005.

Credit Risk Manager........  Risk  Management  Group,  LLC,  a New York  limited
                             liability company. See "The Credit Risk Manager" in
                             this prospectus supplement.

Offered Certificates.......  Only the  certificates  listed on the cover of this
                             prospectus  supplement  are being  offered  by this
                             prospectus   supplement.   Each  class  of  Offered
                             Certificates  will  have  the  initial  certificate
                             principal  balance and pass  through rate set forth
                             or described in the table appearing on the cover of
                             this prospectus supplement.


THE TRUST

The Depositor will establish a trust with respect to the certificates  under the
pooling  and  servicing  agreement  dated  as of  the  Cut-off  Date  among  the
Depositor,  the Servicers, the Master Servicer, the Securities Administrator and
the Trustee. There are eight classes of certificates representing the trust. See
"Description of the Certificates" in this prospectus supplement.

The  certificates  represent in the  aggregate the entire  beneficial  ownership
interest in the trust. In general,  distributions of interest and principal,  if
applicable,  on the Offered  Certificates  will be made only from  payments  and
recoveries received in respect of the mortgage loans.

THE MORTGAGE LOANS

References  to  percentages  of  the  mortgage  loans  under  this  section  are
calculated based on the aggregate  principal balance of the mortgage loans as of
the Cut-off Date.

The trust will contain  approximately 1,375  conventional,  one- to four-family,
first  and  junior  lien  fixed-rate  and  adjustable-rate   mortgage  loans  on
residential  real  properties  (the  "Mortgage  Loans").  The Mortgage Loans are
"Re-performing"  and "Scratch & Dent" as described  under "The Mortgage Pool" in
this prospectus supplement.

The  Mortgage  Loans  have  original  terms  to  maturity  of not  greater  than
approximately 50 years and have the following  characteristics  in the aggregate
as of the Cut-off Date:

Range of mortgage rates:                                      4.000% to 16.000%.

Weighted average mortgage rate:                                          8.018%.

Range of gross margins:                                        0.250% to 9.500%.

Weighted average gross margin:                                           5.507%.

Range of minimum mortgage
rates:                                                        0.250% to 11.850%.

Weighted average minimum
mortgage rate:                                                           7.048%.

Range of maximum mortgage
rates:                                                       10.500% to 17.850%.

Weighted average maximum mortgage rate:                                 13.689%.

Weighted average remaining term to
stated maturity:                                                     282 months.

Range of principal balances:                                 $1,436 to $978,815.

Average principal balance:                                             $108,394.

Weighted average original
combined loan-to value ratio:                                            81.55%.

Weighted average current updated
combined loan-to value ratio:                                            67.49%.

Range of current updated
combined loan-to-value ratios:                                 4.07% to 123.91%.

Weighted average next
adjustment date:                                                January 26, 2006

The  fixed-rate  Mortgage  Loans  consist  of 1,083  Mortgage  Loans and have an
aggregate principal balance of approximately $99,637,815

                                      S-2



as of the Cut-off Date.  The  fixed-rate  Mortgage  Loans have original terms to
maturity  of not  greater  than  approximately  50 years and have the  following
characteristics as of the Cut-off Date:

Range of mortgage rates:                                      4.000% to 16.000%.

Weighted average mortgage rate:                                          8.426%.

Weighted average remaining term to
stated maturity:                                                     252 months.

Range of principal balances:                                 $1,436 to $978,815.

Average principal balance:                                           $92,001.68.

Weighted average original
combined loan-to value ratio:                                            81.33%.

Weighted average current updated
combined loan-to value ratio:                                            60.87%.

Range of current updated
combined loan-to-value ratios:                                 4.07% to 123.91%.

The  adjustable-rate  Mortgage  Loans consist of 292 Mortgage  Loans and have an
aggregate principal balance of approximately $49,403,864 as of the Cut-off Date.
The  adjustable-rate  Mortgage  Loans have  original  terms to  maturity  of not
greater than approximately 31 years and have the following characteristics as of
the Cut-off Date:

Range of mortgage rates:                                      4.000% to 11.850%.

Weighted average mortgage rate:                                          7.195%.

Range of gross margins:                                        0.250% to 9.500%.

Weighted average gross margin:                                           5.507%.

Range of minimum mortgage
rates:                                                        0.250% to 11.850%.

Weighted average minimum
mortgage rate:                                                           7.048%.

Range of maximum mortgage
rates:                                                       10.500% to 17.850%.

Weighted average maximum mortgage rate:                                 13.689%.

Weighted average remaining term to
stated maturity:                                                     343 months.

Range of principal balances:                                $15,201 to $637,500.

Average principal balance:                                          $169,191.31.

Weighted average original
combined loan-to value ratio:                                            81.97%.

Weighted average current updated
combined loan-to value ratio:                                            80.83%.

Range of current updated
combined loan-to-value ratios:                                 7.07% to 115.14%.

Weighted average next
adjustment date:                                                January 26, 2006

The mortgage rate on each  adjustable-rate  Mortgage Loan will adjust every six,
twelve  thirty-six  months  or on each  adjustment  date to equal the sum of (A)
Six-Month LIBOR,  One-Month  LIBOR,  One-Year CMT, the National Average Contract
Mortgage  Rate,  Three-Year  CMT or the Cost of Funds  Index (each as defined in
this  prospectus  supplement)  and (B) the  related  gross  margin,  subject  to
periodic and lifetime  limitations,  as described  under "The Mortgage  Pool" in
this  prospectus  supplement.  See also "The  Mortgage  Pool-The  Index" in this
prospectus supplement.

The first adjustment date on the adjustable-rate Mortgage Loans will occur after
an initial period of  approximately  six months or one, two, three or five years
from the date of origination,  as more fully described under "The Mortgage Pool"
in this prospectus supplement.

For additional information regarding the Mortgage Loans, see "The Mortgage Pool"
in this prospectus supplement.

THE CERTIFICATES

Offered  Certificates.  The Class A-1 Certificates and the Class M-1, Class M-2,
Class M-3 and Class M-4 Certificates (collectively the "Mezzanine Certificates")
are the only classes of certificates offered by this prospectus supplement.  The
Offered  Certificates  will have the  characteristics  shown in the table on the
cover  of  this  prospectus  supplement  and as  described  in  this  prospectus
supplement.

The pass-through rate on each class of Offered Certificates is variable and will
be calculated for

                                      S-3



each  Distribution  Date  as  described  below  and  under  "Description  of the
Certificates-   Pass-Through   Rates"  in  this   prospectus   supplement.   The
pass-through  rate on each  class of  Offered  Certificates  is a rate per annum
based on  one-month  LIBOR  plus an  applicable  spread,  subject  to a rate cap
calculated  based on the weighted  average  mortgage rate of the Mortgage Loans,
less the fee rates payable to the Servicers, the Credit Risk Manager, the Master
Servicer  and the rate at which  the  premium  payable  in  connection  with any
lender-paid   primary   mortgage   insurance  is   calculated,   if   applicable
(collectively,  the "Administration  Costs"). The initial spread relating to the
Class A-1  Certificates  is 0.40% per annum.  The initial spread relating to the
Class M-1  Certificates  is 0.75% per annum.  The initial spread relating to the
Class M-2  Certificates  is 1.25% per annum.  The initial spread relating to the
Class M-3  Certificates  is 3.50% per annum.  The initial spread relating to the
Class M-4 Certificates is 3.00% per annum. Each spread is subject to increase as
more fully described under "Description of the Certificates-Pass-Through  Rates"
in this prospectus supplement.

The  Offered  Certificates  will be  sold  by the  Depositor  to  Deutsche  Bank
Securities Inc. (the "Underwriter") on the Closing Date.

The Offered  Certificates  will be  represented  initially by one or more global
certificates registered in the name of a nominee of the Depository Trust Company
in the United  States,  or of  Clearstream  and the  Euroclear  System in Europe
(each,  as defined  herein),  in minimum  denominations  of $25,000 and integral
multiples of $1.00 in excess of the minimum  denominations.  See "Description of
the Certificates-Book-Entry Certificates" in this prospectus supplement.

Class  CE  Certificates.  The  Class CE  Certificates  are not  offered  by this
prospectus  supplement.  The  certificate  principal  balance  of the  Class  CE
Certificates  on any  date  of  determination  is  equal  to the  excess  of the
aggregate principal balance of the Mortgage Loans over the aggregate certificate
principal balance of the Offered Certificates and the Class P Certificates.  The
Class CE  Certificates  will have an initial  certificate  principal  balance of
approximately  $4,598,579,  and initially  evidence an interest of approximately
3.09% in the trust.

Class  P  Certificates.  The  Class  P  Certificates  are  not  offered  by this
prospectus supplement. The Class P Certificates will have an initial certificate
principal  balance of $100 and will not be entitled to  distributions in respect
of interest. The Class P Certificates will be entitled to all prepayment charges
received in respect of the Mortgage Loans.

Class R Certificates.  The Class R Certificates or Residual Certificates,  which
are not offered by this prospectus supplement,  represent the residual interests
in the trust.

CREDIT ENHANCEMENT

The credit  enhancement  provided  for the benefit of the holders of the Offered
Certificates  consists  of  excess  interest,   arrearages,   subordination  and
overcollateralization,  each as described in this section and under "Description
of     the     Certificates-Credit      Enhancement",      "-Arrearages"     and
"-Overcollateralization  Provisions" in this prospectus supplement. In addition,
the Offered  Certificates  will have the benefit of a cap agreement  provided by
Barclays Bank PLC (the "Cap Provider") as described under "The Cap Agreement and
the Cap Provider" in this prospectus supplement.

EXCESS  INTEREST.  The Mortgage Loans bear interest each month in an amount that
in the aggregate is expected to exceed the amount  needed to distribute  monthly
interest on the Offered Certificates and to pay certain fees and expenses of the
trust.  Any excess interest from the Mortgage Loans each month will be available
to absorb  realized  losses on the  Mortgage  Loans and to achieve,  maintain or
restore overcollateralization at the required level.

ARREARAGES. The mortgage pool contains Mortgage Loans which have been subject to
monetary defaults in the past and are now  re-performing  either pursuant to the
terms of the  original  mortgage  note or under the  provisions  of a bankruptcy
plan.  Certain of these Mortgage Loans have  Arrearages.  The  "Arrearage"  with
respect to each such Mortgage Loan is equal to the interest portion of scheduled
payments due on such Mortgage Loan on or prior to the Cut-off

                                      S-4



Date but not yet  received by such date.  Any  realized  losses on the  Mortgage
Loans will  first  cause a  reduction  in net  monthly  excess  cashflow,  which
includes  collections  in respect of  Arrearages.  This reduction in net monthly
excess  cashflow is  intended to afford the holders of the Offered  Certificates
protection  against  realized  losses on the Mortgage  Loans as described  under
"Description of the Certificates-Arrearages".

SUBORDINATION. The rights of the holders of the Mezzanine Certificates and Class
CE Certificates to receive  distributions  will be  subordinated,  to the extent
described  in this  prospectus  supplement,  to the rights of the holders of the
Class A-1 Certificates.

In   addition,   to   the   extent   described   under   "Description   of   the
Certificates--Allocation   of   Losses;   Subordination"   in  this   prospectus
supplement,

     o    the rights of the holders of the Class M-2,  Class M-3,  Class M-4 and
Class CE  Certificates  will be subordinated to the rights of the holders of the
Class M-1 Certificates;

     o    the rights of the  holders  of the Class  M-3,  Class M-4 and Class CE
Certificates  will be subordinated to the rights of the holders of the Class M-2
Certificates;

     o    the rights of the holders of the Class M-4  Certificates  and Class CE
Certificates  will be subordinated to the rights of the holders of the Class M-3
Certificates; and

     o    the  rights  of the  holders  of the  Class  CE  Certificates  will be
subordinated to the rights of the holders of the Class M-4 Certificates.

Subordination is intended to enhance the likelihood of regular  distributions on
the more senior  certificates in respect of interest and principal and to afford
the more senior certificates  protection against realized losses on the Mortgage
Loans,  as  described  under  "Description  of the  Certificates--Allocation  of
Losses; Subordination" in this prospectus supplement.

OVERCOLLATERALIZATION.  The aggregate principal balance of the Mortgage Loans as
of the Cut-off Date will exceed the aggregate  certificate  principal balance of
the  Class  A-1  Certificates,  the  Mezzanine  Certificates  and  the  Class  P
Certificates on the Closing Date by approximately  $4,598,579,  which represents
approximately 3.09 % of the aggregate principal balance of the Mortgage Loans as
of the Cut-off Date. The amount of overcollateralization required by the pooling
and  servicing  agreement  with  respect  to  the  Mortgage  Loans  will  not be
established  at issuance,  but over time is targeted to increase as set forth in
this      prospectus      supplement.      See      "Description      of     the
Certificates-Overcollateralization Provisions" in this prospectus supplement.

CAP  AGREEMENT.  For  each  Distribution  Date  occurring  on or  prior  to  the
Distribution  Date in June  2011,  the  Offered  Certificates  and the  Class CE
Certificates  will have the  benefit of a cap  agreement  (the "Cap  Agreement")
which is intended  partially to mitigate  interest rate risk.  The Cap Agreement
requires  the Cap  Provider  to make a cap  payment  in an  amount  equal to the
product of:

     (1)  the excess,  if any, of one-month  LIBOR over a specified  strike rate
for the related Distribution Date;

     (2)  the  scheduled  notional  amount,  which is based on the lesser of the
expected  amortization  of the  Mortgage  Loans  and the  aggregate  certificate
principal balance of the Offered Certificates and Class CE Certificates; and

     (3)  a  fraction,  the  numerator  of which is the  actual  number  of days
elapsed  from  the  previous  Distribution  Date to but  excluding  the  current
Distribution  Date (or, for the first  Distribution  Date,  the actual number of
days  elapsed  from the Closing  Date to but  excluding  the first  Distribution
Date), and the denominator of which is 360.

Cap payments,  if any, made by the Cap Provider will be deposited into a reserve
fund (the "Reserve Fund") and will be available for  distribution on the Offered
Certificates,  in respect of any interest  shortfall  amounts resulting from the
application of the applicable rate cap, to the limited extent described  herein.
In addition, the excess of the cap payments over

                                      S-5



the amounts  required to be  distributed  to the  Offered  Certificates  on each
Distribution Date as described in this prospectus supplement will be distributed
to the Class CE Certificates. See "Description of the Certificates" and "The Cap
Agreement and the Cap Provider" in this prospectus supplement.

ALLOCATION OF LOSSES

If,  on any  Distribution  Date,  there is not  sufficient  excess  interest  or
overcollateralization  (represented  by the  Class CE  Certificates)  to  absorb
realized  losses on the Mortgage Loans as described  under  "Description  of the
Certificates--Overcollateralization  Provisions" in this prospectus  supplement,
then realized  losses on the Mortgage  Loans will be allocated to the Class M-4,
Class M-3,  Class M-2 and Class M-1  Certificates,  in that order,  in each case
until the certificate  principal  balance of each such class has been reduced to
zero.  The pooling and  servicing  agreement  does not permit the  allocation of
realized  losses on the Mortgage Loans to the Class A-1  Certificates;  however,
investors in the Class A-1  Certificates  should realize that under certain loss
scenarios, there will not be enough principal and interest on the Mortgage Loans
to pay the Class A-1  Certificates  all interest and principal  amounts to which
these    certificates    are   then   entitled.    See   "Description   of   the
Certificates--Allocation   of   Losses;   Subordination"   in  this   prospectus
supplement.

Once  realized  losses  are  allocated  to  the  Mezzanine  Certificates,  their
certificate  principal  balances  will be  permanently  reduced by the amount so
allocated. However, the amount of any realized losses allocated to the Mezzanine
Certificates  may be  distributed to the holders of those  certificates,  to the
extent  of  funds  available,  according  to  the  priorities  set  forth  under
"Description  of the  Certificates--  Overcollateralization  Provisions" in this
prospectus supplement.

P&I ADVANCES

Subject to the limitations described under "Description of the Certificates--P&I
Advances" in this  prospectus  supplement,  each Servicer is required to advance
delinquent  payments of principal and interest on the Mortgage Loans, other than
the simple interest mortgage loans, serviced by such Servicer. In addition, each
Servicer is required  to advance  delinquent  payments of interest on the simple
interest mortgage loans serviced by such Servicer.  A successor  servicer (which
may be the Master  Servicer) will be obligated to make any required  delinquency
advance if the related  Servicer fails in its obligation to do so, to the extent
provided in the pooling and servicing agreement.  Each Servicer or any successor
servicer,  as the case may be, is entitled to be reimbursed for these  advances,
and  therefore  these  advances  are  not a  form  of  credit  enhancement.  See
"Description of the  Certificates--P&I  Advances" in this prospectus  supplement
and "Description of the Securities--Advances in Respect of Delinquencies" in the
prospectus.

OPTIONAL TERMINATION

At its  option  and  subject to certain  conditions,  the  Master  Servicer  may
purchase  all of the  Mortgage  Loans in the mortgage  pool,  together  with any
properties in respect of the Mortgage Loans acquired on behalf of the trust, and
thereby effect  termination and early retirement of the certificates,  after the
aggregate  principal  balance of the Mortgage Loans (and properties  acquired in
respect of the Mortgage Loans),  remaining in the trust has been reduced to less
than or equal to 10% of the aggregate principal balance of the Mortgage Loans as
of the Cut-off Date. Subject to certain  additional  conditions set forth in the
pooling and servicing agreement,  in the event that the Master Servicer fails to
exercise its optional  termination right and the aggregate  principal balance of
the Mortgage Loans (and  properties  acquired in respect of the Mortgage  Loans)
remaining  in the  trust  has been  reduced  to less  than or equal to 5% of the
aggregate  principal balance of the Mortgage Loans as of the Cut-off Date, Ocwen
Federal Bank FSB, may, at its option,  exercise such optional termination right.
See "Pooling and Servicing Agreement--Termination" in this prospectus supplement
and "Description of the Securities--Termination" in the prospectus.

FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSEQUENCES

Multiple  elections  will be made to  treat  designated  portions  of the  trust
(exclusive of the Reserve Fund and the Cap  Agreement)  as real estate  mortgage
investment conduits (each, a

                                      S-6



"REMIC") for federal  income tax  purposes.  See  "Material  Federal  Income Tax
Considerations--REMICs --Characterization of Investments in REMIC Securities" in
the prospectus.

For  further  information  regarding  the  federal  income tax  consequences  of
investing in the Offered Certificates,  see "Federal Income Tax Consequences" in
this prospectus  supplement and "Material Federal Income Tax  Considerations" in
the prospectus.

RATINGS

It is a  condition  to  the  issuance  of  the  certificates  that  the  Offered
Certificates  receive at least the following  ratings from Standard & Poor's,  a
division of The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. ("S&P") and Fitch Ratings ("Fitch"):

       Offered
    Certificates              S&P               Fitch
    ------------              ---               -----
      Class A-1               AAA                AAA
      Class M-1                AA+                AA
      Class M-2                A+                 A
      Class M-3               BBB+               BBB
      Class M-4               BBB                BBB-

A security  rating does not address the frequency of prepayments on the Mortgage
Loans or the  corresponding  effect  on yield to  investors.  See  "Yield on the
Certificates"   and  "Ratings"  in  this   prospectus   supplement   and  "Yield
Considerations" in the prospectus.

LEGAL INVESTMENT

The Offered  Certificates will not constitute  "mortgage related securities" for
purposes of the Secondary Mortgage Market Enhancement Act of 1984 ("SMMEA"). See
"Legal Investment" in this prospectus supplement and in the prospectus.


CONSIDERATIONS FOR BENEFIT PLAN INVESTORS

It is expected that the Class A-1  Certificates may be purchased by a pension or
other employee benefit plan subject to the Employee  Retirement  Income Security
Act of 1974 or Section  4975 of the Internal  Revenue  Code of 1986,  as amended
(the "Code") so long as certain  conditions  are met. A fiduciary of an employee
benefit plan must  determine  that the purchase of a  certificate  is consistent
with  its  fiduciary  duties  under  applicable  law and does  not  result  in a
nonexempt  prohibited  transaction under applicable law. See "Considerations for
Benefit Plan Investors" in this prospectus supplement and "ERISA Considerations"
in the prospectus.

                                      S-7



                                  RISK FACTORS

     The following information, which you should consider carefully,  identifies
significant risks associated with an investment in the certificates.

NATURE OF THE MORTGAGE LOANS.

     The current  underwriting  guidelines of the  originators are generally not
applicable to the Mortgage Loans because a majority of the Mortgage Loans in the
trust fund are  seasoned,  and because  certain of the  Mortgage  Loans may have
fallen outside of the parameters of those underwriting guidelines at the time of
their  origination.  It is likely that the  underwriting  standards  employed in
connection  with the origination of the Mortgage Loans are diverse and generally
did not  conform to Fannie  Mae or Freddie  Mac  guidelines.  See  "Underwriting
Standards" in this prospectus  supplement.  The Mortgage Loans include  mortgage
loans:  (i) that  subsequent to funding were  determined  not to comply with the
related originator's  underwriting  standards for, or otherwise failed to comply
with, the program under which they were  originated;  (ii) with respect to which
the  opinion of the value of the related  mortgaged  property  expressed  in the
appraisal used at origination  appeared to be inaccurate;  (iii) with respect to
which  information  used to document the borrower's down payment,  income and/or
employment was incomplete; (iv) that have deficiencies in legal documentation or
are  missing  documents;  (v) that  have had  prior  delinquencies;  (vi)  whose
borrowers have credit scores lower than the credit scores  required  pursuant to
the applicable originator's underwriting guidelines; (vii) that otherwise do not
meet the applicable originator's  underwriting  guidelines;  and (viii) that are
performing under repayment plans or are otherwise considered re-performing.  The
Mortgage Loans with the  characteristics  set forth in clauses (i) through (vii)
are referred to in this prospectus supplement as "Scratch & Dent Mortgage Loans"
and the Mortgage Loans with the  characteristics  set forth in clause (viii) are
referred to in this prospectus supplement as "Re-performing Mortgage Loans".

     The foregoing  characteristics  of the Mortgage Loans may adversely  affect
the performance of the Mortgage Pool, and may adversely  affect the value of the
Offered  Certificates  as compared  to  pass-through  certificates  representing
interests in other mortgage pools backed by subprime mortgage loans.

     As a  result  of the  lack of  compliance  with  the  related  originator's
underwriting  standards  and other  defects,  in the case of the  Scratch & Dent
Mortgage Loans,  and the histories of the Mortgage Loans, in the case of certain
of the Re-performing Mortgage Loans, the Mortgage Loans are likely to experience
rates of delinquency,  foreclosure and bankruptcy that are higher,  and that may
be  substantially   higher,   than  (i)  those  experienced  by  mortgage  loans
underwritten to stricter standards or in a more traditional manner or (ii) those
experienced by other mortgage pools backed by other subprime of mortgage  loans.
With  respect to Mortgage  Loans that are  delinquent  or subject to  bankruptcy
proceedings  as of the Closing  Date,  or that become  delinquent  or subject to
liquidation or bankruptcy proceedings,  you may face delays in receiving payment
and/or may suffer losses if the credit enhancements for your class or classes of
certificates are insufficient to cover the delays and losses.

     As stated above,  some of the Mortgage Loans included in the trust fund are
either  currently  delinquent or have been  delinquent in the past. The Mortgage
Loans may have had  previous  delinquencies  within  the 12 months  prior to the
Cut-off Date.  Mortgage Loans with a history of delinquencies are more likely to
experience  delinquencies in the future, even if such Mortgage Loans are current
as of the Cut-off Date.

     In addition, as stated above, certain of the mortgage files relating to the
Scratch  & Dent  Mortgage  Loans  being  transferred  to  the  Trustee  (or  the
custodian) on the Closing Date may have  document  defects which may include one
or more of the  following:  (i) the mortgage file contains a lost

                                      S-8



note  affidavit  with a copy of the  mortgage  note but not the  original of the
mortgage note,  (ii) the mortgage file is missing an  intervening  assignment or
(iii) the mortgage file is missing a copy of the title insurance policy. Failure
to obtain the original mortgage note or intervening assignment with respect to a
Mortgage  Loan  could  delay the  related  Servicer  from  foreclosing  upon and
liquidating the related Mortgaged Property.

     Some  additional  detail about the  defective  nature of the Scratch & Dent
Mortgage  Loans is  described  under  "The  Mortgage  Pool"  in this  prospectus
supplement.  Investors in the Offered  Certificates should carefully review this
prospectus supplement.

     NEITHER THE  MORTGAGE  LOAN SELLER NOR ANY OTHER PERSON WILL BE REQUIRED TO
PROVIDE ANY CURE,  SUBSTITUTION,  REPURCHASE OR OTHER REMEDIES IN RESPECT OF ANY
OF THE  ALREADY-IDENTIFIED  LOAN-LEVEL  DEFECTS  RELATING  TO THE SCRATCH & DENT
MORTGAGE LOANS OR ANY RE-PERFORMING  MORTGAGE LOANS THAT MAY ALSO BE CATEGORIZED
AS SCRATCH & DENT MORTGAGE LOANS,  THAT ARE DESCRIBED  ABOVE, TO THE EXTENT SUCH
DEFECTS ARE SET FORTH ON THE SCHEDULE OF DEFECTS  ATTACHED TO THE MORTGAGE  LOAN
PURCHASE AGREEMENT.

FORECLOSURE RESTRICTIONS MAY INCREASE REALIZED LOSSES.

     Any Mortgage Loans in the Mortgage Pool that are 90 or more days delinquent
as of the Closing Date may have certain restrictions placed on their foreclosure
in the pooling and servicing agreement.  Mortgage Loans that are 90 or more days
delinquent as of the Closing Date constitute approximately 2.55% of the Mortgage
Loans, by aggregate  principal  balance as of the Cut-off Date, all of which are
serviced by Ocwen  Federal Bank FSB. In the event that  foreclosure  proceedings
are commenced with respect to one of these Mortgage Loans, if acquiring title to
the related  mortgaged  property  would cause the  adjusted  basis (for  federal
income tax purposes) of the mortgaged properties that are currently owned by the
related REMIC after foreclosure (along with any other assets owned by that REMIC
other than "qualified mortgages" and "permitted  investments" within the meaning
of Section  860G of the Internal  Revenue  Code) to exceed 0.75% of the adjusted
basis of the assets in the  related  REMIC,  the  related  Servicer  will not be
permitted  to  acquire  title to the  Mortgage  Loan on  behalf  of such  REMIC.
Instead,  the related Servicer must dispose of the Mortgage Loan for cash in the
foreclosure sale. In addition, if the related Servicer determines that following
a  distribution  on any  Distribution  Date the adjusted basis of such mortgaged
properties  in  foreclosure  (along with any other  assets  owned by the related
REMIC other than "qualified  mortgages" and "permitted  investments"  within the
meaning  of Section  860G of the  Internal  Revenue  Code)  exceeds  1.0% of the
adjusted  basis  of the  assets  of the  related  REMIC  immediately  after  the
distribution,  then  prior to such  Distribution  Date,  such  Servicer  will be
required to dispose of enough of such mortgaged  properties in foreclosure,  for
cash, so that the adjusted  basis of such  mortgaged  properties in  foreclosure
(along with any other  assets owned by the related  REMIC other than  "qualified
mortgages" and "permitted investments" within the meaning of Section 860G of the
Internal  Revenue  Code)  will be less  than 1.0% of the  adjusted  basis of the
assets of the related  REMIC.  In either  event,  the related  Servicer  will be
permitted  to acquire  (for its own account and not on behalf of the trust fund)
the mortgaged  property at the foreclosure  sale for an amount not less than the
greater of: (i) the highest  amount bid by any other  person at the  foreclosure
sale, or (ii) the estimated fair value of the mortgaged property,  as determined
by the related Servicer in good faith.  These  restrictions  will be lifted with
respect to a delinquent  Mortgage Loan if such Mortgage Loan becomes current for
three  consecutive  regular  scheduled  monthly  payments.  As a result of these
restrictions,  losses on these Mortgage Loans may be greater than if the related
Servicer was  permitted to obtain title on behalf of the trust fund. In the case
of those Mortgage Loans subject to such further  restrictions,  realized  losses
may be greater than would be the case if such Mortgage Loans were not subject to
such further restrictions.

DELINQUENT MORTGAGE LOANS RISK.

     Approximately  14.85% of the Mortgage Loans by aggregate  principal balance
as of the Cut-off Date were  delinquent in their monthly  payments.  Information
about the delinquency status of the

                                      S-9



Mortgage Loans as of the Cut-off Date is described  under "The Mortgage Pool" in
this prospectus supplement.  Delinquent Mortgage Loans are more likely to result
in losses.

MORTGAGE  LOANS  WITH HIGH  COMBINED  LOAN-TO-VALUE  RATIOS  LEAVE  THE  RELATED
MORTGAGOR WITH LITTLE OR NO EQUITY IN THE RELATED MORTGAGED PROPERTY.

     Approximately 3.21% of the Mortgage Loans by aggregate principal balance as
of the Cut-off Date had a current updated combined loan-to-value ratio as of the
Cut-off Date in excess of 100%.

     An  overall  decline  in the  residential  real  estate  market,  a rise in
interest rates over a period of time and the condition of a mortgaged  property,
as well as other  factors,  may have the  effect  of  reducing  the value of the
mortgaged  property from the  appraised  value at the time the Mortgage Loan was
originated.  If there is a reduction in the value of the mortgaged property, the
combined  loan-to-value  ratio  may  increase  over  what it was at the time the
Mortgage  Loan was  originated.  Such an increase may reduce the  likelihood  of
liquidation or other proceeds being sufficient to satisfy the Mortgage Loan, and
any losses to the extent not  covered by the credit  enhancement  may affect the
yield to maturity of your certificates. There can be no assurance that the value
of a mortgaged  property  estimated  in any  appraisal or review is equal to the
actual value of that mortgaged property at the time of that appraisal or review.
Investors  should  note  that the  values  of the  mortgaged  properties  may be
insufficient to cover the outstanding  principal  balance of the Mortgage Loans.
There can be no assurance that the combined  loan-to-value ratio of any Mortgage
Loan determined at any time after  origination will be less than or equal to its
combined loan-to-value ratio at origination.

THE  MORTGAGE  LOANS ARE  CONCENTRATED  IN CERTAIN  AREAS,  WHICH MAY  PRESENT A
GREATER RISK OF LOSS RELATING TO THESE MORTGAGE LOANS.

     Approximately  17.73%,  9.86%, 7.27%, 7.15% and 5.38% of the Mortgage Loans
by aggregate  principal  balance as of the Cut-off Date are secured by mortgaged
properties located in the State of California,  the State of New York, the State
of  Ohio,  the  State  of  Texas  and the  State  of New  Jersey,  respectively.
Approximately  0.90%, 0.66%, 0.58% and 0.56% of the Mortgage Loans, by aggregate
principal  balance  as of the  Cut-off  Date are  located  in a single New York,
California,  California and New York zip code, respectively.  If the residential
real estate  market of these  states  should  experience  an overall  decline in
property values after the dates of origination of the Mortgage Loans,  the rates
of  delinquencies,  foreclosures,  bankruptcies and losses on the Mortgage Loans
may increase over historical  levels of comparable type loans,  and may increase
substantially.  In  addition,  properties  located  in those  states may be more
susceptible than homes located in other parts of the country to certain types of
uninsured hazards, such as earthquakes,  as well as floods,  mudslides and other
natural disasters.

JUNIOR LIEN MORTGAGE LOANS RISK.

     Approximately 5.72% of the Mortgage Loans by aggregate principal balance as
of the  Cut-off  Date,  are  secured by junior  liens on the  related  mortgaged
properties.  The  proceeds  from  any  liquidation,  insurance  or  condemnation
proceedings  will be  available  to  satisfy  the  outstanding  balance  of such
Mortgage  Loans  only to the  extent  that  the  claims  of the  related  senior
mortgages have been satisfied in full,  including any related foreclosure costs.
In circumstances  when it has been determined to be uneconomical to foreclose on
the mortgaged property, the related Servicer may write off the entire balance of
such  Mortgage  Loan  as a  bad  debt.  The  foregoing  considerations  will  be
particularly applicable to Mortgage Loans secured by junior liens that have high
combined  loan-to-value  ratios because it is comparatively more likely that the
related  Servicer would determine  foreclosure to be uneconomical in the case of
such Mortgage  Loans.  The rate of default of junior lien Mortgage  Loans may be
greater  than  that of  Mortgage  Loans  secured  by first  liens on  comparable
properties.

                                      S-10



BALLOON MORTGAGE LOAN RISK.

     Mortgage  Loans that are balloon  loans pose a risk because a borrower must
make a large lump sum payment of principal  at the end of the loan term.  If the
borrower is unable to pay the lump sum or  refinance  such  amount,  the related
Servicer will not be obligated to advance the principal portion of that lump sum
payment,  and you may suffer a loss.  Approximately 2.22% of the Mortgage Loans,
by aggregate principal balance as of the Cut-off Date, are balloon loans.

SIMPLE INTEREST MORTGAGE LOAN RISK.

     Approximately 9.00% of the Mortgage Loans by aggregate principal balance as
of the Cut-off Date are simple  interest  mortgage  loans. If the borrowers with
respect to such Mortgage Loans  consistently  makes scheduled payments after the
scheduled due date the Mortgage  Loan will amortize more slowly than  scheduled.
In addition, monthly payments with respect to these Mortgage Loans may have been
deferred until the maturity of the Mortgage Loan. Any remaining unpaid principal
or deferred payment are payable on the final maturity date of the Mortgage Loan.
These Mortgage Loans involve a greater degree of risk because the ability of the
borrower to make such payment typically will depend upon the borrower's  ability
either to timely refinance the loan or to sell the related  mortgaged  property.
See "The Mortgage Pool" in this prospectus supplement.

INTEREST ONLY MORTGAGE LOAN RISK.

     Approximately  5.58% the Mortgage Loans, by aggregate  principal balance as
of the Cut-off  Date,  require the  borrowers to make monthly  payments  only of
accrued  interest for the first two, three or five years following  origination.
After  such  interest-only  period,  the  borrower's  monthly  payment  will  be
recalculated to cover both interest and principal so that the Mortgage Loan will
amortize  fully  prior  to  its  final  payment  date.  If the  monthly  payment
increases,  the related borrower may not be able to pay the increased amount and
may  default or may  refinance  the  related  Mortgage  Loan to avoid the higher
payment.  Because no principal payments may be made or advanced on such Mortgage
Loans for two, three or five years following origination, the certificateholders
will receive smaller principal  distributions during such period than they would
have received if the related borrowers were required to make monthly payments of
interest and principal for the entire lives of such Mortgage Loans.  This slower
rate of principal  distributions  may reduce the return on an  investment in the
Offered Certificates that are purchased at a discount.

THE  MEZZANINE  CERTIFICATES  WILL BE MORE  SENSITIVE  TO LOSSES ON THE MORTGAGE
LOANS THAN THE CLASS A-1 CERTIFICATES  BECAUSE THEY ARE SUBORDINATE TO THE CLASS
A-1 CERTIFICATES.

     The  weighted  average  lives of, and the yields to maturity  on, the Class
M-1, Class M-2, Class M-3 and Class M-4 Certificates will be progressively  more
sensitive,  in that order,  to the rate and timing of borrower  defaults and the
severity  of  ensuing  losses on the  Mortgage  Loans.  If the  actual  rate and
severity  of losses on the  Mortgage  Loans is higher  than those  assumed by an
investor  in  these  certificates,   the  actual  yield  to  maturity  of  these
certificates  may be lower than the yield  anticipated  by the investor based on
such assumption.  The timing of losses on the Mortgage Loans will also affect an
investor's  actual yield to maturity,  even if the rate of defaults and severity
of losses over the life of the mortgage pool are  consistent  with an investor's
expectations.  In general,  the earlier a loss occurs, the greater the effect on
an investor's  yield to maturity.  Realized losses on the Mortgage Loans, to the
extent they exceed the amount of excess  interest,  the amount of any arrearages
collected by the related  Servicer  with  respect to the Mortgage  Loans and the
amount of  overcollateralization,  following  distributions  of principal on the
related Distribution Date, will reduce the certificate principal balances of the
Mezzanine  Certificates  beginning with the class of Mezzanine Certificates then
outstanding  with the lowest payment  priority.  As a result of such reductions,
less  interest  will  accrue  on each  such  class of  certificates  than  would
otherwise be the case.  However,  the amount of any realized losses allocated to
the  Mezzanine   Certificates  may  be  distributed  to  the  holders  of  those

                                      S-11



certificates, to the extent of funds available,  according to the priorities set
forth under "Description of the Certificates--Overcollateralization  Provisions"
in this prospectus supplement.

THE MEZZANINE  CERTIFICATES  GENERALLY WILL NOT BE ENTITLED TO RECEIVE PRINCIPAL
PAYMENTS  UNTIL JANUARY 2008 WHICH MAY RESULT IN A GREATER RISK OF LOSS RELATING
TO THESE CERTIFICATES.

     Unless the certificate  principal balance of the Class A-1 Certificates has
been reduced to zero,  the  Mezzanine  Certificates  will not be entitled to any
principal  distributions until at least January 2008 or a later date as provided
in this prospectus supplement or during any period in which delinquencies on the
Mortgage  Loans  exceed  the  levels  set  forth  under   "Description   of  the
Certificates--Principal  Distributions  on the  Offered  Certificates"  in  this
prospectus supplement.  As a result, the weighted average lives of the Mezzanine
Certificates will be longer than would be the case if distributions of principal
were allocated  among all of the  certificates  at the same time. As a result of
the longer weighted average lives of the Mezzanine Certificates,  the holders of
these certificates have a greater risk of suffering a loss on their investments.
Further,  because  such  certificates  might not  receive any  principal  if the
delinquency levels set forth under  "Description of the  Certificates--Principal
Distributions  on the Offered  Certificates"  in this prospectus  supplement are
exceeded,  it  is  possible  for  such  certificates  to  receive  no  principal
distributions on a particular  Distribution Date even if no losses have occurred
on the mortgage pool.

THE OFFERED  CERTIFICATES WILL BE LIMITED  OBLIGATIONS  SOLELY OF THE TRUST FUND
AND NOT OF ANY OTHER PARTY.

     The Offered Certificates will not represent an interest in or obligation of
the Depositor, the Servicers, the Master Servicer, the Securities Administrator,
the Originators, the Trustee or any of their respective affiliates.  Neither the
Offered  Certificates  nor the  underlying  Mortgage Loans will be guaranteed or
insured by any governmental agency or instrumentality,  or by the Depositor, the
Servicers, the Master Servicer, the Securities  Administrator,  the Originators,
the  Trustee  or any of their  respective  affiliates.  Proceeds  of the  assets
included  in the  trust  will be the sole  source  of  payments  on the  Offered
Certificates, and there will be no recourse to the Depositor, the Servicers, the
Originators, the Master Servicer, the Securities Administrator,  the Trustee, or
any other entity in the event that these proceeds are  insufficient or otherwise
unavailable to make all payments provided for under the Offered Certificates.

     The remedies  available to the Trustee on behalf of the  Certificateholders
in the event a  representation  or  warranty  regarding  the  Mortgage  Loans is
breached by the Mortgage Loan Seller, or in the event a defective  Mortgage File
is delivered by the Mortgage Loan Seller, are limited to the cure of such breach
or defect,  or the  substitution  or repurchase of the affected  Mortgage  Loan.
There can be no  assurance  that the Mortgage  Loan Seller will have  sufficient
resources or liquidity in the future to provide such remedies.  INVESTORS SHOULD
NOTE,  HOWEVER,  THAT NEITHER THE MORTGAGE LOAN SELLER NOR ANY OTHER PERSON WILL
BE REQUIRED TO PROVIDE ANY REMEDIES IN RESPECT OF ANY OF THE  ALREADY-IDENTIFIED
LOAN-LEVEL  DEFECTS  RELATING  TO THE  SCRATCH  &  DENT  MORTGAGE  LOANS  OR ANY
RE-PERFORMING  MORTGAGE  LOANS  THAT MAY ALSO BE  CATEGORIZED  AS SCRATCH & DENT
MORTGAGE LOANS THAT ARE DESCRIBED  UNDER "--NATURE OF THE MORTGAGE LOANS" ABOVE,
TO THE EXTENT  SUCH  DEFECTS ARE SET FORTH ON A SCHEDULE  TO THE  MORTGAGE  LOAN
PURCHASE AGREEMENT.

THE DIFFERENCE  BETWEEN THE PASS-THROUGH RATES ON THE CLASS A-1 CERTIFICATES AND
MEZZANINE  CERTIFICATES  AND THE MORTGAGE RATES ON THE MORTGAGE LOANS MAY RESULT
IN INTEREST SHORTFALLS ON SUCH CERTIFICATES.

     The  yield to  maturity  on the Class A-1  Certificates  and the  Mezzanine
Certificates  may be  affected by the  resetting  of the  mortgage  rates on the
adjustable-rate  Mortgage  Loans  included in the mortgage pool on their related
adjustment  dates.  In  addition,  because the mortgage  rate for  approximately
86.55%,  11.38%,  1.79%, 0.21%, 0.04% and 0.03% of the adjustable-rate  Mortgage
Loans, by aggregate  principal balance as of the Cut-off Date,  adjusts based on
Six-Month LIBOR,  One-Month  LIBOR,  One-Year CMT, the National Average Contract
Mortgage Rate, Three-Year CMT and the Cost of

                                      S-12



Funds Index,  respectively,  plus a fixed percentage amount,  such rate could be
higher than prevailing market interest rates, and this may result in an increase
in the rate of  prepayments  on such  Mortgage  Loans after  their  adjustments.
Finally, the mortgage rates on certain of the adjustable-rate Mortgage Loans are
based on Six-Month LIBOR,  One-Month  LIBOR,  One-Year CMT, the National Average
Contract  Mortgage  Rate,  Three-Year  CMT and the Cost of Funds Index while the
pass-through rates on the Class A-1 Certificates and the Mezzanine  Certificates
are based on One-Month LIBOR. Consequently, the application to such certificates
of the rate cap,  which is equal to the weighted  average coupon on the Mortgage
Loans,  net of certain fees of the trust,  could  adversely  affect the yield to
maturity  on such  certificates.  In  addition,  the rate cap will  decrease  if
Mortgage Loans with  relatively high mortgage rates prepay at a faster rate than
Mortgage Loans with relatively low mortgage rates.

     If the  pass-through  rates on the Class A-1  Certificates or the Mezzanine
Certificates  are limited for any  Distribution  Date,  the  resulting  interest
shortfalls  may be  recovered by the holders of these  certificates  on the same
Distribution Date or on future Distribution Dates on a subordinated basis to the
extent that on such  Distribution  Date or future  Distribution  Dates there are
available  funds  remaining  after  certain other  distributions  on the Offered
Certificates  and the payment of certain  fees and  expenses  of the trust.  See
"Yield on the  Certificates--Special  Yield  Considerations"  in this prospectus
supplement.

THE RATE AND TIMING OF PRINCIPAL DISTRIBUTIONS ON THE CLASS A-1 CERTIFICATES AND
THE  MEZZANINE  CERTIFICATES  WILL BE AFFECTED BY  PREPAYMENT  SPEEDS AND BY THE
PRIORITY OF PAYMENT ON SUCH CERTIFICATES.

     The rate and timing of  distributions  allocable  to principal on the Class
A-1 Certificates and the Mezzanine  Certificates will depend, in general, on the
rate and timing of principal  payments  (including  prepayments  and collections
upon  defaults,  liquidations  and  repurchases)  on the Mortgage  Loans and the
allocation  thereof to pay  principal on such  certificates  as described  under
"Description  of  the  Certificates--Principal   Distributions  on  the  Offered
Certificates" in this prospectus supplement. As is the case with mortgage backed
pass-through  certificates  generally,  the Offered  Certificates are subject to
substantial inherent cash-flow  uncertainties  because the Mortgage Loans may be
prepaid  at any time.  However,  with  respect  to  approximately  27.25% of the
Mortgage Loans, by aggregate  principal  balance of the Mortgage Loans as of the
Cut-off  Date,  a  prepayment  may subject the related  borrower to a prepayment
charge.  A prepayment  charge may or may not act as a deterrent to prepayment of
the  related   Mortgage  Loan.  See  "The  Mortgage  Pool"  in  this  prospectus
supplement.

     Generally, when prevailing interest rates are increasing,  prepayment rates
on mortgage loans tend to decrease;  a decrease in the  prepayment  rates on the
Mortgage Loans will result in a reduced rate of return of principal to investors
in the Class A-1  Certificates  and the  Mezzanine  Certificates  at a time when
reinvestment  at such higher  prevailing  rates would be desirable.  Conversely,
when prevailing interest rates are declining, prepayment rates on mortgage loans
tend to increase; an increase in the prepayment rates on the Mortgage Loans will
result in a greater  rate of return of  principal  to investors in the Class A-1
Certificates  and  Mezzanine   Certificates  at  a  time  when  reinvestment  at
comparable yields may not be possible.

     Distributions  of  principal  will be made to the holders of the  Mezzanine
Certificates   according  to  the  priorities   described  in  this   prospectus
supplement.  The  timing of  commencement  of  principal  distributions  and the
weighted average life of each such class of certificates will be affected by the
rates of prepayment on the Mortgage Loans  experienced both before and after the
commencement of principal distributions on such classes. For further information
regarding the effect of principal  prepayments on the weighted  average lives of
the Offered  Certificates,  see "Yield on the  Certificates"  in this prospectus
supplement,  including  the  table  entitled  "Percent  of  Initial  Certificate
Principal  Balance  Outstanding  at the Specified  Percentages of the Prepayment
Assumption."

                                      S-13



THE YIELD TO MATURITY ON THE  OFFERED  CERTIFICATES  WILL DEPEND ON A VARIETY OF
FACTORS.

     The yield to maturity on the Offered Certificates will depend on:

     o    the applicable pass-through rate thereon;

     o    the applicable purchase price;

     o    the rate and timing of principal payments  (including  prepayments and
          collections  upon  defaults,  liquidations  and  repurchases)  and the
          allocation thereof to reduce the certificate  principal balance of the
          Offered Certificates; and

     o    the rate,  timing and  severity  of  realized  losses on the  Mortgage
          Loans,  adjustments  to the  mortgage  rates  on  the  adjustable-rate
          Mortgage  Loans  included in the mortgage  pool,  the amount of excess
          interest  generated by the Mortgage  Loans and the  allocation  to the
          Offered Certificates of certain interest shortfalls.

     In general,  if the Offered  Certificates  are  purchased  at a premium and
principal  distributions  thereon occur at a rate faster than anticipated at the
time of purchase,  the  investor's  actual yield to maturity  will be lower than
that assumed at the time of purchase.  Conversely,  if the Offered  Certificates
are purchased at a discount and principal  distributions thereon occur at a rate
slower than that  anticipated  at the time of purchase,  the  investor's  actual
yield to maturity will be lower than that originally assumed.

     The  proceeds to the  Depositor  from the sale of the Offered  Certificates
were  determined  based on a  number  of  assumptions,  including  a  prepayment
assumption of 28% CPR as described in this prospectus supplement under "Yield on
the  Certificates"  and  weighted  average  lives   corresponding   thereto.  No
representation  is made that the  Mortgage  Loans will prepay at such rate or at
any other rate. The yield assumptions for the Offered  Certificates will vary as
determined at the time of sale.

THE  YIELD  TO  MATURITY  ON THE  MEZZANINE  CERTIFICATES  WILL BE  PARTICULARLY
SENSITIVE TO THE RATE OF PREPAYMENTS ON THE MORTGAGE LOANS.

     The multiple class structure of the Mezzanine Certificates causes the yield
of these  classes  to be  particularly  sensitive  to  changes  in the  rates of
prepayment of the Mortgage  Loans.  Because  distributions  of principal will be
made to the holders of such certificates  according to the priorities  described
in this  prospectus  supplement,  the  yield  to  maturity  on such  classes  of
certificates  will be sensitive to the rates of prepayment on the Mortgage Loans
experienced both before and after the commencement of principal distributions on
such classes. The yield to maturity on such classes of certificates will also be
extremely  sensitive  to losses due to defaults on the  Mortgage  Loans (and the
timing  thereof),  to the extent these losses are not covered by excess cashflow
otherwise  payable  to  the  Class  CE  Certificates  or a  class  of  Mezzanine
Certificates  with a lower payment priority.  Furthermore,  as described in this
prospectus  supplement,  the timing of receipt of principal  and interest by the
Mezzanine Certificates may be adversely affected by losses even if these classes
of certificates do not ultimately bear such loss.

VIOLATION OF CONSUMER PROTECTION LAWS MAY RESULT IN LOSSES ON THE MORTGAGE LOANS
AND YOUR CERTIFICATES.

     Applicable state laws generally  regulate interest rates and other charges,
require  certain  disclosure,  and  require  licensing  of the  originators.  In
addition,  other state laws,  public  policy and  general  principles  of equity
relating to the protection of consumers, unfair and deceptive practices and debt
collection  practices may apply to the origination,  servicing and collection of
the Mortgage Loans.

                                      S-14



     The Mortgage Loans are also subject to federal laws, including:

     o    the  Federal   Truth-in-Lending   Act  and  Regulation  Z  promulgated
          thereunder,   which  require  certain  disclosures  to  the  borrowers
          regarding the terms of the Mortgage Loans;

     o    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;

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

     o    the Depository  Institutions  Deregulation and Monetary Control Act of
          1980, which preempts certain state usury laws.

     Violations of certain  provisions of these federal and state laws may limit
the ability of the related  Servicer to collect all or part of the  principal of
or interest  on the related  Mortgage  Loans and in addition  could  subject the
trust to damages and administrative  enforcement.  In particular, the failure of
the   originators   to  comply  with   certain   requirements   of  the  Federal
Truth-in-Lending Act, as implemented by Regulation Z, could subject the trust to
monetary penalties,  and result in the borrowers'  rescinding the Mortgage Loans
against the trust. In addition to federal law, some states have enacted,  or may
enact,  laws or  regulations  that  prohibit  inclusion  of some  provisions  in
Mortgage  Loans  that  have  interest  rates or  origination  costs in excess of
prescribed levels, and require that borrowers be given certain disclosures prior
to the  consummation  of the  Mortgage  Loans and  restrict  the  ability of the
related Servicer to foreclose in response to borrower  defaults.  The failure of
the Originators to comply with these laws could subject the trust to significant
monetary penalties,  could result in the borrowers rescinding the Mortgage Loans
against the trust and/or limit the ability of the related  Servicer to foreclose
upon the related mortgaged properties in the event of borrower defaults.

     The Mortgage Loan Seller will represent  that, as of the Closing Date, each
Mortgage  Loan is in  compliance  with  applicable  federal  and state  laws and
regulations. In the event of a breach of such representation,  the Mortgage Loan
Seller  will be  obligated  to cure such  breach or  repurchase  or replace  the
affected  Mortgage  Loan  in the  manner  described  in the  prospectus.  If the
Mortgage Loan Seller is unable or otherwise  fails to satisfy such  obligations,
the yield on the Offered Certificates may be materially and adversely affected.

INTEREST  GENERATED  BY THE  MORTGAGE  LOANS  MAY BE  INSUFFICIENT  TO  ACHIEVE,
MAINTAIN OR RESTORE OVERCOLLATERALIZATION.

     The Mortgage Loans are expected to generate more interest than is needed to
pay  interest  owed on the  Offered  Certificates  and to pay  certain  fees and
expenses of the trust.  Any remaining  interest  generated by the Mortgage Loans
will then be used to absorb losses that occur on the Mortgage Loans. After these
financial  obligations  of the  trust are  covered,  available  excess  interest
generated by the Mortgage Loans will be used to achieve, maintain or restore the
overcollateralization.  We  cannot  assure  you,  however,  that  enough  excess
interest will be generated to achieve, maintain or restore the required level of
overcollateralization.  The  factors  described  below will affect the amount of
excess interest that the Mortgage Loans will generate:

     o    Every time a Mortgage Loan is prepaid in full,  excess interest may be
          reduced  because such Mortgage Loan will no longer be outstanding  and
          generating interest or, in the case of a partial  prepayment,  will be
          generating less interest.

                                      S-15



     o    Every time a  Mortgage  Loan is  liquidated  or  written  off,  excess
          interest may be reduced  because such  Mortgage Loan will no longer be
          outstanding and generating interest.

     o    If the rates of  delinquencies,  defaults  or  losses on the  Mortgage
          Loans are higher than expected, excess interest will be reduced by the
          amount necessary to compensate for any shortfalls in cash available to
          make required distributions on the Offered Certificates.

     o    The  mortgage  rates on  approximately  88.62% of the  adjustable-rate
          Mortgage Loans, by aggregate principal balance as of the Cut-off Date,
          adjust  less  frequently  than,  and on the basis of an index  that is
          different from the index used to determine,  the pass-through rates on
          the  Offered  Certificates  and the  fixed-rate  Mortgage  Loans  have
          mortgage rates that do not adjust. As a result, the pass-through rates
          on the Offered Certificates may increase relative to mortgage rates on
          the Mortgage  Loans,  requiring that a greater portion of the interest
          generated by the Mortgage  Loans be applied to cover  interest on such
          certificates.

INTEREST  PAYMENTS ON THE MORTGAGE LOANS MAY BE  INSUFFICIENT TO PAY INTEREST ON
YOUR CERTIFICATES.

     When a Mortgage Loan is prepaid in full,  the borrower is charged  interest
only up to the date on which  payment is made,  rather than for an entire month.
This may result in a shortfall in interest collections  available for payment on
the next Distribution  Date. Each Servicer is required to cover a portion of the
shortfall in interest collections that are attributable to voluntary prepayments
in full on the  Mortgage  Loans  serviced  by such  Servicer  during the related
prepayment  period,  but only up to the  servicing fee (or in the case of Select
Portfolio Servicing, Inc., one half of the servicing fee) payable to the related
Servicer for the related interest accrual period.  If the credit  enhancement is
insufficient  to cover  this  shortfall  in excess  of the  amount  the  related
Servicer covers, you may incur a loss. In addition, the Servicers will not cover
shortfalls  in  interest  collections  due  to  bankruptcy  proceedings  or  the
application of the Relief Act or similar state or local laws.

     On any Distribution Date, any shortfalls  resulting from the application of
the  Relief  Act or  similar  state or local  laws and any  prepayment  interest
shortfalls  to the  extent  not  covered by  compensating  interest  paid by the
related Servicer will be allocated, first, to the Class CE Certificates, second,
to the Class M-4 Certificates, third, to the Class M-3 Certificates,  fourth, to
the Class M-2  Certificates,  fifth, to the Class M-1 Certificates and sixth, to
the Class A-1  Certificates.  The  holders of the Offered  Certificates  will be
entitled  to  reimbursement  for any such  interest  shortfalls  but only to the
extent  of  available  funds  and in the  order  of  priority  set  forth  under
"Description  of the  Certificates--Overcollateralization  Provisions." If these
shortfalls are allocated to the Offered Certificates the amount of interest paid
to those  certificates  will be reduced,  adversely  affecting the yield on your
investment.

THE LIQUIDITY OF YOUR CERTIFICATES MAY BE LIMITED.

     The Underwriter has no obligation to make a secondary market in the classes
of Offered Certificates. There is therefore no assurance that a secondary market
will develop or, if it develops,  that it will continue.  Consequently,  you may
not be able to sell your certificates  readily or at prices that will enable you
to realize your desired yield.  The market values of the certificates are likely
to  fluctuate;  these  fluctuations  may be  significant  and  could  result  in
significant losses to you.

     The secondary markets for asset-backed  securities have experienced periods
of illiquidity and can be expected to do so in the future.  Illiquidity can have
a  severely  adverse  effect on the  prices of  securities  that are  especially
sensitive  to  prepayment,  credit  or  interest  rate  risk,  or that have been
structured  to  meet  the  investment  requirements  of  limited  categories  of
investors.

                                      S-16



THE CAP AGREEMENT IS SUBJECT TO COUNTERPARTY RISK.

     The assets of the trust  include the Cap  Agreement  which will require the
counterparty  thereunder to make certain payments for the benefit of the holders
of the Offered  Certificates and the Class CE  Certificates.  To the extent that
distributions  on the  Offered  Certificates  depend in part on  payments  to be
received by the Trustee under the Cap  Agreement,  the ability of the Trustee to
make such  distributions  on the  Offered  Certificates  will be  subject to the
credit  risk of the  counterparty  to the Cap  Agreement.  Although  there  is a
mechanism  in place to  facilitate  replacement  of the Cap  Agreement  upon the
default or credit impairment of the counterparty, there can be no assurance that
any such  mechanism  will  result  in the  ability  of the  Trustee  to obtain a
suitable replacement Cap Agreement.

THE  RETURN ON YOUR  CERTIFICATES  COULD BE  REDUCED  BY  SHORTFALLS  DUE TO THE
APPLICATION OF THE RELIEF ACT.

     The Relief Act and similar state or local laws provide  relief to borrowers
who enter active  military  service and to  borrowers in reserve  status who are
called to active military service after the origination of their mortgage loans.
The ongoing  military  operations of the United  States in Iraq and  Afghanistan
have  caused an increase  in the number of  citizens  in active  military  duty,
including those citizens previously in reserve status.  Under the Relief Act the
interest rate  applicable  to a mortgage loan for which the related  borrower is
called to active military service will be reduced from the percentage  stated in
the related mortgage note to 6.00%, if applicable.  This interest rate reduction
and any reduction  provided under similar state or local laws could result in an
interest  shortfall because neither the Master Servicer nor the related Servicer
will be able to collect the amount of interest which  otherwise would be payable
with respect to such  Mortgage  Loan if the Relief Act or similar state or local
law was not applicable thereto.  This shortfall will not be paid by the borrower
on future due dates or advanced by the Master  Servicer or the related  Servicer
and,  therefore,  will  reduce  the  amount  available  to pay  interest  to the
certificateholders  on subsequent  Distribution  Dates.  We do not know how many
Mortgage  Loans  in the  mortgage  pool  have  been  or may be  affected  by the
application of the Relief Act or similar state or local law.

POSSIBLE REDUCTION OR WITHDRAWAL OF RATINGS ON THE OFFERED CERTIFICATES.

     Each rating agency rating the Offered  Certificates  may change or withdraw
its initial ratings at any time in the future if, in its judgment, circumstances
warrant a change.  No person is  obligated  to  maintain  the  ratings  at their
initial  levels.  If a rating  agency  reduces or withdraws its rating on one or
more classes of the Offered Certificates,  the liquidity and market value of the
affected certificates is likely to be reduced.

SUITABILITY OF THE OFFERED CERTIFICATES AS INVESTMENTS.

     The Offered Certificates are not suitable investments for any investor that
requires a regular or predictable schedule of monthly payments or payment on any
specific date. The Offered  Certificates are complex  investments that should be
considered only by investors who, either alone or with their financial,  tax and
legal  advisors,  have the  expertise to analyze the  prepayment,  reinvestment,
default  and  market  risk,  the  tax  consequences  of an  investment  and  the
interaction of these factors.

     All  capitalized  terms used in this  prospectus  supplement  will have the
meanings assigned to them under "Description of the  Certificates--Glossary"  or
in the prospectus under "Index of Defined Terms."

                                 USE OF PROCEEDS

     DB Structured  Products,  Inc. (the "Mortgage Loan Seller"),  will sell the
Mortgage Loans to Ace Securities Corp. (the  "Depositor") and the Depositor will
convey the  Mortgage  Loans to the trust fund

                                      S-17



in exchange  for and  concurrently  with the delivery of the  certificates.  Net
proceeds  from the  sale of the  Offered  Certificates  will be  applied  by the
Depositor to the purchase of the Mortgage  Loans from the Mortgage  Loan Seller.
Such net proceeds  together with certain classes of certificates  not offered by
this  prospectus  supplement will represent the purchase price to be paid by the
Depositor to the Mortgage Loan Seller for the Mortgage Loans. The Mortgage Loans
were  previously  purchased  by the  Mortgage  Loan  Seller  directly  from  the
Originators.

                                THE MORTGAGE POOL

GENERAL

     The  pool  of  mortgage  loans  (the  "Mortgage   Pool")  will  consist  of
approximately  1,375  conventional,  one- to four-family,  first and junior lien
fixed-rate  and  adjustable-rate   mortgage  loans  (the  "Mortgage  Loans")  on
residential real properties (the "Mortgaged Properties") and having an aggregate
principal balance as of the Cut-off Date of approximately $149,041,679,  subject
to a permitted  variance of plus or minus 5%. The Mortgage  Loans have  original
terms to maturity of not greater than approximately 50 years.

     Approximately  92.20% of the Mortgage Loans, by aggregate principal balance
as of the  Cut-off  Date,  provide  for  level  monthly  payments  in an  amount
sufficient fully to amortize the Mortgage Loans over their terms or, in the case
of adjustable-rate  Mortgage Loans, monthly payments that will be adjusted to an
amount  that  will  amortize  such  Mortgage   Loans  fully  over  their  terms.
Approximately  2.22% of the Mortgage Loans, by aggregate principal balance as of
the Cut-off Date,  are balloon loans (the  "Balloon  Loans"),  which require the
related  borrowers to make balloon payments on the maturity date of such Balloon
Loans that are larger than the monthly  payments made by such borrowers on prior
due dates in order to  amortize  such  Balloon  Loans  fully over  their  terms.
Approximately  5.58% of the Mortgage Loans, by aggregate principal balance as of
the Cut-off  Date,  are interest  only loans (the  "Interest  Only Loans") which
require the related  borrowers to make monthly payments of only accrued interest
for the  first  two,  three or five  years  following  origination.  After  such
interest-only  period,  the borrower's  monthly  payment will be recalculated to
cover both interest and principal so that such Mortgage Loan will amortize fully
on or prior to its final payment date.

     Approximately  9.00% of the  Mortgage  Loans  accrue  interest  on a simple
interest  basis (the "Simple  Interest  Mortgage  Loans").  Interest on a Simple
Interest  Mortgage  Loan is charged to a borrower on the  outstanding  principal
balance of the Simple Interest Mortgage Loan based on the number of days elapsed
between the date through  which  interest  was last paid on the Simple  Interest
Mortgage Loan through receipt of the borrower's most current monthly payment and
the portion of each monthly  payment that is allocated to interest and principal
is adjusted based on the actual amount of interest charged on such basis.

     Approximately  94.28% of the Mortgage Loans, by aggregate principal balance
as of the  Cut-Off  Date,  are secured by first  mortgages  or deeds of trust or
other  similar  security   instruments   creating  first  liens  on  residential
properties  ("First Lien Mortgage Loans").  Approximately  5.72% of the Mortgage
Loans,  by aggregate  principal  balance as of the Cut-Off Date,  are secured by
junior  mortgages  or  deeds of trust  or  other  similar  security  instruments
creating junior liens on residential  properties ("Junior Lien Mortgage Loans").
The Mortgaged Properties consist of attached, detached or semi-detached,  one to
four-family dwelling units, individual condominium units and individual units in
planned unit developments.

     References to percentages of the Mortgage Loans,  unless  otherwise  noted,
are calculated based on the aggregate principal balance of the Mortgage Loans as
of the Cut-off Date.

     The  Mortgage  Loans in the trust fund are either  "Re-performing  Mortgage
Loans" or "Scratch & Dent Mortgage Loans". Although a Mortgage Loan may fit into
both of these categories, if a

                                      S-18



Mortgage  Loan  was 61 days or more  delinquent  based  upon  the  terms  of the
original  mortgage note or  modification  or  bankruptcy  plan as of the Cut-off
Date,  such Mortgage Loan is categorized  as a  "Re-performing  Mortgage  Loan".
Approximately  3.61% of the Mortgage Loans by aggregate  principal balance as of
the Cut-off Date are  "Re-performing  Mortgage  Loans".  Re-Performing  Mortgage
Loans are  re-performing  under the following  cash flow test:  the borrower has
made at least three aggregate  scheduled  monthly  payments in the four calendar
months  preceding  the Cut-off  Date  (regardless  of either the timing of those
payments  or the  payment  history of the  Mortgage  Loan  prior to four  months
preceding the Cut-off Date),

     Approximately  96.39% of the Mortgage Loans by aggregate  principal balance
as of the Cut-off Date are  "Scratch & Dent  Mortgage  Loans".  Scratch and Dent
Mortgage  Loans  consist of Mortgage  Loans (i) that  subsequent to funding were
determined not to comply with the related  Originator's  underwriting  standards
for, or  otherwise  failed to comply  with,  the  program  under which they were
originated;  (ii) with  respect to which the opinion of the value of the related
mortgaged property expressed in the appraisal used at origination appeared to be
inaccurate;  (iii)  with  respect  to which  information  used to  document  the
borrower's down payment, income and/or employment was incomplete; (iv) that have
deficiencies in legal documentation or are missing documents;  (v) that have had
prior delinquencies;  (vi) that have borrowers with credit scores lower than the
credit scores  required  pursuant to the  applicable  originator's  underwriting
guidelines;  and (vii) that  otherwise do not meet the  applicable  originator's
underwriting guidelines.

     The mortgage  rate (the  "Mortgage  Rate") on each Mortgage Loan is the per
annum rate of  interest  specified  in the related  mortgage  note as reduced by
application  of the  Relief Act or  similar  state or local laws and  bankruptcy
adjustments.  Approximately 66.85% of the Mortgage Loans are fixed-rate mortgage
loans  and  approximately  33.15%  of the  Mortgage  Loans  are  adjustable-rate
mortgage  loans.  The  adjustable-rate  mortgage  loans are  referred to in this
prospectus  supplement  as "ARM  Loans".  Approximately  86.55% of the ARM Loans
provide  for  adjustment  to the  Mortgage  Rates  applicable  thereto  based on
Six-Month  LIBOR (as  described  below).  Approximately  11.38% of the ARM Loans
provide  for  adjustment  to the  Mortgage  Rates  applicable  thereto  based on
One-Month  LIBOR  (as  described  below).  Approximately  1.79% of the ARM Loans
provide for adjustment to the Mortgage Rate applicable thereto based on One-Year
CMT (as  described  below).  Approximately  0.21% of the ARM Loans  provide  for
adjustment  to the  Mortgage  Rates  applicable  thereto  based on the  National
Average Contract Mortgage Rate (as described below).  Approximately 0.04% of the
ARM Loans provide for adjustment to the Mortgage Rates applicable  thereto based
on Three-Year  CMT (as described  below).  Approximately  0.03% of the ARM Loans
provide for  adjustment to the Mortgage  Rates  applicable  thereto based on the
Cost of Funds Index or "COFI" (as described  below).  The first  adjustment with
respect to each ARM Loan will not occur  until  after an  initial  period of six
months or one,  two,  three or five years from the date of  origination  thereof
(each, a "Delayed First  Adjustment  Mortgage  Loan").  In connection  with each
Mortgage Rate adjustment,  the ARM Loans have corresponding adjustments to their
monthly  payment amount,  in each case on each applicable  adjustment date (each
such date, an "Adjustment  Date"). On each Adjustment Date, the Mortgage Rate on
each ARM Loan will be adjusted  generally to equal the sum of the related  Index
and a fixed  percentage  amount (the "Gross Margin") for that ARM Loan specified
in the related  mortgage  note.  The  Mortgage  Rate on each ARM Loan,  however,
including  each Delayed First  Adjustment  Mortgage  Loan,  will not increase or
decrease by more than the initial  periodic rate cap (the  "Periodic  Rate Cap")
specified  in the  related  mortgage  note  on the  initial  Adjustment  Date or
increase  or  decrease  by more  than  the  subsequent  periodic  rate  cap (the
"Subsequent  Periodic Rate Cap")  specified in the related  mortgage note on any
subsequent  Adjustment  Date. The weighted average initial Periodic Rate Cap and
Subsequent Periodic Rate Cap for the ARM Loans is approximately 2.689% per annum
and 1.424% per annum, respectively. Effective with the first monthly payment due
on each ARM Loan after each related  Adjustment Date, the monthly payment amount
will be adjusted to an amount that will fully amortize the outstanding principal
balance of the related ARM Loan over its remaining  term and pay interest at the
Mortgage Rate as so adjusted.  Due to the  application of the Periodic Rate Caps
and the Maximum  Mortgage Rates, the Mortgage Rate on each ARM Loan, as adjusted
on any related

                                      S-19



Adjustment  Date, may be less than the sum of the related  Index,  calculated as
described in this  prospectus  supplement,  and the related  Gross  Margin.  See
"--The Index" in this  prospectus  supplement.  None of the ARM Loans permit the
related  borrower to convert the  adjustable  Mortgage  Rate  thereon to a fixed
Mortgage Rate.

     Substantially all of the Mortgage Loans have scheduled monthly payments due
on the first day of the month  (with  respect to each  Mortgage  Loan,  the "Due
Date"). Each Mortgage Loan will contain a customary  "due-on-sale"  clause which
provides  that the  Mortgage  Loan  must be  repaid at the time of a sale of the
related Mortgaged Property or assumed by a creditworthy purchaser of the related
Mortgaged Property.

     Approximately  27.25% of the  Mortgage  Loans  provide  for  payment by the
borrower of a prepayment charge (a "Prepayment Charge") in limited circumstances
on certain  prepayments  as  provided in the related  mortgage  note.  Each such
Mortgage  Loan  provides for payment of a Prepayment  Charge on certain  partial
prepayments  and all  prepayments in full made up to five years from the date of
origination of the Mortgage Loan, as provided in the related  mortgage note. The
amount of the Prepayment Charge is as provided in the related mortgage note. The
holders of the Class P Certificates  will be entitled to all Prepayment  Charges
received on the Mortgage  Loans,  and these  amounts  will not be available  for
distribution on the other classes of certificates.  Under the limited  instances
described  under the terms of the pooling and servicing  agreement,  the related
Servicer may waive the payment of any  otherwise  applicable  Prepayment  Charge
with respect to the Mortgage Loans. As of July 1, 2003, the Alternative Mortgage
Parity  Act  of  1982  (the  "Parity  Act"),  which  regulates  the  ability  of
originators to impose  prepayment  charges,  was amended,  and as a result,  the
originators  will be required to comply with state and local laws in originating
mortgage  loans  with  prepayment   charge  provisions  with  respect  to  loans
originated on or after July 1, 2003. The Depositor makes no  representations  as
to the effect that the  Prepayment  Charges and the  amendment of the Parity Act
may have on the  prepayment  performance  of the Mortgage  Loans.  However,  the
amendment  of the  Parity  Act  does not  retroactively  affect  mortgage  loans
originated  before July 1, 2003.  Investors should conduct their own analysis of
the effect, if any, that the Prepayment Charges, decisions by the Servicers with
respect to the waiver of the Prepayment  Charges and the amendment to the Parity
Act, may have on the prepayment performance of the Mortgage Loans. The Depositor
makes no representation as to the effect that the Prepayment Charges,  decisions
by the  servicer  with respect to the waiver of the  Prepayment  Charges and the
amendment  to the Parity  Act,  may have on the  prepayment  performance  of the
Mortgage  Loans.  See  "Certain  Legal  Aspects of the  Loans-Enforceability  of
Prepayment and Late Payment Fees" in the prospectus.

MORTGAGE LOAN CHARACTERISTICS

     The average  principal  balance of the Mortgage  Loans at  origination  was
approximately  $119,728.46.   No  Mortgage  Loan  had  a  principal  balance  at
origination  greater than  approximately  $1,050,000 or less than  approximately
$3,280.00. The average principal balance of the Mortgage Loans as of the Cut-off
Date was approximately $108,393.95.  No Mortgage Loan had a principal balance as
of the  Cut-off  Date  greater  than  approximately  $978,815.46  or  less  than
approximately $1,435.72.

     The Mortgage  Loans had Mortgage  Rates as of the Cut-off Date ranging from
approximately  4.000% per annum to  approximately  16.000%  per  annum,  and the
weighted  average  Mortgage Rate was  approximately  8.018% per annum. As of the
Cut-off Date, the ARM Loans had Gross Margins ranging from approximately  0.250%
per annum to approximately 9.500% per annum, Minimum Mortgage Rates ranging from
approximately  0.250% per annum to  approximately  11.850% per annum and Maximum
Mortgage  Rates ranging from  approximately  10.500% per annum to  approximately
17.850% per annum. As of the Cut-off Date, the weighted average Gross Margin was
approximately   5.507%,   the  weighted   average  Minimum   Mortgage  Rate  was
approximately  7.048% per annum and the weighted  average Maximum  Mortgage Rate
was approximately 13.689% per annum. The latest first

                                      S-20



Adjustment  Date  following the Cut-off Date on any ARM Loan occurs on August 1,
2008 and the  weighted  average  next  Adjustment  Date for all of the ARM Loans
following the Cut-off Date is January 26, 2006.

     The weighted average current combined  loan-to-value  ratio of the Mortgage
Loans as of the Cut-off Date was  approximately  81.55%.  The  weighted  average
current  updated  combined  loan-to-value  ratio  as of  the  Cut-off  Date  was
approximately 67.49%.

     The  weighted  average  remaining  term to stated  maturity of the Mortgage
Loans was  approximately 282 months as of the Cut-off Date. None of the Mortgage
Loans will have a first due date  prior to  January  1, 1986 or after  August 1,
2011 or will have a  remaining  term to stated  maturity of less than 1 month or
greater than 551 months as of the Cut-off Date. The latest  maturity date of any
Mortgage Loan is October 1, 2050.

     As of the Cut-off  Date,  the weighted  average FICO Score for the Mortgage
Loans that were scored is  approximately  599. No Mortgage Loan which was scored
had a FICO Score as of the Cut-off Date greater than 831 or less than 401.

     The  Mortgage   Loans  are  expected  to  have  the  following   additional
characteristics  as of the Cut-off Date (the sum in any column may not equal the
total indicated due to rounding):

                                      S-21



                      COLLATERAL TYPE OF THE MORTGAGE LOANS

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
                                        MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
            COLLATERAL TYPE               LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
Fixed Rate ...........................     1,083   $  99,637,815      66.85%
ARM ..................................       292      49,403,864      33.15
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................     1,375   $ 149,041,679     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======


                                 DAYS DELINQUENT

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
                                        MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
            DAYS DELINQUENT               LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
 0  -  29 ............................     1,090   $ 126,902,802      85.15%
30  -  59 ............................       202      16,751,165      11.24
60  -  89 ............................        25       1,587,326       1.07
90  -  119 ...........................         9         528,721       0.35
Greater than or equal to 120 .........        49       3,271,665       2.20
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................     1,375   $ 149,041,679     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======


                       LIEN PRIORITY OF THE MORTGAGE LOANS

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
                                        MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
             LIEN PRIORITY                LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
First Lien ...........................     1,112   $ 140,517,144      94.28%
Junior Lien ..........................       263       8,524,535       5.72
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................     1,375   $ 149,041,679     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======

                                      S-22



             PRINCIPAL BALANCES OF THE MORTGAGE LOANS AT ORIGINATION


                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                         NUMBER     PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                           OF        BALANCE         BALANCE
          PRINCIPAL BALANCE             MORTGAGE  OUTSTANDING AT  OUTSTANDING AT
          AT ORIGINATION ($)              LOANS     ORIGINATION    ORIGINATION
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
      0.01 -  50,000.00 ..............       431   $  11,217,789       7.53%
 50,000.01 - 100,000.00 ..............       443      29,369,875      19.71
100,000.01 - 150,000.00 ..............       157      17,732,476      11.90
150,000.01 - 200,000.00 ..............        63      10,660,773       7.15
200,000.01 - 250,000.00 ..............        82      16,327,814      10.96
250,000.01 - 300,000.00 ..............        77      17,984,005      12.07
300,000.01 - 350,000.00 ..............        45      13,198,838       8.86
350,000.01 - 400,000.00 ..............        31      10,970,384       7.36
400,000.01 - 450,000.00 ..............        12       4,397,747       2.95
450,000.01 - 500,000.00 ..............        14       6,173,220       4.14
500,000.01 - 550,000.00 ..............         8       4,051,940       2.72
550,000.01 - 600,000.00 ..............         5       2,748,722       1.84
600,000.01 - 650,000.00 ..............         6       3,229,281       2.17
Greater than or equal
  to 1,000,000.01 ....................         1         978,815       0.66
                                        --------   -------------     ------
       Total .........................     1,375   $ 149,041,679     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======


                    PRINCIPAL BALANCES OF THE MORTGAGE LOANS
                             AS OF THE CUT-OFF DATE

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
     PRINCIPAL BALANCE AS OF THE        MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
            CUT-OFF DATE ($)              LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
      0.01 -    50,000.00 ............       491   $  13,510,692       9.07%
 50,000.01 -   100,000.00 ............       418      29,879,892      20.05
100,000.01 -   150,000.00 ............       145      17,417,488      11.69
150,000.01 -   200,000.00 ............        94      16,820,909      11.29
200,000.01 -   250,000.00 ............        83      18,768,737      12.59
250,000.01 -   300,000.00 ............        45      12,474,890       8.37
300,000.01 -   350,000.00 ............        38      12,277,224       8.24
350,000.01 -   400,000.00 ............        24       9,062,108       6.08
400,000.01 -   450,000.00 ............         8       3,437,338       2.31
450,000.01 -   500,000.00 ............        14       6,715,668       4.51
500,000.01 -   550,000.00 ............         8       4,159,856       2.79
550,000.01 -   600,000.00 ............         4       2,300,207       1.54
600,000.01 -   650,000.00 ............         2       1,237,854       0.83
950,000.01 - 1,000,000.00 ............         1         978,815       0.66
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................     1,375   $ 149,041,679     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======

                                      S-23



    GEOGRAPHIC DISTRIBUTION OF THE MORTGAGED PROPERTIES OF THE MORTGAGE LOANS

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
                                        MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
                LOCATION                  LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
California ...........................       129   $  26,431,318      17.73%
New York .............................        89      14,702,384       9.86
Ohio .................................       207      10,840,435       7.27
Texas ................................       106      10,659,135       7.15
New Jersey ...........................        56       8,017,178       5.38
Florida ..............................        77       7,404,534       4.97
Georgia ..............................        44       5,503,849       3.69
Illinois .............................        47       5,433,640       3.65
Maryland .............................        33       4,963,785       3.33
Pennsylvania .........................        65       4,766,803       3.20
Michigan .............................        54       4,691,927       3.15
Massachusetts ........................        21       4,189,906       2.81
Indiana ..............................        71       4,043,062       2.71
Connecticut ..........................        19       3,462,363       2.32
Virginia .............................        23       3,299,852       2.21
Colorado .............................        22       2,814,041       1.89
Kentucky .............................        56       2,774,087       1.86
Washington ...........................        18       2,606,662       1.75
North Carolina .......................        38       2,528,784       1.70
Arizona ..............................        20       2,290,811       1.54
Tennessee ............................        17       2,039,460       1.37
Hawaii ...............................         8       1,918,977       1.29
Missouri .............................        23       1,573,395       1.06
Alabama ..............................        16       1,324,407       0.89
Louisiana ............................        10       1,192,025       0.80
District of Columbia .................         5       1,023,765       0.69
Maine ................................         7         906,667       0.61
Wisconsin ............................         8         744,015       0.50
Minnesota ............................         7         729,551       0.49
South Carolina .......................        10         663,220       0.44
New Mexico ...........................         3         639,434       0.43
New Hampshire ........................         5         565,816       0.38
Oklahoma .............................         3         555,994       0.37
Utah .................................         9         531,510       0.36
Kansas ...............................         6         422,753       0.28
Nevada ...............................         3         363,918       0.24
Nebraska .............................         7         323,382       0.22
Oregon ...............................         5         294,180       0.20
Rhode Island .........................         3         272,157       0.18
Iowa .................................         5         261,012       0.18
Mississippi ..........................         4         249,779       0.17
Vermont ..............................         2         230,414       0.15
Arkansas .............................         4         229,906       0.15
Delaware .............................         2         181,179       0.12
Idaho ................................         4         166,637       0.11
North Dakota .........................         1          80,194       0.05
West Virginia ........................         1          57,601       0.04
South Dakota .........................         1          46,481       0.03
Wyoming ..............................         1          29,292       0.02
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................     1,375   $ 149,041,679     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======

                                      S-24



           MORTGAGE RATES OF THE MORTGAGE LOANS AS OF THE CUT-OFF DATE

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
                                        MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
           MORTGAGE RATE (%)              LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
 4.000 -  4.499 ......................         6   $     754,546       0.51%
 4.500 -  4.999 ......................         7       1,527,182       1.02
 5.000 -  5.499 ......................        20       4,898,351       3.29
 5.500 -  5.999 ......................        13       2,806,523       1.88
 6.000 -  6.499 ......................        33       7,383,155       4.95
 6.500 -  6.999 ......................       120      21,885,818      14.68
 7.000 -  7.499 ......................       133      26,322,556      17.66
 7.500 -  7.999 ......................       156      24,998,337      16.77
 8.000 -  8.499 ......................       102      11,908,930       7.99
 8.500 -  8.999 ......................       113      13,039,707       8.75
 9.000 -  9.499 ......................        72       5,392,990       3.62
 9.500 -  9.999 ......................       131       8,362,448       5.61
10.000 - 10.499 ......................        75       4,054,748       2.72
10.500 - 10.999 ......................        95       4,837,149       3.25
11.000 - 11.499 ......................        61       2,802,435       1.88
11.500 - 11.999 ......................        79       3,444,101       2.31
12.000 - 12.499 ......................        51       1,612,761       1.08
12.500 - 12.999 ......................        35       1,284,626       0.86
13.000 - 13.499 ......................        21         621,751       0.42
13.500 - 13.999 ......................        33         763,738       0.51
14.000 - 14.499 ......................         6         113,798       0.08
14.500 - 14.999 ......................         7         121,620       0.08
15.000 - 15.499 ......................         3          17,876       0.01
15.500 - 15.999 ......................         2          14,774       0.01
16.000 - 16.499 ......................         1          71,760       0.05
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................     1,375   $ 149,041,679     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======

                                      S-25



                      REMAINING TERM TO STATED MATURITY OF
                    THE MORTGAGE LOANS AS OF THE CUT-OFF DATE


                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                         NUMBER     PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                           OF        BALANCE         BALANCE
          REMAINING TERM TO             MORTGAGE  OUTSTANDING AT  OUTSTANDING AT
           STATED MATURITY                LOANS     ORIGINATION    ORIGINATION
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
  1 - 60 months ......................       110   $   4,070,782       2.73%
 61 - 120 months .....................       182       8,375,636       5.62
121 - 180 months .....................       158       7,428,884       4.98
181 - 240 months .....................       179      17,736,262      11.90
241 - 300 months .....................       223      43,945,787      29.49
301 - 360 months .....................       522      67,409,395      45.23
Greater than or equal to 361 .........         1          74,932       0.05
                                        --------   -------------     ------
      Total ..........................     1,375   $ 149,041,679     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======


                         SEASONING OF THE MORTGAGE LOANS

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
                                        MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
               SEASONING                  LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
  1 -  60 months .....................       788   $  82,033,546      55.04%
 61 - 120 months .....................       461      50,879,693      34.14
121 - 180 months .....................       120      15,906,181      10.67
181 - 240 months .....................         6         222,259       0.15
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................     1,375   $ 149,041,679     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======


                      PROPERTY TYPES OF THE MORTGAGE LOANS

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
                                        MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
             PROPERTY TYPE                LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
Single Family Residence ..............     1,156   $ 116,867,843      78.41%
PUD ..................................        82      13,744,024       9.22
2-4 Family ...........................        67      12,502,989       8.39
Condominium ..........................        41       4,008,847       2.69
Manufactured Housing .................        17       1,462,337       0.98
Cooperative ..........................         4         281,401       0.19
Other ................................         8         174,237       0.12
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................     1,375   $ 149,041,679     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======

                                      S-26



          ORIGINAL COMBINED LOAN-TO-VALUE RATIOS OF THE MORTGAGE LOANS

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
           ORIGINAL COMBINED            MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
        LOAN-TO-VALUE RATIO (%)           LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
Less than or equal to 50.00 ..........        45   $   4,749,006       3.19%
50.01 -  55.00 .......................        26       2,661,690       1.79
55.01 -  60.00 .......................        26       2,675,703       1.80
60.01 -  65.00 .......................        40       5,539,626       3.72
65.01 -  70.00 .......................        78      11,729,772       7.87
70.01 -  75.00 .......................        83      11,899,678       7.98
75.01 -  80.00 .......................       278      40,146,015      26.94
80.01 -  85.00 .......................       117      15,607,080      10.47
85.01 -  90.00 .......................       142      20,843,125      13.98
90.01 -  95.00 .......................       162      13,708,898       9.20
95.01 - 100.00 .......................       296      14,492,623       9.72
Greater than  or equal to 100.01 .....        82       4,988,462       3.35
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................     1,375   $ 149,041,679     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======


       CURRENT UPDATED COMBINED LOAN-TO-VALUE RATIOS OF THE MORTGAGE LOANS

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
           ORIGINAL COMBINED            MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
       LOAN-TO-VALUE RATIO (%)*           LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
Less than or equal to 50.00 ..........       328   $  38,621,587      25.91%
50.01 -  55.00 .......................        63       7,563,396       5.07
55.01 -  60.00 .......................        62       7,920,446       5.31
60.01 -  65.00 .......................        58       6,959,708       4.67
65.01 -  70.00 .......................        68       7,957,141       5.34
70.01 -  75.00 .......................        81       8,333,748       5.59
75.01 -  80.00 .......................       169      22,423,911      15.05
80.01 -  85.00 .......................       130      16,165,319      10.85
85.01 -  90.00 .......................        99      12,875,568       8.64
90.01 -  95.00 .......................        96       5,767,535       3.87
95.01 - 100.00 .......................       144       9,663,224       6.48
Greater than or equal to 100.01 ......        77       4,790,095       3.21
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................     1,375   $ 149,041,679     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======

- ----------
* Current  Updated  CLTV's are  calculated by taking the original CLTV for those
loans seasoned 11 months or less and an updated CLTV for those loans seasoned 12
months or more.  Updated  CLTV's for those loans  seasoned 12 months or more are
calculated  by taking the unpaid  principal  balance as of the Cut-off Date plus
the senior  balance,  in the case of junior liens,  divided by the BPO value, if
available. If a BPO was not available, then an AVM was used. If neither a BPO or
an AVM was available, the original appraisal value was used. Updated CLTV's were
calculated for 58.24% of the Mortgage Loans. For purposes of calculating updated
CLTV's,  a BPO was used for 80.06% of the Mortgage Loans by balance,  an AVM was
used for 18.61% of the  Mortgage  Loans by balance,  and an  original  appraisal
value was used for 1.32% of the Mortgage  Loans by balance.  An updated CLTV was
not calculated for 41.76% of the Mortgage Loans.

                                      S-27



                    DOCUMENTATION TYPE OF THE MORTGAGE LOANS

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
                                        MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
          DOCUMENTATION TYPE              LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
Full Documentation ...................     1,015   $ 106,180,112      71.24%
Stated Documentation .................       179      29,261,013      19.63
Limited Documentation ................        75       5,504,542       3.69
Alternative Documentation ............        30       1,681,113       1.13
Full/Alt Documentation ...............        21       1,590,612       1.07
No Income Verifier ...................        16       1,238,427       0.83
Reduced ..............................         7       1,172,646       0.79
No Income No Asset ...................         9         895,415       0.60
No Documentation .....................        11         658,194       0.44
Unknown ..............................         7         488,793       0.33
Streamline ...........................         5         370,811       0.25
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................     1,375   $ 149,041,679     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======


                    CURRENT FICO SCORE FOR THE MORTGAGE LOANS

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
                                        MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
          CURRENT FICO SCORE              LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
Not Available ........................        31   $   2,465,938       1.65%
Less than or equal to 499 ............       132      13,705,783       9.20
500 - 524 ............................       153      13,519,532       9.07
525 - 549 ............................       180      15,911,189      10.68
550 - 574 ............................       167      15,579,280      10.45
575 - 599 ............................       164      16,992,302      11.40
600 - 624 ............................       131      14,195,430       9.52
625 - 649 ............................       138      16,524,398      11.09
650 - 674 ............................       118      15,388,230      10.32
675 - 699 ............................        71      11,286,044       7.57
700 - 724 ............................        42       6,086,526       4.08
725 - 749 ............................        22       3,380,081       2.27
750 - 774 ............................        11       2,059,750       1.38
775 - 799 ............................        10       1,752,163       1.18
Greater than or equal to 800 .........         5         195,031       0.13
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................     1,375   $ 149,041,679     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======

                                      S-28



                       LOAN PURPOSE OF THE MORTGAGE LOANS

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
                                        MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
             LOAN PURPOSE                 LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
Refinance - Cashout ..................       689   $  64,580,086      43.33%
Purchase .............................       412      52,258,474      35.06
Refinance - Rate Term ................       234      29,425,208      19.74
Debt Consolidation ...................        15       1,529,188       1.03
Unknown ..............................        21         957,096       0.64
Home Improvement .....................         3         279,230       0.19
Construction .........................         1          12,397       0.01
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................     1,375   $ 149,041,679     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======


                     OCCUPANCY STATUS OF THE MORTGAGE LOANS

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
                                        MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
           OCCUPANCY STATUS*              LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
Primary ..............................     1,298   $ 142,181,001      95.40%
Investment ...........................        62       4,523,006       3.03
Second Home ..........................        15       2,337,672       1.57
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................     1,375   $ 149,041,679     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======

*The occupancy status of a Mortgaged  Property is as represented by the borrower
in its loan application.

                                      S-29



          NEXT ADJUSTMENT DATES FOR THE ADJUSTABLE-RATE MORTGAGE LOANS
                          INCLUDED IN THE MORTGAGE POOL

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
                                           ARM      AS OF THE       AS OF THE
         NEXT ADJUSTMENT DATE             LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
December 2004 ........................         1   $      38,715       0.08%
January 2005 .........................        22       6,053,475      12.25
February 2005 ........................         4         188,267       0.38
March 2005 ...........................         1          37,837       0.08
April 2005 ...........................         3         516,849       1.05
May 2005 .............................         5         408,474       0.83
June 2005 ............................         4         305,791       0.62
July 2005 ............................         2         127,690       0.26
August 2005 ..........................         1          64,348       0.13
September 2005 .......................         1         217,150       0.44
October 2005 .........................         1         100,609       0.20
November 2005 ........................         1          83,957       0.17
December 2005 ........................         6         818,112       1.66
January 2006 .........................        13       2,765,651       5.60
February 2006 ........................         8       2,269,892       4.59
March 2006 ...........................        49       8,607,372      17.42
April 2006 ...........................       139      21,302,535      43.12
May 2006 .............................        21       3,506,737       7.10
June 2006 ............................         2         318,979       0.65
October 2006 .........................         1          19,027       0.04
March 2007 ...........................         3         673,134       1.36
April 2007 ...........................         2         331,417       0.67
June 2007 ............................         1         123,046       0.25
August 2008 ..........................         1         524,800       1.06
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................       292   $  49,403,864     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======

                                      S-30



              GROSS MARGINS OF THE ADJUSTABLE-RATE MORTGAGE LOANS
                         INCLUDED IN THE MORTGAGE POOL

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
                                           ARM      AS OF THE       AS OF THE
            GROSS MARGIN (%)              LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
0.000 - 0.499 ........................         1   $      38,715       0.08%
1.500 - 1.999 ........................         1         104,847       0.21
2.000 - 2.499 ........................         2         138,247       0.28
2.500 - 2.999 ........................         7       1,239,985       2.51
3.000 - 3.499 ........................         8       2,156,559       4.37
3.500 - 3.999 ........................        17       4,685,327       9.48
4.000 - 4.499 ........................        13       2,807,018       5.68
4.500 - 4.999 ........................        24       4,199,289       8.50
5.000 - 5.499 ........................        42       6,913,480      13.99
5.500 - 5.999 ........................        43       8,006,216      16.21
6.000 - 6.499 ........................        35       4,474,738       9.06
6.500 - 6.999 ........................        66      11,187,732      22.65
7.000 - 7.499 ........................        18       1,954,472       3.96
7.500 - 7.999 ........................         6         517,293       1.05
8.000 - 8.499 ........................         6         707,084       1.43
8.500 - 8.999 ........................         1         131,695       0.27
9.000 - 9.499 ........................         1          49,953       0.10
9.500 - 9.999 ........................         1          91,213       0.18
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................       292   $  49,403,864     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======

                                      S-31



          MAXIMUM MORTGAGE RATES OF THE ADJUSTABLE-RATE MORTGAGE LOANS
                          INCLUDED IN THE MORTGAGE POOL

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
           MAXIMUM MORTGAGE                ARM      AS OF THE       AS OF THE
               RATE (%)                   LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
10.500 - 10.999 ......................         1   $     157,528       0.32%
11.000 - 11.499 ......................         2         205,234       0.42
11.500 - 11.999 ......................         8       2,008,616       4.07
12.000 - 12.499 ......................        39      10,647,355      21.55
12.500 - 12.999 ......................        32       5,740,768      11.62
13.000 - 13.499 ......................        26       4,147,416       8.39
13.500 - 13.999 ......................        50       8,697,253      17.60
14.000 - 14.499 ......................        22       2,994,974       6.06
14.500 - 14.999 ......................        40       6,072,136      12.29
15.000 - 15.499 ......................        24       3,816,004       7.72
15.500 - 15.999 ......................        14       1,608,834       3.26
16.000 - 16.499 ......................        13       1,291,859       2.61
16.500 - 16.999 ......................        12       1,202,605       2.43
17.000 - 17.499 ......................         3         314,359       0.64
17.500 - 17.999 ......................         6         498,922       1.01
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................       292   $  49,403,864     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======

                                      S-32



          MINIMUM MORTGAGE RATES OF THE ADJUSTABLE-RATE MORTGAGE LOANS
                          INCLUDED IN THE MORTGAGE POOL

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
           MINIMUM MORTGAGE                ARM      AS OF THE       AS OF THE
                RATE (%)                  LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
 0.000 -  0.499 ......................         1   $      38,715       0.08%
 1.000 -  1.499 ......................         1          30,481       0.06
 2.000 -  2.499 ......................         2         187,394       0.38
 2.500 -  2.999 ......................         1          94,802       0.19
 3.000 -  3.499 ......................         1          90,039       0.18
 3.500 -  3.999 ......................         2         241,485       0.49
 4.000 -  4.499 ......................         7       2,254,748       4.56
 4.500 -  4.999 ......................        14       3,829,612       7.75
 5.000 -  5.499 ......................         5         950,315       1.92
 5.500 -  5.999 ......................         9       2,074,427       4.20
 6.000 -  6.499 ......................        20       5,540,292      11.21
 6.500 -  6.999 ......................        47       9,415,848      19.06
 7.000 -  7.499 ......................        32       4,756,206       9.63
 7.500 -  7.999 ......................        48       7,502,665      15.19
 8.000 -  8.499 ......................        29       3,991,174       8.08
 8.500 -  8.999 ......................        28       4,237,218       8.58
 9.000 -  9.499 ......................        16       1,791,122       3.63
 9.500 -  9.999 ......................        14       1,333,032       2.70
10.000 - 10.499 ......................         5         434,268       0.88
10.500 - 10.999 ......................         5         359,889       0.73
11.000 - 11.499 ......................         2         114,873       0.23
11.500 - 11.999 ......................         3         135,258       0.27
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................       292   $  49,403,864     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======


        INITIAL PERIODIC RATE CAPS OF THE ADJUSTABLE-RATE MORTGAGE LOANS
                         INCLUDED IN THE MORTGAGE POOL

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
                                           ARM      AS OF THE       AS OF THE
     INITIAL PERIODIC RATE CAP (%)        LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
0.001 - 1.000 ........................        10   $   1,274,432       2.58%
1.001 - 2.000 ........................        49       9,285,960      18.80
2.001 - 3.000 ........................       231      38,433,930      77.80
4.001 - 5.000 ........................         1         325,585       0.66
5.001 - 6.000 ........................         1          83,957       0.17
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................       292   $  49,403,864     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======

                                      S-33



       SUBSEQUENT PERIODIC RATE CAPS OF THE ADJUSTABLE-RATE MORTGAGE LOANS
                          INCLUDED IN THE MORTGAGE POOL

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
                                           ARM      AS OF THE       AS OF THE
   SUBSEQUENT PERIODIC RATE CAP (%)       LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
1.000 - 1.999 ........................       267   $  42,798,626      86.63%
2.000 - 2.999 ........................         8         984,161       1.99
3.000 - 3.999 ........................        17       5,621,077      11.38
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................       292   $  49,403,864     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======


            LIFETIME RATE CAPS OF THE ADJUSTABLE-RATE MORTGAGE LOANS
                          INCLUDED IN THE MORTGAGE POOL

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
                                           ARM      AS OF THE       AS OF THE
         LIFETIME RATE CAP (%)            LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
 4.000 -  4.499 ......................         1   $      19,027       0.04%
 5.000 -  5.499 ......................         1         325,585       0.66
 5.500 -  5.999 ......................         1          34,285       0.07
 6.000 -  6.499 ......................       170      25,187,998      50.98
 7.000 -  7.499 ......................       109      21,532,083      43.58
 7.500 -  7.999 ......................         6       2,018,808       4.09
 8.000 -  8.499 ......................         1          94,802       0.19
 8.500 -  8.999 ......................         1          88,211       0.18
 9.000 -  9.499 ......................         1          38,715       0.08
12.000 - 12.499 ......................         1          64,348       0.13
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................       292   $  49,403,864     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======


         PREPAYMENT PENALTY MONTHS OF THE MORTGAGE LOANS AT ORIGINATION

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
      PREPAYMENT PENALTY MONTHS         MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
            AT ORIGINATION                LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
 0 ...................................     1,036   $ 108,432,230      72.75%
12 ...................................        22       3,157,692       2.12
24 ...................................       223      29,184,840      19.58
36 ...................................        90       8,150,931       5.47
60 ...................................         4         115,985       0.08
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................     1,375   $ 149,041,679     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======

                                      S-34



                        LOAN STATUS OF THE MORTGAGE LOANS

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
                                        MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
             LOAN STATUS                  LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
Active ...............................     1,245   $ 137,534,195      92.28%
Bankruptcy ...........................       109       8,946,854       6.00
Forbearance ..........................        21       2,560,630       1.72
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................     1,375   $ 149,041,679     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======


                            FIXED-RATE MORTGAGE LOANS
                            -------------------------

                COLLATERAL TYPE OF THE FIXED-RATE MORTGAGE LOANS

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
                                        MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
           COLLATERAL TYPE                LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
Fixed Rate ...........................     1,083   $  99,637,815     100.00%
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................     1,083   $  99,637,815     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======


                                 DAYS DELINQUENT

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
                                        MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
           DAYS DELINQUENT                LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
 0 -  29 .............................       840   $  84,417,245      84.72%
30 -  59 .............................       163      10,170,875      10.21
60 -  89 .............................        24       1,419,883       1.43
90 - 119 .............................         7         358,146       0.36
Greater than or equal to 120 .........        49       3,271,665       3.28
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................     1,083   $  99,637,815     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======


                 LIEN PRIORITY OF THE FIXED-RATE MORTGAGE LOANS

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
                                        MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
            LIEN PRIORITY                 LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
First Lien ...........................       820   $  91,113,280      91.44%
Junior Lien ..........................       263       8,524,535       8.56
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................     1,083   $  99,637,815     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======

                                      S-35



       PRINCIPAL BALANCES OF THE FIXED-RATE MORTGAGE LOANS AT ORIGINATION

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                         NUMBER     PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                           OF        BALANCE         BALANCE
          PRINCIPAL BALANCE             MORTGAGE  OUTSTANDING AT  OUTSTANDING AT
          AT ORIGINATION ($)              LOANS     ORIGINATION    ORIGINATION
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
      0.01 -  50,000.00 ..............       414   $  10,476,571      10.51%
 50,000.01 - 100,000.00 ..............       354      22,926,109      23.01
100,000.01 - 150,000.00 ..............        93      10,198,072      10.24
150,000.01 - 200,000.00 ..............        24       3,846,507       3.86
200,000.01 - 250,000.00 ..............        58      11,008,247      11.05
250,000.01 - 300,000.00 ..............        63      14,044,494      14.10
300,000.01 - 350,000.00 ..............        33       9,299,206       9.33
350,000.01 - 400,000.00 ..............        17       5,697,257       5.72
400,000.01 - 450,000.00 ..............         8       2,677,012       2.69
450,000.01 - 500,000.00 ..............         6       2,351,855       2.36
500,000.01 - 550,000.00 ..............         4       1,955,899       1.96
550,000.01 - 600,000.00 ..............         3       1,585,989       1.59
600,000.01 - 650,000.00 ..............         5       2,591,781       2.60
Greater than or equal to 1,000,000.01 .        1         978,815       0.98
                                        --------   -------------     ------
      Total ..........................     1,083   $  99,637,815     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======


               PRINCIPAL BALANCES OF THE FIXED-RATE MORTGAGE LOANS
                             AS OF THE CUT-OFF DATE

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
      PRINCIPAL BALANCE AS OF THE       MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
           CUT-OFF DATE ($)               LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
      0.01 -    50,000.00 ............       468   $  12,562,396      12.61%
 50,000.01 -   100,000.00 ............       333      23,448,634      23.53
100,000.01 -   150,000.00 ............        82       9,927,836       9.96
150,000.01 -   200,000.00 ............        56      10,156,460      10.19
200,000.01 -   250,000.00 ............        59      13,449,171      13.50
250,000.01 -   300,000.00 ............        31       8,535,379       8.57
300,000.01 -   350,000.00 ............        25       8,052,007       8.08
350,000.01 -   400,000.00 ............        11       4,114,567       4.13
400,000.01 -   450,000.00 ............         4       1,716,603       1.72
450,000.01 -   500,000.00 ............         6       2,894,304       2.90
500,000.01 -   550,000.00 ............         4       2,063,815       2.07
550,000.01 -   600,000.00 ............         2       1,137,474       1.14
600,000.01 -   650,000.00 ............         1         600,354       0.60
950,000.01 - 1,000,000.00 ............         1         978,815       0.98
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................     1,083   $  99,637,815     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======

                                      S-36



              GEOGRAPHIC DISTRIBUTION OF THE MORTGAGED PROPERTIES
                        OF THE FIXED-RATE MORTGAGE LOANS

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
                                        MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
              LOCATION                    LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
California ...........................        89   $  15,542,743      15.60%
Ohio .................................       199      10,120,164      10.16
New York .............................        62       8,246,061       8.28
Texas ................................        87       7,821,281       7.85
New Jersey ...........................        46       5,450,481       5.47
Maryland .............................        30       4,670,542       4.69
Illinois .............................        39       4,474,044       4.49
Florida ..............................        53       4,030,140       4.04
Georgia ..............................        30       3,496,603       3.51
Indiana ..............................        63       3,389,853       3.40
Pennsylvania .........................        45       3,017,203       3.03
Kentucky .............................        52       2,498,239       2.51
Virginia .............................        18       2,330,286       2.34
Michigan .............................        29       2,184,766       2.19
Arizona ..............................        17       2,023,737       2.03
North Carolina .......................        32       1,959,080       1.97
Massachusetts ........................        11       1,832,849       1.84
Washington ...........................        13       1,730,213       1.74
Connecticut ..........................        14       1,699,864       1.71
Tennessee ............................        14       1,581,908       1.59
Colorado .............................        17       1,546,899       1.55
Louisiana ............................        10       1,192,025       1.20
Missouri .............................        17       1,133,712       1.14
Hawaii ...............................         5       1,056,549       1.06
Alabama ..............................        11         754,235       0.76
District of Columbia .................         4         725,642       0.73
South Carolina .......................        10         663,220       0.67
Maine ................................         3         506,932       0.51
Oklahoma .............................         2         490,501       0.49
Kansas ...............................         6         422,753       0.42
Minnesota ............................         6         355,621       0.36
Utah .................................         7         335,500       0.34
New Mexico ...........................         2         326,812       0.33
Nebraska .............................         7         323,382       0.32
Oregon ...............................         5         294,180       0.30
Mississippi ..........................         4         249,779       0.25
Wisconsin ............................         5         192,846       0.19
Idaho ................................         4         166,637       0.17
Rhode Island .........................         2         139,258       0.14
Vermont ..............................         1         137,063       0.14
Arkansas .............................         3         110,255       0.11
Iowa .................................         3         100,669       0.10
North Dakota .........................         1          80,194       0.08
Delaware .............................         1          75,662       0.08
West Virginia ........................         1          57,601       0.06
South Dakota .........................         1          46,481       0.05
Wyoming ..............................         1          29,292       0.03
Nevada ...............................         1          24,055       0.02
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................     1,083   $  99,637,815     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======

                                      S-37



     MORTGAGE RATES OF THE FIXED-RATE MORTGAGE LOANS AS OF THE CUT-OFF DATE

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
                                        MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
          MORTGAGE RATE (%)               LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
 4.000 -  4.499 ......................         2   $     161,429       0.16%
 5.000 -  5.499 ......................         2          58,835       0.06
 5.500 -  5.999 ......................         5         836,943       0.84
 6.000 -  6.499 ......................        11       1,244,321       1.25
 6.500 -  6.999 ......................        72      12,379,931      12.42
 7.000 -  7.499 ......................       100      21,461,503      21.54
 7.500 -  7.999 ......................       109      17,684,439      17.75
 8.000 -  8.499 ......................        74       7,979,847       8.01
 8.500 -  8.999 ......................        85       8,802,489       8.83
 9.000 -  9.499 ......................        56       3,601,868       3.61
 9.500 -  9.999 ......................       117       7,029,415       7.05
10.000 - 10.499 ......................        69       3,558,390       3.57
10.500 - 10.999 ......................        89       4,438,544       4.45
11.000 - 11.499 ......................        58       2,657,081       2.67
11.500 - 11.999 ......................        75       3,120,076       3.13
12.000 - 12.499 ......................        51       1,612,761       1.62
12.500 - 12.999 ......................        35       1,284,626       1.29
13.000 - 13.499 ......................        21         621,751       0.62
13.500 - 13.999 ......................        33         763,738       0.77
14.000 - 14.499 ......................         6         113,798       0.11
14.500 - 14.999 ......................         7         121,620       0.12
15.000 - 15.499 ......................         3          17,876       0.02
15.500 - 15.999 ......................         2          14,774       0.01
16.000 - 16.499 ......................         1          71,760       0.07
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................     1,083   $  99,637,815     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======


                      REMAINING TERM TO STATED MATURITY OF
              THE FIXED-RATE MORTGAGE LOANS AS OF THE CUT-OFF DATE

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
           REMAINING TERM TO            MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
            STATED MATURITY               LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
  1 - 60 months ......................       110   $   4,070,782       4.09%
 61 - 120 months .....................       182       8,375,636       8.41
121 - 180 months .....................       154       7,235,835       7.26
181 - 240 months .....................       177      17,559,707      17.62
241 - 300 months .....................       202      37,732,154      37.87
301 - 360 months .....................       257      24,588,768      24.68
Greater than or equal to 361 .........         1          74,932       0.08
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................     1,083   $  99,637,815     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======

                                      S-38



                   SEASONING OF THE FIXED-RATE MORTGAGE LOANS

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
                                        MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
             SEASONING                    LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
  1 - 60 months ......................       506   $  33,591,842      33.71%
 61 - 120 months .....................       457      50,287,137      50.47
121 - 180 months .....................       117      15,624,779      15.68
181 - 240 months .....................         3         134,057       0.13
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................     1,083   $  99,637,815     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======


                 PROPERTY TYPES OF THE FIXED-RATE MORTGAGE LOANS

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
                                        MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
            PROPERTY TYPE                 LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
Single Family Residence ..............       920   $  79,214,542      79.50%
PUD ..................................        79      13,037,310      13.08
2-4 Family ...........................        40       5,044,407       5.06
Condominium ..........................        25       1,422,999       1.43
Manufactured Housing .................         8         546,875       0.55
Cooperative ..........................         3         197,444       0.20
Other ................................         8         174,237       0.17
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................     1,083   $  99,637,815     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======


     ORIGINAL COMBINED LOAN-TO-VALUE RATIOS OF THE FIXED-RATE MORTGAGE LOANS

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
          ORIGINAL COMBINED             MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
       LOAN-TO-VALUE RATIO (%)            LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
Less than or equal to 50.00 ..........        43   $   4,508,634       4.53%
50.01 -  55.00 .......................        20       1,995,796       2.00
55.01 -  60.00 .......................        19       1,330,651       1.34
60.01 -  65.00 .......................        32       4,477,557       4.49
65.01 -  70.00 .......................        60       8,638,598       8.67
70.01 -  75.00 .......................        60       8,900,796       8.93
75.01 -  80.00 .......................       179      22,854,466      22.94
80.01 -  85.00 .......................        71       7,161,033       7.19
85.01 -  90.00 .......................        98      12,281,862      12.33
90.01 -  95.00 .......................       138      10,995,147      11.04
95.01 - 100.00 .......................       283      12,045,370      12.09
Greater than or equal to 100.01 ......        80       4,447,905       4.46
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................     1,083   $  99,637,815     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======

                                      S-39



 CURRENT UPDATED COMBINED LOAN-TO-VALUE RATIOS OF THE FIXED-RATE MORTGAGE LOANS

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
       CURRENT UPDATED COMBINED         MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
       LOAN-TO-VALUE RATIO (%)*           LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
Less than or equal to 50.00 ..........       316   $  37,419,054      37.56%
50.01 -  55.00 .......................        57       6,897,503       6.92
55.01 -  60.00 .......................        53       6,285,401       6.31
60.01 -  65.00 .......................        49       5,728,849       5.75
65.01 -  70.00 .......................        53       5,197,608       5.22
70.01 -  75.00 .......................        59       4,884,009       4.90
75.01 -  80.00 .......................        82       6,371,309       6.39
80.01 -  85.00 .......................        83       7,700,123       7.73
85.01 -  90.00 .......................        54       4,555,072       4.57
90.01 -  95.00 .......................        72       3,007,591       3.02
95.01 - 100.00 .......................       132       7,492,150       7.52
Greater than or equal to 100.01 ......        73       4,099,147       4.11
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................     1,083   $  99,637,815     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======

- ----------
*Current  Updated  CLTV's are  calculated  by taking the original CLTV for those
loans seasoned 11 months or less and an updated CLTV for those loans seasoned 12
months or more.  Updated  CLTV's for those loans  seasoned 12 months or more are
calculated  by taking the unpaid  principal  balance as of the Cut-off Date plus
the senior  balance,  in the case of junior liens,  divided by the BPO value, if
available. If a BPO was not available, then an AVM was used. If neither a BPO or
an AVM was available, the original appraisal value was used. Updated CLTV's were
calculated  for  83.22%  of the  fixed-rate  Mortgage  Loans.  For  purposes  of
calculating updated CLTV's, a BPO was used for 79.24% of the fixed-rate Mortgage
Loans by balance, an AVM was used for 19.37% of the fixed-rate Mortgage Loans by
balance,  and an original  appraisal  value was used for 1.39% of the fixed-rate
Mortgage Loans by balance.  An updated CLTV was not calculated for 16.78% of the
fixed-rate Mortgage Loans.


               DOCUMENTATION TYPE OF THE FIXED-RATE MORTGAGE LOANS

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
                                        MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
          DOCUMENTATION TYPE              LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
Full Documentation ...................       836   $  81,954,003      82.25%
Stated Documentation .................        83       6,468,165       6.49
Limited Documentation ................        67       4,196,504       4.21
Alternative Documentation ............        29       1,591,075       1.60
Full/Alt Documentation ...............        20       1,489,387       1.49
No Income Verifier ...................        15       1,223,225       1.23
No Income No Asset ...................         9         895,415       0.90
No Documentation .....................        10         639,167       0.64
Reduced Documentation ................         5         559,634       0.56
Streamline ...........................         5         370,811       0.37
Unknown ..............................         4         250,429       0.25
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................     1,083   $  99,637,815     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======

                                      S-40



              CURRENT FICO SCORE FOR THE FIXED-RATE MORTGAGE LOANS

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
                                        MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
          CURRENT FICO SCORE              LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
Not Available ........................        29   $   2,000,481       2.01%
Less than or equal to 499 ............       108      10,074,753      10.11
500 - 524 ............................       131      10,804,097      10.84
525 - 549 ............................       143      10,280,566      10.32
550 - 574 ............................       119       8,748,765       8.78
575 - 599 ............................       125      10,818,048      10.86
600 - 624 ............................       100       9,272,872       9.31
625 - 649 ............................       106      11,631,096      11.67
650 - 674 ............................        96      10,033,732      10.07
675 - 699 ............................        57       7,840,304       7.87
700 - 724 ............................        37       4,554,825       4.57
725 - 749 ............................        15       1,772,654       1.78
750 - 774 ............................         8         939,639       0.94
775 - 799 ............................         6         770,258       0.77
Greater than or equal to 800 .........         3          95,724       0.10
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................     1,083   $  99,637,815     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======


                  LOAN PURPOSE OF THE FIXED-RATE MORTGAGE LOANS

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
                                        MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
            LOAN PURPOSE                  LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
Refinance - Cashout ..................       527   $  37,718,209      37.86%
Purchase .............................       324      36,035,380      36.17
Refinance - Rate Term ................       199      24,335,316      24.42
Unknown ..............................        21         957,096       0.96
Debt Consolidation ...................         9         526,658       0.53
Home Improvement .....................         2          52,759       0.05
Construction .........................         1          12,397       0.01
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................     1,083   $  99,637,815     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======

                                      S-41



                OCCUPANCY STATUS OF THE FIXED-RATE MORTGAGE LOANS

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
                                        MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
         OCCUPANCY STATUS*                LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
Primary ..............................     1,028   $  95,612,681      95.96%
Investment ...........................        45       2,848,732       2.86
Second Home ..........................        10       1,176,402       1.18
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................     1,083   $  99,637,815     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======

*The occupancy status of a Mortgaged  Property is as represented by the borrower
in its loan application.


    PREPAYMENT PENALTY MONTHS OF THE FIXED-RATE MORTGAGE LOANS AT ORIGINATION

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
       PREPAYMENT PENALTY MONTHS        MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
            AT ORIGINATION                LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
 0 ...................................       928   $  87,108,868      87.43%
12 ...................................        18       2,064,871       2.07
24 ...................................        52       3,157,621       3.17
36 ...................................        81       7,190,470       7.22
60 ...................................         4         115,985       0.12
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................     1,083   $  99,637,815     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======


                  LOAN STATUS OF THE FIXED-RATE MORTGAGE LOANS

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
                                        MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
            LOAN STATUS                   LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
Active ...............................       962   $  89,237,442      89.56%
Bankruptcy ...........................       105       8,471,540       8.50
Forbearance ..........................        16       1,928,833       1.94
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................     1,083   $  99,637,815     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======

                                      S-42



                         ADJUSTABLE-RATE MORTGAGE LOANS
                         ------------------------------


              COLLATERAL TYPE OF THE ADJUSTABLE-RATE MORTGAGE LOANS

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
                                        MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
           COLLATERAL TYPE                LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
ARM ..................................       292   $  49,403,864     100.00%
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................       292   $  49,403,864     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======


                                 DAYS DELINQUENT

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
                                        MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
           DAYS DELINQUENT                LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
 0 -  29 .............................       250   $  42,485,557      86.00%
30 -  59 .............................        39       6,580,289      13.32
60 -  89 .............................         1         167,443       0.34
90 - 119 .............................         2         170,575       0.35
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................       292   $  49,403,864     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======


               LIEN PRIORITY OF THE ADJUSTABLE-RATE MORTGAGE LOANS

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
                                        MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
            LIEN PRIORITY                 LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
First Lien ...........................       292   $  49,403,864     100.00%
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................       292   $  49,403,864     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======

                                      S-43



     PRINCIPAL BALANCES OF THE ADJUSTABLE-RATE MORTGAGE LOANS AT ORIGINATION

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                         NUMBER     PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                           OF        BALANCE         BALANCE
          PRINCIPAL BALANCE             MORTGAGE  OUTSTANDING AT  OUTSTANDING AT
          AT ORIGINATION ($)              LOANS     ORIGINATION    ORIGINATION
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
      0.01 -  50,000.00 ..............        17   $     741,217       1.50%
 50,000.01 - 100,000.00 ..............        89       6,443,766      13.04
100,000.01 - 150,000.00 ..............        64       7,534,404      15.25
150,000.01 - 200,000.00 ..............        39       6,814,266      13.79
200,000.01 - 250,000.00 ..............        24       5,319,567      10.77
250,000.01 - 300,000.00 ..............        14       3,939,511       7.97
300,000.01 - 350,000.00 ..............        12       3,899,632       7.89
350,000.01 - 400,000.00 ..............        14       5,273,127      10.67
400,000.01 - 450,000.00 ..............         4       1,720,735       3.48
450,000.01 - 500,000.00 ..............         8       3,821,365       7.73
500,000.01 - 550,000.00 ..............         4       2,096,041       4.24
550,000.01 - 600,000.00 ..............         2       1,162,733       2.35
600,000.01 - 650,000.00 ..............         1         637,500       1.29
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................       292   $  49,403,864     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======


            PRINCIPAL BALANCES OF THE ADJUSTABLE-RATE MORTGAGE LOANS
                             AS OF THE CUT-OFF DATE

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
     PRINCIPAL BALANCE AS OF THE        MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
           CUT-OFF DATE ($)               LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
      0.01 -  50,000.00 ..............        23   $     948,296       1.92%
 50,000.01 - 100,000.00 ..............        85       6,431,258      13.02
100,000.01 - 150,000.00 ..............        63       7,489,652      15.16
150,000.01 - 200,000.00 ..............        38       6,664,449      13.49
200,000.01 - 250,000.00 ..............        24       5,319,567      10.77
250,000.01 - 300,000.00 ..............        14       3,939,511       7.97
300,000.01 - 350,000.00 ..............        13       4,225,217       8.55
350,000.01 - 400,000.00 ..............        13       4,947,541      10.01
400,000.01 - 450,000.00 ..............         4       1,720,735       3.48
450,000.01 - 500,000.00 ..............         8       3,821,365       7.73
500,000.01 - 550,000.00 ..............         4       2,096,041       4.24
550,000.01 - 600,000.00 ..............         2       1,162,733       2.35
600,000.01 - 650,000.00 ..............         1         637,500       1.29
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................       292   $  49,403,864     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======

                                      S-44



                      GEOGRAPHIC DISTRIBUTION OF THE MORTGAGED PROPERTIES OF THE
                         ADJUSTABLE RATE MORTGAGE LOANS

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
                                        MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
              LOCATION                    LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
California ...........................        40   $  10,888,576      22.04%
New York .............................        27       6,456,323      13.07
Florida ..............................        24       3,374,394       6.83
Texas ................................        19       2,837,854       5.74
New Jersey ...........................        10       2,566,697       5.20
Michigan .............................        25       2,507,161       5.07
Massachusetts ........................        10       2,357,057       4.77
Georgia ..............................        14       2,007,246       4.06
Connecticut ..........................         5       1,762,499       3.57
Pennsylvania .........................        20       1,749,600       3.54
Colorado .............................         5       1,267,141       2.56
Virginia .............................         5         969,567       1.96
Illinois .............................         8         959,596       1.94
Washington ...........................         5         876,449       1.77
Hawaii ...............................         3         862,428       1.75
Ohio .................................         8         720,271       1.46
Indiana ..............................         8         653,209       1.32
Alabama ..............................         5         570,172       1.15
North Carolina .......................         6         569,703       1.15
New Hampshire ........................         5         565,816       1.15
Wisconsin ............................         3         551,169       1.12
Tennessee ............................         3         457,551       0.93
Missouri .............................         6         439,683       0.89
Maine ................................         4         399,735       0.81
Minnesota ............................         1         373,930       0.76
Nevada ...............................         2         339,863       0.69
New Mexico ...........................         1         312,622       0.63
District of Columbia .................         1         298,123       0.60
Maryland .............................         3         293,243       0.59
Kentucky .............................         4         275,848       0.56
Arizona ..............................         3         267,074       0.54
Utah .................................         2         196,009       0.40
Iowa .................................         2         160,342       0.32
Rhode Island .........................         1         132,899       0.27
Arkansas .............................         1         119,651       0.24
Delaware .............................         1         105,517       0.21
Vermont ..............................         1          93,351       0.19
Oklahoma .............................         1          65,493       0.13
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................       292   $  49,403,864     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======

                                      S-45



   MORTGAGE RATES OF THE ADJUSTABLE-RATE MORTGAGE LOANS AS OF THE CUT-OFF DATE

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
                                        MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
          MORTGAGE RATE (%)               LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
 4.000 -  4.499 ......................         4   $     593,117       1.20%
 4.500 -  4.999 ......................         7       1,527,182       3.09
 5.000 -  5.499 ......................        18       4,839,515       9.80
 5.500 -  5.999 ......................         8       1,969,580       3.99
 6.000 -  6.499 ......................        22       6,138,834      12.43
 6.500 -  6.999 ......................        48       9,505,887      19.24
 7.000 -  7.499 ......................        33       4,861,053       9.84
 7.500 -  7.999 ......................        47       7,313,897      14.80
 8.000 -  8.499 ......................        28       3,929,083       7.95
 8.500 -  8.999 ......................        28       4,237,218       8.58
 9.000 -  9.499 ......................        16       1,791,122       3.63
 9.500 -  9.999 ......................        14       1,333,032       2.70
10.000 - 10.499 ......................         6         496,359       1.00
10.500 - 10.999 ......................         6         398,605       0.81
11.000 - 11.499 ......................         3         145,354       0.29
11.500 - 11.999 ......................         4         324,025       0.66
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................       292   $  49,403,864     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======


                      REMAINING TERM TO STATED MATURITY OF
            THE ADJUSTABLE-RATE MORTGAGE LOANS AS OF THE CUT-OFF DATE

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
          REMAINING TERM TO             MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
           STATED MATURITY                LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
121 - 180 months .....................         4   $     193,049       0.39%
181 - 240 months .....................         2         176,555       0.36
241 - 300 months .....................        21       6,213,632      12.58
301 - 360 months .....................       265      42,820,627      86.67
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................       292   $  49,403,864     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======


                 SEASONING OF THE ADJUSTABLE-RATE MORTGAGE LOANS

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
                                        MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
              SEASONING                   LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
  1 -  60 months .....................       282   $  48,441,704      98.05%
 61 - 120 months .....................         4         592,556       1.20
121 - 180 months .....................         3         281,402       0.57
181 - 240 months .....................         3          88,202       0.18
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................       292   $  49,403,864     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======

                                      S-46



              PROPERTY TYPES OF THE ADJUSTABLE-RATE MORTGAGE LOANS

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
                                        MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
            PROPERTY TYPE                 LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
Single Family Residence ..............       236   $  37,653,301      76.22%
2-4 Family ...........................        27       7,458,582      15.10
Condominium ..........................        16       2,585,848       5.23
Manufactured Housing .................         9         915,462       1.85
PUD ..................................         3         706,714       1.43
Cooperative ..........................         1          83,957       0.17
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................       292   $  49,403,864     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======


  ORIGINAL COMBINED LOAN-TO-VALUE RATIOS OF THE ADJUSTABLE-RATE MORTGAGE LOANS

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
          ORIGINAL COMBINED             MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
       LOAN-TO-VALUE RATIO (%)            LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
Less than or equal to 50.00 ..........         2   $     240,373       0.49%
50.01 - 55.00 ........................         6         665,894       1.35
55.01 - 60.00 ........................         7       1,345,052       2.72
60.01 - 65.00 ........................         8       1,062,069       2.15
65.01 - 70.00 ........................        18       3,091,174       6.26
70.01 - 75.00 ........................        23       2,998,882       6.07
75.01 - 80.00 ........................        99      17,291,549      35.00
80.01 - 85.00 ........................        46       8,446,047      17.10
85.01 - 90.00 ........................        44       8,561,263      17.33
90.01 - 95.00 ........................        24       2,713,750       5.49
95.01 - 100.00 .......................        13       2,447,253       4.95
Greater than or equal to 100.01 ......         2         540,558       1.09
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................       292   $  49,403,864     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======

                                      S-47



                  CURRENT UPDATED COMBINED LOAN-TO-VALUE RATIOS
                     OF THE ADJUSTABLE-RATE MORTGAGE LOANS

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
       CURRENT UPDATED COMBINED         MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
       LOAN-TO-VALUE RATIO (%)*           LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
Less than or equal to 50.00 ..........        12   $   1,202,533       2.43%
50.01 -  55.00 .......................         6         665,894       1.35
55.01 -  60.00 .......................         9       1,635,045       3.31
60.01 -  65.00 .......................         9       1,230,859       2.49
65.01 -  70.00 .......................        15       2,759,534       5.59
70.01 -  75.00 .......................        22       3,449,740       6.98
75.01 -  80.00 .......................        87      16,052,602      32.49
80.01 -  85.00 .......................        47       8,465,196      17.13
85.01 -  90.00 .......................        45       8,320,496      16.84
90.01 -  95.00 .......................        24       2,759,944       5.59
95.01 - 100.00 .......................        12       2,171,073       4.39
Greater than or equal to 100.01 ......         4         690,948       1.40
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................       292   $  49,403,864     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======

- --------------------
*Current  Updated  CLTV's are  calculated  by taking the original CLTV for those
loans seasoned 11 months or less and an updated CLTV for those loans seasoned 12
months or more.  Updated  CLTV's for those loans  seasoned 12 months or more are
calculated  by taking the unpaid  principal  balance as of the Cut-off Date plus
the senior  balance,  in the case of junior liens,  divided by the BPO value, if
available. If a BPO was not available, then an AVM was used. If neither a BPO or
an AVM was available, the original appraisal value was used. Updated CLTV's were
calculated  for 7.86% of the  adjustable-rate  Mortgage  Loans.  For purposes of
calculating  updated  CLTV's,  a BPO was used for 97.56% of the  adjustable-rate
Mortgage  Loans by  balance,  an AVM was used for  2.44% of the  adjustable-rate
Mortgage Loans by balance,  and an original  appraisal  value was used for 0% of
the  adjustable-rate  Mortgage  Loans  by  balance.  An  updated  CLTV  was  not
calculated for 92.14% of the adjustable-rate Mortgage Loans.


            DOCUMENTATION TYPE OF THE ADJUSTABLE-RATE MORTGAGE LOANS

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
                                        MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
          DOCUMENTATION TYPE              LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
Full Documentation ...................       179   $  24,226,109      49.04%
Stated Documentation .................        96      22,792,849      46.14
Limited Documentation ................         8       1,308,038       2.65
Reduced Documentation ................         2         613,011       1.24
Unknown ..............................         3         238,365       0.48
Full/Alt Documentation ...............         1         101,225       0.20
Alternative Documentation ............         1          90,039       0.18
No Documentation .....................         1          19,027       0.04
No Income Verifier ...................         1          15,201       0.03
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................       292   $  49,403,864     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======

                                      S-48



            CURRENT FICO SCORE FOR THE ADJUSTABLE-RATE MORTGAGE LOANS

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
                                        MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
         CURRENT FICO SCORE               LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
Not Available ........................         2   $     465,457       0.94%
Less than or equal to 499 ............        24       3,631,031       7.35
500 - 524 ............................        22       2,715,436       5.50
525 - 549 ............................        37       5,630,623      11.40
550 - 574 ............................        48       6,830,515      13.83
575 - 599 ............................        39       6,174,254      12.50
600 - 624 ............................        31       4,922,559       9.96
625 - 649 ............................        32       4,893,302       9.90
650 - 674 ............................        22       5,354,499      10.84
675 - 699 ............................        14       3,445,740       6.97
700 - 724 ............................         5       1,531,700       3.10
725 - 749 ............................         7       1,607,426       3.25
750 - 774 ............................         3       1,120,111       2.27
775 - 799 ............................         4         981,905       1.99
Greater than or equal to 800 .........         2          99,306       0.20
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................       292   $  49,403,864     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======


               LOAN PURPOSE OF THE ADJUSTABLE-RATE MORTGAGE LOANS

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
                                        MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
            LOAN PURPOSE                  LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
Refinance - Cashout ..................       162   $  26,861,877      54.37%
Purchase .............................        88      16,223,095      32.84
Refinance - Rate Term ................        35       5,089,892      10.30
Debt Consolidation ...................         6       1,002,529       2.03
Home Improvement .....................         1         226,471       0.46
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................       292   $  49,403,864     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======

                                      S-49



             OCCUPANCY STATUS OF THE ADJUSTABLE-RATE MORTGAGE LOANS

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
                                        MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
          OCCUPANCY STATUS*               LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
Primary ..............................       270   $  46,568,320      94.26%
Investment ...........................        17       1,674,274       3.39
Second Home ..........................         5       1,161,270       2.35
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................       292   $  49,403,864     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======

*The occupancy status of a Mortgaged  Property is as represented by the borrower
in its loan application.


          NEXT ADJUSTMENT DATES FOR THE ADJUSTABLE-RATE MORTGAGE LOANS
                          INCLUDED IN THE MORTGAGE POOL

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
                                        MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
         NEXT ADJUSTMENT DATE             LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
December 2004 ........................         1   $      38,715       0.08%
January 2005 .........................        22       6,053,475      12.25
February 2005 ........................         4         188,267       0.38
March 2005 ...........................         1          37,837       0.08
April 2005 ...........................         3         516,849       1.05
May 2005 .............................         5         408,474       0.83
June 2005 ............................         4         305,791       0.62
July 2005 ............................         2         127,690       0.26
August 2005 ..........................         1          64,348       0.13
September 2005 .......................         1         217,150       0.44
October 2005 .........................         1         100,609       0.20
November 2005 ........................         1          83,957       0.17
December 2005 ........................         6         818,112       1.66
January 2006 .........................        13       2,765,651       5.60
February 2006 ........................         8       2,269,892       4.59
March 2006 ...........................        49       8,607,372      17.42
April 2006 ...........................       139      21,302,535      43.12
May 2006 .............................        21       3,506,737       7.10
June 2006 ............................         2         318,979       0.65
October 2006 .........................         1          19,027       0.04
March 2007 ...........................         3         673,134       1.36
April 2007 ...........................         2         331,417       0.67
June 2007 ............................         1         123,046       0.25
August 2008 ..........................         1         524,800       1.06
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................       292   $  49,403,864     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======

                                      S-50



               GROSS MARGINS OF THE ADJUSTABLE-RATE MORTGAGE LOANS
                         INCLUDED IN THE MORTGAGE POOL

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
                                        MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
           GROSS MARGIN (%)               LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
0.000 - 0.499 ........................         1   $      38,715       0.08%
1.500 - 1.999 ........................         1         104,847       0.21
2.000 - 2.499 ........................         2         138,247       0.28
2.500 - 2.999 ........................         7       1,239,985       2.51
3.000 - 3.499 ........................         8       2,156,559       4.37
3.500 - 3.999 ........................        17       4,685,327       9.48
4.000 - 4.499 ........................        13       2,807,018       5.68
4.500 - 4.999 ........................        24       4,199,289       8.50
5.000 - 5.499 ........................        42       6,913,480      13.99
5.500 - 5.999 ........................        43       8,006,216      16.21
6.000 - 6.499 ........................        35       4,474,738       9.06
6.500 - 6.999 ........................        66      11,187,732      22.65
7.000 - 7.499 ........................        18       1,954,472       3.96
7.500 - 7.999 ........................         6         517,293       1.05
8.000 - 8.499 ........................         6         707,084       1.43
8.500 - 8.999 ........................         1         131,695       0.27
9.000 - 9.499 ........................         1          49,953       0.10
9.500 - 9.999 ........................         1          91,213       0.18
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................       292   $  49,403,864     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======


          MAXIMUM MORTGAGE RATES OF THE ADJUSTABLE-RATE MORTGAGE LOANS
                          INCLUDED IN THE MORTGAGE POOL

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
          MAXIMUM MORTGAGE              MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
               RATE (%)                   LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
10.500 - 10.999 ......................         1   $     157,528       0.32%
11.000 - 11.499 ......................         2         205,234       0.42
11.500 - 11.999 ......................         8       2,008,616       4.07
12.000 - 12.499 ......................        39      10,647,355      21.55
12.500 - 12.999 ......................        32       5,740,768      11.62
13.000 - 13.499 ......................        26       4,147,416       8.39
13.500 - 13.999 ......................        50       8,697,253      17.60
14.000 - 14.499 ......................        22       2,994,974       6.06
14.500 - 14.999 ......................        40       6,072,136      12.29
15.000 - 15.499 ......................        24       3,816,004       7.72
15.500 - 15.999 ......................        14       1,608,834       3.26
16.000 - 16.499 ......................        13       1,291,859       2.61
16.500 - 16.999 ......................        12       1,202,605       2.43
17.000 - 17.499 ......................         3         314,359       0.64
17.500 - 17.999 ......................         6         498,922       1.01
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................       292   $  49,403,864     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======

                                      S-51



          MINIMUM MORTGAGE RATES OF THE ADJUSTABLE-RATE MORTGAGE LOANS
                          INCLUDED IN THE MORTGAGE POOL

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
           MINIMUM MORTGAGE             MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
               RATE (%)                   LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
 0.000 -  0.499 ......................         1   $      38,715       0.08%
 1.000 -  1.499 ......................         1          30,481       0.06
 2.000 -  2.499 ......................         2         187,394       0.38
 2.500 -  2.999 ......................         1          94,802       0.19
 3.000 -  3.499 ......................         1          90,039       0.18
 3.500 -  3.999 ......................         2         241,485       0.49
 4.000 -  4.499 ......................         7       2,254,748       4.56
 4.500 -  4.999 ......................        14       3,829,612       7.75
 5.000 -  5.499 ......................         5         950,315       1.92
 5.500 -  5.999 ......................         9       2,074,427       4.20
 6.000 -  6.499 ......................        20       5,540,292      11.21
 6.500 -  6.999 ......................        47       9,415,848      19.06
 7.000 -  7.499 ......................        32       4,756,206       9.63
 7.500 -  7.999 ......................        48       7,502,665      15.19
 8.000 -  8.499 ......................        29       3,991,174       8.08
 8.500 -  8.999 ......................        28       4,237,218       8.58
 9.000 -  9.499 ......................        16       1,791,122       3.63
 9.500 -  9.999 ......................        14       1,333,032       2.70
10.000 - 10.499 ......................         5         434,268       0.88
10.500 - 10.999 ......................         5         359,889       0.73
11.000 - 11.499 ......................         2         114,873       0.23
11.500 - 11.999 ......................         3         135,258       0.27
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................       292   $  49,403,864     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======


        INITIAL PERIODIC RATE CAPS OF THE ADJUSTABLE-RATE MORTGAGE LOANS
                          INCLUDED IN THE MORTGAGE POOL

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
                                        MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
     INITIAL PERIODIC RATE CAP (%)        LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
0.001 - 1.000 ........................        10   $   1,274,432       2.58%
1.001 - 2.000 ........................        49       9,285,960      18.80
2.001 - 3.000 ........................       231      38,433,930      77.80
4.001 - 5.000 ........................         1         325,585       0.66
5.001 - 6.000 ........................         1          83,957       0.17
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................       292   $  49,403,864     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======

                                      S-52



       SUBSEQUENT PERIODIC RATE CAPS OF THE ADJUSTABLE-RATE MORTGAGE LOANS
                          INCLUDED IN THE MORTGAGE POOL

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
                                        MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
   SUBSEQUENT PERIODIC RATE CAP (%)       LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
1.000 - 1.999 ........................       267   $  42,798,626      86.63%
2.000 - 2.999 ........................         8         984,161       1.99
3.000 - 3.999 ........................        17       5,621,077      11.38
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................       292   $  49,403,864     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======


            LIFETIME RATE CAPS OF THE ADJUSTABLE-RATE MORTGAGE LOANS
                         INCLUDED IN THE MORTGAGE POOL

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
                                        MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
         LIFETIME RATE CAP (%)            LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
 4.000 -  4.499 ......................         1   $      19,027       0.04%
 5.000 -  5.499 ......................         1         325,585       0.66
 5.500 -  5.999 ......................         1          34,285       0.07
 6.000 -  6.499 ......................       170      25,187,998      50.98
 7.000 -  7.499 ......................       109      21,532,083      43.58
 7.500 -  7.999 ......................         6       2,018,808       4.09
 8.000 -  8.499 ......................         1          94,802       0.19
 8.500 -  8.999 ......................         1          88,211       0.18
 9.000 -  9.499 ......................         1          38,715       0.08
12.000 - 12.499 ......................         1          64,348       0.13
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................       292   $  49,403,864     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======

                                      S-53



 PREPAYMENT PENALTY MONTHS OF THE ADJUSTABLE-RATE MORTGAGE LOANS AT ORIGINATION

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
      PREPAYMENT PENALTY MONTHS         MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
           AT ORIGINATION                 LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
 0 ...................................       108   $  21,323,363      43.16%
12 ...................................         4       1,092,821       2.21
24 ...................................       171      26,027,219      52.68
36 ...................................         9         960,461       1.94
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................       292   $  49,403,864     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======


                LOAN STATUS OF THE ADJUSTABLE-RATE MORTGAGE LOANS

                                                    AGGREGATE     % OF AGGREGATE
                                                    PRINCIPAL       PRINCIPAL
                                         NUMBER      BALANCE         BALANCE
                                           OF      OUTSTANDING     OUTSTANDING
                                        MORTGAGE    AS OF THE       AS OF THE
             LOAN STATUS                  LOANS    CUT-OFF DATE    CUT-OFF DATE
- --------------------------------------  --------  --------------  --------------
Active ...............................       283   $  48,296,753      97.76%
Forbearance ..........................         5         631,797       1.28
Bankruptcy ...........................         4         475,314       0.96
                                        --------   -------------     ------
     Total ...........................       292   $  49,403,864     100.00%
                                        ========   =============     ======

                                      S-54



THE INDEX

         As of any Adjustment Date, the index applicable to the determination of
the  Mortgage  Rate on each ARM Loan  will  generally  be (A)  with  respect  to
approximately 86.55% of the Mortgage Loans, by aggregate principal balance as of
the Cut-off  Date,  the average of the  interbank  offered  rates for  six-month
United  States  dollar  deposits in the London  market as  published in The Wall
Street  Journal  and as  most  recently  available  either  (i) as of the  first
business  day 45 days  prior  to that  Adjustment  Date or (ii) as of the  first
business  day of the  month  preceding  the  month of the  Adjustment  Date,  as
specified in the related mortgage note ("Six-Month  LIBOR"), (B) with respect to
approximately 11.38% of the Mortgage Loans, by aggregate principal balance as of
the Cut-off  Date,  the average of the  interbank  offered  rates for  one-month
United  States  dollar  deposits in the London  market as  published in The Wall
Street  Journal  and as  most  recently  available  either  (i) as of the  first
business  day 45 days  prior  to that  Adjustment  Date or (ii) as of the  first
business  day of the  month  preceding  the  month of the  Adjustment  Date,  as
specified in the related mortgage note  ("One-Month  LIBOR") (C) with respect to
approximately  1.79% of the Mortgage Loans, by aggregate principal balance as of
the Cut-off Date, the weekly average yield on United States Treasury  Securities
adjusted to a constant maturity of one year, as published in the Federal Reserve
Statistical  Release H.15 (519) as most recently  announced as of a date 45 days
prior  to  that  Adjustment  Date   ("One-Year   CMT"),   (D)  with  respect  to
approximately  0.21% of the ARM Loans, by aggregate  principal balance as of the
Cut-off Date, the National Average Contract Mortgage Rate (the index figure used
for each  adjustment  to the  National  Average  Contract  Rate will be the most
recently  available  index  as of the  Adjustment  Date),  (E) with  respect  to
approximately  0.04% of the ARM Loans, by aggregate  principal balance as of the
Cut-off Date,  the weekly  average yield on United  States  Treasury  Securities
adjusted to a constant  maturity of three  years,  as  published  in the Federal
Reserve  Statistical  Release H.15 (519) as most recently announced as of a date
45 days prior to that Adjustment Date  ("Three-Year  CMT"), and (F) with respect
to approximately  0.03% of the ARM Loans, by aggregate  principal  balance as of
the  Cut-off  Date,  the Cost of Funds  Index  ("COFI").  In the event  that the
related Index becomes unavailable or otherwise unpublished, the related Servicer
will select a comparable  alternative  index over which it has no direct control
and which is readily verifiable.

UNDERWRITING STANDARDS

         Underwriting  guidelines  are primarily  intended to evaluate the value
and adequacy of the mortgaged  property as  collateral  and are also intended to
consider the  borrower's  credit  standing and  repayment  ability.  The current
underwriting  guidelines of the  Originators are generally not applicable to the
Mortgage  Loans because the Mortgage  Loans in the trust fund are seasoned,  and
because  certain of the Mortgage Loans may have fallen outside of the parameters
of those underwriting guidelines at the time of their origination.  It is likely
that the underwriting  guidelines employed in connection with the origination of
the Mortgage  Loans are diverse and  generally  did not conform to Fannie Mae or
Freddie Mac guidelines.  Accordingly,  the Mortgage Loan Seller will not provide
an informed summary of any underwriting guidelines of the various Originators or
make a  determination  of  whether  the  Mortgage  Loans  were  underwritten  in
accordance  with the  underwriting  guidelines of the  Originators.  In general,
neither the  Mortgage  Loan Seller nor the  Depositor  has  re-underwritten  any
Mortgage Loan.

         As a result of the subprime underwriting guidelines, the lack of normal
compliance  with those  guidelines in some cases and the delinquency and payment
histories  of some of the  Mortgage  Loans,  the  Mortgage  Loans are  likely to
experience rates of delinquency, foreclosure and bankruptcy that are higher, and
that may be substantially  higher,  than (i) those experienced by mortgage loans
underwritten  to stricter  guidelines  or in a more  traditional  manner or (ii)
those  experienced by other mortgage pools backed by subprime mortgage loans. As
described under "Risk Factors- Nature of the Mortgage Loans," the Mortgage Loans
include mortgage loans that represent exceptions from the



                                      S-55


underwriting  guidelines.  A  substantial  portion of the Mortgage  Loans in the
Mortgage Pool represent underwriting exceptions.

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION CONCERNING THE MORTGAGE LOANS

         The description in this prospectus  supplement of the Mortgage Pool and
the Mortgaged  Properties is based upon the Mortgage Pool as  constituted  as of
the Cut-off Date. Prior to the issuance of the certificates,  Mortgage Loans may
be removed from the Mortgage Pool if the Depositor  deems the removal  necessary
or desirable, and may be prepaid at any time. A limited number of other mortgage
loans  may be  included  in the  Mortgage  Pool  prior  to the  issuance  of the
certificates  unless  including these mortgage loans would  materially alter the
characteristics of the Mortgage Pool as described in this prospectus supplement.
The  Depositor  believes  that the  information  set  forth  in this  prospectus
supplement will be representative of the characteristics of the Mortgage Pool as
it will be constituted  at the time the  certificates  are issued,  although the
range of Mortgage Rates and maturities and other characteristics of the Mortgage
Loans may vary.

                            YIELD ON THE CERTIFICATES

CERTAIN SHORTFALLS IN COLLECTIONS OF INTEREST

         When a principal  prepayment  in full is made on a Mortgage  Loan,  the
borrower  is  charged  interest  only  for the  period  from the Due Date of the
preceding  monthly  payment up to the date of the  prepayment,  instead of for a
full month. When a partial principal  prepayment is made on a Mortgage Loan, the
borrower is not charged  interest on the amount of the  prepayment for the month
in  which  the  prepayment  is  made.  In  addition,   the  application  of  the
Servicemembers  Civil Relief Act (the "Relief  Act") and similar  state or local
laws to any Mortgage Loan could adversely affect, for an indeterminate period of
time, the ability of the related Servicer to collect full amounts of interest on
such Mortgage  Loans.  Each Servicer is obligated to pay from its own funds only
those interest  shortfalls  attributable to voluntary  principal  prepayments in
full by the  borrowers  on the  Mortgage  Loans  serviced by such  Servicer  and
received  from the  16th day of the  month  prior  to the  month of the  related
Distribution Date to the last day of such prior month;  provided,  however, that
with respect to the first  Distribution  Date, the Servicers are required to pay
those  interest  shortfalls  in  connection  with  prepayments  in full received
between  January 1, 2005 and January 15, 2005,  and provided  further,  that the
obligation of Option One Mortgage  Corporation  ("Option One") and Ocwen Federal
Bank FSB  ("Ocwen") to remit the amount of any  shortfall in interest  resulting
from a  principal  prepayment  in full on a  Mortgage  Loan  serviced  by either
Servicer  shall be limited to the aggregate  Servicing  Fee (as defined  herein)
payable to Option One or Ocwen, as applicable,  for the related Due Period,  and
the obligation of Select Portfolio  Servicing,  Inc. ("SPS") to remit the amount
of any shortfall in interest resulting from a principal  prepayment in full on a
Mortgage  Loan  serviced by SPS shall be limited to  one-half  of the  aggregate
Servicing  Fee (as  defined  herein)  payable to SPS for the related Due Period.
None of the Servicers will remit any shortfalls in interest  attributable to the
application  of the Relief Act or any similar  state or local law.  Any interest
shortfalls attributable to voluntary principal prepayments required to be funded
but not funded by the Servicers are required to be paid by the Master  Servicer,
but only to the extent that such amount does not exceed the Master Servicing Fee
for the Mortgage Loans for the applicable  Distribution Date.  Accordingly,  the
effect of interest shortfalls  resulting from (i) principal  prepayments in part
on the Mortgage Loans, (ii) principal  prepayments in full on the Mortgage Loans
serviced by any  Servicer  received  from the 16th day of the month prior to the
month of the related Distribution Date to the last day of the month prior to the
month  of  the  related   Distribution   Date  (each,  a  "Prepayment   Interest
Shortfall"),  to the extent that they exceed any payments by the Master Servicer
or the  related  Servicer  ("Compensating  Interest")  or (iii)  any  shortfalls
resulting from the application of the Relief Act or similar state or local laws,
will be to reduce the aggregate  amount of interest  collected that is available
for  distribution to  certificateholders.  Any such shortfalls will be allocated
among   the    certificates    as   provided   under    "Description    of   the
Certificates-Interest   Distributions   on   the   Offered   Certificates"   and
"-Overcollateralization  Provisions"

                                      S-56


in this  prospectus  supplement.  See  "Certain  Legal  Aspects of the  Mortgage
Loans-Servicemembers Civil Relief Act" in the prospectus.

GENERAL PREPAYMENT CONSIDERATIONS

         The  rate  of  principal  payments  on the  Offered  Certificates,  the
aggregate amount of distributions on such certificates and the yield to maturity
of such  certificates  will be  related to the rate and  timing of  payments  of
principal on the Mortgage Loans. The rate of principal  payments on the Mortgage
Loans will in turn be affected by the  amortization  schedules  of the  Mortgage
Loans as they change from time to time to  accommodate  changes in the  Mortgage
Rates  and by the rate of  principal  prepayments  thereon  (including  for this
purpose,  payments  resulting from  refinancings,  liquidations  of the Mortgage
Loans  due to  defaults,  casualties,  condemnations  and  repurchases,  whether
optional or  required,  by the  Depositor  or the  Mortgage  Loan  Seller).  The
Mortgage  Loans  may be  prepaid  by the  borrowers  at any  time;  however,  as
described under "The Mortgage Pool" in this prospectus supplement,  with respect
to approximately 27.25% of the Mortgage Loans, by aggregate principal balance of
the Mortgage  Loans as of the Cut-off Date, a prepayment may subject the related
borrower to a Prepayment Charge.

         Prepayments,  liquidations  and  repurchases of the Mortgage Loans will
result in  distributions  in respect of principal to the holders of the class or
classes of Offered  Certificates  then  entitled to receive  distributions  that
otherwise  would be distributed  over the remaining terms of the Mortgage Loans.
Since the rates of payment of  principal  on the  Mortgage  Loans will depend on
future  events and a variety of factors,  no  assurance  can be given as to that
rate or the rate of  principal  prepayments.  The  extent  to which the yield to
maturity  of any class of  Offered  Certificates  may vary from the  anticipated
yield  will  depend  upon the  degree  to which  the  Offered  Certificates  are
purchased  at a  discount  or  premium  and the  degree to which  the  timing of
payments thereon is sensitive to prepayments on the Mortgage Loans.  Further, an
investor should consider,  in the case of any Offered Certificate purchased at a
discount,  the risk that a slower than anticipated rate of principal payments on
the Mortgage Loans could result in an actual yield to the investor that is lower
than the anticipated yield. In the case of any Offered Certificate  purchased at
a premium,  there is a risk that a faster  than  anticipated  rate of  principal
payments  could result in an actual yield to the investor that is lower than the
anticipated yield. In general,  the earlier prepayments of principal are made on
the  Mortgage  Loans,  the  greater  the effect on the yield to  maturity of the
Offered  Certificates.  As a  result,  the  effect  on an  investors'  yield  of
principal  payments  occurring  at a  rate  higher  (or  lower)  than  the  rate
anticipated by the investor during the period immediately following the issuance
of the  Offered  Certificates  would not be fully  offset by a  subsequent  like
reduction (or increase) in the rate of principal payments.

         It is  highly  unlikely  that the  Mortgage  Loans  will  prepay at any
constant  rate until  maturity or that all of the Mortgage  Loans will prepay at
the same rate.  Moreover,  the timing of  prepayments  on the Mortgage Loans may
significantly affect the yield to maturity on the Offered Certificates,  even if
the average rate of principal payments  experienced over time is consistent with
an investor's expectation.

         The rate of payments (including prepayments) on pools of mortgage loans
is influenced by a variety of economic, geographic, social and other factors. If
prevailing  mortgage  rates fall  significantly  below the Mortgage Rates on the
Mortgage  Loans,  the rate of prepayment  and  refinancing  would be expected to
increase.  Conversely, if prevailing mortgage rates rise significantly above the
Mortgage  Rates on the Mortgage  Loans,  the rate of  prepayment on the Mortgage
Loans would be expected to  decrease.  Other  factors  affecting  prepayment  of
mortgage  loans include  changes in borrowers'  housing  needs,  job  transfers,
unemployment,  borrowers'  net equity in the mortgaged  properties and servicing
decisions.  The prepayment  experience of the Delayed First Adjustment  Mortgage
Loans may  differ  from that of the other  Mortgage  Loans.  The  Delayed  First

                                      S-57


Adjustment Mortgage Loans may be subject to greater rates of prepayments as they
approach their initial  Adjustment  Dates even if market interest rates are only
slightly higher or lower than the Mortgage Rates on the Delayed First Adjustment
Mortgage Loans as borrowers seek to avoid changes in their monthly payments.  In
addition,  the existence of the applicable  Periodic Rate Cap,  Maximum Mortgage
Rate and  Minimum  Mortgage  Rate  may  affect  the  likelihood  of  prepayments
resulting  from  refinancings.  There  can be no  certainty  as to the  rate  of
prepayments  on the  Mortgage  Loans  during  any period or over the life of the
certificates. See "Yield Considerations" in the prospectus.

         Because principal  distributions are paid to certain classes of Offered
Certificates  before other classes,  holders of classes of Offered  Certificates
having a later priority of payment bear a greater risk of losses than holders of
classes having earlier priorities for distribution of principal. This is because
the certificates having a later priority of payment will represent an increasing
percentage   interest  in  the  trust  fund  during  the  period  prior  to  the
commencement of distributions of principal on these  certificates.  As described
under "Description of the  Certificates--Principal  Distributions on the Offered
Certificates"  in this  prospectus  supplement,  prior to the Stepdown Date, all
principal  payments on the  Mortgage  Loans will be  allocated  to the Class A-1
Certificates.  Thereafter,  as further described in this prospectus  supplement,
during certain periods,  subject to certain  delinquency  triggers  described in
this prospectus supplement, all principal payments on the Mortgage Loans will be
allocated  among the Class A-1  Certificates  and all  classes of the  Mezzanine
Certificates   in  the   priorities   described   under   "Description   of  the
Certificates--Principal  Distributions  on the  Offered  Certificates"  in  this
prospectus supplement.

         In  general,  defaults  on  mortgage  loans are  expected to occur with
greater frequency in their early years. In addition, default rates may be higher
for mortgage loans used to refinance an existing mortgage loan.  Because certain
of the  Mortgage  Loans have the  histories  and defects  discussed  under "Risk
Factors--Nature  of the Mortgage Loans" herein,  the risk of delinquencies  with
respect to, and the rate and severity of losses on, the  Mortgage  Loans will be
greater than that of other pools of subprime mortgage loans. The characteristics
of the  Mortgage  Pool are likely to affect  the  prepayment  experience  of the
Mortgage Loans, and consequently of the Offered  Certificates,  in a manner that
differs from other pools of subprime mortgage loans. The Scratch & Dent Mortgage
Loans and certain of the  Re-performing  Mortgage  Loans may  experience  higher
rates of prepayment due to  foreclosures  and  liquidations  than other pools of
subprime mortgage loans might experience.  See "The Mortgage  Pool--Underwriting
Standards" in this prospectus supplement.

SPECIAL YIELD CONSIDERATIONS

         The Mortgage Rates on  approximately  66.85% of the Mortgage  Loans, by
aggregate  principal balance as of the Cut-off Date, are fixed and will not vary
with any index.  The Mortgage  Rates on  approximately  86.55%,  11.38%,  1.79%,
0.21%,  0.04% and 0.03% of the ARM Loans, by aggregate  principal  balance as of
the Cut-off Date, adjust based upon Six-Month LIBOR,  One-Month LIBOR,  One-Year
CMT,  the National  Average  Contract  Mortgage  Rate,  Three-Year  CMT or COFI,
respectively,  subject to periodic and lifetime limitations and after an initial
period of six months or one,  two,  three or five years with  respect to Delayed
First  Adjustment   Mortgage  Loans.  The  Pass-Through   Rate  on  the  Offered
Certificates  adjusts  monthly  based  upon  One-Month  LIBOR,  subject  to  the
applicable  Net WAC  Pass-Through  Rate,  with the result that  increases in the
Pass-Through Rates on such certificates may be limited for extended periods in a
rising  interest  rate  environment.  Investors  should note that all of the ARM
Loans are Delayed  First  Adjustment  Mortgage  Loans.  The  interest due on the
Mortgage  Loans during any Due Period,  net of the expenses of the trust may not
equal the amount of  interest  that  would  accrue at  One-Month  LIBOR plus the
applicable  spread on the  Offered  Certificates  during  the  related  Interest
Accrual  Period;  however,  any  shortfall  of this kind will be  payable to the
holders  of such  certificates,  but  only  to the  extent  and in the  priority
described   under   "Description   of  the   Certificates--Overcollateralization
Provisions" in this prospectus  supplement.  In addition,  the indices set forth
above and  One-Month  LIBOR may  respond  differently  to  economic  and  market
factors. Thus, it is possible, for example, that if both One-Month LIBOR and the
related Index rise during the same period, One-Month LIBOR may rise more rapidly
than such Index potentially resulting in the


                                      S-58


application  of  the  applicable  Net  WAC  Pass-Through  Rate  on  the  Offered
Certificates,  which  would  adversely  affect  the  yield to  maturity  on such
certificates.

         If the  pass-through  rates on the Offered  Certificates are limited by
the  applicable  Net WAC  Pass-Through  Rate  for  any  Distribution  Date,  the
resulting  interest  shortfalls,  which are  referred to herein as "Net WAC Rate
Carryover Amounts", may be recovered by the holders of such certificates on such
Distribution  Date or on future  Distribution  Dates, to the extent that on such
Distribution  Date or future  Distribution  Dates there are any available  funds
remaining after certain other distributions on the Offered  Certificates and the
payment of certain  fees and  expenses of the trust.  The ratings on the Offered
Certificates  will not  address  the  likelihood  of any such  recovery  of such
interest shortfalls by holders of those certificates.

         As described  under  "Description  of the  Certificates--Allocation  of
Losses;  Subordination,"  amounts  otherwise  distributable  to  holders  of the
Mezzanine  Certificates  and the Class CE Certificates  may be made available to
protect  the  holders of the Class A-1  Certificates  against  interruptions  in
distributions due to certain borrower  delinquencies,  to the extent not covered
by P&I  Advances.  Such  delinquencies  may affect the yield to investors in the
Mezzanine  Certificates and, even if subsequently  cured, will affect the timing
of the receipt of distributions by the holders of the Mezzanine Certificates. In
addition,  the rate of delinquencies or losses will affect the rate of principal
payments   on   the   Mezzanine   Certificates.    See   "Description   of   the
Certificates--Principal  Distributions  on the  Offered  Certificates"  in  this
prospectus supplement.

WEIGHTED AVERAGE LIVES

         Weighted  average  life refers to the average  amount of time that will
elapse from the date of issuance of a security until each dollar of principal of
that security will be repaid to the investor.  The weighted  average life of the
Offered  Certificates  will be influenced by the rate at which  principal on the
Mortgage  Loans  is paid,  which  may be in the form of  scheduled  payments  or
prepayments  (including repurchases and prepayments of principal by the borrower
as well as amounts received by virtue of condemnation,  insurance or foreclosure
with respect to the Mortgage Loans), and the timing of these payments.

         The  "Assumed  Final  Distribution  Date" for each class of the Offered
Certificates  is the  Distribution  Date in November,  2050.  The Assumed  Final
Distribution  Date is the  Distribution  Date in the month  following the latest
scheduled  maturity date of all of the Mortgage Loans. Since the rate of payment
(including  prepayments)  of principal on the Mortgage  Loans can be expected to
exceed the scheduled rate of payments,  and could exceed the scheduled rate by a
substantial  amount,  the disposition of the last remaining Mortgage Loan may be
earlier, and could be substantially earlier, than the Assumed Final Distribution
Date.

         Prepayments  on  mortgage  loans are  commonly  measured  relative to a
prepayment standard or model. The prepayment  assumption used in this prospectus
supplement  with respect to the Mortgage Loans assumes a prepayment rate for the
mortgage  loans of 28% CPR. To assume 28% CPR or any other CPR  percentage is to
assume that the stated  percentage of the outstanding  principal  balance of the
pool is prepaid over the course of a year.  No  representation  is made that the
Mortgage Loans will prepay in accordance with such prepayment model or any other
rate. We refer to the prepayment model herein as a "Prepayment Assumption".

         The tables entitled "Percent of Initial  Certificate  Principal Balance
Outstanding at the Specified Percentages of the Prepayment  Assumption" indicate
the  percentage  of the  initial  Certificate  Principal  Balance of the Offered
Certificates  that would be outstanding after each of the dates shown at various
percentages  of CPR,  and the  corresponding  weighted  average  lives  of these
certificates.  The tables are based on the following  assumptions (the "Modeling
Assumptions"):  (i) the  Mortgage  Pool  consists  of 92  mortgage  loans with a
December 1, 2004 cut-off  date and the  characteristics  set forth  below,  (ii)

                                      S-59


distributions on the certificates are received, in cash, on the 25th day of each
month,  commencing  in January  2005;  (iii) the  Mortgage  Loans  prepay at the
percentages of CPR  indicated;  (iv) no defaults or  delinquencies  occur in the
payment by  borrowers of  principal  and  interest on the Mortgage  Loans and no
shortfalls  due to the  application  of the Relief Act or similar state or local
laws are  incurred;  (v)  neither  the  Master  Servicer  nor any  other  person
purchases  from the trust fund any Mortgage Loan under any  obligation or option
under the Pooling and Servicing  Agreement,  except as indicated in footnote two
in the  tables;  (vi)  scheduled  monthly  payments  on the  Mortgage  Loans are
received on the first day of each month  commencing  in December  2004,  and are
computed prior to giving effect to any prepayments  received in the prior month;
(vii) prepayments  representing payment in full of individual Mortgage Loans are
received on the last day of each month  commencing  in December 2004 and include
30 days'  interest  thereon;  (viii)  the  scheduled  monthly  payment  for each
Mortgage Loan is calculated based on the assumed  mortgage loan  characteristics
stated  below;  (ix) the  certificates  are  purchased on January 14, 2005;  (x)
Six-Month  LIBOR remains  constant at 2.84% per annum,  One-Month  LIBOR remains
constant at 2.42% per annum,  One-Year CMT remains  constant at 2.82% per annum,
Three-Year  CMT remains  constant at 3.36% per annum and the gross mortgage rate
on  each  ARM  Loan  is  adjusted   according  to  the  assumed   mortgage  loan
characteristics;  (xi) the Class P  Certificates  have a  Certificate  Principal
Balance equal to zero;  (xii) all of the Mortgage Loans accrue interest based on
a 360 day year  consisting of twelve 30 day months;  and (xiii) each  Servicer's
fee is assumed to be 0.50% per annum,  the Master  Servicer fee is assumed to be
equal to 0.0525%  per annum and the  Credit  Risk  Manager  fee is assumed to be
equal to 0.02% per annum.



























                                      S-60


                      ASSUMED MORTGAGE LOAN CHARACTERISTICS



                   REMAINING
                     TERM         REMAINING                  GROSS                             MAXIMUM       MINIMUM      INITIAL
    PRINCIPAL         TO        AMORTIZATION                MORTGAGE                   GROSS   MORTGAGE     MORTGAGE     PERIODIC
     BALANCE       MATURITY         TERM          AGE         RATE        INDEX       MARGIN     RATE         RATE       RATE CAP
       ($)         (MONTHS)       (MONTHS)      (MONTHS)      (%)          TYPE         (%)       (%)          (%)          (%)
   ----------     -----------   ------------    --------   -----------   ---------   --------  ---------    ---------   ----------
                                                                                                
                                                                        Six-Month
     38,715.42       140           140           220        10.500        LIBOR        0.250     15.500        0.250       3.000
                                                                        Six-Month
    455,997.74       320           320            40        11.211        LIBOR        7.356     16.877        8.867       3.000
                                                                        Six-Month
 12,571,176.62       353           353             7         7.397        LIBOR        5.635     13.729        7.350       2.658
                                                                        Six-Month
     52,336.30       353           353             7         9.100        LIBOR        6.200     15.100        9.100       3.000
                                                                        Six-Month
    696,484.65       352           352             8         8.101        LIBOR        5.808     15.101        8.101       1.951
                                                                        Six-Month
  2,067,202.02       353           353             7         8.313        LIBOR        6.534     14.432        8.313       3.000
                                                                        Six-Month
  1,136,824.84       354           354             6         8.234        LIBOR        5.890     14.351        8.234       3.000
                                                                        Six-Month
     69,965.37       340           340            20        11.200        LIBOR        6.300     17.200       11.200       1.000
                                                                        Six-Month
  1,007,513.70       353           353             7         6.401        LIBOR        5.794     12.401        6.401       2.811
                                                                        Six-Month
 20,501,603.48       353           353             7         7.565        LIBOR        6.011     14.065        7.549       2.648
                                                                        Six-Month
     62,090.88       334           334            26        10.250        LIBOR        8.250     16.270        8.250       3.000
                                                                        Six-Month
    193,905.11       353           353             7         7.888        LIBOR        6.718     13.888        7.888       3.000
                                                                        Six-Month
    396,000.00       353           353             7         6.500        LIBOR        6.990     13.500        6.500       3.000
                                                                        Six-Month
    344,000.00       352           352             8         6.800        LIBOR        5.550     13.800        6.800       1.500
                                                                        Six-Month
  1,244,110.00       353           353             7         6.266        LIBOR        5.989     13.266        6.266       2.040
                                                                        Six-Month
     65,000.00       353           353             7         7.600        LIBOR        6.990     14.600        7.600       3.000
                                                                         One-Year
    123,046.00       357           357             3         6.000         CMT         2.000     12.000        2.000       3.000
                                                                        Six-Month
    503,532.61       352           352             8         6.889        LIBOR        4.591     12.889        6.889       3.000
                                                                        Six-Month
    100,609.30       339           339            21         7.500        LIBOR        6.000     14.500        7.500       2.000
                                                                        Six-Month
    501,018.36       353           353             7         6.977        LIBOR        4.776     12.977        6.977       3.000


                 SUBSEQUENT                     ADJUSTMENT   ORIGINAL
    PRINCIPAL     PERIODIC       MONTHS TO        RATE         IO
     BALANCE      RATE CAP      NEXT RATE       FREQUENCY     TERM
       ($)           (%)        ADJUSTMENT       (MONTHS)   (MONTHS)
   ----------    ----------   -------------    -----------  ---------


     38,715.42      1.000            1              6           0

    455,997.74      1.000            2              6           0

 12,571,176.62      1.166           15              6           0

     52,336.30      1.000           17              6           0

    696,484.65      1.500           15              6           0

  2,067,202.02      1.060           16              6           0

  1,136,824.84      1.058           16              6           0

     69,965.37      1.000            5              6           0

  1,007,513.70      1.000           16              6           0

 20,501,603.48      1.247           15              6           0

     62,090.88      1.000            2              6           0

    193,905.11      1.000           16              6           0

    396,000.00      1.500           16              6          24

    344,000.00      1.500           15              6          24

  1,244,110.00      1.500           15              6          24

     65,000.00      1.500           15              6          24

    123,046.00      2.000           30             12          36

    503,532.61      1.000           27              6           0

    100,609.30      2.000           10              6           0

    501,018.36      1.000           28              6           0


                                      S-61





                   REMAINING
                     TERM        REMAINING                   GROSS                             MAXIMUM       MINIMUM      INITIAL
    PRINCIPAL         TO        AMORTIZATION                MORTGAGE                   GROSS   MORTGAGE     MORTGAGE     PERIODIC
     BALANCE       MATURITY         TERM          AGE         RATE        INDEX       MARGIN     RATE         RATE       RATE CAP
       ($)         (MONTHS)       (MONTHS)      (MONTHS)      (%)          TYPE         (%)       (%)          (%)          (%)
   ----------     -----------   ------------    --------   -----------   ---------   --------  ---------    ---------   ----------
                                                                                                
     94,802.32       266           266            94         4.250     One-Year CMT    2.875     12.500        2.875       2.000
                                                                        Six-Month
    524,800.00       346           346            14         6.250        LIBOR        2.750     12.250        6.250       1.000
                                                                        One-Month
  5,621,076.54       291           291             9         5.128        LIBOR        3.362     12.000        4.494       3.000
                                                                        Six-Month
     15,201.38       173           173           187         4.125        LIBOR        2.250     13.750        4.000       1.000
                                                                        One-Month
    104,847.04       173           173           151         7.375        LIBOR        1.500     13.625        5.875       1.000
                                                                        Six-Month
    189,436.68       288           288            72         7.279        LIBOR        4.746     15.326        7.279       2.069
                                                                        Six-Month
     37,837.26       335           335            25        11.650        LIBOR        6.000     17.650       11.650       1.000
    665,703.33       264           264            97         4.245     One-Year CMT    2.761     12.288        3.651       4.068
                                                                        Three-Year
     19,027.03       203           203           157         8.000         CMT         2.875     12.250        8.000       1.000
  2,690,763.75        69           241           111         9.613         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
    172,384.31       158           336            22        10.623         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
     65,269.56       163           343            17         9.990         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
     50,304.89       164           342            16         9.249         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
     51,483.11       166           346            14         8.999         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
     21,489.47       169           348            11        10.490         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
     75,352.03       164           341            16        10.157         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
     15,390.83       133           283            47        14.650         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
    159,713.28        28           268            32        10.212         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
    190,549.18        81            81            37        11.065         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
    305,533.02        65            65            60        11.784         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
     55,068.48       113           113             7        11.147         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
     75,416.42       113           113             7        12.101         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
     56,309.89       115           115             5         7.600         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
     15,417.36       112           112             8        12.140         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
  7,632,974.02        92            92            86         8.005         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
    648,758.91       107           107            51        11.818         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
    318,730.87       174           174             6         6.950         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
     30,551.04       174           174             6        11.999         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A


                 SUBSEQUENT     ADJUSTMENT      ORIGINAL
    PRINCIPAL     PERIODIC       MONTHS TO        RATE         IO
     BALANCE      RATE CAP      NEXT RATE       FREQUENCY     TERM
       ($)           (%)        ADJUSTMENT       (MONTHS)   (MONTHS)
   ----------    ----------   -------------    -----------  ---------

     94,802.32      2.000            1             12           0

    524,800.00      1.000           44              6          60

  5,621,076.54      3.000            1              1         120

     15,201.38      1.000            5              6           0

    104,847.04      1.000            5              6           0

    189,436.68      1.000            5              6           0

     37,837.26      1.000            3              6           0
    665,703.33      2.000            8             12           0

     19,027.03      1.000           22             36           0
  2,690,763.75        N/A          N/A            N/A         N/A
    172,384.31        N/A          N/A            N/A         N/A
     65,269.56        N/A          N/A            N/A         N/A
     50,304.89        N/A          N/A            N/A         N/A
     51,483.11        N/A          N/A            N/A         N/A
     21,489.47        N/A          N/A            N/A         N/A
     75,352.03        N/A          N/A            N/A         N/A
     15,390.83        N/A          N/A            N/A         N/A
    159,713.28        N/A          N/A            N/A         N/A
    190,549.18        N/A          N/A            N/A         N/A
    305,533.02        N/A          N/A            N/A         N/A
     55,068.48        N/A          N/A            N/A         N/A
     75,416.42        N/A          N/A            N/A         N/A
     56,309.89        N/A          N/A            N/A         N/A
     15,417.36        N/A          N/A            N/A         N/A
  7,632,974.02        N/A          N/A            N/A         N/A
    648,758.91        N/A          N/A            N/A         N/A
    318,730.87        N/A          N/A            N/A         N/A
     30,551.04        N/A          N/A            N/A         N/A


                                      S-62





                   REMAINING
                     TERM        REMAINING                   GROSS                               MAXIMUM     MINIMUM      INITIAL
    PRINCIPAL         TO        AMORTIZATION                MORTGAGE                   GROSS    MORTGAGE    MORTGAGE     PERIODIC
     BALANCE       MATURITY         TERM          AGE         RATE        INDEX       MARGIN      RATE        RATE       RATE CAP
       ($)         (MONTHS)       (MONTHS)      (MONTHS)      (%)          TYPE         (%)        (%)         (%)          (%)
   ----------     -----------   ------------    --------   -----------   ---------   --------   ---------   ---------   ----------
                                                                                                 
     66,367.68       171           171             9         9.450         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
     38,965.26       175           175             5        12.134         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
     51,651.04       171           171             9         7.750         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
     39,557.85       172           172             8         8.200         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
    143,923.00       173           173             7         7.439         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
    206,176.23       158           158            15         9.154         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
     18,332.44       141           141            39        13.650         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
     19,405.95       131           131            49        13.840         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
  2,303,176.70       140           140            64        10.261         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
  2,101,109.29       196           196            29        10.763         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
     65,662.48       192           192            48        11.990         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
     49,527.79       234           234             6         8.750         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
     70,249.35       232           232             8        11.135         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
     50,049.69       234           234             6         9.640         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
    154,165.88       234           234             6         6.950         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
  1,033,692.69       232           232             8        10.478         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
     60,964.53       232           232             8         9.469         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
    299,117.46       232           232             8         7.536         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
    498,997.17       231           231             9        10.009         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
  4,131,662.70       191           191            68         9.675         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
    407,656.43       198           198            67        11.731         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
     34,559.83       286           286            14        13.750         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
 65,243,119.07       280           280            78         8.109         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
  1,037,210.37       339           339            18         8.761         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
     67,707.37       352           352             8        10.700         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
  1,473,036.03       353           353             7         8.219         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
    107,552.15       355           355             5         7.000         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
    999,940.63       354           354             6         7.361         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
    554,670.75       351           351             9         9.745         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
    743,467.48       353           353             7         7.824         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
    446,962.71       354           354             6         7.593         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
    278,920.68       353           353             7         9.025         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
     78,695.38       347           347            13         9.750         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A



                  SUBSEQUENT                    ADJUSTMENT    ORIGINAL
    PRINCIPAL      PERIODIC       MONTHS TO        RATE          IO
     BALANCE       RATE CAP      NEXT RATE       FREQUENCY      TERM
       ($)            (%)        ADJUSTMENT       (MONTHS)    (MONTHS)
   ----------     ----------     ----------    -------------  ---------

     66,367.68        N/A           N/A            N/A           N/A
     38,965.26        N/A           N/A            N/A           N/A
     51,651.04        N/A           N/A            N/A           N/A
     39,557.85        N/A           N/A            N/A           N/A
    143,923.00        N/A           N/A            N/A           N/A
    206,176.23        N/A           N/A            N/A           N/A
     18,332.44        N/A           N/A            N/A           N/A
     19,405.95        N/A           N/A            N/A           N/A
  2,303,176.70        N/A           N/A            N/A           N/A
  2,101,109.29        N/A           N/A            N/A           N/A
     65,662.48        N/A           N/A            N/A           N/A
     49,527.79        N/A           N/A            N/A           N/A
     70,249.35        N/A           N/A            N/A           N/A
     50,049.69        N/A           N/A            N/A           N/A
    154,165.88        N/A           N/A            N/A           N/A
  1,033,692.69        N/A           N/A            N/A           N/A
     60,964.53        N/A           N/A            N/A           N/A
    299,117.46        N/A           N/A            N/A           N/A
    498,997.17        N/A           N/A            N/A           N/A
  4,131,662.70        N/A           N/A            N/A           N/A
    407,656.43        N/A           N/A            N/A           N/A
     34,559.83        N/A           N/A            N/A           N/A
 65,243,119.07        N/A           N/A            N/A           N/A
  1,037,210.37        N/A           N/A            N/A           N/A
     67,707.37        N/A           N/A            N/A           N/A
  1,473,036.03        N/A           N/A            N/A           N/A
    107,552.15        N/A           N/A            N/A           N/A
    999,940.63        N/A           N/A            N/A           N/A
    554,670.75        N/A           N/A            N/A           N/A
    743,467.48        N/A           N/A            N/A           N/A
    446,962.71        N/A           N/A            N/A           N/A
    278,920.68        N/A           N/A            N/A           N/A
     78,695.38        N/A           N/A            N/A           N/A



                                      S-63




                   REMAINING
                     TERM        REMAINING                   GROSS                             MAXIMUM       MINIMUM     INITIAL
    PRINCIPAL         TO        AMORTIZATION                MORTGAGE                   GROSS   MORTGAGE     MORTGAGE     PERIODIC
     BALANCE       MATURITY         TERM          AGE         RATE        INDEX       MARGIN     RATE         RATE       RATE CAP
       ($)         (MONTHS)       (MONTHS)      (MONTHS)      (%)          TYPE         (%)       (%)          (%)          (%)
   ----------     -----------   ------------    --------   -----------   ---------   --------  ---------    ---------   ----------
                                                                                                
    183,891.64       354           354             6         6.050         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
     93,942.07       351           351             9         9.250         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
     64,029.05       333           333            27        10.350         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
  3,046,967.92       350           350            10         7.391         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
    648,289.52       352           352             8         9.634         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
     62,855.77       307           307            53         8.990         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
      1,707.97        29            29            31         6.000         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
      9,591.65        48            48            12        11.184         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
      3,539.38        43            43            17         7.250         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
     11,530.16        54            54             6        10.800         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A
      3,755.17        27            27            70        10.000         N/A          N/A         N/A         N/A         N/A


                 SUBSEQUENT                    ADJUSTMENT   ORIGINAL
    PRINCIPAL     PERIODIC       MONTHS TO        RATE        IO
     BALANCE      RATE CAP      NEXT RATE      FREQUENCY     TERM
       ($)           (%)        ADJUSTMENT      (MONTHS)    (MONTHS)
   ----------    ----------    -----------    -----------  ---------

    183,891.64        N/A          N/A            N/A         N/A
     93,942.07        N/A          N/A            N/A         N/A
     64,029.05        N/A          N/A            N/A         N/A
  3,046,967.92        N/A          N/A            N/A         N/A
    648,289.52        N/A          N/A            N/A         N/A
     62,855.77        N/A          N/A            N/A         N/A
      1,707.97        N/A          N/A            N/A         N/A
      9,591.65        N/A          N/A            N/A         N/A
      3,539.38        N/A          N/A            N/A         N/A
     11,530.16        N/A          N/A            N/A         N/A
      3,755.17        N/A          N/A            N/A         N/A













                                      S-64



         There will be discrepancies  between the  characteristics of the actual
Mortgage Loans and the characteristics  assumed in preparing the tables entitled
"Percent of Initial  Certificate  Principal Balance Outstanding at the Specified
Percentages of the Prepayment  Assumption".  Any  discrepancy may have an effect
upon the percentages of the initial Certificate  Principal Balance  outstanding,
and the weighted  average lives,  of the Offered  Certificates  set forth in the
tables. In addition,  since the actual Mortgage Loans will have  characteristics
that  differ  from  those  assumed in  preparing  the tables and since it is not
likely the level of the  related  Index will remain  constant  as  assumed,  the
Offered  Certificates  may mature earlier or later than indicated by the tables.
In  addition,  as described  under  "Description  of the  Certificates-Principal
Distributions on the Offered  Certificates" in this prospectus  supplement,  the
occurrence  of the  Stepdown  Date or a Trigger  Event  will have the  effect of
accelerating  or  decelerating  the  amortization  of the Offered  Certificates,
affecting  the  weighted  average  lives  of  such  certificates.  Based  on the
foregoing  assumptions,  the tables indicate the weighted  average lives of each
class of  Offered  Certificates  and set forth the  percentages  of the  initial
Certificate  Principal  Balance of such  certificates  that would be outstanding
after  each of the  Distribution  Dates  shown,  at various  percentages  of the
Prepayment  Assumption.  Neither the  prepayment  model used in this  prospectus
supplement  nor any  other  prepayment  model  or  assumption  purports  to be a
historical   description  of  prepayment  experience  or  a  prediction  of  the
anticipated  rate of  prepayment  of any pool of mortgage  loans,  including the
Mortgage Loans.  Variations in the prepayment  experience and the balance of the
Mortgage  Loans that prepay may increase or decrease the  percentages of initial
Certificate  Principal  Balances,  and  weighted  average  lives,  shown  in the
following  tables.  These  variations  may occur even if the average  prepayment
experience of all the Mortgage Loans equals any of the specified  percentages of
the Prepayment Assumption.










                                      S-65



                    PERCENT OF INITIAL CERTIFICATE PRINCIPAL BALANCE OUTSTANDING
                      AT THE SPECIFIED PERCENTAGES OF THE PREPAYMENT ASSUMPTION


                                                                               CLASS A-1
                                                                               ---------

             DISTRIBUTION DATE                   0% CPR       15% CPR         28% CPR        35% CPR         45% CPR
- ------------------------------------------       ------       -------         -------        -------         -------
                                                                                                
Initial Percentage........................        100           100             100            100             100
December 25, 2005.........................         94            74              58             48              35
December 25, 2006.........................         91            56              30             18               2
December 25, 2007.........................         88            40              10              0               0
December 25, 2008.........................         85            29              10              0               0
December 25, 2009.........................         82            24              10              0               0
December 25, 2010.........................         76            19               7              0               0
December 25, 2011.........................         72            16               5              0               0
December 25, 2012.........................         68            13               3              0               0
December 25, 2013.........................         65            11               2              0               0
December 25, 2014.........................         62             9               2              0               0
December 25, 2015.........................         58             7               1              0               0
December 25, 2016.........................         53             6               1              0               0
December 25, 2017.........................         49             5               1              0               0
December 25, 2018.........................         44             4               *              0               0
December 25, 2019.........................         39             3               0              0               0
December 25, 2020.........................         33             2               0              0               0
December 25, 2021.........................         29             2               0              0               0
December 25, 2022.........................         27             1               0              0               0
December 25, 2023.........................         24             1               0              0               0
December 25, 2024.........................         21             1               0              0               0
December 25, 2025.........................         18             1               0              0               0
December 25, 2026.........................         14             *               0              0               0
December 25, 2027.........................         11             0               0              0               0
December 25, 2028.........................          9             0               0              0               0
December 25, 2029.........................          7             0               0              0               0
December 25, 2030.........................          6             0               0              0               0
December 25, 2031.........................          4             0               0              0               0
December 25, 2032.........................          3             0               0              0               0
December 25, 2033.........................          1             0               0              0               0
December 25, 2034.........................          0             0               0              0               0

Weighted Average Life in Years (1)                 12.81          3.70            1.86           1.10            0.80
Weighted Average Life in Years (1)(2)              12.70          3.46            1.71           1.10            0.80

- ---------------------
*Indicates a number that is greater than zero but less than 0.5%.

(1) The weighted  average life of a certificate is determined by (a) multiplying
    the amount of each distribution of principal by the number of years from the
    date of issuance of the  certificate to the related  Distribution  Date, (b)
    adding the results and (c) dividing the sum by the  aggregate  amount of the
    distribution of principal described in clause (a) above.

(2) Assumes  that the  Master  Servicer  exercises  its option to  purchase  the
    Mortgage  Loans on the earliest  possible  Distribution  Date on which it is
    permitted   to  exercise   this   option.   See   "Pooling   and   Servicing
    Agreement--Termination" in this prospectus supplement.






                                      S-66



          PERCENT OF INITIAL CERTIFICATE PRINCIPAL BALANCE OUTSTANDING
            AT THE SPECIFIED PERCENTAGES OF THE PREPAYMENT ASSUMPTION


                                                                               CLASS M-1
                                                                               ---------

             DISTRIBUTION DATE                   0% CPR       15% CPR         28% CPR        35% CPR         45% CPR
- ------------------------------------------       ------       -------         -------        -------         -------
                                                                                                
Initial Percentage........................        100           100             100            100             100
December 25, 2005.........................        100           100             100            100             100
December 25, 2006.........................        100           100             100            100             100
December 25, 2007.........................        100           100             100             95              90
December 25, 2008.........................        100            96              82             95              54
December 25, 2009.........................        100            79              35             66              29
December 25, 2010.........................        100            64              24             41              15
December 25, 2011.........................        100            52              16             26               7
December 25, 2012.........................        100            43              11             16               2
December 25, 2013.........................        100            35               8             10               0
December 25, 2014.........................        100            29               6              5               0
December 25, 2015.........................        100            24               4              1               0
December 25, 2016.........................        100            19               2              0               0
December 25, 2017.........................        100            16               0              0               0
December 25, 2018.........................        100            12               0              0               0
December 25, 2019.........................        100            10               0              0               0
December 25, 2020.........................        100             8               0              0               0
December 25, 2021.........................         97             6               0              0               0
December 25, 2022.........................         89             5               0              0               0
December 25, 2023.........................         79             4               0              0               0
December 25, 2024.........................         70             2               0              0               0
December 25, 2025.........................         59             *               0              0               0
December 25, 2026.........................         48             0               0              0               0
December 25, 2027.........................         36             0               0              0               0
December 25, 2028.........................         28             0               0              0               0
December 25, 2029.........................         24             0               0              0               0
December 25, 2030.........................         19             0               0              0               0
December 25, 2031.........................         14             0               0              0               0
December 25, 2032.........................          8             0               0              0               0
December 25, 2033.........................          2             0               0              0               0
December 25, 2034.........................          0             0               0              0               0

Weighted Average Life in Years (1)                 22.21          8.53            5.41           6.07            4.41
Weighted Average Life in Years (1)(2)              21.84          7.77            4.92           4.80            3.47

- ---------------------
*Indicates a number that is greater than zero but less than 0.5%.

 (1)The weighted  average life of a certificate is determined by (a) multiplying
    the amount of each distribution of principal by the number of years from the
    date of issuance of the  certificate to the related  Distribution  Date, (b)
    adding the results and (c) dividing the sum by the  aggregate  amount of the
    distribution of principal described in clause (a) above.

(2) Assumes  that the  Master  Servicer  exercises  its option to  purchase  the
    Mortgage  Loans on the earliest  possible  Distribution  Date on which it is
    permitted   to  exercise   this   option.   See   "Pooling   and   Servicing
    Agreement--Termination" in this prospectus supplement.


                                      S-67


                    PERCENT OF INITIAL CERTIFICATE PRINCIPAL BALANCE OUTSTANDING
                     AT THE SPECIFIED PERCENTAGES OF THE PREPAYMENT ASSUMPTION


                                                                               CLASS M-2
                                                                               ---------

             DISTRIBUTION DATE                   0% CPR        15% CPR         28% CPR        35% CPR         45% CPR
- ------------------------------------------       ------        -------         -------        -------         -------
                                                                                                 
Initial Percentage........................         100           100             100            100             100
December 25, 2005.........................         100           100             100            100             100
December 25, 2006.........................         100           100             100            100             100
December 25, 2007.........................         100           100             100            100              52
December 25, 2008.........................         100            96              49             52              17
December 25, 2009.........................         100            79              34             21               9
December 25, 2010.........................         100            64              24             13               5
December 25, 2011.........................         100            52              16              8               0
December 25, 2012.........................         100            43              11              5               0
December 25, 2013.........................         100            35               8              1               0
December 25, 2014.........................         100            29               6              0               0
December 25, 2015.........................         100            24               3              0               0
December 25, 2016.........................         100            19               0              0               0
December 25, 2017.........................         100            16               0              0               0
December 25, 2018.........................         100            12               0              0               0
December 25, 2019.........................         100            10               0              0               0
December 25, 2020.........................         100             8               0              0               0
December 25, 2021.........................          97             6               0              0               0
December 25, 2022.........................          89             5               0              0               0
December 25, 2023.........................          79             2               0              0               0
December 25, 2024.........................          70             0               0              0               0
December 25, 2025.........................          59             0               0              0               0
December 25, 2026.........................          48             0               0              0               0
December 25, 2027.........................          36             0               0              0               0
December 25, 2028.........................          28             0               0              0               0
December 25, 2029.........................          24             0               0              0               0
December 25, 2030.........................          19             0               0              0               0
December 25, 2031.........................          14             0               0              0               0
December 25, 2032.........................           8             0               0              0               0
December 25, 2033.........................           0             0               0              0               0
December 25, 2034.........................           0             0               0              0               0

Weighted Average Life in Years (1)                  22.21          8.49            5.03           4.53            3.37
Weighted Average Life in Years (1)(2)               21.84          7.77            4.58           4.18            3.11

- ---------------------
(1) The weighted  average life of a certificate is determined by (a) multiplying
    the amount of each distribution of principal by the number of years from the
    date of issuance of the  certificate to the related  Distribution  Date, (b)
    adding the results and (c) dividing the sum by the  aggregate  amount of the
    distribution of principal described in clause (a) above.

(2) Assumes  that the  Master  Servicer  exercises  its option to  purchase  the
    Mortgage  Loans on the earliest  possible  Distribution  Date on which it is
    permitted   to  exercise   this   option.   See   "Pooling   and   Servicing
    Agreement--Termination" in this prospectus supplement.


                                      S-68



                    PERCENT OF INITIAL CERTIFICATE PRINCIPAL BALANCE OUTSTANDING
                      AT THE SPECIFIED PERCENTAGES OF THE PREPAYMENT ASSUMPTION


                                                                               CLASS M-3
                                                                               ----------

             DISTRIBUTION DATE                   0% CPR       15% CPR         28% CPR        35% CPR         45% CPR
- ------------------------------------------       ------       -------         -------        -------         -------
                                                                                                
Initial Percentage........................        100           100             100            100             100
December 25, 2005.........................        100           100             100            100             100
December 25, 2006.........................        100           100             100            100             100
December 25, 2007.........................        100           100             100            100              31
December 25, 2008.........................        100            96              49             33              17
December 25, 2009.........................        100            79              34             21               9
December 25, 2010.........................        100            64              24             13               1
December 25, 2011.........................        100            52              16              8               0
December 25, 2012.........................        100            43              11              2               0
December 25, 2013.........................        100            35               8              0               0
December 25, 2014.........................        100            29               3              0               0
December 25, 2015.........................        100            24               0              0               0
December 25, 2016.........................        100            19               0              0               0
December 25, 2017.........................        100            16               0              0               0
December 25, 2018.........................        100            12               0              0               0
December 25, 2019.........................        100            10               0              0               0
December 25, 2020.........................        100             8               0              0               0
December 25, 2021.........................         97             5               0              0               0
December 25, 2022.........................         89             1               0              0               0
December 25, 2023.........................         79             0               0              0               0
December 25, 2024.........................         70             0               0              0               0
December 25, 2025.........................         59             0               0              0               0
December 25, 2026.........................         48             0               0              0               0
December 25, 2027.........................         36             0               0              0               0
December 25, 2028.........................         28             0               0              0               0
December 25, 2029.........................         24             0               0              0               0
December 25, 2030.........................         19             0               0              0               0
December 25, 2031.........................         14             0               0              0               0
December 25, 2032.........................          8             0               0              0               0
December 25, 2033.........................          0             0               0              0               0
December 25, 2034.........................          0             0               0              0               0

Weighted Average Life in Years (1)                 22.19          8.42            4.88           4.21            3.11
Weighted Average Life in Years (1)(2)              21.84          7.77            4.48           3.89            2.88

- ---------------------
(1) The weighted  average life of a certificate is determined by (a) multiplying
    the amount of each distribution of principal by the number of years from the
    date of issuance of the  certificate to the related  Distribution  Date, (b)
    adding the results and (c) dividing the sum by the  aggregate  amount of the
    distribution of principal described in clause (a) above.

(2) Assumes  that the  Master  Servicer  exercises  its option to  purchase  the
    Mortgage  Loans on the earliest  possible  Distribution  Date on which it is
    permitted   to  exercise   this   option.   See   "Pooling   and   Servicing
    Agreement--Termination" in this prospectus supplement.


                                      S-69



                    PERCENT OF INITIAL CERTIFICATE PRINCIPAL BALANCE OUTSTANDING
                      AT THE SPECIFIED PERCENTAGES OF THE PREPAYMENT ASSUMPTION


                                                                               CLASS M-4
                                                                               ---------

             DISTRIBUTION DATE                   0% CPR       15% CPR          28% CPR        35% CPR         45% CPR
- ------------------------------------------       ------       -------          -------        -------         -------
                                                                                                 
Initial Percentage........................         100           100             100            100             100
December 25, 2005.........................         100           100             100            100             100
December 25, 2006.........................         100           100             100            100             100
December 25, 2007.........................         100           100             100            100              31
December 25, 2008.........................         100            96              49             33              17
December 25, 2009.........................         100            79              34             21               9
December 25, 2010.........................         100            64              24             13               0
December 25, 2011.........................         100            52              16              5               0
December 25, 2012.........................         100            43              11              0               0
December 25, 2013.........................         100            35               5              0               0
December 25, 2014.........................         100            29               0              0               0
December 25, 2015.........................         100            24               0              0               0
December 25, 2016.........................         100            19               0              0               0
December 25, 2017.........................         100            16               0              0               0
December 25, 2018.........................         100            12               0              0               0
December 25, 2019.........................         100            10               0              0               0
December 25, 2020.........................         100             4               0              0               0
December 25, 2021.........................          97             0               0              0               0
December 25, 2022.........................          89             0               0              0               0
December 25, 2023.........................          79             0               0              0               0
December 25, 2024.........................          70             0               0              0               0
December 25, 2025.........................          59             0               0              0               0
December 25, 2026.........................          48             0               0              0               0
December 25, 2027.........................          36             0               0              0               0
December 25, 2028.........................          28             0               0              0               0
December 25, 2029.........................          24             0               0              0               0
December 25, 2030.........................          19             0               0              0               0
December 25, 2031.........................          14             0               0              0               0
December 25, 2032.........................           7             0               0              0               0
December 25, 2033.........................           0             0               0              0               0
December 25, 2034.........................           0             0               0              0               0

Weighted Average Life in Years (1)                  22.16          8.32            4.78           4.04            2.98
Weighted Average Life in Years (1)(2)               21.84          7.77            4.44           3.78            2.79

- ---------------------
(1) The weighted  average life of a certificate is determined by (a) multiplying
    the amount of each distribution of principal by the number of years from the
    date of issuance of the  certificate to the related  Distribution  Date, (b)
    adding the results and (c) dividing the sum by the  aggregate  amount of the
    distribution of principal described in clause (a) above.

(2) Assumes  that the  Master  Servicer  exercises  its option to  purchase  the
    Mortgage  Loans on the earliest  possible  Distribution  Date on which it is
    permitted   to  exercise   this   option.   See   "Pooling   and   Servicing
    Agreement--Termination" in this prospectus supplement.








                                      S-70



         There is no assurance  that  prepayments of the Mortgage Loans included
in the  Mortgage  Pool  will  conform  to any of the  levels  of the  Prepayment
Assumption indicated in the immediately preceding tables, or to any other level,
or that the actual  weighted  average  lives of the  Offered  Certificates  will
conform  to any of the  weighted  average  lives  set  forth in the  immediately
preceding  tables.  Furthermore,  the  information  contained in the tables with
respect  to the  weighted  average  lives  of the  Offered  Certificates  is not
necessarily indicative of the weighted average lives that might be calculated or
projected under different or varying prepayment assumptions.

         The  characteristics  of the  Mortgage  Loans  will  differ  from those
assumed in preparing  the  immediately  preceding  tables.  In  addition,  it is
unlikely  that any Mortgage  Loan will prepay at any constant  percentage  until
maturity or that all of the  Mortgage  Loans will  prepay at the same rate.  The
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.

YIELD SENSITIVITY OF THE MEZZANINE CERTIFICATES

         If the Certificate Principal Balances of the Class CE, Class M-4, Class
M-3 and Class M-2 Certificates  have been reduced to zero, the yield to maturity
on the Class M-1 Certificates  will become extremely  sensitive to losses on the
Mortgage  Loans  (and the timing  thereof)  that are  covered by  subordination,
because the entire  amount of any Realized  Losses (to the extent not covered by
Net Monthly Excess Cashflow) will be allocated to the Class M-1 Certificates. If
the  Certificate  Principal  Balances  of the Class CE,  Class M-4 and Class M-3
Certificates  have been reduced to zero,  the yield to maturity on the Class M-2
Certificates  will become  extremely  sensitive to losses on the Mortgage  Loans
(and the timing thereof) that are covered by  subordination,  because the entire
amount of any Realized  Losses (to the extent not covered by Net Monthly  Excess
Cashflow) will be allocated to the Class M-2  Certificates.  If the  Certificate
Principal  Balances of the Class CE Certificates and Class M-4 Certificates have
been reduced to zero, the yield to maturity on the Class M-3  Certificates  will
become  extremely  sensitive  to losses on the  Mortgage  Loans  (and the timing
thereof)  that are covered by  subordination,  because the entire  amount of any
Realized Losses (to the extent not covered by Net Monthly Excess  Cashflow) will
be allocated to the Class M-3 Certificates. If the Certificate Principal Balance
of the Class CE Certificates have been reduced to zero, the yield to maturity on
the Class M-4  Certificates  will become  extremely  sensitive  to losses on the
Mortgage  Loans  (and the timing  thereof)  that are  covered by  subordination,
because the entire  amount of any Realized  Losses (to the extent not covered by
Net Monthly Excess  Cashflow)  will be allocated to the Class M-4  Certificates.
The initial  undivided  interests in the trust fund  evidenced by the Class M-1,
Class M-2,  Class M-3,  Class M-4 and Class CE  Certificates  are  approximately
10.25%,  approximately  5.25%,  approximately  4.75%,  approximately  1.25%  and
approximately  3.09%,  respectively.  Investors  in the  Mezzanine  Certificates
should fully consider the risk that Realized  Losses on the Mortgage Loans could
result in the  failure of  investors  to fully  recover  their  investments.  In
addition,  except as  otherwise  provided in this  prospectus  supplement  under
"Description of the  Certificates--Allocation  of Losses",  once Realized Losses
have been allocated to the Mezzanine  Certificates,  their Certificate Principal
Balances will be permanently reduced by the amounts so allocated. Therefore, the
amounts of Realized  Losses  allocated  to the  Mezzanine  Certificates  will no
longer accrue interest nor will these amounts be reinstated.  However, Allocated
Realized Loss Amounts may be paid to the holders of the  Mezzanine  Certificates
from Net Monthly Excess Cashflow in the priorities set forth under  "Description
of  the  Certificates--Overcollateralization   Provisions"  in  this  prospectus
supplement.

         Unless the Certificate Principal Balances of the Class A-1 Certificates
have been reduced to zero, principal distributions on the Mezzanine Certificates
will only commence on or after the Stepdown  Date and during  periods in which a
Trigger Event is not in effect.  As a result,  the weighted average lives of the
Mezzanine Certificates will be longer than would otherwise be the


                                      S-71


case if  distributions of principal were allocated on a pro rata basis among all
of the Offered Certificates. As a result of the longer weighted average lives of
the Mezzanine Certificates, the holders of such certificates have a greater risk
of suffering a loss on their investments. For additional considerations relating
to the yield on the Mezzanine  Certificates,  see "Yield  Considerations" in the
prospectus.

                         DESCRIPTION OF THE CERTIFICATES

GENERAL

         The Ace Securities Corp. Home Equity Loan Trust, Series 2005-SD1, Asset
Backed Pass-Through  Certificates will consist of eight classes of certificates,
designated  as (i) the Class A-1  Certificates;  (ii) the Class M-1,  Class M-2,
Class  M-3  and   Class   M-4   Certificates   (collectively,   the   "Mezzanine
Certificates");  (iii) the Class CE  Certificates  (together  with the Mezzanine
Certificates,  the "Subordinate  Certificates");  (iv) the Class P Certificates;
and (v) the Class R  Certificates  (also  referred  to  herein as the  "Residual
Certificates").  Only the Class A-1 Certificates and the Mezzanine  Certificates
(collectively,  the  "Offered  Certificates")  are  offered  by this  prospectus
supplement.

         Distributions on the Offered  Certificates will be made on the 25th day
of each month,  or, if that day is not a business  day,  on the next  succeeding
business  day,  beginning  in January  2005 to the  persons in whose  names such
certificates  are  registered  at the close of business on the Record Date.  The
"Record Date" for the Class A-1 Certificates  and the Mezzanine  Certificates is
the business day immediately  preceding such  Distribution  Date, for so long as
such  Certificates  are held in book-entry form and the last business day of the
month  immediately  preceding the month in which the related  Distribution  Date
occurs if such certificates are held in physical form.

         The  certificates  represent  in the  aggregate  the entire  beneficial
ownership  interest in the trust fund consisting  primarily of the Mortgage Pool
of  conventional,  one- to  four-family,  first and junior lien  fixed-rate  and
adjustable-rate  Mortgage Loans having original terms to maturity of not greater
than  approximately  50 years.  The Mortgage  Loans have an aggregate  principal
balance  as of the  Cut-off  Date of  approximately  $149,041,679,  subject to a
permitted  variance as described  under "The Mortgage  Pool" in this  prospectus
supplement.

         The Offered  Certificates will have the initial  Certificate  Principal
Balance  set  forth in the  table  appearing  on the  cover  of this  prospectus
supplement.   The  Pass-Through  Rates  on  the  Offered  Certificates  will  be
calculated for each Distribution Date as described under "--Pass-Through  Rates"
below.  The Class A-1  Certificates  evidence an initial  undivided  interest of
approximately  75.41% in the trust fund, the Class M-1, Class M-2, Class M-3 and
Class M-4  Certificates  evidence initial  undivided  interests of approximately
10.25%,  approximately  5.25%,  approximately  4.75%  and  approximately  1.25%,
respectively,  in the trust fund and the Class CE Certificates  evidence initial
undivided interests of approximately 3.09% in the trust fund.

BOOK-ENTRY CERTIFICATES

         The Offered  Certificates will be book-entry  Certificates (for so long
as they are registered in the name of the applicable  depository or its nominee,
the "Book-Entry Certificates"). Persons acquiring beneficial ownership interests
in  the   Book-Entry   Certificates   ("Certificate   Owners")  will  hold  such
certificates  through The Depository Trust Company ("DTC") in the United States,
or   Clearstream   Banking   Luxembourg,   formerly   known  as   Cedelbank   SA
("Clearstream"),  or the Euroclear System  ("Euroclear") in Europe,  if they are
participants  of  such  systems   ("Clearstream   Participants"   or  "Euroclear
Participants",  respectively),  or indirectly  through  organizations  which are
Clearstream  or Euroclear  Participants.  The  Book-Entry  Certificates  will be
issued  in one or  more  certificates  which  equal  the  aggregate  Certificate
Principal  Balance of such  Certificates and will initially be registered in the
name of Cede & Co., the nominee of DTC. Clearstream and Euroclear


                                      S-72


will hold omnibus positions on behalf of their  participants  through customers'
securities accounts in Clearstreams' and Euroclear's names on the books of their
respective  depositories  which in turn will hold such  positions in  customers'
securities  accounts in the depositories,  names on the books of DTC.  Citibank,
N.A. will act as depositary for Clearstream,  and JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A. will
act as depository for Euroclear (in such capacities,  individually the "Relevant
Depositary" and  collectively the "European  Depositories").  Investors may hold
such   beneficial   interests  in  the   Book-Entry   Certificates   in  minimum
denominations  of $25,000.  Except as  described  below,  no  Certificate  Owner
acquiring a Book-Entry Certificate (each, a "beneficial owner") will be entitled
to receive a physical  certificate  representing such Certificate (a "Definitive
Certificate").  Unless  and until  Definitive  Certificates  are  issued,  it is
anticipated that the only  "Certificateholder"  of the Offered Certificates will
be  Cede  &  Co.,   as  nominee  of  DTC.   Certificate   Owners   will  not  be
Certificateholders  as that term is used in the Pooling and Servicing Agreement.
Certificate  Owners are only  permitted  to  exercise  their  rights  indirectly
through DTC and participants of DTC ("DTC Participants").

         The Certificate  Owner's ownership of a Book-Entry  Certificate will be
recorded on the records of the brokerage firm, bank, thrift institution or other
financial  intermediary  (each, a "Financial  Intermediary")  that maintains the
Certificate   Owner's   account  for  such  purpose.   In  turn,  the  Financial
Intermediary's  ownership of such Book-Entry Certificate will be recorded on the
records of DTC (or of a participating  firm that acts as agent for the Financial
Intermediary,  whose interest will in turn be recorded on the records of DTC, if
the beneficial  owner's  Financial  Intermediary is not a DTC Participant and on
the records of Clearstream or Euroclear, as appropriate).

         Certificate  Owners will receive all  distributions of principal of and
interest  on the  Book-Entry  Certificates  from  the  Securities  Administrator
through  DTC  and  DTC  Participants.  While  the  Book-Entry  Certificates  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 DTC Participants on
whose behalf it acts with respect to the Book-Entry Certificates and is required
to receive and  transmit  distributions  of  principal  of, and interest on, the
Book-Entry  Certificates.  DTC Participants and indirect  participants with whom
Certificate  Owners have accounts with respect to  Book-Entry  Certificates  are
similarly  required to make  book-entry  transfers and receive and transmit such
distributions on behalf of their  respective  Certificate  Owners.  Accordingly,
although  Certificate  Owners will not possess  certificates  representing their
respective  interests  in the  Book-Entry  Certificates,  the  Rules  provide  a
mechanism by which  Certificate  Owners will receive  distributions  and will be
able to transfer their interest.

         Certificate   Owners  will  not  receive  or  be  entitled  to  receive
certificates   representing   their  respective   interests  in  the  Book-Entry
Certificates, except under the limited circumstances described below. Unless and
until  Definitive  Certificates are issued,  Certificate  Owners who are not DTC
Participants may transfer ownership of Book-Entry  Certificates only through DTC
Participants and indirect  participants by instructing such DTC Participants and
indirect  participants  to  transfer  Book-Entry  Certificates,   by  book-entry
transfer,  through  DTC for the  account of the  purchasers  of such  Book-Entry
Certificates,   which  account  is   maintained   with  their   respective   DTC
Participants.  Under the Rules and in accordance  with DTC's normal  procedures,
transfers of ownership of Book-Entry  Certificates  will be executed through DTC
and the accounts of the respective DTC  Participants  at DTC will be debited and
credited.  Similarly,  the DTC Participants and indirect  participants will make
debits or credits, as the case may be, on their records on behalf of the selling
and purchasing Certificate Owners.

         Because of time zone  differences,  credits of  securities  received in
Clearstream  or Euroclear as a result of a  transaction  with a DTC  Participant
will be made during subsequent  securities  settlement  processing and dated the
business day following the DTC settlement date. Such credits


                                      S-73


or any  transactions in such  securities  settled during such processing will be
reported to the relevant  Euroclear  Participants  or  Clearstream  Participants
(each as defined  below) on such business day. Cash received in  Clearstream  or
Euroclear  as a result  of sales  of  securities  by or  through  a  Clearstream
Participant or Euroclear  Participant to a DTC Participant will be received with
value  on the  DTC  settlement  date  but  will  be  available  in the  relevant
Clearstream  or Euroclear cash account only as of the business day following the
DTC  settlement  date.  For  information  with  respect  to  tax   documentation
procedures  relating to the  Certificates,  see "Global Clearance and Settlement
and  Documentation  Procedures-Certain  U.S.  Federal  Income Tax  Documentation
Requirements" in Annex I hereto.

         Transfers  between DTC  Participants  will occur in accordance with DTC
rules.  Transfers between  Clearstream  Participants and Euroclear  Participants
will occur in accordance with their respective rules and operating procedures.

         Cross-market  transfers  between persons holding directly or indirectly
through DTC, on the one hand, and,  directly or indirectly  through  Clearstream
Participants or Euroclear Participants, on the other, will be effected in DTC in
accordance  with DTC  rules on  behalf of the  relevant  European  international
clearing  system  by  the  Relevant  Depository;   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, if the transaction
meets its settlement  requirements,  will deliver  instructions  to the Relevant
Depository to take action to effect final settlement on its behalf by delivering
or receiving  securities  in DTC, and making or receiving  payment in accordance
with  normal  procedures  for  same  day  funds  settlement  applicable  to DTC.
Clearstream Participants and Euroclear Participants may not deliver instructions
directly to the European Depositories.

         DTC  which  is a New  York-chartered  limited  purpose  trust  company,
performs  services  for  its  DTC  Participants,  some of  which  (and/or  their
representatives)  own DTC.  In  accordance  with its normal  procedures,  DTC is
expected to record the positions held by each DTC  Participant in the Book-Entry
Certificates,  whether  held for its own  account  or as a nominee  for  another
person.  In general,  beneficial  ownership of Book-Entry  Certificates  will be
subject to the rules of DTC, as in effect from time to time.

         Clearstream,  67 Bd Grande-Duchesse  Charlotte,  L-1331 Luxembourg, was
incorporated in 1970 as a limited company under  Luxembourg law.  Clearstream is
owned by banks, securities dealers and financial institutions, and currently has
about  100  shareholders,   including  U.S.  financial   institutions  or  their
subsidiaries.  No single entity may own more than five percent of  Clearstream's
stock.

         Clearstream  is  registered  as a bank  in  Luxembourg,  and as such is
subject to regulation by the Institute Monetaire Luxembourgeois,  the Luxembourg
Monetary Authority, which supervises Luxembourg banks.

         Clearstream  holds  securities  for its customers and  facilitates  the
clearance and  settlement of securities  transactions  by electronic  book-entry
transfers  between  their  accounts.   Clearstream  provides  various  services,
including   safekeeping,    administration,    clearance   and   settlement   of
internationally   traded  securities  and  securities   lending  and  borrowing.
Clearstream  also deals with domestic  securities  markets in several  countries
through  established  depository and custodial  relationships.  Clearstream  has
established an electronic bridge with the Euroclear  Operator (as defined below)
in Brussels to facilitate  settlement  of trades  between  systems.  Clearstream
currently accepts over 70,000 securities issues on its books.

                                      S-74


         Clearstream's customers are world-wide financial institutions including
underwriters,  securities  brokers  and  dealers,  banks,  trust  companies  and
clearing  corporations.  Clearstream's  United  States  customers are limited to
securities   brokers  and  dealers  and  banks.   Currently,   Clearstream   has
approximately 3,000 customers located in over 60 countries,  including all major
European  countries,   Canada,  and  the  United  States.   Indirect  access  to
Clearstream is available to other institutions which clear through or maintain a
custodial relationship with an account holder of Clearstream.

         Euroclear was created in 1968 to hold  securities for its  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 29  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  Euroclear  Bank  S.A/N.V.  (the  "Euroclear  Operator"),  under
contract  with  Euroclear   Clearance   Systems  S.C.,  a  Belgian   cooperative
corporation (the  "Cooperative").  All operations are conducted by the Euroclear
Operator,  and all Euroclear  securities  clearance  accounts and Euroclear cash
accounts are accounts  with the Euroclear  Operator,  not the  Cooperative.  The
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.

         Securities  clearance  accounts and cash  accounts  with the  Euroclear
Operator 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.

         Distributions  on the  Book-Entry  Certificates  will  be  made on each
Distribution  Date by the  Securities  Administrator  to Cede & Co.  DTC will be
responsible  for  crediting  the amount of such  payments to the accounts of the
applicable DTC Participants in accordance with DTC's normal procedures. Each DTC
Participant  will be responsible for disbursing such payments to the Certificate
Owners of the Book-Entry  Certificates  that it represents and to each Financial
Intermediary for which it acts as agent.  Each such Financial  Intermediary will
be responsible for disbursing funds to the Certificate  Owners of the Book-Entry
Certificates that it represents.

         Under  a  book-entry  format,  Certificate  Owners  of  the  Book-Entry
Certificates may experience some delay in their receipt of payments,  since such
payments  will  be  forwarded  by the  Securities  Administrator  to  Cede & Co.
Distributions with respect to Certificates held through Clearstream or Euroclear
will be credited to the cash accounts of Clearstream  Participants  or Euroclear
Participants in accordance with the relevant  system's rules and procedures,  to
the extent  received by the  Relevant  Depository.  Such  distributions  will be
subject to tax reporting in accordance  with relevant United States tax laws and
regulations. See "Material Federal Income Tax Considerations  REMICS-Taxation of
Certain Foreign Investors" in the prospectus. Because DTC can only act on behalf
of  Financial  Intermediaries,  the  ability  of a  Certificate  Owner to pledge
Book-Entry  Certificates  to persons or entities that do not  participate in the
Depository  system,  or  otherwise  take  actions in respect of such  Book-Entry
Certificates, may be limited due to the lack of


                                      S-75


physical certificates for such Book-Entry Certificates. In addition, issuance of
the Book-Entry  Certificates in book-entry form may reduce the liquidity of such
Certificates in the secondary  market since certain  potential  investors may be
unwilling  to  purchase  Certificates  for which  they  cannot  obtain  physical
certificates.

         DTC has advised the  Securities  Administrator  that,  unless and until
Definitive  Certificates  are issued,  DTC will take any action  permitted to be
taken by the  holders  of the  Book-Entry  Certificates  under the  Pooling  and
Servicing   Agreement   only  at  the   direction  of  one  or  more   Financial
Intermediaries  to whose DTC accounts the Book-Entry  Certificates are credited,
to the extent that such actions are taken on behalf of Financial  Intermediaries
whose  holdings  include  such  Book-Entry  Certificates.   Clearstream  or  the
Euroclear Operator,  as the case may be, will take any other action permitted to
be taken by a  Certificateholder  under the Pooling and  Servicing  Agreement on
behalf of a Clearstream  Participant or Euroclear Participant only in accordance
with its  relevant  rules and  procedures  and  subject  to the  ability  of the
Relevant  Depository  to effect such actions on its behalf  through DTC. DTC may
take actions, at the direction of the related DTC Participants,  with respect to
some Book-Entry  Certificates  which conflict with actions taken with respect to
other Book-Entry Certificates.

         Definitive  Certificates  will be issued to  Certificate  Owners of the
Book-Entry Certificates,  or their nominees,  rather than to DTC or its nominee,
only if (a) DTC or the Depositor advises the Securities Administrator in writing
that DTC is no longer  willing,  qualified  or able to  discharge  properly  its
responsibilities  as nominee  and  depository  with  respect  to the  Book-Entry
Certificates  and the Depositor is unable to locate a qualified  successor,  (b)
the  Depositor,  at  its  sole  option,  with  the  consent  of  the  Securities
Administrator,  elects to terminate a book-entry system through DTC or (c) after
the  occurrence  of an Event of Default (as defined in the Pooling and Servicing
Agreement),  Certificate Owners having percentage interests aggregating not less
than 51% of the Book-Entry Certificates advise the Securities  Administrator and
DTC through the Financial  Intermediaries  and the DTC  Participants  in writing
that  the  continuation  of a  book-entry  system  through  DTC (or a  successor
thereto) is no longer in the best interests of Certificate Owners.

         Upon the occurrence of any of the events  described in the  immediately
preceding paragraph,  the Securities Administrator will be required to cause DTC
to  notify  all  Certificate  Owners  of the  occurrence  of such  event and the
availability  through DTC of Definitive  Certificates.  Upon surrender by DTC of
the global certificate or certificates  representing the Book-Entry Certificates
and instructions for  re-registration,  the Securities  Administrator will issue
Definitive  Certificates,  and  thereafter  the  Securities  Administrator  will
recognize  the holders of such  Definitive  Certificates  as  Certificateholders
under the Pooling and Servicing Agreement.

         In the event any Definitive Certificates are issued,  surrender of such
Definitive  Certificates  shall occur at the office designated from time to time
for such purposes by the  certificate  registrar.  As of the Closing  Date,  the
certificate  registrar  designates  its offices  located at Sixth and Marquette,
Minneapolis, Minnesota 55479 for this purpose.

         Although DTC,  Clearstream  and Euroclear  have agreed to the foregoing
procedures in order to facilitate transfers of Book-Entry Certificates among DTC
Participants of DTC, Clearstream 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  Depositor,  the  Servicers,  the  Master  Servicer,  the
Securities  Administrator  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 or any transfers thereof.

                                      S-76


PASS-THROUGH RATES

         The  pass-through  rate  (the  "Pass-Through  Rate")  on the  Class A-1
Certificates will be a rate per annum equal to the lesser of (i) One-Month LIBOR
plus 0.400% in the case of each  Distribution  Date  through and  including  the
Distribution Date on which the aggregate principal balance of the Mortgage Loans
(and  properties  acquired in respect  thereof)  remaining  in the trust fund is
reduced to less than or equal to 10% of the aggregate  principal  balance of the
Mortgage  Loans as of the Cut-off Date (the  "Optional  Termination  Date"),  or
One-Month LIBOR plus 0.800%, in the case of any Distribution Date thereafter and
(ii) the Net WAC Pass-Through Rate for the Distribution Date.

         The Pass-Through  Rate on the Class M-1 Certificates will be a rate per
annum equal to the lesser of (i) One-Month LIBOR plus 0.750% in the case of each
Distribution  Date through and  including  the  Optional  Termination  Date,  or
One-Month LIBOR plus 1.125%, in the case of any Distribution Date thereafter and
(ii) the Net WAC Pass-Through Rate for the Distribution Date.

         The Pass-Through  Rate on the Class M-2 Certificates will be a rate per
annum equal to the lesser of (i) One-Month LIBOR plus 1.250% in the case of each
Distribution  Date through and  including  the  Optional  Termination  Date,  or
One-Month LIBOR plus 1.875%, in the case of any Distribution Date thereafter and
(ii) the Net WAC Pass-Through Rate for the Distribution Date.

         The Pass-Through  Rate on the Class M-3 Certificates will be a rate per
annum equal to the lesser of (i) One-Month LIBOR plus 3.500% in the case of each
Distribution  Date through and  including  the  Optional  Termination  Date,  or
One-Month LIBOR plus 5.250%, in the case of any Distribution Date thereafter and
(ii) the Net WAC Pass-Through Rate for the Distribution Date.

         The Pass-Through  Rate on the Class M-4 Certificates will be a rate per
annum equal to the lesser of (i) One-Month LIBOR plus 3.000% in the case of each
Distribution  Date through and  including  the  Optional  Termination  Date,  or
One-Month LIBOR plus 4.500%, in the case of any Distribution Date thereafter and
(ii) the Net WAC Pass-Through Rate for the Distribution Date.

GLOSSARY

         "ADMINISTRATION  FEE RATE":  With respect to each  Mortgage  Loan,  the
Administration  Fee  Rate is equal to the sum of (i) the  Master  Servicing  Fee
Rate,  (ii) the  related  Servicing  Fee  Rate,  (iii) the rate at which the fee
payable to the Credit Risk Manager is calculated  and (iv) the rate at which the
premium  payable in connection with any lender paid primary  mortgage  insurance
policy is calculated, if applicable.

         "ALLOCATED  REALIZED LOSS AMOUNT":  The Allocated  Realized Loss Amount
with respect to any class of Mezzanine Certificates and any Distribution Date is
an amount  equal to the sum of any  Realized  Loss  allocated  to that  class of
certificates on the Distribution Date and any Allocated Realized Loss Amount for
that class remaining unpaid from the previous Distribution Date.

         "AVAILABLE  DISTRIBUTION AMOUNT": The Available Distribution Amount for
any  Distribution  Date  is  equal  to  the  sum,  net  of  amounts  payable  or
reimbursable  therefrom to the Servicers,  the Master  Servicer,  the Securities
Administrator,  the  Custodian,  the Credit Risk Manager or the  Trustee,  of an
amount equal to (i) the aggregate  amount of scheduled  monthly  payments on the
Mortgage  Loans  due on the  related  Due Date and  received  on or prior to the
related Determination Date; (ii) unscheduled payments in respect of the Mortgage
Loans (including  principal  prepayments  received during the related Prepayment
Period,  Compensating  Interest payments  received for such  Distribution  Date,
insurance proceeds,  liquidation proceeds,  Subsequent Recoveries and Arrearages
(as defined under "--Arrearages" in this prospectus  supplement) received during
the preceding  calendar month and proceeds from repurchases of and substitutions
for the Mortgage


                                      S-77


Loans occurring during the immediately  preceding  calendar month) and (iii) all
P&I Advances with respect to the Mortgage  Loans  received for the  Distribution
Date.

         "CERTIFICATE  PRINCIPAL BALANCE":  The Certificate Principal Balance of
an Offered  Certificate  outstanding  at any time  represents  the then  maximum
amount  that  the  holder  of  such   certificate  is  entitled  to  receive  as
distributions  allocable to principal  from the cash flow on the Mortgage  Loans
and the other assets in the trust fund. The Certificate  Principal Balance of an
Offered  Certificate  as of any date of  determination  is equal to the  initial
Certificate  Principal  Balance  of  such  certificate  plus,  in the  case of a
Mezzanine  Certificate,  any  Subsequent  Recoveries  added  to the  Certificate
Principal  Balance of such Certificate,  as described under  "Description of the
Certificates  --  Allocation  of  Losses;   Subordination"  in  this  prospectus
supplement  and,  reduced  by the  aggregate  of (i) all  amounts  allocable  to
principal  previously  distributed with respect to that certificate and (ii) any
reductions in the  Certificate  Principal  Balance of any Mezzanine  Certificate
deemed to have occurred in connection with allocations of Realized Losses in the
manner  described  in this  prospectus  supplement.  The  Certificate  Principal
Balance of the Class CE Certificates as of any date of determination is equal to
the excess, if any, of (i) the then aggregate  principal balance of the Mortgage
Loans over (ii) the then aggregate  Certificate Principal Balance of the Offered
Certificates  and the Class P Certificates.  The initial  Certificate  Principal
Balance of the Class P Certificates is equal to $100.

         "CLASS A-1  PRINCIPAL  DISTRIBUTION  AMOUNT":  The Class A-1  Principal
Distribution  Amount is an  amount  equal to the  excess of (x) the  Certificate
Principal  Balance  of the  Class  A-1  Certificates  immediately  prior  to the
Distribution  Date over (y) the lesser of (A) the  product of (i)  approximately
45.50% and (ii) the aggregate  principal balance of the Mortgage Loans as of the
last day of the related Due Period (after giving effect to scheduled payments of
principal due during the related Due Period, to the extent received or advanced,
and unscheduled  collections of principal received during the related Prepayment
Period) and (B) the aggregate  principal balance of the Mortgage Loans as of the
last day of the related Due Period (after giving effect to scheduled payments of
principal due during the related Due Period, to the extent received or advanced,
and unscheduled  collections of principal received during the related Prepayment
Period) minus the product of (i) 0.50% and (ii) the aggregate  principal balance
of the Mortgage Loans as of the Cut-off Date.

         "CLASS M-1  PRINCIPAL  DISTRIBUTION  AMOUNT":  The Class M-1  Principal
Distribution  Amount is an amount  equal to the excess of (x) the sum of (i) the
Certificate  Principal  Balance of the Class A-1 Certificates  after taking into
account  the  payment  of the Class  A-1  Principal  Distribution  Amount on the
Distribution  Date and (ii) the Certificate  Principal  Balance of the Class M-1
Certificates  immediately  prior to the Distribution Date over (y) the lesser of
(A) the product of (i)  approximately  66.00% and (ii) the  aggregate  principal
balance  of the  Mortgage  Loans as of the last day of the  related  Due  Period
(after giving  effect to scheduled  payments of principal due during the related
Due Period, to the extent received or advanced,  and unscheduled  collections of
principal  received during the related  Prepayment Period) and (B) the aggregate
principal  balance of the  Mortgage  Loans as of the last day of the related Due
Period (after  giving  effect to scheduled  payments of principal due during the
related  Due  Period,  to the  extent  received  or  advanced,  and  unscheduled
collections of principal  received during the related  Prepayment  Period) minus
the  product  of (i)  0.50%  and (ii) the  aggregate  principal  balance  of the
Mortgage Loans as of the Cut-off Date.

         "CLASS M-2  PRINCIPAL  DISTRIBUTION  AMOUNT":  The Class M-2  Principal
Distribution  Amount is an amount  equal to the excess of (x) the sum of (i) the
Certificate  Principal  Balance of the Class A-1 Certificates  after taking into
account  the  payment  of the Class  A-1  Principal  Distribution  Amount on the
Distribution  Date,  (ii) the  Certificate  Principal  Balance  of the Class M-1
Certificates  after taking into  account the payment of the Class M-1  Principal
Distribution Amount on the Distribution Date and (iii) the Certificate Principal
Balance of the Class M-2 Certificates immediately prior to the Distribution Date
over (y) the lesser of (A) the product of (i) approximately  76.50% and (ii) the
aggregate  principal  balance  of the  Mortgage  Loans as of the last day of the
related Due Period


                                      S-78


(after giving  effect to scheduled  payments of principal due during the related
Due Period, to the extent received or advanced,  and unscheduled  collections of
principal  received during the related  Prepayment Period) and (B) the aggregate
principal  balance of the  Mortgage  Loans as of the last day of the related Due
Period (after  giving  effect to scheduled  payments of principal due during the
related  Due  Period,  to the  extent  received  or  advanced,  and  unscheduled
collections of principal  received during the related  Prepayment  Period) minus
the  product  of (i)  0.50%  and (ii) the  aggregate  principal  balance  of the
Mortgage Loans as of the Cut-off Date.

         "CLASS M-3  PRINCIPAL  DISTRIBUTION  AMOUNT":  The Class M-3  Principal
Distribution  Amount is an amount  equal to the excess of (x) the sum of (i) the
Certificate  Principal  Balance of the Class A-1 Certificates  after taking into
account  the  payment  of the Class  A-1  Principal  Distribution  Amount on the
Distribution  Date,  (ii) the  Certificate  Principal  Balance  of the Class M-1
Certificates  after taking into  account the payment of the Class M-1  Principal
Distribution  Amount on the Distribution  Date, (iii) the Certificate  Principal
Balance of the Class M-2  Certificates  after taking into account the payment of
the Class M-2 Principal  Distribution  Amount on the Distribution  Date and (iv)
the  Certificate  Principal  Balance of the Class M-3  Certificates  immediately
prior to the  Distribution  Date over (y) the  lesser of (A) the  product of (i)
approximately  86.00% and (ii) the aggregate  principal  balance of the Mortgage
Loans as of the last day of the  related  Due  Period  (after  giving  effect to
scheduled payments of principal due during the related Due Period, to the extent
received or advanced,  and unscheduled  collections of principal received during
the related  Prepayment  Period) and (B) the aggregate  principal balance of the
Mortgage Loans as of the last day of the related Due Period (after giving effect
to  scheduled  payments of principal  due during the related Due Period,  to the
extent received or advanced,  and unscheduled  collections of principal received
during the related  Prepayment  Period)  minus the product of (i) 0.50% and (ii)
the aggregate principal balance of the Mortgage Loans as of the Cut-off Date.

         "CLASS M-4  PRINCIPAL  DISTRIBUTION  AMOUNT":  The Class M-4  Principal
Distribution  Amount is an amount  equal to the excess of (x) the sum of (i) the
Certificate  Principal  Balance of the Class A-1 Certificates  after taking into
account  the  payment  of the Class  A-1  Principal  Distribution  Amount on the
Distribution  Date,  (ii) the  Certificate  Principal  Balance  of the Class M-1
Certificates  after taking into  account the payment of the Class M-1  Principal
Distribution  Amount on the Distribution  Date, (iii) the Certificate  Principal
Balance of the Class M-2  Certificates  after taking into account the payment of
the Class M-2 Principal  Distribution  Amount on the Distribution Date, (iv) the
Certificate  Principal  Balance of the Class M-3 Certificates  after taking into
account  the  payment  of the Class  M-3  Principal  Distribution  Amount on the
Distribution  Date and (v) the  Certificate  Principal  Balance of the Class M-4
Certificates  immediately  prior to the Distribution Date over (y) the lesser of
(A) the product of (i)  approximately  88.50% and (ii) the  aggregate  principal
balance  of the  Mortgage  Loans as of the last day of the  related  Due  Period
(after giving  effect to scheduled  payments of principal due during the related
Due Period, to the extent received or advanced,  and unscheduled  collections of
principal  received during the related  Prepayment Period) and (B) the aggregate
principal  balance of the  Mortgage  Loans as of the last day of the related Due
Period (after  giving  effect to scheduled  payments of principal due during the
related  Due  Period,  to the  extent  received  or  advanced,  and  unscheduled
collections of principal  received during the related  Prepayment  Period) minus
the  product  of (i)  0.50%  and (ii) the  aggregate  principal  balance  of the
Mortgage Loans as of the Cut-off Date.

         "CREDIT ENHANCEMENT PERCENTAGE":  The Credit Enhancement Percentage for
any  Distribution  Date  and  any  class  of  Offered  Certificates  will be the
percentage  obtained by dividing  (x) the sum of (i) the  aggregate  Certificate
Principal    Balance   of   the   Subordinate    Certificates   and   (ii)   the
Overcollateralization  Amount  by (y) the  aggregate  principal  balance  of the
Mortgage  Loans as of the last day of the Due Period,  calculated  after  taking
into account  scheduled  payments of principal due during the related Due Period
to the extent  received or advanced,  and  unscheduled  collections of principal
received during the related  Prepayment Period, and after reduction for Realized
Losses incurred on the Mortgage Loans during the related  Prepayment Period, and
distribution of the


                                      S-79


Principal  Distribution  Amount to the holders of the certificates then entitled
to distributions of principal on such Distribution Date.

         "DETERMINATION  DATE": With respect to any Distribution  Date, the 15th
day of the  calendar  month in which such  Distribution  Date occurs or, if such
15th day is not a business day, the business day immediately preceding such 15th
day.

         "DUE  PERIOD":  The Due Period with  respect to the first  Distribution
Date commences on the first day of the month immediately  preceding the month in
which the  Distribution  Date  occurs  and ends on the first day of the month in
which the Distribution  Date occurs and, with respect to any  Distribution  Date
thereafter,  commences on the second day of the month immediately  preceding the
month in which the  Distribution  Date  occurs  and ends on the first day of the
month in which the Distribution Date occurs.

         "EXPENSE ADJUSTED MORTGAGE RATE": The Expense Adjusted Mortgage Rate on
any Mortgage Loan is equal to the then applicable  Mortgage Rate on the Mortgage
Loan minus the Administration Fee Rate.

         "EXTRA PRINCIPAL DISTRIBUTION AMOUNT": The Extra Principal Distribution
Amount  for any  Distribution  Date will be the  lesser  of (i) the Net  Monthly
Excess Cashflow for such  Distribution  Date and (ii) the  Overcollateralization
Increase Amount.

         "INTEREST ACCRUAL PERIOD":  The Interest Accrual Period for the Offered
Certificates  and  any  Distribution  Date  is  the  period  commencing  on  the
Distribution  Date of the month  immediately  preceding  the month in which such
Distribution Date occurs (or, in the case of the first period, commencing on the
Closing  Date),  and ending on the day preceding  such  Distribution  Date.  All
distributions of interest on the Offered Certificates will be based on a 360-day
year and the actual number of days in the applicable Interest Accrual Period.

         "INTEREST CARRY FORWARD AMOUNT": The Interest Carry Forward Amount with
respect to any class of Offered  Certificates and any Distribution Date is equal
to the amount, if any, by which the Interest  Distribution Amount for that class
of certificates  for the immediately  preceding  Distribution  Date exceeded the
actual  amount  distributed  on the  certificates  in respect of interest on the
immediately  preceding  Distribution  Date,  together  with any  Interest  Carry
Forward Amount with respect to such class of certificates  remaining unpaid from
the previous  Distribution  Date,  plus interest  accrued thereon at the related
Pass-Through  Rate on such class of  certificates  for the most  recently  ended
Interest Accrual Period.

         "INTEREST  DISTRIBUTION  AMOUNT": The Interest  Distribution Amount for
any  class of the  Offered  Certificates  on any  Distribution  Date is equal to
interest  accrued during the related  Interest Accrual Period on the Certificate
Principal  Balance of that class  immediately  prior to the Distribution Date at
the  Pass-Through  Rate for that class  reduced (to not less than zero),  in the
case of each such  class,  by the  allocable  share,  if any,  for that class of
Prepayment  Interest  Shortfalls  to the  extent  not  covered  by  Compensating
Interest paid by the Master  Servicer or the Servicers and shortfalls  resulting
from the application of the Relief Act or similar state or local laws.

         "INTEREST  REMITTANCE  AMOUNT":  The Interest Remittance Amount for any
Distribution Date is that portion of the Available  Distribution Amount for such
Distribution Date that represents  interest received or advanced on the Mortgage
Loans (other than any Simple Interest Excess,  if applicable),  plus any amounts
withdrawn from the Simple Interest Excess Sub-Account (defined below), minus any
amounts payable or  reimbursable  therefrom to the Servicers,  the Trustee,  the
Custodian,  the Master  Servicer,  the  Credit  Risk  Manager or the  Securities
Administrator.


                                      S-80


         "NET MONTHLY EXCESS CASHFLOW":  The Net Monthly Excess Cashflow for any
Distribution  Date is equal to the sum of (i) the amount of any  collections  in
respect of  Arrearages  on the Mortgage  Loans,  (ii) any  Overcollateralization
Reduction Amount and (iii) the excess of (x) the Available  Distribution  Amount
for the  Distribution  Date  over (y) the sum for the  Distribution  Date of the
aggregate of the Senior Interest  Distribution  Amount payable to the holders of
the Class A-1 Certificates,  the aggregate of the Interest  Distribution Amounts
payable  to  the  holders  of  the  Mezzanine  Certificates  and  the  Principal
Remittance Amount.

         "NET WAC  PASS-THROUGH  RATE":  The Net WAC  Pass-Through  Rate for any
Distribution  Date and the Offered  Certificates,  is a rate per annum (adjusted
for the actual number of days elapsed in the related  Interest  Accrual  Period)
equal to the weighted average of the Expense Adjusted Mortgage Rates on the then
outstanding Mortgage Loans, weighted based on their Scheduled Principal Balances
as of the  first  day of the  calendar  month  preceding  the month in which the
Distribution Date occurs.

         "NET WAC RATE CARRYOVER  AMOUNT":  With respect to any class of Offered
Certificates and any Distribution Date on which the Pass-Through Rate is limited
to the applicable Net WAC  Pass-Through  Rate, an amount equal to the sum of (i)
the excess of (x) the amount of interest  such class would have been entitled to
receive on such  Distribution  Date if the applicable Net WAC Pass-Through  Rate
would not have been applicable to such class on such  Distribution Date over (y)
the amount of interest paid on such  Distribution Date at the applicable Net WAC
Pass-Through  Rate plus (ii) the related Net WAC Rate  Carryover  Amount for the
previous  Distribution  Date not previously  distributed  together with interest
thereon  at a rate  equal to the  Pass-Through  Rate for such class for the most
recently ended Interest  Accrual Period  determined  without taking into account
the applicable Net WAC Pass-Through Rate.

         "OVERCOLLATERALIZATION  AMOUNT": The Overcollateralization Amount as of
any  Distribution  Date is equal to the  amount by which  aggregate  outstanding
principal balance of the Mortgage Loans  immediately  following the Distribution
Date  exceeds  the sum of the  Certificate  Principal  Balances  of the  Offered
Certificates  and the Class P Certificates  after taking into account payment of
the Principal Remittance Amount on the related Distribution Date.

         "OVERCOLLATERALIZATION   INCREASE  AMOUNT":  An   Overcollateralization
Increase Amount with respect to the Offered  Certificates  and any  Distribution
Date is any  amount  of Net  Monthly  Excess  Cashflow  actually  applied  as an
accelerated    payment   of    principal    to   the    extent   the    Required
Overcollateralization Amount exceeds the Overcollateralization Amount.

         "OVERCOLLATERALIZATION   REDUCTION  AMOUNT":  An  Overcollateralization
Reduction  Amount  for  any  Distribution  Date  is  the  amount  by  which  the
Overcollateralization  Amount exceeds the Required  Overcollateralization Amount
limited to the Principal Remittance Amount. The Overcollateralization  Reduction
Amount is equal to zero when a Trigger Event is in effect.

         "PREPAYMENT  PERIOD":  With respect to the first Distribution Date, the
period  commencing on December 1, 2004 and ending on January 15, 2005,  and with
respect any Distribution  Date thereafter and the Mortgage Loans serviced by (i)
Ocwen and SPS,  the  calendar  month  preceding  the month in which the  related
Distribution  Date occurs with respect to  prepayments  in part,  and the period
beginning on the 16th day of the month preceding the related  Distribution  Date
and ending on the 15th day of the month in which such  Distribution  Date occurs
with respect to prepayments  in full; and (ii) Option One, the period  beginning
on the 16th day of the month preceding the related  Distribution Date and ending
on the 15th day of the month of such Distribution Date.

         "PRINCIPAL  DISTRIBUTION AMOUNT": The Principal Distribution Amount for
any  Distribution  Date  will  be the sum of (i) the  principal  portion  of all
scheduled monthly payments on the


                                      S-81


Mortgage Loans due during the related Due Period,  whether or not received on or
prior to the  related  Determination  Date;  (ii) the  principal  portion of all
proceeds  received in respect of the  repurchase  of a Mortgage Loan (or, in the
case of a substitution,  certain amounts representing a principal adjustment) as
required by the Pooling and Servicing Agreement during the immediately preceding
calendar  month;   (iii)  the  principal   portion  of  all  other   unscheduled
collections,  including insurance proceeds,  liquidation proceeds and Subsequent
Recoveries received during the immediately preceding calendar month and all full
and partial principal prepayments received during the related Prepayment Period,
to the extent  applied as recoveries of principal on the Mortgage Loans and (iv)
the amount of any  Overcollateralization  Increase Amount for such  Distribution
Date minus (v) the amount of any Overcollateralization Reduction Amount for such
Distribution  Date minus any amounts payable or reimbursable  from the foregoing
to the Servicers,  the Trustee, the Custodian,  the Master Servicer,  the Credit
Risk Manager or the  Securities  Administrator.  In no event will the  Principal
Distribution  Amount with respect to any Distribution Date be (x) less than zero
or (y) greater than the then outstanding aggregate Certificate Principal Balance
of the Offered Certificates.

         "PRINCIPAL  REMITTANCE AMOUNT": The Principal Remittance Amount for any
Distribution  Date is the sum of the  amounts  described  in clauses (i) through
(iii) of the  definition  of  Principal  Distribution  Amount net of any amounts
payable or reimbursable therefrom to the Servicers,  the Trustee, the Custodian,
the Master Servicer, the Credit Risk Manager or the Securities Administrator.

         "REQUIRED  OVERCOLLATERALIZATION AMOUNT": Shall mean an amount equal to
the product of approximately (i) 5.75% and (ii) the aggregate  principal balance
of the  Mortgage  Loans  as of the  Cut-off  Date,  which  may be  decreased  as
described   under   "Overcollateralization   Provisions"   in  this   prospectus
supplement.

         "SCHEDULED  PRINCIPAL BALANCE":  The Scheduled Principal Balance of any
Mortgage Loan as of any date of determination is equal to the principal  balance
of the Mortgage Loan as of the Cut-off Date, after  application of the principal
portion of all payments  collected on or before the Cut-off Date, reduced by (i)
the  principal  portion  of all  monthly  payments  due on or before the date of
determination,   whether  or  not  received;   (ii)  all  amounts  allocable  to
unscheduled  principal  that were received  prior to the calendar month in which
the date of  determination  occurs and (iii) any Bankruptcy  Loss occurring as a
result of a Deficient Valuation that was incurred prior to the calendar month in
which the date of determination occurs.

         "SENIOR INTEREST DISTRIBUTION AMOUNT": The Senior Interest Distribution
Amount for any Distribution  Date is equal to the Interest  Distribution  Amount
for such Distribution Date for the Class A-1 Certificates and the Interest Carry
Forward  Amount,   if  any,  for  such  Distribution  Date  for  the  Class  A-1
Certificates.

         "STEPDOWN  DATE":  The Stepdown Date is the earlier to occur of (i) the
later to occur of (x) the  Distribution  Date  occurring in January 2008 and (y)
the  first  Distribution  Date  on  which  the  Credit  Enhancement   Percentage
(calculated  for this purpose only after  taking into account  distributions  of
principal on the Mortgage Loans,  but prior to any distribution of the Principal
Distribution  Amount  to  the  holders  of the  certificates  then  entitled  to
distributions of principal on the  Distribution  Date), is greater than or equal
to  approximately  54.50%  and (ii) the  first  Distribution  Date on which  the
Certificate  Principal Balance of the Class A-1 Certificates has been reduced to
zero.

         "SUBSEQUENT RECOVERIES":  As of any Distribution Date, amounts received
during  the  related  Prepayment  Period by the  related  Servicer  specifically
related to a defaulted  Mortgage Loan or disposition of an REO Property prior to
the related Prepayment Period that resulted in a Realized


                                      S-82


Loss, after the liquidation or disposition of such defaulted  Mortgage Loan, net
of any amounts  reimbursable to the related  Servicer  related to obtaining such
Subsequent Recovery.

         "TRIGGER EVENT": With respect to any Distribution Date, a Trigger Event
is in effect if (x) the percentage obtained by dividing (i) the principal amount
of  Mortgage  Loans  delinquent  60 days or more  (including  Mortgage  Loans in
foreclosure, REO and discharged in bankruptcy;  provided that in the case of (I)
Mortgage Loans that are the subject of forbearance plans and (II) Mortgage Loans
with  respect  to which  the  related  borrower  is the  subject  of  bankruptcy
proceedings,  delinquency  shall be deemed to mean  delinquency  of the  monthly
payment  due  under  the  related   forbearance  plan  or  bankruptcy  plan,  as
applicable) by (ii) the aggregate  principal  balance of the Mortgage  Loans, in
each case, as of the last day of the previous  calendar  month exceeds 29.50% of
the Credit Enhancement  Percentage with respect to such Distribution Date or (y)
the aggregate  amount of Realized Losses incurred since the Cut-off Date through
the last day of the  related  Due  Period  divided  by the  aggregate  principal
balance of the  Mortgage  Loans as of the Cut-off  Date  exceeds the  applicable
percentages set forth below with respect to such Distribution Date:


DISTRIBUTION DATE                     PERCENTAGE
- -----------------------------         ---------------------------------------------------
                                   
January 2008 to December 2008         4.25%, plus 1/12 of 1.50% for each month thereafter

January 2009 to December 2009         5.75%, plus 1/12 of 1.15% for each month thereafter

January 2010 to December 2010         6.90%, plus 1/12 of 0.35% for each month thereafter

January 2011 and thereafter           7.25%


INTEREST DISTRIBUTIONS ON THE OFFERED CERTIFICATES

         Holders of the Offered Certificates will be entitled to receive on each
Distribution  Date,  interest  distributions  in an  aggregate  amount  equal to
interest  accrued during the related  Interest Accrual Period on the Certificate
Principal Balances thereof at the then-applicable Pass-Through Rates thereon, in
the priorities set forth below.

         On each  Distribution  Date,  the  Interest  Remittance  Amount will be
distributed in the following order of priority.

                  FIRST,  to the  holders  of the  Class A-1  Certificates,  the
Senior Interest Distribution Amount allocable to the Class A-1 Certificates; and

                  SECOND,  sequentially,  to the holders of the Class M-1, Class
M-2,  Class  M-3 and  Class  M-4  Certificates,  in  that  order,  the  Interest
Distribution Amount allocable to each such class.

         On any Distribution Date, any shortfalls resulting from the application
of the Relief Act or any similar state or local law and any Prepayment  Interest
Shortfalls  to the  extent  not  covered by  Compensating  Interest  paid by the
Servicers or the Master Servicer will be allocated  FIRST, to Net Monthly Excess
Cashflow  according  to the  priorities  set  forth  under  "Description  of the
Certificates--Overcollateralization  Provisions" in this prospectus  supplement,
SECOND,  to the Class M-4  Certificates,  THIRD, to the Class M-3  Certificates,
FOURTH, to the Class M-2 Certificates, fifth, to the Class M-1 Certificates, and
SIXTH, to the Class A-1  Certificates.  The holders of the Offered  Certificates
will be entitled to reimbursement for any of these interest shortfalls,  subject
to available funds, in the priorities  described under  "--Overcollateralization
Provisions" in this prospectus supplement.

         With respect to any Distribution Date, to the extent that the aggregate
Interest Distribution Amount exceeds the Interest Remittance Amount, a shortfall
in interest  distributions on one or more classes of Offered  Certificates  will
result and payments of Interest Carry Forward Amounts to such classes of Offered
Certificates will be made. The Interest Carry Forward Amount with respect


                                      S-83


to the Class A-1  Certificates,  if any,  is  distributed  as part of the Senior
Interest  Distribution  Amount on each  Distribution  Date.  The Interest  Carry
Forward  Amount  with  respect to the  Mezzanine  Certificates,  if any,  may be
carried  forward to  succeeding  Distribution  Dates and,  subject to  available
funds,  will be distributed in the manner set forth in  "--Overcollateralization
Provisions" in this prospectus supplement.

         Except as otherwise  described in this  prospectus  supplement,  on any
Distribution Date, distributions of the Interest Distribution Amount for a class
of certificates  will be made in respect of that class of  certificates,  to the
extent provided in this prospectus  supplement,  on a pari passu basis, based on
the Certificate Principal Balance of the certificates of each class.

CALCULATION OF ONE-MONTH LIBOR

         With respect to each  Interest  Accrual  Period (other than the initial
Interest  Accrual Period) and the Offered  Certificates,  on the second business
day  preceding  such  Interest  Accrual  Period,  (each such date,  an "Interest
Determination  Date"),  the Securities  Administrator  will determine  One-Month
LIBOR for such Interest  Accrual  Period.  With respect to the initial  Interest
Accrual Period, on the Closing Date, the Securities Administrator will determine
One-Month LIBOR for such Interest Accrual Period based on information  available
on the second  business day  preceding  the Closing Date (the related  "Interest
Determination Date"). "One Month LIBOR" means, as of any Interest  Determination
Date, the London interbank offered rate for one-month U.S. dollar deposits which
appears on Telerate Page 3750 (as defined herein) as of 11:00 a.m. (London time)
on such date. If such rate does not appear on Telerate  Page 3750,  the rate for
that day will be  determined  on the basis of the offered rates of the Reference
Banks (as defined herein) for one-month U.S. dollar  deposits,  as of 11:00 a.m.
(London time) on such Interest Determination Date. The Securities  Administrator
will  request the  principal  London  office of each of the  Reference  Banks to
provide a quotation of its rate. If on such Interest  Determination  Date two or
more Reference  Banks provide such offered  quotations,  One-Month LIBOR for the
related  Interest  Accrual Period shall be the  arithmetic  mean of such offered
quotations  (rounded  upwards if  necessary  to the  nearest  whole  multiple of
0.0625%). If on such Interest  Determination Date fewer than two Reference Banks
provide  such  offered  quotations,  One-Month  LIBOR for the  related  Interest
Accrual  Period shall be the higher of (x) One-Month  LIBOR as determined on the
previous  Interest  Determination  Date and (y) the  Reserve  Interest  Rate (as
defined herein).

         As used in this section,  "business day" means a day on which banks are
open for  dealing  in  foreign  currency  and  exchange  in London and New York;
"Telerate  Page 3750" means the display page  currently so designated on the Dow
Jones  Telerate  Capital  Markets Report (or such other page as may replace that
page on that service for the purpose of displaying  comparable rates or prices);
"Reference  Banks" means leading banks selected by the Securities  Administrator
and  engaged  in  transactions  in  Eurodollar  deposits  in  the  international
Eurocurrency  market (i) with an established  place of business in London,  (ii)
which have been designated as such by the Securities Administrator and (iii) not
controlling,  controlled  by, or under common control with, the Depositor or the
Securities  Administrator,  and  "Reserve  Interest  Rate" shall be the rate per
annum  that  the  Securities  Administrator  determines  to be  either  (i)  the
arithmetic  mean (rounded  upwards if necessary to the nearest whole multiple of
0.0625%) of the one-month  U.S.  dollar  lending rates which New York City banks
selected by the Securities  Administrator  are quoting on the relevant  Interest
Determination  Date to the  principal  London  offices of  leading  banks in the
London interbank  market or (ii) in the event that the Securities  Administrator
can determine no such arithmetic  mean, the lowest one-month U.S. dollar lending
rate which New York City banks  selected  by the  Securities  Administrator  are
quoting on such Interest Determination Date to leading European banks.

         The  establishment  of One-Month  LIBOR on each Interest  Determination
Date  by  the  Securities  Administrator  and  the  Securities   Administrator's
calculation of the rate of interest


                                      S-84


applicable to the Offered  Certificates  for the related Interest Accrual Period
shall (in the absence of manifest error) be final and binding.

PRINCIPAL DISTRIBUTIONS ON THE OFFERED CERTIFICATES

         On each Distribution  Date, the Principal  Distribution  Amount will be
distributed  to the  holders  of  the  Offered  Certificates  then  entitled  to
principal distributions. In no event will the Principal Distribution Amount with
respect to any Distribution  Date be (i) less than zero or (ii) greater than the
then  outstanding   aggregate  Certificate  Principal  Balance  of  the  Offered
Certificates.

         (A) On each Distribution Date (i) prior to the Stepdown Date or (ii) on
which a Trigger Event is in effect, distributions in respect of principal to the
extent  of the  Principal  Distribution  Amount  will be  made in the  following
amounts and order of priority:

                  FIRST, to the holders of the Class A-1 Certificates  until the
Certificate  Principal Balance of the Class A-1 Certificates has been reduced to
zero; and

                  SECOND,  sequentially,  to the holders of the Class M-1, Class
M-2, Class M-3 and Class M-4 Certificates,  in that order, until the Certificate
Principal Balance of each such class has been reduced to zero.

         (B) On each  Distribution  Date (i) on or after the  Stepdown  Date and
(ii) on which a Trigger  Event is not in  effect,  distributions  in  respect of
principal to the extent of the Principal Distribution Amount will be made in the
following amounts and order of priority:

                  FIRST, to the holders of the Class A-1 Certificates, the Class
A-1 Principal Distribution Amount until the Certificate Principal Balance of the
Class A-1 Certificates has been reduced to zero;

                  SECOND,  to the  holders  of the Class M-1  Certificates,  the
lesser of (x) the excess of (i) the Principal  Distribution Amount over (ii) the
amount  distributed  to the holders of the Class A-1  Certificates  under clause
FIRST above,  and (y) the Class M-1  Principal  Distribution  Amount,  until the
Certificate  Principal Balance of the Class M-1 Certificates has been reduced to
zero;

                  THIRD,  to the  holders  of the  Class M-2  Certificates,  the
lesser of (x) the excess of (i) the Principal  Distribution Amount over (ii) the
sum of the  amounts  distributed  to the  holders of the Class A-1  Certificates
under clause FIRST above and to the holders of the Class M-1 Certificates  under
clause SECOND above, and (y) the Class M-2 Principal  Distribution Amount, until
the Certificate Principal Balance of the Class M-2 Certificates has been reduced
to zero;

                  FOURTH,  to the  holders  of the Class M-3  Certificates,  the
lesser of (x) the excess of (i) the Principal  Distribution Amount over (ii) the
sum of the  amounts  distributed  to the  holders of the Class A-1  Certificates
under  clause FIRST above,  to the holders of the Class M-1  Certificates  under
clause  SECOND  above and to the  holders  of the Class M-2  Certificates  under
clause THIRD above, and (y) the Class M-3 Principal  Distribution  Amount, until
the Certificate Principal Balance of the Class M-3 Certificates has been reduced
to zero; and

                  FIFTH,  to the  holders  of the  Class M-4  Certificates,  the
lesser of (x) the excess of (i) the Principal  Distribution Amount over (ii) the
sum of the  amounts  distributed  to the  holders of the Class A-1  Certificates
under  clause FIRST above,  to the holders of the Class M-1  Certificates  under
clause SECOND above, to the holders of the Class M-2  Certificates  under clause
THIRD above and to the holders of the Class M-3 Certificates under clause FOURTH
above,  and  (y)  the  Class  M-4  Principal   Distribution  Amount,  until  the
Certificate  Principal Balance of the Class M-4 Certificates has been reduced to
zero;



                                      S-85


         The  allocation of  distributions  in respect of principal to the Class
A-1 Certificates on each Distribution Date (a) prior to the Stepdown Date or (b)
on which a Trigger Event has occurred,  will have the effect of accelerating the
amortization  of the Class A-1  Certificates  while,  in the absence of Realized
Losses,  increasing the respective  percentage interest in the principal balance
of the Mortgage Loans  evidenced by the Mezzanine  Certificates.  Increasing the
respective  percentage interest in the trust fund of the Mezzanine  Certificates
relative to that of the Class A-1  Certificates  is  intended  to  preserve  the
availability of the subordination provided by the Mezzanine Certificates.

CREDIT ENHANCEMENT

         The credit  enhancement  provided for the benefit of the holders of the
Offered  Certificates  consists of subordination,  as described in this section,
arrearages as described under  "-Arrearages"  in this prospectus  supplement and
overcollateralization as described under "--Overcollateralization Provisions" in
this prospectus supplement.

         The rights of the holders of the  Subordinate  Certificates  to receive
distributions will be subordinated,  to the extent described in this section, to
the rights of the holders of the Class A-1 Certificates.  This  subordination is
intended  to enhance  the  likelihood  of regular  receipt by the holders of the
Class A-1 Certificates of the full amount of their scheduled monthly payments of
interest  and  principal  and to afford  holders  of the Class A-1  Certificates
protection against Realized Losses.

         The protection afforded to the holders of the Class A-1 Certificates by
means of the subordination of the Subordinate  Certificates will be accomplished
by (i) the  preferential  right of the holders of the Class A-1  Certificates to
receive on any  Distribution  Date,  prior to  distribution  on the  Subordinate
Certificates,  distributions  in respect of interest and  principal,  subject to
available funds and (ii) if necessary, the right of the holders of the Class A-1
Certificates to receive future  distributions of amounts that would otherwise be
payable to the holders of the Subordinate Certificates.

         In  addition,   (i)  the  rights  of  the  holders  of  the  Class  M-1
Certificates  will be senior to the rights of  holders  of the Class M-2,  Class
M-3, Class M-4 and Class CE Certificates,  (ii) the rights of the holders of the
Class M-2 Certificates  will be senior to the rights of the holders of the Class
M-3, Class M-4 and Class CE Certificates, (iii) the rights of the holders of the
Class M-3 Certificates  will be senior to the rights of the holders of the Class
M-4 Certificates and Class CE Certificates and (iv) the rights of the holders of
the Class M-4  Certificates  will be senior to the rights of the  holders of the
Class CE Certificates.  This subordination is intended to enhance the likelihood
of regular receipt by the holders of more senior  certificates of  distributions
in respect of interest  and  principal  and to afford these  holders  protection
against Realized Losses.

ARREARAGES

         The Mortgage  Pool contains  Mortgage  Loans which have been subject to
monetary defaults in the past and are now  re-performing  either pursuant to the
terms of the  original  mortgage  note or under the  provisions  of a bankruptcy
plan.  Certain of these Mortgage Loans have  Arrearages.  The  "Arrearage"  with
respect  to any  such  Mortgage  Loan is equal to the  interest  portion  of the
payments due with respect to any such  Mortgage  Loan on or prior to the Cut-off
Date but not received by the related  Servicer by such date. Any Realized Losses
on the Mortgage Loans on any  Distribution  Date will first cause a reduction in
Net Monthly  Excess  Cashflow,  which  includes  any  collections  in respect of
Arrearages  on the  Mortgage  Loans.  This  reduction  is intended to afford the
holders of the Offered Certificates protection against Realized Losses.





                                      S-86


OVERCOLLATERALIZATION PROVISIONS

         The weighted  average Expense  Adjusted  Mortgage Rate for the Mortgage
Loans is  expected to be higher than the  weighted  average of the  Pass-Through
Rates on the Offered  Certificates,  thus generating excess interest collections
which, in the absence of Realized Losses, will not be necessary to fund interest
distributions on the Offered  Certificates.  Additional  excess interest will be
generated   by  the   portion  of  the   Mortgage   Pool   represented   by  the
Overcollateralization Amount. The Pooling and Servicing Agreement requires that,
on each Distribution  Date, the Net Monthly Excess Cashflow,  if any, be applied
on the related  Distribution Date as an accelerated  payment of principal on the
class or classes of Offered Certificates then entitled to receive  distributions
in  respect of  principal,  but only to the  limited  extent  described  in this
section.

         With respect to any Distribution  Date, any Net Monthly Excess Cashflow
(or,  in the  case of  clause  FIRST  below,  the Net  Monthly  Excess  Cashflow
exclusive  of any  Overcollateralization  Reduction  Amount)  shall  be  paid as
follows:

         FIRST,  to the  holders of the class or classes  of  certificates  then
entitled to receive distributions in respect of principal, in an amount equal to
any Extra Principal  Distribution Amount,  payable to such holders in accordance
with  the  priorities  set  forth  under   "--Allocation   of  Extra   Principal
Distribution Amount" below;

         SECOND, sequentially, to the holders of the Class M-1, Class M-2, Class
M-3 and  Class  M-4  Certificates,  in that  order,  in an  amount  equal to the
Interest Carry Forward Amount allocable to each such class;

         THIRD, sequentially,  to the holders of the Class M-1, Class M-2, Class
M-3 and  Class  M-4  Certificates,  in that  order,  in an  amount  equal to the
Allocated Realized Loss Amount allocable to each such class;

         FOURTH,  to the  holders  of the Class A-1  Certificates,  in an amount
equal  to  such  certificates'   allocated  share  of  any  Prepayment  Interest
Shortfalls  on the  Mortgage  Loans to the  extent not  covered by  Compensating
Interest  paid by the  Master  Servicer  or the  Servicers,  and any  shortfalls
resulting  from the  application of the Relief Act or similar state or local law
or the bankruptcy code with respect to the Mortgage Loans;

         FIFTH, sequentially,  to the holders of the Class M-1, Class M-2, Class
M-3 and Class  M-4  Certificates,  in that  order,  in an  amount  equal to such
certificates'  share of any Prepayment Interest Shortfalls on the Mortgage Loans
to the extent not covered by  Compensating  Interest paid by the Master Servicer
or the  Servicers,  and any  shortfalls  resulting  from the  application of the
Relief Act or similar state or local law or the bankruptcy  code with respect to
the Mortgage Loans;

         SIXTH,  to  the  Reserve  Fund  (the  "Reserve  Fund")  established  in
accordance  with the terms of the Pooling and Servicing  Agreement the amount by
which the sum of the Net WAC Rate Carryover Amounts, if any, with respect to the
Offered  Certificates  exceeds the sum of any amounts received by the Securities
Administrator  with respect to the Cap  Agreement  since the prior  Distribution
Date and any  amounts in the  Reserve  Fund that were not  distributed  on prior
Distribution Dates;

         SEVENTH,  to the  holders  of the  Class P  Certificates  and  Class CE
Certificates as provided in the Pooling and Servicing Agreement; and

         EIGHTH,  to the holders of the  Residual  Certificates,  any  remaining
amounts.

         On each Distribution  Date, the Securities  Administrator  will deposit
all amounts  received  with respect to the Cap Agreement in the Reserve Fund. On
each Distribution Date, after making the


                                      S-87


distributions   required   under   "Interest   Distributions   on  the   Offered
Certificates"  and "Principal  Distributions  on the Offered  Certificates"  and
after the  distribution of the Net Monthly Excess  Cashflow as described  above,
the Securities  Administrator will withdraw from the Reserve Fund the amounts on
deposit  therein  (which  shall  include  any  payments  received  under the Cap
Agreement) and distribute such amounts to the Offered Certificates in respect of
any Net WAC Rate  Carryover  Amounts  due to each  such  class in the  following
manner and order of priority:

         (A) any amounts received by the Securities  Administrator on account of
the Cap Agreement will be distributed  sequentially  to the holders of the Class
A-1, Class M-1, Class M-2, Class M-3 and Class M-4 Certificates,  in that order,
in respect of the related Net WAC Rate Carryover  Amount for each such class for
such  Distribution  Date;  provided,  that if,  on any  Distribution  Date,  the
payments received by the Securities Administrator under the Cap Agreement exceed
the  amount  of the  Net WAC  Rate  Carryover  Amounts  payable  to the  Offered
Certificates on such  Distribution  Date, such excess will be distributed to the
Class CE Certificates.

         (B) any  amounts  deposited  in the  Reserve  Fund from the Net Monthly
Excess  Cashflow will be distributed  sequentially,  to the holders of the Class
A-1, Class M-1, Class M-2, Class M-3 and Class M-4 Certificates,  in that order,
the related Net WAC Rate Carryover  Amount for such  Distribution  Date for each
such class to the extent not paid pursuant to clause (A) above.

         Any amounts  deposited in the Reserve Fund from the Net Monthly  Excess
Cashflow  will be  distributed  sequentially,  to the  holders of the Class A-1,
Class M-1, Class M-2, Class M-3 and Class M-4  Certificates,  in that order, the
related Net WAC Rate Carryover Amount for such  Distribution  Date for each such
class to the extent not paid pursuant to clause (A) above.

         As of the Closing Date, the aggregate principal balance of the Mortgage
Loans as of the Cut-off  Date will exceed the sum of the  aggregate  Certificate
Principal  Balances of the Offered  Certificates and the Class P Certificates by
an  amount  equal to  approximately  $4,598,579,  which is equal to the  initial
Certificate  Principal  Balance  of  the  Class  CE  Certificates.  This  amount
represents  approximately  3.09%  of  the  aggregate  principal  balance  of the
Mortgage Loans as of the Cut-off Date. Under the Pooling and Servicing Agreement
the  Overcollateralization  Amount is required to be maintained at the "Required
Overcollateralization  Amount" as defined under "--Glossary" above. In the event
that Realized  Losses are incurred on the Mortgage  Loans,  such Realized Losses
may result in an overcollateralization deficiency since the Realized Losses will
reduce the  principal  balance of the  Mortgage  Loans  without a  corresponding
reduction  to the  aggregate  Certificate  Principal  Balances  of  the  Offered
Certificates.  In the event of an overcollateralization  deficiency, the Pooling
and Servicing  Agreement  requires the payment from Net Monthly Excess Cashflow,
subject to  available  funds,  of an amount  equal to the  overcollateralization
deficiency,  which  shall  constitute  a principal  distribution  on the Offered
Certificates in reduction of the Certificate  Principal  Balances of the Offered
Certificates.  This has the  effect  of  accelerating  the  amortization  of the
Offered Certificates  relative to the amortization of the Mortgage Loans, and of
increasing the Overcollateralization Amount.

         On and after the Stepdown Date and provided that a Trigger Event is not
in effect the Required Overcollateralization Amount may be permitted to decrease
("step  down"),  to a level equal to  approximately  11.50% of the then  current
aggregate  outstanding  principal  balance of the Mortgage  Loans (after  giving
effect to  principal  payments to be  distributed  on the  related  Distribution
Date),  subject to a floor equal to the product (i) 0.50% and (ii) the aggregate
principal  balance of the Mortgage  Loans as of the Cut-off  Date.  In the event
that the Required  Overcollateralization Amount is permitted to step down on any
Distribution  Date, the Pooling and Servicing  Agreement provides that a portion
of the  principal  which would  otherwise be  distributed  to the holders of the
Offered  Certificates on the related  Distribution  Date shall be distributed to
the holders of the Class CE  Certificates  pursuant to the  priorities set forth
above.



                                      S-88


         With  respect  to each  Distribution  Date,  the  Overcollateralization
Reduction Amount,  after taking into account all other  distributions to be made
on the related  Distribution  Date,  shall be  distributed as Net Monthly Excess
Cashflow  pursuant to the  priorities  set forth  above.  This has the effect of
decelerating  the  amortization  of the  Offered  Certificates  relative  to the
amortization  of the Mortgage Loans,  and of reducing the  Overcollateralization
Amount.  However,  if on any Distribution Date a Trigger Event is in effect, the
Required  Overcollateralization Amount will not be permitted to step down on the
related Distribution Date.

ALLOCATION OF EXTRA PRINCIPAL DISTRIBUTION AMOUNT

         On each  Distribution  Date (a)  prior to the  Stepdown  Date or (b) on
which a Trigger  Event is in effect,  the Extra  Principal  Distribution  Amount
shall be distributed as follows:

         FIRST,  to the  holders  of  the  Class  A-1  Certificates,  until  the
Certificate  Principal Balance of the Class A-1 Certificates has been reduced to
zero; and

         SECOND, sequentially, to the holders of the Class M-1, Class M-2, Class
M-3 and Class M-4 Certificates,  in that order, until the Certificate  Principal
Balance of each such class has been reduced to zero.

         On each  Distribution Date (a) on or after the Stepdown Date and (b) on
which a Trigger Event is not in effect, the holders of the Offered  Certificates
shall be entitled to receive distributions in respect of principal to the extent
of the Extra Principal Distribution Amount in the following amounts and order of
priority:

         FIRST, the lesser of (x) the Principal  Distribution Amount and (y) the
Class A-1 Principal  Distribution Amount, shall be distributed to the holders of
the Class A-1 Certificates until the Certificate  Principal Balance of the Class
A-1 Certificates has been reduced to zero;

         SECOND, the lesser of (x) the excess of (i) the Principal  Distribution
Amount  over  (ii) the  amount  distributed  to the  holders  of the  Class  A-1
Certificates  under  clause  FIRST  above,  and  (y)  the  Class  M-1  Principal
Distribution  Amount,  shall be  distributed  to the  holders  of the  Class M-1
Certificates,   until  the  Certificate  Principal  Balance  of  the  Class  M-1
Certificates has been reduced to zero;

         THIRD,  the lesser of (x) the excess of (i) the Principal  Distribution
Amount over (ii) the sum of the amounts  distributed to the holders of the Class
A-1  Certificates  under  clause FIRST above and to the holders of the Class M-1
Certificates  under  clause  SECOND  above,  and (y)  the  Class  M-2  Principal
Distribution  Amount,  shall be  distributed  to the  holders  of the  Class M-2
Certificates,   until  the  Certificate  Principal  Balance  of  the  Class  M-2
Certificates has been reduced to zero;

         FOURTH, the lesser of (x) the excess of (i) the Principal  Distribution
Amount over (ii) the sum of the amounts  distributed to the holders of the Class
A-1  Certificates  under  clause  FIRST  above,  to the holders of the Class M-1
Certificates  under  clause  SECOND  above and to the  holders  of the Class M-2
Certificates  under  clause  THIRD  above,  and  (y)  the  Class  M-3  Principal
Distribution  Amount,  shall be  distributed  to the  holders  of the  Class M-3
Certificates,   until  the  Certificate  Principal  Balance  of  the  Class  M-3
Certificates has been reduced to zero; and

         FIFTH,  the lesser of (x) the excess of (i) the Principal  Distribution
Amount over (ii) the sum of the amounts  distributed to the holders of the Class
A-1  Certificates  under  clause  FIRST  above,  to the holders of the Class M-1
Certificates  under  clause  SECOND  above,  to the  holders  of the  Class  M-2
Certificates  under  clause  THIRD  above  and to the  holders  of the Class M-3
Certificates  under  clause  FOURTH  above  and  (y)  the  Class  M-4  Principal
Distribution Amount, shall be distributed to the holders


                                      S-89


of the Class M-4  Certificates,  until the Certificate  Principal Balance of the
Class M-4 Certificates has been reduced to zero.

ALLOCATION OF LOSSES; SUBORDINATION

         With respect to any defaulted  Mortgage Loan that is finally liquidated
through  foreclosure sale or disposition of the related  Mortgaged  Property (if
acquired on behalf of the  certificateholders  by deed in lieu of foreclosure or
otherwise),  the amount of loss realized,  if any, will equal the portion of the
unpaid principal  balance  remaining,  if any, plus interest thereon through the
last day of the month in which the related Mortgage Loan was finally  liquidated
or  charged-off,  after  application  of all amounts  recovered  (net of amounts
reimbursable  to the related  Servicer or the Master  Servicer for P&I Advances,
servicing  advances  and other  related  expenses,  including  attorneys'  fees)
towards  interest and principal  owing on the Mortgage  Loan. The amount of loss
realized and any Bankruptcy Losses are referred to in this prospectus supplement
as "Realized Losses." In the event that amounts recovered in connection with the
final liquidation of a defaulted Mortgage Loan are insufficient to reimburse the
related Servicer or the Master Servicer for P&I Advances, servicing advances and
unpaid  servicing fees,  these amounts may be reimbursed to the related Servicer
or the Master Servicer out of any funds in the related  collection account prior
to any remittance to the Securities  Administrator  of funds for distribution on
the certificates.

         Realized  Losses on the Mortgage Loans for any  Distribution  Date will
FIRST,  cause a reduction in Net Monthly Excess  Cashflow for that  Distribution
Date and SECOND, cause a reduction in the Overcollateralization  Amount for that
Distribution Date until reduced to zero. To the extent that Realized Losses on a
Distribution  Date  cause the  aggregate  Certificate  Principal  Balance of the
Offered  Certificates  after  taking  into  account  all  distributions  on such
Distribution  Date to exceed the  aggregate  principal  balance of the  Mortgage
Loans  as of the  last  day of the  related  Due  Period,  such  excess  will be
allocated  FIRST,  to the  Class  M-4  Certificates;  SECOND,  to the  Class M-3
Certificates; THIRD, to the Class M-2 Certificates; and FOURTH, to the Class M-1
Certificates,  in each case to reduce the Certificate  Principal Balance thereof
until it has been reduced to zero.

         The Pooling and Servicing  Agreement  does not permit the allocation of
Realized Losses to the Class A-1 Certificates or Class P Certificates. Investors
in the Class A-1 Certificates  should note that although  Realized Losses cannot
be allocated to the Class A-1  Certificates,  under certain loss scenarios there
will not be enough principal and interest on the Mortgage Loans to pay the Class
A-1  Certificates  all  interest  and  principal  amounts to which they are then
entitled.

         Except as described below,  once Realized Losses have been allocated to
the Mezzanine  Certificates  such amounts with respect to such certificates will
no longer accrue interest,  and such amounts will not be reinstated  thereafter.
However,  Allocated  Realized  Loss  Amounts  may be paid to the  holders of the
Mezzanine  Certificates  from Net  Monthly  Excess  Cashflow,  according  to the
priorities set forth under "--Overcollateralization Provisions" above.

         Any  allocation of a Realized Loss to a Mezzanine  Certificate  will be
made by reducing the Certificate  Principal  Balance of that  Certificate by the
amount so  allocated  as of the  Distribution  Date in the month  following  the
calendar month in which the Realized Loss was incurred. Notwithstanding anything
to the contrary  described in this prospectus  supplement,  in no event will the
Certificate  Principal Balance of any Mezzanine Certificate be reduced more than
once in respect of any particular  amount both (i) allocable to such certificate
in respect of Realized  Losses and (ii)  payable as  principal  to the holder of
such certificate from Net Monthly Excess Cashflow.

         A  "Bankruptcy  Loss"  is  a  Deficient  Valuation  or a  Debt  Service
Reduction.  With respect to any Mortgage  Loan,  a  "Deficient  Valuation"  is a
valuation by a court of competent  jurisdiction of the Mortgaged  Property in an
amount less than the then  outstanding  indebtedness  under the  Mortgage  Loan,
which  valuation  results from a proceeding  initiated  under the United  States

                                      S-90


Bankruptcy Code. A "Debt Service Reduction" is any reduction in the amount which
a borrower is  obligated  to pay on a monthly  basis with  respect to a Mortgage
Loan as a result of any proceeding  initiated under the United States Bankruptcy
Code, other than a reduction attributable to a Deficient Valuation.

         In the event that a Servicer receives any Subsequent  Recoveries,  such
Subsequent Recoveries will be distributed as part of the Available  Distribution
Amount in accordance  with the priorities  described  under  "Description of the
Certificates"  in  this  prospectus  supplement  and the  Certificate  Principal
Balance of each class of  Mezzanine  Certificates  that has been  reduced by the
allocation of a Realized Loss to such certificate will be increased, in order of
seniority,  by the amount of such  Subsequent  Recoveries but only to the extent
that such  certificate  has not been  reimbursed for the amount of such Realized
Loss (or any portion  thereof)  allocated to such  certificate  from Net Monthly
Excess     Cashflow    as     described     under     "Description     of    the
Certificates--Overcollateralization  Provisions" in this prospectus  supplement.
Holders of such  certificates  will not be entitled to any payment in respect of
current interest on the amount of such increases for any Interest Accrual Period
preceding the Distribution Date on which such increase occurs.

P&I ADVANCES

         Subject to the limitations set forth in the following  paragraph,  each
Servicer  will be obligated to advance or cause to be advanced on or before each
Servicer  Remittance  Date (as defined in the Pooling and Servicing  Agreement),
its own funds, or funds in the related  collection account that are not included
in the Available  Distribution  Amount for the Distribution  Date. The amount of
the related  advance  will be equal to (i) with  respect to the Simple  Interest
Mortgage  Loans,  the aggregate of payments of interest on such Mortgage  Loans,
and (ii) with respect to all Mortgage Loans other than Simple Interest  Mortgage
Loans, the aggregate of all scheduled payments of principal and/or interest with
respect to such Mortgage Loans,  in each case net of the related  Servicing Fees
payable to the related Servicer,  that were due during the related Due Period on
the related Mortgage Loans and that were delinquent on the related Determination
Date, plus amounts  representing assumed payments not covered by any current net
income on the Mortgaged  Properties  acquired by  foreclosure or deed in lieu of
foreclosure (net of the related Servicing Fees).  These advances are referred to
in this prospectus supplement as "P&I Advances";  provided, however, no Servicer
shall be required to make P&I Advances with respect to any scheduled payments of
principal  and/or interest that were due on a Mortgage Loan prior to the Cut-off
Date.  For  purposes  of the  Servicer's  determination  of whether or not a P&I
Advance is required  to be made on a Mortgage  Loan for which the  borrower  has
failed to make one or more scheduled  payments of principal  and/or interest due
on such Mortgage Loan on or prior to the Cut-off Date,  any payment  received by
the related Servicer during the Due Period relating to such Servicer  Remittance
Date in an amount equal to the scheduled payment of principal and/or interest on
such  Mortgage  Loan shall be deemed to be the  scheduled  payment of  principal
and/or interest due during such Due Period, and the related Servicer will not be
required to make a P&I Advance with respect to such Mortgage  Loan. In addition,
no portion of such payment  will  constitute  the receipt of an  Arrearage  with
respect to such  Mortgage  Loan unless all payments  required to be made on such
Mortgage Loan for all prior Due Periods occurring subsequent to the Cut-off Date
have been received by the related Servicer.

         P&I  Advances  on a Mortgage  Loan are  required to be made only to the
extent they are deemed by the related  Servicer to be  recoverable  from related
late collections,  insurance  proceeds or liquidation  proceeds on such Mortgage
Loan.  The purpose of making the P&I Advances is to maintain a regular cash flow
to the  certificateholders,  rather than to guarantee or insure against  losses.
The  Servicers  will not be required to make any P&I  Advances  with  respect to
reductions  in the amount of the monthly  payments on any Mortgage  Loans due to
bankruptcy  proceedings or the application of the Relief Act or similar state or
local laws or with respect to the principal  portion of any balloon  payments on
the Balloon Loans.




                                      S-91


         All P&I  Advances  will be  reimbursable  to the  Servicers  or  Master
Servicer from late collections, insurance proceeds and liquidation proceeds from
the  Mortgage  Loan as to which  the  unreimbursed  P&I  Advance  was  made.  In
addition,  any P&I Advances previously made in respect of any Mortgage Loan that
are deemed by the related Servicer or Master Servicer to be nonrecoverable  from
related late  collections,  insurance  proceeds or  liquidation  proceeds may be
reimbursed  to the related  Servicer or Master  Servicer out of any funds in the
related  collection  account prior to the distributions on the certificates.  In
the event that a  Servicer  fails in its  obligation  to make any  required  P&I
Advance,  a  successor  servicer  to  such  Servicer  (which  may be the  Master
Servicer),  will be obligated to make the P&I Advance on the  Distribution  Date
for which the related  Servicer was  required to make such P&I  Advance,  to the
extent required in the Pooling and Servicing Agreement.

         Upon an Event of  Default  by Ocwen  under the  Pooling  and  Servicing
Agreement, the Master Servicer may terminate Ocwen and the Master Servicer will,
or under certain  circumstances,  Ocwen or its designee may, appoint a successor
servicer for the related  Mortgage Loans. In any event,  the successor  servicer
must  meet the  requirements  for  successor  servicers  under the  Pooling  and
Servicing  Agreement  (including receipt of confirmation from each Rating Agency
that  the   appointment  of  such  successor   servicer  would  not  lead  to  a
qualification,  downgrade  or  withdrawal  of the ratings  then  assigned to the
Offered Certificates).

         The Pooling and Servicing  Agreement provides that the related Servicer
may enter into a facility  with any person which  provides  that such person may
fund P&I Advances or servicing advances,  although no such facility shall reduce
or otherwise  affect the  obligations  of the related  Servicer to fund such P&I
Advances or servicing advances. Any P&I Advances or servicing advances funded by
an  advancing  person will be  reimbursed  to the  advancing  person in the same
manner as reimbursements would be made to the related Servicer.

REPORTS TO CERTIFICATEHOLDERS

         On each  Distribution  Date,  the  Securities  Administrator  will make
available to each holder of a certificate,  a statement (and, at its option, any
additional  files  containing the same  information  in an  alternative  format)
available  each  month  via the  Securities  Administrator's  internet  website.
Assistance  in using the  website  can be  obtained  by calling  the  Securities
Administrator's customer service desk at (301) 815-6600. Parties that are unable
to use the above  distribution  options are entitled to have a paper copy mailed
to them via first class mail by calling the Securities  Administrator's customer
service desk and indicating  such. The Securities  Administrator  shall have the
right to change the way such  statements  are  distributed in order to make such
distribution more convenient and/or more accessible to the above parties and the
Securities  Administrator shall provide timely and adequate  notification to all
above parties regarding any such changes.

         In addition,  within a reasonable  period of time after the end of each
calendar year, the Securities  Administrator will, upon written request, prepare
and  deliver to each  holder of a  Certificate  of record  during  the  previous
calendar   year  a  statement   containing   information   necessary  to  enable
Certificateholders  to prepare their tax returns.  Such statements will not have
been examined and reported upon by an independent public accountant.

                                  THE SERVICERS

         Primary  servicing  of the  Mortgage  Loans will be  provided  by Ocwen
Federal Bank FSB ("Ocwen") with respect to approximately  73.55% of the Mortgage
Loans (the "Ocwen Mortgage  Loans"),  Option One Mortgage  Corporation  ("Option
One") with respect to  approximately  20.84% of the Mortgage  Loans (the "Option
One Mortgage Loans") and Select Portfolio  Servicing,  Inc. ("SPS") with respect
to approximately 5.61% of the Mortgage Loans (the "SPS Mortgage Loans"), in each
case by aggregate  principal  balance as of the Cut-off Date. Each Servicer will
service the


                                      S-92


related  Mortgage Loans in accordance with the Pooling and Servicing  Agreement.
The Master  Servicer  will be required to monitor  each  Servicer's  performance
under the  Pooling  and  Servicing  Agreement.  In the  event of a default  by a
Servicer under the Pooling and Servicing  Agreement,  the Master  Servicer shall
enforce any remedies against the related Servicer.

OCWEN FEDERAL BANK FSB

         The information set forth in the following paragraphs has been provided
by Ocwen. None of the Depositor, the Mortgage Loan Seller, the Originators,  the
other Servicers, the Trustee, the Master Servicer, the Securities Administrator,
the Underwriter,  the Credit Risk Manager or any of their respective  affiliates
has made or will make any  representation  as to the accuracy or completeness of
this information.

         Ocwen is a  federally  chartered  savings  bank with its home office in
Fort Lee,  New Jersey,  its  servicing  operations  in Orlando,  Florida and its
corporate  offices  in  West  Palm  Beach,  Florida.  Ocwen  is a  wholly  owned
subsidiary of Ocwen Financial  Corporation,  a public financial services holding
company  ("OCN")  headquartered  in West  Palm  Beach,  Florida.  OCN's  primary
businesses are the servicing, special servicing and resolution of nonconforming,
subperforming  and nonperforming  residential and commercial  mortgage loans for
third parties,  as well as providing  loan servicing  technology and business to
business e commerce solutions for the mortgage and real estate industries.

         Ocwen  is  rated  as  a  "Strong"  residential  subprime  servicer  and
residential  special servicer by Standard & Poor's and has an "RPS2" rating as a
subprime  servicer and an "RSS2"  rating as special  servicer from Fitch Ratings
("Fitch").  Ocwen is also rated "SQ2" ("Above Average") as a primary servicer of
subprime loans and as a special servicer by Moody's Investors  Service,  Inc. On
April 23,  2004,  Standard & Poor's  placed its  "Strong"  residential  subprime
servicer and residential  special  servicer ratings assigned to Ocwen on "Credit
Watch with negative implications".

         Ocwen has been named as a defendant in several  potential  class action
lawsuits challenging its mortgage servicing practices.  To date, no such lawsuit
has been  certified by any court as a class  action.  On April 13,  2004,  these
lawsuits were  consolidated in a single proceeding in the United States District
Court for the District of Illinois under caption styled:  Ocwen Federal Bank FSB
Mortgage  Servicing  Litigation,  MDL Docket No. 1604.  Ocwen  believes that its
servicing  practices  comply with legal  requirements.  Ocwen  intends to defend
against such  lawsuits.  Ocwen is also subject to various other routine  pending
litigation  in the  ordinary  course  of its  business.  While  the  outcome  of
litigation is always  uncertain,  Ocwen's  management is of the opinion that the
resolution of any of these claims and lawsuits will not have a material  adverse
effect on the results of its operations or financial condition or its ability to
service the mortgage loans.

         On April 19, 2004, Ocwen entered into a Supervisory  Agreement with the
Office of Thrift  Supervision (the "OTS")  memorializing  various loan servicing
and customer service  practices,  some of which were previously adopted by Ocwen
and others to be implemented  on a going forward basis.  It is not known whether
the OTS or other regulatory agencies will seek to implement  additional measures
relating to Ocwen's servicing practices.

         On  November  24,  2004,  Ocwen  filed  an  application  for  voluntary
dissolution  with the OTS, which would,  among other things,  eliminate  certain
restrictions imposed on the amount of mortgage servicing rights Ocwen may obtain
and therefore  provide Ocwen more flexibility to grow its residential  servicing
business.  As part of the proposed  dissolution,  it is expected that a purchase
and  assumption  agreement  would be entered into with Ocwen Loan  Servicing LLC
("OLS"),  a Delaware  limited  liability  company,  pursuant  to which OLS would
acquire and assume all of Ocwen's assets and  liabilities.  Ocwen's  management,
servicing  portfolio  and platform  would not be changed as a result of any such
transaction.


                                      S-93



         Ocwen is an approved Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae seller/servicer.  As of
September 30, 2004, Ocwen provided servicing for residential mortgage loans with
an  aggregate   unpaid  principal   balance  of  approximately   $34.4  billion,
substantially all of which are being serviced for third parties.

         As of  September  30, 2004,  OCN had  approximately  $1.285  billion in
assets, approximately $958 million in liabilities and approximately $327 million
in  equity.   As  of  September  30,  2004,   Ocwen's  core  capital  ratio  was
approximately  19.01% and its total risk-based  capital ratio was  approximately
19.44%, as measured by the Office of Thrift  Supervision.  For the quarter ended
September 30, 2004,  OCN's net income was  approximately  $39.3  million  (which
includes a net tax benefit of $31.8  million,  primarily  reflecting the partial
reversal of the deferred tax asset  valuation  allowance that was established in
prior years),  as compared to an approximate net income of $9.1 million reported
for the quarter ended June 30, 2004. OCN reported  approximately  $242.0 million
of cash and cash equivalents as of September 30, 2004.

         The following tables set forth, for the non conforming  credit mortgage
loan servicing portfolio serviced by Ocwen,  certain information relating to the
delinquency,  foreclosure, REO and loss experience with respect to such mortgage
loans  (including  loans in foreclosure in Ocwen's  servicing  portfolio  (which
portfolio does not include  mortgage  loans that are  subserviced by others)) at
the end of the indicated periods. The indicated periods of delinquency are based
on the  number of days past due on a  contractual  basis.  No  mortgage  loan is
considered  delinquent  for these  purposes  until it is one month past due on a
contractual  basis.  BECAUSE OF THE UNIQUE  COMPOSITION OF THE MORTGAGE LOANS IN
THE  MORTGAGE  POOL AS  COMPARED  WITH THE  SERVICING  PORTFOLIO  OF  OCWEN  THE
DELINQUENCY  AND  FORECLOSURE  EXPERIENCE OF OCWEN SET FORTH BELOW DOES NOT SHOW
SEPARATE  INFORMATION  ABOUT OCWEN'S PAST SERVICING OF MORTGAGE LOANS SIMILAR TO
THE  MORTGAGE  LOANS  IN  THE  MORTGAGE  POOL.  OCWEN  DOES  NOT  HAVE  SEPARATE
REPRESENTATIVE  HISTORICAL  DELINQUENCY,   BANKRUPTCY,  FORECLOSURE  OR  DEFAULT
EXPERIENCE  THAT MAY BE REFERRED TO FOR PURPOSES OF EXAMINING THE PERFORMANCE OF
POOLS OF MORTGAGE LOANS SIMILAR TO THE MORTGAGE POOL.














                                      S-94


                          DELINQUENCY AND FORECLOSURES
                             (DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS)


                                            AS OF                                              AS OF
                                      DECEMBER 31, 2001                                  DECEMBER 31, 2002
                        ----------------------------------------------  -------------------------------------------------
                                                              Percent                                             Percent
                                        By         Percent      By                         By         Percent        By
                          By No.       Dollar       By No.     Dollar       By No.        Dollar        By No.     Dollar
                         of Loans      Amount     of Loans    Amount      of Loans       Amount       of Loans     Amount
                         --------  ------------   --------    -------    ---------    -----------     --------    -------
                                                                                          
Total Portfolio.......   186,955   $ 17,422,016   100.00%     100.00%     229,335     $26,356,007     100.00%     100.00%

Period of Delinquency(1)

30-59 Days............     8,520   $    719,620     4.56%       4.13%       8,483     $   858,552       3.70%       3.26%

60-89 Days............     3,755   $    324,753     2.01%       1.86%       3,718     $   393,762       1.62%       1.49%

90 Days or more.......    22,709   $  1,896,796    12.15%      10.89%      19,823     $ 1,820,509       8.64%       6.91%
                        --------   ------------    -----       -----       ------     -----------       ----        ----
Total Delinquent
  Loans...............    34,984   $  2,941,169    18.71%      16.88%      32,024     $ 3,072,823      13.96%      11.66%
                        --------   ------------    -----       -----       ------     -----------      -----       -----
Loans in
  Foreclosure(2)......    10,286   $    908,884     5.50%       5.22%       8,323     $   849,266       3.63%       3.22%






                                            AS OF                                              AS OF
                                      DECEMBER 31, 2001                                  SEPTEMBER 31, 2002
                        ----------------------------------------------  -------------------------------------------------
                                                              Percent                                             Percent
                                        By         Percent      By                         By         Percent        By
                          By No.       Dollar       By No.     Dollar       By No.        Dollar        By No.     Dollar
                         of Loans      Amount     of Loans    Amount      of Loans       Amount       of Loans     Amount
                         --------  ------------   --------    -------    ---------    -----------     --------    -------
                                                                                           
Total Portfolio......   256,891    $30,551,242     100.00%    100.00%     241,336      $28,364,581     100.00%     100.00%

Period of Delinquency(1)

30-59 Days...........    10,662    $ 1,117,125      4.15%      3.66%       10,828       $1,091,513       4.49%       3.85%

60-89 Days...........     4,595    $   488,900      1.79%      1.60%        5,072      $   519,471       2.10%       1.83%

90 Days or more......    24,050    $ 2,341,837      9.36%      7.67%       26,092       $2,522,048      10.81%       8.89%
                         ------    -----------      ----       ----        ------       ----------      -----        ----
Total Delinquent
  Loans..............    39,307    $ 3,947,862     15.30%      12.92%      41,992       $4,133,032      17.40%      14.57%
                         ------    -----------     -----       -----       ------       ----------      -----       -----
Loans in
  Foreclosure(2).....     9,800    $ 1,057,710      3.81%      3.46%       10,118       $1,052,178       4.19%       3.71%

- --------------------------
(1) Includes 19,175 loans totaling  $1,701,448 for September 30, 2004 which were
    delinquent at the time of transfer to Ocwen.

(2) Loans in foreclosure  are also included under the heading "Total  Delinquent
    Loans."








                                      S-95



                                REAL ESTATE OWNED
                             (DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS)


                                        AS OF                                  AS OF
                                  DECEMBER 31, 2001                      DECEMBER 31, 2002
                             ----------------------------     -------------------------------------
                                                 By                                        By
                                By No.         Dollar               By No.               Dollar
                               of Loans        Amount              of Loans              Amount
                             ------------  --------------     -------------------  ----------------
                                                                       
Total Portfolio.......         186,955     $  17,422,016            229,335        $  26,356,007
Foreclosed Loans(1)...           3,983     $     301,782              3,484        $     285,598
Foreclosure Ratio(2)..            2.13%            1.73%               1.52%              1.08%

                                         AS OF                                  AS OF
                                   DECEMBER 31, 2003                     SEPTEMBER 30, 2004
                             -----------------------------     ------------------------------------
                                                 By                                        By
                                By No.         Dollar                By No.              Dollar
                               of Loans        Amount               of Loans             Amount
                             ------------  --------------     -------------------  ------------------
                                                                       
Total Portfolio.......         256,891     $ 30,551,242              241,336       $    28,364,581
Foreclosed Loans(1)...           4,849     $    437,510                4,946       $       445,674
Foreclosure Ratio(2)..            1.89%            1.43%                2.05%               1.57%

- --------------------------
 (1)For the purposes of these  tables,  "Foreclosed  Loans" means the  principal
    balance of mortgage loans secured by mortgaged properties the title to which
    has been acquired by Ocwen.

(2) The  "Foreclosure  Ratio" is equal to the  aggregate  principal  balance  or
    number of Foreclosed Loans divided by the aggregate  principal  balance,  or
    number,  as applicable,  of mortgage loans in the total portfolio at the end
    of the indicated period.


                           LOAN GAIN/(LOSS) EXPERIENCE
                             (DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS)


                                                                        AS OF                 AS OF
                                                                  DECEMBER 31, 2002     DECEMBER 31, 2001
                                                                 ------------------    ------------------
                                                                                 
Total Portfolio(1).................                              $       17,422,016    $       26,356,007
Net Gains/(Losses)(2)(3)...........                              $        (266,262)    $        (275,036)
Net Gains/(Losses) as a Percentage of Total Portfolio....                   (1.53)%               (1.04)%

                                                                        AS OF                 AS OF
                                                                  DECEMBER 31, 2002    SEPTEMBER 31, 2001
                                                                 ------------------    ------------------
                                                                                 
Total Portfolio(1).......................................        $       30,551,242    $       28,364,581
Net Gains/(Losses)(2)(3).................................        $        (249,516)    $        (337,279)
Net Gains/(Losses) as a Percentage of Total Portfolio....                   (0.82)%               (1.19)%

- --------------------------
 (1)"Total  Portfolio" on the date stated above is the principal  balance of the
    mortgage loans outstanding on the last day of the period.

(2) "Net  Gains/(Losses)"  are actual  gains or losses  incurred  on  liquidated
    properties and shortfall payoffs for the preceding one year period. Gains or
    losses on liquidated  properties  are  calculated as net sales proceeds less
    unpaid principal at the time of payoff.  Shortfall payoffs are calculated as
    the difference  between  principal payoff amount and unpaid principal at the
    time of payoff.

(3) Includes $(105,353) as of September 30, 2004 of losses attributable to loans
    which were delinquent as of the time of transfer to Ocwen.

         While the above  delinquency,  foreclosure,  real estate owned and loss
experiences reflect Ocwen's experiences for the periods indicated,  no assurance
can be given that the delinquency,


                                      S-96


foreclosure, real estate owned and loss experiences on the Mortgage Loans in the
Mortgage  Pool will be  similar.  Accordingly,  this  information  should not be
considered to reflect the credit  quality of the Mortgage  Loans included in the
Mortgage Pool, or as a basis of assessing the likelihood,  amount or severity of
losses on the mortgage loans. The statistical data in the tables is based on all
of the loans in Ocwen's relevant servicing portfolio.  The Mortgage Loans in the
Mortgage Pool may, in general,  be more recently originated than, and are likely
to have other  characteristics  which distinguish them from, the majority of the
mortgage loans in Ocwen's servicing portfolio.

OPTION ONE MORTGAGE CORPORATION

         The information set forth in the following paragraphs has been provided
by Option One. None of the Depositor, the Mortgage Loan Seller, the Originators,
the other Servicers,  the Master  Servicer,  the Securities  Administrator,  the
Trustee, the Credit Risk Manager, the Underwriter or any of their affiliates has
made or will make any  representation as to the accuracy or completeness of such
information.

         Option  One,  a  California   corporation   headquartered   in  Irvine,
California,  will serve as the Servicer for the Mortgage  Loans  pursuant to the
Pooling and Servicing Agreement.

         Option One was incorporated in 1992,  commenced receiving  applications
for mortgage loans under its regular  lending program in February 1993 and began
funding such mortgage loans indirectly in the same month. The principal business
of Option One is the origination,  sale and servicing of non-conforming mortgage
loans.

         Option One is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Block Financial, which is in
turn a wholly-owned subsidiary of H&R Block, Inc.

         The following  tables set forth, as of December 31, 2001,  December 31,
2002, December 31, 2003 and September 30, 2004, certain information  relating to
the delinquency  experience  (including imminent  foreclosures,  foreclosures in
progress and  bankruptcies)  of one- to four-family  residential  mortgage loans
included in Option One's entire servicing  portfolio  (which portfolio  includes
mortgage loans  originated under Option One's guidelines and mortgage loans that
are subserviced for others) at the end of the indicated  periods.  The indicated
periods of delinquency are based on the number of days past due on a contractual
basis. No mortgage loan is considered delinquent for these purposes until it has
not been paid by the next scheduled due date for such mortgage loan.  BECAUSE OF
THE UNIQUE  COMPOSITION  OF THE MORTGAGE  LOANS IN THE MORTGAGE POOL AS COMPARED
WITH THE  SERVICING  PORTFOLIO  OF OPTION ONE THE  DELINQUENCY  AND  FORECLOSURE
EXPERIENCE  OF OPTION  ONE SET FORTH  BELOW DOES NOT SHOW  SEPARATE  INFORMATION
ABOUT OPTION  ONE'S PAST  SERVICING  OF MORTGAGE  LOANS  SIMILAR TO THE MORTGAGE
LOANS IN THE MORTGAGE  POOL.  OPTION ONE DOES NOT HAVE  SEPARATE  REPRESENTATIVE
HISTORICAL DELINQUENCY,  BANKRUPTCY,  FORECLOSURE OR DEFAULT EXPERIENCE THAT MAY
BE REFERRED TO FOR PURPOSES OF EXAMINING  THE  PERFORMANCE  OF POOLS OF MORTGAGE
LOANS SIMILAR TO THE MORTGAGE POOL.







                                      S-97


                          DELINQUENCY AND FORECLOSURES
                             (DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS)


                                        AT YEAR ENDED                                      AT YEAR ENDED
                                      DECEMBER 31, 2001                                  DECEMBER 31, 2002
                        ----------------------------------------------  --------------------------------------------------
                                                               Percent                                            Percent
                                         By        Percent       By                       By          Percent        By
                         By No.        Dollar       By No.     Dollar     By No.        Dollar         By No.      Dollar
                        of Loans       Amount      of Loans    Amount    of Loans       Amount        of Loans     Amount
                        ---------  --------------  ---------  --------  ----------  ---------------  ----------  ---------
                                                                                            
Total Portfolio.......    191,998    $ 21,403,400     N/A       N/A      226,286      $ 28,070,873       N/A         N/A

Period of Delinquency

30-59 Days............      3,968         400,922     2.07%     1.87%      4,536           494,896       2.00%      1.76%

60-89 Days............      2,220         226,156     1.16      1.06       2,345           249,011       1.04       0.89

90 Days or more.......     10,892       1,003,217     5.67      4.69      14,075         1,371,377       6.22       4.89
                        ---------  --------------  -------    ------    --------    --------------   --------    -------

Total Delinquent
  Loans(1)............     17,080    $  1,630,294     8.90%     7.62%     20,956      $  2,115,285       9.26%      7.54%

Loans in
  Foreclosure(2)......      8,752    $    817,455     4.56%     3.82%     10,491      $  1,059,786       4.64%      3.78%




                                         AT YEAR ENDED                                  AT NINE MONTH ENDED
                                       DECEMBER 31, 2003                                 SEPTEMBER 30, 2004
                        ----------------------------------------------  --------------------------------------------------
                                                               Percent                                            Percent
                                         By        Percent       By                       By          Percent        By
                         By No.        Dollar       By No.     Dollar     By No.        Dollar         By No.      Dollar
                        of Loans       Amount      of Loans    Amount    of Loans       Amount        of Loans     Amount
                        ---------  --------------  ---------  --------  ----------  ---------------  ----------  ---------
                                                                                            
Total Portfolio.......    301,778    $41,364,855      N/A        N/A       351,223     $51,682,674       N/A         N/A

Period of Delinquency

30-59 Days............      5,207        604,945     1.73%      1.46%        6,422         791,219       1.83%      1.53%

60-89 Days............      2,564        293,412     0.85       0.71         2,973         351,219       0.85       0.68

90 Days or more.......     15,387      1,597,177     5.10       3.86        14,435       1,524,830       4.11       2.95

                        ---------  -------------   ------     ------     ---------   -------------    -------     ------
Total Delinquent
  Loans(1)............     23,158    $ 2,495,534     7.68%      6.03%       23,830     $ 2,667,268       6.78%      5.16%
Loans in
  Foreclosure(2)......     10,764    $ 1,161,361     3.57%      2.81%        8,861     $   969,540       2.52%      1.88%

- --------------------------
(1) The sum in any column may not equal the total indicated due to rounding.

(2) Loans in foreclosure  are also included under the heading "Total  Delinquent
    Loans."




                                      S-98



                             TOTAL REAL ESTATE OWNED
                             (DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS)


                                        AT YEAR ENDED                             AT YEAR ENDED
                                      DECEMBER 31, 2001                         DECEMBER 31, 2002
                             ------------------------------------      -----------------------------------
                                                       By                                       By
                                   By No.             Dollar                 By No.            Dollar
                                 of Loans            Amount                of Loans           Amount
                             -----------------  -----------------      ----------------  -----------------
                                                                               
Total Portfolio.......           191,998          $ 21,403,400              226,286        $ 28,070,873

Foreclosed Loans(1)...             2,466          $    202,012                3,461        $    282,689

Foreclosure Ratio(2)..              1.28%                 0.94%                1.53%              1.01%




                                        AT YEAR ENDED                          AT NINE MONTH ENDED
                                      DECEMBER 31, 2001                         SEPTEMBER 30,2004
                             ------------------------------------      -----------------------------------
                                                       By                                       By
                                   By No.             Dollar                 By No.            Dollar
                                 of Loans            Amount                of Loans           Amount
                             -----------------  -----------------      ----------------  -----------------
                                                                                
Total Portfolio.......            301,778         $ 41,364,855              351,223         $51,682,674

Foreclosed Loans(1)...              3,361         $    293,629                2,771         $    251,195

Foreclosure Ratio(2)..               1.11%               0.71%                 0.79%               0.49%

- --------------------------
(1) For the  purpose  of these  tables,  Foreclosed  Loans  means the  principal
    balance of mortgage loans secured by mortgaged properties the title to which
    has been  acquired by Option One, by  investors  or by an insurer  following
    foreclosure or delivery of a deed in lieu of foreclosure.

(2) The Foreclosure Ratio is equal to the aggregate  principal balance or number
    of Foreclosed Loans divided by the aggregate principal balance or number, as
    applicable,  of  mortgage  loans in the  Total  Portfolio  at the end of the
    indicated period.














                                      S-99


                              LOAN LOSS EXPERIENCE
                             (DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS)


                                             AS OF OR FOR THE       AS OF OR FOR THE
                                                YEAR ENDED              YEAR ENDED
                                             DECEMBER 31, 2001      DECEMBER 31, 2002
                                             -----------------      -----------------
                                                              
Total Portfolio(1).................          $    21,403,400        $    28,070,873

Net Losses(2)(3)...................          $        85,326        $       167,698

Net Losses as a Percentage of Total
Portfolio..........................                    0.40%                  0.60%




                                             AS OF OR FOR THE      AS OF OR FOR THE NINE
                                                YEAR ENDED              MONTH ENDED
                                             DECEMBER 31, 2003       DECEMBER 31, 2004
                                           ---------------------  -----------------------
                                                              
Total Portfolio(1).................          $    41,364,855        $    51,682,674

Net Losses(2)(3)...................          $       239,088        $       195,835

Net Losses as a Percentage of Total
Portfolio(4).......................                    0.58%                  0.51%

- --------------------------
(1) "Total Portfolio" on the date stated above is the principal  balances of the
    mortgage loans outstanding on the last day of the period.

(2) "Net Losses" means "Gross  Losses" minus  "Recoveries."  "Gross  Losses" are
    actual losses incurred on liquidated  properties for each respective period.
    Losses are calculated after repayment of all principal,  foreclosure  costs,
    servicing fees and accrued interest to the date of liquidation. "Recoveries"
    are recoveries from liquidation proceeds,  deficiency judgments and mortgage
    insurance proceeds.

(3) "Net Losses" are  computed on a  loan-by-loan  basis and are  reported  with
    respect to the period in which the loan is liquidated.  If additional  costs
    are incurred or  recoveries  are received  after the end of the period,  the
    amounts are  adjusted  with  respect to the period in which the related loan
    was liquidated. Accordingly, the Net Losses reported in the table may change
    in  future  periods.  The  information  in this  table  reflects  costs  and
    recoveries through September 30, 2004.

(4) For September 30, 2004, "Net Losses as a Percentage of Total  Portfolio" was
    annualized  by  multiplying  "Net  Losses" by 1.33  before  calculating  the
    percentage of "Net Losses as a Percentage of Total Portfolio".

         It is unlikely that the  delinquency  experience of the Mortgage  Loans
included in the Mortgage Pool will correspond to the  delinquency  experience of
Option  One's  mortgage  portfolio  set  forth  in  the  foregoing  tables.  The
statistics  shown above  represent the  delinquency  experience for Option One's
mortgage  servicing  portfolio  only  for the  periods  presented,  whereas  the
aggregate delinquency  experience on the Mortgage Loans included in the Mortgage
Pool will depend on the results  obtained over the life of the Mortgage Pool. In
particular,  investors  should note that the Mortgage Pool will be a static pool
of Mortgage Loans,  whereas new mortgage loans are continually  being originated
and added to the pool for which such statistics are compiled.  Accordingly,  the
actual loss and  delinquency  percentages  with respect to the Mortgage Pool are
likely to be  substantially  higher than those indicated in the tables above. In
addition,  if the  residential  real estate market should  experience an overall
decline in property values,  the actual rates of delinquencies  and foreclosures
could be higher than those  previously  experienced by Option One.  Furthermore,
adverse  economic  conditions  may affect the timely  payment by  mortgagors  of
scheduled  payments  of  principal  and  interest  on such  Mortgage  Loans and,
accordingly,  the actual rates of delinquencies and foreclosures with respect to
the Mortgage Pool.

SELECT PORTFOLIO SERVICING, INC.

         The information set forth in the following paragraphs has been provided
by SPS. None of the Depositor,  the Mortgage Loan Seller,  the Originators,  the
other Servicers, the Trustee, the


                                     S-100


Master Servicer, the Securities Administrator,  the Underwriter, the Credit Risk
Manager, the Certificate Insurer or any of their respective  affiliates has made
or will make any  representation  as to the  accuracy  or  completeness  of this
information.

         GENERAL.  SPS changed its name from Fairbanks Capital Corp. on June 30,
2004. SPS commenced  mortgage  servicing  operations in 1989 for its own account
and has managed and serviced  third-party  mortgage loan portfolios  since 1994.
SPS conducts operations in Salt Lake City, Utah, and Jacksonville, Florida.

         SPS is approved by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development
("HUD") as a non-supervised  mortgagee with servicing approval,  and is a Fannie
Mae-approved  seller/servicer and a Freddie Mac-approved servicer engaged in the
servicing  of first and junior lien  mortgage  loans.  SPS was  incorporated  on
February 24, 1989 under the laws of the State of Utah.  SPS'  corporate  offices
are located at 3815 South West Temple, Salt Lake City, Utah 84165-0250.

         SPS maintains an "Average" rating with a "Stable" outlook with Standard
and Poor's Ratings Services, a division of the McGraw-Hill  Companies,  Inc. and
an "SQ3" rating with Moody's  Investors  Service.  Fitch Ratings has given SPS a
residential  primary servicer rating for subprime and home equity of "RPS3-", an
Alt-A primary servicer rating of "RPS3" and a special servicer rating of "RSS3".

         SERVICING  PORTFOLIO.  At  September  30,  2004,  December 31, 2003 and
December  31,  2002,  SPS  serviced a total  portfolio  of 287,035,  423,655 and
556,593  mortgage loans and real estate owned,  respectively,  having  aggregate
unpaid principal balances of approximately $23.703 billion,  $40.957 billion and
$49.313 billion, respectively, for itself and others.

         LEGAL AND REGULATORY ACTIONS AFFECTING SPS. On May 18, 2004, the United
States  District  Court for the  District  of  Massachusetts  entered  its final
approval of the settlement of  approximately  40 putative class action cases and
made permanent its December 10, 2003  injunction  that had the effect of staying
all  litigation  against SPS relating to the claims  addressed by the settlement
agreement.  The injunction excludes  counterclaims and defenses that might arise
out of foreclosure  proceedings  that SPS initiates and individuals who excluded
themselves  from the  settlement  to pursue  individual  claims for relief.  The
settlement  contemplates that plaintiffs'  redress would come, in part, from the
redress fund  established in connection  with SPS'  settlement  with the Federal
Trade Commission ("FTC") and HUD described herein.

         On November 12, 2003,  SPS  announced  that it had entered into a final
settlement  agreement with the FTC and HUD to resolve issues raised during their
review of SPS' servicing practices. As part of the settlement, SPS agreed to pay
to the FTC the amount of $40 million for the  creation of a redress fund for the
benefit of consumers harmed allegedly by SPS and to implement  certain practices
on a prospective basis.

         On May 5, 2004, a West Virginia state court entered an order  approving
a  settlement  between SPS and  plaintiffs  in a putative  class action in which
plaintiffs  alleging  certain  of SPS'  fees  violated  provisions  of the  West
Virginia Code sought an injunction,  declaratory relief,  actual damages,  civil
penalties,  punitive damages,  attorneys' fees, and other relief from SPS. Under
the settlement, SPS may resume its previously enjoined foreclosure activities in
West  Virginia,  subject to  compliance  with  applicable  law.  The  settlement
requires  the  approximately  200 West  Virginia  loans  that were in one of two
specific  categories  (i.e.,  real estate owned or foreclosure) as of January 7,
2003 to be reviewed by a three-person panel,  including a representative of SPS,
to resolve any customer  disputes that may exist regarding  charges  assessed by
SPS on such customers' accounts and/or SPS' right to foreclose. On May 13, 2004,
the West Virginia Supreme Court accepted a petition to certify certain questions
regarding foreclosure procedure. The Court's


                                     S-101


review of these  questions may impact the activities of SPS and other  servicers
in that state with respect to foreclosures and loan workouts.

         SPS has  recently  entered  into  consent  agreements  with  regulatory
agencies in Florida, Massachusetts, Michigan, Colorado, California and Illinois,
which provide for provisions  similar to some of those  contained in the consent
order  entered into with the FTC and HUD.  While not  admitting any liability in
any of those  agreements,  SPS  agreed to refund  certain  amounts  to  Florida,
Massachusetts,  California  and Michigan  consumers  identified by regulators in
those states.

         SPS has  experienced an increased  level of scrutiny from various state
regulatory  agencies  and  a few  states  have  conducted  or  commenced  formal
investigations.  A few agencies have taken the position that notwithstanding the
amount  available under the FTC redress fund, such agencies would seek to ensure
that the consumers residing in those states receive relief without regard to the
relief available under the FTC redress fund. If those state regulatory  agencies
persist in their desire to have  amounts  paid to consumers  who reside in those
states regardless of the establishment of the FTC redress fund, and such amounts
in the aggregate are material,  it is unlikely that SPS will be able to pay such
amounts.  As a result,  those  agencies might elect to bring  administrative  or
other actions against SPS seeking to require refunds, the imposition of monetary
penalties and/or revocation of SPS' licenses to conduct its servicing activities
in that state.  Due to this current and potential  future adverse event,  future
income from SPS' operations may be impacted negatively.

         The   occurrence  of  one  or  more  of  the  foregoing   events  or  a
determination  by  any  court  or  regulatory  agency  that  SPS'  policies  and
procedures do not comply with applicable law could lead to further downgrades by
one or more  rating  agencies,  a transfer of SPS'  servicing  responsibilities,
increased  delinquencies  on the  mortgage  loans  serviced  by SPS,  delays  in
distributions on the offered  certificates,  losses on the offered certificates,
or any combination of these events. In addition,  such developments could result
in SPS' insolvency or bankruptcy, and there can be no assurance, in the event of
a bankruptcy proceeding, that SPS could reorganize successfully in bankruptcy.

         SPS'S DELINQUENCY AND FORECLOSURE EXPERIENCE.  The following table sets
forth the delinquency  and  foreclosure  experience of the portfolio of mortgage
loans serviced by SPS as of the date indicated. SPS' portfolio of mortgage loans
may differ  significantly  from the mortgage loans in the mortgage pool in terms
of  interest  rates,  principal  balances,  geographic  distribution,  types  of
properties, lien priority, origination and underwriting criteria, prior servicer
performance  and other  possibly  relevant  characteristics.  For  example,  the
delinquency  and loss  experience of SPS' servicing  portfolio may include loans
and financial assets  originated  pursuant to different  underwriting  standards
than the mortgage  loans in the  mortgage  pool and loans and  financial  assets
having a geographic distribution that varies from the geographic distribution of
the  mortgage  loans  in the  mortgage  pool.  In  addition,  SPS'  consolidated
servicing  portfolios  include  loans  with  a  variety  of  payment  and  other
characteristics  that may not  correspond to those of the mortgage  loans in the
mortgage pool. There can be no assurance,  and no  representation  is made, that
the delinquency and foreclosure experience with respect to the mortgage loans in
the mortgage pool will be similar to that  reflected in the table below,  nor is
any  representation  made as to the rate at which losses may be  experienced  on
liquidation  of  defaulted  mortgage  loans in the  mortgage  pool.  The  actual
delinquency  experience on the mortgage  loans in the mortgage pool will depend,
among other  things,  upon the value of the real estate  securing  such mortgage
loans in the  mortgage  pool and the  ability of the  related  borrower  to make
required payments. It should be noted that if the residential real estate market
should  experience an overall  decline in property  values,  the actual rates of
delinquencies and foreclosures could be higher than those previously experienced
by SPS. In addition,  adverse economic  conditions may affect the timely payment
by  borrowers of  scheduled  payments of principal  and interest on the mortgage
loans in the mortgage pool and,  accordingly,  the actual rates of delinquencies
and foreclosures with respect to the


                                     S-102


mortgage pool.  Finally,  the statistics  shown below  represent the delinquency
experience for SPS' mortgage servicing portfolio only for the periods presented,
whereas the aggregate  delinquency  experience on the mortgage loans  comprising
the  mortgage  pool will  depend on the  results  obtained  over the life of the
mortgage  pool. It should be noted that SPS' business  emphasizes,  to a certain
degree,  the acquisition of servicing rights with respect to non-performing  and
subperforming  mortgage  loans  and SPS has been an  active  participant  in the
market for such servicing  rights over the past several years.  Delinquency  and
foreclosure  is  typically  much greater  with these types of loans.  Thus,  the
acquisition  of such  servicing  rights may have  affected the  delinquency  and
foreclosure  experience  of SPS in the  periods  ended on  September  30,  2004,
December 31, 2003 and December 31, 2002.  BECAUSE OF THE UNIQUE  COMPOSITION  OF
THE MORTGAGE LOANS IN THE MORTGAGE POOL AS COMPARED WITH THE SERVICING PORTFOLIO
OF SPS THE DELINQUENCY  AND  FORECLOSURE  EXPERIENCE OF SPS SET FORTH BELOW DOES
NOT SHOW  SEPARATE  INFORMATION  ABOUT SPS'S PAST  SERVICING  OF MORTGAGE  LOANS
SIMILAR TO THE MORTGAGE  LOANS IN THE MORTGAGE  POOL. SPS DOES NOT HAVE SEPARATE
REPRESENTATIVE  HISTORICAL  DELINQUENCY,   BANKRUPTCY,  FORECLOSURE  OR  DEFAULT
EXPERIENCE  THAT MAY BE REFERRED TO FOR PURPOSES OF EXAMINING THE PERFORMANCE OF
POOLS OF MORTGAGE LOANS SIMILAR TO THE MORTGAGE POOL.


                 SPS' DELINQUENCY AND FORECLOSURE EXPERIENCE(1)
                             (DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS)



                         As of September 30, 2004           As of December 31, 2003           As of December 31, 2002
                     ---------------------------------  ---------------------------------  ---------------------------------
                                              % by                               % by                               % by
                      No. of    Principal   Principal    No. of   Principal    Principal   No. of    Principal    Principal
                      Loans     Balance(2)  Balance(3)   Loans    Balance(2)   Balance(3)   Loans    Balance(2)   Balance(3)
                     -------    ---------- -----------  -------  -----------   ----------  -------  -----------   ----------
                                                                                         
Current Loans......  176,024   $15,368,395    64.84%    284,100  $29,749,403    72.64%     377,527   $35,318,650    71.62%
Period of
   Delinquency(4)

   30-59 Days......   26,222     2,102,266     8.87%     35,802    3,148,839      7.69%     52,238     4,560,835     9.25%
   60-89...........   10,013       815,429     3.44%     12,261    1,100,601      2.69%     13,320     1,186,803     2.41%
   90 Days or
     more..........   18,976     1,047,543     4.42%     17,128    1,007,251      2.46%     13,407       737,108     1.49%
                     -------     ---------   ------     -------  -----------    ------     -------   -----------   ------
Total
   Delinquencies...   55,211     3,965,238    16.73%     65,191    5,256,691     12.83%     78,965     6,484,746    13.15%
Foreclosures.......   20,007     1,767,247     7.46%     33,306    2,933,501      7.16%     52,095     4,263,810     8.65%
Bankruptcies.......   27,921     1,945,274     8.21%     30,072    2,155,412      5.26%     34,077     2,294,211     4.65%
                     -------     ---------   ------     -------  -----------    ------     -------   -----------   ------
Total
   Foreclosures/
   Bankruptcies....   47,928     3,712,521    15.66%     63,378    5,088,913     12.42%     86,172     6,558,021    13.30%
                     -------     ---------   ------     -------  -----------    ------     -------   -----------   ------
Real Estate Owned..    7,872       656,773     2.77%     10,986      862,046      2.10%     13,929       951,359     1.93%

Total Portfolio....  287,035   $23,702,927   100.00%    423,655  $40,957,053    100.00%    556,593   $49,312,776   100.00%
                     =======   ===========   ======     =======  ===========    ======     =======   ===========   ======

(1) The  table  shows  mortgage  loans  which  were   delinquent  or  for  which
    foreclosure proceedings had been instituted as of the date indicated.
(2) For the Real Estate Owned  properties,  the principal balance is at the time
    of foreclosure or delivery of a deed-in-lieu of foreclosure.
(3) Certain totals may not equal 100% due to rounding.
(4) No  mortgage  loan is included  in this  section of the table as  delinquent
    until it is one-month past due.

SERVICING AND OTHER COMPENSATION AND PAYMENT OF EXPENSES

         The Servicers will provide customary  servicing  functions with respect
to the Mortgage  Loans.  Among other things,  the Servicers are obligated  under
some  circumstances  to make P&I Advances with respect to the Mortgage Loans. In
managing the liquidation of defaulted  Mortgage  Loans,  each Servicer will have
sole   discretion  to  take  such  action  in   maximizing   recoveries  to  the
certificateholders  including,  without  limitation,  selling defaulted Mortgage
Loans and REO properties as described in the Pooling and Servicing Agreement.

         The  principal  compensation  to be paid to each Servicer in respect of
the servicing activities performed by such Servicer will be a servicing fee (the
"Servicing  Fee") with respect to each Mortgage Loan serviced by such  Servicer,
equal to one-twelfth of the product of either the


                                     S-103


Servicing  Fee  Rate  or  the  Aggregate  Servicing  Fee  Rate,  as  applicable,
multiplied  by the  Scheduled  Principal  Balance  of such  Mortgage  Loan.  The
Servicing  Fee payable to each Servicer  shall be  calculated  using a per annum
rate (the "Servicing Fee Rate") equal to 0.50%.  In addition,  the Servicers are
entitled to retain any Prepayment Interest Excess (as defined in the Pooling and
Servicing Agreement) with respect to the related Mortgage Loans.

         In  general,  each  Servicer  is  obligated  to offset  any  Prepayment
Interest  Shortfall in connection with a prepayment in full on any  Distribution
Date, with Compensating  Interest on such Distribution Date; provided that Ocwen
and Option One are only required to pay Compensating Interest in an amount up to
the Servicing Fee payable to Ocwen or Option One, respectively,  and SPS is only
required  to pay  Compensating  Interest  in an  amount  up to  one-half  of the
Servicing  Fee payable to SPS.  Each  Servicer  is  obligated  to pay  insurance
premiums and other ongoing  expenses  associated with the related Mortgage Loans
incurred by such  Servicer in  connection  with its  responsibilities  under the
Pooling and  Servicing  Agreement  and is entitled  to  reimbursement  for these
expenses as provided in the Pooling and Servicing Agreement. See "Description of
the  Agreements-Material  Terms of the  Pooling  and  Servicing  Agreements  and
Underlying Servicing  Agreements-Retained  Interest,  Servicing Compensation and
Payment of  Expenses"  in the  prospectus  for  information  regarding  expenses
payable by the Servicers.

                               THE MASTER SERVICER

GENERAL

         The information set forth in the following  paragraph has been provided
by the Master Servicer.  None of the Depositor,  the  Originators,  the Mortgage
Loan Seller,  the  Servicers,  the  Trustee,  the  Underwriter,  the Credit Risk
Manager  or any of  their  respective  affiliates  has  made  or will  make  any
representation as to the accuracy or completeness of the information.

         Wells Fargo Bank,  National  Association ("Wells Fargo"), is a national
banking  association,  with its  master  servicing  offices  located at 9062 Old
Annapolis Road, Columbia, Maryland 21045. Wells Fargo is engaged in the business
of  master  servicing  single-family   residential  mortgage  loans  secured  by
properties located in all 50 states and the District of Columbia. Wells Fargo is
one of the banking subsidiaries of Wells Fargo & Company.

         The Master  Servicer will be required to monitor the performance of the
Servicers under the Pooling and Servicing  Agreement.  In the event of a default
by Ocwen under the Pooling and Servicing Agreement,  the Master Servicer,  Ocwen
or Ocwen's  designee  will appoint a successor  servicer for Ocwen or the Master
Servicer will assume  primary  servicing  obligations  for the related  Mortgage
Loans  itself.  In the event of a default by Option One or SPS under the Pooling
and Servicing  Agreement,  the Master Servicer will appoint a successor servicer
for Option One or SPS as provided in the Pooling and Servicing Agreement, or the
Master  Servicer  will  assume  primary  servicing  obligations  for the related
Mortgage Loans itself.

MASTER SERVICING AND OTHER COMPENSATION AND PAYMENT OF EXPENSES

         The principal compensation to be paid to the Master Servicer in respect
of its  master  servicing  activities  for the  certificates  will  be a  master
servicing  fee  calculated  at a rate set  forth in the  Pooling  and  Servicing
Agreement on the  Scheduled  Principal  Balance of each such  Mortgage Loan (the
"Master  Servicing Fee Rate")  together with any interest or other income earned
on funds held in the Distribution Account.

         In the  event  that  the  Servicers  fail  to  pay  the  amount  of any
Prepayment  Interest Shortfall required to be paid on any Distribution Date, the
Master Servicer shall pay such amount up to the master  servicing fee payable to
the Master Servicer on such Distribution Date.

                                     S-104


                                   THE TRUSTEE

         HSBC Bank  USA,  National  Association  will be the  Trustee  under the
Pooling and  Servicing  Agreement.  The  Depositor  and the Master  Servicer may
maintain other banking relationships in the ordinary course of business with the
Trustee.  The Trustee's  corporate  trust office is located at 452 Fifth Avenue,
New York, New York 10018, Attention: Corporate Trust, ACE Securities Corp., Home
Equity Loan Trust,  Series  2005-SD1 or at such other address as the Trustee may
designate from time to time.

         The Master  Servicer  will pay the Trustee the trustee's fee in respect
of its obligations  under the Pooling and Servicing  Agreement.  The Pooling and
Servicing  Agreement  will provide that the Trustee and any  director,  officer,
employee or agent of the Trustee  will be  indemnified  by the trust and will be
held harmless against any loss,  liability,  expense or cost including,  without
limitation,   attorneys   fees  and  expenses   (not   including   expenses  and
disbursements  incurred  or made by the  Trustee in the  ordinary  course of the
Trustee's  performance  in  accordance  with the  provisions  of the Pooling and
Servicing  Agreement)  incurred by the Trustee in connection with any pending or
threatened  legal action or arising out of or in connection  with the acceptance
or  administration of its obligations and duties under the Pooling and Servicing
Agreement,  the  Certificates or the Custodial  Agreement,  other than any loss,
liability or expense (i) resulting from a breach of the  obligations  and duties
of the  Servicers  under the  Pooling  and  Servicing  Agreement  (for which the
Trustee receives indemnity from the related Servicer) or (ii) incurred by reason
of  willful  misfeasance,  bad faith or  negligence  in the  performance  of the
Trustee's duties under the Pooling and Servicing Agreement,  the Certificates or
the  Custodial  Agreement or by reason of reckless  disregard,  of the Trustee's
obligations  and  duties  under  the  Pooling  and  Servicing   Agreement,   the
Certificates or the Custodial Agreement.

                          THE SECURITIES ADMINISTRATOR

         Wells  Fargo,  as the  Securities  Administrator  under the Pooling and
Servicing  Agreement,  will perform  certain  securities and tax  administration
services for the Trust for so long as it is the Master Servicer.  The Securities
Administrator's  corporate  trust office is located at 9062 Old Annapolis  Road,
Columbia,   Maryland   21045  or  at  such  other  address  as  the   Securities
Administrator may designate from time to time.

         The Securities  Administrator  may resign at any time including at such
time as the  Master  Servicer  is  removed  or  terminated,  in which  event the
Depositor  will be  obligated  to appoint a successor  Securities  Administrator
reasonably acceptable to the Trustee. The Trustee may also remove the Securities
Administrator if the Securities  Administrator ceases to be eligible to continue
as  such  under  the  Pooling  and  Servicing  Agreement  or if  the  Securities
Administrator becomes incapable of acting, bankrupt,  insolvent or if a receiver
or public officer takes charge of the Securities  Administrator or its property,
or if the Master  Servicer is terminated or removed.  Upon such  resignation  or
removal of the  Securities  Administrator,  the  Depositor  will be  entitled to
appoint  a  successor  Securities  Administrator  reasonably  acceptable  to the
Trustee.  The  Securities  Administrator  may also be removed at any time by the
holders of certificates  evidencing ownership of not less than 51% of the trust.
Any resignation or removal of the Securities  Administrator and appointment of a
successor Securities Administrator will not become effective until acceptance of
the  appointment  by the  successor  Securities  Administrator.  The  Securities
Administrator  and the Master Servicer will be indemnified by the trust fund for
certain expenses as provided in the Pooling and Servicing Agreement.

                                  THE CUSTODIAN

         The mortgage  loan files with respect to the  Mortgage  Loans,  will be
held by Wells Fargo Bank, National Association,  a national banking association,
pursuant to a custodial agreement to be

                                     S-105


entered into among HSBC Bank USA, National Association,  as Trustee, Wells Fargo
Bank, National Association,  in its capacity as custodian, and the Servicer. For
additional  information  about Wells Fargo Bank,  National  Association see "The
Master Servicer" in this prospectus supplement.

                             THE CREDIT RISK MANAGER

         Risk Management  Group,  LLC, as credit risk manager for the trust (the
"Credit Risk Manager") will monitor the  performance of the Servicers,  and make
recommendations  to the  Servicers  and/or  Master  Servicer  regarding  certain
delinquent and defaulted  Mortgage Loans and will report to the Depositor on the
performance  of such  Mortgage  Loans,  pursuant  to a  Credit  Risk  Management
Agreement to be entered into by the Credit Risk Manager and each Servicer and/or
Master  Servicer on or prior to the Closing  Date.  The Credit Risk Manager will
rely upon  mortgage  loan data that is  provided to it by each  Servicer  and/or
Master Servicer in performing its advisory and monitoring functions.  The Credit
Risk Manager will be entitled to receive a "Credit Risk Manager's Fee" until the
termination  of the trust or until  its  removal  either  (i) by  Deutsche  Bank
Securities Inc., so long as it is the holder of the Class CE Certificate or (ii)
by the Certificateholders  holding not less than 66 2/3% of the voting rights in
the Trust Fund, each as described in the pooling and servicing  agreement.  Such
fee will be paid by the trust and will be equal to a per annum percentage of the
then current aggregate principal balance of the Mortgage Loans.

                         POOLING AND SERVICING AGREEMENT

GENERAL

         The  certificates  will be  issued  under  the  Pooling  and  Servicing
Agreement (the "Pooling and Servicing  Agreement"),  dated as of January 1, 2005
among  the  Depositor,  the  Servicers,  the  Master  Servicer,  the  Securities
Administrator  and the  Trustee,  a form of which is filed as an  exhibit to the
registration   statement.   A  Current  Report  on  Form  8-K  relating  to  the
certificates  containing  a copy  of the  Pooling  and  Servicing  Agreement  as
executed  will be  filed  by the  Depositor  with the  Securities  and  Exchange
Commission   ("SEC")  within  fifteen  days  of  the  initial  issuance  of  the
certificates.  The trust fund created under the Pooling and Servicing  Agreement
will  consist of (i) all of the  Depositor's  right,  title and  interest in the
Mortgage  Loans,  the  related  mortgage  notes,  mortgages  and  other  related
documents;  (ii) all Arrearages and all payments on or collections in respect of
the Mortgage Loans due after the Cut-off Date, together with any proceeds of the
Mortgage  Loans;   (iii)  any  Mortgaged   Properties   acquired  on  behalf  of
certificateholders  by  foreclosure or by deed in lieu of  foreclosure,  and any
revenues received on these mortgaged properties;  (iv) the rights of the Trustee
under all insurance  policies  required to be  maintained  under the Pooling and
Servicing  Agreement;  (v) the rights of the  Depositor  under the mortgage loan
purchase  agreement;  (vi) payments made pursuant to the Cap Agreement and (vii)
the Reserve  Fund and any  amounts on deposit in the  Reserve  Fund from time to
time and any proceeds thereof. Reference is made to the prospectus for important
information  in  addition  to  that  set  forth  in this  prospectus  supplement
regarding the trust fund,  the terms and conditions of the Pooling and Servicing
Agreement  and  the  Offered  Certificates.  The  Depositor  will  provide  to a
prospective or actual  certificate  holder without charge, on written request, a
copy, without exhibits,  of the Pooling and Servicing Agreement and the mortgage
loan purchase  agreement.  Requests  should be addressed to 6525 Morrison Blvd.,
Suite 318, Charlotte, North Carolina 28211.

ASSIGNMENT OF THE MORTGAGE LOANS

         On the Closing Date,  the  Depositor  will transfer to the trust all of
its right, title and interest in and to each Mortgage Loan, the related mortgage
note,  mortgage,  assignment of mortgage in  recordable  form to the Trustee and
other related documents (collectively,  the "Related Documents"),  including all
scheduled payments with respect to each such Mortgage Loan due after the Cut-off
Date and all Arrearages on the Mortgage Loans.  The Trustee,  concurrently  with
such


                                     S-106


transfer,  will deliver the  certificates  to the Depositor.  Each Mortgage Loan
transferred  to the trust will be identified on a schedule (the  "Mortgage  Loan
Schedule")  delivered to the Trustee and each  Servicer  pursuant to the Pooling
and Servicing  Agreement.  The Mortgage  Loan Schedule will include  information
such as the principal  balance of each Mortgage Loan as of the Cut-off Date, its
Mortgage Rate as well as other information with respect to each Mortgage Loan.

         The Pooling and Servicing  Agreement  will require  that,  prior to the
closing date, the Depositor will deliver or cause to be delivered to the Trustee
(or the Custodian,  as the Trustee's  agent for such purpose) the mortgage notes
endorsed  to the  Trustee on behalf of the  certificateholders  and the  Related
Documents.  In lieu of delivery of original mortgages or mortgage notes, if such
original is not  available  or lost,  the  Depositor  may deliver or cause to be
delivered true and correct copies  thereof,  or, with respect to a lost mortgage
note, a lost note affidavit.  The assignments of mortgage are generally required
to be recorded by or on behalf of the Depositor in the  appropriate  offices for
real property records, except (i) in states as to which an opinion of counsel is
delivered  to the effect  that such  recording  is not  required  to protect the
trustee's  interest in the  Mortgage  Loan  against the claim of any  subsequent
transferee or any  successor to or creditor of the  depositor or the seller,  or
(ii) with respect to any Mortgage  Loan  electronically  registered  through the
Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc.

         On or prior to the Closing  Date,  the Trustee or the  Custodian on its
behalf will review the Mortgage Loans and the Related Documents  pursuant to the
Pooling and Servicing  Agreement and if any Mortgage Loan or Related Document is
found to be defective in any material respect,  other than a defect set forth on
the schedule of defects  attached to the mortgage loan purchase  agreement,  and
such defect is not cured within 90 days  following  notification  thereof to the
Mortgage  Loan Seller by the Trustee or the  Servicer,  the Mortgage Loan Seller
will be obligated  either to (i)  substitute  for such Mortgage Loan a Qualified
Substitute  Mortgage Loan;  however,  such substitution is permitted only within
two years of the  Closing  Date and may not be made unless an opinion of counsel
is provided to the effect that such  substitution will not disqualify any of the
REMICs (as defined in the Pooling and Servicing  Agreement) as a REMIC or result
in a prohibited  transaction  tax under the Code; or (ii) purchase such Mortgage
Loan at a price  (the  "Purchase  Price")  equal  to the  outstanding  principal
balance of such Mortgage  Loan as of the date of purchase,  plus all accrued and
unpaid  interest  thereon,  computed at the Mortgage Rate through the end of the
calendar month in which the purchase is effected,  plus the amount of any unpaid
Servicing Fees and any unreimbursed P&I Advances and servicing  advances made by
the related  Servicer plus all  unreimbursed  costs and damages  incurred by the
trust and the Trustee in connection with any violation by any such Mortgage Loan
of any predatory or abusive  lending law. The Purchase Price will be required to
be  remitted  to the related  Servicer  for  deposit in the  related  Collection
Account (as defined herein) for remittance to the Securities Administrator prior
to the next  succeeding  Distribution  Date after such  obligation  arises.  The
obligation of the Mortgage Loan Seller to repurchase or substitute for a Deleted
Mortgage  Loan (as defined  herein) is the sole remedy  regarding any defects in
the Mortgage Loans and Related  Documents  available to the  certificateholders.
INVESTORS  SHOULD NOTE,  HOWEVER,  THAT NEITHER THE MORTGAGE LOAN SELLER NOR ANY
OTHER  PERSON WILL BE REQUIRED TO PROVIDE ANY  REMEDIES IN RESPECT OF ANY OF THE
ALREADY-IDENTIFIED  LOAN-LEVEL  DEFECTS  RELATING TO THE SCRATCH & DENT MORTGAGE
LOANS OR ANY  RE-PERFORMING  MORTGAGE  LOANS  THAT MAY  ALSO BE  CATEGORIZED  AS
SCRATCH & DENT MORTGAGE LOANS THAT ARE DESCRIBED UNDER "RISK  FACTORS--NATURE OF
THE  MORTGAGE  LOANS"  ABOVE,  TO THE  EXTENT  SUCH  DEFECTS  ARE SET FORTH ON A
SCHEDULE TO THE MORTGAGE LOAN PURCHASE AGREEMENT.  See "Risk  Factors--Nature of
the Mortgage Loans" and "--The  certificates will be limited  obligations solely
of the trust fund and not of any other party" in this prospectus supplement.

         In connection with the substitution of a Qualified  Substitute Mortgage
Loan, the Mortgage Loan Seller will be required to remit to the related Servicer
for deposit in the related  Collection  Account for remittance to the Securities
Administrator  prior  to  the  next  succeeding  Distribution  Date  after  such
obligation arises an amount (the  "Substitution  Shortfall Amount") equal to the

                                     S-107


excess of the principal  balance of the related  Deleted  Mortgage Loan over the
principal balance of such Qualified Substitute Mortgage Loan.

         A "Qualified  Substitute  Mortgage Loan" is a mortgage loan substituted
for a Deleted  Mortgage Loan which must, on the date of such  substitution,  (i)
have an outstanding  principal balance (or in the case of a substitution of more
than one Mortgage  Loan for a Deleted  Mortgage  Loan,  an  aggregate  principal
balance),  not in excess of the principal  balance of the Deleted Mortgage Loan;
(ii)  have a  Mortgage  Rate not  less  than the  Mortgage  Rate of the  Deleted
Mortgage  Loan and not  more  than 1% in  excess  of the  Mortgage  Rate of such
Deleted  Mortgage  Loan;  (iii)  if such  mortgage  loan  is an  adjustable-rate
mortgage loan, have a Maximum  Mortgage Rate and Minimum  Mortgage Rate not less
than the respective  rate for the Deleted  Mortgage Loan and have a Gross Margin
equal to or greater than the Deleted  Mortgage Loan; (iv) have the same Due Date
as the Deleted  Mortgage  Loan;  (v) have a remaining  term to maturity not more
than one year earlier and not later than the  remaining  term to maturity of the
Deleted Mortgage Loan; (vi) comply with each  representation  and warranty as to
the Mortgage Loans set forth in the mortgage loan purchase  agreement (deemed to
be made as of the date of  substitution);  (vii) be of the same or better credit
quality as the Mortgage Loan being replaced;  (viii) have the same lien priority
on the related  mortgaged  property as the Mortgage Loan being replaced and (ix)
satisfy  certain  other  conditions  specified  in  the  Pooling  and  Servicing
Agreement.

         The  Mortgage  Loan  Seller  will  make  certain   representations  and
warranties  as to the accuracy in all material  respects of certain  information
furnished to the Trustee with respect to each Mortgage  Loan.  In addition,  the
Mortgage Loan Seller will represent and warrant,  as of the Closing Date,  that,
among other things:  (i) at the time of transfer to the Depositor,  the Mortgage
Loan Seller has transferred or assigned all of its right,  title and interest in
each  Mortgage  Loan and the  Related  Documents,  free of any  lien;  (ii) each
Mortgage Loan complied,  at the time of  origination,  in all material  respects
with applicable state and federal laws including,  but not limited to, predatory
lending laws;  (iii) the Mortgage Loans are not subject to the  requirements  of
the Home  Ownership  and Equity  Protection  Act of 1994 and no Mortgage Loan is
classified and/or defined as a "high cost",  "covered" or "predatory" loan under
any other federal, state or local law or ordinance or regulation including,  but
not limited  to, the States of  Georgia,  Arkansas,  Kentucky,  New Jersey,  New
Mexico or Illinois;  and (iv) no proceeds  from any  Mortgage  Loan were used to
purchase single premium credit insurance policies as part of the origination of,
or as a condition to closing,  such Mortgage Loan. Upon discovery of a breach of
any such  representation and warranty which materially and adversely affects the
interests of the  certificateholders  in the related  Mortgage  Loan and Related
Documents,  the  Mortgage  Loan  Seller  will have a period of 90 days after the
earlier of  discovery  or  receipt  of written  notice of the breach to effect a
cure. If the breach cannot be cured within the 90-day period,  the Mortgage Loan
Seller will be obligated to (i)  substitute  for such  Deleted  Mortgage  Loan a
Qualified  Substitute  Mortgage Loan or (ii) purchase such Deleted Mortgage Loan
from the trust.  The same procedure and limitations that are set forth above for
the  substitution or purchase of Deleted Mortgage Loans as a result of deficient
documentation  relating  thereto will apply to the substitution or purchase of a
Deleted Mortgage Loan as a result of a breach of a representation or warranty in
the mortgage loan purchase  agreement that materially and adversely  affects the
interests of the certificateholders.

         Mortgage  Loans  required to be transferred to the Mortgage Loan Seller
as described in the preceding  paragraphs  are referred to as "Deleted  Mortgage
Loans."

PAYMENTS ON MORTGAGE  LOANS;  DEPOSITS TO  COLLECTION  ACCOUNT AND  DISTRIBUTION
ACCOUNT

         Each Servicer  will  establish and maintain or cause to be maintained a
separate  trust  account  (the  "Collection  Account")  for the  benefit  of the
certificateholders.  Each  Collection  Account  will be an Eligible  Account (as
defined in the Pooling and Servicing  Agreement).  Upon receipt by a Servicer of
amounts in respect of the related Mortgage Loans (excluding amounts representing
the


                                     S-108


Servicing Fees payable to the related Servicer or other servicing  compensation,
reimbursement for P&I Advances and servicing  advances and insurance proceeds to
be applied  to the  restoration  or repair of a  Mortgaged  Property  or similar
items), the related Servicer will deposit such amounts in the related Collection
Account.  Amounts so  deposited  may be invested in  Permitted  Investments  (as
defined in the  Pooling  and  Servicing  Agreement)  maturing  no later than one
Business  Day  prior to the date on which  the  amount  on  deposit  therein  is
required to be remitted to the Securities  Administrator  if such  investment is
managed  by  a  Person  other  than  the  related  Servicer  or  the  Securities
Administrator,  or maturing on the  Business  Day on which the amount on deposit
therein is  required  to be remitted  to the  Securities  Administrator  if such
investment is managed by the related  Servicer or the Securities  Administrator.
All investment income on funds in a Collection  Account shall be for the benefit
of the related Servicer.

         The   Securities   Administrator   will   establish   an  account  (the
"Distribution  Account") into which will be deposited  amounts remitted to it by
the Servicers for distribution to  certificateholders on a Distribution Date and
payment of certain fees and expenses of the trust. The Distribution Account will
be an Eligible Account.  Amounts on deposit therein may be invested in Permitted
Investments  maturing  on or  before  the  Business  Day  prior  to the  related
Distribution Date unless such Permitted  Investments are invested in investments
managed or advised by the Securities  Administrator or an affiliate thereof,  in
which case such  Permitted  investments  may mature on the related  Distribution
Date.

SIMPLE INTEREST EXCESS SUB-ACCOUNT

         The  Pooling  and  Servicing  Agreement  requires  that  each  Servicer
servicing Simple Interest Mortgage Loans establish and maintain a sub-account of
the collection account (the "Simple Interest Excess  Sub-Account").  The related
Servicer will transfer to the Simple Interest Excess  Sub-Account all Net Simple
Interest Excess during each Due Period.  "Net Simple Interest  Excess" means, as
of any determination date for each Simple Interest  Qualifying Loan, the excess,
if any, of the aggregate  amount of Simple Interest Excess (net of reimbursement
to the related  Servicer for simple  interest  advancing as provided below) over
the amount of Simple Interest Shortfall. "Simple Interest Shortfall" means as of
any determination date for each Simple Interest  Qualifying Loan, the excess, if
any, of (i) the amount of interest that would accrue on the principal balance of
such  Mortgage  Loan at the  Mortgage  Rate  during  the  related  Due Period if
interest  were to accrue based on a 360-day year of twelve 30-day  months,  over
(ii) the portion of the scheduled monthly payment received from the borrower for
such Mortgage Loan allocable to interest with respect to the related Due Period.
"Simple  Interest  Excess" means, as of any  determination  date for each Simple
Interest  Qualifying  Loan,  the  excess,  if  any,  of (i) the  portion  of the
scheduled  monthly  payment  received  from the borrower for such  mortgage loan
allocable  to interest  with  respect to the  related Due Period,  over (ii) the
amount of interest that would accrue on the  principal  balance of such Mortgage
Loan at the Mortgage Rate during the Due Period if interest were to accrue based
on a 360-day  year of twelve  30-day  months.  "Net Simple  Interest  Shortfall"
means, as of any  Determination  Date for each Simple Interest  Qualifying Loan,
the  excess,  if any,  of the  aggregate  Simple  Interest  Shortfalls  over the
aggregate  Simple  Interest Excess for the related  period.  A "Simple  Interest
Qualifying  Loan", as of any  Determination  Date, is any Mortgage Loan that was
neither  prepaid in full during the related  Prepayment  Period,  nor delinquent
with  respect to a payment  that  became due during the related Due Period as of
the close of business on the determination date following such Due Period.

         The related  Servicer  will  withdraw  amounts on deposit in the Simple
Interest Excess  Sub-Account for deposit to the collection account prior to each
distribution date to pay Net Simple Interest Shortfalls.

         All funds in the Simple Interest Excess  Sub-Account may be invested in
permitted  investments.  So long as no event of default by the related  Servicer
shall have occurred and be


                                     S-109


continuing,  any net  investment  earnings on funds held in the Simple  Interest
Excess  Sub-Account  are for the  account of the related  Servicer.  The related
Servicer will be required to reimburse the Simple  Interest  Excess  Sub-Account
for any net investment losses.

EVENTS OF DEFAULT

         Upon the occurrence of events of default  described under  "Description
of the  Agreements-Material  Terms of the Pooling and Servicing  Agreements  and
Underlying  Servicing  Agreements-Events  of Default  under the  Agreement"  and
"-Rights Upon Events of Default under the  Agreements"  in the  prospectus,  the
related Servicer may be removed as the Servicer of the related Mortgage Loans in
accordance  with the terms of the Pooling and  Servicing  Agreement.  As further
described  in,  and in  accordance  with the  provisions  of,  the  Pooling  and
Servicing Agreement,  immediately upon the removal of the related Servicer after
the occurrence of an Event of Default,  a successor  Servicer  (which may be the
Master  Servicer)  will become the successor to such Servicer  under the Pooling
and Servicing Agreement;  provided,  however that, under certain  circumstances,
Ocwen or its designee  may  designate a successor  servicer  with respect to the
related  Mortgage  Loans if it has been  terminated  as the  Servicer  under the
Pooling and Servicing  Agreement.  Any successor  servicer appointed by Ocwen or
its  designee  must  qualify  as a  successor  servicer  under the  Pooling  and
Servicing  Agreement  and  be  approved  by  the  Rating  Agencies  (by  written
confirmation  that such appointment of a successor  servicer would not result in
the  reduction  or  withdrawal  of  the  rating  of  any  outstanding  class  of
certificates).  Any proceeds  received in connection  with the  appointment of a
successor servicer shall be the property of Ocwen or its designee.

         Any  successor  to Ocwen  appointed  under the  Pooling  and  Servicing
Agreement  must be a housing  loan  servicing  institution,  acceptable  to each
rating  agency,  with a net  worth  at the time of the  appointment  of at least
$15,000,000.  See "Description of the  Agreements-Material  Terms of the Pooling
and Servicing Agreements and Underlying  Servicing  Agreements-Events of Default
under the Agreement"  and "-Rights Upon Events of Default under the  Agreements"
in the prospectus.

VOTING RIGHTS

         At all times,  98% of all voting  rights  will be  allocated  among the
holders of the Offered  Certificates and the Class CE Certificates in proportion
to the then  outstanding  Certificate  Principal  Balances  of their  respective
certificates,  1% of all voting  rights will be  allocated to the holders of the
Class P Certificates in proportion to the then outstanding Certificate Principal
Balances of their  respective  certificates  and 1% of all voting rights will be
allocated to the holders of the Residual Certificates.

TERMINATION

         The  circumstances  under which the obligations  created by the Pooling
and  Servicing  Agreement  will  terminate  in respect of the  certificates  are
described in "Description of the  Securities-Termination" in the prospectus. The
Master Servicer will have the right to purchase all remaining Mortgage Loans and
any properties  acquired in respect thereof and thereby effect early  retirement
of the  certificates  on any  Distribution  Date following the Due Period during
which the  aggregate  principal  balance of the  Mortgage  Loans and  properties
acquired in respect thereof  remaining in the trust fund at the time of purchase
is reduced to less than or equal to 10% of the  aggregate  principal  balance of
the  Mortgage  Loans as of the  Cut-off  Date.  Subject  to  certain  additional
conditions set forth in the Pooling and Servicing  Agreement,  in the event that
the Master  Servicer  fails to exercise its optional  termination  right and the
aggregate  principal  balance of the Mortgage Loans (and properties  acquired in
respect of the Mortgage  Loans)  remaining in the trust has been reduced to less
than or equal to 5% of the aggregate  principal balance of the Mortgage Loans as
of the Cut-off Date,  Ocwen Federal Bank FSB, may, at its option,  exercise such
optional


                                     S-110


termination  right.  In the event the Master  Servicer or Ocwen Federal Bank FSB
exercises the option (either the Master  Servicer or Ocwen Federal Bank FSB, the
"Terminator"),  the purchase price payable in connection with the option will be
equal to par with respect to the Mortgage Loans and the fair market value of all
properties  acquired by the trust in respect of any Mortgage Loans, plus accrued
interest  for  each  Mortgage  Loan  at the  related  Mortgage  Rate  to but not
including  the  first  day of  the  month  in  which  the  repurchase  price  is
distributed,  together  with (to the extent not  covered by the  foregoing)  all
amounts due and owing to the Trustee, the Servicers, the Master Servicer and the
Securities Administrator as of the termination date. In the event the Terminator
exercises  this  option,  the portion of the  purchase  price  allocable  to the
Offered  Certificates,  to the extent of available  funds,  (i) 100% of the then
outstanding Certificate Principal Balance of the Offered Certificates, plus (ii)
one month's interest on the then outstanding  Certificate  Principal  Balance of
the Offered Certificates at the then applicable  Pass-Through Rate for each such
class,  plus (iii) any previously  accrued but unpaid interest  thereon to which
the holders of the Offered  Certificates are entitled,  together with the amount
of any Net WAC Rate Carryover Amounts. The holders of the Residual  Certificates
shall  pledge  any  amount  received  in a  termination  in excess of par to the
holders of the Class CE Certificates.  In no event will the trust created by the
Pooling and Servicing  Agreement continue beyond the expiration of 21 years from
the death of the  survivor  of the persons  named in the  Pooling and  Servicing
Agreement. See "Description of the Securities-Termination" in the prospectus.

OPTIONAL PURCHASE OF DEFAULTED MORTGAGE LOANS

         As to any Ocwen Mortgage Loan which becomes delinquent in payment by 90
days or more,  Ocwen or an affiliate of Ocwen may, at its option,  purchase such
Ocwen Mortgage Loan from the Trust at the Purchase Price for such Mortgage Loan,
under the circumstances described in the Pooling and Servicing Agreement.

                     THE CAP AGREEMENT AND THE CAP PROVIDER

         The Offered  Certificates will have the benefit of an interest rate cap
agreement  (the "Cap  Agreement")  with respect to the Mortgage  Loans.  The Cap
Agreement will be documented pursuant to a confirmation  incorporating the terms
and  conditions of an ISDA Master  Agreement  (Multicurrency-Cross  Border),  as
supplemented  by a schedule.  Pursuant to the Cap  Agreement,  Barclays Bank PLC
(together  with any  successor,  the "Cap  Provider")  will  agree to pay to the
Securities  Administrator  for  the  benefit  of  the  holders  of  the  Offered
Certificates and the Class CE Certificates, a monthly payment in an amount equal
to the product of:

         (1) the excess, if any, of One-Month LIBOR over the strike rate for the
related Distribution Date;

         (2) the Scheduled Notional Amount; and

         (3) a fraction,  the  numerator  of which is the actual  number of days
elapsed  from  the  previous  Distribution  Date to but  excluding  the  current
Distribution  Date (or, for the first  Distribution  Date,  the actual number of
days  elapsed  from the Closing  Date to but  excluding  the first  Distribution
Date), and the denominator of which is 360.

         The Scheduled  Notional Amount with respect to each Distribution  Date,
which  declines in  accordance  with the expected  amortization  of the Mortgage
Loans (but in no event shall be greater than the aggregate Certificate Principal
Balance of the Offered Certificates and the Class CE Certificates), is set forth
below.


                                     S-111





       DISTRIBUTION DATE        SCHEDULED NOTIONAL AMOUNT ($)   STRIKE RATE (%)
 ---------------------------    -----------------------------   ---------------
                                                              
 January 2005                         149,063,619.15                8.50
 February 2005                        144,821,748.11                8.50
 March 2005                           140,698,837.50                8.50
 April 2005                           136,691,538.65                8.50
 May 2005                             132,796,685.43                8.50
 June 2005                            129,011,162.49                8.50
 July 2005                            125,331,900.17                8.50
 August 2005                          121,755,994.18                8.50
 September 2005                       118,280,539.97                8.50
 October 2005                         114,903,047.35                8.50
 November 2005                        111,620,492.11                8.50
 December 2005                        108,430,248.66                8.50
 January 2006                         105,329,724.16                8.50
 February 2006                        102,316,442.15                8.50
 March 2006                            99,387,958.89                8.50
 April 2006                            96,541,943.71                8.50
 May 2006                              93,778,402.98                8.50
 June 2006                             91,093,675.02                8.50
 July 2006                             88,484,357.79                8.50
 August 2006                           85,948,355.73                8.50
 September 2006                        83,483,792.42                8.50
 October 2006                          81,088,685.89                8.50
 November 2006                         78,761,131.14                8.50
 December 2006                         76,499,245.51                8.50
 January 2007                          74,301,169.11                8.50
 February 2007                         72,165,123.51                8.50
 March 2007                            70,089,373.50                8.50
 April 2007                            68,072,243.96                8.50
 May 2007                              66,040,198.41                8.50
 June 2007                             64,137,524.01                8.50
 July 2007                             62,288,640.67                8.50
 August 2007                           60,492,046.94                8.50
 September 2007                        58,746,280.61                8.50
 October 2007                          57,049,924.68                8.50
 November 2007                         55,401,524.97                8.50
 December 2007                         53,799,817.13                8.50
 January 2008                          52,243,496.17                8.50
 February 2008                         50,731,293.21                8.50
 March 2008                            49,261,974.55                8.50
 April 2008                            47,834,340.63                8.50
 May 2008                              46,447,225.15                8.50
 June 2008                             45,099,494.11                8.50
 July 2008                             43,790,044.96                8.50
 August 2008                           42,517,805.69                8.50
 September 2008                        41,281,734.06                8.50
 October 2008                          40,080,816.68                8.50
 November 2008                         38,914,068.31                8.50
 December 2008                         37,780,329.80                8.50
 January 2009                          36,678,880.88                8.50
 February 2009                         35,608,815.72                8.50
 March 2009                            34,569,253.62                8.50
 April 2009                            33,559,338.34                8.50





                                     S-112




       DISTRIBUTION DATE        SCHEDULED NOTIONAL AMOUNT ($)   STRIKE RATE (%)
 ---------------------------    -----------------------------   ---------------
                                                              
 May 2009                              32,578,237.41                8.50
 June 2009                             31,625,141.51                8.50
 July 2009                             30,699,263.78                8.50
 August 2009                           29,799,839.26                8.50
 September 2009                        28,926,124.24                8.50
 October 2009                          28,077,395.69                8.50
 November 2009                         27,252,950.68                8.50
 December 2009                         26,452,105.86                8.50
 January 2010                          25,674,196.85                8.50
 February 2010                         24,918,577.81                8.50
 March 2010                            24,184,620.84                8.50
 April 2010                            23,471,715.54                8.50
 May 2010                              22,779,268.51                8.50
 June 2010                             22,106,702.88                8.50
 July 2010                             21,085,886.61                8.50
 August 2010                           20,462,328.59                8.50
 September 2010                        19,856,702.39                8.50
 October 2010                          19,268,501.67                8.50
 November 2010                         18,697,234.17                8.50
 December 2010                         18,142,421.39                8.50
 January 2011                          17,603,598.18                8.50
 February 2011                         17,080,312.35                8.50
 March 2011                            16,572,124.37                8.50
 April 2011                            16,078,606.95                8.50
 May 2011                              15,599,344.77                8.50
 June 2011                             15,133,934.09                8.50

        The Cap Agreement will terminate  after the  Distribution  Date in June
2011.

         If, on any Distribution  Date, the payments  received by the Securities
Administrator  under the Cap  Agreement  exceed  the  amount of the Net WAC Rate
Carryover Amounts payable to the Offered Certificates on such Distribution Date,
such excess will be distributed to the Class CE Certificates.

         The Cap Agreement will be governed by and construed in accordance  with
the laws of the State of New  York.  The  obligations  of the Cap  Provider  are
limited to those specifically set forth in the Cap Agreement.

         The Cap Provider is a public limited company  registered in England and
Wales under number 1026167.  The liability of the members of the Cap Provider is
limited. It has its registered and head office at 54 Lombard Street, London EC3P
3AH. The Cap Provider was incorporated on August 7, 1925 under the Colonial Bank
Act 1925 and on October 4, 1971 was  registered  as a company  limited by shares
under the Companies Act 1948 to 1967. Pursuant to The Barclays Bank Act 1984, on
January 1, 1985, Barclays Bank was re-registered as a public limited company and
its name was changed from  "Barclays  Bank  International  Limited" to "Barclays
Bank PLC".

         The Cap Provider and its subsidiary  undertakings (taken together,  the
"Group") is an  international  financial  services  group  engaged  primarily in
banking,  investment banking and asset management.  In terms of assets employed,
it is one of the largest  financial  services groups in the United Kingdom.  The
Group also  operates in many other  countries  around the world and is a leading
provider of  coordinated  global  services  to  multinational  corporations  and
financial  institutions in the world's main financial centers.  The whole of the
issued ordinary share capital of


                                     S-113


the Cap Provider is  beneficially  owned by Barclays PLC,  which is the ultimate
holding company of the Group.

         The short term  unsecured  obligations  of the Cap  Provider  are rated
"A-1+" by Standard & Poor's, "P-1" by Moody's and "F1+" by Fitch Ratings and the
long-term  obligations of Barclays Bank PLC are rated "Aa1" by Moody's,  "AA" by
Standard & Poor's and "AA+" by Fitch Ratings.

         As at June 30,  2004,  the  Group had  total  assets of  (pound)498,127
million, total net loans and advances of (pound)323,750  million, total deposits
of  (pound)322,040  million  and  equity  shareholders  funds  of  (pound)17,067
million.  The profit  before  taxation of the Group in respect of the six months
ended June 30, 2004 was  (pound)2,411  million after charging net provisions for
bad and doubtful debts of (pound)589 million.

         As at December 31, 2003,  the Group had total assets of  (pound)443,373
million  (December  31,  2002:  (pound)403,066  million),  total  net  loans and
advances of (pound)288,743 million (December 31, 2002:  (pound)260,572 million),
total  deposits of  (pound)278,960  million  (December 31, 2002:  (pound)258,932
million) and equity  shareholders  funds of (pound)16,485  million (December 31,
2002: (pound)15,205 million). The profit before taxation of the Group in respect
of the year ended December 31, 2003 was (pound)3,845 million (December 31, 2002:
(pound)3,203  million)  after charging net provisions for bad and doubtful debts
of (pound)1,347 million (December 31, 2002: (pound)1,484 million)

                         FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSEQUENCES

         In  the  opinion  of  Thacher  Proffitt  &  Wood  LLP,  counsel  to the
Depositor,  assuming compliance with the provisions of the Pooling and Servicing
Agreement, for federal income tax purposes, each of the REMICs established under
the Pooling and Servicing Agreement will qualify as a REMIC under the Code.

         For federal  income tax  purposes (i) the  Residual  Certificates  will
represent the  "residual  interests" in each REMIC elected by the trust and (ii)
the  Offered  Certificates  (exclusive  of any  right  of  the  holder  of  such
certificates  to receive  payments  from the Reserve  Fund in respect of Net WAC
Rate Carryover Amounts),  the Class P Certificates and the Class CE Certificates
will  represent  the  "regular  interests"  of,  and  will  be  treated  as debt
instruments of, a REMIC. See "Material Federal Income Tax Considerations-REMICs"
in the prospectus.

         For federal income tax purposes,  the Class A-1  Certificates and Class
M-1 Certificates  will not, the Class M-4  Certificates  will, and the remaining
classes of Offered  Certificates  may,  be treated as having  been  issued  with
original  issue  discount.  The  prepayment  assumption  that  will  be  used in
determining the rate of accrual of original issue discount,  market discount and
premium, if any, for federal income tax purposes will be based on the assumption
that, subsequent to the date of any determination the Mortgage Loans will prepay
at a rate equal to 28% CPR. No  representation  is made that the Mortgage  Loans
will prepay at that rate or at any other rate. See "Material  Federal Income Tax
Consideration-General" and "-REMICs-Taxation of Owners of Regular Securities" in
the prospectus.

         The holders of the Offered  Certificates will be required to include in
income  interest on their  certificates in accordance with the accrual method of
accounting.

         The  Internal  Revenue  Service (the "IRS") has issued  original  issue
discount  regulations (the "OID Regulations") under sections 1271 to 1275 of the
Code that address the treatment of debt  instruments  issued with original issue
discount,  Purchasers of the Offered  Certificates  should be aware that the OID
Regulations do not  adequately  address  certain issues  relevant to, or are not
applicable  to,  prepayable  securities  such as the  Offered  Certificates.  In
addition,  there is considerable  uncertainty  concerning the application of the
OID Regulations to REMIC Regular Certificates that provide for payments based on
an adjustable rate such as the Offered Certificates.  Because of the uncertainty
concerning  the   application  of  Section   1272(a)(6)  of  the  Code  to  such
certificates  and  because  the rules of the OID  Regulations  relating  to debt
instruments  having  an  adjustable  rate  of  interest  are  limited  in  their
application in ways that could preclude their  application to such  certificates
even in the absence of Section 1272(a)(6) of the Code, the IRS could assert that
the  Offered  Certificates  should be  treated  as issued  with  original  issue
discount  or should be  governed  by the rules  applicable  to debt  instruments
having  contingent  payments  or by some  other  method  not yet  set  forth  in
regulations.  Prospective  purchasers of the Offered Certificates are advised to
consult their tax advisors concerning the tax treatment of such certificates.

                                     S-114


         In certain  circumstances  the OID  Regulations  permit the holder of a
debt instrument to recognize original issue discount under a method that differs
from that used by the issuer. Accordingly,  the holder of an Offered Certificate
may be able to select a method for  recognizing  original  issue  discount  that
differs   from   that   used  by  the  Trust  in   preparing   reports   to  the
certificateholders and the IRS.

         If the method for computing  original  issue discount  described  above
results in a negative amount for any period with respect to a Certificateholder,
the amount of original issue discount allocable to that period would be zero and
the  Certificateholder  will be  permitted to offset that  negative  amount only
against  future  original  issue  discount,   if  any,   attributable  to  those
Certificates.

         Certain of the  certificates  may be  treated  for  federal  income tax
purposes as having been issued at a premium. Whether any holder of a certificate
will be treated as holding such  certificate  with amortizable bond premium will
depend on such certificateholders purchase price and the distributions remaining
to be  made  on  such  certificate  at the  time  of  its  acquisition  by  such
certificateholder.  Holders of such  certificates  should  consult their own tax
advisors  regarding  the  possibility  of making an election  to  amortize  such
premium.  See "Material Federal Income Tax  Considerations-  REMICs--Taxation of
Owners of Regular Securities" in the Prospectus.

         Each  holder of an Offered  Certificate  is deemed to own an  undivided
beneficial  ownership  interest  in a REMIC  Regular  Interest  and the right to
receive  payments  from the  Reserve  Fund in respect of Net WAC Rate  Carryover
Amounts. The Reserve Fund is not an asset of any REMIC.

         The treatment of amounts received by a holder of an Offered Certificate
under that certificateholder's  right to receive a Net WAC Rate Carryover Amount
will depend on the portion,  if any, of the  certificateholder's  purchase price
allocable  thereto.  Under  the REMIC  Regulations,  each  holder of an  Offered
Certificate  must allocate its purchase price for such  certificate  between its
undivided interest in the regular interest of a REMIC and its undivided interest
in the right to receive  payments  from the  Reserve  Fund in respect of Net WAC
Rate Carryover  Amounts in accordance  with the relative,  fair market values of
each property right.  The Pooling and Servicing  Agreement will provide that the
Securities  Administrator  is required to treat  payments made to the holders of
the Offered  Certificates  with  respect to a Net WAC Rate  Carryover  Amount as
includible  in income based on the  regulations  relating to notional  principal
contracts.  The OID regulations provide that the trust's allocation of the issue
price is binding on all holders  unless the holder  explicitly  discloses on its
tax return that its allocation is different from the trust's allocation. For tax
reporting  purposes,  the Securities  Administrator may, as required,  treat the
right to receive  payments  from the Reserve Fund in respect of the Net WAC Rate
Carryover  Amounts  as having  more than a de minimis  value.  The value of such
amount shall be available from the Securities  Administrator upon request to the
extent  it is  provided  to the  Securities  Administrator  by the  Underwriter.
Information  regarding  such  amounts  will be  available  from  the  Securities
Administrator upon request.  However, this assignment of value is not binding on
the IRS and the IRS could argue that a greater value should have been  allocated
to the right to receive  payments  from the  Reserve  Fund in respect of Net WAC
Rate Carryover  Amounts.  If an argument of this kind were to be sustained,  the
Offered  Certificates  could be viewed as having been issued with original issue
discount. Under the REMIC Regulations,


                                     S-115


the Trustee is required to account for the REMIC Regular  Interest and the right
to receive  payments from the Reserve Fund in respect of Net WAC Rate  Carryover
Amounts as discrete  property  rights.  Holders of the Offered  Certificates are
advised to consult  their own tax advisors  regarding  the  allocation  of issue
price, timing,  character and source of income and deductions resulting from the
ownership  of  the  Offered   Certificates.   Treasury   regulations  have  been
promulgated  under  Section  1275  of  the  Code  generally  providing  for  the
integration of a "qualifying  debt instrument" with a hedge if the combined cash
flows of the  components  are  substantially  equivalent  to the cash flows on a
variable rate debt instrument.  However, these regulations specifically disallow
integration  of debt  instruments  subject  to Section  1272(a)(6)  of the Code.
Therefore,  holders  of the  Offered  Certificates  will  be  unable  to use the
integration  method  provided  for under these  regulations  with respect to the
Offered  Certificates.  Ownership of the right to Net WAC Rate Carryover Amounts
will nevertheless  entitle the owner to amortize the separate price paid for the
right to Net WAC Rate  Carryover  Amounts  under  the  regulations  relating  to
notional principal  contracts if this right is treated as a "notional  principal
contract."

         In the event that a  certificateholder's  right to receive Net WAC Rate
Carryover Amounts is characterized as a "Notional Principal  Contract," upon the
sale of an Offered  Certificate  the amount of the sale allocated to the selling
certificateholder's  right to receive  payments from the Reserve Fund in respect
of the Net WAC  Rate  Carryover  Amounts  would  be  considered  a  "termination
payment"  under  the  regulations   relating  to  Notional  Principal  Contracts
allocable to the related certificate. A certificateholder will have gain or loss
from a  termination  of the right to receive  payments  from the Reserve Fund in
respect of Net WAC Rate Carryover  Amounts equal to (i) any termination  payment
it received or is deemed to have received minus (ii) the unamortized  portion of
any amount paid (or deemed paid) by the certificateholder  upon entering into or
acquiring its interest in the right to receive payments from the Reserve Fund in
respect of Net WAC Rate Carryover Amounts.

         Gain or loss  realized  upon the  termination  of the right to  receive
payments from the Reserve Fund in respect of Net WAC Rate Carryover Amounts 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.

         This  paragraph  applies to the Offered  Certificates  exclusive of any
rights in the Reserve Fund. The Offered  Certificates  will be treated as assets
described in Section  7701(a)(19)(C)  of the Code and "real estate assets" under
Section  856(c)(4)(A)  of the Code  generally  in the same  proportion  that the
assets of the trust would be so treated.  In  addition,  interest on the Offered
Certificates will be treated as "interest on obligations secured by mortgages on
real  property"  under Section  856(c)(3)(B)  of the Code to the extent that the
Offered   Certificates  are  treated  as  "real  estate  assets"  under  Section
856(c)(4)(A) of the Code. Moreover,  the Offered Certificates 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 a regular  or  residual
interest  therein.  However,  as  mentioned  above,  no  portion of a Class A or
Mezzanine  Certificateholder's  basis  or  income  allocable  to  a  Basis  Risk
Arrangement will qualify for such treatment. As a result, those Certificates are
not  suitable  investments  for  inclusion  in another  REMIC.  See "Pooling and
Servicing  Agreement--Termination"  in this prospectus  supplement and "Material
Federal Income Tax Considerations--  REMICs--Characterization  of Investments in
REMIC Securities" in the prospectus.

         The holders of the Offered  Certificates will be required to include in
income  interest on their  certificates in accordance with the accrual method of
accounting.  As noted  above,  each  holder of an  Offered  Certificate  will be
required to allocate a portion of the purchase price paid for such  certificates
to the right to receive  payments  from the  Reserve  Fund in respect of Net WAC
Rate  Carryover  Amounts.  The  value of the right to  receive  any Net WAC Rate
Carryover  Amount is a  question  of fact which  could be  subject to  differing
interpretations.  Because  Net WAC  Rate  Carryover  Amounts  are  treated  as a
separate right of the Offered Certificates not payable by the

                                     S-116


REMIC,   this  right  will  not  be  treated  as  a  qualifying  asset  for  any
certificateholder  that is a mutual  savings  bank,  domestic  building and loan
association,  real estate investment  trust, or real estate mortgage  investment
conduit and any amounts  received  from the reserve fund will not be  qualifying
real estate income for real estate investment trusts.

         For further  information  regarding  federal income tax consequences of
investing  in  the  Offered  Certificates,  see  "Material  Federal  Income  Tax
Considerations--REMICs" in the prospectus.

                             METHOD OF DISTRIBUTION

         Subject  to the  terms and  conditions  set  forth in the  amended  and
restated underwriting agreement,  dated as of July 8, 2002 and a terms agreement
dated as of January 12, 2005 (collectively, the "Underwriting Agreement"), among
the  Underwriter  and the  Depositor,  the  Depositor  has agreed to sell to the
Underwriter,  and the Underwriter has agreed to purchase from the Depositor, the
Offered Certificates.

         Distribution of the Offered Certificates will be made from time to time
in negotiated  transactions  or otherwise at varying  prices to be determined at
the time of  sale.  Proceeds  to the  Depositor  from  the  sale of the  Offered
Certificates, before deducting expenses payable by the Depositor, will be 99.73%
of  the  aggregate  initial   Certificate   Principal  Balance  of  the  Offered
Certificates.   In  connection  with  the  purchase  and  sale  of  the  Offered
Certificates,  the Underwriter may be deemed to have received  compensation from
the Depositor in the form of underwriting discounts.

         The Offered  Certificates are offered subject to receipt and acceptance
by the Underwriter,  to prior sale and to the Underwriter's  right to reject any
order in whole or in part and to  withdraw,  cancel or modify the offer  without
notice.  It is expected that delivery of the Offered  Certificates  will be made
through the facilities of DTC,  Clearstream and the Euroclear System on or about
the Closing  Date.  The Offered  Certificates  will be offered in Europe and the
United States of America.

         The Underwriting  Agreement  provides that the Depositor will indemnify
the Underwriter  against those civil  liabilities set forth in the  Underwriting
Agreement,  including  liabilities under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended,
or will  contribute  to  payments  the  Underwriter  may be  required to make in
respect of these liabilities.

                                SECONDARY MARKET

         There is currently no secondary market for the Offered Certificates and
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  Underwriter
intends  to  establish  a  market  in  the  Offered  Certificates  but it is not
obligated to do so. There can be no assurance  that any  additional  information
regarding the Offered  Certificates  will be available through any other source.
In  addition,  the  Depositor  is not aware of any source  through  which  price
information  about the  Offered  Certificates  will be  available  on an ongoing
basis. The limited nature of the information  regarding the Offered Certificates
may  adversely  affect the  liquidity  of the  Offered  Certificates,  even if a
secondary market for the Offered  Certificates  becomes  available.  The primary
source of information available to investors concerning the Offered Certificates
will be the  monthly  statements  discussed  herein  under  "Description  of the
Certificates-Reports to Certificateholders" which will include information as to
the outstanding  principal balance of the Offered Certificates and the status of
the applicable form of credit enhancement.




                                     S-117


                                 LEGAL OPINIONS

         Legal matters relating to the Offered  Certificates will be passed upon
for the Depositor and the Underwriter by Thacher  Proffitt & Wood llp, New York,
New York.

                                     RATINGS

         It is a condition to the issuance of the certificates  that the Offered
Certificates  receive at least the following  ratings from Standard & Poor's,  a
division of The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. ("S&P") and Fitch Ratings ("Fitch"):


                CLASS                  S&P               FITCH
            --------------        --------------    --------------
              Class A-1                AAA                AAA
              Class M-1                AA+                AA
              Class M-2                A+                  A
              Class M-3               BBB+                BBB
              Class M-4                BBB               BBB-

         The ratings assigned to mortgage pass-through  certificates address the
likelihood of the receipt by  certificateholders  of all  distributions to which
the certificateholders are entitled. The rating process addresses structural and
legal  aspects  associated  with the  certificates,  including the nature of the
underlying  mortgage  loans.  The  ratings  assigned  to  mortgage  pass-through
certificates  do not represent any assessment of the  likelihood  that principal
prepayments  will  be  made  by  the  borrowers  or the  degree  to  which  such
prepayments  will differ from that  originally  anticipated.  The ratings do not
address  the  possibility  that  certificateholders  might  suffer a lower  than
anticipated  yield due to  non-credit  events.  In addition,  the ratings on the
Offered  Certificates do not address the likelihood of receipt by the holders of
such certificates of any amounts in respect of Net WAC Rate Carryover Amounts.

         A  security  rating  is not a  recommendation  to  buy,  sell  or  hold
securities  and may be  subject to  revision  or  withdrawal  at any time by the
assigning  rating  organization.   Each  security  rating  should  be  evaluated
independently  of any  other  security  rating.  In the event  that the  ratings
initially assigned to the Offered  Certificates are subsequently lowered for any
reason,  no person or entity is  obligated  to  provide  any  additional  credit
support or credit enhancement with respect to the Offered Certificates.

         The Depositor has not requested that any rating agency rate the Offered
Certificates other than as stated above.  However,  there can be no assurance as
to whether any other rating agency will rate the Offered Certificates, or, if it
does, what rating would be assigned by any other rating agency.  A rating on the
Offered  Certificates by another rating agency, if assigned at all, may be lower
than the ratings assigned to the Offered Certificates as stated in this section.

                                LEGAL INVESTMENT

         The  Offered   Certificates  will  not  constitute   "mortgage  related
securities" for purposes of SMMEA.

         The   Depositor   makes   no   representations   as   to   the   proper
characterization  of any class of Offered  Certificates  for legal investment or
other  purposes,  or as to the ability of  particular  investors to purchase any
class of Offered  Certificates  under applicable legal investment  restrictions.
These  uncertainties  may adversely affect the liquidity of any class of Offered
Certificates. Accordingly, all


                                     S-118


institutions  whose  investment  activities are subject to legal investment laws
and  regulations,  regulatory  capital  requirements  or  review  by  regulatory
authorities should consult with their legal advisors in determining  whether and
to what extent any class of Offered Certificates  constitutes a legal investment
or  is  subject  to  investment,  capital  or  other  restrictions.  See  "Legal
Investment" in the Prospectus.

                    CONSIDERATIONS FOR BENEFIT PLAN INVESTORS

         A fiduciary of any employee  benefit plan or other plan or  arrangement
subject  to  ERISA or  Section  4975 of the Code (a  "Plan"),  or any  insurance
company,  whether through its general or separate accounts,  or any other person
investing plan assets of a Plan, should carefully review with its legal advisors
whether the purchase or holding of Class A-1  Certificates  could give rise to a
transaction  prohibited or not otherwise permissible under ERISA or Section 4975
of the Code.  The  purchase  or holding of the Class A-1  Certificates  by or on
behalf of, or with Plan assets of, a Plan may qualify for exemptive relief under
the  Underwriters'  Exemption,  as currently  in effect and as  described  under
"ERISA Considerations" in the prospectus.  The Underwriters'  Exemption relevant
to the  Class  A-1  Certificates  was  granted  by the  Department  of  Labor as
Prohibited Transaction Exemption ("PTE") 94-84 and FAN 97-03E, as amended by PTE
97-34 at 62 F.R. 39021,  PTE 2000-58 at 65 F.R. 67765 and PTE 2002-41 at 67 F.R.
54487.  The  Underwriters'  Exemption  was  amended  by PTE  2002-41 to permit a
trustee to be affiliated  with an  underwriter  despite the  restriction  in PTE
2000-58 to the contrary.  However, the Underwriters' Exemption contains a number
of  conditions  which  must be met for the  exemption  to apply,  including  the
requirements  that the Class A-1  Certificates  be rated at least  "AA-" (or its
equivalent) by Fitch, Moody's or S&P at the time of the Plan's purchase and that
the investing Plan must be an "accredited investor" as defined in Rule 501(a)(1)
of Regulation D under the Securities  Act. As noted above,  one  requirement for
eligibility of the Class A-1 Certificates  under the Underwriter's  Exemption is
that all of the mortgage loans must have a loan-to-value  ratio of not more than
125%, based on the outstanding principal balance of the loan and the fair market
value of the mortgage  property as of the closing date. It is possible  that, if
the fair market  value of any of the Mortgage  Loans has declined  substantially
since  origination,  this requirement may not be satisfied.  This possibility is
greater for the seasoned loans than it is for other mortgage  loans. A fiduciary
of a Plan  contemplating  purchasing an Class A-1 Certificate  must make its own
determination that the conditions set forth in the Underwriters'  Exemption will
be satisfied with respect to the certificates.

         Each  beneficial  owner  of a  Mezzanine  Certificate  or any  interest
therein shall be deemed to have  represented,  by virtue of its  acquisition  or
holding of that  certificate  or interest  therein,  that either (i) it is not a
plan  investor or (ii) (1) it is an insurance  company,  (2) the source of funds
used to acquire or hold the  certificate  or interest  therein is an  "insurance
company  general  account,"  as such term is defined in PTCE 95-60,  and (3) the
conditions in Sections I and III of PTCE 95-60 have been satisfied.

         If any  Mezzanine  Certificate  or any interest  therein is acquired or
held in violation of the conditions  described in the preceding  paragraph,  the
next  preceding  permitted  beneficial  owner will be treated as the  beneficial
owner of that Mezzanine Certificate,  retroactive to the date of transfer to the
purported  beneficial owner. Any purported beneficial owner whose acquisition or
holding of any such certificate or interest therein was effected in violation of
the conditions  described in the preceding  paragraph  shall  indemnify and hold
harmless the Depositor,  the Trustee, the Servicers, the Master Servicer and the
Securities  Administrator  and the  trust  fund  from  and  against  any and all
liabilities,  claims, costs or expenses incurred by those parties as a result of
that acquisition or holding.

         Any fiduciary or other investor of Plan assets that proposes to acquire
or hold the  Offered  Certificates  on behalf of or with Plan assets of any Plan
should  consult with its counsel  with respect to: (i) whether,  with respect to
the Offered Certificates, the specific and general conditions and the


                                     S-119


other  requirements in the  Underwriters'  Exemption would be satisfied and (ii)
the potential applicability of the general fiduciary  responsibility  provisions
of ERISA and the prohibited  transaction provisions of ERISA and Section 4975 of
the Internal Revenue Code to the proposed investment. See "ERISA Considerations"
in the prospectus.

         The sale of any of the Offered  Certificates to a Plan is in no respect
a representation by the Depositor or the related  underwriter that an investment
in the Offered  Certificates meets all relevant legal  requirements  relating to
investments by Plans generally or any particular  Plan, or that an investment in
the Offered  Certificates  is appropriate  for Plans generally or any particular
Plan.










                                     S-120



                                     ANNEX I

          GLOBAL CLEARANCE AND SETTLEMENT AND DOCUMENTATION PROCEDURES

         Except in certain limited circumstances,  the Offered Certificates will
be offered  globally  (the "Global  Securities")  and will be available  only in
book-entry  form.  Investors  in the  Global  Securities  may hold  such  Global
Securities through any of DTC,  Clearstream or Euroclear.  The Global Securities
will be  tradable  as home  market  instruments  in both the  European  and U.S.
domestic  markets.  Initial  settlement and all secondary  trades will settle in
same-day funds.

         Secondary market trading between  investors  holding Global  Securities
through  Clearstream  and  Euroclear  will be  conducted  in the ordinary way in
accordance  with their normal rules and operating  procedures  and in accordance
with conventional eurobond practice (i.e., seven calendar day settlement).

         Secondary market trading between  investors  holding Global  Securities
through DTC will be conducted  according to the rules and procedures  applicable
to U.S. corporate debt obligations.

         Secondary cross-market trading between Clearstream or Euroclear and DTC
Participants holding Certificates will be effected on a delivery-against-payment
basis through the respective  Depositories of Clearstream and Euroclear (in such
capacity) and as DTC Participants.

         Non-U.S.  holders (as  described  below) of Global  Securities  will be
subject to U.S.  withholding taxes unless such holders meet certain requirements
and  deliver   appropriate  U.S.  tax  documents  to  the  securities   clearing
organizations or their participants.

INITIAL SETTLEMENT

         All Global  Securities  will be held in  book-entry  form by DTC in the
name  of Cede & Co.  as  nominee  of DTC.  Investors'  interests  in the  Global
Securities will be represented  through financial  institutions  acting on their
behalf as direct and indirect Participants in DTC. As a result,  Clearstream and
Euroclear  will hold  positions on behalf of their  participants  through  their
respective  Depositories,  which in turn will hold such positions in accounts as
DTC Participants.

         Investors  electing to hold their  Global  Securities  through DTC will
follow the settlement  practices  applicable to conventional  eurobonds,  except
that there will be no temporary  global  security and no "lock-up" or restricted
period.  Investor  securities  custody  accounts  will be  credited  with  their
holdings against payment in same-day funds on the settlement date.

         Investors electing to hold their Global Securities through  Clearstream
or  Euroclear  accounts  will follow the  settlement  procedures  applicable  to
conventional  eurobonds,  except that there will be no temporary global security
and no "lock-up" or restricted period. Global Securities will be credited to the
securities  custody  accounts on the settlement date against payment in same-day
funds.

SECONDARY MARKET TRADING

         Since the purchaser  determines the place of delivery,  it is important
to  establish  at the time of the trade where both the  purchaser's  and sellers
accounts are located to ensure that  settlement can be made on the desired value
date.

         TRADING BETWEEN DTC PARTICIPANTS.  Secondary market trading between DTC
Participants  will be settled using the procedures  applicable to prior mortgage
loan asset-backed certificates issues in same-day funds.



                                       I-1


         TRADING BETWEEN  CLEARSTREAM AND/OR EUROCLEAR  PARTICIPANTS.  Secondary
market trading between Clearstream  Participants or Euroclear  Participants will
be settled using the procedures applicable to conventional eurobonds in same-day
funds.

         TRADING BETWEEN DTC SELLER AND CLEARSTREAM OR EUROCLEAR PURCHASER. When
Global Securities are to be transferred from the account of a DTC Participant to
the  account  of a  Clearstream  Participant  or a  Euroclear  Participant,  the
purchaser  will  send   instructions  to  Clearstream  or  Euroclear  through  a
Clearstream Participant or Euroclear Participant at least one business day prior
to settlement. Clearstream or Euroclear will instruct the respective Depositary,
as the case may be, to receive the Global  Securities  against payment.  Payment
will include  interest  accrued on the Global  Securities from and including the
last coupon payment date to and excluding the  settlement  date, on the basis of
the actual  number of days in such accrual  period and a year assumed to consist
of 360 days. For  transactions  settling on the 31st of the month,  payment will
include  interest accrued to and excluding the first day of the following month.
Payment will then be made by the respective  Depositary of the DTC Participant's
account against  delivery of the Global  Securities.  After  settlement has been
completed,  the Global  Securities  will be credited to the respective  clearing
system and by the clearing system, in accordance with its usual  procedures,  to
the Clearstream Participant's or Euroclear Participant's account. The securities
credit  will  appear  the next day  (European  time)  and the cash  debt will be
back-valued to, and the interest on the Global  Securities will accrue from, the
value date (which would be the  preceding  day when  settlement  occurred in New
York).  If  settlement is not  completed on the intended  value date (i.e.,  the
trade fails),  the  Clearstream or Euroclear cash debt will be valued instead as
of the actual settlement date.

         Clearstream  Participants and Euroclear  Participants will need to make
available  to the  respective  clearing  systems the funds  necessary to process
same-day funds  settlement.  The most direct means of doing so is to preposition
funds for settlement,  either from cash on hand or existing lines of credit,  as
they would for any settlement  occurring within Clearstream or Euroclear.  Under
this  approach,  they may take on credit  exposure to  Clearstream  or Euroclear
until the Global Securities are credited to their accounts one day later.

         As an  alternative,  if Clearstream or Euroclear has extended a line of
credit to them, Clearstream Participants or Euroclear Participants can elect not
to  preposition  funds and allow that  credit  line to be drawn upon the finance
settlement.   Under  this  procedure,   Clearstream  Participants  or  Euroclear
Participants  purchasing Global Securities would incur overdraft charges for one
day,  assuming  they  cleared  the  overdraft  when the Global  Securities  were
credited to their accounts.  However,  interest on the Global  Securities  would
accrue from the value date.  Therefore,  in many cases the investment  income on
the Global Securities earned during that one-day period may substantially reduce
or offset the amount of such overdraft charges, although this result will depend
on each Clearstream  Participant's or Euroclear Participant's particular cost of
funds.

         Since the  settlement is taking place during New York  business  hours,
DTC Participants can employ their usual procedures for sending Global Securities
to  the   respective   European   Depositary  for  the  benefit  of  Clearstream
Participants or Euroclear  Participants.  The sale proceeds will be available to
the  DTC  seller  on the  settlement  date.  Thus,  to the  DTC  Participants  a
cross-market transaction will settle no differently than a trade between two DTC
Participants.

         TRADING BETWEEN CLEARSTREAM OR EUROCLEAR SELLER AND DTC PURCHASER.  Due
to time zone differences in their favor,  Clearstream Participants and Euroclear
Participants  may employ their  customary  procedures for  transactions in which
Global  Securities  are to be transferred  by the  respective  clearing  system,
through the respective  Depository,  to a DTC Participant.  The seller will send
instructions  to Clearstream or Euroclear  through a Clearstream  Participant or
Euroclear  Participant at least one business day prior to  settlement.  In these
cases  Clearstream  or Euroclear  will instruct the  respective  Depositary,  as
appropriate,  to deliver the Global Securities to the DTC Participant's  account
against payment.  Payment will include interest accrued on the Global Securities
from and including the last coupon payment to and excluding the settlement  date
on the basis of the


                                       I-2


actual  number of days in such  accrual  period and a year assumed to consist of
360 days.  For  transactions  settling  on the 31st of the month,  payment  will
include  interest accrued to and excluding the first day of the following month.
The payment will then be reflected in the account of the Clearstream Participant
or Euroclear  Participant the following day, and receipt of the cash proceeds in
the  Clearstream  Participant's  or  Euroclear  Participant's  account  would be
back-valued to the value date (which would be the preceding day, when settlement
occurred  in  New  York).  Should  the  Clearstream   Participant  or  Euroclear
Participant have a line of credit with its respective  clearing system and elect
to be in debt in  anticipation  of receipt of the sale  proceeds in its account,
the  back-valuation  will  extinguish  any overdraft  incurred over that one-day
period.  If settlement is not  completed on the intended  value date (i.e.,  the
trade fails),  receipt of the cash proceeds in the Clearstream  Participant's or
Euroclear  Participant's  account  would  instead  be  valued  as of the  actual
settlement date.

         Finally,  day  traders  that  use  Clearstream  or  Euroclear  and that
purchase  Global  Securities  from DTC  Participants  For deliver to Clearstream
Participants  or  Euroclear  Participants  should note that these  trades  would
automatically  fail on the sale side unless  affirmative  action were taken.  At
least three techniques  should be readily  available to eliminate this potential
problem:

         (a) borrowing  through  Clearstream or Euroclear for one day (until the
purchase  side of the day trade is reflected in their  Clearstream  or Euroclear
accounts) in accordance with the clearing system's customary procedures;

         (b) borrowing the Global  Securities in the U.S. from a DTC Participant
no later  than  one day  prior  to  settlement,  which  would  give  the  Global
Securities  sufficient  time to be reflected in their  Clearstream  or Euroclear
account in order to settle the sale side of the trade; or

         (c)  staggering the value dates for the buy and sell sides of the trade
so that the value date for the purchase from the DTC Participant is at least one
day  prior to the  value  date for the sale to the  Clearstream  Participant  or
Euroclear Participant.

CERTAIN U.S. FEDERAL INCOME TAX DOCUMENTATION REQUIREMENTS

         A beneficial  owner of Global  Securities  holding  securities  through
Clearstream  or Euroclear  (or through DTC if the holder has an address  outside
the U.S.) will be subject to the 30% U.S. withholding tax that generally applies
to payments of interest  (including  original issue discount) on registered debt
issued by U.S. Persons, unless (i) each clearing system, bank or other financial
institution that holds customers' securities in the ordinary course of its trade
or business in the chain of intermediaries between such beneficial owner and the
U.S.  entity  required to withhold tax complies  with  applicable  certification
requirements  and (ii) such beneficial owner takes one of the following steps to
obtain an exemption or reduced tax rate:

         EXEMPTION FOR NON-U.S.  PERSONS  (FORM  W-8BEN).  Beneficial  owners of
Global Securities that are non-U.S. Persons can obtain a complete exemption from
the  withholding  tax by filing a signed  Form  W-8BEN  (Certificate  of Foreign
Status  of  Beneficial  Owner  for  United  States  Tax  Withholding).   If  the
information shown on Form W-8BEN changes, a new Form W-8BEN must be filed within
30 days of such change.

         EXEMPTION FOR NON-U.S.  PERSONS WITH EFFECTIVELY CONNECTED INCOME (FORM
W-8ECI). A non-U.S. Person, including a non-U.S. corporation or bank with a U.S.
branch, for which the interest income  ineffectively  connected with its conduct
of a trade or business in the United  States,  can obtain an exemption  from the
withholding tax by filing Form W-8ECI (Certificate of Foreign Person's Claim for
Exemption from Withholding on Income Effectively Connected with the Conduct of a
Trade or Business in the United States).


                                       I-3


         EXEMPTION  OR REDUCED  RATE FOR  NON-U.S.  PERSONS  RESIDENT  IN TREATY
COUNTRIES (FORM W-8BEN).  Non-U.S.  Persons that are Certificate Owners residing
in a  country  that has a tax  treaty  with the  United  States  can  obtain  an
exemption  or reduced tax rate  (depending  on the treaty  terms) by filing Form
W-8BEN  (Certificate of Foreign Status of Beneficial Owner for United States Tax
Withholding). Form W-8BEN may be filed by the Certificate Owners or his agent.

         EXEMPTION  FOR U.S.  PERSONS  (FORM  W-9).  U.S.  Persons  can obtain a
complete  exemption from the  withholding tax by filing Form W-9 (Payers Request
for Taxpayer Identification Number and Certification).

         U.S. FEDERAL INCOME TAX REPORTING PROCEDURE. The Certificate Owner of a
Global Security files by submitting the  appropriate  form to the person through
whom it holds (the clearing  agency,  in the case of persons holding directly on
the books of the  clearing  agency).  Form W-8BEN and Form W-8ECI are  effective
until the third succeeding calendar year from the date such form is signed.

         The term "U.S.  Person"  means (i) a citizen or  resident of the United
States, (ii) a corporation, partnership or other entity treated as a corporation
or partnership  for United States  federal  income tax purposes  organized in or
under the laws of the  United  States or any state  thereof or the  District  of
Columbia (unless,  in the case of a partnership,  Treasury  regulations  provide
otherwise),  (iii) an estate the income of which is  includible  in gross income
for United States tax purposes,  regardless of its source,  or (iv) a trust if a
court within the United States is able to exercise primary  supervision over the
administration of the trust and one or more United States persons have authority
to control all substantial decisions of the trust. Notwithstanding the preceding
sentence,  to the extent  provided in Treasury  regulations,  certain  trusts in
existence on August 20,1996,  and treated as United States persons prior to such
date, that elect to continue to be treated as United States persons will also be
a U.S.  Person.  This  summary  does not deal with all  aspects of U.S.  Federal
income tax  withholding  that may be relevant  to foreign  holders of the Global
Securities. Investors are advised to consult their own tax advisors for specific
tax advice concerning their holding and disposing of the Global Securities.



                                       I-4


                                   PROSPECTUS

                            ASSET BACKED CERTIFICATES

                               ASSET BACKED NOTES
                              (ISSUABLE IN SERIES)

                              ACE SECURITIES CORP.,
                                    DEPOSITOR

THE TRUST FUNDS:

         Each trust fund will be established to hold assets transferred to it by
ACE Securities Corp. The assets in each trust fund will generally consist of one
or more of the following:

         o        mortgage  loans  secured  by one- to  four-family  residential
                  properties;

         o        unsecured home improvement loans;

         o        manufactured housing installment sale contracts;

         o        mortgage  pass-through  securities  issued  or  guaranteed  by
                  Ginnie Mae, Fannie Mae, or Freddie Mac; or

         o        previously issued  asset-backed or mortgage-backed  securities
                  backed by mortgage loans secured by residential  properties or
                  participations in those types of loans.

         The  assets  in  your  trust  fund  are  specified  in  the  prospectus
supplement for that particular trust fund, while the types of assets that may be
included in a trust fund,  whether or not in your trust fund,  are  described in
greater detail in this prospectus.

THE SECURITIES:

         ACE Securities Corp. will sell the securities  pursuant to a prospectus
supplement.  The securities will be grouped into one or more series, each having
is own distinct  designation.  Each series will be issued in one or more classes
and will evidence  beneficial  ownership of, or be secured by, the assets in the
trust fund that the series relates to. A prospectus supplement for a series will
specify all of the terms of the series and of each of the classes in the series.

         NEITHER THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION NOR ANY STATE SECURITIES
COMMISSION HAS APPROVED OR  DISAPPROVED  OF THESE  SECURITIES OR PASSED UPON THE
ADEQUACY OR ACCURACY OF THIS PROSPECTUS. ANY REPRESENTATION TO THE CONTRARY IS A
CRIMINAL OFFENSE.

               The date of this prospectus is September 23, 2004.



                                TABLE OF CONTENTS

Description of the Trust Funds.................................................1
Use of Proceeds...............................................................16
Yield Considerations..........................................................16
The Depositor.................................................................22
Description of the Securities.................................................23
Description of the Agreements.................................................38
Description of Credit Support.................................................62
Certain Legal Aspects of Mortgage Loans.......................................66
Certain Legal Aspects of the Contracts........................................81
Material Federal Income Tax Considerations....................................85
State and Other Tax Considerations...........................................129
ERISA Considerations.........................................................129
Legal Investment.............................................................137
Methods of Distribution......................................................139
Additional Information.......................................................140
Incorporation of Certain Documents by Reference..............................141
Legal Matters................................................................141
Financial Information........................................................141
Rating.......................................................................142
INDEX OF DEFINED TERMS.......................................................143



                         DESCRIPTION OF THE TRUST FUNDS

Assets

         The primary  assets of each trust fund (the "Assets") will include some
or all of the following types of assets:

         o        mortgage  loans on residential  properties,  which may include
                  Home Equity Loans,  home  improvement  contracts and Land Sale
                  Contracts (each as defined in this prospectus);

         o        home  improvement  installment  sales contracts or installment
                  loans that are unsecured  called  unsecured  home  improvement
                  Loans;

         o        manufactured housing installment sale contracts or installment
                  loan agreements referred to as contracts;

         o        any    combination    of   "fully    modified    pass-through"
                  mortgage-backed  certificates  guaranteed  by  the  Government
                  National  Mortgage  Association  ("Ginnie  Mae"),   guaranteed
                  mortgage pass-through securities issued by Fannie Mae ("Fannie
                  Mae") and mortgage  participation  certificates  issued by the
                  Federal  Home  Loan  Mortgage   Corporation   ("Freddie  Mac")
                  (collectively, "Agency Securities");

         o        previously issued  asset-backed  certificates,  collateralized
                  mortgage obligations or participation  certificates (each, and
                  collectively,  "Mortgage Securities") evidencing interests in,
                  or collateralized by, mortgage loans or Agency Securities; or

         o        a combination of mortgage  loans,  unsecured home  improvement
                  loans,   contracts,    Agency   Securities   and/or   Mortgage
                  Securities.

         The mortgage  loans will not be guaranteed or insured by ACE Securities
Corp. or any of its affiliates. The mortgage loans will be guaranteed or insured
by a governmental  agency or  instrumentality or other person only if and to the
extent  expressly  provided in the  prospectus  supplement.  The depositor  will
select each Asset to include in a trust fund from among those it has  purchased,
either directly or indirectly,  from a prior holder (an "Asset  Seller"),  which
may be an  affiliate of the  depositor  and which prior holder may or may not be
the originator of that mortgage loan.

         The Assets included in the trust fund for your series may be subject to
various types of payment provisions:

         o        "Level  Payment  Assets," which may provide for the payment of
                  interest,  and full  repayment of principal,  in level monthly
                  payments  with a fixed  rate of  interest  computed  on  their
                  declining principal balances;

         o        "Adjustable  Rate  Assets,"  which may  provide  for  periodic
                  adjustments  to their  rates of interest to equal the sum of a
                  fixed margin and an index;

         o        "Buy Down Assets,"  which are Assets for which funds have been
                  provided by someone other than the related borrowers to reduce
                  the borrowers'  monthly payments during the early period after
                  origination of those Assets;

         o        "Increasing Payment Assets," as described below;

                                       1


         o        "Interest  Reduction  Assets,"  which provide for the one-time
                  reduction of the interest rate payable on these Assets;

         o        "GEM Assets,"  which provide for (1) monthly  payments  during
                  the first year after  origination that are at least sufficient
                  to pay  interest due on these  Assets,  and (2) an increase in
                  those monthly payments in later years at a predetermined  rate
                  resulting  in full  repayment  over a  shorter  term  than the
                  initial amortization terms of those Assets;

         o        "GPM  Assets,"  which allow for  payments  during a portion of
                  their  terms  which  are or may be less  than  the  amount  of
                  interest  due on their  unpaid  principal  balances,  and this
                  unpaid  interest  will be added to the  principal  balances of
                  those Assets and will be paid,  together  with interest on the
                  unpaid interest, in later years;

         o        "Step-up Rate Assets"  which  provide for interest  rates that
                  increase over time;

         o        "Balloon Payment Assets;"

         o        "Convertible  Assets" which are Adjustable Rate Assets subject
                  to provisions pursuant to which,  subject to limitations,  the
                  related  borrowers  may  exercise  an  option to  convert  the
                  adjustable interest rate to a fixed interest rate; and

         o        "Bi-weekly  Assets,"  which provide for payments to be made by
                  borrowers on a bi-weekly basis.

         An  "Increasing  Payment  Asset" is an Asset that  provides for monthly
payments that are fixed for an initial  period to be specified in the prospectus
supplement and which increase thereafter (at a predetermined rate expressed as a
percentage of the monthly payment during the preceding  payment period,  subject
to any caps on the amount of any single monthly  payment  increase) for a period
to be specified in the prospectus supplement from the date of origination, after
which the  monthly  payment  is fixed at a  level-payment  amount so as to fully
amortize the Asset over its remaining  term to maturity.  The scheduled  monthly
payment for an Increasing  Payment Asset is the total amount required to be paid
each month in accordance with its terms and equals the sum of (1) the borrower's
monthly payments referred to in the preceding  sentence and (2) payments made by
the  respective  servicers  pursuant  to  buy-down  or subsidy  agreements.  The
borrower's initial monthly payments for each Increasing Payment Asset are set at
the  level-payment  amount  that would  apply to an  otherwise  identical  Level
Payment Asset having an interest rate some number of percentage points below the
Asset Rate of that Increasing  Payment Asset. The borrower's monthly payments on
each Increasing Payment Asset, together with any payments made on the Increasing
Payment  Asset  by  the  related  servicers  pursuant  to  buy-down  or  subsidy
agreements, will in all cases be sufficient to allow payment of accrued interest
on the Increasing  Payment Asset at the related interest rate,  without negative
amortization.  A borrower's monthly payments on an Increasing Payment Asset may,
however,  not be sufficient to result in any reduction of the principal  balance
of that Asset until after the period when those payments may be increased.

         The Notes or Certificates,  as applicable,  will be entitled to payment
only from the  assets of the  related  trust  fund and will not be  entitled  to
payments from the assets of any other trust fund  established  by the depositor.
The assets of a trust fund may consist of certificates  representing  beneficial
ownership interests in, or indebtedness of, another trust fund that contains the
Assets, if specified in the prospectus supplement.

                                       2


MORTGAGE LOANS

         GENERAL

         Each mortgage loan will generally be secured by a lien on (1) a one- to
four-family  residential  property (including a manufactured home) or a security
interest in shares issued by a cooperative housing corporation (a "Single Family
Property") or (2) a primarily residential property that consists of five or more
residential  dwelling units,  referred to as a multifamily  property,  which may
include  limited  retail,  office  or  other  commercial  space  ("Multi  Family
Property" and together with Single Family Property, "Mortgaged Properties"). The
mortgage  loans will be secured by first  and/or  junior  mortgages  or deeds of
trust or other similar security  instruments  creating a first or junior lien on
Mortgaged Property.

         The Mortgaged Properties may also include:

         o        Apartment buildings owned by cooperative housing  corporations
                  ("Cooperatives"); and

         o        Leasehold interests in properties,  the title to which is held
                  by third  party  lessors.  The term of these  leaseholds  will
                  exceed the term of the related  mortgage note by at least five
                  years or some other time period  specified  in the  prospectus
                  supplement.

         The principal  balance of mortgage loans secured by Mortgaged  Property
         consisting  of Multi Family  Property or apartment  buildings  owned by
         Cooperatives  shall  not  exceed  5% of the  principal  balance  of all
         mortgage loans conveyed to the trust fund.

         o        The mortgage loans may include:

         o        Closed-end  and/or  revolving home equity loans or balances of
                  these home equity loans ("Home Equity Loans");

         o        Secured  home  improvement  installment  sales  contracts  and
                  secured installment loan agreements, known as home improvement
                  contracts; and

         o        Mortgage loans evidenced by contracts  ("Land Sale Contracts")
                  for the sale of  properties  pursuant  to which  the  borrower
                  promises  to pay the amount due on the  mortgage  loans to the
                  holder of the Land Sale Contract with fee title to the related
                  property  held by that holder  until the borrower has made all
                  of the payments  required pursuant to that Land Sale Contract,
                  at which time fee title is conveyed to the borrower.

         The originator of each mortgage loan will have been a person other than
the depositor.  The prospectus  supplement will indicate if any originator is an
affiliate of the  depositor.  The  mortgage  loans will be evidenced by mortgage
notes secured by mortgages,  deeds of trust or other security  instruments  (the
"Mortgages")  creating  a  lien  on  the  Mortgaged  Properties.  The  Mortgaged
Properties  will be  located in any one of the fifty  states,  the  District  of
Columbia,  Guam,  Puerto Rico or any other  territory of the United  States.  If
provided in the  prospectus  supplement,  the mortgage  loans may include  loans
insured  by  the  Federal  Housing   Administration  (the  "FHA")  or  partially
guaranteed by the Veteran's  Administration  (the "VA"). See "--FHA Loans and VA
Loans" below.

                                       3


         LOAN-TO-VALUE RATIO

         The "Loan-to-Value  Ratio" of a mortgage loan at any particular time is
the ratio (expressed as a percentage) of the then outstanding  principal balance
of the mortgage loan to the Value of the related Mortgaged Property. The "Value"
of a Mortgaged Property, other than for Refinance Loans, is generally the lesser
of (a) the appraised value determined in an appraisal obtained by the originator
at  origination  of that  loan  and (b)  the  sales  price  for  that  property.
"Refinance Loans" are loans made to refinance  existing loans.  Unless otherwise
specified in the  prospectus  supplement,  the Value of the  Mortgaged  Property
securing a  Refinance  Loan is the  appraised  value of the  Mortgaged  Property
determined in an appraisal  obtained at the time of origination of the Refinance
Loan.  The value of a Mortgaged  Property as of the date of initial  issuance of
the related series may be less than the Value at origination  and will fluctuate
from time to time based upon changes in economic  conditions and the real estate
market.

         PRIMARY MORTGAGE INSURANCE

         Except  in the  case  of  high  loan-to-value  loans  and as  otherwise
specified in the related  prospectus  supplement,  each  mortgage  loan having a
loan-to-value  ratio at  origination in excess of 80%, is required to be covered
by a primary mortgage guaranty insurance policy insuring against default on such
mortgage loan as to at least the principal  amount thereof  exceeding 75% of the
value of the  mortgaged  property at  origination  of the  mortgage  loan.  This
insurance  must remain in force at least until the mortgage loan  amortizes to a
level that would produce a  loan-to-value  ratio lower than 80%. See  "--Primary
Mortgage Insurance Policies".

         MORTGAGE LOAN INFORMATION IN THE PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENTS

         Your prospectus  supplement will contain  information,  as of the dates
specified in that  prospectus  supplement and to the extent then  applicable and
specifically  known  to the  depositor,  with  respect  to the  mortgage  loans,
including:

         o        the  total  outstanding  principal  balance  and the  largest,
                  smallest  and  average  outstanding  principal  balance of the
                  mortgage  loans  as of,  unless  otherwise  specified  in that
                  prospectus supplement,  the close of business on the first day
                  of the  month of  formation  of the  related  trust  fund (the
                  "Cut-off Date");

         o        the type of property securing the mortgage loans;

         o        the weighted  average (by  principal  balance) of the original
                  and remaining terms to maturity of the mortgage loans;

         o        the range of maturity dates of the mortgage loans;

         o        the range of the  Loan-to-Value  Ratios at  origination of the
                  mortgage loans;

         o        the mortgage rates or range of mortgage rates and the weighted
                  average mortgage rate borne by the mortgage loans;

         o        the state or states in which most of the Mortgaged  Properties
                  are located;

         o        information  regarding the prepayment  provisions,  if any, of
                  the mortgage loans;

         o        for  mortgage  loans  with  adjustable  mortgage  rates  ("ARM
                  Loans"), the index, the frequency of the adjustment dates, the
                  range of margins added to the index,  and

                                       4


                  the maximum mortgage rate or monthly payment  variation at the
                  time of any adjustment of and over the life of the ARM Loan;

         o        information  regarding  the  payment  characteristics  of  the
                  mortgage   loans,   including   balloon   payment   and  other
                  amortization provisions;

         o        the  number of  mortgage  loans  that are  delinquent  and the
                  number of days or ranges of the number of days those  mortgage
                  loans are delinquent; and

         o        the  material  underwriting  standards  used for the  mortgage
                  loans.

         If specific information respecting the mortgage loans is unknown to the
depositor at the time the Notes or  Certificates,  as applicable,  are initially
offered, more general information of the nature described above will be provided
in the prospectus  supplement,  and specific  information will be set forth in a
report  that  will  be  available  to   purchasers   of  the  related  Notes  or
Certificates,  as applicable, at or before the initial issuance of that Security
and will be filed as part of a Current  Report  on Form 8-K with the  Securities
and  Exchange  Commission  (the  "Commission")  within  fifteen  days after that
initial issuance.  The characteristics of the mortgage loans included in a trust
fund will not vary by more than five percent (by total  principal  balance as of
the  Cut-off  Date)  from the  characteristics  of the  mortgage  loans that are
described in the prospectus supplement.

         The  prospectus  supplement  will specify  whether the  mortgage  loans
include (1) Home Equity Loans, which may be secured by Mortgages that are junior
to other liens on the related  Mortgaged  Property  and/or (2) home  improvement
contracts originated by a home improvement  contractor and secured by a mortgage
on the related mortgaged property that is junior to other liens on the mortgaged
property.  The home improvements  purchased with the home improvement  contracts
typically include  replacement  windows,  house siding,  roofs,  swimming pools,
satellite dishes,  kitchen and bathroom  remodeling goods, solar heating panels,
patios,  decks,  room  additions and garages.  The  prospectus  supplement  will
specify  whether the home  improvement  contracts  are FHA loans and, if so, the
limitations on any FHA insurance.  In addition,  the prospectus  supplement will
specify whether the mortgage loans contain some mortgage loans evidenced by Land
Sale Contracts.

         PAYMENT PROVISIONS OF THE MORTGAGE LOANS

         All of the  mortgage  loans will  provide for  payments  of  principal,
interest or both, on due dates that occur monthly, quarterly or semi-annually or
at some other  interval as is  specified  in the  prospectus  supplement  or for
payments in another manner described in the prospectus supplement. Each mortgage
loan may  provide  for no accrual of  interest or for accrual of interest on the
mortgage  loan at a mortgage  rate that is fixed  over its term or that  adjusts
from  time to  time,  or that may be  converted  from an  adjustable  to a fixed
mortgage  rate or a different  adjustable  mortgage  rate, or from a fixed to an
adjustable  mortgage  rate,  from time to time  pursuant  to an  election  or as
otherwise  specified in the related  mortgage note, in each case as described in
the prospectus supplement. Each mortgage loan may provide for scheduled payments
to maturity or payments that adjust from time to time to accommodate  changes in
the mortgage  rate or to reflect the  occurrence  of  particular  events or that
adjust  on the  basis of  other  methodologies,  and may  provide  for  negative
amortization  or  accelerated  amortization,  in each case as  described  in the
prospectus  supplement.  Each mortgage loan may be fully amortizing or require a
balloon  payment due on its stated  maturity  date, in each case as described in
the  prospectus  supplement.  Each  mortgage  loan may contain  prohibitions  on
prepayment (a "Lockout Period" and, the date of expiration  thereof, a "Lock-out
Date")  or  require  payment  of a premium  or a yield  maintenance  penalty  (a
"Prepayment Premium") in connection with a prepayment, in each case as described
in the prospectus supplement.  If the holders of any class or classes of Offered

                                       5


Notes or Offered Certificates,  as applicable,  are entitled to all or a portion
of any Prepayment  Premiums  collected from the mortgage  loans,  the prospectus
supplement will specify the method or methods by which any of these amounts will
be allocated. See "--Assets" above.

         REVOLVING CREDIT LINE LOANS

         As more fully  described  in the  prospectus  supplement,  the mortgage
loans may  consist,  in whole or in part,  of  revolving  Home  Equity  Loans or
balances of these Home Equity Loans ("Revolving Credit Line Loans"). Interest on
each Revolving Credit Line Loan, excluding  introductory rates offered from time
to time during promotional  periods,  may be computed and payable monthly on the
average  daily  outstanding  principal  balance of that loan.  From time to time
before the expiration of the related draw period specified in a Revolving Credit
Line Loan,  principal  amounts on that  Revolving  Credit Line Loan may be drawn
down (up to a  maximum  amount  as set forth in the  prospectus  supplement)  or
repaid. If specified in the prospectus supplement,  new draws by borrowers under
the Revolving Credit Line Loans will automatically become part of the trust fund
described in the prospectus  supplement.  As a result,  the total balance of the
Revolving  Credit  Line  Loans  will  fluctuate  from day to day as new draws by
borrowers  are added to the trust fund and  principal  payments  are  applied to
those  balances  and  those  amounts  will  usually  differ  each  day,  as more
specifically described in the prospectus  supplement.  Under some circumstances,
under a Revolving  Credit Line Loan,  a borrower  may,  during the related  draw
period,  choose an interest  only payment  option,  during which the borrower is
obligated to pay only the amount of interest that accrues on the loan during the
billing cycle,  and may also elect to pay all or a portion of the principal.  An
interest  only  payment  option may  terminate  at the end of the  related  draw
period,  after which the borrower  must begin paying at least a minimum  monthly
portion of the average outstanding principal balance of the loan.

         UNSECURED HOME IMPROVEMENT LOANS

         The  unsecured  home  improvement  loans may  consist  of  conventional
unsecured home improvement loans, unsecured installment loans and unsecured home
improvement  loans  that are FHA loans.  Except as  otherwise  described  in the
prospectus  supplement,  the  unsecured  home  improvement  loans  will be fully
amortizing and will bear interest at a fixed or variable annual percentage rate.

         UNSECURED HOME IMPROVEMENT LOAN INFORMATION IN PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENTS

         Each prospectus  supplement will contain  information,  as of the dates
specified in the  prospectus  supplement  and to the extent then  applicable and
specifically  known  to  the  depositor,  with  respect  to any  unsecured  home
improvement loans, including:

         o        the  total  outstanding  principal  balance  and the  largest,
                  smallest  and  average  outstanding  principal  balance of the
                  unsecured home improvement loans as of the applicable  cut-off
                  date;

         o        the weighted average,  by principal  balance,  of the original
                  and  remaining   terms  to  maturity  of  the  unsecured  home
                  improvement loans;

         o        the earliest and latest  origination date and maturity date of
                  the unsecured home improvements loans;

         o        the interest rates or range of interest rates and the weighted
                  average interest rates borne by the unsecured home improvement
                  loans;

                                       6


         o        the  state or  states  in  which  most of the  unsecured  home
                  improvement loans were originated.

         o        information  regarding the prepayment  provisions,  if any, of
                  the unsecured home improvement loans;

         o        with  respect to the  unsecured  home  improvement  loans with
                  adjustable   interest   rates,   called  ARM  unsecured   home
                  improvement  loans, the index, the frequency of the adjustment
                  dates,  the  range  of  margins  added to the  index,  and the
                  maximum interest rate or monthly payment variation at the time
                  of any  adjustment  thereof  and  over  the  life  of the  ARM
                  unsecured home improvement loan;

         o        information  regarding  the  payment  characteristics  of  the
                  unsecured home improvement loans;

         o        the  number  of  unsecured  home  improvement  loans  that are
                  delinquent  and the  number of days or ranges of the number of
                  days that unsecured home improvement loans are delinquent; and

         o        the material  underwriting  standards  used for the  unsecured
                  home improvement loans.

         If specific information respecting the unsecured home improvement loans
is unknown to the depositor at the time Notes or  Certificates,  as  applicable,
are initially  offered,  more general  information of the nature described above
will be provided in the prospectus supplement,  and specific information will be
set forth in a report that will be available to  purchasers of the related Notes
or  Certificates,  as applicable,  at or before the initial issuance thereof and
will be filed as part of a Current Report on Form 8-K with the Commission within
fifteen days after the related  initial  issuance.  The  characteristics  of the
unsecured home improvement  loans included in a trust fund will not vary by more
than five percent,  by total principal  balance as of the cut-off date, from the
characteristics thereof that are described in the prospectus supplement.

CONTRACTS

         GENERAL

         To the extent provided in the prospectus supplement, each contract will
be secured by a security interest in a new or used  manufactured  home, called a
Manufactured  Home. The contracts may include  contracts that are FHA loans. The
method of computing the  Loan-to-Value  Ratio of a contract will be described in
the prospectus supplement.

         CONTRACT INFORMATION IN PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENTS

         Each  prospectus  supplement  relating  to a trust  fund  whose  assets
include a substantial  proportion of contracts will contain certain information,
as of the dates specified in that  prospectus  supplement and to the extent then
applicable  and  specifically  known  to  the  depositor,  with  respect  to any
contracts, including:

         o        the  total  outstanding  principal  balance  and the  largest,
                  smallest  and  average  outstanding  principal  balance of the
                  contracts as of the applicable cut-off date;

         o        whether  the  manufactured  homes  were  new or used as of the
                  origination of the related contracts;

                                       7


         o        the weighted average,  by principal  balance,  of the original
                  and remaining terms to maturity of the contracts;

         o        the range of maturity dates of the contracts;

         o        the range of the  Loan-to-Value  Ratios at  origination of the
                  contracts;

         o        the annual percentage rate on each contract, called a contract
                  rate,  or range of  contract  rates and the  weighted  average
                  contract rate borne by the contracts;

         o        the state or states in which  most of the  manufactured  homes
                  are located at origination;

         o        information  regarding the prepayment  provisions,  if any, of
                  the contracts;

         o        for contracts with adjustable  contract rates,  referred to as
                  ARM  contracts,  the index,  the  frequency of the  adjustment
                  dates,  and  the  maximum  contract  rate or  monthly  payment
                  variation at the time of any  adjustment  thereof and over the
                  life of the ARM contract;

         o        the number of contracts  that are delinquent and the number of
                  days or  ranges  of the  number of days  those  contracts  are
                  delinquent;

         o        information  regarding  the  payment  characteristics  of  the
                  contracts; and

         o        the material underwriting standards used for the contracts.

         If specific  information  respecting  the  contracts  is unknown to the
depositor at the time the Notes or  Certificates,  as applicable,  are initially
offered, more general information of the nature described above will be provided
in the prospectus  supplement,  and specific  information will be set forth in a
report  that  will  be  available  to   purchasers   of  the  related  Notes  or
Certificates,  as applicable, at or before the initial issuance thereof and will
be filed as part of a  Current  Report  on Form 8-K with the  Commission  within
fifteen days after the related  initial  issuance.  The  characteristics  of the
contracts  included in a trust fund will not vary by more than five  percent (by
total principal balance as of the cut-off date) from the characteristics thereof
that are described in the prospectus supplement.

         The information described above regarding the contracts in a trust fund
may be  presented  in the  prospectus  supplement  in  combination  with similar
information regarding the mortgage loans in the trust fund.

         PAYMENT PROVISIONS OF THE CONTRACTS

         All of the contracts  will provide for payments of principal,  interest
or both,  on due dates  that  occur  monthly  or at some  other  interval  as is
specified  in the  prospectus  supplement  or for  payments  in  another  manner
described in the prospectus supplement. Each contract may provide for no accrual
of interest or for accrual of interest  thereon at a contract rate that is fixed
over its term or that  adjusts from time to time,  or as otherwise  specified in
the prospectus  supplement.  Each contract may provide for scheduled payments to
maturity or payments that adjust from time to time to accommodate changes in the
contract rate as otherwise described in the prospectus supplement.

                                       8


AGENCY SECURITIES

         The Agency  Securities  will consist of any  combination  of Ginnie Mae
certificates,  Fannie Mae certificates and Freddie Mac  certificates,  which may
include Stripped Agency Securities, as described below.

         GINNIE MAE

         Ginnie Mae 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  Ginnie Mae 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 that may be
required  to be paid  under any  guaranty  under this  subsection."  To meet its
obligations under that guaranty, Ginnie Mae is authorized,  under Section 306(d)
of the  National  Housing Act of 1934 (the  "Housing  Act"),  to borrow from the
United  States  Treasury  with no  limitations  as to  amount,  to  perform  its
obligations under its guarantee.

         GINNIE MAE CERTIFICATES

         Each Ginnie Mae  certificate  will be a "fully  modified  pass-through"
mortgage-backed  certificate issued and serviced by an issuer approved by Ginnie
Mae or Fannie  Mae as a  seller-  servicer  of FHA loans or VA loans,  except as
described below regarding  Stripped  Agency  Securities (as defined below).  The
loans underlying  Ginnie Mae certificates may consist of FHA loans, VA loans and
other  loans  eligible  for  inclusion  in  loan  pools  underlying  Ginnie  Mae
certificates.  Ginnie Mae certificates may be issued under either or both of the
Ginnie  Mae I  program  and the  Ginnie  Mae II  program,  as  described  in the
prospectus supplement. If the trust fund includes Ginnie Mae certificates,  your
prospectus supplement will include any material additional information regarding
the Ginnie Mae guaranty  program,  the  characteristics  of the pool  underlying
those Ginnie Mae certificates, the servicing of the related pool, the payment of
principal and interest on Ginnie Mae  certificates  and other  relevant  matters
regarding the Ginnie Mae certificates.

         Except  as  otherwise  specified  in the  prospectus  supplement  or as
described  below with  respect to Stripped  Agency  Securities,  each Ginnie Mae
certificate will provide for the payment,  by or on behalf of the issuer, to the
registered  holder  of that  Ginnie  Mae  certificate  of  monthly  payments  of
principal and interest equal to the holder's proportionate interest in the total
amount of the monthly  principal and interest  payments on each related FHA loan
or VA loan,  minus  servicing  and  guaranty  fees  totaling  the  excess of the
interest on that FHA loan or VA loan over the Ginnie Mae certificates'  interest
rate.  In addition,  each payment to a holder of a Ginnie Mae  certificate  will
include proportionate pass-through payments to that holder of any prepayments of
principal of the FHA loans or VA loans underlying the Ginnie Mae certificate and
the holder's  proportionate  interest in the remaining  principal balance in the
event of a foreclosure or other disposition of any related FHA loan or VA loan.

         The  Ginnie Mae  certificates  do not  constitute  a  liability  of, or
evidence any recourse against,  the issuer of the Ginnie Mae  certificates,  the
depositor  or any  affiliates  of the  depositor,  and the  only  recourse  of a
registered  holder (for  example,  the  trustee)  is to enforce the  guaranty of
Ginnie Mae.

                                       9


         Ginnie Mae will have  approved  the  issuance of each of the Ginnie Mae
certificates included in a trust fund in accordance with a guaranty agreement or
contract  between  Ginnie Mae and the  issuer of the  Ginnie  Mae  certificates.
Pursuant  to that  agreement,  that  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 those 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
to make timely payments of all amounts due on the Ginnie Mae  certificate,  even
if the  payments  received  by that  issuer on the loans  backing the Ginnie Mae
certificate  are less  than the  amounts  due.  If the  issuer is unable to make
payments on a Ginnie Mae certificate as they become due, it must promptly notify
Ginnie Mae and request Ginnie Mae to make that payment.  Upon that  notification
and  request,  Ginnie Mae will make those  payments  directly to the  registered
holder of the  Ginnie  Mae  certificate.  In the event no payment is made by the
issuer  and the  issuer  fails to notify  and  request  Ginnie  Mae to make that
payment,  the  registered  holder of the Ginnie  Mae  certificate  has  recourse
against only Ginnie Mae to obtain that payment.  The trustee or its nominee,  as
registered  holder of the Ginnie Mae  certificates  included in a trust fund, is
entitled to proceed  directly against Ginnie Mae under the terms of the guaranty
agreement or contract  relating to the Ginnie Mae  certificates  for any amounts
that are unpaid when due under each Ginnie Mae certificate.

         The Ginnie  Mae  certificates  included  in a trust fund may have other
characteristics  and terms,  different from those described above so long as the
Ginnie Mae  certificates and underlying  residential  loans meet the criteria of
the  rating  agency or  agencies.  The Ginnie Mae  certificates  and  underlying
residential loans will be described in the prospectus supplement.

         FANNIE MAE

         Fannie Mae is a federally chartered and  stockholder-owned  corporation
organized and existing under the Federal National Mortgage  Association  Charter
Act, as amended (the "Charter  Act").  Fannie Mae was originally  established in
1938 as a United States government agency to provide  supplemental  liquidity to
the mortgage market and was transformed into a stockholder-  owned and privately
managed corporation by legislation enacted in 1968.

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

         FANNIE MAE CERTIFICATES

         Fannie  Mae   certificates   are   Guaranteed   Mortgage   Pass-Through
Certificates  typically  issued  pursuant to a prospectus  that is  periodically
revised by Fannie Mae. Fannie Mae certificates  represent  fractional  undivided
interests in a pool of mortgage  loans formed by Fannie Mae.  Each mortgage loan
must meet the applicable standards of the Fannie Mae purchase program.  Mortgage
loans comprising a pool are either provided by Fannie Mae from its own portfolio
or  purchased  pursuant  to the  criteria  of the Fannie Mae  purchase  program.
Mortgage loans underlying Fannie Mae certificates  included in a trust fund will
consist of conventional mortgage loans, FHA loans or VA loans. If the trust fund
includes Fannie Mae  certificates,  your prospectus  supplement will include any
material  additional   information   regarding  the  Fannie  Mae  program,   the
characteristics  of  the  pool  underlying  the  Fannie  Mae  certificates,  the
servicing of the related

                                       10


pool, payment of principal and interest on the Fannie Mae certificates and other
relevant matters about the Fannie Mae certificates.

         Except as described below with respect to Stripped  Agency  Securities,
Fannie Mae guarantees to each registered holder of a Fannie Mae certificate that
it will distribute  amounts  representing that holder's  proportionate  share of
scheduled principal and interest at the applicable interest rate provided for by
that Fannie Mae  certificate on the underlying  mortgage  loans,  whether or not
received,  and that holder's proportionate share of the full principal amount of
any prepayment or foreclosed or other finally liquidated  mortgage loan, whether
or not the related principal amount is actually recovered.

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

         Fannie Mae certificates evidencing interests in pools of mortgage loans
formed on or after May 1, 1985  (other than  Fannie Mae  certificates  backed by
pools  containing  graduated  payment  mortgage loans or multifamily  loans) are
available  in  book-entry  form  only.  For a Fannie Mae  certificate  issued in
book-entry  form,  distributions  on the Fannie Mae certificate  will be made by
wire, and for a fully registered Fannie Mae certificate,  distributions  will be
made by check.

         The Fannie  Mae  certificates  included  in a trust fund may have other
characteristics and terms,  different from those described above, as long as the
Fannie Mae certificates  and underlying  mortgage loans meet the criteria of the
rating agency or agencies rating the  Certificates.  The Fannie Mae certificates
and underlying mortgage loans will be described in the prospectus supplement.

         FREDDIE MAC

         Freddie Mac is a corporate instrumentality of the United States created
pursuant to Title III of the Emergency Home Finance Act of 1970, as amended (the
"Freddie Mac Act").  Freddie Mac was  established  primarily  for the purpose of
increasing  the  availability  of mortgage  credit for the  financing  of needed
housing.  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 Freddie Mac
currently  consists  of the  purchase of first  lien,  conventional  residential
mortgage loans or participation interests in those mortgage loans and the resale
of the mortgage loans so purchased in the form of mortgage securities, primarily
Freddie Mac  certificates.  Freddie Mac is  confined  to  purchasing,  so far as
practicable,  mortgage loans and participation interests in mortgage loans which
it deems to be of the quality,  type and class as to meet generally the purchase
standards imposed by private institutional mortgage investors.

         FREDDIE MAC CERTIFICATES

         Each Freddie Mac 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 (the  "Freddie Mac  Certificate  Group").  Each of
these mortgage loans must meet the applicable standards set forth in the Freddie
Mac Act. A Freddie Mac Certificate Group may include whole loans,  participation
interests  in  whole  loans  and  undivided  interests  in  whole  loans  and/or
participations  comprising  another Freddie Mac Certificate  Group. If the trust
fund includes Freddie Mac certificates,  your prospectus supplement will include
any material additional  information regarding

                                       11


the Freddie Mac guaranty  program,  the  characteristics  of the pool underlying
that Freddie Mac  certificate,  the  servicing of the related  pool,  payment of
principal  and interest on the Freddie Mac  certificate  and any other  relevant
matters about the Freddie Mac certificates.

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

                  (1)      foreclosure sale;

                  (2)      payment of the claim by any mortgage insurer; and

                  (3)      the expiration of any right of redemption, but in any
         event  no later  than one year  after  demand  has been  made  upon the
         borrower for accelerated payment of principal.

         In taking actions  regarding the collection of principal  after default
on the mortgage loans underlying Freddie Mac certificates,  including the timing
of demand for  acceleration,  Freddie Mac  reserves  the right to  exercise  its
servicing  judgment  for the  mortgage  loans in the same manner as for mortgage
loans  that it has  purchased  but not sold.  The length of time  necessary  for
Freddie Mac to determine that a mortgage loan should be accelerated  varies with
the particular  circumstances of each borrower,  and Freddie Mac has not adopted
servicing  standards  that require that the demand be made within any  specified
period.

         Freddie Mac  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 Freddie Mac
under its guarantee are obligations solely of Freddie Mac and are not backed by,
nor entitled to, the full faith and credit of the United States.  If Freddie Mac
were unable to satisfy those  obligations,  distributions  to holders of Freddie
Mac  certificates  would consist solely of payments and other  recoveries on the
underlying mortgage loans and, accordingly,  monthly distributions to holders of
Freddie Mac certificates  would be affected by delinquent  payments and defaults
on those mortgage loans.

         The  Freddie Mac  certificates  included in a trust fund may have other
characteristics and terms,  different from those described above, so long as the
Freddie Mac certificates and underlying  mortgage loans meet the criteria of the
rating agency or agencies rating the Notes or Certificates,  as applicable.  The
Freddie Mac certificates and underlying  mortgage loans will be described in the
prospectus supplement.

         STRIPPED AGENCY SECURITIES

         The Ginnie Mae  certificates,  Fannie Mae  certificates  or Freddie Mac
certificates  may be  issued  in the  form  of  certificates  ("Stripped  Agency
Securities")  that represent an undivided  interest in all or part of either the
principal  distributions  (but not the interest  distributions)  or the

                                       12


interest  distributions  (but  not  the  principal  distributions),  or in  some
specified  portion of the  principal or interest  distributions  (but not all of
those  distributions),  on an underlying  pool of mortgage loans or other Ginnie
Mae certificates,  Fannie Mae certificates or Freddie Mac  certificates.  Ginnie
Mae,  Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac, as  applicable,  will  guarantee  each Stripped
Agency  Security  to the same extent as that entity  guarantees  the  underlying
securities  backing the Stripped  Agency  Securities or to the extent  described
above for a Stripped Agency Security backed by a pool of mortgage loans,  unless
otherwise  specified in the  prospectus  supplement.  If the trust fund includes
Stripped Agency Securities, your prospectus supplement will include any material
additional  information  regarding the  characteristics of the assets underlying
the Stripped  Agency  Securities,  the payments of principal and interest on the
Stripped Agency  Securities and other relevant matters about the Stripped Agency
Securities.

MORTGAGE SECURITIES

         The Mortgage Securities will represent beneficial interests in loans of
the type that would otherwise be eligible to be mortgage  loans,  unsecured home
improvement loans, contract or Agency Securities, or collateralized  obligations
secured by mortgage loans,  unsecured home improvement loans, contract or Agency
Securities. The Mortgage Securities will have been

                  (1)      issued by an entity  other than the  depositor or its
         affiliates;

                  (2)      acquired in bona fide secondary  market  transactions
         from persons  other than the issuer of the Mortgage  Securities  or its
         affiliates; and

                  (3)      (a) offered and distributed to the public pursuant to
         an effective  registration  statement or (b) purchased in a transaction
         not involving any public offering from a person who is not an affiliate
         of the issuer of those securities at the time of sale (nor an affiliate
         of the issuer 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 the issuer.

         Although  individual  Underlying  Loans may be insured or guaranteed by
the United States or an agency or  instrumentality  of the United  States,  they
need not be,  and  Mortgage  Securities  themselves  will not be so  insured  or
guaranteed. Except as otherwise set forth in the prospectus supplement, Mortgage
Securities  will generally be similar to Notes or  Certificates,  as applicable,
offered under this prospectus.

         The prospectus supplement for the Notes or Certificates, as applicable,
of  each  series  evidencing  interests  in  a  trust  fund  including  Mortgage
Securities will include a description of the Mortgage Securities and any related
credit enhancement,  and the related mortgage loans,  unsecured home improvement
loans, contracts, or Agency Securities will be described together with any other
mortgage loans or Agency  Securities  included in the trust fund of that series.
As  used  in  this  prospectus,  the  terms  "mortgage  loans,"  unsecured  home
improvement  loans,  contracts,  include  the  mortgage  loans,  unsecured  home
improvement loans, contracts, as applicable,  underlying the Mortgage Securities
in your trust fund.  References  in this  prospectus  to advances to be made and
other actions to be taken by the master  servicer in connection  with the Assets
may include any advances made and other  actions taken  pursuant to the terms of
the applicable Mortgage Securities.

FHA LOANS AND VA LOANS

         FHA loans will be insured by the FHA as  authorized  under 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.  The

                                       13


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 that FHA loan.

         Mortgage loans, unsecured home improvement loans,  contracts,  that are
FHA loans are insured by the FHA (as described in the 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 other liquidation  costs) pursuant to Title I
of the Housing Act.

         There are two primary FHA  insurance  programs  that are  available for
multifamily 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 those loans made under  Sections  221(d)(3)  and
(d)(4) by HUD/FHA and a HUD-approved co-insurer. Generally the term of this type
of  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
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 some 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 that VA loan.  The
maximum  guarantee  that may be issued by the VA under this  program will be set
forth in the prospectus supplement.

PRE-FUNDING ACCOUNTS

         To the extent  provided in a  prospectus  supplement,  a portion of the
proceeds  of the  issuance  of  Notes or  Certificates,  as  applicable,  may be
deposited into an account maintained with the trustee (a "Pre-Funding Account").
In that case, the depositor will be obligated to sell at a  predetermined  price
- -- and the  trust  fund for the  related  series  of Notes or  Certificates,  as
applicable,  will be obligated to purchase -- additional Assets (the "Subsequent
Assets") from time to time,  and as frequently as daily,  within the period (not
to exceed three months) specified in the prospectus supplement (the "Pre-Funding
Period") after the issuance of the Notes or Certificates,  as applicable, having
a total principal  balance  approximately  equal to the amount on deposit in the
Pre-Funding Account (the "Pre-Funded Amount") for that series on the date of its
issuance. The Pre-Funded Amount for a series will be specified in the prospectus
supplement,  and will not in any case exceed 50% of the total  initial  Security
Balance of the related Notes or  Certificates,  as  applicable.  Any  Subsequent
Assets will be required to satisfy specific  eligibility criteria more fully set
forth in the prospectus  supplement,  which criteria will be consistent with the
eligibility criteria of the Assets initially included in the trust fund, subject
to those exceptions that are expressly stated in the prospectus  supplement.  In
addition, specific conditions must be satisfied before the Subsequent Assets are
transferred  into the trust  fund,  for  example,  the  delivery  to the  rating

                                       14


agencies  and to the trustee of any  required  opinions  of counsel.  See "ERISA
Considerations--Pre-Funding   Accounts"  for  additional  information  regarding
Pre-Funding Accounts.

         Except as set forth in the following  sentence,  the Pre-Funded  Amount
will be used only to purchase  Subsequent  Assets. Any portion of the Pre-Funded
Amount remaining in the Pre-Funding Account at the end of the Pre-Funding Period
will be  used to  prepay  one or more  classes  of  Notes  or  Certificates,  as
applicable,  in the  amounts  and  in the  manner  specified  in the  prospectus
supplement.  In  addition,  if  specified  in  the  prospectus  supplement,  the
depositor  may be required  to deposit  cash into an account  maintained  by the
trustee (the  "Capitalized  Interest  Account")  for the purpose of assuring the
availability  of  funds  to  pay  interest  on the  Notes  or  Certificates,  as
applicable,   during  the  Pre-Funding  Period.  Any  amount  remaining  in  the
Capitalized  Interest  Account  at the  end of the  Pre-Funding  Period  will be
remitted as specified in the prospectus supplement.

         Amounts deposited in the Pre-Funding and Capitalized  Interest Accounts
will  be  permitted  to be  invested,  pending  application,  only  in  eligible
investments authorized by each applicable rating agency.

ACCOUNTS

         Each trust fund will  include  one or more  accounts,  established  and
maintained  on behalf of the  securityholders  into  which the person or persons
designated in the prospectus  supplement  will, to the extent  described in this
prospectus and in the prospectus supplement deposit all payments and collections
received or advanced  with  respect to the Assets and other  assets in the trust
fund.  This type of  account  may be  maintained  as an  interest  bearing  or a
non-interest bearing account, and funds held in that account may be held as cash
or invested in some short-term,  investment grade  obligations,  in each case as
described   in   the   prospectus   supplement.    See   "Description   of   the
Agreements--Material   Terms  of  the  Pooling  and  Servicing   Agreements  and
Underlying Servicing Agreements--Collection Account and Related Accounts."

CREDIT SUPPORT

         If so provided in the prospectus supplement, partial or full protection
against some  defaults and losses on the Assets in the related trust fund may be
provided to one or more classes of Notes or Certificates,  as applicable, in the
related  series in the form of  subordination  of one or more  other  classes of
Notes or  Certificates,  as  applicable,  in that series or by one or more other
types of credit  support,  for example,  a letter of credit,  insurance  policy,
guarantee,  reserve fund or another type of credit support,  or a combination of
these  (any of these  types  of  coverage  for the  Notes  or  Certificates,  as
applicable,  of any series, is referred to generally as "credit  support").  The
amount and types of coverage,  the  identification  of the entity  providing the
coverage  (if  applicable)  and  related  information  for each  type of  credit
support, if any, will be described in the prospectus  supplement for a series of
Notes or Certificates, as applicable. See "Description of Credit Support."

CASH FLOW AGREEMENTS

         If so provided in the prospectus supplement, the trust fund may include
guaranteed  investment  contracts pursuant to which moneys held in the funds and
accounts  established  for the  related  series  will be invested at a specified
rate. The trust fund may also include other  agreements,  for example,  interest
rate swap  agreements,  interest  rate cap or floor  agreements,  currency  swap
agreements or similar agreements provided to reduce the effects of interest rate
or currency  exchange rate  fluctuations on the Assets or on one or more classes
of Notes or  Certificates,  as applicable.  (Currency swap  agreements  might be
included  in the trust fund if some or all of the Assets were  denominated  in a
non-United  States  currency.)  The  principal  terms of any related  guaranteed
investment contract or other agreement (any of these types of agreement, a

                                       15


"Cash Flow Agreement"),  including provisions relating to the timing, manner and
amount  of  payments  under  these  documents  and  provisions  relating  to the
termination of these documents,  will be described in the prospectus  supplement
for the related  series.  In addition,  the prospectus  supplement  will provide
information with respect to the borrower under any Cash Flow Agreement.

                                 USE OF PROCEEDS

         The  net  proceeds  to be  received  from  the  sale  of the  Notes  or
Certificates, as applicable, will be applied by the depositor to the purchase of
Assets, or the repayment of the financing incurred in that purchase,  and to pay
for some of the expenses incurred in connection with that purchase of Assets and
sale of Notes or Certificates,  as applicable. The depositor expects to sell the
Notes or  Certificates,  as  applicable,  from time to time,  but the timing and
amount of offerings of Notes or  Certificates,  as applicable,  will depend on a
number of factors,  including  the volume of Assets  acquired by the  depositor,
prevailing interest rates, availability of funds and general market conditions.

                              YIELD CONSIDERATIONS

GENERAL

         The yield on any Offered  Security will depend on the price paid by the
securityholder,  the Interest  Rate of the  Security,  the receipt and timing of
receipt of  distributions  on the Security and the weighted  average life of the
Assets  in the  related  trust  fund  (which  may be  affected  by  prepayments,
defaults, liquidations or repurchases).

INTEREST RATE

         Notes or Certificates,  as applicable, of any class within a series may
have fixed, variable or adjustable Interest Rates, which may or may not be based
upon the  interest  rates  borne by the Assets in the related  trust  fund.  The
prospectus  supplement  for any series will specify the  Interest  Rate for each
class of Notes or Certificates,  as applicable, or, in the case of a variable or
adjustable  Interest  Rate,  the method of  determining  the Interest  Rate; the
effect,  if any, of the  prepayment  of any Asset on the Interest Rate of one or
more  classes  of  Notes  or  Certificates,   as  applicable;  and  whether  the
distributions  of interest on the Notes or Certificates,  as applicable,  of any
class will be dependent, in whole or in part, on the performance of any borrower
under a Cash Flow Agreement.

         If specified  in the  prospectus  supplement,  the  effective  yield to
maturity to each holder of Notes or  Certificates,  as  applicable,  entitled to
payments of interest  will be below that  otherwise  produced by the  applicable
Interest Rate and purchase  price of that Security  because,  while interest may
accrue  on  each  Asset  during  a  period  (each,  an  "Accrual  Period"),  the
distribution  of that  interest  will be made on a day that may be several days,
weeks or months following the period of accrual.

TIMING OF PAYMENT OF INTEREST

         Each payment of interest on the Notes or  Certificates,  as applicable,
entitled to  distributions of interest (or addition to the Security Balance of a
class of Accrual  Securities)  will be made by or on behalf of the trustee  each
month on the date specified in the related  prospectus  supplement (each date, a
"Distribution  Date"),  and will  include  interest  accrued  during the Accrual
Period for that Distribution  Date. As indicated above under "--Interest  Rate,"
if the Accrual  Period  ends on a date other than the day before a  Distribution
Date for the related series, the yield

                                       16


realized by the holders of those Notes or  Certificates,  as applicable,  may be
lower than the yield that would  result if the Accrual  Period  ended on the day
before the Distribution Date.

PAYMENTS OF PRINCIPAL; PREPAYMENTS

         The yield to maturity on the Notes or Certificates, as applicable, will
be affected by the rate of principal  payments on the Assets (or, in the case of
Mortgage Securities and Agency Securities,  the underlying assets related to the
Mortgage  Securities and Agency  Securities),  including  principal  prepayments
resulting  from both  voluntary  prepayments  by the borrowers  and  involuntary
liquidations.  The rate at which principal prepayments occur will be affected by
a variety of  factors,  including  the terms of the Assets  (or,  in the case of
Mortgage Securities and Agency Securities,  the underlying assets related to the
Mortgage  Securities and Agency  Securities),  the level of prevailing  interest
rates,   the   availability  of  mortgage  credit  and  economic,   demographic,
geographic, tax, legal and other factors.

         In general,  however,  if prevailing  interest rates fall significantly
below the interest  rates on the Assets in a  particular  trust fund (or, in the
case of Mortgage Securities and Agency Securities, the underlying assets related
to the Mortgage Securities and Agency Securities), those assets are likely to be
the subject of higher  principal  prepayments than if prevailing rates remain at
or above the rates  borne by those  assets.  However,  you should note that some
Assets  (or,  in the case of  Mortgage  Securities  and Agency  Securities,  the
underlying assets related to the Mortgage  Securities and Agency Securities) may
consist of loans with different interest rates. The rate of principal payment on
Mortgage  Securities  will  also be  affected  by the  allocation  of  principal
payments  on the  underlying  assets  among the  Mortgage  Securities  or Agency
Securities  and  other  Mortgage  Securities  or Agency  Securities  of the same
series.  The rate of principal  payments on the Assets in the related trust fund
(or, in the case of Mortgage  Securities and Agency  Securities,  the underlying
assets related to the Mortgage Securities and Agency Securities) is likely to be
affected  by the  existence  of any  Lock-out  Periods  and  Prepayment  Premium
provisions of the mortgage loans underlying or comprising  those Assets,  and by
the  extent  to which the  servicer  of any of these  mortgage  loans is able to
enforce these provisions.  Mortgage loans with a Lock-out Period or a Prepayment
Premium  provision,  to the extent  enforceable,  generally would be expected to
experience  a lower  rate of  principal  prepayments  than  otherwise  identical
mortgage loans without those  provisions,  with shorter Lock-out Periods or with
lower Prepayment Premiums.

         Because  of the  depreciating  nature of  manufactured  housing,  which
limits the  possibilities  for refinancing,  and because the terms and principal
amounts of manufactured housing contracts are generally shorter and smaller than
the terms and principal  amounts of mortgage loans secured by site-built  homes,
changes in interest rates have a  correspondingly  small effect on the amount of
the  monthly   payments  on  mortgage   loans  secured  by   site-built   homes.
Consequently,  changes in interest  rates may play a smaller role in  prepayment
behavior  of  manufactured  housing  contracts  than  they do in the  prepayment
behavior of loans secured by mortgage on  site-built  homes.  Conversely,  local
economic  conditions  and some of the other factors  mentioned  above may play a
larger role in the prepayment  behavior of manufactured  housing  contracts than
they do in the  prepayment  behavior of loans secured by mortgages on site-built
homes.

         If the  purchaser of a Security  offered at a discount  calculates  its
anticipated  yield to  maturity  based on an assumed  rate of  distributions  of
principal  that is faster than that actually  experienced  on the Assets (or, in
the case of Mortgage  Securities and Agency  Securities,  the underlying  assets
related to the Mortgage Securities and Agency  Securities),  the actual yield to
maturity will be lower than that so calculated.  Conversely, if the purchaser of
a Security  offered at a premium  calculates its  anticipated  yield to maturity
based on an assumed rate of  distributions of principal that is slower than that
actually  experienced on the Assets (or, in the case of Mortgage  Securities and
Agency Securities,  the underlying assets related to the Mortgage Securities and
Agency  Securities),  the actual  yield to  maturity  will be lower than that so
calculated.  In either case,

                                       17


if  so  provided  in  the  prospectus  supplement  for  a  series  of  Notes  or
Certificates,  as applicable,  the effect on yield on one or more classes of the
Notes or  Certificates,  as  applicable,  of that series of  prepayments  of the
Assets  in the  related  trust  fund  may be  mitigated  or  exacerbated  by any
provisions  for  sequential  or  selective  distribution  of  principal to those
classes.

         When a full  prepayment is made on a mortgage  loan or a contract,  the
borrower is charged  interest on the principal  amount of the mortgage loan or a
contract so prepaid for the number of days in the month  actually  elapsed up to
the date of the  prepayment  or some other period  specified  in the  prospectus
supplement.  Generally,  the effect of prepayments in full will be to reduce the
amount  of  interest  paid  in the  following  month  to  holders  of  Notes  or
Certificates,  as applicable,  entitled to payments of interest because interest
on the  principal  amount of any mortgage  loan or a contract so prepaid will be
paid only to the date of  prepayment  rather  than for a full  month.  A partial
prepayment  of  principal is applied so as to reduce the  outstanding  principal
balance of the  related  mortgage  loan or a contract  as of its due date in the
month in which the  partial  prepayment  is  received  or some  other date as is
specified in the prospectus supplement.

         The timing of changes in the rate of  principal  payments on the Assets
(or, in the case of Mortgage  Securities and Agency  Securities,  the underlying
assets  related  to  the  Mortgage   Securities  and  Agency   Securities)   may
significantly affect an investor's actual yield to maturity, even if the average
rate of distributions of principal is consistent with an investor's expectation.
In general,  the earlier a principal  payment is received on the mortgage  loans
and distributed on a Security,  the greater the effect on that investor's  yield
to maturity.  The effect on an investor's yield of principal  payments occurring
at a rate higher (or lower) than the rate  anticipated by the investor  during a
particular  period may not be offset by a similar  decrease (or increase) in the
rate of principal payments at a later time.

         The  securityholder  will bear the risk of not being  able to  reinvest
principal  received  from a Security  at a yield at least  equal to the yield on
that Security.

PREPAYMENTS -- MATURITY AND WEIGHTED AVERAGE LIFE

         The  rates at which  principal  payments  are  received  on the  Assets
included in or  comprising a trust fund and the rate at which  payments are made
from any credit  support or Cash Flow  Agreement for the related series of Notes
or  Certificates,  as  applicable,  may affect  the  ultimate  maturity  and the
weighted average life of each class of that series.  Prepayments on the mortgage
loans or contracts  comprising  or underlying  the Assets in a particular  trust
fund will generally  accelerate  the rate at which  principal is paid on some or
all of the classes of the Notes or Certificates,  as applicable,  of the related
series.

         If so provided in the  prospectus  supplement  for a series of Notes or
Certificates,  as applicable,  one or more classes of Notes or Certificates,  as
applicable,  may have a final scheduled  Distribution Date, which is the date on
or before which the Security Balance of the class of Notes or  Certificates,  as
applicable,  is scheduled to be reduced to zero,  calculated on the basis of the
assumptions  applicable  to that  series.  Weighted  average  life refers to the
average  amount of time that will  elapse  from the date of issue of a  security
until each dollar of principal of that  security will be repaid to the investor.
The weighted average life of a class of Notes or Certificates, as applicable, of
a series will be influenced by the rate at which principal on the Assets is paid
to that class, which may be in the form of scheduled amortization or prepayments
(for this purpose, the term "prepayment"  includes  prepayments,  in whole or in
part, and liquidations due to default).

         In addition, the weighted average life of the Notes or Certificates, as
applicable,  may be affected by the varying  maturities of the Assets in a trust
fund.  If any Assets in a  particular  trust fund have actual  terms to maturity
less than those assumed in calculating  final scheduled  Distribution  Dates for
the classes of Notes or Certificates,  as applicable, of the related series, one

                                       18


or more classes of these Notes or Certificates, as applicable, may be fully paid
before their respective final scheduled  Distribution Dates, even in the absence
of prepayments.  Accordingly,  the prepayment  experience of the Assets will, to
some extent,  be a function of the mix of mortgage  rates or contract  rates and
maturities of the mortgage  loans or contracts  comprising  or underlying  those
Assets. See "Description of the Trust Funds."

         Prepayments  on  loans  are  also  commonly   measured  relative  to  a
prepayment  standard or model,  such as the  Constant  Prepayment  Rate  ("CPR")
prepayment model or the Standard Prepayment Assumption ("SPA") prepayment model.
CPR represents a constant  assumed rate of prepayment each month relative to the
then  outstanding  principal  balance  of a pool of loans  for the life of those
loans.  SPA represents an assumed rate of prepayment  each month relative to the
then outstanding  principal balance of a pool of loans. A prepayment  assumption
of  100%  of SPA  assumes  prepayment  rates  of  0.2%  per  annum  of the  then
outstanding  principal  balance of those loans in the first month of the life of
the loans and an additional  0.2% per annum in each month  thereafter  until the
thirtieth  month.  Starting in the thirtieth month and in each month  thereafter
during the life of the loans, 100% of SPA assumes a constant  prepayment rate of
6% per annum each month.

         Neither  CPR nor  SPA nor any  other  prepayment  model  or  assumption
purports to be a historical description of prepayment experience or a prediction
of the  anticipated  rate of  prepayment  of any pool of  loans,  including  the
mortgage loans or contracts underlying or comprising the Assets.

         The prospectus supplement for each series of Notes or Certificates,  as
applicable,  may contain  tables,  if  applicable,  setting  forth the projected
weighted average life of each class of Offered Notes or Offered Certificates, as
applicable, of that series and the percentage of the initial Security Balance of
each class that would be  outstanding on specified  Distribution  Dates based on
the assumptions stated in the prospectus supplement,  including assumptions that
prepayments  on the mortgage  loans  comprising or underlying the related Assets
are made at rates corresponding to various percentages of CPR, SPA or some other
standard  specified in the prospectus  supplement.  These tables and assumptions
are intended to illustrate the  sensitivity of the weighted  average life of the
Notes or Certificates,  as applicable,  to various prepayment rates and will not
be intended to predict or to provide  information  that will enable investors to
predict  the  actual  weighted  average  life of the Notes or  Certificates,  as
applicable.  It is unlikely that  prepayment of any mortgage  loans or contracts
comprising  or  underlying  the  Assets  for  any  series  will  conform  to any
particular  level of CPR,  SPA or any other  rate  specified  in the  prospectus
supplement.

OTHER FACTORS AFFECTING WEIGHTED AVERAGE LIFE

         TYPE OF ASSET

         If specified in the prospectus  supplement,  a number of mortgage loans
may have balloon  payments  due at maturity  (which,  based on the  amortization
schedule of those mortgage loans, may be a substantial  amount), and because the
ability of a borrower  to make a balloon  payment  typically  will depend on its
ability either to refinance the loan or to sell the related Mortgaged  Property,
there is a risk that a number of Balloon Payment Assets may default at maturity.
The ability to obtain  refinancing will depend on a number of factors prevailing
at the time refinancing or sale is required,  including real estate values,  the
borrower's  financial  situation,  prevailing  mortgage loan interest rates, the
borrower's  equity in the related  Mortgaged  Property,  tax laws and prevailing
general economic  conditions.  Neither the depositor,  the servicer,  the master
servicer,  nor  any of  their  affiliates  will be  obligated  to  refinance  or
repurchase  any mortgage  loan or to sell the Mortgaged  Property  except to the
extent provided in the prospectus supplement. In the case of defaults,  recovery
of proceeds may be delayed by, among other things, bankruptcy of

                                       19


the borrower or adverse  conditions in the market where the property is located.
To minimize losses on defaulted mortgage loans, the servicer may modify mortgage
loans  that  are in  default  or as to which a  payment  default  is  reasonably
foreseeable.  Any defaulted  balloon  payment or  modification  that extends the
maturity of a mortgage loan will tend to extend the weighted average life of the
Notes or Certificates,  as applicable,  and may thus lengthen the period of time
elapsed from the date of issuance of a Security until it is retired.

         For some  mortgage  loans,  including  ARM Loans,  the mortgage rate at
origination  may be below the rate  that  would  result if the index and  margin
relating to the mortgage loan were applied at  origination.  For some contracts,
the contract rate may be stepped up during its terms or may otherwise vary or be
adjusted.  Under the applicable underwriting standards,  the borrower under each
mortgage  loan or  contract  generally  will be  qualified  on the  basis of the
mortgage rate or contract rate or contract  rate in effect at  origination.  The
repayment of any of these mortgage loans or contracts may therefore be dependent
on the ability of the borrower to make larger level monthly  payments  following
the adjustment of the mortgage rate or contract rate. In addition, some mortgage
loans may be subject to  temporary  buydown  plans  ("Buydown  Mortgage  Loans")
pursuant to which the monthly  payments  made by the  borrower  during the early
years of the mortgage loan will be less than the scheduled  monthly  payments on
the mortgage loan (the "Buydown  Period").  The periodic  increase in the amount
paid by the  borrower  of a Buydown  Mortgage  Loan  during or at the end of the
applicable  Buydown  Period  may  create  a  greater  financial  burden  for the
borrower,  who  might  not have  otherwise  qualified  for a  mortgage,  and may
accordingly increase the risk of default for the related mortgage loan.

         The mortgage  rates on some ARM Loans subject to negative  amortization
generally   adjust  monthly  and  their   amortization   schedules  adjust  less
frequently.  During a period of  rising  interest  rates as well as  immediately
after  origination  (initial  mortgage rates are generally lower than the sum of
the applicable  index at  origination  and the related margin over that index at
which  interest  accrues),  the amount of  interest  accruing  on the  principal
balance of those mortgage  loans may exceed the amount of the minimum  scheduled
monthly  payment on the mortgage  loans.  As a result,  a portion of the accrued
interest on negatively  amortizing  mortgage loans may be added to the principal
balance  of those  mortgage  loans  and will  bear  interest  at the  applicable
mortgage rate. The addition of any deferred interest to the principal balance of
any  related  class or classes of Notes or  Certificates,  as  applicable,  will
lengthen  the  weighted  average  life  of  those  Notes  or  Certificates,   as
applicable,  and may  adversely  affect  yield  to  holders  of  those  Notes or
Certificates,  as  applicable,  depending  on the price at which  those Notes or
Certificates,  as applicable,  were purchased.  In addition,  for some ARM Loans
subject to negative  amortization,  during a period of declining interest rates,
it might be expected that each minimum scheduled monthly payment on this type of
mortgage  loan would  exceed  the  amount of  scheduled  principal  and  accrued
interest on the principal  balance of that mortgage  loan, and since that excess
will be applied to reduce the principal  balance of the related class or classes
of Notes or  Certificates,  as  applicable,  the weighted  average life of those
Notes or Certificates,  as applicable,  will be reduced and may adversely affect
yield to holders of those Notes or Certificates, as applicable, depending on the
price at which those Notes or Certificates, as applicable, were purchased.

         As may be described in the prospectus supplement, the related Agreement
may provide that all or a portion of the principal  collected on or with respect
to the  related  mortgage  loans may be  applied by the  related  trustee to the
acquisition of additional  Revolving Credit Line Loans during a specified period
(rather than used to fund payments of principal to  securityholders  during that
period) with the result that the related Notes or  Certificates,  as applicable,
possess an  interest-only  period,  also  commonly  referred  to as a  revolving
period,  which  will  be  followed  by an  amortization  period.  Any  of  these
interest-only or revolving periods may, upon the occurrence of particular events
to be described in the prospectus  supplement,  terminate  before the end of the
specified  period and result in the earlier than  expected  amortization  of the
related Notes or Certificates, as applicable.

                                       20


         In addition, and as may be described in the prospectus supplement,  the
related  Agreement may provide that all or some of this collected  principal may
be  retained  by the  trustee  (and  held  in  specific  temporary  investments,
including  mortgage  loans) for a  specified  period  before  being used to fund
payments of principal to securityholders.

         The result of the retention and temporary  investment by the trustee of
this principal  would be to slow the  amortization  rate of the related Notes or
Certificates,  as applicable,  relative to the amortization  rate of the related
mortgage  loans,  or to attempt to match the  amortization  rate of the  related
Notes or Certificates, as applicable, to an amortization schedule established at
the time the Notes or  Certificates,  as  applicable,  are  issued.  Any similar
feature applicable to any Notes or Certificates,  as applicable,  may end on the
occurrence of events to be described in the prospectus supplement,  resulting in
the current funding of principal payments to the related  securityholders and an
acceleration of the amortization of these Notes or Certificates, as applicable.

         TERMINATION

         If  specified  in the  prospectus  supplement,  a  series  of  Notes or
Certificates,  as  applicable,  may be subject  to  optional  early  termination
through  the  repurchase  of the Assets in the  related  trust fund by the party
specified in the prospectus supplement,  on any date on which the total Security
Balance of the Notes or Certificates,  as applicable, of that series declines to
a percentage  specified in the  prospectus  supplement  (generally not to exceed
10%) of the Initial Security Balance,  under the circumstances and in the manner
set forth therein.  In addition,  if so provided in the  prospectus  supplement,
some  classes of Notes or  Certificates,  as  applicable,  may be  purchased  or
redeemed in the manner set forth  therein.  See  "Description  of the Securities
- --Termination."

         DEFAULTS

         The rate of defaults  on the Assets  will also affect the rate,  timing
and amount of  principal  payments on the Assets and thus the yield on the Notes
or  Certificates,  as  applicable.  In general,  defaults  on mortgage  loans or
contracts are expected to occur with greater frequency in their early years. The
rate of default on mortgage  loans that are  refinance or limited  documentation
mortgage loans,  and on mortgage loans with high  Loan-to-Value  Ratios,  may be
higher than for other types of mortgage loans. Furthermore,  the rate and timing
of  prepayments,  defaults and  liquidations  on the mortgage loans or contracts
will be affected by the general economic  condition of the region of the country
in which the related Mortgaged Properties or manufactured homes are located. The
risk of  delinquencies  and loss is greater and  prepayments  are less likely in
regions where a weak or  deteriorating  economy exists,  as may be evidenced by,
among other factors, increasing unemployment or falling property values.

         FORECLOSURES

         The number of foreclosures or repossessions and the principal amount of
the mortgage  loans or contracts  comprising or  underlying  the Assets that are
foreclosed  or  repossessed  in relation to the number and  principal  amount of
mortgage loans or contracts that are repaid in accordance  with their terms will
affect the weighted  average life of the mortgage loans or contracts  comprising
or  underlying   the  Assets  and  that  of  the  related  series  of  Notes  or
Certificates, as applicable.

         REFINANCING

         At the request of a borrower, the servicer may allow the refinancing of
a mortgage  loan or contract in any trust fund by accepting  prepayments  on the
mortgage  loan and  permitting  a new loan  secured  by a  mortgage  on the same
property.  In the event of that refinancing,  the new loan

                                       21


would not be included in the related trust fund and, therefore, that refinancing
would have the same effect as a prepayment in full of the related  mortgage loan
or contract.  A servicer may, from time to time,  implement programs designed to
encourage  refinancing.  These  programs may include  modifications  of existing
loans,  general  or  targeted   solicitations,   the  offering  of  pre-approved
applications,  reduced  origination  fees or closing costs,  or other  financial
incentives.  In addition,  servicers may encourage the  refinancing  of mortgage
loans or contracts,  including defaulted mortgage loans or contracts, that would
permit  creditworthy  borrowers to assume the outstanding  indebtedness of those
mortgage loans or contracts.

         DUE-ON-SALE CLAUSES

         Acceleration  of  mortgage   payments  as  a  result  of  transfers  of
underlying  Mortgaged Property is another factor affecting prepayment rates that
may not be reflected in the prepayment  standards or models used in the relevant
prospectus  supplement.  A number of the mortgage loans comprising or underlying
the Assets, other than FHA loans and VA loans, may include "due-on-sale clauses"
that allow the  holder of the  mortgage  loans to demand  payment in full of the
remaining  principal  balance  of the  mortgage  loans upon  sale,  transfer  or
conveyance of the related Mortgaged Property.

         For  any  mortgage  loans,  except  as  set  forth  in  the  prospectus
supplement,  the servicer will generally  enforce any due-on-sale  clause to the
extent  it has  knowledge  of  the  conveyance  or  proposed  conveyance  of the
underlying  Mortgaged Property and it is entitled to do so under applicable law;
provided, however, that the servicer will not take any action in relation to the
enforcement  of  any  due-on-sale  provision  that  would  adversely  affect  or
jeopardize  coverage under any applicable  insurance policy.  See "Certain Legal
Aspects  of  Mortgage   Loans--Due-on-Sale  Clauses"  and  "Description  of  the
Agreements--Material   Terms  of  the  Pooling  and  Servicing  Agreements"  and
"Underlying Servicing Agreements--Due-on-Sale Provisions."

         The contracts, in general, prohibit the sale or transfer of the related
manufactured   homes  without  the  consent  of  the  servicer  and  permit  the
acceleration  of the maturity of the  contracts by the servicer upon any sale or
transfer  that is not consented to. It is expected that the servicer will permit
most  transfers of  manufactured  homes and not  accelerate  the maturity of the
related  contracts.  In some cases,  the  transfer  may be made by a  delinquent
borrower to avoid a  repossession  of the  manufactured  home.  In the case of a
transfer of a manufactured  home after which the servicer  desires to accelerate
the maturity of related contract, the servicer's ability to do so will depend on
the enforceability under state law of the due-on-sale clause.

                                  THE DEPOSITOR

         ACE Securities Corp., the depositor,  is a special purpose  corporation
incorporated  in the State of Delaware on June 3, 1998. The principal  executive
offices of the  depositor  are located at 6525  Morrison  Boulevard,  Suite 318,
Charlotte,  North Carolina 28211.  Its telephone  number is (704) 365-0569.  The
depositor  does  not  have,  nor is it  expected  in the  future  to  have,  any
significant assets.

         The limited purposes of the depositor are, in general, to acquire,  own
and sell mortgage loans and financial assets; to issue,  acquire,  own, hold and
sell  securities  and notes secured by or  representing  ownership  interests in
mortgage loans and other financial assets, collections on the mortgage loans and
related assets;  and to engage in any acts that are incidental to, or necessary,
suitable or convenient to accomplish, these purposes.

         All of the  shares  of  capital  stock  of the  depositor  are  held by
Altamont Holdings Corp., a Delaware corporation.

                                       22


                          DESCRIPTION OF THE SECURITIES

GENERAL

         The  Asset-backed  certificates  (the  "Certificates")  of each  series
(including  any class of  Certificates  not  offered  by this  prospectus)  will
represent  the entire  beneficial  ownership  interest in the trust fund created
pursuant to the related  Agreement.  The  Asset-backed  notes (the  "Notes," and
together with the Certificates,  the "Securities"),  will represent indebtedness
of the  related  trust  fund and  will be  issued  and  secured  pursuant  to an
indenture. Each series of Notes or Certificates,  as applicable, will consist of
one or more classes of Notes or Certificates, as applicable, that may:

         o        provide  for the accrual of interest on the series of Notes or
                  Certificates,  as  applicable,  based on  fixed,  variable  or
                  adjustable rates;

         o        be  senior  ("Senior  Notes"  or  "Senior  Certificates,"  and
                  collectively,     "Senior    Securities")    or    subordinate
                  ("Subordinate   Notes"  or  "Subordinate   Certificates,"  and
                  collectively,  "Subordinate  Securities") to one or more other
                  classes of Notes or Certificates, as applicable, in respect of
                  distributions on the Notes or Certificates, as applicable;

         o        be  entitled  either  to  (A)  principal  distributions,  with
                  disproportionately  low, nominal or no interest  distributions
                  or (B) interest  distributions,  with  disproportionately low,
                  nominal or no principal  distributions  (collectively,  "Strip
                  Securities");

         o        provide for distributions of accrued interest on the series of
                  Notes  or  Certificates,   as  applicable,  which  begin  only
                  following  the  occurrence  of  specific  events,  that as the
                  retirement   of  one  or  more  other   classes  of  Notes  or
                  Certificates,  as  applicable,  of that series  (collectively,
                  "Accrual Securities");

         o        provide  for   payments  of  principal  as  described  in  the
                  prospectus  supplement,  from  all or  only a  portion  of the
                  Assets in that trust fund,  to the extent of available  funds,
                  in each case as described in the prospectus supplement; and/or

         o        provide for  distributions  based on a  combination  of two or
                  more components of the Notes or  Certificates,  as applicable,
                  with  one or more  of the  characteristics  described  in this
                  paragraph including a Strip Security component.

         If specified in the prospectus supplement, distributions on one or more
classes of a series of Notes or Certificates,  as applicable,  may be limited to
collections  from a designated  portion of the Assets in the related  trust fund
(each portion of the Assets, an "Asset Group"). Any of these classes may include
classes of Offered Notes or Offered Certificates, as applicable.

         Each class of Notes or  Certificates,  as  applicable,  offered by this
prospectus and the related  prospectus  supplement  (the "Offered Notes" and the
"Offered  Certificates,"  respectively,  and together, the "Offered Securities")
will be issued in minimum  denominations  corresponding to the Security Balances
or,  in the  case of some  classes  of Strip  Securities,  notional  amounts  or
percentage interests specified in the prospectus supplement. The transfer of any
Offered Notes or Offered  Certificates,  as  applicable,  may be registered  and
those Notes or Certificates, as applicable, may be exchanged without the payment
of any service charge payable in connection  with that  registration of transfer
or exchange,  but the  depositor or the trustee or any agent of the depositor or
the trustee may require  payment of a sum  sufficient  to cover any tax or other
governmental  charge.  One  or  more  classes  of  Notes  or  Certificates,   as
applicable,  of a series may be issued in fully  registered,  certificated  form
("Definitive Notes" or "Definitive Certificates," and collectively,

                                       23


"Definitive   Securities")  or  in  book-entry  form   ("Book-Entry   Notes"  or
"Book-Entry  Certificates,"  and  collectively,   "Book-Entry  Securities"),  as
provided   in   the   prospectus    supplement.    See   "Description   of   the
Securities--Book-Entry Registration and Definitive Securities." Definitive Notes
or Definitive Certificates,  as applicable, will be exchangeable for other Notes
or Certificates,  as applicable, of the same class and series of a similar total
Security  Balance,  notional  amount or  percentage  interest  but of  different
authorized denominations.

DISTRIBUTIONS

         Distributions  on the Notes or  Certificates,  as  applicable,  of each
series will be made by or on behalf of the trustee on each  Distribution Date as
specified in the prospectus  supplement from the Available  Distribution  Amount
for that series and that Distribution Date.  Distributions (other than the final
distribution)  will  be  made  to the  persons  in  whose  names  the  Notes  or
Certificates,  as applicable, are registered at the close of business on, unless
a different  date is specified in the prospectus  supplement,  the last business
day of the month preceding the month in which the Distribution  Date occurs (the
"Record Date"), and the amount of each distribution will be determined as of the
close of  business  on the date  specified  in the  prospectus  supplement  (the
"Determination   Date").   All   distributions   for  each  class  of  Notes  or
Certificates,  as applicable,  on each  Distribution  Date will be allocated pro
rata among the outstanding  securityholders in that class or by random selection
or as described in the  prospectus  supplement.  Payments 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 for these payments,  if
that securityholder has so notified the trustee or other person required to make
those  payments no later than the date  specified in the  prospectus  supplement
(and, if so provided in the prospectus supplement,  holds Notes or Certificates,
as applicable,  in the requisite amount specified in the prospectus supplement),
or by check  mailed to the  address of the person  entitled to the payment as it
appears on the Security Register; provided, however, that the final distribution
in retirement of the Notes or  Certificates,  as  applicable,  will be made only
upon presentation and surrender of the Notes or Certificates,  as applicable, at
the  location   specified  in  the  notice  to  securityholders  of  that  final
distribution.

AVAILABLE DISTRIBUTION AMOUNT

         All distributions on the Notes or Certificates,  as applicable, of each
series on each  Distribution  Date will be made from the Available  Distribution
Amount  described  below,  subject  to the  terms  described  in the  prospectus
supplement. Generally, the "Available Distribution Amount" for each Distribution
Date equals the sum of the following amounts:

                  (1)      the  total  amount  of all  cash  on  deposit  in the
         related Collection Account as of the corresponding  Determination Date,
         exclusive, unless otherwise specified in the prospectus supplement, of:

                           (a)      all  scheduled  payments  of  principal  and
                  interest  collected  but due on a date after the  related  Due
                  Period  (unless  a  different   period  is  specified  in  the
                  prospectus  supplement,  a "Due  Period" for any  Distribution
                  Date will  begin on the  second  day of the month in which the
                  immediately preceding Distribution Date occurs, or 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),

                           (b)      all   prepayments,   together  with  related
                  payments  of  the  interest  thereon  and  related  Prepayment
                  Premiums,  all  proceeds  of any FHA  insurance,  VA  Guaranty
                  Policy or insurance  policies to be maintained  for each Asset
                  (to  the  extent  that   proceeds   are  not  applied  to  the
                  restoration  of the Asset or released in  accordance  with the
                  normal  servicing  procedures  of a  servicer,  subject to the
                  terms

                                       24


                  and conditions applicable to the related Asset) (collectively,
                  "Insurance Proceeds"), all other amounts received and retained
                  in connection with the liquidation of Assets in default in the
                  trust fund  ("Liquidation  Proceeds"),  and other  unscheduled
                  recoveries  received  after the related  Due Period,  or other
                  period specified in the prospectus supplement,

                           (c)      all amounts in the  Collection  Account that
                  are due or  reimbursable  to the  depositor,  the trustee,  an
                  Asset  Seller,  a servicer,  the master  servicer or any other
                  entity as specified in the  prospectus  supplement or that are
                  payable in respect of particular expenses of the related trust
                  fund, and

                           (d)      all amounts  received for a repurchase of an
                  Asset from the trust  fund for  defective  documentation  or a
                  breach  of  representation  or  warranty  received  after  the
                  related  Due  Period,   or  other  period   specified  in  the
                  prospectus supplement;

                  (2)      if the prospectus supplement so provides, interest or
         investment  income on amounts on  deposit  in the  Collection  Account,
         including any net amounts paid under any Cash Flow Agreements;

                  (3)      all  advances  made  by  a  servicer  or  the  master
         servicer or any other entity as specified in the prospectus  supplement
         for that Distribution Date;

                  (4)      if and to the extent  the  prospectus  supplement  so
         provides,  amounts  paid by a servicer or any other entity as specified
         in the  prospectus  supplement  with  respect  to  interest  shortfalls
         resulting from prepayments during the related Prepayment Period; and

                  (5)      to  the  extent   not  on  deposit  in  the   related
         Collection  Account as of the  corresponding  Determination  Date,  any
         amounts  collected under,  from or in respect of any credit support for
         that Distribution Date.

         As  described  below,  unless  otherwise  specified  in the  prospectus
supplement,  the entire Available  Distribution Amount will be distributed among
the  related  Notes or  Certificates,  as  applicable,  (including  any Notes or
Certificates,   as  applicable,   not  offered  by  this   prospectus)  on  each
Distribution Date, and accordingly will be released from the trust fund and will
not be available for any future distributions.

         The  prospectus  supplement for a series of Notes or  Certificates,  as
applicable,  will describe any variation in the  calculation or  distribution of
the Available Distribution Amount for that series.

DISTRIBUTIONS OF INTEREST ON THE SECURITIES

         Each class of Notes or Certificates, as applicable, (other than classes
of Strip Securities  which have no Interest Rate) may have a different  Interest
Rate, which will be a fixed,  variable or adjustable rate at which interest will
accrue on that class or a component  of that class (the  "Interest  Rate" in the
case of Certificates).  The prospectus supplement will specify the Interest Rate
for each class or component or, in the case of a variable or adjustable Interest
Rate, the method for  determining  the Interest  Rate.  Interest on the Notes or
Certificates,  as applicable,  will be calculated on the basis of a 360-day year
consisting of twelve 30-day months unless the prospectus  supplement specifies a
different basis.

         Distributions of interest on the Notes or Certificates,  as applicable,
of any class will be made on each  Distribution  Date  (other  than any class of
Accrual Securities,  which will be entitled to distributions of accrued interest
starting only on the Distribution Date, or under the

                                       25


circumstances,  specified in the prospectus  supplement,  and any class of Strip
Securities that are not entitled to any  distributions of interest) based on the
Accrued Security Interest for that class and that Distribution  Date, subject to
the sufficiency of the portion of the Available Distribution Amount allocable to
that class on that Distribution  Date. Before any interest is distributed on any
class of Accrual  Securities,  the amount of Accrued Security Interest otherwise
distributable  on that class will  instead be added to the  Security  Balance of
that class on each Distribution Date.

         For  each  class  of Notes or  Certificates,  as  applicable,  and each
Distribution  Date  (other  than some  classes  of Strip  Securities),  "Accrued
Security  Interest" will be equal to interest accrued during the related Accrual
Period  on  the  outstanding   Security   Balance  of  the  class  of  Notes  or
Certificates,  as applicable,  immediately  before the Distribution Date, at the
applicable Interest Rate, reduced as described below.  Accrued Security Interest
on some classes of Strip Securities will be equal to interest accrued during the
related Accrual Period on the outstanding  notional amount of the Strip Security
immediately  before each  Distribution  Date, at the  applicable  Interest Rate,
reduced as described  below, or interest  accrual in the manner described in the
prospectus  supplement.  The method of  determining  the  notional  amount for a
particular  class  of  Strip  Securities  will be  described  in the  prospectus
supplement.  Reference to notional  amount is solely for  convenience in some of
the calculations  and does not represent the right to receive any  distributions
of  principal.  Unless  otherwise  provided in the  prospectus  supplement,  the
Accrued Security  Interest on a series of Notes or Certificates,  as applicable,
will be  reduced  in the  event of  prepayment  interest  shortfalls,  which are
shortfalls in collections  of interest for a full accrual period  resulting from
prepayments  before the due date in that accrual period on the mortgage loans or
contracts comprising or underlying the Assets in the trust fund for that series.
The particular  manner in which these  shortfalls are to be allocated among some
or all of the classes of Notes or  Certificates,  as applicable,  of that series
will be specified in the prospectus  supplement.  The prospectus supplement will
also describe the extent to which the amount of Accrued  Security  Interest that
is otherwise  distributable on (or, in the case of Accrual Securities,  that may
otherwise  be added to the  Security  Balance  of) a class of  Offered  Notes or
Offered  Certificates,  as  applicable,  may be reduced as a result of any other
contingencies,  including  delinquencies,  losses and  deferred  interest on the
mortgage  loans or contracts  comprising or underlying the Assets in the related
trust  fund.  Unless  otherwise  provided  in  the  prospectus  supplement,  any
reduction in the amount of Accrued Security Interest otherwise  distributable on
a class of Notes or Certificates,  as applicable, by reason of the allocation to
that  class of a portion  of any  deferred  interest  on the  mortgage  loans or
contracts  comprising  or  underlying  the Assets in the related trust fund will
result in a corresponding  increase in the Security  Balance of that class.  See
"Yield Considerations."

DISTRIBUTIONS OF PRINCIPAL OF THE SECURITIES

         The Notes or Certificates,  as applicable,  of each series,  other than
some classes of Strip Securities,  will have a "Security  Balance" which, at any
time,  will equal the then  maximum  amount  that the holder will be entitled to
receive on principal  out of the future cash flow on the Assets and other assets
included  in the related  trust  fund.  The  outstanding  Security  Balance of a
Security will be reduced:

         o        to the extent of  distributions  of principal on that Security
                  from time to time and

         o        if and to the extent provided in the prospectus supplement, by
                  the amount of losses incurred on the related Assets.

         The outstanding Security Balance of a Security:

                                       26


         o        may be  increased  in  respect  of  deferred  interest  on the
                  related   mortgage  loans,  to  the  extent  provided  in  the
                  prospectus supplement and

         o        in the case of Accrual  Securities,  will be  increased by any
                  related Accrued  Security  Interest up until the  Distribution
                  Date on which distributions of interest are required to begin.

         If specified in the prospectus  supplement,  the initial total Security
Balance of all classes of Notes or Certificates, as applicable, of a series will
be greater than the outstanding total principal balance of the related Assets as
of the applicable  Cut-off Date. The initial total Security  Balance of a series
and each class of the series will be  specified  in the  prospectus  supplement.
Distributions of principal will be made on each  Distribution  Date to the class
or  classes of Notes or  Certificates,  as  applicable,  in the  amounts  and in
accordance  with the  priorities  specified in the prospectus  supplement.  Some
classes of Strip  Securities  with no Security  Balance are not  entitled to any
distributions of principal.

         If specified in the related prospectus  supplement,  the trust fund may
issue notes or certificates,  as applicable,  from time to time and use proceeds
of this issuance to make principal payments with respect to a series.

REVOLVING PERIOD

         The applicable  prospectus supplement may provide that all or a portion
of the principal collections may be applied by the trustee to the acquisition of
subsequent  Revolving  Credit Line Loans during a specified  period  rather than
used to distribute payments of principal to securityholders  during that period.
These notes or certificates,  as applicable, would then possess an interest only
period,  also  commonly  referred  to as a  "Revolving  Period",  which  will be
followed by an "Amortization  Period",  during which principal will be paid. Any
interest only revolving  period may terminate  prior to the end of the specified
period and result in the earlier than expected principal  repayment of the notes
or certificates, as applicable.

COMPONENTS

         To the extent specified in the prospectus supplement, distribution on a
class of Notes or Certificates,  as applicable, may be based on a combination of
two or more different  components as described under "--General"  above. To that
extent,  the  descriptions  set forth  under  "Distributions  of Interest on the
Securities"  and  "--Distributions  of Principal of the  Securities"  above also
relate  to  components  of the  component  class of Notes  or  Certificates,  as
applicable.  References in those  sections to Security  Balance may refer to the
principal  balance,  if any, of these  components  and reference to the Interest
Rate may refer to the Interest Rate, if any, on these components.

DISTRIBUTIONS ON THE SECURITIES OF PREPAYMENT PREMIUMS

         If so provided in the prospectus  supplement,  Prepayment Premiums that
are  collected  on the  mortgage  loans  in  the  related  trust  fund  will  be
distributed  on each  Distribution  Date to the  class  or  classes  of Notes or
Certificates,  as applicable,  entitled to the  distribution as described in the
prospectus supplement.

ALLOCATION OF LOSSES AND SHORTFALLS

         If so provided in the  prospectus  supplement  for a series of Notes or
Certificates,  as  applicable,  consisting of one or more classes of Subordinate
Notes or Subordinate  Certificates,  as

                                       27


applicable, on any Distribution Date in respect of which losses or shortfalls in
collections  on the Assets  have been  incurred,  the amount of those  losses or
shortfalls  will be borne first by a class of  Subordinate  Notes or Subordinate
Certificates,  as  applicable,  in the  priority  and manner and  subject to the
limitations specified in the prospectus  supplement.  See "Description of Credit
Support" for a description of the types of protection  that may be included in a
trust fund against losses and shortfalls on Assets  comprising  that trust fund.
The prospectus supplement for a series of Notes or Certificates,  as applicable,
will describe the entitlement,  if any, of a class of Notes or Certificates,  as
applicable,  whose  Security  Balance  has been  reduced  to zero as a result of
distributions  or the  allocation of losses on the related Assets to recover any
losses  previously  allocated to that class from amounts received on the Assets.
However,  if the  Security  Balance  of a class  of Notes  or  Certificates,  as
applicable,  has been reduced to zero as the result of principal  distributions,
the allocation of losses on the Assets,  an optional  termination or an optional
purchase  or  redemption,  that  class  will no longer be  entitled  to  receive
principal distributions from amounts received on the assets of the related trust
fund,  including   distributions  in  respect  of  principal  losses  previously
allocated to that class.

ADVANCES IN RESPECT OF DELINQUENCIES

         If so provided in the  prospectus  supplement,  the servicer or another
entity  described in the prospectus  supplement  will be required as part of its
servicing  responsibilities  to advance on or before each  Distribution Date its
own funds or funds held in the related  Collection Account that are not included
in the Available  Distribution  Amount for that Distribution  Date, in an amount
equal  to the  total of  payments  of (1)  principal  (other  than  any  balloon
payments) and (2) interest (net of related servicing fees and Retained Interest)
that were due on the Assets in that trust fund during the related Due Period and
were  delinquent  on the  related  Determination  Date,  subject to a good faith
determination  that the advances will be reimbursable  from Related Proceeds (as
defined below). In the case of a series of Notes or Certificates, as applicable,
that  includes  one  or  more  classes  of  Subordinate   Notes  or  Subordinate
Certificates,  as applicable,  and if so provided in the prospectus  supplement,
the servicer's (or another entity's)  advance  obligation may be limited only to
the portion of those delinquencies  necessary to make the required distributions
on one or more classes of Senior Notes or Senior  Certificates,  as  applicable,
and/or  may be  subject  to a good faith  determination  that  advances  will be
reimbursable  not only from Related  Proceeds but also from collections on other
Assets otherwise distributable on one or more classes of those Subordinate Notes
or Subordinate Certificates, as applicable. See "Description of Credit Support."

         Advances are intended to maintain a regular flow of scheduled  interest
and  principal  payments  to  holders  of the  class  or  classes  of  Notes  or
Certificates, as applicable,  entitled to the payments, rather than to guarantee
or insure against losses. Advances of the servicer's (or another entity's) funds
will be  reimbursable  only out of related  recoveries on the Assets  (including
amounts  received  under  any form of credit  support)  respecting  which  those
advances  were made (as to any Assets,  "Related  Proceeds")  and from any other
amounts  specified in the  prospectus  supplement,  including out of any amounts
otherwise  distributable  on  one  or  more  classes  of  Subordinate  Notes  or
Subordinate Certificates, as applicable, of that series; provided, however, that
any advance  will be  reimbursable  from any  amounts in the related  Collection
Account before any  distributions  being made on the Notes or  Certificates,  as
applicable, to the extent that the servicer (or some other entity) determines in
good faith that that  advance (a  "Nonrecoverable  Advance")  is not  ultimately
recoverable from Related  Proceeds or, if applicable,  from collections on other
Assets  otherwise   distributable  on  the  Subordinate   Notes  or  Subordinate
Certificates,  as  applicable.  If advances  have been made by the servicer from
excess  funds in the related  Collection  Account,  the  servicer is required to
replace these funds in that Collection  Account on any future  Distribution Date
to the extent that funds in that Collection  Account on that  Distribution  Date
are less than payments required to be made to  securityholders  on that date. If
specified in the  prospectus  supplement,  the  obligations  of the servicer (or
another  entity) to make advances may be secured by a cash advance reserve fund,
a surety  bond,  a letter of credit or  another  form of

                                       28


limited guaranty.  If applicable,  information  regarding the characteristics of
and the  identity  of any  borrower  on any surety bond will be set forth in the
prospectus supplement.

         If and to the extent so  provided  in the  prospectus  supplement,  the
servicer (or another  entity)  will be entitled to receive  interest at the rate
specified in the prospectus  supplement on its outstanding  advances and will be
entitled to pay itself this interest  periodically  from general  collections on
the Assets before any payment to securityholders or as otherwise provided in the
related Agreement and described in the prospectus supplement.

         If specified in the prospectus  supplement,  the master servicer or the
trustee  will be  required  to make  advances,  subject to  specific  conditions
described in the prospectus supplement, in the event of a servicer default.

REPORTS TO SECURITYHOLDERS

         With  each   distribution   to   holders  of  any  class  of  Notes  or
Certificates,  as applicable,  of a series, the servicer, the master servicer or
the trustee, as provided in the prospectus supplement,  will forward or cause to
be forwarded to each holder, to the depositor and to any other parties as may be
specified  in the related  Agreement,  a statement  containing  the  information
specified in the prospectus supplement, or if no information is specified in the
prospectus  supplement,  generally  setting  forth,  in each case to the  extent
applicable and available:

                  (1)      the amount of that  distribution  to holders of Notes
         or  Certificates,  as  applicable,  of that class applied to reduce the
         Security Balance of the Notes or Certificates, as applicable;

                  (2)      the amount of that  distribution  to holders of Notes
         or  Certificates,  as  applicable,  of that class  allocable to Accrued
         Security Interest;

                  (3)      the  amount  of  that   distribution   allocable   to
         Prepayment Premiums;

                  (4)      the amount of related servicing  compensation and any
         other customary information as is required to enable securityholders to
         prepare their tax returns;

                  (5)      the  total  amount  of  advances   included  in  that
         distribution,  and the total  amount of  unreimbursed  advances  at the
         close of business on that Distribution Date;

                  (6)      the  total  principal  balance  of the  Assets at the
         close of business on that Distribution Date;

                  (7)      the number and total  principal  balance of  mortgage
         loans in respect of which

                           (a)      one scheduled payment is delinquent,

                           (b)      two scheduled payments are delinquent,

                           (c)      three  or  more   scheduled   payments   are
                                    delinquent and

                           (d)      foreclosure proceedings have begun;

                  (8)      for any mortgage loan or contract  liquidated  during
         the  related Due  Period,  (a) the  portion of the related  liquidation
         proceeds payable or reimbursable to a servicer (or

                                       29


         any other  entity) in respect of that  mortgage loan and (b) the amount
         of any loss to securityholders;

                  (9)      with respect to collateral acquired by the trust fund
         through  foreclosure  or otherwise  (an "REO  Property")  relating to a
         mortgage  loan or contract and included in the trust fund as of the end
         of the related Due Period, the date of acquisition;

                  (10)     for each REO Property  relating to a mortgage loan or
         contract  and  included  in the trust fund as of the end of the related
         Due Period,

                           (a)      the book value,

                           (b)      the   principal   balance  of  the   related
                                    mortgage   loan  or   contract   immediately
                                    following that Distribution Date (calculated
                                    as if that  mortgage  loan or contract  were
                                    still   outstanding   taking  into   account
                                    limited  modifications  to the  terms of the
                                    mortgage loan specified in the Agreement),

                           (c)      the total amount of  unreimbursed  servicing
                                    expenses   and   unreimbursed   advances  in
                                    respect of the REO Property and

                           (d)      if applicable,  the total amount of interest
                                    accrued  and  payable on  related  servicing
                                    expenses and related advances;

                  (11)     for any REO  Property  sold  during the  related  Due
         Period

                           (a)      the total amount of sale proceeds,

                           (b)      the portion of those sales proceeds  payable
                                    or  reimbursable  to the master  servicer in
                                    respect of that REO  Property or the related
                                    mortgage loan or contract and

                           (c)      the amount of any loss to securityholders in
                                    respect of the related mortgage loan;

                  (12)     the total Security Balance or notional amount, as the
         case may be, of each  class of Notes or  Certificates,  as  applicable,
         (including  any  class of Notes or  Certificates,  as  applicable,  not
         offered  by  this   prospectus)  at  the  close  of  business  on  that
         Distribution  Date,  separately   identifying  any  reduction  in  that
         Security  Balance due to the allocation of any loss and increase in the
         Security  Balance  of a class  of  Accrual  Securities  if any  Accrued
         Security Interest has been added to that balance;

                  (13)     the total amount of principal prepayments made during
         the related Due Period;

                  (14)     the amount  deposited in the reserve fund, if any, on
         that Distribution Date;

                  (15)     the amount  remaining in the reserve fund, if any, as
         of the close of business on that Distribution Date;

                  (16)     the total unpaid Accrued Security  Interest,  if any,
         on each class of Notes or Certificates,  as applicable, at the close of
         business on that Distribution Date;

                                       30


                  (17)     in the case of Notes or Certificates,  as applicable,
         with a variable  Interest  Rate,  the Interest Rate  applicable to that
         Distribution  Date,  and,  if  available,  the  immediately  succeeding
         Distribution   Date,  as  calculated  in  accordance  with  the  method
         specified in the prospectus supplement;

                  (18)     in the case of Notes or Certificates,  as applicable,
         with an adjustable  Interest  Rate, for statements to be distributed in
         any month in which an adjustment date occurs,  the adjustable  Interest
         Rate  applicable  to that  Distribution  Date,  if  available,  and the
         immediately  succeeding  Distribution  Date as calculated in accordance
         with the method specified in the prospectus supplement;

                  (19)     as to any series that includes  credit  support,  the
         amount of coverage of each instrument of credit support  included as of
         the close of business on that Distribution Date;

                  (20)     during  the   Pre-Funding   Period,   the   remaining
         Pre-Funded  Amount and the  portion of the  Pre-Funding  Amount used to
         acquire Subsequent Assets since the preceding Distribution Date;

                  (21)     during the Pre-Funding  Period,  the amount remaining
         in the Capitalized Interest Account; and

                  (22)     the total amount of payments by the borrowers of

                           (a)      default interest,

                           (b)      late charges and

                           (c)      assumption and  modification  fees collected
                                    during the related Due Period.

         Within a reasonable period of time after the end of each calendar year,
the servicer,  the master servicer or the trustee, as provided in the prospectus
supplement, will furnish to each securityholder of record at any time during the
calendar year the  information  required by the Code and applicable  regulations
under the Code to enable  securityholders  to  prepare  their tax  returns.  See
"Description   of  the   Securities--Book-Entry   Registration   and  Definitive
Securities."

TERMINATION

         The  obligations  created by the related  Agreement  for each series of
Notes or  Certificates,  as  applicable,  will  terminate  upon the  payment  to
securityholders of that series of all amounts held in the Collection Accounts or
by a servicer,  the master  servicer,  if any, or the trustee and required to be
paid to them pursuant to that  Agreement  following the earlier of (1) the final
payment or other  liquidation of the last Asset subject to the related Agreement
or the  disposition  of all property  acquired upon  foreclosure of any mortgage
loan or contract  subject to the  Agreement  and (2) the  purchase of all of the
assets of the trust fund by the party entitled to effect that termination, under
the circumstances and in the manner set forth in the prospectus  supplement.  In
no event, however, will the trust fund continue beyond the date specified in the
prospectus  supplement.  Written  notice of termination of the Agreement will be
given to each securityholder,  and the final distribution will be made only upon
presentation and surrender of the Notes or Certificates,  as applicable,  at the
location to be specified in the notice of termination.

         If  specified  in the  prospectus  supplement,  a  series  of  Notes or
Certificates,  as  applicable,  may be subject  to  optional  early  termination
through  the  purchase  of the  Assets in the  related  trust

                                       31


fund  by  the  party   specified  in  the  prospectus   supplement,   under  the
circumstances  and in the manner set forth in the prospectus  supplement.  If so
provided  in the  prospectus  supplement,  upon the  reduction  of the  Security
Balance of a specified class or classes of Notes or Certificates, as applicable,
by a specified percentage, the party specified in the prospectus supplement will
solicit  bids  for  the  purchase  of all  assets  of the  trust  fund,  or of a
sufficient  portion of those  assets to retire that class or classes or purchase
that class or classes at a price set forth in the prospectus supplement, in each
case,  under the  circumstances  and in the manner  set forth in the  prospectus
supplement. That price will at least equal the outstanding Security Balances and
any accrued and unpaid interest on the Security  Balances  (including any unpaid
interest shortfalls for prior Distribution Dates). Any sale of the Assets of the
trust fund will be without  recourse  to the trust fund or the  securityholders.
Any purchase or  solicitation  of bids may be made only when the total  Security
Balance  of that  class or  classes  declines  to a  percentage  of the  Initial
Security Balance of those Notes or Certificates,  as applicable,  (not to exceed
10%) specified in the prospectus supplement.  In addition, if so provided in the
prospectus supplement, some classes of Notes or Certificates, as applicable, may
be purchased or redeemed in the manner set forth in the prospectus supplement at
a price at least  equal to the  outstanding  Security  Balance  of each class so
purchased  or  redeemed  and any accrued  and unpaid  interest  on the  Security
Balance (including any unpaid interest shortfalls for prior Distribution Dates).

OPTIONAL PURCHASES

         Subject to the provisions of the applicable  Agreement,  the depositor,
the servicer or any other party  specified in the prospectus  supplement may, at
that party's  option,  repurchase  any mortgage loan that is in default or as to
which default is reasonably  foreseeable if, in the depositor's,  the servicer's
or any other party's judgment,  the related default is not likely to be cured by
the  borrower  or default is not likely to be  averted,  at a price equal to the
unpaid  principal  balance of the  mortgage  loan plus  accrued  interest on the
mortgage loan and under the conditions set forth in the prospectus supplement.

BOOK-ENTRY REGISTRATION AND DEFINITIVE SECURITIES

         GENERAL

         If provided for in the  prospectus  supplement,  one or more classes of
the Offered Notes or Offered Certificates,  as applicable, of any series will be
issued as Book-Entry Notes or Book-Entry Certificates,  as applicable,  and each
of  these  classes  will  be   represented  by  one  or  more  single  Notes  or
Certificates,  as  applicable,  registered  in the  name  of a  nominee  for the
depository,  The  Depository  Trust  Company  ("DTC")  and,  if  provided in the
prospectus  supplement,  additionally  through Clearstream  Luxembourg,  societe
anonyme ("Clearstream  Luxembourg") or the Euroclear System ("Euroclear").  Each
class of Book-Entry  Notes or Book-Entry  Certificates,  as applicable,  will be
issued in one or more  certificates or notes, as the case may be, that equal the
initial  principal  amount of the  related  class of  Offered  Notes or  Offered
Certificates,  as  applicable,  and will  initially be registered in the name of
Cede & Co.

         No person  acquiring  an interest in a  Book-Entry  Security  (each,  a
"Beneficial Owner") will be entitled to receive a Definitive Security, except as
set forth  below under  "-Definitive  Securities."  Unless and until  Definitive
Notes or Definitive Certificates,  as applicable,  are issued for the Book-Entry
Notes or Book-Entry Certificates, as applicable, under the limited circumstances
described  in the  applicable  prospectus  supplement  or this  prospectus,  all
references to actions by securityholders with respect to the Book-Entry Notes or
Book-Entry  Certificates,  as  applicable,  will refer to actions  taken by DTC,
Clearstream  Luxembourg or Euroclear upon instructions  from their  Participants
(as defined  below),  and all  references in this  prospectus to  distributions,
notices,   reports  and  statements  to  securityholders  with  respect  to  the
Book-Entry  Notes or  Book-Entry  Certificates,  as  applicable,  will  refer to
distributions, notices, reports and statements to DTC,

                                       32


Clearstream  Luxembourg  or  Euroclear,  as  applicable,   for  distribution  to
Beneficial  Owners  by DTC in  accordance  with  the  procedures  of DTC  and if
applicable, Clearstream Luxembourg and Euroclear.

         Beneficial  Owners  will  hold  their  Book-Entry  Notes or  Book-Entry
Certificates,  as  applicable,  through  DTC in the  United  States,  or, if the
Offered  Notes or Offered  Certificates,  as  applicable,  are  offered for sale
globally,  through  Clearstream  Luxembourg  or  Euroclear in Europe if they are
participating  organizations  ("Participants")  of those  systems.  Participants
include  securities  brokers and dealers,  banks,  trust  companies and clearing
corporations  and may include some other  organizations.  Indirect access to the
DTC,  Clearstream  Luxembourg and Euroclear systems also is available to others,
such as banks,  brokers,  dealers  and trust  companies  that  clear  through or
maintain  a  custodial  relationship  with a  Participant,  either  directly  or
indirectly ("Indirect Participants").

         DTC

         DTC is a limited-purpose  trust company organized under the laws of the
State  of New  York,  a  member  of the  Federal  Reserve  System,  a  "clearing
corporation"  within the meaning of the Uniform  Commercial  Code  ("UCC") and a
"clearing  agency"  registered  pursuant to the provisions of Section 17A of the
Securities  Exchange  Act of 1934,  as amended  (the  "Exchange  Act").  DTC was
created to hold  securities  for its  Participants,  some of which (and/or their
representatives)  own DTC,  and  facilitate  the  clearance  and  settlement  of
securities  transactions between its Participants through electronic  book-entry
changes in their accounts,  thus  eliminating the need for physical  movement of
securities. In accordance with its normal procedures,  DTC is expected to record
the  positions  held by each of its  Participants  in the  Book-Entry  Notes  or
Book-Entry Certificates, as applicable, whether held for its own account or as a
nominee for another person. In general, beneficial ownership of Book-Entry Notes
or  Book-Entry  Certificates,  as  applicable,  will be  subject  to the  rules,
regulations and procedures  governing DTC and its Participants as in effect from
time to time.

         CLEARSTREAM LUXEMBOURG

         Clearstream Banking, societe anonyme, 67 Bd Grande-Duchesse  Charlotte,
L-2967  Luxembourg  ("Clearstream,  Luxembourg"),  was  incorporated  in 1970 as
"Cedel S.A.", a company with limited  liability under  Luxembourg law (a societe
anonyme).  Cedel S.A. subsequently changed its name to Cedelbank. On January 10,
2000,  Cedelbank's parent company,  Cedel International,  societe anonyme ("CI")
merged its clearing, settlement and custody business with that of Deutsche Borse
Clearing AG ("DBC"). The merger involved the transfer by CI of substantially all
of its assets and  liabilities  (including its shares in CB) to a new Luxembourg
company, New Cedel International, societe anonyme ("New CI"), which is 50% owned
by CI and 50% owned by DBC's parent company  Deutsche Borse AG. The shareholders
of these two entities are banks,  securities dealers and financial institutions.
Cedel  International  currently has 92  shareholders,  including U.S.  financial
institutions or their subsidiaries. No single entity may own more than 5 percent
of Cedel International's stock.

         Further  to  the  merger,   the  Board  of   Directors   of  New  Cedel
International decided to rename the companies in the group in order to give them
a cohesive brand name. The new brand name that was chosen is "Clearstream". With
effect from January 14, 2000 New CI has been renamed "Clearstream International,
societe  anonyme".  On January 18,  2000,  Cedelbank  was  renamed  "Clearstream
Banking,  societe anonyme",  and Cedel Global Services was renamed  "Clearstream
Services, societe anonyme".

         On January 17,  2000 DBC was renamed  "Clearstream  Banking  AG".  This
means  that  there  are  now two  entities  in the  corporate  group  headed  by
Clearstream International which share the

                                       33


name  "Clearstream  Banking",  the entity  previously named  "Cedelbank" and the
entity previously named "Deutsche Borse Clearing AG".

         Clearstream,    Luxembourg   holds   securities   for   its   customers
("Clearstream,  Luxembourg  Participants")  and  facilitates  the  clearance and
settlement of securities transactions between Clearstream,  Luxembourg customers
through  electronic  book-entry  changes in accounts of Clearstream,  Luxembourg
customers,  thereby  eliminating the need for physical movement of certificates.
Transactions may be settled by Clearstream,  Luxembourg in any of 36 currencies,
including  United  States  Dollars.  Clearstream,  Luxembourg  provides  to  its
customers,  among  other  things,  services  for  safekeeping,   administration,
clearance and  settlement of  internationally  traded  securities and securities
lending  and  borrowing.  Clearstream,   Luxembourg  also  deals  with  domestic
securities  markets in over 30  countries  through  established  depository  and
custodial  relationships.  Clearstream,  Luxembourg  is  registered as a bank in
Luxembourg,  and  as  such  is  subject  to  regulation  by  the  Commission  de
Surveillance du Secteur Financier,  "CSSF",  which supervises  Luxembourg banks.
Clearstream,   Luxembourg's  customers  are  world-wide  financial  institutions
including  underwriters,  securities brokers and dealers, banks, trust companies
and clearing corporations.  Clearstream, Luxembourg's U.S. customers are limited
to securities brokers and dealers, and banks. Currently, Clearstream, Luxembourg
has approximately  2,000 customers  located in over 80 countries,  including all
major European  countries,  Canada,  and the United States.  Indirect  access to
Clearstream, Luxembourg is available to other institutions that clear through or
maintain  a  custodial  relationship  with an  account  holder  of  Clearstream,
Luxembourg.  Clearstream,  Luxembourg has established an electronic  bridge with
Morgan  Guaranty  Trust  Company of New York as the  Operator  of the  Euroclear
System  (MGT/EOC)  in  Brussels  to  facilitate  settlement  of  trades  between
Clearstream, Luxembourg and MGT/EOC.

         EUROCLEAR

         Euroclear was created in 1968 to hold  securities for its  Participants
and  to  clear  and  settle  transactions   between  its  Participants   through
simultaneous  electronic  book-entry delivery against payment,  thus eliminating
the  need  for  physical  movement  of  securities  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 Guaranty Trust Company of New
York (the "Euroclear Operator"), under contract with Euroclear Clearance Systems
S.C., a Belgian  cooperative  corporation (the "Cooperative  Corporation").  All
operations are conducted by the Euroclear Operator, and all Euroclear securities
clearance  accounts and Euroclear  cash accounts are accounts with the Euroclear
Operator,  not  the  Cooperative   Corporation.   The  Cooperative   Corporation
establishes  policy  for  Euroclear  on  behalf of its  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  Participant  of Euroclear,  either  directly or
indirectly.

         The  Euroclear  Operator  is the Belgian  branch of a New York  banking
corporation  that  is a  member  bank  of the  Federal  Reserve  System,  and is
regulated and examined by the Board of Governors of the Federal  Reserve  System
and the New  York  State  Banking  Department,  as well as the  Belgian  Banking
Commission.

         Securities  clearance  accounts and cash  accounts  with the  Euroclear
Operator 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

                                       34


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  securities  to  specific  securities
clearance  accounts.  The Euroclear Operator acts under the Terms and Conditions
only on behalf of its  Participants,  and has no record of or relationship  with
persons holding through Participants of Euroclear.

         Clearstream  Luxembourg  and Euroclear  will hold omnibus  positions on
behalf  of  their  Participants   through  customers'   securities  accounts  in
Clearstream  Luxembourg's and Euroclear's names on the books of their respective
depositaries which in turn will hold positions in customers' securities accounts
in the depositaries'  names on the books of DTC. Citibank will act as depositary
for  Clearstream  Luxembourg  and JPMorgan Chase Bank will act as depositary for
Euroclear   (individually  the  "Relevant  Depositary"  and  collectively,   the
"European Depositaries").

         BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP OF BOOK-ENTRY SECURITIES

         Except as  described  below,  no  Beneficial  Owner will be entitled to
receive a physical certificate representing a Certificate,  or note representing
a Note.  Unless  and  until  Definitive  Notes or  Definitive  Certificates,  as
applicable,  are issued, it is anticipated that the only "securityholder" of the
Offered Notes or Offered  Certificates,  as  applicable,  will be Cede & Co., as
nominee of DTC. Beneficial Owners will not be  "Certificateholders" as that term
is  used  in any  Agreement,  nor  "Noteholders"  as  that  term  is used in any
indenture.  Beneficial  Owners  are only  permitted  to  exercise  their  rights
indirectly through Participants,  DTC, Clearstream  Luxembourg or Euroclear,  as
applicable.

         The  Beneficial  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
Beneficial   Owner's   account  for  that  purpose.   In  turn,   the  Financial
Intermediary's  ownership  of a  Book-Entry  Security  will be  recorded  on the
records  of DTC (or of a  Participant  that  acts  as  agent  for the  Financial
Intermediary,  whose interest will in turn be recorded on the records of DTC, if
the Beneficial Owner's Financial Intermediary is not a Participant of DTC and on
the records of Clearstream Luxembourg or Euroclear, as appropriate).

         Beneficial  Owners will receive all  distributions of principal of, and
interest on, the Offered Notes or Offered Certificates,  as applicable, from the
trustee  through DTC and its  Participants.  While the Offered  Notes or Offered
Certificates,  as applicable,  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 Offered Notes or Offered  Certificates,  as  applicable,  and is required to
receive and transmit distributions of principal of, and interest on, the Offered
Notes  or  Offered  Certificates,  as  applicable.   Participants  and  Indirect
Participants  with whom Beneficial  Owners have accounts with respect to Offered
Notes or Offered  Certificates,  as applicable,  are similarly  required to make
book-entry  transfers and receive and transmit  distributions on behalf of their
respective Beneficial Owners.  Accordingly,  although Beneficial Owners will not
possess certificates or notes, the Rules provide a mechanism by which Beneficial
Owners will receive distributions and will be able to transfer their interest.

         Beneficial   Owners   will  not  receive  or  be  entitled  to  receive
certificates or notes  representing  their  respective  interests in the Offered
Notes  or  Offered  Certificates,   as  applicable,  except  under  the  limited
circumstances  described below.  Unless and until Definitive Notes or Definitive
Certificates,   as  applicable,  are  issued,  Beneficial  Owners  who  are  not
Participants may transfer ownership of Offered Notes or Offered Certificates, as
applicable,  only through Participants and Indirect  Participants by instructing
the Participants and Indirect  Participants to transfer Offered Notes or Offered
Certificates, as applicable, by book-entry transfer, through DTC for the account
of the purchasers of the Offered Notes or Offered  Certificates,  as applicable,
which

                                       35


account is maintained with their respective Participants. Under the Rules and in
accordance  with DTC's normal  procedures,  transfer of ownership of  Book-Entry
Notes or Book-Entry  Certificates,  as applicable,  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 Beneficial Owners.

         Because of time zone differences, any credits of securities received in
Clearstream  Luxembourg  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.  These credits or any
transactions  in securities  settled during this  processing will be reported to
the  relevant  Participants  of  Clearstream  Luxembourg  or  Euroclear  on that
business day. Cash received in  Clearstream  Luxembourg or Euroclear as a result
of sales of securities by or through a Participant of Clearstream  Luxembourg or
Euroclear  to a  Participant  of DTC  will be  received  with  value  on the DTC
settlement date but will be available in the relevant Clearstream  Luxembourg or
Euroclear cash account only as of the business day following  settlement in DTC.
For information  with respect to tax  documentation  procedures  relating to the
Notes  or  Certificates,   as  applicable,  see  "Material  Federal  Income  Tax
Considerations--Tax  Treatment of Foreign  Investors" in this prospectus and, if
the Book-Entry  Notes or Book-Entry  Certificates,  as applicable,  are globally
offered and the  prospectus  supplement  so  provides,  see  "Global  Clearance,
Settlement and Tax  Documentation  Procedures--Certain  U.S.  Federal Income Tax
Documentation Requirements" in Annex I to the prospectus supplement.

         Transfers between Participants of DTC will occur in accordance with DTC
Rules.  Transfers  between  Participants of Clearstream  Luxembourg or Euroclear
will occur in accordance with their respective rules and operating procedures.

         Cross-market  transfers  between persons holding directly or indirectly
through DTC, on the one hand, and directly or indirectly through Participants of
Clearstream  Luxembourg or Euroclear,  on the other,  will be effected in DTC in
accordance with the DTC Rules on behalf of the relevant  European  international
clearing system by the Relevant Depositary;  however,  cross-market transactions
will require  delivery of  instructions to the relevant  European  international
clearing system by the  counterparty in that system in accordance with its rules
and  procedures  and within  its  established  deadlines  (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  in DTC, and making or receiving  payment in  accordance  with normal
procedures  for same day funds  settlement  applicable to DTC.  Participants  of
Clearstream Luxembourg or Euroclear may not deliver instructions directly to the
European Depositaries.

         Distributions  on the Book-Entry Notes or Book-Entry  Certificates,  as
applicable,  will be made on each  Distribution  Date by the Trustee to DTC. DTC
will be  responsible  for  crediting  the  amount  of each  distribution  to the
accounts of the applicable  Participants  of DTC in accordance with DTC's normal
procedures.  Each  Participant  of DTC will be  responsible  for  disbursing the
distribution  to the  Beneficial  Owners of the  Book-Entry  Notes or Book-Entry
Certificates,   as  applicable,   that  it  represents  and  to  each  Financial
Intermediary  for which it acts as agent.  Each Financial  Intermediary  will be
responsible  for  disbursing  funds to the  Beneficial  Owners of the Book-Entry
Notes or Book-Entry Certificates, as applicable, that it represents.

         Under a book-entry format, Beneficial Owners of the Book-Entry Notes or
Book-Entry  Certificates,  as  applicable,  may  experience  some delay in their
receipt of payments,  because the distributions will be forwarded by the Trustee
to Cede & Co. Any  distributions on Notes or Certificates,  as applicable,  held
through  Clearstream  Luxembourg  or  Euroclear  will be  credited  to the  cash
accounts of  Participants  of Clearstream  Luxembourg or Euroclear in accordance
with the

                                       36


relevant  system's rules and procedures,  to the extent received by the Relevant
Depositary.  These  distributions will be subject to tax reporting in accordance
with relevant  United  States tax laws and  regulations.  See "Material  Federal
Income Tax  Considerations--REMICs--Taxation  of Certain  Foreign  Investors" in
this prospectus. Because DTC can only act on behalf of Financial Intermediaries,
the  ability of a  Beneficial  Owner to pledge  Book-Entry  Notes or  Book-Entry
Certificates,  as applicable,  to persons or entities that do not participate in
the depository  system, or otherwise take actions in respect of Book-Entry Notes
or Book-Entry  Certificates,  as  applicable,  may be limited due to the lack of
physical  securities for the  Book-Entry  Notes or Book-Entry  Certificates,  as
applicable.  In  addition,  issuance  of  the  Book-Entry  Notes  or  Book-Entry
Certificates,  as applicable, in book-entry form may reduce the liquidity of the
securities in the secondary market since potential investors may be unwilling to
purchase  Notes or  Certificates,  as  applicable,  for which they cannot obtain
physical securities.

         Monthly and annual  reports  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  Notes or Book-Entry  Certificates,  as  applicable,  of
Beneficial Owners are credited.

         Generally, DTC will advise the applicable trustee that unless and until
Definitive Notes or Definitive Certificates, as applicable, are issued, DTC will
take any action  permitted to be taken by the holders of the Book-Entry Notes or
Book-Entry  Certificates,  as applicable,  under the Agreement or indenture,  as
applicable,  only at the direction of one or more  Financial  Intermediaries  to
whose  DTC  accounts  the  Book-Entry  Notes  or  Book-Entry  Certificates,   as
applicable,  are  credited,  to the extent  that  actions are taken on behalf of
Financial   Intermediaries  whose  holdings  include  the  Book-Entry  Notes  or
Book-Entry  Certificates,  as applicable.  If the Book-Entry Notes or Book-Entry
Certificates, as applicable, are globally offered, Clearstream Luxembourg or the
Euroclear Operator,  as the case may be, will take any other action permitted to
be taken by a securityholder under the Agreement or indenture, as applicable, on
behalf  of  a  Participant  of  Clearstream  Luxembourg  or  Euroclear  only  in
accordance  with its relevant rules and procedures and subject to the ability of
the Relevant  Depositary to effect those actions on its behalf  through DTC. DTC
may take actions, at the direction of the related Participants,  with respect to
some Offered Notes or Offered  Certificates,  as applicable,  that conflict with
actions taken with respect to other Offered  Notes or Offered  Certificates,  as
applicable.

         Although DTC,  Clearstream  Luxembourg and Euroclear have agreed to the
foregoing  procedures  in order to facilitate  transfers of Book-Entry  Notes or
Book-Entry Certificates,  as applicable,  among Participants of DTC, Clearstream
Luxembourg and Euroclear, they are under no obligation to perform or continue to
perform these procedures and the procedures may be discontinued at any time.

         None of the depositor,  any master servicer, any servicer, the trustee,
any securities  registrar or paying agent or any of their  affiliates  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 Notes or Book-Entry
Certificates,  as applicable,  or for maintaining,  supervising or reviewing any
records relating to those beneficial ownership interests.

         DEFINITIVE SECURITIES

         Notes or  Certificates,  as applicable,  initially issued in book-entry
form  will  be  issued  as  Definitive  Notes  or  Definitive  Certificates,  as
applicable,  to Beneficial  Owners or their nominees,  rather than to DTC or its
nominee only

                                       37


         (1)      if the depositor advises the trustee in writing that DTC is no
                  longer   willing   or   able   to   properly   discharge   its
                  responsibilities  as depository for the Notes or Certificates,
                  as  applicable,  and the  depositor  is  unable  to  locate  a
                  qualified successor,

         (2)      if the depositor,  at its option, elects to end the book-entry
                  system through DTC or

         (3)      in  accordance  with any  other  provisions  described  in the
                  prospectus supplement.

         Upon the occurrence of any of the events  described in the  immediately
preceding  paragraph,  DTC  is  required  to  notify  all  Participants  of  the
availability  through DTC of  Definitive  Notes or Definitive  Certificates,  as
applicable,  for the Beneficial Owners. Upon surrender by DTC of the security or
securities  representing  the Book-Entry  Notes or Book-Entry  Certificates,  as
applicable,  together with instructions for registration, the trustee will issue
(or  cause  to  be  issued)  to  the  Beneficial   Owners  identified  in  those
instructions the Definitive Notes or Definitive Certificates,  as applicable, to
which they are entitled,  and  thereafter the trustee will recognize the holders
of  those  Definitive  Notes  or  Definitive  Certificates,  as  applicable,  as
securityholders under the Agreement.

                          DESCRIPTION OF THE AGREEMENTS

AGREEMENTS APPLICABLE TO A SERIES

         REMIC SECURITIES, FASIT SECURITIES, GRANTOR TRUST SECURITIES

         Notes or Certificates, as applicable, representing interests in a trust
fund, or a portion of a trust fund,  that the trustee will elect to have treated
as a real estate mortgage investment conduit under Sections 860A through 860G of
the Code ("REMIC Securities"), FASIT Securities (as defined in this prospectus),
or Grantor Trust Securities (as defined in this prospectus) will be issued,  and
the  related  trust fund will be created,  pursuant  to a pooling and  servicing
agreement  or trust  agreement  (in either case,  generally  referred to in this
prospectus as the "pooling and servicing  agreement")  among the depositor,  the
trustee and the sole servicer or master servicer,  as applicable.  The Assets of
that trust fund will be transferred to the trust fund and thereafter serviced in
accordance with the terms of the pooling and servicing  agreement.  In the event
there are multiple  servicers of the Assets of that trust fund,  or in the event
the  Securities  consist of Notes,  each  servicer  will  perform its  servicing
functions pursuant to a related underlying servicing agreement.

         SECURITIES THAT ARE PARTNERSHIP INTERESTS FOR TAX PURPOSES AND NOTES

         Certificates,  as  applicable,  that  are  intended  to be  treated  as
partnership  interests  for tax purposes  will be issued,  and the related trust
fund will be created,  pursuant to the pooling and servicing  agreement or trust
agreement.

         A series of Notes issued by a trust fund that is intended to be treated
as a partnership or disregarded  entity for tax purposes will be issued pursuant
to an indenture between the related trust fund and an indenture trustee named in
the  prospectus  supplement.  The  trust  fund will be  established  either as a
statutory  business  trust under the law of the State of Delaware or as a common
law trust under the law of the State of New York  pursuant to a trust  agreement
between  the  depositor  and  an  owner  trustee  specified  in  the  prospectus
supplement  relating to that series of Notes. The Assets securing payment on the
Notes will be serviced in  accordance  with a sale and  servicing  agreement  or
servicing agreement.

                                       38


MATERIAL TERMS OF THE POOLING AND SERVICING  AGREEMENTS AND UNDERLYING SERVICING
AGREEMENTS

         GENERAL

         The  following  summaries  describe  the material  provisions  that may
appear in each pooling and servicing agreement,  sale and servicing agreement or
servicing  agreement  (each an  "Agreement").  The  prospectus  supplement for a
series of Notes or Certificates,  as applicable,  will describe any provision of
the  Agreement  relating  to  that  series  that  materially  differs  from  the
description of those provisions  contained in this prospectus.  The summaries do
not purport to be complete  and are subject to, and are  qualified  by reference
to,  all of the  provisions  of the  Agreement  for  each  trust  fund  and  the
description of those provisions in the prospectus supplement.  The provisions of
each Agreement  will vary depending on the nature of the Notes or  Certificates,
as  applicable,  to be issued under the  Agreement and the nature of the related
trust  fund.  As used in this  prospectus  for any series,  the term  "Security"
refers to all of the  Notes or  Certificates,  as  applicable,  of that  series,
whether or not  offered by this  prospectus  and by the  prospectus  supplement,
unless  the  context  otherwise  requires.  A form of a  pooling  and  servicing
agreement  has been filed as an exhibit to the  Registration  Statement of which
this  prospectus is a part. The depositor will provide a copy of the pooling and
servicing  agreement  (without  exhibits)  relating  to any  series  of Notes or
Certificates,   as  applicable,   without  charge  upon  written  request  of  a
securityholder  of that series addressed to ACE Securities  Corp., 6525 Morrison
Boulevard, Suite 318, Charlotte,  North Carolina 28211, Attention:  Elizabeth S.
Eldridge.

         The servicer or master servicer and the trustee for any series of Notes
or Certificates,  as applicable,  will be named in the prospectus supplement. In
the event there are multiple  servicers for the Assets in a trust fund, a master
servicer  will perform some of the  administration,  calculation  and  reporting
functions for that trust fund and will supervise the related servicers  pursuant
to a pooling and servicing agreement.  For a series involving a master servicer,
references in this  prospectus to the servicer will apply to the master servicer
where  non-servicing  obligations are described.  If specified in the prospectus
supplement,  a manager or administrator may be appointed pursuant to the pooling
and servicing agreement for any trust fund to administer that trust fund.

         ASSIGNMENT OF ASSETS; REPURCHASES

         At the time of  issuance  of any  series of Notes or  Certificates,  as
applicable,  the  depositor  will  assign  (or  cause  to be  assigned)  to  the
designated trustee the Assets to be included in the related trust fund, together
with all  principal  and  interest to be  received  on or with  respect to those
Assets  after the Cut-off  Date,  other than  principal  and  interest due on or
before the Cut-off Date and other than any Retained Interest.  The trustee will,
concurrently  with  that  assignment,  deliver  the  Notes or  Certificates,  as
applicable,  to the  depositor  in exchange  for the Assets and the other assets
comprising  the trust fund for that series.  Each Asset will be  identified in a
schedule  appearing as an exhibit to the related  Agreement.  That schedule will
include detailed information to the extent available and relevant

         (1)      in respect of each mortgage loan included in the related trust
         fund,  including the city and state of the related  Mortgaged  Property
         and type of that property,  the mortgage rate and, if  applicable,  the
         applicable index, margin, adjustment date and any rate cap information,
         the  original  and  remaining  term  to  maturity,   the  original  and
         outstanding   principal  balance  and  balloon  payment,  if  any,  the
         Loan-to-Value Ratio as of the date indicated and payment and prepayment
         provisions, if applicable, and

         (2)      in respect of each  Contract  included  in the  related  trust
         fund, including the outstanding principal amount and the Contract Rate;
         and

                                       39


         (3)      in respect of each Mortgage Security and Agency Security,  the
         original and  outstanding  principal  amount,  if any, and the interest
         rate on the Mortgage Security or Agency Security.

         For each mortgage loan, except as otherwise specified in the prospectus
supplement,  the depositor  will deliver or cause to be delivered to the trustee
(or to the custodian  hereinafter referred to) particular loan documents,  which
will generally include the original mortgage note endorsed, without recourse, in
blank or to the order of the trustee, the original Mortgage (or a certified copy
of the original  Mortgage) with evidence of recording  indicated on the original
Mortgage and an assignment  of the Mortgage to the trustee in  recordable  form.
However,  a trust fund may include  mortgage  loans where the original  mortgage
note is not delivered to the trustee if the depositor delivers to the trustee or
the custodian a copy or a duplicate original of the mortgage note, together with
an affidavit  certifying that the original of the mortgage note has been lost or
destroyed.  For those  mortgage  loans,  the trustee (or its nominee) may not be
able to enforce the mortgage note against the related borrower. The Asset Seller
or other entity specified in the prospectus supplement will be required to agree
to  repurchase,  or  substitute  for,  each  of  these  mortgage  loans  that is
subsequently in default if the enforcement thereof or of the related Mortgage is
materially  adversely affected by the absence of the original mortgage note. The
related  Agreement  will  generally  require  the  depositor  or  another  party
specified  in  the  prospectus  supplement  to  promptly  cause  each  of  these
assignments of Mortgage to be recorded in the appropriate public office for real
property records, except in the State of California or in other states where, in
the opinion of counsel  acceptable to the trustee,  recording is not required to
protect the trustee's interest in the related mortgage loan against the claim of
any subsequent transferee or any successor to or creditor of the depositor,  the
servicer,  the  relevant  Asset Seller or any other prior holder of the mortgage
loan.

         The trustee (or a custodian)  will review the mortgage  loan  documents
within a specified  period of days after receipt of the mortgage loan documents,
and the  trustee (or a  custodian)  will hold those  documents  in trust for the
benefit  of the  securityholders.  If any of  these  documents  are  found to be
missing or defective in any material  respect,  the trustee (or that  custodian)
will  immediately  notify the servicer and the depositor,  and the servicer will
immediately  notify the relevant  Asset Seller or other entity  specified in the
prospectus  supplement.  If the Asset Seller  cannot cure the omission or defect
within a specified  number of days after receipt of that notice,  then the Asset
Seller or other entity specified in the prospectus supplement will be obligated,
within a  specified  number of days of  receipt  of that  notice,  to either (1)
repurchase  the related  mortgage  loan from the trustee at a price equal to the
sum of the unpaid  principal  balance of the mortgage loan,  plus unpaid accrued
interest at the interest rate for that Asset from the date as to which  interest
was last paid to the due date in the Due Period in which the  relevant  purchase
is to occur,  plus  servicing  expenses  that are  payable to the  servicer,  or
another price as specified in the prospectus  supplement (the "Purchase  Price")
or (2) substitute a new mortgage  loan.  There can be no assurance that an Asset
Seller or other named  entity  will  fulfill  this  repurchase  or  substitution
obligation,  and neither the  servicer  nor the  depositor  will be obligated to
repurchase  or  substitute  for that  mortgage loan if the Asset Seller or other
named entity defaults on its obligation.

         This repurchase or substitution  obligation constitutes the sole remedy
available to the  securityholders  or the trustee for omission of, or a material
defect in, a constituent  document.  To the extent  specified in the  prospectus
supplement,  in  lieu  of  curing  any  omission  or  defect  in  the  Asset  or
repurchasing  or  substituting  for that Asset,  the Asset Seller or other named
entity may agree to cover any losses  suffered  by the trust fund as a result of
that breach or defect.

         Notwithstanding the preceding three paragraphs,  the documents for Home
Equity Loans, home improvement  contracts and unsecured home improvements  loans
will be delivered to the trustee (or a custodian)  only to the extent  specified
in the prospectus supplement.  Generally these documents will be retained by the
servicer,  which may also be the Asset Seller.  In addition,

                                       40


assignments of the related Mortgages to the trustee will be recorded only to the
extent specified in the prospectus supplement.

         For each  contract,  the servicer,  which may also be the asset seller,
generally will maintain custody of the original contract and copies of documents
and  instruments  related to each  contract  and the  security  interest  in the
manufactured home securing each contract. To give notice of the right, title and
interest  of the  trustee in the  contracts,  the  depositor  will  cause  UCC-1
financing  statements to be executed by the related asset seller identifying the
depositor as secured party and by the depositor  identifying  the trustee as the
secured party and, in each case,  identifying  all contracts as collateral.  The
contracts will be stamped or otherwise  marked to reflect their  assignment from
the depositor to the trust fund only to the extent  specified in the  prospectus
supplement.  Therefore, if, through negligence, fraud or otherwise, a subsequent
purchaser were able to take physical  possession of the contracts without notice
of that  assignment,  the  interest  of the  trustee in the  contracts  could be
defeated.

         While the contract documents will not be reviewed by the trustee or the
servicer, if the servicer finds that any document is missing or defective in any
material  respect,  the  servicer  will be  required to  immediately  notify the
depositor  and the  relevant  asset  seller  or other  entity  specified  in the
prospectus supplement.  If the asset seller or some other entity cannot cure the
omission  or defect  within a  specified  number of days  after  receipt of this
notice,  then the asset seller or that other entity will be obligated,  within a
specified  number of days of receipt of this notice,  to repurchase  the related
contract from the trustee at the purchase price or substitute for that contract.
There can be no assurance  that an asset seller or any other entity will fulfill
this  repurchase or  substitution  obligation,  and neither the servicer nor the
depositor will be obligated to repurchase or substitute for that contract if the
asset seller or any other entity defaults on its obligation.  This repurchase or
substitution   obligation   constitutes   the  sole  remedy   available  to  the
securityholders  or the  trustee  for  omission  of, or a material  defect in, a
constituent document. To the extent specified in the prospectus  supplement,  in
lieu  of  curing  any  omission  or  defect  in the  asset  or  repurchasing  or
substituting  for that  asset,  the asset  seller  may agree to cover any losses
suffered by the trust fund as a result of that breach or defect.

         Mortgage  Securities  and 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 Mortgage  Securities and Agency  Securities  issued
only in book-entry  form,  through the  depository  with respect to the Mortgage
Securities and Agency Securities,  in accordance with the procedures established
by  the  issuer  or  guarantor  for  registration  of  those  certificates,  and
distributions  on those  securities  to which the trust fund is entitled will be
made directly to the trustee.

         REPRESENTATIONS AND WARRANTIES; REPURCHASES

         To the extent provided in the prospectus supplement the depositor will,
for each Asset, assign  representations  and warranties,  as of a specified date
(the person making those representations and warranties, the "Warranting Party")
covering, by way of example, the following types of matters:

         o        the  accuracy of the  information  set forth for that Asset on
                  the schedule of Assets  appearing as an exhibit to the related
                  Agreement;

         o        in the  case  of a  mortgage  loan,  the  existence  of  title
                  insurance insuring the lien priority of the mortgage loan and,
                  in the case of a contract,  that the contract  creates a valid
                  first security interest in or lien on the related manufactured
                  home;

         o        the authority of the Warranting Party to sell the Asset;

                                       41


         o        the payment status of the Asset;

         o        in the case of a mortgage  loan,  the  existence  of customary
                  provisions in the related mortgage note and Mortgage to permit
                  realization  against the Mortgaged  Property of the benefit of
                  the security of the Mortgage; and

         o        the existence of hazard and extended perils insurance coverage
                  on the Mortgaged Property or manufactured home.

         Any  Warranting  Party shall be an Asset  Seller or an affiliate of the
Asset  Seller  or any  other  person  acceptable  to the  depositor  and will be
identified in the prospectus supplement.

         Representations  and  warranties  made in  respect of an Asset may have
been made as of a date before the applicable  Cut-off Date. A substantial period
of time may have elapsed  between that date and the date of initial  issuance of
the  related  series of Notes or  Certificates,  as  applicable,  evidencing  an
interest in that Asset. In the event of a breach of any of these representations
or  warranties,  the  Warranting  Party will be obligated to reimburse the trust
fund for losses  caused by that breach or either cure that breach or  repurchase
or replace the affected Asset as described below. Since the  representations and
warranties may not address events that may occur  following the date as of which
they were made, the Warranting Party will have a reimbursement, cure, repurchase
or substitution  obligation in connection  with a breach of that  representation
and warranty  only if the relevant  event that causes that breach  occurs before
that date.  That party  would have no  obligations  if the  relevant  event that
causes that breach occurs after that date.

         Each Agreement will provide that the servicer and/or trustee or another
entity  identified  in the  prospectus  supplement  will be  required  to notify
promptly the relevant  Warranting Party of any breach of any  representation  or
warranty made by it in respect of an Asset that materially and adversely affects
the value of that Asset or the  interests in the  prospectus  supplement  of the
securityholders.  If the  Warranting  Party  cannot  cure that  breach  within a
specified  period  following  the date on which that party was  notified of that
breach,  then the  Warranting  Party will be obligated to repurchase  that Asset
from the trustee within a specified period from the date on which the Warranting
Party was  notified  of that  breach,  at the  Purchase  Price  therefor.  If so
provided in the prospectus  supplement for a series, a Warranting Party,  rather
than  repurchase  an  Asset as to which a breach  has  occurred,  will  have the
option, within a specified period after initial issuance of that series of Notes
or  Certificates,  as  applicable,  to cause the  removal of that Asset from the
trust fund and substitute in its place one or more other Assets,  as applicable,
in accordance with the standards described in the prospectus  supplement.  If so
provided in the prospectus  supplement for a series, a Warranting Party,  rather
than  repurchase or substitute an Asset as to which a breach has occurred,  will
have the  option to  reimburse  the trust  fund or the  securityholders  for any
losses caused by that breach.  This  reimbursement,  repurchase or  substitution
obligation will constitute the sole remedy available to  securityholders  or the
trustee for a breach of representation by a Warranting Party.

         Neither the depositor  (except to the extent that it is the  Warranting
Party) nor the servicer will be obligated to purchase or substitute for an Asset
if a Warranting  Party defaults on its obligation to do so, and no assurance can
be given  that the  Warranting  Parties  will carry out those  obligations  with
respect to the Assets.

         A servicer  will make  representations  and  warranties  regarding  its
authority to enter into, and its ability to perform its obligations  under,  the
related  Agreement.  A  breach  of  any  representation  of  the  servicer  that
materially and adversely affects the interests of the  securityholders and which
continues unremedied for the number of days specified in the Agreement after the
discovery of the breach by the servicer or the receipt of written notice of that

                                       42


breach by the servicer  from the trustee,  the depositor or the holders of Notes
or  Certificates,  as  applicable,  evidencing  not less than 25% of the  voting
rights or other percentage  specified in the related Agreement,  will constitute
an Event of Default  under that  Agreement.  See "Events of Default" and "Rights
Upon Event of Default."

         COLLECTION ACCOUNT AND RELATED ACCOUNTS

         GENERAL.  The servicer  and/or the trustee will, as to each trust fund,
establish and maintain or cause to be  established  and  maintained  one or more
separate  accounts  for  the  collection  of  payments  on  the  related  Assets
(collectively,  the "Collection Account"),  which must be an account or accounts
that either:

         o        are  insured  by  the  Bank  Insurance  Fund  or  the  Savings
                  Association  Insurance Fund of the Federal  Deposit  Insurance
                  Corporation  ("FDIC") (to the limits  established by the FDIC)
                  and the uninsured  deposits in which are otherwise  secured so
                  that the  securityholders  have a claim  with  respect  to the
                  funds in the Collection  Account or a perfected first priority
                  security interest against any collateral  securing those funds
                  that is  superior  to the  claims of any other  depositors  or
                  general creditors of the institution with which the Collection
                  Account is maintained, or

         o        are maintained  with a bank or trust company,  and in a manner
                  satisfactory to the rating agency or agencies rating any class
                  of Notes or Certificates, as applicable, of that series.

         Investment  of amounts in the  Collection  Account is limited to United
States government securities and other investment grade obligations specified in
the Agreement ("Permitted Investments").  A Collection Account may be maintained
as an interest  bearing or a non-interest  bearing account and the funds held in
the Collection Account may be invested pending each succeeding Distribution Date
in  short-term  Permitted  Investments.  Any interest or other income  earned on
funds  in  the  Collection  Account  will,  unless  otherwise  specified  in the
prospectus  supplement,  be paid to the servicer or its  designee as  additional
servicing  compensation.  The  Collection  Account  may be  maintained  with  an
institution that is an affiliate of the servicer,  if applicable,  provided that
that institution  meets the standards  imposed by the rating agency or agencies.
If permitted by the rating agency or agencies,  a Collection Account may contain
funds relating to more than one series of mortgage pass-through certificates and
may contain other funds  respecting  payments on mortgage loans belonging to the
servicer or serviced or master serviced by it on behalf of others.

         DEPOSITS.  A  servicer  or the  trustee  will  deposit  or  cause to be
deposited  in the  Collection  Account  for one or more  trust  funds on a daily
basis,  or any other period  provided in the related  Agreement,  the  following
payments and  collections  received,  or advances  made,  by the servicer or the
trustee or on its behalf after the Cut-off  Date (other than  payments due on or
before the Cut-off Date,  and exclusive of any amounts  representing  a Retained
Interest), except as otherwise provided in the Agreement:

                  (1)      all  payments  on  account  of  principal,  including
         principal prepayments, on the Assets;

                  (2)      all  payments  on account of  interest on the Assets,
         including  any  default  interest  collected,  in each  case net of any
         portion retained by a servicer as its servicing compensation and net of
         any Retained Interest;

                                       43


                  (3)      Liquidation Proceeds and Insurance Proceeds, together
         with the net  proceeds  on a monthly  basis with  respect to any Assets
         acquired for the benefit of securityholders;

                  (4)      any amounts paid under any  instrument  or drawn from
         any fund that  constitutes  credit  support for the  related  series of
         Notes or Certificates,  as applicable,  as described under "Description
         of Credit Support;"

                  (5)      any advances made as described under  "Description of
         the Securities--Advances in Respect of Delinquencies;"

                  (6)      any amounts  paid under any Cash Flow  Agreement,  as
         described under "Description of the Trust Funds--Cash Flow Agreements;"

                  (7)      all  proceeds  of any Asset  or,  with  respect  to a
         mortgage  loan,  property  acquired  in  respect of the  mortgage  loan
         purchased by the  depositor,  any Asset  Seller or any other  specified
         person as described above under  "--Assignment of Assets;  Repurchases"
         and  "--Representations  and Warranties;  Repurchases," all proceeds of
         any  defaulted   mortgage  loan  purchased  as  described  below  under
         "--Realization  Upon  Defaulted  Assets," and all proceeds of any Asset
         purchased  as  described  under   "Description   of  the   Securities--
         Termination;"

                  (8)      any  amounts  paid by a  servicer  to cover  interest
         shortfalls arising out of the prepayment of Assets in the trust fund as
         described below under "--Retained Interest;  Servicing Compensation and
         Payment of Expenses;"

                  (9)      to  the  extent  that  any  of  these  items  do  not
         constitute  additional  servicing   compensation  to  a  servicer,  any
         payments on account of  modification  or assumption  fees, late payment
         charges or Prepayment Premiums on the Assets;

                  (10)     all   payments   required  to  be  deposited  in  the
         Collection Account with respect to any deductible clause in any blanket
         insurance policy described below under "--Hazard Insurance Policies;"

                  (11)     any amount  required to be deposited by a servicer or
         the trustee in connection  with losses  realized on investments for the
         benefit of the  servicer or the  trustee,  as the case may be, of funds
         held in the Collection Account; and

                  (12)     any other  amounts  required to be  deposited  in the
         Collection  Account as provided in the related  Agreement and described
         in the prospectus supplement.

         WITHDRAWALS.  A  servicer  or the  trustee  may,  from  time to time as
provided in the related Agreement,  make withdrawals from the Collection Account
for each  trust  fund for any of the  following  purposes,  except as  otherwise
provided in the Agreement:

                  (1)      to make distributions to the  securityholders on each
         Distribution Date;

                  (2)      to  reimburse  a servicer  for  unreimbursed  amounts
         advanced as described under "Description of the Securities--Advances in
         Respect of  Delinquencies,"  which  reimbursement  is to be made out of
         amounts  received that were  identified  and applied by the servicer as
         late  collections  of  interest  (net of  related  servicing  fees  and
         Retained  Interest) on and principal of the particular Assets for which
         the advances were made or out of amounts drawn under any form of credit
         support with respect to those Assets;

                                       44


                  (3)      to  reimburse a servicer  for unpaid  servicing  fees
         earned and  unreimbursed  servicing  expenses  incurred with respect to
         Assets  and  properties  acquired  in  respect  of  the  Assets,  which
         reimbursement  is to be made out of amounts that represent  Liquidation
         Proceeds and Insurance  Proceeds collected on the particular Assets and
         properties,  and net income  collected  on the  particular  properties,
         which fees were  earned or  expenses  were  incurred  or out of amounts
         drawn under any form of credit support for those Assets and properties;

                  (4)      to reimburse a servicer for any advances described in
         clause (2) above and any  servicing  expenses  described  in clause (3)
         above  which,  in the  servicer's  good  faith  judgment,  will  not be
         recoverable  from  the  amounts  described  in  those  clauses,   which
         reimbursement is to be made from amounts  collected on other Assets or,
         if and to the extent so provided by the related Agreement and described
         in the  prospectus  supplement,  just  from  that  portion  of  amounts
         collected  on other Assets that is  otherwise  distributable  on one or
         more  classes of  Subordinate  Notes or  Subordinate  Certificates,  as
         applicable,  if any, remain outstanding,  and otherwise any outstanding
         class of Notes or Certificates, as applicable, of the related series;

                  (5)      if and  to the  extent  described  in the  prospectus
         supplement,  to  pay  a  servicer  interest  accrued  on  the  advances
         described in clause (2) above and the servicing  expenses  described in
         clause (3) above while those  advances and  servicing  expenses  remain
         outstanding and unreimbursed;

                  (6)      to  reimburse a servicer,  the  depositor,  or any of
         their respective directors, officers, employees and agents, as the case
         may be, for expenses,  costs and liabilities incurred by these parties,
         as and to the extent described below under "--Certain Matters Regarding
         Servicers, the Master Servicer and the Depositor;"

                  (7)      if and  to the  extent  described  in the  prospectus
         supplement,  to pay (or to transfer to a separate  account for purposes
         of escrowing for the payment of) the trustee's fees;

                  (8)      to  reimburse  the  trustee or any of its  directors,
         officers, employees and agents, as the case may be, for expenses, costs
         and  liabilities  incurred  by  these  parties,  as and  to the  extent
         described below under "--Certain Matters Regarding the Trustee;"

                  (9)      to   pay  a   servicer,   as   additional   servicing
         compensation,  interest  and  investment  income  earned in  respect of
         amounts held in the Collection Account;

                  (10)     to pay the person so entitled  any amounts  deposited
         in the  Collection  Account  that were  identified  and  applied by the
         servicer as recoveries of Retained Interest;

                  (11)     to pay for costs  reasonably  incurred in  connection
         with the proper  management and  maintenance of any Mortgaged  Property
         acquired for the benefit of  securityholders  by foreclosure or by deed
         in lieu of foreclosure or otherwise,  which payments are to be made out
         of income received on that property;

                  (12)     if one or more  elections have been made to treat the
         trust fund or designated  portions of the trust fund as a REMIC, to pay
         any  federal,  state or local  taxes  imposed  on the trust fund or its
         assets or transactions,  as and to the extent described under "Material
         Federal Income Tax Considerations--REMICs--Taxes That May Be Imposed on
         the REMIC Pool" or in the prospectus supplement, respectively;

                                       45


                  (13)     to pay for the cost of an  independent  appraiser  or
         other expert in real estate  matters  retained to determine a fair sale
         price for a defaulted  mortgage loan or a property  acquired in respect
         of a mortgage loan in connection  with the liquidation of that mortgage
         loan or property;

                  (14)     to pay for the cost of  various  opinions  of counsel
         obtained   pursuant  to  the  related  Agreement  for  the  benefit  of
         securityholders;

                  (15)     to  pay  for  the  costs  of  recording  the  related
         Agreement if that recordation  materially and beneficially  affects the
         interests  of  securityholders,  provided  that the  payment  shall not
         constitute a waiver with respect to the  obligation  of the  Warranting
         Party to remedy  any breach of  representation  or  warranty  under the
         Agreement;

                  (16)     to pay the person so entitled  any amounts  deposited
         in the Collection  Account in error,  including amounts received on any
         Asset  after its  removal  from the  trust  fund  whether  by reason of
         purchase or substitution as contemplated  above under  "--Assignment of
         Assets; Repurchase" and "--Representations and Warranties; Repurchases"
         or otherwise;

                  (17)     to  make  any  other  withdrawals  permitted  by  the
         related Agreement; and

                  (18)     to clear and terminate the Collection  Account at the
         termination of the trust fund.

         OTHER COLLECTION ACCOUNTS.  If specified in the prospectus  supplement,
the  Agreement  for any  series of Notes or  Certificates,  as  applicable,  may
provide for the establishment and maintenance of a separate  collection  account
into which the servicer  will  deposit on a daily basis,  or any other period as
provided in the related Agreement,  the amounts described under "Deposits" above
for one or more series of Notes or Certificates,  as applicable.  Any amounts on
deposit  in any of  these  collection  accounts  will be  withdrawn  from  these
collection  accounts and deposited into the appropriate  Collection Account by a
time  specified in the  prospectus  supplement.  To the extent  specified in the
prospectus  supplement,  any amounts that could be withdrawn from the Collection
Account as described under  "--Withdrawals" above may also be withdrawn from any
of these  collection  accounts.  The  prospectus  supplement  will set forth any
restrictions  for  any  of  these  collection  accounts,   including  investment
restrictions and any restrictions for financial  institutions  with which any of
these collection accounts may be maintained.

         The servicer will establish and maintain with the indenture  trustee an
account, in the name of the indenture trustee on behalf of the holders of Notes,
into which amounts released from the Collection  Account for distribution to the
holders  of Notes will be  deposited  and from  which all  distributions  to the
holders of Notes will be made.

         COLLECTION AND OTHER SERVICING PROCEDURES.  The servicer is required to
make reasonable  efforts to collect all scheduled  payments under the Assets and
will follow or cause to be followed those  collection  procedures  that it would
follow with respect to assets that are comparable to the Assets and held for its
own account, provided that those procedures are consistent with

                  (1)      the terms of the  related  Agreement  and any related
                           hazard  insurance  policy  or  instrument  of  credit
                           support,  if any,  included in the related trust fund
                           described in this prospectus or under "Description of
                           Credit Support,"

                  (2)      applicable law and

                                       46


                  (3)      the  general  servicing  standard  specified  in  the
                           prospectus  supplement  or,  if  no  standard  is  so
                           specified,  its normal servicing practices (in either
                           case, the "Servicing Standard").

In  connection,  the servicer  will be permitted in its  discretion to waive any
late  payment  charge or penalty  interest  in  respect of a late  payment on an
Asset.

         Each  servicer  will  also  be  required  to  perform  other  customary
functions  of a servicer of  comparable  assets,  including  maintaining  hazard
insurance  policies  as  described  in  this  prospectus  and in any  prospectus
supplement, and filing and settling claims under these policies; maintaining, to
the  extent  required  by the  Agreement,  escrow  or  impoundment  accounts  of
borrowers for payment of taxes, insurance and other items required to be paid by
any  borrower  pursuant to the terms of the Assets;  processing  assumptions  or
substitutions  in those cases where the servicer has  determined  not to enforce
any applicable due-on-sale clause; attempting to cure delinquencies; supervising
foreclosures or repossessions;  inspecting and managing mortgaged  properties or
manufactured homes under some circumstances;  and maintaining accounting records
relating  to the  Assets.  The  servicer or any other  entity  specified  in the
prospectus  supplement  will be  responsible  for filing and settling  claims in
respect of particular Assets under any applicable  instrument of credit support.
See "Description of Credit Support."

         The servicer may agree to modify,  waive or amend any term of any Asset
in a manner consistent with the Servicing  Standard so long as the modification,
waiver or  amendment  will not (1) affect the amount or timing of any  scheduled
payments  of  principal  or  interest  on the  Asset  or  (2)  in its  judgment,
materially  impair the security for the Asset or reduce the likelihood of timely
payment  of  amounts  due on the  Asset.  The  servicer  also  may  agree to any
modification,  waiver or  amendment  that would so affect or impair the payments
on, or the security for, an Asset if (1) in its judgment,  a material default on
the Asset has occurred or a payment default is reasonably foreseeable and (2) in
its judgment,  that  modification,  waiver or amendment is reasonably  likely to
produce a greater  recovery  with respect to the Asset on a present  value basis
than would liquidation. In the event of any modification, waiver or amendment of
any Asset,  the  servicer  will furnish a copy of that  modification,  waiver or
amendment to the trustee (or its custodian).

         In the case of multifamily loans, a borrower's failure to make required
mortgage loan payments may mean that operating income is insufficient to service
the  mortgage  loan debt,  or may reflect the  diversion of that income from the
servicing of the mortgage loan debt. In addition, a borrower under a multifamily
loan that is unable to make  mortgage  loan  payments may also be unable to make
timely  payment of all required  taxes and  otherwise to maintain and insure the
related Mortgaged Property. In general, the servicer will be required to monitor
any  multifamily  loan that is in  default,  evaluate  whether the causes of the
default can be corrected over a reasonable period without significant impairment
of the  value of  related  Mortgaged  Property,  initiate  corrective  action in
cooperation with the borrower if cure is likely, inspect the related Multifamily
Property  and take  those  other  actions  as are  consistent  with the  related
Agreement.  A significant  period of time may elapse before the servicer is able
to assess  the  success  of  servicer,  can make the  initial  determination  of
appropriate  action,   evaluate  the  success  of  corrective  action,   develop
additional initiatives, institute foreclosure proceedings and actually foreclose
may  vary  considerably  depending  on  the  particular  multifamily  loan,  the
Multifamily  Property,  the  borrower,  the presence of an  acceptable  party to
assume  the  multifamily  loan and the  laws of the  jurisdiction  in which  the
Multifamily Property is located.

         REALIZATION UPON DEFAULTED ASSETS

         Generally,  the  servicer  is  required to monitor any Asset that is in
default,  initiate corrective action in cooperation with the borrower if cure is
likely,  inspect the Asset and take any other actions as are consistent with the
Servicing Standard.  A significant period of time may elapse

                                       47


before the servicer is able to assess the success of that  corrective  action or
the need for additional initiatives.

         Any Agreement  relating to a trust fund that includes mortgage loans or
contracts may grant to the servicer and/or the holder or holders of some classes
of Notes or  Certificates,  as applicable,  a right of first refusal to purchase
from the trust  fund at a  predetermined  purchase  price any  mortgage  loan or
contract  as to  which a  specified  number  of  scheduled  payments  under  the
Agreement are delinquent. Any right of first refusal granted to the holder of an
Offered Security will be described in the prospectus supplement.  The prospectus
supplement  will also  describe any similar  right  granted to any person if the
predetermined  purchase  price is less than the Purchase Price  described  above
under "--Representations and Warranties; Repurchases."

         If specified in the  prospectus  supplement,  the servicer may offer to
sell  any  defaulted  mortgage  loan  or  contract  described  in the  preceding
paragraph  and not  otherwise  purchased  by any person  having a right of first
refusal with respect to that  defaulted  mortgage loan or contract,  if and when
the servicer determines,  consistent with the Servicing Standard, so that a sale
would produce a greater recovery on a present value basis than would liquidation
through foreclosure,  repossession or similar proceedings. The related Agreement
will provide that any offering be made in a commercially reasonable manner for a
specified period and that the servicer accept the highest cash bid received from
any  person   (including   itself,   an   affiliate   of  the  servicer  or  any
securityholder)  that constitutes a fair price for that defaulted  mortgage loan
or contract. If there is no bid that is determined to be fair, the servicer will
proceed with respect to that  defaulted  mortgage  loan or contract as described
below. Any bid in an amount at least equal to the Purchase Price described above
under  "--Representations  and  Warranties;  Repurchases"  will in all  cases be
deemed fair.

         The  servicer,  on behalf  of the  trustee,  may at any time  institute
foreclosure  proceedings,  exercise any power of sale contained in any mortgage,
obtain a deed in lieu of foreclosure,  or otherwise acquire title to a Mortgaged
Property  securing a mortgage  loan by operation of law or otherwise  and may at
any time  repossess  and realize upon any  manufactured  home, if that action is
consistent  with the  Servicing  Standard and a default on that mortgage loan or
contract has occurred or, in the servicer's judgment, is imminent.

         If title to any  Mortgaged  Property  is acquired by a trust fund as to
which a REMIC election has been made, the servicer, on behalf of the trust fund,
will be  required to sell the  Mortgaged  Property  within  three years from the
close of the  calendar  year of  acquisition,  unless (1) the  Internal  Revenue
Service  grants an  extension  of time to sell that  property or (2) the trustee
receives an opinion of independent counsel to the effect that the holding of the
property  by the trust  fund  longer  than  three  years  after the close of the
calendar year of its  acquisition  will not result in the imposition of a tax on
the trust fund or cause the trust  fund to fail to qualify as a REMIC  under the
Code at any time that any Notes or Certificates, as applicable, are outstanding.
Subject to the foregoing,  the servicer will be required to (A) solicit bids for
any Mortgaged  Property so acquired in that manner as will be reasonably  likely
to realize a fair price for that  property  and (B)  accept the first  (and,  if
multiple  bids are  contemporaneously  received,  the highest) cash bid received
from any person that constitutes a fair price.

         The  limitations  imposed  by  the  related  Agreement  and  the  REMIC
provisions of the Code (if a REMIC  election has been made for the related trust
fund) on the ownership and  management  of any  Mortgaged  Property  acquired on
behalf of the trust fund may result in the  recovery  of an amount less than the
amount that would otherwise be recovered. See "Certain Legal Aspects of Mortgage
Loans--Foreclosure."

         If recovery on a defaulted Asset under any related instrument of credit
support is not available,  the servicer nevertheless will be obligated to follow
or cause to be  followed  those

                                       48


normal  practices and  procedures as it deems  necessary or advisable to realize
upon the defaulted  Asset.  If the proceeds of any  liquidation  of the property
securing the defaulted Asset are less than the outstanding  principal balance of
the  defaulted  Asset  plus  interest  accrued  on the  defaulted  Asset  at the
applicable  interest  rate,  plus the total  amount of expenses  incurred by the
servicer in connection with those  proceedings and which are reimbursable  under
the  Agreement,  the  trust  fund  will  realize  a loss in the  amount  of that
difference.  The servicer  will be entitled to withdraw or cause to be withdrawn
from the Collection  Account out of the  Liquidation  Proceeds  recovered on any
defaulted  Asset,  before the  distribution  of those  Liquidation  Proceeds  to
securityholders,  amounts representing its normal servicing  compensation on the
Security, unreimbursed servicing expenses incurred with respect to the Asset and
any unreimbursed advances of delinquent payments made with respect to the Asset.

         If any property  securing a defaulted  Asset is damaged the servicer is
not required to expend its own funds to restore the damaged  property  unless it
determines (1) that restoration will increase the proceeds to securityholders on
liquidation  of the Asset after  reimbursement  of the servicer for its expenses
and (2) that its  expenses  will be  recoverable  by it from  related  Insurance
Proceeds or Liquidation Proceeds.

         The pooling and servicing agreement will require the trustee, if it has
not received a distribution for any Mortgage  Security or Agency Security by the
fifth business day after the date on which that distribution was due and payable
pursuant  to the  terms of that  Agency  Security,  to  request  the  issuer  or
guarantor,  if any, of that  Mortgage  Security or Agency  Security to make that
payment as promptly  as possible  and  legally  permitted  to take legal  action
against  that 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 this legal action will be  reimbursable  to the trustee
out of the  proceeds of that  action and will be retained by the trustee  before
the  deposit  of any  remaining  proceeds  in  the  Collection  Account  pending
distribution of the Collection Account to securityholders of the related series.
If the proceeds of any legal action are  insufficient  to reimburse  the trustee
for its legal fees and  expenses,  the trustee will be entitled to withdraw from
the Collection  Account an amount equal to its expenses,  and the trust fund may
realize a loss in that amount.

         As servicer of the Assets, a servicer, on behalf of itself, the trustee
and  the  securityholders,  will  present  claims  to the  borrower  under  each
instrument  of credit  support,  and will  take  those  reasonable  steps as are
necessary to receive payment or to permit  recovery under these  instruments for
defaulted Assets.

         If a servicer or its designee recovers payments under any instrument of
credit  support  for any  defaulted  Assets,  the  servicer  will be entitled to
withdraw  or cause to be  withdrawn  from the  Collection  Account  out of those
proceeds,  before  distribution  of the Collection  Account to  securityholders,
amounts   representing  its  normal   servicing   compensation  on  that  Asset,
unreimbursed  servicing  expenses  incurred  for the Asset and any  unreimbursed
advances of  delinquent  payments  made with  respect to the Asset.  See "Hazard
Insurance Policies" and "Description of Credit Support."

         HAZARD INSURANCE POLICIES

         MORTGAGE LOANS. Generally,  each Agreement for a trust fund composed of
mortgage  loans will require the servicer to cause the borrower on each mortgage
loan to maintain a hazard insurance policy (including flood insurance  coverage,
if obtainable,  to the extent the property is located in a federally  designated
flood area, in an amount as is required under applicable  guidelines)  providing
for the level of coverage that is required under the related Mortgage or, if any
Mortgage permits its holder to dictate to the borrower the insurance coverage to
be

                                       49


maintained on the related Mortgaged Property, then the level of coverage that is
consistent with the Servicing  Standard.  That coverage will be in general in an
amount equal to the lesser of the principal  balance owing on that mortgage loan
(but not  less  than the  amount  necessary  to  avoid  the  application  of any
co-insurance  clause  contained in the hazard  insurance  policy) and the amount
necessary to fully  compensate for any damage or loss to the improvements on the
Mortgaged  Property on a replacement cost basis or any other amount specified in
the  prospectus  supplement.  The ability of the  servicer to assure that hazard
insurance  proceeds are  appropriately  applied may be dependent  upon its being
named as an additional  insured under any hazard  insurance policy and under any
other  insurance  policy  referred  to  below,  or  upon  the  extent  to  which
information in this regard is furnished by borrowers.  All amounts  collected by
the servicer  under any of these  policies  (except for amounts to be applied to
the restoration or repair of the Mortgaged  Property or released to the borrower
in accordance with the servicer's  normal servicing  procedures,  subject to the
terms  and  conditions  of the  related  Mortgage  and  mortgage  note)  will be
deposited in the Collection Account in accordance with the related Agreement.

         The Agreement may provide that the servicer may satisfy its  obligation
to cause each borrower to maintain a hazard  insurance  policy by the servicer's
maintaining  a blanket  policy  insuring  against  hazard losses on the mortgage
loans. If the blanket policy contains a deductible  clause, the servicer will be
required to deposit in the  Collection  Account from its own funds all sums that
would have been deposited in the Collection Account but for that clause.

         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  mortgage  loans  will  be
underwritten by different insurers under different state laws in accordance with
different applicable state forms, and therefore will not contain identical terms
and conditions, the basic terms of the policies are dictated by respective state
laws,  and most of these  policies  typically do not cover any  physical  damage
resulting  from  war,  revolution,   governmental  actions,   floods  and  other
water-related  causes,  earth movement  (including  earthquakes,  landslides and
mudflows), wet or dry rot, vermin, domestic animals and other kinds of uninsured
risks.

         The  hazard  insurance  policies  covering  the  Mortgaged   Properties
securing the mortgage loans will typically contain a coinsurance  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 to recover the full amount of any partial loss. If
the insured's  coverage falls below this specified  percentage,  the coinsurance
clause generally  provides that the insurer's  liability in the event of partial
loss does not exceed the lesser of (1) the replacement  cost of the improvements
less physical  depreciation and (2) that proportion of the loss as the amount of
insurance carried bears to the specified percentage of the full replacement cost
of those improvements.

         Each Agreement for a trust fund composed of mortgage loans will require
the servicer to cause the borrower on each  mortgage  loan to maintain all other
insurance  coverage for the related Mortgaged Property as is consistent with the
terms of the related  Mortgage and the Servicing  Standard,  which insurance may
typically include flood insurance (if the related Mortgaged Property was located
at the time of origination in a federally designated flood area).

         Any cost incurred by the servicer in maintaining  any insurance  policy
will be added to the amount owing under the mortgage loan where the terms of the
mortgage loan so permit; provided,  however, that the addition of that cost will
not be taken into account for purposes of  calculating  the  distribution  to be
made to  securityholders.  Those costs may be recovered by the servicer from the
Collection Account, with interest, as provided by the Agreement.

                                       50


         Under the terms of the  mortgage  loans,  borrowers  will  generally be
required  to  present  claims  to  insurers  under  hazard  insurance   policies
maintained on the related Mortgaged  Properties.  The servicer, on behalf of the
trustee and  securityholders,  is  obligated to present or cause to be presented
claims under any blanket  insurance  policy  insuring  against  hazard losses on
Mortgaged  Properties securing the mortgage loans.  However,  the ability of the
servicer to present or cause to be presented  those claims is dependent upon the
extent to which  information  in this  regard is  furnished  to the  servicer by
borrowers.

         CONTRACTS.  Generally,  the  terms of the  agreement  for a trust  fund
composed of contracts  will  require the servicer to maintain for each  contract
one or more hazard  insurance  policies  that  provide,  at a minimum,  the same
coverage as a standard form fire and extended coverage  insurance policy that is
customary  for  manufactured  housing,  issued by a company  authorized to issue
those policies in the state in which the manufactured home is located, and in an
amount that is not less than the maximum  insurable  value of that  manufactured
home or the  principal  balance due from the  borrower on the related  contract,
whichever is less;  provided,  however,  that the amount of coverage provided by
each hazard  insurance policy must be sufficient to avoid the application of any
co-insurance clause contained therein.  When a manufactured home's location was,
at the  time  of  origination  of  the  related  contract,  within  a  federally
designated special flood hazard area, the servicer must cause flood insurance to
be  maintained,  which  coverage  must be at least equal to the  minimum  amount
specified  in the  preceding  sentence or any lesser  amount as may be available
under the federal flood insurance  program.  Each hazard insurance policy caused
to be  maintained  by the servicer  must contain a standard loss payee clause in
favor of the servicer  and its  successors  and  assigns.  If any borrower is in
default in the payment of premiums on its hazard  insurance  policy or policies,
the  servicer  must  pay  those  premiums  out of its  own  funds,  and  may add
separately  the  premiums  to  the  borrower's  obligation  as  provided  by the
contract, but may not add the premiums to the remaining principal balance of the
contract.

         The  servicer  may  maintain,  in lieu  of  causing  individual  hazard
insurance  policies  to be  maintained  for  each  manufactured  home,  and must
maintain,  to the extent that the related contract does not require the borrower
to maintain a hazard insurance policy for the related  manufactured home, one or
more blanket insurance  policies  covering losses on the borrower's  interest in
the contracts  resulting from the absence or insufficiency of individual  hazard
insurance policies. The servicer must pay the premium for that blanket policy on
the basis described  therein and must pay any deductible amount for claims under
that policy relating to the contracts.

         FHA INSURANCE AND VA GUARANTEES

         FHA loans will be insured by the FHA as  authorized  under the  Housing
Act.  Some FHA 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 Notes or
Certificates, as applicable, 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 prospectus  supplement,  the following  describes FHA insurance
programs and regulations as generally in effect for 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 servicer
and are paid to the FHA. The regulations  governing FHA  single-family  mortgage
insurance  programs  provide that  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.  For a defaulted FHA loan, the servicer is
limited  in  its  ability  to  initiate  foreclosure  proceedings.  When  it  is
determined,  either  by  the  servicer  or  HUD,

                                       51


that default was caused by  circumstances  beyond the  borrower's  control,  the
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
borrower.  Those  plans may  involve  the  reduction  or  suspension  of regular
mortgage payments for a specified  period,  with those payments to be made on or
before the maturity date of the mortgage, or the recasting of payments due under
the  mortgage up to or,  other than FHA loans  originated  under the FHA Title I
Program,  beyond the maturity date. In addition,  when a default caused by those
circumstances is accompanied by other criteria, HUD may provide relief by making
payments to the  servicer in partial or full  satisfaction  of amounts due under
the FHA loan  (which  payments  are to be repaid by the  borrower  to HUD) or by
accepting  assignment of the loan from the servicer.  With some  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 borrower  before the
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. To the extent specified in the prospectus  supplement,
the  servicer of each single  family FHA loan will be  obligated to purchase any
debenture  issued in  satisfaction  of that FHA loan upon  default for an amount
equal to the principal amount of that debenture.

         Other  than in  relation  to the FHA  Title I  Program,  the  amount of
insurance  benefits  generally  paid by the FHA is  equal to the  entire  unpaid
principal  amount of the  defaulted  FHA loan adjusted to reimburse the servicer
for some of its costs and expenses and to deduct amounts received or retained by
the servicer after default.  When entitlement to insurance benefits results from
foreclosure  (or other  acquisition  of  possession)  and conveyance to HUD, the
servicer is compensated for no more than  two-thirds of its  foreclosure  costs,
and is  compensated  for  interest  accrued  and unpaid  before that 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 FHA 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 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.

         VA loans will be partially  guaranteed by the VA under the Serviceman's
Readjustment Act (a "VA Guaranty Policy"). For a defaulted VA loan, the servicer
is, absent  exceptional  circumstances,  authorized to announce its intention to
foreclose  only when the default has continued for three  months.  Generally,  a
claim  for  the  guarantee  is  submitted  after  liquidation  of the  Mortgaged
Property.

         The amount payable under the guarantee will be the percentage of the VA
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 that VA loan,
interest  accrued on the unpaid balance of that VA loan to the appropriate  date
of computation and limited  expenses of the mortgagee,  but in each case only to
the extent that those amounts have not been recovered through liquidation of the
Mortgaged  Property.  The amount  payable  under the  guarantee  may in no event
exceed the amount of the original guarantee.

         FIDELITY BONDS AND ERRORS AND OMISSIONS INSURANCE

         Each  Agreement  will require that the servicer  obtain and maintain in
effect a fidelity bond or similar form of insurance  coverage (which may provide
blanket  coverage) or any combination

                                       52


of these insuring against loss occasioned by fraud,  theft or other  intentional
misconduct  of the officers,  employees and agents of the servicer.  The related
Agreement will allow the servicer to self-insure  against loss occasioned by the
errors and  omissions of the  officers,  employees and agents of the servicer so
long as the criteria set forth in the Agreement are met.

         DUE-ON-SALE CLAUSES

         The mortgage  loans may contain  clauses  requiring  the consent of the
mortgagee to any sale or other transfer of the related  Mortgaged  Property,  or
due-on-sale  clauses  entitling  the  mortgagee  to  accelerate  payment  of the
mortgage loan upon any sale,  transfer or  conveyance  of the related  Mortgaged
Property.  The servicer will  generally  enforce any  due-on-sale  clause to the
extent  it has  knowledge  of  the  conveyance  or  proposed  conveyance  of the
underlying  Mortgaged Property and it is entitled to do so under applicable law;
provided, however, that the servicer will not take any action in relation to the
enforcement of any due-on-sale clause that would:

         o        adversely  affect or jeopardize  coverage under any applicable
                  insurance policy or

         o        materially  increase the risk of default or delinquency on, or
                  materially impair the security for, that mortgage loan.

         Any fee  collected by or on behalf of the servicer for entering into an
assumption  agreement  will be  retained  by or on  behalf  of the  servicer  as
additional  servicing  compensation.  See  "Certain  Legal  Aspects of  Mortgage
Loans--Due-on-Sale Clauses."

         The  contracts  may also contain  clauses  requiring the consent of the
mortgagee to any sale or other transfer of the related  mortgaged  property,  or
due-on-sale clauses. The servicer will generally permit that transfer so long as
the transferee satisfies the servicer's then applicable  underwriting standards.
The purpose of those  transfers is often to avoid a default by the  transferring
borrower.

         RETAINED INTEREST, SERVICING COMPENSATION AND PAYMENT OF EXPENSES

         The  prospectus  supplement for a series of Notes or  Certificates,  as
applicable,  will specify  whether  there will be any  Retained  Interest in the
Assets,  and, if so, the initial  owner of this  Retained  Interest.  If so, the
Retained  Interest  will be  established  on a  loan-by-loan  basis  and will be
specified on an exhibit to the related  Agreement.  A "Retained  Interest" in an
Asset  represents a specified  portion of the interest payable on the Asset. The
Retained  Interest will be deducted from borrower  payments as received and will
not be part of the related trust fund.

         The servicer's primary servicing  compensation for a series of Notes or
Certificates,  as  applicable,  will come from the  periodic  payment to it of a
portion of the interest  payment on each Asset or any other amount  specified in
the prospectus supplement.  Since any Retained Interest and a servicer's primary
compensation  are  percentages  of the  principal  balance of each Asset,  those
amounts will decrease in accordance  with the  amortization  of the Assets.  The
prospectus  supplement  for a series of Notes or  Certificates,  as  applicable,
evidencing  interests in a trust fund that includes  mortgage loans or contracts
may provide that, as additional  compensation,  the servicer may retain all or a
portion  of  assumption  fees,   modification  fees,  late  payment  charges  or
Prepayment  Premiums  collected  from borrowers and any interest or other income
that may be  earned  on funds  held in the  Collection  Account  or any  account
established by a servicer pursuant to the Agreement.

         The servicer may, to the extent provided in the prospectus  supplement,
pay from its servicing  compensation  expenses  incurred in connection  with its
servicing  and  managing  of the  Assets,  including  payment  of the  fees  and
disbursements  of the trustee and independent

                                       53


accountants,  payment of expenses incurred in connection with  distributions and
reports to  securityholders,  and payment of any other expenses described in the
prospectus  supplement.  Some other  expenses,  including  expenses  relating to
defaults  and  liquidations  on the Assets and, to the extent so provided in the
prospectus  supplement,  interest on these expenses at the rate specified in the
prospectus supplement may be borne by the trust fund.

         If  and to the  extent  provided  in  the  prospectus  supplement,  the
servicer  may be  required  to apply a  portion  of the  servicing  compensation
otherwise  payable to it in respect  of any Due  Period to  interest  shortfalls
resulting from the voluntary  prepayment of any Assets in the related trust fund
during that period before their due dates.

         EVIDENCE AS TO COMPLIANCE

         Each  Agreement  relating  to Assets  that  include  mortgage  loans or
contracts,  unless otherwise provided in the prospectus supplement, will provide
that on or before a  specified  date in each year,  beginning  with the first of
these  dates at least six  months  after the  related  Cut-off  Date,  a firm of
independent  public  accountants  will furnish a statement to the trustee to the
effect  that,  on  the  basis  of  the   examination   by  that  firm  conducted
substantially in compliance with either the Uniform Single  Attestation  Program
for Mortgage Bankers,  the Audit Program for Mortgages  serviced for Freddie Mac
or any other program used by the servicer,  the servicing by or on behalf of the
servicer of mortgage loans under agreements  substantially similar to each other
(including the related  Agreement) was conducted in compliance with the terms of
those agreements or that program except for any significant exceptions or errors
in records  that,  in the  opinion of the firm,  either  the Audit  Program  for
Mortgages  serviced  for  Freddie  Mac, or  paragraph  4 of the  Uniform  Single
Attestation Program for Mortgage Bankers,  or any other program,  requires it to
report.

         Each  Agreement  will also provide for  delivery to the trustee,  on or
before  a  specified  date in each  year,  of an  officer's  certificate  of the
servicer to the effect that the servicer has fulfilled its obligations under the
Agreement throughout the preceding calendar year or other specified twelve-month
period.

         CERTAIN  MATTERS  REGARDING  SERVICERS,  THE  MASTER  SERVICER  AND THE
         DEPOSITOR

         The servicer or master  servicer  under each Agreement will be named in
the prospectus  supplement.  The entities serving as servicer or master servicer
may  be  affiliates  of  the  depositor  and  may  have  other  normal  business
relationships with the depositor or the depositor's  affiliates.  If applicable,
reference in this  prospectus  to the servicer  will also be deemed to be to the
master servicer. Each Agreement will provide, in general, that:

         o        The servicer may resign from its  obligations and duties under
                  the Agreement only upon a determination  that its duties under
                  the Agreement are no longer  permissible  under applicable law
                  or are in material  conflict by reason of applicable  law with
                  any other activities carried on by it, the other activities of
                  the  servicer  so causing  that  conflict  being of a type and
                  nature  carried  on  by  the  servicer  at  the  date  of  the
                  Agreement.  No  resignation  will become  effective  until the
                  trustee or a successor  servicer  has  assumed the  servicer's
                  obligations and duties under the Agreement.

         o        Neither any servicer, the depositor nor any director, officer,
                  employee,  or agent of a  servicer  or the  depositor  will 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;  provided,  however,  that neither a servicer,  the
                  depositor  nor any other person will be protected  against any
                  breach of a  representation,  warranty or covenant made in the
                  related  Agreement,  or  against

                                       54


                  any  liability  specifically  imposed  by  the  Agreement,  or
                  against  any  liability  that  would  otherwise  be imposed by
                  reason of willful  misfeasance,  bad faith or gross negligence
                  in  the   performance  of  obligations  or  duties  under  the
                  Agreement or by reason of reckless  disregard  of  obligations
                  and duties under the Agreement.

         o        Any  servicer,  the  depositor  and  any  director,   officer,
                  employee  or  agent of a  servicer  or the  depositor  will be
                  entitled to indemnification by the related 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  Notes  or  Certificates,   as  applicable;
                  provided,  however,  that that indemnification will not extend
                  to any loss, liability or expense

                  (1)      specifically  imposed by that  Agreement or otherwise
                           incidental  to the  performance  of  obligations  and
                           duties under the Agreement, including, in the case of
                           a servicer,  the prosecution of an enforcement action
                           in respect of any specific  mortgage loan or mortgage
                           loans or contract or  contracts  (except as any loss,
                           liability or expense  will be otherwise  reimbursable
                           pursuant to that Agreement);

                  (2)      incurred   in   connection   with  any  breach  of  a
                           representation,  warranty  or  covenant  made in that
                           Agreement;

                  (3)      incurred by reason of misfeasance, bad faith or gross
                           negligence  in  the  performance  of  obligations  or
                           duties under the Agreement,  or by reason of reckless
                           disregard of those obligations or duties;

                  (4)      incurred  in  connection  with any  violation  of any
                           state or federal securities law; or

                  (5)      imposed  by  any  taxing   authority  if  that  loss,
                           liability or expense is not specifically reimbursable
                           pursuant to the terms of the related Agreement.

         o        Neither  any  servicer  nor the  depositor  will be under  any
                  obligation to appear in,  prosecute or defend any legal action
                  that  is not  incidental  to its  respective  responsibilities
                  under the Agreement and which in its opinion may involve it in
                  any expense or liability.  Any servicer or the depositor  may,
                  however,  in its discretion  undertake any action which it may
                  deem  necessary or desirable with respect to the Agreement and
                  the rights and duties of the parties to the  Agreement and the
                  interests of the securityholders under the Agreement.  In that
                  event,  the legal  expenses  and costs of that  action and any
                  liability resulting will be expenses, costs and liabilities of
                  the securityholders, and the servicer or the depositor, as the
                  case may be, will be entitled to be reimbursed therefor and to
                  charge the Collection Account.

         Any person into which the  servicer or the  depositor  may be merged or
consolidated,  or any person resulting from any merger or consolidation to which
the  servicer  or the  depositor  is a party,  or any person  succeeding  to the
business of the servicer or the depositor,  may be the successor of the servicer
or the depositor, as the case may be, under the terms of the related Agreement.

         SPECIAL SERVICERS

         If and to the extent specified in the prospectus supplement,  a special
servicer (a "Special  servicer") may be a party to the related  Agreement or may
be  appointed by the servicer or another  specified  party to perform  specified
duties in respect of servicing the related  mortgage loans that

                                       55


would  otherwise be performed by the servicer (for example,  the workout  and/or
foreclosure  of defaulted  mortgage  loans).  The rights and  obligations of any
Special  servicer  will  be  specified  in the  prospectus  supplement,  and the
servicer will be liable for the  performance of a Special  servicer only if, and
to the extent, set forth in the prospectus supplement.

         EVENTS OF DEFAULT UNDER THE AGREEMENT

         o        Events of default under the related  Agreement  will generally
                  include:

         o        any  failure  by the  servicer  to  distribute  or cause to be
                  distributed to securityholders, or to remit to the trustee for
                  distribution  to  securityholders,  any required  payment that
                  continues after a grace period, if any;

         o        any failure by the servicer  duly to observe or perform in any
                  material  respect any of its other  covenants  or  obligations
                  under the  Agreement  that  continues  unremedied  for 30 days
                  after  written  notice of that  failure  has been given to the
                  servicer by the trustee or the depositor,  or to the servicer,
                  the  depositor and the trustee by  securityholders  evidencing
                  not less than 25% of the voting rights for that series;

         o        any  breach  of a  representation  or  warranty  made  by  the
                  servicer  under the Agreement  that  materially  and adversely
                  affects the interests of  securityholders  and which continues
                  unremedied for 30 days after written notice of that breach has
                  been given to the servicer by the trustee or the depositor, or
                  to the servicer,  the depositor and the trustee by the holders
                  of Notes or Certificates,  as applicable,  evidencing not less
                  than 25% of the voting rights for that series; and

         o        some events of insolvency, readjustment of debt, marshaling of
                  assets and  liabilities or similar  proceedings and actions by
                  or on behalf of the  servicer  indicating  its  insolvency  or
                  inability to pay its obligations.

         Material  variations to the foregoing  events of default (other than to
shorten cure periods or eliminate notice  requirements) will be specified in the
prospectus supplement.  The trustee will, not later than the later of 60 days or
any other period specified in the prospectus  supplement after the occurrence of
any event  that  constitutes  or,  with  notice or lapse of time or both,  would
constitute  an event of default  and five days after  specific  officers  of the
trustee  become aware of the  occurrence of that event,  transmit by mail to the
depositor  and all  securityholders  of the  applicable  series  notice  of that
occurrence, unless that default has been cured or waived.

         RIGHTS UPON EVENT OF DEFAULT UNDER THE AGREEMENTS

         So long as an event of default under an Agreement  remains  unremedied,
the  depositor or the trustee  may, and at the  direction of holders of Notes or
Certificates,  as  applicable,  evidencing  not  less  than  51% (or  any  other
percentage specified in the Agreement) of the voting rights for that series, the
trustee will  terminate all of the rights and  obligations of the servicer under
the Agreement and in and to the mortgage  loans (other than as a  securityholder
or as the owner of any Retained Interest), whereupon the trustee will succeed to
all of the  responsibilities,  duties and  liabilities of the servicer under the
Agreement  (except  that if the  trustee is  prohibited  by law from  obligating
itself  to make  advances  regarding  delinquent  Assets,  or if the  prospectus
supplement  so  specifies,  then the trustee will not be obligated to make those
advances)  and will be entitled  to similar  compensation  arrangements.  If the
trustee is unwilling  or unable so to act, it may or, at the written  request of
the holders of Notes or  Certificates,  as applicable,  entitled to at least 51%
(or any other  percentage  specified in the  Agreement) of the voting rights for
that series, it must appoint, or petition a court of competent  jurisdiction for
the appointment of, a loan servicing institution

                                       56


acceptable to the rating agency with a net worth at the time of that appointment
of at least  $15,000,000 (or any other amount specified in the Agreement) to act
as successor to the servicer under the Agreement.  Pending that appointment, the
trustee is  obligated  to act in that  capacity.  The trustee and any  successor
servicer may agree upon the servicing compensation to be paid, which in no event
may be  greater  than  the  compensation  payable  to  the  servicer  under  the
Agreement.

         The holders of Notes or  Certificates,  as applicable,  representing at
least 66 2/3% (or any other percentage specified in the Agreement) of the voting
rights  allocated  to the  respective  classes  of  Notes  or  Certificates,  as
applicable,  affected  by any event of default  will be  entitled  to waive that
event of  default;  provided,  however,  that an Event of  Default  involving  a
failure to distribute a required payment to securityholders  described in clause
(1) under "Events of Default under the  Agreements" may be waived only by all of
the  securityholders.  Upon any  waiver of an event of  default,  that  event of
default  will cease to exist and will be deemed to have been  remedied for every
purpose under the Agreement.

         No securityholders will have the right under any Agreement to institute
any proceeding with respect to the Agreement  unless that holder  previously has
given to the trustee  written  notice of default and unless the holders of Notes
or  Certificates,  as  applicable,  evidencing  not less  than 25% (or any other
percentage  specified in the  Agreement)  of the voting rights have made written
request upon the trustee to institute that proceeding in its own name as trustee
under the Agreement and have offered to the trustee  reasonable  indemnity,  and
the trustee for 60 days (or any other number of days specified in the Agreement)
has neglected or refused to institute any proceeding.  The trustee,  however, is
under no  obligation to exercise any of the trusts or powers vested in it by any
Agreement or to make any investigation of matters arising under the Agreement or
to  institute,  conduct  or defend  any  litigation  under the  Agreement  or in
relation to the  Agreement  at the  request,  order or  direction  of any of the
securityholders  covered by that Agreement,  unless those  securityholders  have
offered to the  trustee  reasonable  security  or  indemnity  against the costs,
expenses and liabilities that may be incurred.

         The manner of  determining  the voting rights of a Security or class or
classes  of Notes or  Certificates,  as  applicable,  will be  specified  in the
Agreement.

         AMENDMENT

         In general, each Agreement may be amended by the parties to it, without
the consent of any securityholders covered by the Agreement, to

                  (1)      cure any ambiguity or mistake;

                  (2)      correct,  modify or  supplement  any provision in the
         Agreement  that may be  inconsistent  with any other  provision  in the
         Agreement or with the prospectus supplement;

                  (3)      make any other  provisions with respect to matters or
         questions   arising  under  the  Agreement   that  are  not  materially
         inconsistent with the provisions of the Agreement; or

                  (4)      comply  with any  requirements  imposed  by the Code;
         provided  that,  in the case of clause  (3),  that  amendment  will not
         adversely   affect  in  any  material  respect  the  interests  of  any
         securityholders  covered by the  Agreement  as  evidenced  either by an
         opinion of counsel to that  effect or the  delivery  to the  trustee of
         written  notification  from each rating  agency that  provides,  at the
         request of the  depositor,  a rating for the  Offered  Notes or Offered
         Certificates,  as applicable,  of the related series to the effect that
         that

                                       57


         amendment or  supplement  will not cause that rating agency to lower or
         withdraw   the  then  current   rating   assigned  to  those  Notes  or
         Certificates, as applicable.

         In general,  each Agreement may also be amended by the  depositor,  the
servicer,  if any,  and the  trustee,  with the  consent of the  securityholders
affected by the amendment  evidencing not less than 51% (or any other percentage
specified in the  Agreement) of the voting  rights,  for any purpose;  provided,
however,  no amendment  may (1) reduce in any manner the amount of, or delay the
timing of,  payments  received or  advanced  on Assets  that are  required to be
distributed  on any Security  without the consent of the  securityholder  or (2)
reduce the consent  percentages  described in this paragraph without the consent
of all the securityholders  covered by the Agreement then outstanding.  However,
for any  series of Notes or  Certificates,  as  applicable,  as to which a REMIC
election is to be made,  the trustee  will not consent to any  amendment  of the
Agreement  unless it has first have received an opinion of counsel to the effect
that that  amendment  will not result in the  imposition of a tax on the related
trust fund or, if applicable, cause the related trust fund to fail to qualify as
a REMIC, at any time that the related Notes or Certificates,  as applicable, are
outstanding.

         THE TRUSTEE

         The  trustee  under  each  Agreement  will be named  in the  prospectus
supplement.   The  commercial  bank,  national  banking   association,   banking
corporation or trust company serving as trustee may have a banking  relationship
with the depositor and its affiliates,  with any servicer and its affiliates and
with any master servicer and its affiliates.  To the extent  consistent with its
fiduciary  obligations as trustee, the trustee may delegate its duties to one or
more agents as provided in the Agreement.

         DUTIES OF THE TRUSTEE

         The  trustee  will  make  no  representations  as to  the  validity  or
sufficiency of any Agreement, the Notes or Certificates,  as applicable,  or any
Asset or related  document and is not  accountable for the use or application by
or on behalf of any  servicer  of any funds paid to the master  servicer  or its
designee in respect of the Notes or Certificates,  as applicable, or the Assets,
or deposited into or withdrawn from the Collection  Account or any other account
by or on behalf of the  servicer.  If no Event of Default  has  occurred  and is
continuing,  the trustee is required to perform only those  duties  specifically
required under the related Agreement,  as applicable.  However,  upon receipt of
the various certificates,  reports or other instruments required to be furnished
to it, the trustee is  required  to examine  those  documents  and to  determine
whether they conform to the requirements of the Agreement.

         CERTAIN MATTERS REGARDING THE TRUSTEE

         The trustee and any director, officer, employee or agent of the trustee
will be entitled to indemnification  out of the Collection Account for any loss,
liability  or  expense  (including  costs and  expenses  of  litigation,  and of
investigation,  counsel fees, damages, judgments and amounts paid in settlement)
incurred in connection with the trustee's

         (1)      enforcing its rights and remedies and protecting the interests
                  of the  securityholders  during the continuance of an Event of
                  Default,

         (2)      defending  or  prosecuting  any legal action in respect of the
                  related  Agreement  or  series  of Notes or  Certificates,  as
                  applicable,

                                       58


         (3)      being the  mortgagee  of record  for the  mortgage  loans in a
                  trust fund and the owner of record for any Mortgaged  Property
                  acquired    in   respect    thereof   for   the   benefit   of
                  securityholders, or

         (4)      acting  or  refraining  from  acting  in  good  faith  at  the
                  direction  of the  holders of the  related  series of Notes or
                  Certificates, as applicable, entitled to not less than 25% (or
                  any other percentage as is specified in the related  Agreement
                  for any  particular  matter)  of the  voting  rights  for that
                  series;

provided,  however,  that  this  indemnification  will not  extend  to any loss,
liability  or expense  that  constitutes  a specific  liability  of the  trustee
pursuant to the related Agreement, or to any loss, liability or expense incurred
by reason of willful  misfeasance,  bad faith or  negligence  on the part of the
trustee in the performance of its obligations and duties under the Agreement, or
by reason of its reckless  disregard of those  obligations or duties,  or as may
arise from a breach of any  representation,  warranty or covenant of the trustee
made in the Agreement.

         RESIGNATION AND REMOVAL OF THE TRUSTEE

         The  trustee may at any time  resign  from its  obligations  and duties
under an Agreement by giving written notice of its resignation to the depositor,
the  servicer,  if  any,  each  rating  agency,  and all  securityholders.  Upon
receiving  that notice of  resignation,  the  depositor is required  promptly to
appoint a successor trustee acceptable to the servicer,  if any. If no successor
trustee has been so appointed and has accepted  appointment within 30 days after
the giving of that notice of resignation, the resigning trustee may petition any
court of competent jurisdiction for the appointment of a successor trustee.

         If at any time the  trustee  ceases to be  eligible  to  continue  as a
trustee  under the  related  Agreement,  or if at any time the  trustee  becomes
incapable of acting, or is adjudged bankrupt or insolvent,  or a receiver of the
trustee or of its property is appointed,  or any public  officer takes charge or
control  of the  trustee  or of its  property  or  affairs  for the  purpose  of
rehabilitation,  conservation  or  liquidation,  or if a change in the financial
condition of the trustee has  adversely  affected or will  adversely  affect the
rating  on any  class of the  Notes or  Certificates,  as  applicable,  then the
depositor  and/or a party  specified  in the  related  Agreement  may remove the
trustee and appoint a successor  trustee  acceptable to the master servicer,  if
any,  according to the terms of the related  Agreement.  Securityholders  of any
series  entitled  to at least  51% (or any  other  percentage  specified  in the
prospectus  supplement)  of the voting  rights  for that  series may at any time
remove the trustee without cause and appoint a successor trustee.

         Any  resignation  or  removal  of  the  trustee  and  appointment  of a
successor  trustee will not become  effective until acceptance of appointment by
the successor trustee.

MATERIAL TERMS OF THE INDENTURE

         GENERAL

         The following summary describes the material provisions that may appear
in each indenture. The prospectus supplement for a series of Notes will describe
any provision of the indenture  relating to that series that materially  differs
from  the  description  of that  provision  contained  in this  prospectus.  The
summaries do not purport to be complete and are subject to, and are qualified by
reference to, all of the  provisions  of the indenture for a series of Notes.  A
form of an indenture has been filed as an exhibit to the Registration  Statement
of which this  prospectus is a part.  The  depositor  will provide a copy of the
indenture (without exhibits) relating to any series of Notes without charge upon
written request of a  securityholder  of that series addressed to ACE

                                       59


Securities Corp., 6525 Morrison Boulevard,  Suite 318, Charlotte, North Carolina
28211, Attention: Elizabeth S. Eldridge.

         EVENTS OF DEFAULT

         Events of default  under the  indenture  for each  series of Notes will
generally include:

         o        a  default  for  thirty  days  (or any  other  number  of days
                  specified in the prospectus supplement) or more in the payment
                  of any  principal of or interest on a Note of that series,  to
                  the extent specified in the prospectus supplement;

         o        failure to perform any other  covenant of the depositor or the
                  trust fund in the  indenture  that  continues  for a period of
                  sixty  days (or any  other  number  of days  specified  in the
                  prospectus  supplement or the  indenture)  after notice of the
                  failure is given in accordance  with the procedures  described
                  in the prospectus supplement;

         o        any  representation  or warranty  made by the depositor or the
                  trust fund in the  indenture  or in any  certificate  or other
                  writing  delivered  pursuant to the indenture or in connection
                  with the  indenture  with respect to or affecting  that series
                  having  been  incorrect  in a material  respect as of the time
                  made,  and that breach is not cured  within sixty days (or any
                  other number of days specified in the  prospectus  supplement)
                  after  notice of the  breach is given in  accordance  with the
                  procedures described in the prospectus supplement;

         o        specified  events of bankruptcy,  insolvency,  receivership or
                  liquidation of the trust fund; or

         o        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, subject to and in accordance with the
terms of the  indenture,  either  the  indenture  trustee  or the  holders  of a
majority  of the then total  outstanding  amount of the Notes of that series may
declare  the  principal  amount  (or,  if the Notes of that  series are  Accrual
Securities,  that  portion of the  principal  amount as may be  specified in the
terms of that  series,  as provided in the  indenture)  of all the Notes of that
series to be due and  payable  immediately.  That  declaration  may,  under some
circumstances, be rescinded and annulled by the securityholders of a majority in
total outstanding amount of the Notes of that series.

         If,  following an event of default with respect to any series of Notes,
the Notes of that series have been declared to be due and payable, the indenture
trustee may, in its  discretion,  notwithstanding  that  acceleration,  elect to
maintain  possession of the collateral  securing the Notes of that series and to
continue  to apply  distributions  on that  collateral  as if there  had been no
declaration of acceleration if that collateral  continues to provide  sufficient
funds for the payment of  principal  of and interest on the Notes of that series
as they  would  have  become  due if there  had not been  that  declaration.  In
addition,  the  indenture  trustee  may not  sell  or  otherwise  liquidate  the
collateral  securing the Notes of a series following an event of default,  other
than a default in the payment of any  principal  or interest on any Note of that
series for thirty days or more, unless

                  (1)      the   holders  of  100%  (or  any  other   percentage
         specified in the indenture) of the then total outstanding amount of the
         Notes of that series consent to that sale;

                                       60


                  (2)      the  proceeds  of  that  sale  or   liquidation   are
         sufficient  to pay in full the principal of and accrued  interest,  due
         and unpaid, on the outstanding Notes of that series at the date of that
         sale; or

                  (3)      the indenture trustee determines that that collateral
         would not be sufficient on an ongoing basis to make all payments on the
         Notes as those payments would have become due if the Notes had not been
         declared due and payable, and the indenture trustee obtains the consent
         of the  holders of 66 2/3% (or any other  percentage  specified  in the
         indenture)  of the then total  outstanding  amount of the Notes of that
         series.

         If  so  specified  in  the  prospectus  supplement,   only  holders  of
particular  classes of Notes  will have the right to  declare  the Notes of that
series to be immediately due and payable in the event of a payment  default,  as
described above, and to exercise the remedies described above.

         If the indenture  trustee  liquidates the collateral in connection with
an event of default  involving a default for thirty days (or any other number of
days  specified  in the  indenture)  or more in the payment of  principal  of or
interest on the Notes of a series,  the  indenture  provides  that the indenture
trustee  will have a prior lien on the  proceeds of any  liquidation  for unpaid
fees and expenses.  As a result,  upon the  occurrence of that event of default,
the amount available for distribution to the securityholders  would be less than
would otherwise be the case. However,  the indenture trustee may not institute a
proceeding  for  the  enforcement  of  its  lien  except  in  connection  with a
proceeding  for the  enforcement of the lien of the indenture for the benefit of
the securityholders after the occurrence of that event of default.

         To the extent provided in the prospectus  supplement,  in the event the
principal  of the Notes of a series is declared  due and  payable,  as described
above, the holders of any Notes issued at a discount from par may be entitled to
receive no more than an amount equal to the unpaid principal amount of the Notes
less the amount of the discount that is unamortized.

         Subject to the  provisions of the  indenture  relating to the duties of
the indenture  trustee,  in case an event of default  occurs and continues for a
series of Notes,  the indenture  trustee will be under no obligation to exercise
any of the rights or powers  under the  indenture at the request or direction of
any of the  securityholders  of that series,  unless those  holders offer to the
indenture  trustee  security or indemnity  satisfactory to it against the costs,
expenses and  liabilities  that might be incurred by it in  complying  with that
request or direction.  Subject to those provisions for  indemnification and some
limitations  contained in the  indenture,  the holders of a majority of the then
total  outstanding  amount  of the Notes of that  series  will have the right to
direct the time,  method and place of conducting  any  proceeding for any remedy
available to the indenture trustee or exercising any trust or power conferred on
the indenture trustee with respect to the Notes of that series,  and the holders
of a majority of the then total  outstanding  amount of the Notes of that series
may,  in some  cases,  waive any  default  with  respect to the Notes,  except a
default in the  payment of  principal  or  interest or a default in respect of a
covenant or  provision  of the  indenture  that  cannot be modified  without the
waiver or consent of all the  holders of the  outstanding  Notes of that  series
affected.

         DISCHARGE OF INDENTURE

         The  indenture  will be  discharged,  subject to the  provisions of the
indenture,  for a series of Notes (except for continuing rights specified in the
indenture)  upon the delivery to the indenture  trustee for  cancellation of all
the Notes of that  series  or,  with some  limitations,  upon  deposit  with the
indenture  trustee  of funds  sufficient  for the  payment in full of all of the
Notes of that series.

         With some  limitations,  the indenture  will provide that, if specified
for the Notes of any series,  the related trust fund will be discharged from any
and all  obligations  in  respect  of the  Notes

                                       61


of that series  (except for  obligations  specified in the  indenture  including
obligations  relating to temporary  Notes and exchange of Notes, to register the
transfer  of or  exchange  Notes of that  series,  to  replace  stolen,  lost or
mutilated  Notes of that series,  to maintain paying agencies and to hold monies
for payment in trust) upon the deposit with the indenture trustee,  in trust, of
money and/or  direct  obligations  of or  obligations  guaranteed  by the United
States of America which through the payment of interest and principal in respect
of the Notes in  accordance  with their  terms will  provide  money in an amount
sufficient to pay the principal of and each installment of interest on the Notes
of that  series on the  maturity  date for those  Notes and any  installment  of
interest on those Notes in  accordance  with the terms of the  indenture and the
Notes of that series.  In the event of any  defeasance and discharge of Notes of
that series,  holders of Notes of that series would be able to look only to that
money and/or those direct obligations for payment of principal and interest,  if
any, on their Notes until maturity.

         INDENTURE TRUSTEE'S ANNUAL REPORT

         The indenture trustee for each series of Notes will be required to mail
each year to all  related  securityholders  a brief  report,  as provided in the
indenture,  relating  to  its  eligibility  and  qualification  to  continue  as
indenture trustee under the related indenture,  any amounts advanced by it under
the indenture, the amount, interest rate and maturity date of indebtedness owing
by that Trust to the applicable  indenture  trustee in its individual  capacity,
the property and funds physically held by the indenture  trustee in its capacity
as  indenture  trustee and any action  taken by it that  materially  affects the
Notes and that has not been previously reported.

         THE INDENTURE TRUSTEE

         The  indenture  trustee for a series of Notes will be  specified in the
prospectus  supplement.  The indenture  trustee for any series may resign at any
time in accordance with the terms of the indenture, in which event the depositor
or the  appropriate  party  designated  in the  indenture  will be  obligated to
appoint a successor  trustee for that series.  The depositor or the  appropriate
party designated in the indenture may also remove any indenture  trustee if that
indenture  trustee  ceases to be eligible to continue as the  indenture  trustee
under the related indenture,  if that indenture trustee becomes insolvent or for
any  other  grounds  specified  in the  indenture.  In those  circumstances  the
depositor or the appropriate party designated in the indenture will be obligated
to  appoint  a  successor  trustee  for the  applicable  series  of  Notes.  Any
resignation or removal of the indenture  trustee and  appointment of a successor
trustee for any series of Notes does not become  effective  until  acceptance of
the appointment by the successor trustee for that series.

         The bank or trust  company  serving  as  indenture  trustee  may have a
banking relationship with the depositor or any of its affiliates,  a servicer or
any of its affiliates or the master  servicer or any of its  affiliates.  To the
extent  consistent  with its fiduciary  obligations  as indenture  trustee,  the
indenture  trustee may  delegate its duties to one or more agents as provided in
the indenture and the Agreement.

                          DESCRIPTION OF CREDIT SUPPORT

GENERAL

         For any series of Notes or Certificates,  as applicable, credit support
may be provided  for one or more  classes of the series or the  related  Assets.
Credit support may be in the form of:

         o        the   subordination  of  one  or  more  classes  of  Notes  or
                  Certificates, as applicable;

         o        letters of credit;

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         o        insurance policies;

         o        guarantees;

         o        the establishment of one or more reserve funds; or

         o        any other method of credit support described in the prospectus
                  supplement, or any combination of the foregoing.

         Any form of credit  support may be structured so as to be drawn upon by
more than one series to the extent described in the prospectus supplement.

         The  coverage  provided by any credit  support will be described in the
prospectus  supplement.  Generally,  that coverage  will not provide  protection
against  all  risks  of loss  and will not  guarantee  repayment  of the  entire
Security  Balance of the Notes or Certificates,  as applicable,  and interest on
the  Security  Balance.  If losses or  shortfalls  occur that  exceed the amount
covered  by  credit  support  or  that  are  not  covered  by  credit   support,
securityholders will bear their allocable share of deficiencies.  Moreover, if a
form of credit support covers more than one series of Notes or Certificates,  as
applicable,  (each, a "Covered Trust"),  securityholders evidencing interests in
any of those Covered  Trusts will be subject to the risk that the credit support
will be  exhausted  by the claims of other  Covered  Trusts  before that Covered
Trust receiving any of its intended share of that coverage.

         If credit  support  is  provided  for one or more  classes  of Notes or
Certificates,  as applicable, of a series, or the related Assets, the prospectus
supplement will include a description of

         (a)      the nature and amount of coverage under that credit support,

         (b)      any conditions to payment under the prospectus  supplement not
                  otherwise described in this prospectus,

         (c)      the  conditions  (if any) under  which the amount of  coverage
                  under that credit  support may be reduced and under which that
                  credit support may be terminated or replaced and

         (d)      the material provisions relating to that credit support.

         Additionally, the prospectus supplement will set forth information with
respect to the obligor under any financial guaranty insurance policy,  letter of
credit, guarantee or similar instrument of credit support, including

         (1)      a brief description of its principal business activities,

         (2)      its principal place of business,  place of  incorporation  and
                  the jurisdiction under which it is chartered or licensed to do
                  business,

         (3)      if  applicable,  the  identity  of  regulatory  agencies  that
                  exercise primary jurisdiction over the conduct of its business
                  and

         (4)      its total  assets,  and its  stockholders'  or  policyholders'
                  surplus,  if  applicable,  as of  the  date  specified  in the
                  prospectus supplement.

                                       63


SUBORDINATE SECURITIES

         One or more  classes  of Notes or  Certificates,  as  applicable,  of a
series may be Subordinate Notes or Subordinate  Certificates,  as applicable, if
specified in the prospectus supplement. The rights of the holders of Subordinate
Notes or Subordinate  Certificates,  as applicable,  to receive distributions of
principal and interest from the Collection Account on any Distribution Date will
be  subordinated  to those  rights  of the  holders  of  Senior  Notes or Senior
Certificates,  as applicable. The subordination of a class may apply only in the
event of (or may be limited to) particular  types of losses or  shortfalls.  The
prospectus  supplement  will set  forth  information  concerning  the  amount of
subordination  of a  class  or  classes  of  Subordinate  Notes  or  Subordinate
Certificates,  as  applicable,  in a series,  the  circumstances  in which  that
subordination  will be applicable and the manner, if any, in which the amount of
subordination will be effected.

CROSS-SUPPORT PROVISIONS

         If the Assets for a series  are  divided  into  separate  groups,  each
supporting a separate class or classes of Notes or Certificates,  as applicable,
of a  series,  credit  support  may  be  provided  by  cross-support  provisions
requiring that distributions be made on Senior Notes or Senior Certificates,  as
applicable,   evidencing  interests  in  one  group  of  mortgage  loans  before
distributions on Subordinate Notes or Subordinate  Certificates,  as applicable,
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 those provisions.

LIMITED GUARANTEE

         If  specified  in the  prospectus  supplement  for a series of Notes or
Certificates, as applicable, credit enhancement may be provided in the form of a
limited guarantee issued by a guarantor named in the prospectus supplement.

FINANCIAL GUARANTY INSURANCE POLICY OR SURETY BOND

         Credit  enhancement may be provided in the form of a financial guaranty
insurance  policy or a surety bond  issued by an insurer  named in the policy or
surety bond, if specified in the prospectus supplement.

LETTER OF CREDIT

         Alternative  credit support for a series of Notes or  Certificates,  as
applicable, may be provided by the issuance of a letter of credit by the bank or
financial  institution  specified in the  prospectus  supplement.  The coverage,
amount and frequency of any reduction in coverage provided by a letter of credit
issued for a series of Notes or Certificates,  as applicable,  will be set forth
in the prospectus supplement relating to that series.

POOL INSURANCE POLICIES

         If specified in the prospectus supplement relating to a series of Notes
or Certificates,  as applicable,  a pool insurance policy for the mortgage loans
in the related trust fund will be obtained. The pool insurance policy will cover
any loss (subject to the limitations described in the prospectus  supplement) by
reason of default to the extent a related  mortgage  loan is not  covered by any
primary mortgage  insurance  policy.  The amount and principal terms of any pool
insurance coverage will be set forth in the prospectus supplement.

                                       64


SPECIAL HAZARD INSURANCE POLICIES

         A special hazard  insurance policy may also be obtained for the related
trust fund, if specified in the prospectus  supplement,  in the amount set forth
in the prospectus supplement.  The special hazard insurance policy will, subject
to the limitations described in the prospectus supplement,  protect against loss
by reason of  damage to  Mortgaged  Properties  caused by  hazards  not  insured
against under the standard form of hazard  insurance  policy for the  respective
states, in which the Mortgaged  Properties are located. The amount and principal
terms  of any  special  hazard  insurance  coverage  will  be set  forth  in the
prospectus supplement.

BORROWER BANKRUPTCY BOND

         Losses  resulting from a bankruptcy  proceeding  relating to a borrower
affecting  the  mortgage  loans  in a  trust  fund  for a  series  of  Notes  or
Certificates, as applicable, will, if specified in the prospectus supplement, be
covered under a borrower  bankruptcy bond (or any other instrument that will not
result  in a  downgrading  of  the  rating  of the  Notes  or  Certificates,  as
applicable, of a series by the rating agency or agencies that rate that series).
Any borrower  bankruptcy bond or any other  instrument will provide for coverage
in an amount  meeting the criteria of the rating  agency or agencies  rating the
Notes or Certificates,  as applicable,  of the related series, which amount will
be set forth in the prospectus supplement. The amount and principal terms of any
borrower bankruptcy coverage will be set forth in the prospectus supplement.

RESERVE FUNDS

         If so provided in the  prospectus  supplement  for a series of Notes or
Certificates, as applicable,  deficiencies in amounts otherwise payable on those
Notes  or  Certificates,   as  applicable,  or  specific  classes  of  Notes  or
Certificates,  as  applicable,  will be covered by one or more reserve  funds in
which  cash,  a letter of  credit,  Permitted  Investments,  a demand  note or a
combination  of these will be  deposited,  in the  amounts so  specified  in the
prospectus  supplement.  The reserve  funds for a series may also be funded over
time by  depositing  a  specified  amount of the  distributions  received on the
related Assets as specified in the prospectus supplement.

         Amounts on deposit in any reserve fund for a series,  together with the
reinvestment  income on these amounts, if any, will be applied for the purposes,
in the manner,  and to the extent  specified  in the  prospectus  supplement.  A
reserve fund may be provided to increase the likelihood of timely  distributions
of principal of and interest on the Notes or  Certificates,  as  applicable.  If
specified in the  prospectus  supplement,  reserve funds may be  established  to
provide  limited  protection  against only some types of losses and  shortfalls.
Following  each  Distribution  Date  amounts in a reserve  fund in excess of any
amount  required to be  maintained  in the reserve fund may be released from the
reserve fund under the conditions and to the extent  specified in the prospectus
supplement  and will not be available  for further  application  to the Notes or
Certificates, as applicable.

         Money  deposited  in any reserve  funds will be  invested in  Permitted
Investments, to the extent specified in the prospectus supplement. To the extent
specified in the prospectus  supplement,  any reinvestment  income or other gain
from those  investments  will be credited to the related  reserve  fund for that
series,  and any loss  resulting from those  investments  will be charged to the
reserve  fund.  However,  that income may be payable to any related  servicer or
another  service  provider  or other  entity.  To the  extent  specified  in the
prospectus supplement, the reserve fund, if any, for a series will not be a part
of the trust fund.

         Additional information concerning any reserve fund will be set forth in
the prospectus  supplement,  including the initial  balance of the reserve fund,
the balance  required to be

                                       65


maintained  in the reserve fund,  the manner in which the required  balance will
decrease  over time,  the manner of funding the reserve  fund,  the purposes for
which  funds  in the  reserve  fund  may be  applied  to make  distributions  to
securityholders and use of investment earnings from the reserve fund, if any.

OVERCOLLATERALIZATION

         If specified in the prospectus supplement,  subordination provisions of
a trust fund may be used to accelerate to a limited extent the  amortization  of
one or more classes of Notes or  Certificates,  as  applicable,  relative to the
amortization of the related Assets. The accelerated  amortization is achieved by
the  application  of excess  interest to the payment of principal of one or more
classes of Notes or  Certificates,  as  applicable.  This  acceleration  feature
creates, for the Assets or groups of Assets, overcollateralization, which is the
excess of the total  principal  balance  of the  related  Assets,  or a group of
related  Assets,  over the principal  balance of the related class or classes of
Notes or  Certificates,  as applicable.  This  acceleration may continue for the
life  of the  related  Security,  or may be  limited.  In the  case  of  limited
acceleration,  once the required level of  overcollateralization is reached, and
subject to the provisions  specified in the prospectus  supplement,  the limited
acceleration  feature may cease, unless necessary to maintain the required level
of overcollateralization.

PRIMARY MORTGAGE INSURANCE POLICIES

         The servicer will  maintain or cause to be  maintained  with respect to
each mortgage loan, a primary  mortgage  insurance policy in accordance with the
underwriting standards described in the related prospectus supplement.  Although
the terms and conditions of primary mortgage  insurance  policies  differ,  each
primary  mortgage  insurance  policy will generally cover losses up to an amount
equal to the excess of the unpaid principal amount of a defaulted mortgage loan,
plus accrued and unpaid interest thereon and approved expenses, over a specified
percentage of the value of the related mortgaged property.

         As  conditions  to the  filing or  payment  of a claim  under a primary
mortgage insurance policy, the insured will typically be required,  in the event
of default by the borrower, to:

         o        advance or discharge (a) hazard insurance  premiums and (b) as
                  necessary and approved in advance by the insurer,  real estate
                  taxes,  property  protection  and  preservation  expenses  and
                  foreclosure and related costs,

         o        in the event of any physical  loss or damage to the  mortgaged
                  property,have the mortgaged  property restored to at least its
                  condition  at  the  effective  date  of the  primary  mortgage
                  insurance policy, ordinary wear and tear excepted, and

         o        tender to the  insurer  good and  merchantable  title to,  and
                  possession of, the mortgaged property.


                     CERTAIN LEGAL ASPECTS OF MORTGAGE LOANS

         The  following  discussion  contains  summaries,  which are  general in
nature,  of legal  aspects of loans  secured by  single-family  or  multi-family
residential  properties.  Because these legal aspects are governed  primarily 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 mortgage loans is
situated.  The  summaries  are  qualified in their  entirety by reference to the
applicable  federal and state laws

                                       66


governing the mortgage loans. In this regard, the following  discussion does not
fully reflect federal  regulations for FHA loans and VA loans.  See "Description
of  The  Trust   Funds--FHA   Loans   and  VA   Loans,"   "Description   of  the
Agreements--Material   Terms  of  the  Pooling  and  Servicing   Agreements  and
Underlying   Servicing   Agreements--FHA   Insurance  and  VA  Guarantees"   and
"Description of the Trust Funds--Assets."

GENERAL

         All of the mortgage  loans are  evidenced by a note or bond and secured
by  instruments  granting  a security  interest  in real  property  which may be
mortgages,  deeds of trust, security deeds or deeds to secure debt, depending on
the prevailing  practice and law in the state in which the Mortgaged Property is
located.  Mortgages,  deeds  of  trust  and  deeds  to  secure  debt are in this
prospectus  collectively  referred to as "mortgages." Any of the foregoing types
of mortgages  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,  as well as separate,  recorded,  contractual  arrangements
with others holding  interests in the mortgaged  property,  the knowledge of the
parties to that instrument as well as the order of recordation of the instrument
in  the  appropriate  public  recording  office.  However,  recording  does  not
generally  establish priority over governmental claims for real estate taxes and
assessments and other charges imposed under governmental police powers.

TYPES OF MORTGAGE INSTRUMENTS

         A mortgage either creates a lien against or constitutes a conveyance of
real property between two parties -a borrower  (usually the owner of the subject
property)  and a  mortgagee  (the  lender).  In  contrast,  a deed of trust is a
three-party  instrument,  among a trustor  (the  equivalent  of a  borrower),  a
trustee to whom the  mortgaged  property is  conveyed,  and a  beneficiary  (the
lender) for whose benefit the  conveyance  is made. As used in this  prospectus,
unless the context otherwise  requires,  "borrower" includes the trustor under a
deed of trust and a grantor under a security deed or a deed to secure debt.

         Under a deed of trust,  the borrower  grants the property,  irrevocably
until the debt is paid, in trust, generally with a power of sale as security for
the indebtedness  evidenced by the related note. A deed to secure debt typically
has two parties.  By executing a deed to secure debt, the grantor  conveys title
to, as opposed  to merely  creating a lien upon,  the  subject  property  to the
grantee until the underlying  debt is repaid,  generally with a power of sale as
security for the indebtedness evidenced by the related mortgage note.

         In case the borrower  under a mortgage is a land trust,  there would be
an  additional  party  because  legal  title to the  property  is held by a land
trustee  under a land  trust  agreement  for the  benefit  of the  borrower.  At
origination of a mortgage loan involving a land trust,  the borrower  executes a
separate  undertaking  to make payments on the mortgage  note.  The  mortgagee's
authority  under a mortgage,  the trustee's  authority under a deed of trust and
the grantee's  authority under a deed to secure debt are governed by the express
provisions of the  mortgage,  the law of the state in which the real property is
located,  some federal laws  (including  the Soldiers' and Sailors' Civil Relief
Act of 1940) and, in some cases, in deed of trust  transactions,  the directions
of the beneficiary.

         The  mortgages  that  encumber  multifamily  properties  may contain an
assignment  of rents and leases,  pursuant to which the borrower  assigns to the
lender the borrower's right, title and interest as landlord under each lease and
the income derived therefrom, while retaining a revocable license to collect the
rents for so long as there is no default. If the borrower defaults,  the license
terminates  and the  lender is  entitled  to collect  the  rents.  Local law may
require  that  the

                                       67


lender take possession of the property and/or obtain a court-appointed  receiver
before becoming entitled to collect the rents.

INTEREST IN REAL PROPERTY

         The real property covered by a mortgage,  deed of trust,  security deed
or deed to secure  debt is most often the fee  estate in land and  improvements.
However, that instrument may encumber other interests in real property such as a
tenant's interest in a lease of land or improvements, or both, and the leasehold
estate  created by that  lease.  An  instrument  covering  an  interest  in real
property other than the fee estate requires special provisions in the instrument
creating that interest or in the mortgage,  deed of trust, security deed or deed
to secure debt, to protect the mortgagee  against  termination  of that interest
before the  mortgage,  deed of trust,  security  deed or deed to secure  debt is
paid.  The  depositor,  the  Asset  Seller  or  other  entity  specified  in the
prospectus  supplement will make representations and warranties in the Agreement
or  representations  and  warranties  will be  assigned  to the  trustee for any
mortgage   loans   secured  by  an  interest  in  a  leasehold   estate.   Those
representation  and  warranties,  if  applicable,  will  be  set  forth  in  the
prospectus supplement.

COOPERATIVE LOANS

         If specified in the prospectus supplement,  the mortgage loans may also
consist of cooperative apartment loans ("Cooperative Loans") secured by security
interests  in  shares   issued  by  a   cooperative   housing   corporation   (a
"Cooperative")  and in the related  proprietary  leases or occupancy  agreements
granting exclusive rights to occupy specific dwelling units in the cooperatives'
buildings.  The  security  agreement  will create a lien upon,  or grant a title
interest in, the property  that it covers,  the priority of which will depend on
the  terms  of the  particular  security  agreement  as  well  as the  order  of
recordation of the agreement in the appropriate  recording office.  That lien or
title  interest is not prior to the lien for real estate  taxes and  assessments
and other charges imposed under governmental police powers.

         Each  Cooperative  owns in fee or has a  leasehold  interest in all the
real  property and owns in fee or leases the building and all separate  dwelling
units in the building.  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
or mortgages on the  cooperative  apartment  building 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 property borrower, or lessee, as the case may be,
is also responsible for meeting these 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 obtaining of
capital by the  Cooperative.  The  interest of the  occupant  under  proprietary
leases or occupancy  agreements as to which that Cooperative is the landlord are
generally subordinate to the interest of the holder of a blanket mortgage and to
the interest of the holder of a land lease.

         If the  Cooperative  is  unable  to meet the  payment  obligations  (1)
arising under a blanket mortgage, the mortgagee holding a blanket mortgage could
foreclose on that mortgage and terminate all subordinate  proprietary leases and
occupancy  agreements  or (2) 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 maturity.  The inability of the  Cooperative  to refinance a mortgage and its
consequent inability to make that 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

                                       68


leases and occupancy agreement.  In either event, a foreclosure by the holder of
a 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 mortgage loans,  the collateral  securing the Cooperative
Loans.

         The Cooperative is owned by tenant-stockholders  who, through ownership
of stock or shares in the corporation,  receive  proprietary  lease or occupancy
agreements that confer exclusive rights to occupy specific units.  Generally,  a
tenant-stockholder  of  a  Cooperative  must  make  a  monthly  payment  to  the
Cooperative  representing  that  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 are financed through
a Cooperative  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--Cooperative
Loans" below.

LAND SALE CONTRACTS

         Under an installment  land sale contract for the sale of real estate (a
"land sale  contract")  the  contract  seller  (hereinafter  referred  to as the
"contract  lender")  retains  legal  title to the  property  and enters  into an
agreement with the contract purchaser  (hereinafter referred to as the "contract
borrower") for the payment of the purchase price,  plus interest,  over the term
of the land sale  contract.  Only after full  performance by the borrower of the
contract is the contract lender  obligated to convey title to the real estate to
the purchaser. As with mortgage or deed of trust financing, during the effective
period of the land sale  contract,  the  contract  borrower is  responsible  for
maintaining  the property in good  condition  and for paying real estate  taxes,
assessments and hazard insurance premiums associated with the property.

         The method of  enforcing  the rights of the  contract  lender  under an
installment contract varies on a state-by-state basis depending on the extent to
which state courts are willing,  or able pursuant to state  statute,  to enforce
the contract  strictly  according to its terms. The terms of land sale contracts
generally provide that upon default by the contract borrower, the borrower loses
his or her right to occupy the property, the entire indebtedness is accelerated,
and the buyer's  equitable  interest in the property is forfeited.  The contract
lender in that  situation  does not have to  foreclose  to  obtain  title to the
property,  although  in some  cases a quiet  title  action  is in  order  if the
contract  borrower has filed the land sale contract in local land records and an
ejectment action may be necessary to recover possession.

         In a few states,  particularly  in cases of contract  borrower  default
during the early years of a land sale contract, the courts will permit ejectment
of the buyer and a forfeiture of his or her interest in the  property.  However,
most state  legislatures  have  enacted  provisions  by analogy to mortgage  law
protecting  borrowers  under land sale contracts from the harsh  consequences of
forfeiture. Under those statues, a judicial contract may be reinstated upon full
payment of the  default  amount  and the  borrower  may have a  post-foreclosure
statutory  redemption  right.  In other  states,  courts in equity  may permit a
contract borrower with significant  investment in the property

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under a land sale  contract for the sale of real estate to share the proceeds of
sale of the property after the indebtedness is repaid or may otherwise refuse to
enforce the forfeiture clause.  Nevertheless,  generally speaking,  the contract
lender's  procedures for obtaining  possession and clear title under a land sale
contract for the sale of real estate in a particular  state are simpler and less
time consuming and costly than are the procedures for  foreclosing and obtaining
clear title to a mortgaged property.

FORECLOSURE

         GENERAL

         Foreclosure  is a legal  procedure that allows the mortgagee to recover
its mortgage debt by enforcing its rights and available legal remedies under the
mortgage. If the mortgagor defaults in payment or performance of its obligations
under the note or mortgage, the mortgagee has the right to institute foreclosure
proceedings  to sell the  mortgaged  property  at public  auction to satisfy the
indebtedness.

         Foreclosure  procedures  for the  enforcement  of a mortgage  vary from
state to state.  Two primary  methods of  foreclosing  a mortgage  are  judicial
foreclosure and non-judicial  foreclosure pursuant to a power of sale granted in
the  mortgage  instrument.   There  are  several  other  foreclosure  procedures
available in some states that are either  infrequently used or available only in
some limited circumstances, such as strict foreclosure.

         JUDICIAL FORECLOSURE

         A  judicial  foreclosure  proceeding  is  conducted  in a court  having
jurisdiction over the mortgaged property.  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  defendants.  When the lender's  right to
foreclose  is  contested,  the legal  proceedings  can be  time-consuming.  Upon
successful completion of a judicial foreclosure proceeding,  the court generally
issues a judgment  of  foreclosure  and  appoints a referee or other  officer to
conduct a public sale of the mortgaged property,  the proceeds of which are used
to satisfy the judgment. Those sales are made in accordance with procedures that
vary from state to state.

         EQUITABLE LIMITATIONS ON ENFORCEABILITY OF CERTAIN PROVISIONS

         United  States  courts have  traditionally  imposed  general  equitable
principles  to limit the remedies  available to a mortgagee in  connection  with
foreclosure.  These equitable  principles are generally  designed to relieve the
borrower  from the legal  effect of  mortgage  defaults,  to the extent that the
effect is perceived as harsh or unfair. Relying on those principles, a court may
alter the  specific  terms of a loan to the  extent it  considers  necessary  to
prevent or remedy an injustice, undue oppression or overreaching, or may require
the lender to undertake affirmative and expensive actions to determine the cause
of 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
and have required that lenders  reinstate  loans or recast payment  schedules to
accommodate  borrowers who are suffering from a temporary financial  disability.
In other cases,  courts have limited the right of the lender to foreclose if the
default  under the  mortgage  is not  monetary,  e.g.,  the  borrower  failed to
maintain the mortgaged  property  adequately  or the borrower  executed a junior
mortgage  on the  mortgaged  property.  The  exercise by the court of its equity
powers will depend on the individual circumstances of each case presented to it.
Finally,  some courts have been faced with the issue of whether federal or state
constitutional  provisions  reflecting due process  concerns for adequate

                                       70


notice    require   that   a   borrower    receive   notice   in   addition   to
statutorily-prescribed  minimum  notice.  For the most  part,  these  cases have
upheld the  reasonableness  of the notice provisions or have found that a public
sale under a mortgage  providing for a power of sale does not involve sufficient
state action to afford constitutional protections to the borrower.

         NON-JUDICIAL FORECLOSURE/POWER OF SALE

         Foreclosure  of  a  deed  of  trust  is  generally  accomplished  by  a
non-judicial trustee's sale pursuant to the power of sale granted in the deed of
trust. A power of sale is typically  granted in a deed of trust.  It may also be
contained in any other type of mortgage instrument. A power of sale allows a non
judicial  public sale to be  conducted  generally  following a request  from the
beneficiary/lender  to the trustee to sell the property  upon any default by the
borrower  under the terms of the mortgage  note or the mortgage  instrument  and
after  notice  of sale is given in  accordance  with the  terms of the  mortgage
instrument, as well as applicable state law.

         In some states, before the sale, the trustee under a deed of trust must
record a notice of default  and  notice of sale and send a copy to the  borrower
and to any other  party  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 party  having an  interest  of record in the real  property,
including junior lienholders.  A notice of sale must be posted in a public place
and, in most  states,  published  for a specified  period of time in one or more
newspapers.  The borrower or junior lienholder may then have the right, during a
reinstatement  period required in some states, to cure the default by paying the
entire  actual  amount  in  arrears  (without  acceleration)  plus the  expenses
incurred in  enforcing  the  obligation.  In other  states,  the borrower or the
junior  lienholder is not provided a period to reinstate the loan,  but has only
the right to pay off the entire debt to prevent the foreclosure sale. Generally,
the procedure  for public sale,  the parties  entitled to notice,  the method of
giving notice and the applicable time periods are governed by state law and vary
among  the  states.  Foreclosure  of a deed to  secure  debt  is also  generally
accomplished by a non-judicial sale similar to that required by a deed of trust,
except  that the  lender or its  agent,  rather  than a  trustee,  is  typically
empowered to perform the sale in accordance with the terms of the deed to secure
debt and applicable law.

         PUBLIC SALE

         A third party may be  unwilling  to purchase a mortgaged  property at a
public sale because of the difficulty in determining  the value of that property
at the time of sale,  due to,  among other  things,  redemption  rights that may
exist and the possibility of physical  deterioration  of the property during the
foreclosure  proceedings.  For these  reasons,  it is common  for the  lender to
purchase  the  mortgaged  property  for an  amount  equal  to or less  than  the
underlying   debt  and  accrued  and  unpaid   interest  plus  the  expenses  of
foreclosure.  Generally,  state law controls the amount of foreclosure costs and
expenses  that  may  be  recovered  by a  lender.  Thereafter,  subject  to  the
borrower's  right in some  states to remain in  possession  during a  redemption
period, if applicable, the lender will become the owner of the property and have
both the  benefits  and burdens of  ownership  of the  mortgaged  property.  For
example,  the  lender  will  become  obligated  to pay  taxes,  obtain  casualty
insurance  and to make those  repairs at its own  expense  as are  necessary  to
render the  property  suitable  for sale.  The lender will  commonly  obtain the
services of a real estate  broker and pay the broker's  commission in connection
with the sale of the  property.  Depending  on market  conditions,  the ultimate
proceeds of the sale of the property may not equal the  lender's  investment  in
the property.  Moreover,  a lender  commonly incurs  substantial  legal fees and
court costs in  acquiring a mortgaged  property  through  contested  foreclosure
and/or  bankruptcy  proceedings.  Generally,  state law  controls  the amount of
foreclosure expenses and costs, including attorneys' fees, that may be recovered
by a lender.

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         A junior  mortgagee  may not  foreclose  on the  property  securing the
junior mortgage unless it forecloses  subject to senior  mortgages and any other
prior  liens,  in which case it may be obliged  to make  payments  on the senior
mortgages to avoid their  foreclosure.  In  addition,  if the  foreclosure  of a
junior mortgage triggers the enforcement of a "due-on-sale"  clause contained in
a senior  mortgage,  the junior mortgagee may be required to pay the full amount
of the senior mortgage to avoid its foreclosure. Accordingly, for those mortgage
loans,  if any,  that are junior  mortgage  loans,  if the lender  purchases the
property the lender's title will be subject to all senior mortgages, prior liens
and specific 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 under which the sale was conducted.
Any proceeds  remaining after satisfaction of senior mortgage debt are generally
payable to the holders of junior  mortgages  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 borrower.  The payment of the proceeds to
the  holders  of junior  mortgages  may occur in the  foreclosure  action of the
senior  mortgage  or a  subsequent  ancillary  proceeding  or  may  require  the
institution of separate legal proceedings by those holders.

         RIGHTS OF REDEMPTION

         The  purposes of a  foreclosure  action are to enable the  mortgagee to
realize upon its security and to bar the  borrower,  and all persons who have an
interest in the property that is subordinate  to the mortgage being  foreclosed,
from  exercise  of 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, those
having an interest that is subordinate to that of the foreclosing mortgagee have
an equity of  redemption  and may redeem the  property by paying the entire debt
with interest. In addition, in some states, when a foreclosure action has begun,
the redeeming  party must pay some of the costs of that action.  Those having an
equity  of  redemption  must  generally  be  made  parties  and  joined  in  the
foreclosure proceeding in order for their equity of redemption to be cut off and
terminated.

         The equity of  redemption  is a common-law  (non-statutory)  right that
exists before  completion of the  foreclosure,  is not waivable by the borrower,
must be exercised before  foreclosure sale and should be distinguished  from the
post-sale statutory rights of redemption. In some states, after sale pursuant to
a deed of trust or foreclosure of a mortgage, the borrower and foreclosed junior
lienors are given a statutory  period in which to redeem the  property  from the
foreclosure  sale.  In some  states,  statutory  redemption  may occur only upon
payment of the  foreclosure  sale  price.  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 from a foreclosure  sale or sale under a
deed of trust.

         Consequently,  the practical effect of the redemption right is to force
the lender to maintain the property and pay the expenses of ownership  until the
redemption  period has expired.  In some states, a post-sale  statutory right of
redemption  may exist  following  a judicial  foreclosure,  but not  following a
trustee's sale under a deed of trust.

         Under the REMIC Provisions  currently in effect,  property  acquired by
foreclosure  generally must not be held for more than three years from the close
of the calendar year of its acquisition.  For a series of Notes or Certificates,
as applicable, for which an election is made to qualify the trust fund or a part
of the trust fund as a REMIC, the Agreement will permit  foreclosed  property to
be held for more than such three year  period if the  Internal  Revenue  Service
grants an extension  of time within  which to sell the  property or  independent
counsel  renders an opinion to the effect  that  holding the  property  for that
additional period is permissible under the REMIC Provisions.

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         COOPERATIVE LOANS

         The Cooperative shares 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 bylaws, as well as
the  proprietary  lease  or  occupancy  agreement,  and may be  canceled  by the
Cooperative  for  failure  by  the  tenant-stockholder  to  pay  rent  or  other
obligations  or charges owed by that  tenant-stockholder,  including  mechanics'
liens   against   the   cooperative   apartment   building   incurred   by  that
tenant-stockholder.  The  proprietary  lease or  occupancy  agreement  generally
permit  the  Cooperative  to  terminate  the lease or  agreement  in the event a
borrower  fails to make  payments or defaults in the  performance  of  covenants
required under the  proprietary  lease or occupancy  agreement.  Typically,  the
lender and the Cooperative  enter into a recognition  agreement that establishes
the  rights  and  obligations  of both  parties in the event of 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,   if   the
tenant-stockholder  has  defaulted  under  the  proprietary  lease or  occupancy
agreement,  the  Cooperative  will  take no action to  terminate  that  lease or
agreement  until the lender has been  provided with 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 the sale of the  Cooperative  apartment,
subject,  however, to the Cooperative's right to sums due under that 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 on the
Cooperative Loan.

         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.

         In some states,  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 foreclosure
sale has been conducted in a "commercially reasonable" manner will depend on the
facts in each case. In determining commercial reasonableness,  a court will look
to the notice given the debtor and the method,  manner, time, place and terms of
the foreclosure.  Generally, a sale conducted according to the usual practice of
banks 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  Cooperatives  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.

         In the case of  foreclosure  on a building  that was  converted  from a
rental building to a building owned by a Cooperative under a non-eviction  plan,
some states  require  that a purchaser at a  foreclosure  sale take the property
subject to rent  control and rent  stabilization  laws that apply to tenants who
elected to remain in a building so converted.

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JUNIOR MORTGAGES

         Some of the mortgage loans may be secured by junior  mortgages or deeds
of trust,  that are  subordinate to first or other senior  mortgages or deeds of
trust  held by other  lenders.  The  rights of the trust fund as the holder of a
junior deed of trust or a junior mortgage are subordinate in lien and in payment
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 borrower, 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" above.

         Furthermore,  because the terms of the junior mortgage or deed of trust
are  subordinate  to the terms of the first  mortgage  or deed of trust,  in the
event of a conflict between the terms of the first mortgage or deed of trust and
the junior mortgage or deed of trust, the terms of the first mortgage or deed of
trust  will  generally  govern.  Upon a failure  of the  borrower  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 first  mortgagee  expends  these  sums,  these sums will
generally have priority over all sums due under the junior mortgage.

ANTI-DEFICIENCY LEGISLATION AND OTHER LIMITATIONS ON LENDERS

         Statutes in some states limit the right of a  beneficiary  under a deed
of trust or a mortgagee under a mortgage to obtain a deficiency judgment against
the borrower  following  foreclosure or sale under a deed of trust. A deficiency
judgment would be a personal  judgment  against the former borrower equal to the
difference  between  the net amount  realized  upon the public  sale of the real
property and the amount due to the lender.

         Some states require the lender to exhaust the security afforded under a
mortgage by foreclosure in an attempt to satisfy the full debt before bringing a
personal action against the borrower.  In some other states,  the lender has the
option of bringing a personal  action  against the  borrower on the debt without
first exhausting that security;  however,  in some of these states,  the lender,
following  judgment  on the  personal  action,  may be deemed to have  elected a
remedy  and may be  precluded  from  exercising  remedies  with  respect  to the
security.  In some  cases,  a  lender  will be  precluded  from  exercising  any
additional  rights  under  the  note  or  mortgage  if it has  taken  any  prior
enforcement  action.   Consequently,   the  practical  effect  of  the  election
requirement,  in those states  permitting  that  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
lender from obtaining a large deficiency judgment against the former borrower as
a result of low or no bids at the judicial sale.

         In addition to anti-deficiency and related legislation,  numerous other
federal and state statutory  provisions,  including the federal  bankruptcy laws
and state laws  affording  relief to debtors,  may interfere  with or affect the
ability of a secured mortgage lender to realize upon its security.  For example,
numerous statutory provisions under the United States Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C.
Sections 101 et seq. (the "Bankruptcy  Code"),  may interfere with or affect the
ability of the secured  mortgage lender to obtain payment of a mortgage loan, to
realize upon  collateral  and/or  enforce a deficiency  judgment.  Under federal
bankruptcy  law,  virtually  all  actions  (including  foreclosure  actions  and
deficiency judgment  proceedings) are automatically  stayed upon the filing

                                       74


of a bankruptcy  petition,  and often no interest or principal payments are made
during the course of the bankruptcy  proceeding.  In a case under the Bankruptcy
Code, the secured party is precluded from foreclosing without authorization from
the bankruptcy court. In addition, a court with federal bankruptcy  jurisdiction
may permit a debtor  through  his or her Chapter 11 or Chapter 13 plan to cure a
monetary  default in respect of a mortgage  loan by paying  arrearages  within a
reasonable  time period and  reinstating  the  original  mortgage  loan  payment
schedule even though the lender accelerated the mortgage loan and final judgment
of foreclosure had been entered in state court (provided no foreclosure sale had
yet  occurred)  before the filing of the  debtor's  petition.  Some  courts with
federal  bankruptcy  jurisdiction  have approved plans,  based on the particular
facts of the case, that affected the curing of a mortgage loan default by paying
arrearages over a number of years.

         If a mortgage loan is secured by property not consisting  solely of the
debtor's  principal  residence,  the Bankruptcy  Code also permits that mortgage
loan to be modified. These modifications may include reducing the amount of each
monthly payment, changing the rate of interest, altering the repayment schedule,
and reducing the lender's security  interest to the value of the property,  thus
leaving  the lender in the  position  of a general  unsecured  creditor  for the
difference between the value of the property and the outstanding  balance of the
mortgage loan. Some courts have permitted these  modifications when the mortgage
loan is  secured  both  by the  debtor's  principal  residence  and by  personal
property.

         In  the  case  of  income-producing  multifamily  properties,   federal
bankruptcy  law may also have the effect of  interfering  with or affecting  the
ability of the secured lender to enforce the borrower's  assignment of rents and
leases  related to the mortgaged  property.  Under Section 362 of the Bankruptcy
Code,  the lender will be stayed from  enforcing the  assignment,  and the legal
proceedings  necessary  to  resolve  the  issue  could be  time-consuming,  with
resulting delays in the lender's receipt of the rents.

         Some tax liens arising under the Code may in some circumstances provide
priority over the lien of a mortgage or deed of trust. 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. These laws include the federal  Truth-in-Lending
Act, Real Estate Settlement  Procedures Act, Equal Credit  Opportunity Act, Fair
Credit  Billing  Act,  Fair Credit  Reporting  Act and related  statutes.  These
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.

         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.

ENVIRONMENTAL CONSIDERATIONS

         A lender may be subject to unforeseen environmental risks when taking a
security interest in real or personal  property.  Property subject to a security
interest  may be  subject to  federal,  state,  and local  laws and  regulations
relating  to  environmental  protection.  These laws may  regulate,  among other
things:  emissions of air  pollutants;  discharges of wastewater or storm water;
generation,  transport,  storage or disposal  of  hazardous  waste or  hazardous
substances; operation, closure and removal of underground storage tanks; removal
and disposal of asbestos containing  materials;  and/or management of electrical
or other equipment  containing  polychlorinated  biphenyls ("PCBs").  Failure to
comply  with these laws and  regulations  may result in  significant  penalties,
including civil and criminal fines. Under the laws of some states, environmental

                                       75


contamination  on a property  may give rise to a lien on the  property to ensure
the availability and/or reimbursement of cleanup costs. Generally all subsequent
liens on that property are subordinated to the environmentally-related lien and,
in some  states,  even prior  recorded  liens are  subordinated  to these  liens
("Superliens").  In the latter states, the security interest of the trustee in a
property that is subject to a Superlien could be adversely affected.

         Under the federal Comprehensive  Environmental  Response,  Compensation
and Liability Act, as amended ("CERCLA"),  and under state law in some states, a
secured  party that takes a deed in lieu of  foreclosure,  purchases a mortgaged
property at a  foreclosure  sale,  operates a mortgaged  property or  undertakes
particular  types of activities that may constitute  management of the mortgaged
property  may  become  liable in some  circumstances  for the  cleanup  costs of
remedial action if hazardous  wastes or hazardous  substances have been released
or disposed of on the property.  These cleanup costs may be substantial.  CERCLA
imposes  strict,  as well as joint  and  several,  liability  for  environmental
remediation  and/or damage costs on several classes of "potentially  responsible
parties," including current "owners and/or operators" of property,  irrespective
of whether those owners or operators caused or contributed to the  contamination
on the property.  In addition,  owners and operators of properties that generate
hazardous  substances that are disposed of at other "off-site"  locations may be
held strictly, jointly and severally liable for environmental remediation and/or
damages at those off-site locations. Many states also have laws that are similar
to CERCLA.  Liability  under CERCLA or under  similar state law could exceed the
value of the property itself as well as the total assets of the property owner.

         Although some provisions of the Asset  Conservation  Act (as defined in
this prospectus) apply to trusts and fiduciaries, the law is somewhat unclear as
to whether and under what precise circumstances cleanup costs, or the obligation
to take  remedial  actions,  could be imposed on a secured  lender,  such as the
trust  fund.  Under the laws of some  states and under  CERCLA,  a lender may be
liable as an "owner or operator" for costs of addressing  releases or threatened
releases of hazardous  substances on a mortgaged  property if that lender or its
agents or employees have  "participated  in the management" of the operations of
the  borrower,  even though the  environmental  damage or threat was caused by a
prior owner or current  owner or operator or other third  party.  Excluded  from
CERCLA's   definition   of  "owner  or   operator"  is  a  person  "who  without
participating  in the  management  of  ...  [the]  facility,  holds  indicia  of
ownership  primarily to protect his security  interest"  (the  "secured-creditor
exemption"). This exemption for holders of a security interest such as a secured
lender  applies  only to the extent that a lender  seeks to protect its security
interest  in  the  contaminated  facility  or  property.  Thus,  if  a  lender's
activities  begin to  encroach  on the actual  management  of that  facility  or
property,  the lender faces potential  liability as an "owner or operator" under
CERCLA.  Similarly,  when a lender  forecloses and takes title to a contaminated
facility or property, the lender may incur potential CERCLA liability in various
circumstances, including among others, when it holds the facility or property as
an  investment  (including  leasing the facility or property to a third  party),
fails to market the  property in a timely  fashion or fails to properly  address
environmental conditions at the property or facility.

         The  Resource  Conservation  and  Recovery  Act,  as amended  ("RCRA"),
contains  a similar  secured-creditor  exemption  for those  lenders  who hold a
security  interest in a petroleum  underground  storage  tank ("UST") or in real
estate containing a UST, or that acquire title to a petroleum UST or facility or
property  on which a UST is  located.  As under  CERCLA,  a lender  may lose its
secured-creditor  exemption  and be held  liable  under  RCRA as a UST  owner or
operator if that lender or its employees or agents participate in the management
of the UST. In addition,  if the lender takes title to or  possession of the UST
or  the  real  estate   containing  the  UST,  under  some   circumstances   the
secured-creditor exemption may be deemed to be unavailable.

         A decision  in May 1990 of the United  States  Court of Appeals for the
Eleventh Circuit in UNITED STATES V. FLEET FACTORS CORP. very narrowly construed
CERCLA's secured-creditor exemption. The court's opinion suggested that a lender
need not have involved  itself in the  day-

                                       76


to-day  operations  of the facility or  participated  in  decisions  relating to
hazardous waste to be liable under CERCLA;  rather,  liability could attach to a
lender if its involvement  with the management of the facility were broad enough
to support  the  inference  that the lender had the  capacity to  influence  the
borrower's  treatment  of  hazardous  waste.  The court  added  that a  lender's
capacity to influence  these  decisions could be inferred from the extent of its
involvement in the facility's financial management. A subsequent decision by the
United  States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in re Bergsoe Metal Corp.,
apparently disagreeing with, but not expressly contradicting,  the Fleet Factors
court,  held  that  a  secured  lender  had no  liability  absent  "some  actual
management of the facility" on the part of the lender.

         Court   decisions  have  taken  varying  views  of  the  scope  of  the
secured-creditor exemption, leading to administrative and legislative efforts to
provide guidance to lenders on the scope of activities that would trigger CERCLA
and/or RCRA  liability.  Until  recently,  these  efforts have failed to provide
substantial guidance.

         On September 28, 1996, however,  Congress enacted, and on September 30,
1996, the President signed into law the Asset Conservation  Lender Liability and
Deposit  Insurance  Protection Act of 1996 (the "Asset  Conservation  Act"). The
Asset Conservation Act was intended to clarify the scope of the secured creditor
exemption under both CERCLA and RCRA. The Asset Conservation Act more explicitly
defined the kinds of  "participation in management" that would trigger liability
under CERCLA and specified  activities that would not constitute  "participation
in  management"  or  otherwise  result in a forfeiture  of the  secured-creditor
exemption before  foreclosure or during a workout period. The Asset Conservation
Act also clarified the extent of protection  against  liability  under CERCLA in
the event of foreclosure and authorized  specific  regulatory  clarifications of
the scope of the secured-creditor exemption for purposes of RCRA, similar to the
statutory protections under CERCLA.  However,  since the courts have not yet had
the  opportunity  to interpret  the new statutory  provisions,  the scope of the
additional  protections  offered  by the  Asset  Conservation  Act is not  fully
defined.  It also is important to note that the Asset  Conservation Act does not
offer complete protection to lenders and that the risk of liability remains.

         If a secured lender does become liable,  it may be entitled to bring an
action  for  contribution   against  the  owner  or  operator  who  created  the
environmental  contamination or against some other liable party, but that person
or entity may be bankrupt or otherwise  judgment proof. It is therefore possible
that cleanup or other environmental  liability costs could become a liability of
the trust fund and occasion a loss to the trust fund and to  securityholders  in
some circumstances.  The new secured creditor amendments to CERCLA,  also, would
not necessarily  affect the potential for liability in actions by either a state
or a private party under other  federal or state laws that may impose  liability
on "owners or operators" but do not incorporate the secured creditor exemption.

         Traditionally,  residential  mortgage  lenders  have not taken steps to
evaluate  whether  hazardous  wastes or  hazardous  substances  are present with
respect to any mortgaged property before the origination of the mortgage loan or
before  foreclosure  or accepting a  deed-in-lieu  of  foreclosure.  Neither the
depositor nor any servicer  makes any  representations  or warranties or assumes
any  liability  with  respect  to:  environmental  conditions  of the  Mortgaged
Property;  the  absence,  presence or effect of  hazardous  wastes or  hazardous
substances  on, near or emanating  from the  Mortgaged  Property;  the impact on
securityholders  of any environmental  condition or presence of any substance on
or near the Mortgaged Property; or the compliance of any Mortgaged Property with
any  environmental  laws.  In  addition,  no agent,  person or entity  otherwise
affiliated with the depositor is authorized or able to make any  representation,
warranty or assumption of liability relative to any Mortgaged Property.

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DUE-ON-SALE CLAUSES

         The  mortgage  loans may contain  due-on-sale  clauses.  These  clauses
generally provide that the lender may accelerate the maturity of the loan if the
borrower  sells,  transfers  or conveys  the  related  Mortgaged  Property.  The
enforceability  of  due-on-sale  clauses has been the subject of  legislation or
litigation  in many  states  and, in some  cases,  the  enforceability  of these
clauses  was limited or denied.  However,  for some loans the  Garn-St.  Germain
Depository Institutions Act of 1982 (the "Garn-St.  Germain Act") preempts state
constitutional,  statutory  and case  law  that  prohibits  the  enforcement  of
due-on-sale  clauses and permits  lenders to enforce these clauses in accordance
with their terms,  subject to limited exceptions.  Due-on-sale clauses contained
in mortgage loans originated by federal savings and loan associations of federal
savings banks are fully enforceable pursuant to regulations of the United States
Federal Home Loan Bank Board, as succeeded by the Office of Thrift  Supervision,
which  preempt  state law  restrictions  on the  enforcement  of those  clauses.
Similarly,  "due-on-sale"  clauses in mortgage  loans made by national banks and
federal  credit  unions  are  now  fully  enforceable   pursuant  to  preemptive
regulations  of the  Comptroller  of the Currency and the National  Credit Union
Administration, respectively.

         The  Garn-St.  Germain Act also sets forth nine  specific  instances in
which a mortgage  lender covered by the 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, some transfers by operation of law, leases
of fewer than three years and the creation of a junior encumbrance.  Regulations
promulgated  under the Garn-St.  Germain Act also  prohibit the  imposition of a
prepayment  penalty 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
that bears an interest rate below the current market rate being assumed by a new
home buyer rather than being paid off,  which may affect the average life of the
mortgage loans and the number of mortgage loans which may extend to maturity.

PREPAYMENT CHARGES AND LATE FEES

         Some state laws restrict the imposition of prepayment  charges and late
fees even when the loans expressly  provide for the collection of those charges.
Although the Alternative  Mortgage  Transaction  Parity Act of 1982 (the "Parity
Act"),  permits the collection of prepayment charges and late fees in connection
with  some  types  of  eligible   loans   preempting   any  contrary  state  law
prohibitions,  some states may not  recognize  the  preemptive  authority of the
Parity Act or have  formally  opted out of the Parity  Act.  As a result,  it is
possible  that  prepayment  charges and late fees may not be  collected  even on
loans that provide for the payment of those charges unless  otherwise  specified
in the  accompanying  prospectus  supplement.  The  related  servicer or another
entity identified in the accompanying  prospectus supplement will be entitled to
all prepayment  charges and late payment charges received on the loans and those
amounts will not be  available  for payment on the  certificates.  The Office of
Thrift  Supervision  ("OTS"),  the agency  that  administers  the Parity Act for
unregulated housing creditors, withdrew its favorable Parity Act regulations and
Chief Counsel Opinions that previously  authorized  lenders to charge prepayment
charges and late fees in certain  circumstances  notwithstanding  contrary state
law,  effective  with  respect  to loans  originated  on or after  July 1, 2003.
However,  the OTS's ruling does not retroactively affect loans originated before
July 1, 2003.

SUBORDINATE FINANCING

         Where a borrower  encumbers  mortgaged property with one or more junior
liens, the senior lender is subjected to additional risks, such as:

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         o        The borrower may have difficulty  repaying  multiple loans. In
                  addition,  if the junior loan permits recourse to the borrower
                  (as junior  loans  often do) and the  senior  loan does not, a
                  borrower  may be more  likely to repay  sums due on the junior
                  loan than those on the senior loan.

         o        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
                  borrower  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
                  any  existing  junior  lender  is harmed  or the  borrower  is
                  additionally burdened.

         o        If the borrower  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  will not apply to some types of  residential  first mortgage
loans  originated by lenders after March 31, 1980. A similar federal statute was
in effect for  mortgage  loans made during the first three  months of 1980.  The
Office of Thrift Supervision is authorized to issue rules and regulations and to
publish  interpretations  governing  implementation  of  Title  V.  The  statute
authorized any state to reimpose interest rate limits by adopting,  before April
1, 1983, a law or constitutional provision that 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. Some states have taken action to
reimpose interest rate limits and/or to limit discount points or other charges.

         The  depositor  believes that a court  interpreting  Title V would hold
that residential first mortgage loans that are 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 before origination of those
mortgage loans,  any limitation  under that state's usury law would not apply to
those 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  loan  originated  after the date of that state action will be eligible
for  inclusion  in a trust fund unless (1) the  mortgage  loan  provides for the
interest rate, discount points and charges as are permitted in that state or (2)
the mortgage loan  provides that its terms will be construed in accordance  with
the laws of another  state under which the interest  rate,  discount  points and
charges would not be usurious and the borrower's counsel has rendered an opinion
that the choice of law provision would be given effect.

         Statutes  differ  in  their  provisions  as to  the  consequences  of a
usurious loan. One group of statutes requires the lender to forfeit the interest
due above  the  applicable  limit or  impose a  specified  penalty.  Under  this
statutory scheme, the borrower may cancel the recorded mortgage or deed of trust
upon paying its debt with lawful  interest,  and the lender may  foreclose,  but
only for the debt plus  lawful  interest.  A second  group of  statutes  is more
severe. A violation of this type of usury law results in the invalidation of the
transaction,  thus  permitting  the borrower to cancel the

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recorded mortgage or deed of trust without any payment or prohibiting the lender
from foreclosing.

ALTERNATIVE MORTGAGE INSTRUMENTS

         Alternative  mortgage  instruments,  including adjustable rate mortgage
loans and early ownership mortgage loans,  originated by non-federally chartered
lenders  have  historically  been  subject to a variety of  restrictions.  Those
restrictions  differed  from  state  to  state,  resulting  in  difficulties  in
determining whether a particular alternative mortgage instrument originated by a
state-chartered lender was in compliance with applicable law. These difficulties
were alleviated  substantially as a result of the enactment of Title VIII of the
Garn-St.  Germain Act ("Title VIII"). Title VIII provides that,  notwithstanding
any state law to the contrary,  state-chartered  banks may originate alternative
mortgage   instruments  in  accordance  with  regulations   promulgated  by  the
Comptroller of the Currency with respect to origination of alternative  mortgage
instruments  by national  banks;  state-chartered  credit  unions may  originate
alternative mortgage  instruments in accordance with regulations  promulgated by
the  National  Credit  Union  Administration  with  respect  to  origination  of
alternative  mortgage  instruments  by  federal  credit  unions;  and all  other
non-federally chartered housing creditors, including state-chartered savings and
loan  associations,  state-chartered  savings banks and mutual savings banks and
mortgage banking companies,  may originate  alternative  mortgage instruments in
accordance with the regulations promulgated by the Federal Home Loan Bank Board,
predecessor to the Office of Thrift Supervision,  with respect to origination of
alternative mortgage instruments by federal savings and loan associations. Title
VIII provides that any state may reject applicability of the provisions of Title
VIII by adopting,  before  October 15, 1985, a law or  constitutional  provision
expressly  rejecting the  applicability  of those  provisions.  Some states have
taken that action.

SOLDIERS' AND SAILORS' CIVIL RELIEF ACT OF 1940

         Under the terms of the Soldiers' and Sailors' Civil Relief Act of 1940,
as amended (the "Relief Act"), a borrower who enters military  service after the
origination  of the  borrower's  mortgage loan  (including a borrower 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 the  borrower's  active  duty  status,  unless a
court orders otherwise upon application of the lender. The Relief Act applies to
borrowers 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 borrowers  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  servicer  to  collect  full
amounts of interest on some 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
Notes or  Certificates,  as  applicable,  and would not be covered by  advances.
These  shortfalls  will be covered by the credit support  provided in connection
with the Notes or  Certificates,  as applicable,  only to the extent provided in
the prospectus supplement.  In addition, the Relief Act imposes limitations that
would impair the ability of the  servicer to  foreclose on an affected  mortgage
loan  during  the  borrower's  period of active  duty  status,  and,  under some
circumstances,  during an additional three month period thereafter.  Thus, if an
affected  mortgage  loan goes into  default,  there  may be  delays  and  losses
occasioned thereby.

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FORFEITURES IN DRUG AND RICO PROCEEDINGS

         Federal  law  provides  that  property  owned by persons  convicted  of
drug-related  crimes or of criminal  violations of the Racketeer  Influenced and
Corrupt  Organizations  ("RICO")  statute can be seized by the government if the
property was used in, or purchased  with the  proceeds of, those  crimes.  Under
procedures  contained in the Comprehensive Crime Control Act of 1984 (the "Crime
Control Act"), the government may seize the property even before conviction. The
government must publish notice of the forfeiture  proceeding and may give notice
to all parties "known to have an alleged  interest in the  property,"  including
the holders of mortgage loans.

         A lender may avoid  forfeiture  of its  interest in the  property if it
establishes  that: (1) its mortgage was executed and recorded before  commission
of the crime upon which the  forfeiture is based,  or (2) the lender was, at the
time of execution of the  mortgage,  "reasonably  without cause to believe" that
the  property was used in, or  purchased  with the proceeds of,  illegal drug or
RICO activities.

                     CERTAIN LEGAL ASPECTS OF THE CONTRACTS

         The  following  discussion  contains  summaries,  which are  general in
nature, of certain legal matters relating to the contracts.  Because these legal
aspects are governed  primarily 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 contracts is situated. The summaries are qualified in their
entirety by reference to the  appropriate  laws of the states in which contracts
may be originated.

GENERAL

         As a result of the  assignment  of the  contracts to the  trustee,  the
trustee will succeed  collectively  to all of the rights  including the right to
receive  payment on the  contracts,  of the obligee  under the  contracts.  Each
contract evidences both

         (a)      the  obligation  of the  borrower to repay the loan  evidenced
         thereby, and

         (b)      the grant of a security  interest in the manufactured  home to
         secure repayment of the loan. Aspects of both features of the contracts
         are described more fully below.

         The contracts  generally  are "chattel  paper" as defined in the UCC in
effect in the states in which the manufactured  homes initially were registered.
Pursuant to the UCC, the sale of chattel paper is treated in a manner similar to
perfection of a security  interest in chattel paper.  Under the  agreement,  the
servicer will transfer physical  possession of the contracts to the trustee.  In
addition,  the servicer  will make an  appropriate  filing of a UCC-1  financing
statement in the appropriate states to give notice of the trustee's ownership of
the  contracts.  The  contracts  will be stamped or marked  otherwise to reflect
their  assignment  from the  depositor  to the  trustee  only if provided in the
prospectus supplement.  Therefore, if, through negligence, fraud or otherwise, a
subsequent  purchaser  were able to take  physical  possession  of the contracts
without notice of the assignment,  the trustee's  interest in contracts could be
defeated.

SECURITY INTERESTS IN THE MANUFACTURED HOMES

         The manufactured  homes securing the contracts may be located in all 50
states,  Security  interests in  manufactured  homes may be perfected  either by
notation of the secured  party's lien on the certificate of title or by delivery
of the  required  documents  and  payment  of a fee to the state  motor  vehicle
authority,  depending on state law. In some nontitle states, perfection pursuant
to the

                                       81


provisions of the UCC is required.  The asset seller may effect that notation or
delivery  of the  required  documents  and fees,  and obtain  possession  of the
certificate of title,  as  appropriate  under the laws of the state in which any
manufactured home securing a manufactured  housing conditional sales contract is
registered.  In the event the asset  seller  fails,  due to clerical  error,  to
effect that notation or delivery, or files the security interest under the wrong
law, the asset  seller may not have a first  priority  security  interest in the
manufactured home securing a contract.  As manufactured homes have become larger
and often have been  attached to their sites  without any apparent  intention to
move them, courts in many states have held that manufactured  homes,  under some
circumstances,  may become subject to real estate title and recording laws. As a
result, a security interest in a manufactured home could be rendered subordinate
to the  interests  of other  parties  claiming  an  interest  in the home  under
applicable state real estate law.

         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.
Substantially all of the contracts contain  provisions  prohibiting the borrower
from  permanently  attaching the  manufactured  home to its site. So long as the
borrower  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 maintain the priority
of the security interest in the manufactured  home. If, however,  a manufactured
home is permanently attached to its site, other parties could obtain an interest
in the  manufactured  home  that is prior to the  security  interest  originally
retained by the asset seller and  transferred to the depositor.  For a series of
securities and if so described in the prospectus supplement, the servicer may be
required  to  perfect  a  security  interest  in  the  manufactured  home  under
applicable real estate laws. The warranting  party will represent that as of the
date of the sale to the  depositor  it has obtained a perfected  first  priority
security  interest by proper notation or delivery of the required  documents and
fees for substantially all of the manufactured homes securing the contracts.

         The  depositor  will cause the security  interests in the  manufactured
homes to be  assigned  to the  trustee  on  behalf of the  securityholders.  The
depositor or the trustee  will amend the  certificates  of title,  or file UCC-3
statements,  to identify the trustee as the new secured party,  and will deliver
the  certificates  of title to the trustee or note  thereon the  interest of the
trustee only if specified in the prospectus supplement.  Accordingly,  the asset
seller,  or other originator of the contracts,  will continue to be named as the
secured party on the certificates of title relating to the  manufactured  homes.
In some  states,  that  assignment  is an effective  conveyance  of the security
interest without amendment of any lien noted on the related certificate of title
and the new secured party  succeeds to servicer's  rights as the secured  party.
However,  in some states,  in the absence of an amendment to the  certificate of
title and the new secured  party  succeeds to  servicer's  rights as the secured
party.  However,  in  some  states,  in  the  absence  of an  amendment  to  the
certificate of title, or the filing of a UCC-3 statement,  the assignment of the
security  interest in the  manufactured  home may not be held  effective  or the
security  interest in the  manufactured  home may not be held  effective  or the
security  interests  may not be perfected and in the absence of that notation or
delivery  to the  trustee,  the  assignment  of  the  security  interest  in the
manufactured home may not be effective against creditors of the asset seller, or
any other  originator of the contracts,  or a trustee in bankruptcy of the asset
seller, or any other originator.

         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  asset
seller,  or other  originator of the Contracts,  on the  certificate of title or
delivery of the required  documents  and fees will be  sufficient to protect the
securityholders  against the rights or 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

                                       82


which the  security  interest  assigned  to the trustee is not  perfected,  that
security interest would be subordinate to, among others,  subsequent  purchasers
for value of  manufactured  homes and holders of perfected  security  interests.
There also exists a risk in not identifying the trustee as the new secured party
on the  certificate  of title that,  through fraud or  negligence,  the security
interest of the trustee could be released.

         If the owner of a manufactured  home moves it to a state other than the
state in which the 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 the relocation  and thereafter  only if and after
the owner re-registers the manufactured home in that state. If the owner were to
relocate  a  manufactured   home  to  another  state  and  not  re-register  the
manufactured  home in that state,  and if steps are not taken to re-perfect  the
trustee's  security  interest  in  that  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,  the servicer must surrender possession if it holds the certificate
of  title  to the  manufactured  home  or,  in the  case of  manufactured  homes
registered  in states that provide for notation of lien,  the asset  seller,  or
other originator,  would receive notice of surrender if the security interest in
the  manufactured  home is noted on the certificate of title.  Accordingly,  the
trustee would have the  opportunity to re-perfect  its security  interest in the
manufactured  home in the state of  relocation.  In states that do not require a
certificate of title for  registration of a manufactured  home,  re-registration
could defeat  perfection.  In the ordinary course of servicing the  manufactured
housing contracts, the servicer takes steps to effect re-perfection upon receipt
of notice of re-registration or information from the borrower as to relocation.

         Similarly,  when a borrower under a manufactured housing contract sells
a manufactured  home, the servicer must surrender  possession of the certificate
of title or, if it is noted as  lienholder  on the  certificate  of title,  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 Agreement,  the
servicer is obligated to take those steps,  at the  servicer's  expense,  as are
necessary  to maintain  perfection  of security  interests  in the  manufactured
homes.

         Under  the  laws of most  states,  liens  for  repairs  performed  on a
manufactured  home and liens for personal property taxes take priority even over
a perfected  security  interest.  The  warranting  party will  represent  in the
agreement  that it has no knowledge  of any of these liens for any  manufactured
home securing payment on any contract.  However,  these liens could arise at any
time  during the term of a  contract.  No notice will be given to the trustee or
securityholders if a lien arises.

ENFORCEMENT OF SECURITY INTERESTS IN THE MANUFACTURED HOMES

         The  servicer on behalf of the trustee,  to the extent  required by the
related  agreement,  may take action to enforce the trustee's  security interest
with  respect  to  contracts  in  default  by  repossession  and  resale  of the
manufactured  homes  securing  those  defaulted   contracts.   So  long  as  the
manufactured  home has not become subject to the real estate law, a creditor can
repossess a  manufactured  home securing a contract by voluntary  surrender,  by
"self-help"  repossession  that is  "peaceful"  or, in the absence of  voluntary
surrender and the ability to repossess  without breach of the peace, by judicial
process. The holder of a contract must give the debtor a number of days' notice,
which varies from 10 to 30 days  depending on that state,  before  beginning any
repossession.  The UCC  and  consumer  protection  laws  in  most  states  place
restrictions  on  repossession  sales,  including  requiring prior notice to the
debtor and  commercial  reasonableness  in effecting  that sale. The law in most
states also  requires  that the debtor be given notice of any sale before resale
of the unit so that the debtor may redeem at or before that resale. In the event
of repossession and resale of a manufactured home, the trustee would be entitled
to be paid out of

                                       83


the sale  proceeds  before the  proceeds  could be applied to the payment of the
claims of unsecured creditors or the holders of subsequently  perfected security
interests or, thereafter, to the debtor.

         Under the laws  applicable  in most  states,  a creditor is entitled to
obtain a deficiency  judgment from a debtor for any  deficiency on  repossession
and resale of the manufactured  home securing the debtor's loan.  However,  some
states impose prohibitions or limitations on deficiency  judgments,  and in many
cases the defaulting borrower would have no assets with which to pay a judgment.

         Other statutory provisions,  including federal and state bankruptcy and
insolvency laws and general equitable principles, may limit or delay the ability
of a lender to repossess and resell collateral or enforce a deficiency judgment.

SOLDIERS' AND SAILORS' CIVIL RELIEF ACT OF 1940

         The  terms of the  Relief  Act apply to a  borrower  on a  Contract  as
described  for a borrower on a mortgage  loan under  "Certain  Legal  Aspects of
Mortgage Loans--Soldiers' and Sailors' Civil Act of 1940."

CONSUMER PROTECTION LAWS

         The so-called Holder-in-Due-Course rule of the Federal Trade Commission
is  intended  to defeat the  ability  of the  transferor  of a  consumer  credit
contract  that is the seller of goods  which gave rise to the  transaction,  and
some related  lenders and assignees,  to transfer the contract free of notice of
claims by the  debtor  thereunder.  The  effect of this rule is to  subject  the
assignee of the contract to all claims and defenses that the debtor could assert
against  the  seller of goods.  Liability  under this rule is limited to amounts
paid under a contract; however, the borrower also may be able to assert the rule
to set off  remaining  amounts due as a defense  against a claim  brought by the
trustee  against  the  borrower.  Numerous  other  federal  and  state  consumer
protection  laws impose  requirements  applicable to the origination and lending
pursuant to the contracts, including the Truth in Lending Act, the Federal Trade
Commission Act, the Fair Credit Billing Act, the Fair Credit  Reporting Act, the
Equal Credit  Opportunity  Act, the Fair Debt  Collection  Practices Act and the
Uniform  Consumer Credit Code. In the case of some of these laws, the failure to
comply  with  their  provisions  may affect the  enforceability  of the  related
contract.

TRANSFERS OF MANUFACTURED HOMES; ENFORCEABILITY OF "DUE-ON-SALE" CLAUSES

         The contracts, in general, prohibit the sale or transfer of the related
manufactured   homes  without  the  consent  of  the  servicer  and  permit  the
acceleration  of the maturity of the  contracts by the servicer upon any sale or
transfer that is not consented to.  Generally,  it is expected that the servicer
will permit most transfers of manufactured homes and not accelerate the maturity
of the  related  contracts.  In  some  cases,  the  transfer  may be  made  by a
delinquent borrower to avoid a repossession proceeding for a manufactured home.

         In the case of a  transfer  of a  manufactured  home  after  which  the
servicer  desires to  accelerate  the  maturity  of the  related  contract,  the
servicer's ability to do so will depend on the enforceability under state law of
the due-on-sale clauses applicable to the manufactured homes.  Consequently,  in
some states the servicer may be prohibited  from enforcing a due-on-sale  clause
in respect of some manufactured homes.

                                       84


APPLICABILITY OF USURY LAWS

         Title  V of  the  Depository  Institutions  Deregulation  and  Monetary
Control  Act of 1980,  as  amended  (Title  V),  provides  that,  subject to the
following conditions, state usury limitations will not apply to any loan that is
secured by a first lien on certain kinds of manufactured housing.

         The  contracts  would be covered if they  satisfy  certain  conditions,
among other  things,  governing the terms of any  prepayments,  late charges and
deferral fees and requiring a 30-day notice period before instituting any action
leading to repossession of or foreclosure on the related unit.

         Title V authorized any state to re-impose limitations on interest rates
and finance  charges by adopting  before April 1, 1983, a law or  constitutional
provision that expressly rejects  application of the federal law. Fifteen states
adopted a similar law before the April 1, 1983 deadline. In addition, even where
Title V was not so  rejected,  any  state  is  authorized  by the law to adopt a
provision limiting discount points or other charges on loans covered by Title V.
The related asset seller will  represent  that all of the contracts  comply with
applicable usury law.

                   MATERIAL FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSIDERATIONS

GENERAL

         The following discussion represents the opinion of McKee Nelson LLP and
Thacher  Proffitt & Wood LLP as to the material  federal income tax consequences
of the purchase,  ownership and  disposition  of the Notes or  Certificates,  as
applicable,  offered under this prospectus. This opinion assumes compliance with
all provisions of the Agreements pursuant to which the Notes or Certificates, as
applicable,  are issued.  This discussion is directed solely to  securityholders
that hold the Notes or Certificates, as applicable, 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
opinions  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 in this
prospectus,  potential  investors  should  consider  the  state  and  local  tax
consequences, if any, of the purchase, ownership and disposition of the Notes or
Certificates,  as  applicable.  See  "State and Other Tax  Considerations."  The
depositor  recommends  that  securityholders  consult  their  own  tax  advisors
concerning the federal,  state,  local or other tax  consequences to them of the
purchase, ownership and disposition of the Notes or Certificates, as applicable,
offered under this prospectus.

         The following discussion addresses securities of five general types:

         o        securities ("REMIC  Securities")  representing  interests in a
                  trust  fund,  or a portion of a trust  fund,  that the trustee
                  will  elect  to  have  treated  as  a  real  estate   mortgage
                  investment  conduit ("REMIC") under Sections 860A through 860G
                  (the "REMIC Provisions") of the Code;

         o        securities ("FASIT  Securities")  representing  interests in a
                  trust  fund,  or a portion of a trust  fund,  that the trustee
                  will elect to have treated as a financial asset securitization
                  investment  trust  ("FASIT")  under Sections 860H through 860L
                  (the "FASIT Provisions") of the Code;

                                       85


         o        securities ("Grantor Trust Securities") representing interests
                  in a trust  fund (a  "Grantor  Trust  Fund")  as to  which  no
                  election will be made;

         o        securities  ("Partnership  Certificates")  representing equity
                  interests in a trust fund (a  "Partnership  Trust Fund") which
                  is treated as a partnership  for federal  income tax purposes;
                  and

         o        securities ("Debt Securities")  representing indebtedness of a
                  Partnership Trust Fund or a trust fund which is disregarded as
                  a separate entity for federal income tax purposes.

         The prospectus supplement for each series of Notes or Certificates,  as
applicable,  will indicate which of the foregoing  treatments will apply to that
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 or, if a FASIT election will be made for the related trust fund,  will
identify all "regular  interests"  and "ownership  interests" in the FASIT.  For
purposes of this tax discussion,

         (1)      references  to a  "securityholder"  or a  "holder"  are to the
                  beneficial owner of a Security,

         (2)      references to "REMIC Pool" are to an entity or portion thereof
                  as to which a REMIC election will be made and

         (3)      to  the  extent   specified  in  the  prospectus   supplement,
                  references to "mortgage  loans" include  Contracts.  Except to
                  the extent  specified in the prospectus  supplement,  no REMIC
                  election will be made for Unsecured Home Improvement Loans.

         The  following  discussion  is based in part upon the  rules  governing
original  issue discount that are set forth in Sections 1271 through 1275 of the
Code  and  in  the  Treasury  regulations   promulgated   thereunder  (the  "OID
Regulations"),  in part upon the REMIC  Provisions and the Treasury  regulations
promulgated  thereunder  (the "REMIC  Regulations"),  and in part upon the FASIT
Provisions.  Although  the FASIT  Provisions  of the Code  became  effective  on
September  1,  1997,  the  Treasury  regulations  issued  with  respect to those
provisions are still in proposed form only.  Accordingly,  the discussion herein
does not address the proposed FASIT regulations  (which will be discussed in the
related  prospectus  supplement  if and to the  extent  they are  relevant)  and
definitive  guidance  cannot be provided with respect to many aspects of the tax
treatment of the holders of FASIT Securities.  In addition,  the OID Regulations
do not adequately address some issues relevant to, and in some instances provide
that they are not applicable to,  securities such as the Notes or  Certificates,
as applicable.

         Taxable Mortgage Pools

         Corporate  income tax can be imposed on the net income of some entities
issuing  non-REMIC  and  non-FASIT  debt  obligations  secured  by  real  estate
mortgages  ("Taxable Mortgage Pools").  Any entity other than a REMIC or a FASIT
(as defined in this prospectus) will be considered a Taxable Mortgage Pool if

         (1)      substantially  all of the assets of the entity consist of debt
                  obligations and more than 50% of those obligations  consist of
                  "real estate mortgages,"

         (2)      that entity is the borrower under debt obligations with two or
                  more maturities, and

                                       86


         (3)      under the terms of the debt obligations on which the entity is
                  the   borrower,   payments   on  those   obligations   bear  a
                  relationship  to  payments  on  the  obligations  held  by the
                  entity.

Furthermore,  a group of assets  held by an entity  can be treated as a separate
Taxable  Mortgage  Pool if the assets are expected to produce  significant  cash
flow that will support one or more of the entity's  issues of debt  obligations.
The  depositor  generally  will  structure  offerings of non-REMIC and non-FASIT
Securities to avoid the application of the Taxable Mortgage Pool rules.

REMICS

         CLASSIFICATION OF REMICS

         For each  series  of REMIC  Securities,  assuming  compliance  with all
provisions  of the related  pooling and servicing  agreement,  in the opinion of
McKee  Nelson LLP and Thacher  Proffitt & Wood LLP,  the related  trust fund (or
each applicable portion of the trust fund) 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 the 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 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
total  adjusted  basis of the  nonqualified  assets is less than 1% of the total
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  of  "disqualified  organizations"  and must  furnish
applicable   tax   information  to  transferors  or  agents  that  violate  this
requirement.  The  pooling  and  servicing  agreement  for 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" below.

         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  contract  in effect on the Startup  Day.
Qualified mortgages include whole 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,
shares held by a tenant stockholder in a cooperative  housing  corporation,  and
manufactured  housing that qualifies as a "single family  residence"  under Code
Section 25(e)(10) 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:

                  (1)      in  exchange  for any  qualified  mortgage  within  a
         three-month period from the Startup Day; or

                  (2)      in exchange  for a  "defective  obligation"  within a
         two-year period from the Startup Day.

                                       87


         A "defective obligation" includes:

                  (1)      a  mortgage  in  default  or as to which  default  is
         reasonably foreseeable;

                  (2)      a mortgage as to which a customary  representation or
         warranty  made at the  time of  transfer  to the  REMIC  Pool  has been
         breached;

                  (3)      a  mortgage  that was  fraudulently  procured  by the
         borrower; and

                  (4)      a mortgage that was not in fact  principally  secured
         by real  property  (but only if the  mortgage  is disposed of within 90
         days of discovery).

A mortgage loan that is "defective" as described in clause (4) above 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 that 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  other   contingencies.   The  reserve  fund  will  be
disqualified  if more than 30% of the gross  income from the assets in that 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  "promptly  and  appropriately"  reduced  to the  extent  it  exceeds  a
reasonably  required amount.  Foreclosure  property is real property acquired by
the REMIC Pool in connection with the default or imminent default of a qualified
mortgage and  generally  may not be held for more than three taxable years after
the taxable year of acquisition  unless  extensions are granted by the Secretary
of the Treasury.

         In addition to the foregoing  requirements,  the various interests in a
REMIC Pool also must meet specific requirements. All of the interests in a REMIC
Pool  must be  either  of the  following:  (1) one or more  classes  of  regular
interests or (2) a single class of residual interests on which distributions, if
any, are made pro rata.

         o        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 variable rate, or consist
                  of a specified, nonvarying portion of the interest payments on
                  qualified  mortgages.  That 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.

         o        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.

                                       88


         An interest in a REMIC Pool may be treated as a regular  interest  even
if payments of principal for that 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, except as disclosed in a related prospectus supplement,
in the opinion of McKee Nelson LLP and Thacher  Proffitt & Wood LLP, the Regular
Securities of a series will constitute one or more classes of regular interests,
and the Residual  Securities  for that series will  constitute a single class of
residual interests for 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 that  status  during  any
taxable  year,  the Code provides that the entity will not be treated as a REMIC
for that year and  thereafter.  In that  event,  that 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,  none  of  these
regulations have been issued. Any relief provided,  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 that status
are not satisfied.  The pooling and servicing agreement for 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

         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 these Notes or Certificates, as applicable, 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.

         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 the Notes or
Certificates,  as  applicable,  are treated as "real estate  assets"  within the
meaning of Section 856(c)(4)(A) of the Code. In addition, the Regular Securities
generally 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 in the REMIC.

         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  those 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   generally   will  qualify  as  "real  estate  assets"  under  Section
856(c)(4)(A) of the Code.

         TIERED REMIC STRUCTURES

         For some 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

                                       89


purposes.  Upon the issuance of any of these series of REMIC  Securities,  McKee
Nelson  LLP or  Thacher  Proffitt  & Wood LLP will  deliver  its  opinion  that,
assuming  compliance  with all  provisions of the related  pooling and servicing
agreement,  the Tiered  REMICs will each  qualify as a REMIC and the  respective
REMIC  Securities  issued by each Tiered  REMIC 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 those Notes or Certificates,  as applicable,
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

(1)      General

         Except as otherwise  indicated herein,  the Regular  Securities will be
treated for federal income tax purposes as debt  instruments  that are issued by
the REMIC and not as beneficial interests in the REMIC or the REMIC's assets. 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 that
Regular Securityholder.

         Payments  of  interest  on Regular  Securities  may be based on a fixed
rate, a variable rate as permitted by the REMIC Regulations, or may consist of a
specified  portion of the interest  payments on qualified  mortgages  where such
portion does not vary during the period the Regular Security is outstanding. The
definition of a variable rate for purposes of the REMIC  Regulations is based on
the definition of a qualified  floating rate for purposes of the rules governing
original  issue  discount  set  forth  in  the  OID  Regulations,  with  certain
modifications   and  permissible   variations.   See  "--Variable  Rate  Regular
Securities"  below for a discussion of the  definition  of a qualified  floating
rate for purposes of the OID Regulations.  A qualified floating rate, as defined
above for purposes of the REMIC Regulations (a "REMIC qualified floating rate"),
qualifies as a variable rate for purposes of the REMIC Regulations if such REMIC
qualified  floating  rate  is set at a  "current  rate"  as  defined  in the OID
Regulations.  In addition, a rate equal to the highest,  lowest or an average of
two or more REMIC  qualified  floating  rates  qualifies as a variable  rate for
REMIC  purposes.  A Regular  Security  may also have a variable  rate based on a
weighted average of the interest rates on some or all of the qualified mortgages
held by the REMIC where each  qualified  mortgage taken into account has a fixed
rate or a  variable  rate  that is  permissible  under  the  REMIC  Regulations.
Further,  a  Regular  Security  may have a rate that is the  product  of a REMIC
qualified floating rate or a weighted average rate and a fixed multiplier,  is a
constant  number of basis  points more or less than a REMIC  qualified  floating
rate or a weighted  average  rate,  or is the product,  plus or minus a constant
number of basis points, of a REMIC qualified floating rate or a weighted average
rate  and a fixed  multiplier.  An  otherwise  permissible  variable  rate for a
Regular  Security,  described above, will not lose its character as such because
it is subject to a floor or a cap,  including  a "funds  available  cap" as that
term is defined in the REMIC  Regulations.  Lastly,  a Regular  Security will be
considered as having a permissible  variable rate if it has a fixed or otherwise
permissible  variable  rate  during one or more  payment or accrual  periods and
different fixed or otherwise  permissible variable rates during other payment or
accrual periods.

                                       90


(2)      Original Issue Discount

         Accrual Securities will be, and other classes of 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 purposes 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 that income. The following discussion is
based in part on the "OID  Regulations" and in part on the provisions of the Tax
Reform Act of 1986 (the "1986 Act").  Regular  Securityholders  should be aware,
however,  that the OID Regulations do not adequately  address some of the issues
relevant  to, and in some  instances  provide that they are not  applicable  to,
prepayable securities,  such as the Regular Securities. To the extent that those
issues are not  addressed in the  regulations,  the Seller  intends to apply the
methodology  described in the  Conference  Committee  Report to the 1986 Act. No
assurance  can be 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  because 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 in the OID  Regulations  and
the  appropriate  method for reporting  interest and original issue discount for
the Regular Securities.

         Each  Regular  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  that  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  before  the issue  date of the  Regular  Security,  unless  the  Regular
Securityholder  elects on its federal  income tax return to exclude  that 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 those  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 the 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 for 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
prospectus  supplement,  because  the  underlying  mortgage  loans  provide  for
remedies in the event of default,  it is anticipated that the trustee will treat
interest for the Regular Securities as qualified stated interest.  Distributions
of interest on an Accrual  Security,  or on other Regular  Securities  for which
deferred interest will accrue, will not constitute qualified stated interest, in
which case the stated  redemption price at maturity of those Regular  Securities
includes  all  distributions  of  interest as well as  principal  on the Regular
Securities.  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

                                       91


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 the 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 those
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 for a series of Regular  Securities  will be set forth in
the prospectus  supplement.  Holders  generally must report de minimis  original
issue discount pro rata as principal payments are received, and that income will
generally  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" below.

         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.  For 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:

                  (1)      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

                  (2)      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:

                           (1)      the  yield  to   maturity   of  the  Regular
                  Security at the issue date; and

                           (2)      the Prepayment Assumption.

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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 total  amount  of  original  issue  discount  for 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 those  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.  For 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.  An  increase in
prepayments on the mortgage loans for a series of Regular  Securities can result
in both a change in the  priority  of  principal  payments  for some  Classes of
Regular  Securities  and either an increase or decrease in the daily portions of
original issue discount for those Regular Securities.

(3)      Acquisition Premium

         A purchaser of a Regular  Security  having original issue discount 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 the
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,  a subsequent  purchaser may elect to treat all that  acquisition
premium under the constant  yield method,  as described  below under the heading
"--Election to Treat All Interest Under the Constant Yield Method" below.

(4)      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  qualified
variable  rate if,  generally,  (1) the issue price does not exceed the original
principal balance by more than a specified  amount,  (2) it does not provide for
any  principal  payments  that are  contingent,  within  the  meaning of the OID
Regulations,  except as provided in (1),  and (3) 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.  A multiple  of a  qualified  floating  rate is  considered  a  qualified
floating rate only if the rate is equal to either (a) the product of a qualified
floating  rate and a fixed  multiple that is greater than 0.65 but not more than
1.35 or (b) the product of a qualified  floating rate and a fixed  multiple that
is greater  than 0.65 but not more

                                       93


than 1.35, increased or decreased by a fixed rate. That rate may also be 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 the information is not (1) within the control of the
issuer or a related party or (2) unique to the  circumstances of the issuer or a
related  party.  However,  an  objective  rate does not  include a rate if it is
reasonably expected that the average value of such rate during the first half of
the  Regular  Security's  term  will  be  either   significantly  less  than  or
significantly  greater than the average  value of the rate during the final half
of the Regular  Security's  term. 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 qualified  floating rate; 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  qualified  variable  rate under the  foregoing
rules, for example, a Class that bears different rates at different times during
the period it is outstanding that it is considered significantly  "front-loaded"
or "back-loaded" within the meaning of the OID Regulations.  It is possible that
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 for Regular
Securities apply the same principles as the OID Regulations,  those  regulations
may lead to different  timing of income  inclusion  than would be the case under
the OID Regulations.  Furthermore, application of those 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  qualified  variable  rate  as  described  in this
paragraph.

         The amount of original issue discount for a Regular  Security bearing a
qualified  variable rate of interest will accrue in the manner  described  above
under  "--Original  Issue  Discount,"  with the  yield to  maturity  and  future
payments on that 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,  if the Class  bears  interest at a
qualified  floating rate or qualified inverse floating rate, or based on a fixed
rate which reflects the reasonably expected yield for the relevant Class, if the
Class bears  interest  at an  objective  rate  (other  than a qualified  inverse
floating rate). Unless required otherwise by applicable final regulations, it is
anticipated that the trustee will treat interest,  other than variable  interest
on an interest-only or super-premium  Class, as qualified stated interest at the
qualified variable rate. However,  the qualified stated interest allocable to an
accrual  period will be increased (or  decreased) if the interest  actually paid
during the accrual  period  exceed (or is less than) the interest  assumed to be
paid under the rate just described.

(5)      Market Discount

         A subsequent 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  (1)  is  exceeded  by the  remaining
outstanding principal payments and interest payments other than qualified stated
interest  payments  due on a Regular  Security,  or (2) in the case of a Regular
Security having original issue discount, is exceeded by the adjusted issue price
of that Regular Security at the time of purchase.  The purchaser  generally will
be  required  to  recognize  ordinary  income to the  extent of  accrued  market
discount on that  Regular  Security as  distributions  includible  in the stated
redemption price at maturity of the Regular Security are received,  in an amount
not exceeding that distribution. The 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

                                       94


provides that until these  regulations  are issued,  the market  discount  would
accrue either (1) on the basis of a constant  interest rate, or (2) in the ratio
of stated  interest  allocable to the relevant period to the sum of the interest
for that period plus the remaining  interest as of the end of that 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 that period plus the  remaining  original
issue  discount as of the end of that period.  The 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.  The
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 on the Regular Security.  The deferred
portion of the interest  expense in any taxable year  generally  will not exceed
the accrued market discount on the Regular  Security for that year. Any 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 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
the 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
that  election  may be  deemed  to be made.  A person  who  purchases  a Regular
Security at a price lower than the  remaining  amounts  includible in the stated
redemption price at maturity of the security, but higher than its adjusted issue
price,  does not acquire the Regular Security with market discount,  but will be
required to report  original issue discount,  appropriately  adjusted to reflect
the excess of the price paid over the adjusted issue price.

         Market discount for a Regular Security will be considered to be zero if
the market discount is less than 0.25% of the remaining stated  redemption price
at  maturity  of the Regular  Security  (or,  in the case of a Regular  Security
having  original  issue  discount,  the  adjusted  issue  price of that  Regular
Security)  multiplied by the weighted  average  maturity of the Regular Security
(presumably   determined  as  described  above  in  the  third  paragraph  under
"--Original  Issue Discount"  above)  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  uncertainty  exists with respect to many aspects of those
rules.  Due to the substantial  lack of regulatory  guidance with respect to the
market  discount  rules, it is unclear how those rules will affect any secondary
market that develops for a particular Class of Regular  Securities.  Prospective
investors in Regular  Securities should consult their own tax advisors regarding
the application of the market  discount rules to the Regular  Securities and the
elections to include  market  discount in income  currently and to accrue market
discount on the basis of the constant yield method.

(6)      Amortizable 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 that Regular Security as a "capital
asset" within the meaning of Code Section 1221, the Regular  Securityholder  may
elect  under Code  Section 171 to amortize  the premium  under a constant  yield
method that reflects  compounding  based on the interval between payments on the
Regular  Security.  The  election  will apply to all  taxable  debt  obligations
(including REMIC regular interests) acquired by the Regular  Securityholder at a
premium  held in that  taxable  year or

                                       95


thereafter,  unless revoked with the permission of the Internal Revenue Service.
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  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  generally 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.

(7)      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 this  election,  (1)  "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 (2) 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 this  election on an instrument by instrument  basis or for a
class or group of debt instruments.  However,  if the holder makes this election
for a debt instrument  with  amortizable  bond premium,  the holder is deemed to
have made  elections to amortize bond premium  currently as it accrues under the
constant  yield  method  for all  premium  bonds  held by the holder in the same
taxable year or thereafter. Alternatively, if the holder makes this election for
a debt  instrument  with  market  discount,  the  holder  is deemed to have made
elections to report  market  discount  income  currently as it accrues under the
constant  yield method for all 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 this election.

(8)      Treatment of Losses

         Regular  Securityholders  will be required to report income for 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 the 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 that loss
with  respect to principal  sustained  during the taxable year on account of any
Regular Securities becoming wholly or partially worthless, and that, in general,
Regular  Securityholders

                                       96


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
Regular  Securities  becoming wholly worthless.  Although the matter is not free
from doubt,  non-corporate Regular  Securityholders should be allowed a bad debt
deduction at the time the principal balance of the 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 those losses only after all the
mortgage  loans  remaining  in  the  trust  fund  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 those  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 that may 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 for
their  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 may be
applicable  to banks and thrift  institutions.  These  taxpayers  are advised to
consult  their tax  advisors  regarding  the  treatment  of  losses  on  Regular
Securities.

(9)      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 original 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 for 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  regarding  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  long-term
capital gain holding period  (currently,  more than one year). That gain will be
treated as ordinary income

                  (1)      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   would  have   accrued  on  the   Regular
         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 for any prior  disposition of property that
         was held as part of that transaction;

                  (2)      in  the  case  of a  non-corporate  taxpayer,  to the
         extent  that the  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

                                       97


                  (3)      to the  extent  that the 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 that  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 the holder for that Regular Security (the "110% yield rule").

         In  addition,  gain or  loss  recognized  from  the  sale of a  Regular
Security by some banks or thrift institutions will be treated as ordinary income
or loss pursuant to Code Section 582(c). Long-term capital gains of noncorporate
taxpayers generally are subject to a lower maximum tax rate than ordinary income
of those  taxpayers for property held for more than one year,  with further rate
reductions  for property held for more than five years.  Currently,  the maximum
tax rate for  corporations  is the same for both  ordinary  income  and  capital
gains.

         TAXATION OF OWNERS OF RESIDUAL SECURITIES

(1)      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 that
quarter and by  allocating  that daily  portion  among the  Residual  Holders in
proportion to their respective holdings of Residual Securities in the REMIC Pool
on that 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

                  (1)      the  limitations  on   deductibility   of  investment
         interest  expense  and  expenses  for the  production  of income do not
         apply;

                  (2)      all bad loans  will be  deductible  as  business  bad
         debts; and

                  (3)      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 Notes or  Certificates,  as
applicable, 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 for 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. If
an interest in the  mortgage  loans is acquired by the REMIC Pool at a discount,
and one or more of these 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 the discount on the mortgage loans that is

                                       98


includible in income may exceed the original issue discount  deductions  allowed
with  respect to the  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 those  Classes are not issued with  substantial  discount or are
issued at a premium.  If taxable  income  attributable  to that  mismatching  is
realized, in 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 that  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 for
any particular  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 that mismatching or unrelated deductions against
which to offset that income,  subject to the  discussion of "excess  inclusions"
below under  "--Limitations  on Offset or Exemption of REMIC Income." The timing
of mismatching of income and deductions described in this paragraph,  if present
for a series of Notes or  Certificates,  as  applicable,  may have a significant
adverse effect upon a Residual Holder's after-tax rate of return.

         A portion of the income of a Residual Holder may be treated unfavorably
in three contexts:

                  (1)      it may not be offset by current or net operating loss
         deductions;

                  (2)      it  will be  considered  unrelated  business  taxable
         income to tax-exempt entities; and

                  (3)      it  is   ineligible   for  any  statutory  or  treaty
         reduction in the 30% withholding  tax otherwise  available to a foreign
         Residual Holder.

See "--Limitations on Offset or Exemption of REMIC Income" below. In addition, a
Residual  Holder's  taxable  income  during  some  periods may exceed the income
reflected  by those  Residual  Holders  for those  periods  in  accordance  with
generally  accepted  accounting  principles.  Investors should consult their own
accountants  concerning the accounting treatment of their investment in Residual
Securities.

(2)      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 that Residual Security. The 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 the loss was disallowed and may be used by the 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,  if, in any year,

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cash  distributions to a Residual Holder exceed its share of the REMIC's taxable
income,  the  excess  will  constitute  a return of capital to the extent of the
holder's basis in its Residual  Security.  A return of capital is not treated as
income for  federal  income tax  purposes,  but will reduce the tax basis of the
Residual Holder (but not below zero). If a Residual  Security's basis is reduced
to zero, any cash  distributions  with respect to that Residual  Security in any
taxable  year in excess of its share of the REMIC's  income  would be taxable to
the holder as gain on the sale or exchange of its interest in the REMIC.

         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 the  residual
interest as zero rather than the 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 the 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 the basis until termination of the
REMIC Pool unless future Treasury  regulations provide for periodic  adjustments
to the REMIC income otherwise  reportable by the 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.

(3)      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  for 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 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  "--Amortizable
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 those
mortgage loans is exceeded by their unpaid principal balances.  The REMIC Pool's
basis in those mortgage loans is generally the fair market value of the mortgage
loans  immediately  after the transfer of the mortgage  loans to the REMIC Pool.
The REMIC Regulations  provide that the basis is equal to the total of the issue
prices of all  regular and  residual  interests  in the REMIC  Pool.  The market
discount  must be  recognized  currently  as an item of  ordinary  income  as it
accrues, rather than being included in income upon the sale of mortgage loans or
as principal on the mortgage loans is paid.  Market  discount  income  generally
should  accrue in the manner  described  above  under  "--Taxation  of Owners of
Regular Securities--Market Discount."

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         PREMIUM.  Generally,  if the  basis of the REMIC  Pool in the  mortgage
loans exceeds the unpaid  principal  balances of the mortgage  loans,  the REMIC
Pool will be considered to have acquired those mortgage loans at a premium equal
to the  amount of that  excess.  As stated  above,  the  REMIC  Pool's  basis in
mortgage  loans is generally the fair market value of the mortgage  loans and is
based on the total of the issue prices of the regular and residual  interests in
the REMIC Pool immediately after the transfer of the mortgage loans to the REMIC
Pool. In a manner analogous to the discussion above under  "--Taxation of Owners
of Regular Securities  Amortizable 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  borrowers on the  mortgage  loans are
expected to be  individuals,  Code Section 171 will not be available for premium
on mortgage loans originated on or before September 27, 1985.  Premium for those
mortgage  loans  may  be  deductible  in  accordance  with a  reasonable  method
regularly employed by the holder of those mortgage loans. The allocation of that
premium pro rata among  principal  payments  should be  considered  a reasonable
method;  however, the Internal Revenue Service may argue that the premium should
be allocated in a different  manner,  such as allocating the premium entirely to
the final payment of principal.

(4)      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 that
quarterly period of (1) 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 (2) the adjusted  issue
price of the Residual  Security at the  beginning of the 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
those daily  accruals of REMIC income  described in this paragraph for all prior
quarters,  decreased  by any  distributions  made with  respect to the  Residual
Security before the beginning of that quarterly period.

         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 carry-forwards, on the 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 the
Residual  Holder for purposes of Code Section  511. In addition,  REMIC  taxable
income is subject to 30%  withholding  tax for 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 persons who are not U.S. Persons.

         Provisions governing the relationship between excess inclusions and the
alternative  minimum tax provide that (i) alternative minimum taxable income for
a Residual  Holder is determined  without regard to the special rule,  discussed
above,  that  taxable  income  cannot be less

                                      101


than excess  inclusions,  (ii) a Residual Holder's  alternative  minimum taxable
income  for a taxable  year  cannot be less than the excess  inclusions  for the
year,  and (iii) the amount of any  alternative  minimum tax net operating  loss
deduction must be computed without regard to any excess inclusions.

         The Internal  Revenue  Service has authority to promulgate  regulations
providing  that  if the  aggregate  value  of  the  Residual  Securities  is not
considered to be "significant," then the entire share of REMIC taxable income of
a Residual Holder may be treated as excess  inclusions  subject to the foregoing
limitations. This authority has not been exercised to date.

(5)      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 (1) the
present  value of the total  anticipated  excess  inclusions  for that  Residual
Security for periods  after the transfer  and (2) 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. That 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.  That tax
generally  would be imposed on the transferor of the Residual  Security,  except
that where the  transfer is through an agent  (including a broker,  nominee,  or
other  middleman)  for a  Disqualified  Organization,  the tax would  instead be
imposed on the agent.  However,  a transferor of a Residual Security would in no
event be liable for the tax for 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 the affidavit is false.  Under the REMIC  Regulations,  an
affidavit will be sufficient if the transferee  furnishes (A) a social  security
number, and states under penalties of perjury that the social security number is
that of the transferee, or (B) a statement under penalties of perjury that it is
not a disqualified organization.

         "Disqualified  Organization"  means  the  United  States,  any state or
political  subdivision  of  the  United  States,  any  foreign  government,  any
international  organization,  any  agency  or  instrumentality  of  any  of  the
foregoing (provided, that the term does not include an instrumentality if all of
its  activities  are subject to tax and a majority of its board of  directors in
not  selected  by  any  governmental   entity),  any  cooperative   organization
furnishing  electric energy or providing  telephone  service to 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  the  organization  is  subject  to the tax on
unrelated business income imposed by Code Section 511.

         In addition,  if a "Pass-Through  Entity" (as defined below) has excess
inclusion  income  for  a  Residual   Security  during  a  taxable  year  and  a
Disqualified  Organization  is the record  holder of an equity  interest in that
entity,  then a tax is  imposed on the  entity  equal to the  product of (1) the
amount  of  excess  inclusions  that  are  allocable  to  the  interest  in  the
Pass-Through  Entity during the period that interest is held by the Disqualified
Organization,  and (2) the highest marginal  federal  corporate income tax rate.
That 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 the
tax if (1) it has received an affidavit  from the record holder  stating,  under
penalties of perjury, that it is not a Disqualified  Organization,  or providing
the holder's  taxpayer  identification  number and stating,  under  penalties of
perjury,  that the social security  number is that of the record owner,  and

                                      102


(2) during the period that person is the record holder of the Residual Security,
the  Pass-Through  Entity does not have actual  knowledge  that the affidavit is
false.

         "Pass-Through  Entity" means any  regulated  investment  company,  real
estate investment  trust,  common trust fund,  partnership,  trust or estate and
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 that  interest,  be treated as a
Pass-Through Entity.

         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. The exception to this tax, otherwise available to a
Pass-Through Entity that is furnished particular affidavits by record holders of
interests in the entity and that does not know those  affidavits  are false,  is
not available to an electing large partnership.

         The pooling and  servicing  agreement for a series will provide that no
legal or  beneficial  interest  in a Residual  Security  may be  transferred  or
registered  unless (1) the proposed  transferee  furnished to the transferor and
the  trustee an  affidavit  providing  its  taxpayer  identification  number and
stating that the transferee is the beneficial owner of the Residual Security and
is not a Disqualified  Organization and is not purchasing the Residual  Security
on  behalf  of a  Disqualified  Organization  (i.e.,  as a  broker,  nominee  or
middleman) and (2) the transferor provides a statement in writing to the trustee
that it has no actual  knowledge  that the  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 for a
series will bear a legend referring to those restrictions on transfer,  and each
Residual  Holder will be deemed to have  agreed,  as a condition of ownership of
the Residual  Security,  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 that information.

         NONECONOMIC  RESIDUAL INTERESTS.  The REMIC Regulations would disregard
some  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 to all federal  income tax purposes if a significant  purpose of the
transfer 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,  (1) 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 (2) 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 (1) 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

                                      103


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,
(2) 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,  and (3) either the  formula  test or the asset test (each as
described below) is satisfied.

         The formula test is satisfied if the present  value of the  anticipated
tax liabilities  associated  with holding the Residual  Security does not exceed
the sum of the present values of (1) any  consideration  given to the transferee
to the acquire the Residual Security,  (2) the expected future  distributions on
the Residual  Security,  and (3) the  anticipated  tax savings  associated  with
holding the Residual  Security as the REMIC  generates  losses.  For purposes of
this  calculation,  the present values generally are calculated using a discount
rate equal to the applicable  federal rate, and the transferee is assumed to pay
tax at the highest corporate rate of tax.

         The asset test is satisfied if

         1.       at the time of the transfer of the Residual  Security,  and at
                  the  close  of  each  of the  transferee's  two  fiscal  years
                  preceding the year of transfer,  the transferee's gross assets
                  for financial  reporting  purposes exceed $100 million and its
                  net  assets  for  financial   reporting  purposes  exceed  $10
                  million,

         2.       the transferee is a taxable domestic C corporation, other than
                  a RIC, REIT,  REMIC or Subchapter T cooperative  (an "Eligible
                  Corporation"),   that  makes  a  written  agreement  that  any
                  subsequent  transfer  of  the  Residual  Security  will  be to
                  another  Eligible  Corporation in a transaction that satisfies
                  the safe harbor  described  above, and the transferor does not
                  know,  or have reason to know,  that the  transferee  will not
                  honor such agreement, and

         3.       the  facts and  circumstances  known to the  transferor  on or
                  before the date of transfer do not  reasonably  indicate  that
                  the taxes  associated  with the Residual  Security will not be
                  paid.

For purposes of requirement (1), the gross and net assets of a transferee do not
include any obligations of a person related to the transferee or any other asset
if a  principal  purpose  for  holding or  acquiring  the asset is to permit the
transferee to satisfy the asset test. Further,  neither the formula test nor the
asset  test  will  be  treated  as  satisfied  in the  case of any  transfer  or
assignment of the Residual Security to a foreign branch of the transferee or any
other  arrangement by which the Residual  Security is at any time subject to net
tax by a foreign country or possession of the United States.

         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 the
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,  the  transferor
reasonably  expects that (1) the future  distributions on the Residual  Security
will equal at least 30% of the anticipated excess inclusions after the transfer,
and (2) such  amounts  will be  distributed  at or after  the time at which  the
excess inclusions accrue and before the end of the next succeeding taxable year.
A safe harbor in the REMIC Regulations provides that the reasonable  expectation
requirement  will be  satisfied  if the above test  would be met at all  assumed
prepayment  rates for the  mortgage  loans from 50 percent to 200 percent of the
Prepayment  Assumption.  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

                                      104


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 the 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  properly  treated as a  partnership  or as a  corporation  for
federal  income tax  purposes)  created or organized in or under the laws of the
United  States or of any state  (including,  for this  purpose,  the District of
Columbia),  an estate that is subject to U.S.  federal  income tax regardless of
the source of its income, or a trust if a court within the United States is able
to exercise primary  supervision over the administration of the trust and one or
more U.S. Persons have the authority to control all substantial decisions of the
trust (or, to the extent provided in applicable Treasury regulations,  trusts in
existence  on August 20,  1996,  which are  eligible to elect and do elect to be
treated as U.S. Persons).

(6)      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 the Residual Holder in the Residual
Security at the time of the sale or exchange.

         Further,  as described  above under  "--Taxation  of Owners of Residual
Securities--Basis  and  Losses",  if a Residual  Security's  basis is reduced to
zero,  any cash  distributions  with  respect to that  Residual  Security in any
taxable year in excess of its share of the REMIC's income for that year would be
taxable to the holder as gain on the sale or  exchange  of its  interest  in the
REMIC. If a Residual Holder has an adjusted basis in its Residual  Security when
its interest in the REMIC Pool terminates, then it will recognize a capital loss
(assuming the Residual  Security was held as a capital asset) at that time in an
amount equal to the remaining adjusted basis.

         Any gain on the sale of a Residual Security will be treated as ordinary
income (1) 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 for any prior disposition of property that was held as a part of
that transaction or (2) in the case of a non-corporate  taxpayer,  to the extent
that the 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 some banks or
thrift  institutions will be treated as ordinary income or loss pursuant to Code
Section 582(c).

         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 the 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.

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(7)      Mark to Market Regulations

         Treasury  regulations  provide that a Residual  Security acquired on or
after January 4, 1995 is not treated as a security and thus may not be marked to
market pursuant to Section 475 of the Code.

         TAXES THAT MAY BE IMPOSED ON THE REMIC POOL

(8)      Inducement Fees

         Regulations  have  been  proposed  regarding  the  federal  income  tax
treatment of "inducement  fees" received by  transferees of  non-economic  REMIC
residual  interests.  The proposed  regulations (i) provide tax accounting rules
for the  treatment  of such fees as income over an  appropriate  period and (ii)
specify that inducement  fees  constitute  income from sources within the United
States.  The proposed  regulations  provide that the final  regulations  will be
applicable  to taxable years ending on or after the date final  regulations  are
published,  and  thus  yet to be  issued  final  regulations  may  apply  to the
treatment of any inducement fee received in connection with the acquisition of a
Residual  Certificate.  Prospective  purchasers of Residual  Certificates should
consult their tax advisors  regarding the effect of these  proposed  regulations
and the tax consequences of receiving any inducement fee.

(1)      Prohibited Transactions

         Income  from   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:

                  (1)      the  disposition of a qualified  mortgages other than
         for

                           (a)      substitution  for a defective  (including  a
                  defaulted)  obligation within two years of the Startup Day (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;

                  (2)      the  receipt of income  from  assets that are not the
         type of  mortgages or  investments  that the REMIC Pool is permitted to
         hold;

                  (3)      the receipt of compensation for services; or

                  (4)      the  receipt  of gain from  disposition  of cash flow
         investments other than pursuant to a qualified liquidation.

         Notwithstanding  (1) and (4) above, it is not a prohibited  transaction
to sell a  qualified  mortgage or cash flow  investment  held by a REMIC Pool 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 Notes
or Certificates, as applicable, is outstanding).  The REMIC Regulations indicate
that the  modification  of

                                      106


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  borrower  pursuant  to the  terms  of a
convertible adjustable rate mortgage loan.

(2)      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

         (1)      during the three months following the Startup Day,

         (2)      made to a qualified reserve fund by a Residual Holder,

         (3)      in the nature of a guarantee,

         (4)      made to facilitate a qualified  liquidation  or clean-up call,
                  and

         (5)      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.

(3)      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 after the year
in which the REMIC Pool acquired that property,  with possible  extensions.  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.

(4)      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 that  adoption
is deemed to occur,  and sells all of its  assets  (other  than  cash)  within a
90-day period  beginning on that 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.

(5)      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 the  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,

                                      107


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,  for the
REMIC Pool as agent of the  Residual  Holders  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 the Residual  Holder,  the Residual Holder or any other
person specified pursuant to Treasury regulations will be required to act as tax
matters  person.  The  tax  matters  person  generally  has  responsibility  for
overseeing and providing notice to the other Residual Holders of  administrative
and judicial proceedings regarding the REMIC Pool's tax affairs,  although other
holders  of the  Residual  Securities  of the  same  series  would  be  able  to
participate in those proceedings in appropriate circumstances.

(6)      Limitations on Deduction of Certain Expenses

         An investor who is an individual,  estate,  or trust will be subject to
limitation  with respect to some itemized  deductions  described in Code Section
67, to the extent that those itemized deductions,  in total, do not exceed 2% of
the investor's  adjusted gross income. In the case of a partnership that has 100
or more  partners and elects to be treated as an "electing  large  partnership,"
70% of that partnership's  miscellaneous itemized deductions will be disallowed,
although the remaining  deductions  will generally be allowed at the partnership
level and will not be subject to the 2% floor that would otherwise be applicable
to  individual  partners.  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 or (1) 3% of the  excess of  adjusted  gross  income in
excess of a specified threshold amount (which is adjusted annually),  or (2) 80%
of the amount of itemized  deductions  otherwise allowable for that year. In the
case of a REMIC Pool, those 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 for a
regular  interest  it holds in another  REMIC.  Those  investors  who hold REMIC
Securities either directly or indirectly through pass-through  entities may have
their pro rata share of those  expenses  allocated to them as  additional  gross
income, but may be subject to that limitation on deductions.  In addition, those
expenses are not  deductible  at all for purposes of computing  the  alternative
minimum  tax,  and may  cause  those  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. For a REMIC Pool that would be classified as an investment trust
in the  absence  of a REMIC  election  or that is  substantially  similar  to an
investment trust, any holder of a Regular Security that is an individual, trust,
estate,  or  pass-through  entity also will be  allocated  its pro rata share of
those expenses and a  corresponding  amount of income and will be subject to the
limitations  or  deductions  imposed by Code  Sections  67 and 68, as  described
above. The prospectus supplement will indicate if all those expenses will not be
allocable to the Residual Securities.

         TAXATION OF CERTAIN FOREIGN INVESTORS

(1)      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),  generally will be considered  "portfolio
interest"  and,  therefore,  generally  will not be subject to 30% United States
withholding  tax,  provided that (1) the interest is not  effectively  connected
with  the  conduct  of  a  trade  or  business  in  the  United  States  of  the
securityholder, (2) the Non-U.S. Person 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 (3) that Non-U. S. Person complies
to the

                                      108


extent necessary with certain certification requirements, which generally relate
to the identity of the beneficial  owner and the status of the beneficial  owner
as a person  that is a  Non-U.S.  person.  Each  Regular  Securityholder  should
consult its tax advisors regarding the tax documentation and certifications that
must be provided to secure the exemption from United States withholding taxes.

         Any capital gain realized on the sale, redemption,  retirement or other
taxable disposition of a Regular Security by a Non-U.S. Person generally will be
exempt from United States federal income and withholding tax,  provided that (i)
such gain is not  effectively  connected with the conduct of a trade or business
in the  United  States  by the  Non-U.S.  Person  and  (ii)  in the  case  of an
individual  Non-U.S.  Person,  the Non-U.S.  Person is not present in the United
States for 183 days or more in the taxable year.

         If the interest on the Regular  Security is effectively  connected with
the conduct of a trade or  business  within the United  States by that  Non-U.S.
Person, the Non-U.S. Person, although exempt from the withholding tax previously
discussed if the holder provides an appropriate statement establishing that such
income is so  effectively  connected,  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.

(2)      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 (1) the
mortgage  loans  were  issued  after  July 18,  1984,  and (2) the trust fund or
segregated  pool of  assets  in the  trust  fund (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"
above.  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 those  Non-U.S.  Persons,  although  exempt from the  withholding  tax
previously   discussed  if  the  holder   provides  an   appropriate   statement
establishing that such income is so effectively  connected,  the amounts paid to
those  Non-U.S.  Persons will be subject to United States  federal income tax at
regular  rates.  See   "--Tax-Related   Restrictions  on  Transfer  of  Residual
Securities--Foreign  Investors"  above  concerning  the  disregard  of 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.

(3)      Backup Withholding

         Distributions made on the REMIC Securities,  and proceeds from the sale
of the REMIC  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 some
circumstances,  principal  distributions)  if the  Holder  fails to comply  with
certain  identification  procedures,  unless the Holder is  otherwise  an exempt
recipient  under   applicable   provisions  of  the  Code,  and,  if  necessary,
demonstrates  such status.  Any amounts to be

                                      109


withheld  from  distribution  on the REMIC  Securities  would be refunded by the
Internal  Revenue  Service or allowed as a credit  against the Regular  Holder's
federal income tax liability.

FASITS

         CLASSIFICATION OF FASITs

         For each  series  of FASIT  Securities,  assuming  compliance  with all
provisions  of the related  pooling and servicing  agreement,  in the opinion of
McKee Nelson LLP or Thacher Proffitt & Wood LLP, the related trust fund (or each
applicable  portion of the trust fund) will  qualify as a FASIT.  The trust fund
will qualify  under the Code as a FASIT in which FASIT regular  securities  (the
"FASIT  Regular  Securities")  and the ownership  interest  security (the "FASIT
Ownership  Security") will constitute the "regular interests" and the "ownership
interest," respectively, if

                  (1)      a FASIT election is in effect;

                  (2)      tests concerning

                           (a)      the composition of the FASIT's assets and

                           (b)      the nature of the securityholders' interests
                  in the FASIT are met on a continuing basis; and

                  (3)      the trust fund is not a regulated  investment company
         as defined in Section 851(a) of the Code.

A segregated pool of assets may also qualify as a FASIT.

(1)      Asset Composition

         In  order  for  the  trust  fund  to  be  eligible  for  FASIT  status,
substantially  all of the  assets of the trust fund must  consist of  "permitted
assets" as of the close of the third month  beginning after the closing date and
at all times thereafter. Permitted assets include:

                  (1)      cash or cash equivalents;

                  (2)      debt  instruments with fixed terms that would qualify
         as regular interests if issued by a REMIC as defined in Section 860D of
         the Code  (generally,  instruments that provide for interest at a fixed
         rate, a qualifying  variable rate, or a qualifying  interest-only  type
         rate);

                  (3)      foreclosure property;

                  (4)      some  hedging  instruments  (generally,  interest and
         currency  rate  swaps  and  credit  enhancement   contracts)  that  are
         reasonably  required to  guarantee or hedge  against the FASIT's  risks
         associated with being the obligor on FASIT interests;

                  (5)      contract   rights   to   acquire    qualifying   debt
         instruments or qualifying hedging instruments;

                  (6)      FASIT regular interests; and

                  (7)      REMIC regular interests.

                                      110


         Permitted  assets do not  include  any debt  instruments  issued by the
holder of the  FASIT's  ownership  interest  or by any  person  related  to that
holder.  A debt  instrument  is a  permitted  asset  only if the  instrument  is
indebtedness for federal income tax purposes,  including  regular interests in a
REMIC or  regular  interests  issued by  another  FASIT,  and it bears (1) fixed
interest or (2) variable  interest of a type that relates to qualified  variable
rate  debt  (as  defined  in  Treasury  regulations   prescribed  under  section
860G(a)(1)(B)).  Permitted  hedges  include  interest  rate or foreign  currency
notional principal contracts,  letters of credit, insurance,  guarantees against
payment default and similar instruments to be provided in regulations, and which
are  reasonably  required  to  guarantee  or hedge  against  the  FASIT's  risks
associated with being the obligor on interests issued by the FASIT.  Foreclosure
property is real property  acquired by the FASIT in connection  with the default
or  imminent  default  of a  debt  instrument,  provided  the  depositor  had no
knowledge or reason to know as of the date the debt  instrument  was acquired by
the FASIT that a default had occurred or would occur.

(2)      Interests in a FASIT

         In addition to the  foregoing  asset  qualification  requirements,  the
interests in a FASIT also must meet specific requirements.  All of the interests
in a FASIT must belong to either of the following:

                  (1)      one or more classes of regular interests or

                  (2)      a single class of ownership  interest that is held by
         an Eligible Corporation (as defined in this prospectus).

         FASIT regular  interests  generally will be treated as debt for federal
income tax purposes.  FASIT  ownership  interests  generally will not treated as
debt for federal  income tax  purposes,  but rather as  representing  rights and
responsibilities  with  respect  to the  taxable  income or loss of the  related
FASIT. The prospectus  supplement for each Series of Notes or  Certificates,  as
applicable,  will indicate which  securities of the Series will be designated as
regular interests, and which, if any, will be designated as ownership interests.

         A FASIT interest generally qualifies as a regular interest if:

                  (1)      it is designated as a regular interest;

                  (2)      it has a  stated  maturity  no  greater  than  thirty
         years;

                  (3)      it  entitles  its  holder  to a  specified  principal
         amount;

                  (4)      the issue price of the interest  does not exceed 125%
         of its stated principal amount;

                  (5)      the yield to  maturity  of the  interest is less than
         the applicable Treasury rate published by the IRS plus 5%; and

                  (6)      if it pays  interest,  this  interest  is  payable at
         either:

                           (a)      a fixed rate with  respect to the  principal
                  amount of the regular interest or

                           (b)      a permissible  variable rate with respect to
                  the principal amount.

                                      111


Permissible variable rates for FASIT regular interests are the same as those for
REMIC   regular   interests.   See   "REMICs--Taxation   of  Owners  of  Regular
Securities--(1)  General" for a discussion  of  permissible  variable  rates for
REMIC regular interests.

         If an interest in a FASIT fails to meet one or more of the requirements
set out in clauses (3), (4), or (5) in the immediately preceding paragraph,  but
otherwise meets all  requirements to be treated as a FASIT, it may still qualify
as a type of regular interest known as a "high-yield  interest." In addition, if
an  interest  in a FASIT fails to meet the  requirement  of clause (6),  but the
interest payable on the interest consists of a specified portion of the interest
payments on permitted assets and that portion does not vary over the life of the
security, the interest will also qualify as a high-yield interest.

         See "--Taxation of Owners of FASIT Regular Securities,"  "--Taxation of
Owners of High-Yield  Interests" and "--Taxation of FASIT Ownership  Securities"
below.

(3)      Consequences of Disqualification

         If the  trust  fund  fails to  comply  with  one or more of the  Code's
ongoing requirements for FASIT status during any taxable year, the Code provides
that it's FASIT status may be lost for that year and thereafter. If FASIT status
is lost,  the  treatment of the former FASIT and interests in the FASIT for U.S.
federal  income tax  purposes is  uncertain.  Although the Code  authorizes  the
Treasury to issue  regulations  that address  situations where a failure to meet
the requirements for FASIT status occurs  inadvertently and in good faith, final
regulations  have not yet been  issued.  It is  possible  that  disqualification
relief might be accompanied by sanctions,  such as the imposition of a corporate
tax on all or a portion  of the  FASIT's  income for the period of time in which
the requirements for FASIT status are not satisfied.

         TAXATION OF OWNERS OF FASIT REGULAR SECURITIES

(1)      General

         Payments received by holders of FASIT Regular Securities generally will
be accorded the same tax treatment under the Code as payments  received on other
taxable debt instruments. Holders of FASIT Regular Securities must report income
from these Notes or  Certificates,  as  applicable,  under an accrual  method of
accounting,  even if they  otherwise  would  have  used  the cash  receipts  and
disbursements method. Except in the case of FASIT Regular Securities issued with
original issue  discount,  interest paid or accrued on a FASIT Regular  Security
generally  will be treated  as  ordinary  income to the  Holder and a  principal
payment  on the  security  will be  treated as a return of capital to the extent
that the securityholder's basis is allocable to that payment.

(2)      Original Issue Discount; Market Discount; Acquisition Premium

         FASIT  Regular  Securities  issued  with  original  issue  discount  or
acquired  with  market  discount or  acquisition  premium  generally  will treat
interest and principal  payments on these Notes or Certificates,  as applicable,
in   the   same   manner   described   for   REMIC   Regular   Securities.   See
"--REMICs--Taxation of Owners of Regular Securities" above.

(3)      Sale or Exchange

         If the FASIT Regular  Securities  are sold,  the holder  generally will
recognize  gain or loss upon the sale in the  manner  described  above for REMIC
Regular   Securities.    See    "--REMICs--Taxation   of   Owners   of   Regular
Securities--Sale or Exchange of Regular Securities."

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         TAXATION OF OWNERS OF HIGH-YIELD INTERESTS

(1)      General

         The  treatment of  high-yield  interests is intended to ensure that the
return on instruments issued by a FASIT yielding an equity-like return continues
to have a corporate level tax. High-yield interests are subject to special rules
regarding the eligibility of holders of this interest,  and the ability of these
holders to offset income derived from their FASIT Security with losses.

         High-yield interests may only be held by Eligible  Corporations,  other
FASITs,  and dealers in  securities  who acquire  such  interests  as  inventory
(together, "Eligible Holders").

         o        An "Eligible  Corporation" is a taxable domestic C corporation
                  that does not qualify as a  regulated  investment  company,  a
                  real estate investment trust, a REMIC, or a cooperative.

         If a securities dealer (other than an Eligible  Corporation)  initially
acquires a  high-yield  interest as  inventory,  but later begins to hold it for
investment, the dealer will be subject to an excise tax equal to the income from
the high-yield  interest multiplied by the highest corporate income tax rate. In
addition,  transfers of high-yield interests to a person that is not an Eligible
Holder will be disregarded  for federal income tax purposes,  and the transferor
will continue to be treated as the holder of the high-yield interest.

         In  addition,  the FASIT  Provisions  contain an  anti-abuse  rule that
imposes  corporate  income tax on income  derived from a FASIT Regular  Interest
that is held by a  pass-through  entity  (other than another  FASIT) that issues
debt or equity  securities backed by the FASIT Regular Interest and that have an
original  yield to  maturity  that is both  five  percentage  points  above  the
applicable  federal rate and more than the yield on the FASIT Regular  Interest.
The excise tax is limited to those arrangements that have a principal purpose of
avoiding the ownership restriction relating to high-yield interests.

(2)      Treatment of Losses

         The  holder of a  high-yield  interest  may not use  non-FASIT  current
losses or net operating loss  carry-forwards  or carrybacks to offset any income
derived from the  high-yield  interest,  for either  regular  federal income tax
purposes or for alternative minimum tax purposes.

         TAXATION OF FASIT OWNERSHIP SECURITY

(1)      General

         A FASIT Ownership Security represents the residual equity interest in a
FASIT. As such, the holder of a FASIT Ownership Security  determines its taxable
income by taking  into  account all  assets,  liabilities,  and items of income,
gain, deduction, loss, and credit of a FASIT. The holder, however, does not take
into account any item of income,  gain or deduction  allocable to a  "prohibited
transaction" as discussed below. In general,  the character of the income to the
holder of a FASIT  Ownership  Security  will be the same as the character of the
income to the FASIT,  except  that any  tax-exempt  interest  income  taken into
account  by the holder of a FASIT  Ownership  Security  is  treated as  ordinary
income.  In determining  that taxable  income,  the holder of a FASIT  Ownership
Security must determine the amount of interest,  original issue discount, market
discount,  and premium  recognized  with respect to each debt instrument held by
the FASIT according to a constant yield  methodology and under an accrual method
of accounting. In addition, a holder of a FASIT Ownership Security is subject to
the same  limitations on their ability

                                      113


to use  losses to offset  income  from their  FASIT  Regular  Securities  as are
holders  of  high-yield  interest.  See  "--Taxation  of  Owners  of  High-Yield
Interests" above.

         Rules  similar  to the wash sale  rules  applicable  to REMIC  Residual
Securities also will apply to FASIT Ownership Security.  Accordingly,  losses on
dispositions of a FASIT Ownership  Security  generally will be disallowed  where
within six months  before or after the  disposition,  the seller of the Security
acquires any other FASIT Ownership Security that is economically comparable to a
FASIT  Ownership  Security.  In  addition,  if any  security  that  is  sold  or
contributed  to a FASIT by the holders of the related FASIT  Ownership  Security
was required to be marked-to-market under Section 475 of the Code by the holder,
then Section 475 of the Code will continue to apply to these securities,  except
that the amount realized under the mark-to-market  rules cannot be less than the
securities' value determined after applying special valuation rules contained in
the FASIT  Provisions.  Those special valuation rules generally require that the
value of debt  instruments  that are not  traded  on an  established  securities
market be determined by calculating the present value of the reasonably expected
payments  under the  instrument  using a discount rate of 120% of the applicable
federal rate, compounded semi-annually.

(2)      Prohibited Transaction

         The holder of a FASIT  Ownership  Security is required to pay a penalty
excise tax equal to 100 percent of net income derived from:

                  (1)      an asset that is not a permitted asset;

                  (2)      any  disposition  of an asset  other than a permitted
         disposition (as described below);

                  (3)      any income  attributable  to loans  originated by the
         FASIT; and

                  (4)      compensation  for  services  (other  than  fees for a
         waiver,  amendment,  or consent with respect to permitted  assets other
         than foreclosure property).

A permitted disposition is any disposition of any permitted asset:

                  (1)      arising  from  complete  liquidation  of a  class  of
         regular interest;

                  (2)      incident to the  foreclosure,  default  (or  imminent
         default) on the asset;

                  (3)      incident  to  the  bankruptcy  or  insolvency  of the
         FASIT;

                  (4)      necessary to avoid a default on any  indebtedness  of
         the a FASIT attributable to a default (or imminent default) on an asset
         of the FASIT;

                  (5)      to facilitate a clean-up call; or

                  (6)      to substitute a permitted debt instrument for another
         permitted debt instrument or in order to reduce  over-collateralization
         by  distributing  a debt  instrument  contributed  by the holder of the
         FASIT  Ownership  Security  to such  holder,  but  only if a  principal
         purpose of acquiring the debt  instrument  which is disposed of was not
         the  recognition  of gain (or the  reduction of a loss) arising from an
         increase in its market value after its acquisition by the FASIT.

Notwithstanding  this rule,  the holder of an Ownership  Security may  currently
deduct its losses  incurred in prohibited  transactions in computing its taxable
income  for the  year of the  loss.  A

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Series of Notes or  Certificates,  as applicable,  for which a FASIT election is
made  generally  will  be  structured  in  order  to  avoid  application  of the
prohibited transactions tax.

(3)      Backup Withholding, Reporting and Tax Administration

         Holders of FASIT  Securities  will be subject to backup  withholding to
the same extent as holders of REMIC Securities.

GRANTOR TRUST FUNDS

         CHARACTERIZATION.  For each series of Grantor Trust Securities, Federal
Tax Counsel  will  deliver its opinion  that the Grantor  Trust Fund will not be
classified as an association taxable as a corporation and that the Grantor Trust
Fund will be classified as a grantor trust under subpart E, Part I of subchapter
J of the Code.  In this  case,  beneficial  owners of Grantor  Trust  Securities
(referred to in this  Prospectus  as "Grantor  Trust  Securityholders")  will be
treated  for federal  income tax  purposes as owners of a portion of the Grantor
Trust Fund's assets as described below.

         TAXATION OF GRANTOR TRUST  SECURITYHOLDERS.  Subject to the  discussion
below  under  "Stripped  Certificates"  and  "Subordinated  Certificates,"  each
Grantor  Trust  Securityholder  will  be  treated  as the  owner  of a pro  rata
undivided  interest in the assets of the Grantor  Trust Fund.  Accordingly,  and
subject to the discussion below of the  recharacterization of the servicing fee,
each Grantor Trust  Securityholder  must include in income its pro rata share of
the  interest  and other  income  from the  assets of the  Grantor  Trust  Fund,
including any interest,  original issue discount,  market  discount,  prepayment
fees, assumption fees, and late payment charges with respect to the assets, and,
subject to  limitations  discussed  below,  may deduct its pro rata share of the
fees and other  deductible  expenses paid by the Grantor Trust Fund, at the same
time and to the same  extent as these items would be included or deducted by the
Grantor Trust Securityholder if the Grantor Trust Securityholder held directly a
pro rata  interest in the assets of the Grantor Trust Fund and received and paid
directly the amounts  received and paid by the Grantor  Trust Fund.  Any amounts
received by a Grantor Trust  Securityholder  in lieu of amounts due with respect
to any asset of the Grantor  Trust Fund because of a default or  delinquency  in
payment  will be treated  for  federal  income tax  purposes  as having the same
character as the payments they replace.

         Each Grantor  Trust  Securityholder  will be entitled to deduct its pro
rata  share of  servicing  fees,  prepayment  fees,  assumption  fees,  any loss
recognized upon an assumption and late payment charges retained by the servicer,
provided that these amounts are reasonable compensation for services rendered to
the Grantor Trust Fund.  Grantor  Trust  Securityholders  that are  individuals,
estates or trusts will be entitled to deduct their share of expenses only to the
extent these expenses plus all other  miscellaneous  itemized  deductions exceed
two percent of the Grantor Trust  Securityholder's  adjusted  gross income,  and
will be allowed no deduction for these expenses in determining their liabilities
for alternative  minimum tax. In addition,  Section 68 of the Code provides that
the amount of itemized  deductions  otherwise allowable for the taxable year for
an individual whose adjusted gross income exceeds a prescribed  threshold amount
will be reduced by the lesser of (1) 3% of the excess of adjusted  gross  income
over the specified threshold amount (adjusted annually for inflation) or (2) 80%
of the amount of itemized  deductions  otherwise  allowable  for the  applicable
taxable  year.  In the case of a  partnership  that has 100 or more partners and
elects  to  be  treated  as  an  "electing  large   partnership,"   70%  of  the
partnership's miscellaneous itemized deductions will be disallowed, although the
remaining deductions will generally be allowed at the partnership level and will
not be subject to the 2% floor that would  otherwise be applicable to individual
partners.

         The  servicing  compensation  to be  received  by the  servicer  may be
questioned  by the IRS as  exceeding a  reasonable  fee for the  services  being
performed  in  exchange  for the  servicing

                                      115


compensation,   and  a  portion   of  the   servicing   compensation   could  be
recharacterized as an ownership interest retained by the servicer or other party
in a portion of the  interest  payments  to be made with  respect to the Grantor
Trust Fund's assets. In this event, a certificate might be treated as a Stripped
Certificate  subject to the stripped bond rules of Section 1286 of the Code, and
either the  original  issue  discount  or the  market  discount  rules.  See the
discussion  below under  "--Stripped  Certificates".  Except as discussed  below
under  "--Stripped   Certificates"  or   "--Subordinated   Certificates,"   this
discussion  assumes that the  servicing  fees paid to the servicer do not exceed
reasonable servicing compensation.

         A purchaser of a Grantor  Trust  Security will be treated as purchasing
an  interest in each asset in the Grantor  Trust Fund at a price  determined  by
allocating  the purchase price paid for the  certificate  among all asset of the
Grantor  Trust Fund in proportion to their fair market values at the time of the
purchase of the  certificate.  To the extent  that the  portion of the  purchase
price of a Grantor  Trust  Security  allocated to an asset of the Grantor  Trust
Fund is less than or greater than the stated redemption price at maturity of the
asset,  the  interest  in the asset will have been  acquired  at a  discount  or
premium. See "--Market Discount" and "--Premium," below.

         The  treatment  of any  discount on an asset of the Grantor  Trust Fund
will depend on whether the discount represents original issue discount or market
discount. Except as indicated otherwise in the applicable Prospectus Supplement,
it is not  expected  that any asset of the  Grantor  Trust  Fund  (other  than a
Stripped Agency Security or other  instrument  evidencing  ownership of specific
interest  and/or  principal  of a  particular  bond)  will have  original  issue
discount   (except  as  discussed   below  under  "Stripped   Certificates"   or
"Subordinated  Certificates").  For the rules governing original issue discount,
see "REMICs--Taxation of Owners of Regular  Securities--Original Issue Discount"
above.

         The  information  provided to Grantor  Trust  Securityholders  will not
include  information  necessary to compute the amount of discount or premium, if
any, at which an interest in each asset of the Grantor Trust Fund is acquired.

         MARKET  DISCOUNT.  A Grantor  Trust  Securityholder  that  acquires  an
undivided  interest in the  Grantor  Trust  Fund's  assets may be subject to the
market  discount  rules of Sections 1276 through 1278 to the extent an undivided
interest  in an asset of the  Grantor  Trust  Fund is  considered  to have  been
purchased at a "market discount".  For a discussion of the market discount rules
under the Code, see  "REMICs--Taxation  of Owners of Regular  Securities--Market
Discount" above. As discussed above, to the extent an asset of the Grantor Trust
Fund is a Stripped Agency Security or other instrument  evidencing  ownership of
specific  interest and/or  principal of a particular bond, it will be subject to
the rules  relating to original issue discount (in lieu of the rules relating to
market    discount).    See    "REMICs--Taxation    of   Owners    of    Regular
Securities--Original Issue Discount" above.

         PREMIUM. To the extent a Grantor Trust  Securityholder is considered to
have  purchased an undivided  interest in an asset of the Grantor Trust Fund for
an amount that is greater  than the stated  redemption  price at maturity of the
interest,  the Grantor Trust Securityholder will be considered to have purchased
the interest in the asset with "amortizable bond premium" equal in amount to the
excess.  For a discussion of the rules  applicable to amortizable  bond premium,
see  "REMICs--Taxation  of Owners of  Regular  Securities--Amortizable  Premium"
above.

         STATUS OF THE GRANTOR  TRUST  SECURITIES.  Except for that portion of a
trust  fund  consisting  of  unsecured  home  improvement  loans  and  except as
qualified below, a Grantor Trust Security owned by a:

         o        "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

                                      116


                  property"    within    the    meaning    of    Code    Section
                  7701(a)(19)(C)(v),  to the extent  assets of the Trust consist
                  of mortgage  loans and other  assets of the type  described in
                  that section of the Code.

         o        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  those  assets  will  be  considered  "interest  on
                  obligations  secured by  mortgages  on real  property" to that
                  extent within the meaning of Code Section 856(c)(3)(B).

         o        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).

         It is not clear whether  Grantor Trust  Certificates  that are Stripped
Certificates  (as  described  below  under  "Stripped  Certificates")  should be
treated as qualifying  under the Code  provisions  cited in the first two bullet
points  above to the same  extent as  Grantor  Trust  Certificates  that are not
Stripped  Certificate.  Grantor Trust Securityholders are urged to consult their
own  tax  advisors  concerning  the  characterization  of  the  securityholder's
investment for federal income tax purposes.

         STRIPPED  CERTIFICATES.  Some classes of certificates may be subject to
the  stripped  bond rules of Section  1286 of the Code and for  purposes of this
discussion  will be  referred  to as  "Stripped  Certificates."  In  general,  a
Stripped  Certificate will be subject to the stripped bond rules where there has
been a  separation  of  ownership  of the  right to  receive  some or all of the
principal  payments  on a  mortgage  loan held by the  Grantor  Trust  Fund from
ownership of the right to receive some or all of the related interest  payments.
Generally,  where a separation  has  occurred,  under the stripped bond rules of
Section  1286 of the Code,  the  holder of a right to  receive  a  principal  or
interest  payment on the bond is required to accrue into  income,  on a constant
yield basis under rules governing  original issue discount (see "REMICs Taxation
of Owners of  Regular  Securities--Original  Issue  Discount"),  the  difference
between the holder's initial  purchase price for the right to receive  principal
or interest,  and the principal or interest  payment to be received with respect
to that right.  However, a holder of a Stripped Certificate will account for any
discount  on the  Stripped  Certificate  (other  than an  interest  treated as a
"stripped  coupon") as market  discount  rather than original  issue discount if
either (i) the amount of original  issue  discount  with respect to the Stripped
Certificate  was treated as zero under the  original  issue  discount DE MINIMIS
rule when the Stripped  Certificate  was stripped or (ii) no more than 100 basis
points (including any amount of servicing in excess of reasonable  servicing) is
stripped off from the mortgage assets.

         Certificates will constitute Stripped  Certificates and will be subject
to these rules under various circumstances, including the following:

         o        if any servicing compensation is deemed to exceed a reasonable
                  amount;

         o        if the  company or any other  party  retains a retained  yield
                  with respect to the assets held by the Grantor Trust Fund;

         o        if two or more classes of certificates are issued representing
                  the right to  non-pro  rata  percentages  of the  interest  or
                  principal payments on the Grantor Trust Fund's assets; or

                                      117


         o        if  certificates  are  issued  which  represent  the  right to
                  interest-only payments or principal-only payments.

         The tax  treatment  of the  Stripped  Certificates  with respect to the
application of the original  issue discount  provisions of the Code is currently
unclear.  However,  the trustee intends to treat each Stripped  Certificate as a
single  debt  instrument  issued  on the day it is  purchased  for  purposes  of
calculating any original issue discount. Original issue discount with respect to
a Stripped  Certificate  must be included in ordinary  gross  income for federal
income tax purposes as it accrues in accordance  with the constant  yield method
that takes into account the  compounding  of interest and this accrual of income
may be in advance of the receipt of any cash  attributable  to that income.  See
"REMICs--Taxation  of Owners of  Regular  Securities--Original  Issue  Discount"
above.  For purposes of applying the original issue  discount  provisions of the
Code, the issue price of a Stripped  Certificate will be the purchase price paid
by each holder of the Stripped  Certificate and the stated  redemption  price at
maturity  may  include  the  aggregate  amount of all  payments  to be made with
respect to the Stripped Certificate whether or not denominated as interest.  The
amount of original issue discount with respect to a Stripped  Certificate may be
treated as zero under the original  issue  discount DE MINIMIS  rules  described
above.

         The  precise  tax  treatment  of  Stripped   Coupon   Certificates   is
substantially  uncertain.  The Code could  read  literally  to require  that OID
computations be made for each payment from each mortgage loan. However, based on
IRS guidance,  it appears that all payments  from a mortgage  loan  underlying a
Stripped Coupon Certificate should be treated as a single installment obligation
subject  to the OID rules of the Code,  in which  case,  all  payments  from the
mortgage loan would be included in the mortgage loans's stated  redemption price
at  maturity  for  purposes  of  calculating   income  on  the  Stripped  Coupon
Certificate under the OID rules of the Code.

         Based on current authority it is unclear under what  circumstances,  if
any, the  prepayment of mortgage loans will give rise to a loss to the holder of
a  Stripped  Bond  Certificate  purchased  at a  premium  or a  Stripped  Coupon
Certificate.  The Code  provides  that a prepayment  assumption  must be used to
accrue income on any pool of debt instruments the yield on which can be affected
by prepayments. There is no guidance as to whether a Stripped Coupon Certificate
or a Stripped  Bond  Certificate  would  represent an interest in a pool of debt
instruments for purpose of this Code provision. In addition, the manner in which
to take prepayments  into account is uncertain.  It is possible that no loss may
be available as a result of any  particular  prepayment,  except  perhaps to the
extent that even if no further  prepayments were received,  a  Certificateholder
would be  unable  to  recover  its  basis.  In  addition,  amounts  received  in
redemption for debt  instruments  issued by natural persons  purchased or issued
after June 8, 1997 are  treated  as  received  in  exchange  therefore  (that is
treated the same as  obligations  issued by  corporations).  This  change  could
affect the character of any loss.

         Holders of Stripped Bond Certificates and Stripped Coupon  Certificates
are  encouraged  to consult  with their own tax  advisors  regarding  the proper
treatment of these certificates for federal income tax purposes.

         SUBORDINATED  CERTIFICATES.  In the event the Grantor Trust Fund issues
two classes of Grantor Trust Securities that are identical except that one class
is a subordinate  class, with a relatively high certificate  pass-through  rate,
and the other is a senior class, with a relatively low certificate  pass-through
rate  (referred to in this  Prospectus  as the  "Subordinate  Certificates"  and
"Senior Certificates",  respectively),  the Grantor Trust Securityholders in the
aggregate  will be  deemed  to  have  acquired  the  following  assets:  (1) the
principal  portion of each  mortgage  loan plus a portion of the interest due on
each mortgage loan (the "Grantor Trust Fund Stripped  Bond"),  and (2) a portion
of the interest due on each  mortgage loan equal to the  difference  between the
Interest  Rate on the  Subordinate  Certificates  and the  Interest  Rate on the
Senior  Certificates,  if  any,  which  difference  is  then  multiplied  by the
Subordinate  Class  Percentage (the "Grantor Trust Fund

                                      118


Stripped  Coupon").  The  "Subordinate  Class  Percentage"  equals  the  initial
aggregate principal amount of the Subordinate Certificates divided by the sum of
the initial aggregate  principal amount of the Subordinate  Certificates and the
Senior Certificates.  The "Senior Class Percentage" equals the initial aggregate
principal  amount of the Senior  Certificates  divided by the sum of the initial
aggregate  principal  amount  of the  Subordinate  Certificates  and the  Senior
Certificates.

         The  Senior  Certificateholders  in the  aggregate  will own the Senior
Class  Percentage of the Grantor Trust Fund Stripped Bond and  accordingly  each
Senior  Certificateholder  will be  treated as owning its pro rata share of such
asset.  The Senior  Certificateholders  will not own any  portion of the Grantor
Trust Fund Stripped Coupon. The Subordinate  Certificateholders in the aggregate
own both the  Subordinate  Class  Percentage  of the Grantor Trust Fund Stripped
Bond  plus  100%  of the  Grantor  Trust  Fund  Stripped  Coupon,  if  any,  and
accordingly each Subordinate Certificateholder will be treated as owning its pro
rata share in both assets.  The Grantor Trust Fund Stripped Bond will be treated
as a "stripped  bond" and the Grantor Trust Fund Stripped Coupon will be treated
as "stripped coupons" within the meaning of Section 1286 of the Code.

         Although not entirely  clear,  the interest  income on the  Subordinate
Certificates and the portion of the servicing fee allocable to such certificates
that does not constitute  excess  servicing will be treated by the Grantor Trust
Fund as qualified  stated  interest,  assuming the interest  with respect to the
mortgage  loans  held by the  Grantor  Trust  Fund  would  otherwise  qualify as
qualified stated interest. Accordingly, except to the extent modified below, the
income of the  Subordinate  Certificates  will be reported in the same manner as
described generally above for holders of Senior Certificates.

         If the Subordinate Certificateholders receive distribution of less than
their share of the Grantor  Trust Fund's  receipts of principal or interest (the
"Shortfall   Amount")   because  of  the   subordination   of  the   Subordinate
Certificates,  holders of Subordinate Certificates would probably be treated for
federal income tax purposes as if they had

         o        received as distributions their full share of receipts;

         o        paid over to the Senior  Certificateholders an amount equal to
                  the Shortfall Amount; and

         o        retained the right to reimbursement of the relevant amounts to
                  the extent these amounts are  otherwise  available as a result
                  of collections on the mortgage loans or amounts available from
                  a reserve account or other form of credit enhancement, if any.

Under this analysis,

         o        Subordinate  Certificateholders would be required to accrue as
                  current income any interest  income,  original issue discount,
                  or (to the extent  paid on assets of the  Grantor  Trust Fund)
                  accrued  market  discount of the Grantor Trust Fund that was a
                  component of the Shortfall Amount, even though that amount was
                  in fact paid to the Senior Certificateholders;

         o        a  loss   would   only   be   allowed   to   the   Subordinate
                  Certificateholders  when their right to receive  reimbursement
                  of the  Shortfall  Amount  became  worthless  (i.e.,  when  it
                  becomes  clear  that  amount  will not be  available  from any
                  source to reimburse the loss); and

                                      119


         o        reimbursement  of the  Shortfall  Amount  prior  to a claim of
                  worthlessness  would  not be  taxable  income  to  Subordinate
                  Certificateholders  because the amount was previously included
                  in income.

Those  results  should  not  significantly  affect the  inclusion  of income for
Subordinate  Certificateholders  on the accrual method of accounting,  but could
accelerate  inclusion of income to  Subordinate  Certificateholders  on the cash
method  of  accounting  by,  in  effect,  placing  them on the  accrual  method.
Moreover,  the character and timing of loss deductions are unclear.  Subordinate
Certificateholders  are  strongly  urged  to  consult  their  own  tax  advisors
regarding the appropriate  timing,  amount and character of any losses sustained
with respect to the Subordinate  Certificates  including any loss resulting from
the failure to recover previously accrued interest or discount income.

         ELECTION TO TREAT ALL INTEREST AS ORIGINAL ISSUE DISCOUNT. The Treasury
Regulations   relating  to  original  issue  discount  permit  a  Grantor  Trust
Securityholder to elect to accrue all interest,  discount,  including de minimis
market  or  original  issue  discount,  reduced  by any  premium,  in  income as
interest,  based on a constant yield method. If an election were to be made with
respect to an interest  in a mortgage  loan with  market  discount,  the Grantor
Trust  Securityholder  would be deemed to have made an  election  to  include in
income  currently  market  discount  with respect to all other debt  instruments
having market discount that the Grantor Trust Securityholder acquires during the
year of the election or afterward.  See "--Market Discount" above.  Similarly, a
Grantor  Trust  Securityholder  that makes this  election  for an  interest in a
mortgage  loan  that is  acquired  at a  premium  will be deemed to have made an
election to amortize  bond premium with respect to all debt  instruments  having
amortizable  bond  premium  that the Grantor  Trust  Securityholder  owns at the
beginning of the first  taxable  year to which the election  applies or acquires
afterward. See "--Premium" above. The election to accrue interest,  discount and
premium on a constant  yield method with respect to a Grantor Trust  Security is
irrevocable.

         PREPAYMENTS.  The Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997 (the "1997 Act") contains
a provision  requiring  original issue discount on any pool of debt  instruments
the yield on which may be affected by reason of prepayments be calculated taking
into account the  Prepayment  Assumption  and requiring the discount to be taken
into income on the basis of a constant yield to assumed  maturity taking account
of actual  prepayments.  The  legislative  history to the 1986 Act  states  that
similar rules apply with respect to market discount and amortizable bond premium
on debt instruments.

         SALE OR EXCHANGE  OF A GRANTOR  TRUST  SECURITY.  Sale or exchange of a
Grantor Trust  Security  prior to its maturity will result in gain or loss equal
to the difference,  if any,  between the amount  realized,  exclusive of amounts
attributable  to accrued and unpaid  interest (which will be treated as ordinary
income  allocable  to the related  asset of the  Grantor  Trust  Fund),  and the
owner's  adjusted  basis in the  Grantor  Trust  Security.  The  adjusted  basis
generally will equal the seller's cost for the Grantor Trust Security, increased
by the original issue discount and any market discount  included in the seller's
gross income with respect to the Grantor Trust  Security,  and reduced,  but not
below zero, by any premium amortized by the seller and by principal  payments on
the Grantor Trust Security  previously  received by the seller. The gain or loss
will,  except as discussed  below, be capital gain or loss to an owner for which
the assets of the Grantor Trust Fund represented by a Grantor Trust Security are
"capital assets" within the meaning of Section 1221. A capital gain or loss will
be  long-term  or  short-term  depending  on  whether or not the  Grantor  Trust
Security has been owned for the long-term capital gain holding period, currently
more than one year.

         Notwithstanding  the  foregoing,  any  gain  realized  on the  sale  or
exchange of a Grantor Trust  Security  will be ordinary  income to the extent of
the seller's  interest in accrued  market  discount on Grantor Trust Fund assets
not  previously  taken into income.  See "--Market  Discount,"  above.  Further,
Grantor Trust Securities will be "evidences of indebtedness"  within the meaning
of

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Section  582(c)(1),  to the extent the assets of the  grantor  trust would be so
treated.  Accordingly,  gain or loss recognized from the sale of a Grantor Trust
Security by a bank or thrift  institution to which such section  applied will be
treated as ordinary gain or loss to the extent selling the assets of the grantor
trust directly would be so treated.

         FOREIGN  INVESTORS IN GRANTOR TRUST  SECURITIES.  A holder of a Grantor
Trust  Security  who is not a "U.S.  person" (as defined  above at  "REMICs--Tax
Related Restrictions on Transfer of Residual Securities--Foreign Investors") and
is not  subject  to federal  income  tax as a result of any  direct or  indirect
connection  to the United  States other than its  ownership  of a Grantor  Trust
Security  generally  will not be subject to United States income or  withholding
tax in respect of payments of interest or original issue discount on its Grantor
Trust  Security  to the  extent  attributable  to debt  obligations  held by the
Grantor Trust Fund that were originated  after July 18, 1984,  provided that the
Grantor  Trust  Securityholder  complies to the extent  necessary  with  certain
certification  requirements  which  generally  relate  to  the  identity  of the
beneficial  owner and the status of the beneficial owner as a person that is not
a U.S.  person.  Interest or original issue discount on a Grantor Trust Security
attributable  to debt  obligations  held by the  Grantor  Trust  Fund  that were
originated  prior to July 19,  1984 will be  subject  to a 30%  withholding  tax
(unless such tax is reduced or  eliminated  by an  applicable  tax treaty).  All
holders of Grantor Trust Securities should consult their tax advisors  regarding
the tax  documentation  and  certifications  that must be provided to secure any
applicable exemptions from United States withholding taxes.

         Any capital gain realized on the sale or other taxable disposition of a
Grantor   Trust   Security   by  a  Non-U.S.   Person  (as   defined   above  at
"REMICs--Taxation of Certain Foreign  Investors--Regular  Securities") generally
will be exempt from United States federal income and withholding  tax,  provided
that (i) such gain is not  effectively  connected with the conduct of a trade or
business in the United States by the Non-U.S.  Person and (ii) in the case of an
individual  Non-U.S.  Person,  the Non-U.S.  Person is not present in the United
States for 183 days or more in the taxable year.

         If the  interest,  gain or  income  with  respect  to a  Grantor  Trust
Security held by a Non-U.S.  Person is effectively connected with the conduct of
a trade or business in the United States by the Non-U.S. Person (although exempt
from  the  withholding  tax  previously  discussed  if the  holder  provides  an
appropriate   statement   establishing   that  such  income  is  so  effectively
connected), the holder generally will be subject to United States federal income
tax on the interest, gain or income at regular federal income tax rates. In this
regard, real estate acquired by a Grantor Trust as a result of foreclosure or in
lieu of foreclosure could cause a foreign holder to have "effectively  connected
income" or a U.S. tax filing  obligation even in the absence of such income.  In
addition, if the Non-U.S. Person is a foreign corporation,  it may be subject to
a branch  profits tax equal to 30% of its  "effectively  connected  earnings and
profits,"  within the meaning of the Code, for the taxable year, as adjusted for
certain  items,  unless it qualifies  for a lower rate under an  applicable  tax
treaty (as modified by the branch profits tax rules).

         BACKUP WITHHOLDING.  Distributions made on the Grantor Trust Securities
and proceeds from the sale of the Grantor Trust  Securities will be subject to a
"backup"   withholding   tax  of  31  %  if,  in  general,   the  Grantor  Trust
Securityholder fails to comply with particular identification procedures, unless
the holder is an exempt recipient under  applicable  provisions of the Code and,
if  necessary,  demonstrates  such  status.  Any  amounts so  withheld  would be
refunded  by the  IRS  or  allowable  as a  credit  against  the  Grantor  Trust
Securityholder's federal income tax.

PARTNERSHIP TRUST FUNDS AND DISREGARDED TRUST FUNDS

         CLASSIFICATION OF TRUST FUNDS

         For each series of Partnership  Certificates or Debt Securities,  McKee
Nelson LLP or Thacher  Proffitt & Wood LLP will  deliver  its  opinion  that the
trust fund will not be a taxable  mortgage pool

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or an association (or publicly traded partnership)  taxable as a corporation for
federal income tax purposes.  This opinion will be based on the assumption  that
the parties to the related Agreement and related documents.

         TAXATION OF DEBT SECURITYHOLDERS

         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,
for each series of Debt Securities,  McKee Nelson LLP or Thacher Proffitt & Wood
LLP 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 Internal  Revenue Service
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
trust fund. If so treated,  the trust fund might be treated as a publicly traded
partnership  that  would be taxable as a  corporation  unless it met  particular
qualifying income tests, and the resulting taxable corporation would not be able
to reduce  its  taxable  income  by  deductions  for  interest  expense  on Debt
Securities recharacterized as equity. Treatment of the Debt Securities as equity
interests in a partnership  could have adverse tax consequences to some holders,
even if the trust fund were not treated as a publicly traded partnership taxable
as a  corporation.  For example,  income  allocable to foreign  holders might be
subject to United States tax and United States tax return filing and withholding
requirements, income allocable to tax-exempt holders might constitute "unrelated
business  taxable  income" (if some,  but not all, of the Debt  Securities  were
recharacterized as equity in a partnership), individual holders might be subject
to  limitations  on their ability to deduct their share of trust fund  expenses,
and  income  from the trust  fund's  assets  would be  taxable to owners of Debt
Securities  without regard to whether cash distributions are made to such owners
and without regard to the owners' method of tax accounting.

         Except for the  treatment of the  allocation of Realized  Losses,  Debt
Securities  generally  will be subject to the same rules of  taxation as Regular
Securities  issued  by a REMIC,  as  described  above,  except  that (1)  income
reportable on Debt  Securities is not required to be reported  under the accrual
method unless the holder  otherwise  uses the accrual method and (2) the special
110% yield 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."

         ALLOCATIONS OF REALIZED LOSSES

         The  manner in which  losses  are  claimed  on the Notes as a result of
defaults by the  underlying  obligors is complex  and differs  depending  on the
characterization of the person considered the issue or the Notes for federal tax
purposes.  Whether  the Noes are  governed by the loss rules for bad debts under
Code Section 166 or for worthless  securities  under Code Section 165 depends on
whether the Notes are considered  issued by a corporation.  If there is a single
corporate holder of the Certificates constituting all of the equity interests in
the issuing Trust Fund, then the issuing Trust will be a disregarded  entity and
the Notes will be considered  issued by a corporation  subject to the loss rules
of Code  Section  165  (which  effects  both  timing and  character  of loss for
corporate taxpayers, and character and possibly timing for other taxpayers).  If
the  Notes are  considered  issued  by a  grantor  trust,  then the notes may be
treated as issued in proportion to the nature of the Certificateholders (e.g. if
some  Certificateholders  are  natural  personas  or  partnerships  and some are
corporations,  losses on the Notes would be governed in part by Code Section 166
and in part by Code  Section  165).  If the  Notes  are  considered  issued by a
partnership

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then they would be governed  by the rules  under Code  Section 166 the same as a
REMIC.  Investors  should  consult  their tax advisors as to the  character  and
timing of any loss that can be claimed with respect to a Note.

         Further, for federal income tax purposes, (i) 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"  within the
meaning  of  Section  7701(a)(19)(C)(v)  of the  Code;  (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);  (iii) Debt
Securities  held by a real estate  investment  trust will not  constitute  "real
estate  assets"  or  "Government  securities"  within  the  meaning  of  Section
856(c)(4)(A) of the Code;  (iv) Debt  Securities held by a regulated  investment
company  will not  constitute  "Government  securities"  within  the  meaning of
Section 851(b)(3)(A)(i) of the Code; and (v) Debt Securities will not constitute
"qualified  mortgages" with in the meaning of Section 860G(a)(3) of the Code for
REMICs.

         TAXATION OF OWNERS OF PARTNERSHIP CERTIFICATES

(1)      Treatment of the Trust Fund as a Partnership

         The correct  characterization  of a Trust Fund that has issued debt and
is not otherwise taxed as a corporation is uncertain. If the Trust Fund has only
a single class of equity and the Trustee  does not have the  authority to accept
any additional assets after the initial  acquisition of receivables (except with
a certain prescribed pre-funding period not exceeding three months) and has very
limited  powers of  investment  (for example does not hold any reserve fund that
could  ultimately  flow  to the  Certificateholders  if  not  need  to  pay  the
Noteholders)  the Trust Fund could  qualify as a grantor  trust with an interest
expense. As a consequence,  each Certificateholder  would be treated as owning a
pro rata  share  of the  Trust  Fund's  assets,  earning  incoming  thereon  and
incurring the expenses of the Trust Fund (including the interest  expense on the
Notes).  See "Grantor  Trust." If a Trust Fund that issues Notes intends to take
the position that  Certificateholders  hold interests in a grantor trust it will
be disclosed in the related prospectus  supplement.  In addition, it is possible
that a Trust Fund that issued Notes could qualify as a  partnership  eligible to
make an election  under  Section 761 to not be taxed under the main  partnership
provisions of the Code (although  certain  ancillary  provisions,  including the
rules  relating to audits of  partnerships,  would  continue to apply).  Such an
election would cause  Certificateholders  to be treated  essentially the same as
holding an interest in a grantor  trust.  However,  the IRS has recently taken a
narrow  interpretation  of the type of entities that qualify for this  election,
which may not  include  a Trust  Fund.  If a Trust  Fund  that is  treated  as a
partnership  has made an election under Section 761 to be excluded from the main
partnership  provisions  of the  Code  this  will be  disclosed  in the  related
prospectus  supplement  along with a description of the  consequences  of making
such an  election.  If there is only one  Certificateholer  in a Trust Fund that
represents all of the equity of the Trust Fund, for federal income tax purposes,
the   separate   existence   of  the  Trust   Fund  is   disregarded,   and  the
Certificateholder is treated as the owner of all of the assets of the Trust Fund
and as the  issuer  of the  Notes of the  Trust  Fund  for  federal  income  tax
purposes.  For all other Trust Funds the at issue Notes,  the Partnership  Trust
Fund  will  agree,   and  the  related   owners  of   Partnership   Certificates
("Partnership  Certificate  Owners") will agree by their purchase of Partnership
Certificates,  if there is more than one Partnership Certificate Owner, to treat
the  Partnership  Trust Fund 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 Partnership
Certificate  Owners,  including,  to the extent  relevant,  the depositor in its
capacity as  recipient  of  distributions  from any reserve  fund,  and the Debt
Securities,  if  any,  being  debt  of  the  partnership,  and if  there  is one
Partnership Certificate Owner, to treat the Partnership Certificate Owner as the
owner of the assets of the  Partnership  Trust Fund and to treat the

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Partnership   Trust  Fund  as  a  disregarded   entity.   However,   the  proper
characterization  of the arrangement  involving the Partnership  Trust Fund, the
Partnership  Certificates,  the Debt Securities and the depositor is not certain
because  there  is no  authority  on  transactions  closely  comparable  to that
contemplated in this prospectus.

         A variety of alternative  characterizations are possible.  For example,
because the Partnership  Certificates  have certain features  characteristic  of
debt, the Partnership  Certificates  might be considered debt of the Partnership
Trust Fund. Generally,  provided such Partnership  Certificates are issued at or
close to face value,  any such  characterization  would not result in materially
adverse tax  consequences to holders of Partnership  Certificates as compared to
the consequences  from treatment of the Partnership  Certificates as equity in a
partnership,   described  below.  The  following  discussion  assumes  that  the
Partnership  Certificates  represent  equity  interests  in a  partnership.  The
following   discussion  also  assumes  that  all  payments  on  the  Partnership
Certificates  are  denominated  in  U.S.   dollars,   none  of  the  Partnership
Certificates  have Interest  Rates which would  qualify as  contingent  interest
under the Treasury regulations  relating to original issue discount,  and that a
series of securities  includes a single class of  Partnership  Certificates.  If
these  conditions  are  not  satisfied  with  respect  to any  given  series  of
Partnership  Certificates,  additional tax  considerations  with respect to such
Partnership   Certificates  will  be  disclosed  in  the  applicable  prospectus
supplement.

(2)      Partnership Taxation

         As a  partnership,  the  Partnership  Trust Fund will not be subject to
federal income tax. Rather, each Partnership  Certificate Owner will be required
to take into account  separately the Partnership  Certificate  Owner's allocable
share of income, gains, losses,  deductions and credits of the Partnership Trust
Fund, whether or not there is a corresponding cash distribution.  The Trust will
generally  be required  to use an accrual  method of  accounting  and a tax year
based on the tax year of its  Certificateholders.  Thus, cash basis holders will
in effect be required to report income from the Partnership  Certificates on the
accrual basis and Partnership  Certificate Owners may become liable for taxes on
Partnership  Trust  Fund  income  even if they have not  received  cash from the
Partnership  Trust Fund to pay the taxes.  The  Partnership  Trust Fund's income
will consist  primarily of interest  and finance  charges  earned on the related
mortgage loans, including appropriate adjustments for market discount,  original
issue discount and bond premium,  and any gain upon collection or disposition of
the 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 mortgage loans.

         The tax  items  of a  partnership  are  allocable  to the  partners  in
accordance with the Code,  Treasury  regulations  and the partnership  agreement
(i.e.,  the Agreement and related  documents).  To the extent that there is more
than one class of equity  (or  potentially  more  than on class of  equity)  the
related prospectus  supplement will describe the manner in which income from the
assets of the Trust Fund will be allocated.

         Assuming Debt Securities are also issued,  all or substantially  all of
the  taxable  income  allocated  to a  Partnership  Certificate  Owner 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 the holder under the Code.

         An individual  taxpayer's  share of expenses of the  Partnership  Trust
Fund,  including  fees to the  servicer,  but not  interest  expense,  would  be
miscellaneous  itemized  deductions and thus  deductible only to the extent such
expenses plus all other miscellaneous itemized deductions exceeds two percent of
the individual's  adjusted gross income. An individual  taxpayer will be

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allowed no deduction  for his share of expenses of the  Partnership  Trust Fund,
other than interest,  in determining his liability for alternative  minimum tax.
In  addition,  Section  68 of the Code  provides  that the  amount  of  itemized
deductions  otherwise  allowable  for the taxable year for an  individual  whose
adjusted gross income exceeds a prescribed  threshold  amount will be reduced by
the lesser of (1) 3% of the excess of adjusted  gross income over the  specified
threshold amount  (adjusted  annually for inflation) or (2) 80% of the amount of
itemized  deductions  otherwise  allowable  for  the  applicable  taxable  year.
Accordingly,  deductions  might be disallowed  to the  individual in whole or in
part and might  result in the  Partnership  Certificate  Owner being taxed on an
amount of income that  exceeds the amount of cash  actually  distributed  to the
holder over the life of the Partnership Trust Fund. In the case of a partnership
that has 100 or more  partners  and elects to be treated as an  "electing  large
partnership," 70% of that partnership's  miscellaneous  itemized deductions will
be disallowed,  although the remaining  deductions  will generally be allowed at
the  partnership  level  and will not be  subject  to the 2%  floor  that  would
otherwise be applicable to individual partners.

         The  Partnership  Trust  Fund  intends  to make  all  tax  calculations
relating  to income and  allocations  to  Partnership  Certificate  Owners on an
aggregate  basis to the extent  relevant.  If the IRS were to  require  that the
calculations  be made  separately for each mortgage loan, the  calculations  may
result in some timing and character differences under some circumstances.

(3)      Discount and Premium

         The purchase price paid by the  Partnership  Trust Fund for the related
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  market  discount,  as the  case  may be.  See
"REMICs--Taxation  of Owners of  Regular  Securities--Acquisition  Premium"  and
"--Market  Discount" above. As indicated above, the Partnership  Trust Fund will
make this  calculation  on an aggregate  basis,  but it is possible that the IRS
might require that it be recomputed on a mortgage  loan-by-mortgage  loan basis.
Further,  with  respect  to any asset of the  Partnership  Trust  Fund that is a
Stripped Agency Security or other  instrument  evidencing  ownership of specific
interest and/or  principal of a particular bond, it will be subject to the rules
relating to original  issue discount with respect to such security or instrument
(in lieu of the rules relating to market  discount).  See  "REMICs--Taxation  of
Owners of Regular Securities--Original Issue Discount" above.

         If the  Partnership  Trust Fund acquires the mortgage loans at a market
discount or premium, the Partnership Trust Fund will elect to include any market
discount in income  currently as it accrues over the life of the mortgage  loans
or to offset any premium  against  interest  income on the  mortgage  loans.  As
indicated  above, a portion of the market discount  income or premium  deduction
may be allocated to Partnership Certificate Owners.

(4)      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. If a termination occurs under Section 708 of
the Code, the Partnership Trust Fund will be considered to contribute its assets
to a new Partnership Trust Fund, which would be treated as a new partnership, in
exchange for Partnership  Certificates  in the new  Partnership  Trust Fund. The
original   Partnership  Trust  Fund  will  then  be  deemed  to  distribute  the
Partnership Certificates in the new Partnership Trust Fund to each of the owners
of  Partnership   Certificates  in  the  original   Partnership  Trust  Fund  in
liquidation of the original  Partnership  Trust Fund. The Partnership Trust Fund
will not comply with particular  technical  requirements that might apply when a
constructive  termination occurs. As a result, the Partnership Trust Fund may be
subject  to some  tax  penalties  and may  incur  additional  expenses  if

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it is required to comply with those requirements.  Furthermore,  the Partnership
Trust Fund might not be able to comply  with these  requirements  due to lack of
data.

(5)      Disposition of Partnership Certificates

         Generally,  capital  gain  or  loss  will  be  recognized  on a sale of
Partnership Certificates in an amount equal to the difference between the amount
realized and the seller's tax basis in the  Partnership  Certificates  sold. Any
gain  or loss  would  be  long-term  capital  gain  or  loss if the  Partnership
Certificate Owner's holding period exceeded one year. A Partnership  Certificate
Owner's tax basis in a Partnership  Certificate  will generally  equal its cost,
increased  by its  share of  Partnership  Trust  Fund  income  allocable  to the
Partnership  Certificate  Owner and decreased by any  distributions  received or
losses allocated with respect to the Partnership Certificate.  In addition, both
the tax basis in the Partnership  Certificates and the amount realized on a sale
of a Partnership  Certificate would include the Partnership  Certificate Owner's
share,  determined under Treasury Regulations,  of the Debt Securities and other
liabilities  of the  Partnership  Trust Fund. A  Partnership  Certificate  Owner
acquiring  Partnership  Certificates  at  different  prices  will  generally  be
required to maintain a single  aggregate  adjusted tax basis in the  Partnership
Certificates  and, upon a sale or other  disposition of some of the  Partnership
Certificates,  allocate a portion of the aggregate tax basis to the  Partnership
Certificates  sold,  rather  than  maintaining  a  separate  tax  basis  in each
Partnership Certificate for purposes of computing gain or loss on a sale of that
Partnership  Certificate.  A portion  holding  rule is  applied,  however,  if a
Certificateholder  has held some of its interest in the  Partnership  Trust Fund
for one year or less and some of its  interest  for more than one year and a "by
lot" identification is not permitted.

         If  a  Partnership  Certificate  Owner  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
Certificates that exceeds the aggregate cash  distributions  with respect to the
Partnership Certificates,  the excess will generally give rise to a capital loss
upon the retirement of the Partnership Certificates.

(6)      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  Partnership  Certificate  Owners in proportion to the
principal  amount of Partnership  Certificates  owned by them as of the close of
the last day of that Due Period.  As a result, a Partnership  Certificate  Owner
purchasing  Partnership  Certificates  may be  allocated  tax items,  which will
affect the  purchaser's  tax  liability and tax basis,  attributable  to periods
before the actual transaction.

         The use of a Due Period  convention  may not be  permitted  by existing
Treasury 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 Partnership
Certificate  Owners.  The Partnership Trust Fund's method of allocation  between
transferors and  transferees may be revised to conform to a method  permitted by
future laws, regulations or other IRS guidance.

(7)      Section 731 Distributions

         In the case of any distribution to a Partnership  Certificate Owner, no
gain will be recognized to that Partnership Certificate Owner to the extent that
the amount of any money distributed for that Partnership Certificate exceeds the
adjusted  basis  of  that  Partnership   Certificate  Owner's  interest  in  the
Partnership  Certificate.  To the extent  that the  amount of money  distributed
exceeds  that  Partnership  Certificate  Owner's  adjusted  basis,  gain will be
currently  recognized.  In  the  case  of  any  distribution  to  a  Partnership
Certificate  Owner,  no loss will be recognized  except

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upon  a  distribution  in  liquidation  of  a  Partnership  Certificate  Owner's
interest.  Any  gain or  loss  recognized  by a  Partnership  Certificate  Owner
generally will be capital gain or loss.

(8)      Section 754 Election

         In the event that a Partnership Certificate Owner sells its Partnership
Certificates at a profit (or loss), the purchasing Partnership Certificate Owner
will have a higher (or lower)  basis in the  Partnership  Certificates  than the
selling  Partnership  Certificate  Owner had.  The tax basis of the  Partnership
Trust Fund's assets will 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 current does not
intend  to  make  an  election  under  Section  754 of the  Code.  As a  result,
Partnership  Certificate Owners 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 Certificates.

(9)      Administrative Matters

         The  trustee  is  required  to keep or  cause to be kept  complete  and
accurate books of the Partnership Trust Fund. Except as disclosed in the related
prospectus  supplement,  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 Partnership Certificate Owner's allocable share of items of
Partnership Trust Fund income and expense to Partnership  Certificate Owners and
the IRS on Schedule  K-1. The  Partnership  Trust Fund will provide the Schedule
K-1 information to nominees that fail to provide the Partnership Trust Fund with
the information  statement  described below and the nominees will be required to
forward  this   information  to  the  beneficial   owners  of  the   Partnership
Certificates.   Generally,  holders  must  timely  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  the
inconsistencies.

         Under  Section  6031 of the Code,  any person  that  holds  Partnership
Certificates  as a nominee at any time  during a calendar  year is  required  to
furnish  the  Partnership  Trust  Fund  with  a  statement  containing  specific
information  on  the  nominee,   the  beneficial   owners  and  the  Partnership
Certificates  so held.  The  information  includes  (1) the  name,  address  and
taxpayer  identification  number of the  nominee  and (2) as to each  beneficial
owner

         o        the name, address and identification number of such person,

         o        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

         o        particular  information on Partnership  Certificates that were
                  held,  bought or sold on behalf of the person  throughout  the
                  year.

In  addition,   brokers  and  financial   institutions   that  hold  Partnership
Certificates  through  a  nominee  are  required  to  furnish  directly  to  the
Partnership  Trust Fund  information  as to  themselves  and their  ownership of
Partnership Certificates.  A clearing agency registered under Section 17A of the
Exchange  Act is not  required  to  furnish  any  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.

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         Unless another designation is made, the depositor will be designated as
the tax  matters  partner  for each  Partnership  Trust Fund in the  pooling and
servicing  agreement and, as the tax matters  partner,  will be responsible  for
representing the Partnership  Certificate  Owners in some specific disputes 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  before the later of three
years after the date on which the partnership information return is filed or the
last day for  filing  the return for the  applicable  year,  determined  without
regard to extensions. 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  Partnership  Certificate  Owners,  and,
under some circumstances,  a Partnership Certificate Owner 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  Partnership
Certificate  Owner's  returns and adjustments of items not related to the income
and losses of the Partnership Trust Fund.

         A special audit system exists for qualifying  large  partnerships  that
have elected to apply a simplified  flow-through reporting system under Sections
771  through  777 of the Code.  Unless  otherwise  specified  in the  applicable
prospectus  supplement,  a  Partnership  Trust  Fund will not elect to apply the
simplified flow-through reporting system.

(10)     Taxation of Certain Foreign Partnership Certificate Owners

         As used below, the term  "Non-United  States Owner" means a Partnership
Certificate Owner that is not a U.S. Person, as defined under  "REMICs--Taxation
of Owners of  Residual  Securities--Tax  Related  Restrictions  on  Transfer  of
Residual Securities-Foreign Investors," above.

         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-United States Owners because there
is no clear authority dealing with that issue under facts substantially  similar
to those  described in this  Prospectus.  Although it is not  expected  that the
Partnership  Trust Fund would be  engaged in a trade or  business  in the United
States for these  purposes,  the  Partnership  Trust Fund will withhold as if it
were so engaged in order to protect  the  Partnership  Trust Fund from  possible
adverse  consequences  of a failure  to  withhold.  The  Partnership  Trust Fund
expects to withhold on the portion of its taxable  income that is  allocable  to
Non-United  States Owners pursuant to Section 1446 of the Code, as if the income
were  effectively  connected to a U.S.  trade or business,  at a rate of 35% for
Non-United  States  Owners  that are taxable as  corporations  and 39.6% for all
other Non-United States Owners.

         Subsequent  adoption of Treasury  regulations  or the issuance of other
administrative  pronouncements  may require the Partnership Trust Fund to change
its withholding procedures.

         Each  Non-United  States  Owner  might  be  required  to  file  a  U.S.
individual  or  corporate  income  tax  return on its share of the income of the
Partnership  Trust Fund  including,  in the case of a  corporation,  a return in
respect of the branch profits tax.  Assuming the  Partnership  Trust Fund is not
engaged in a U.S. trade or business, a Non-United States Owner would be entitled
to a  refund  with  respect  to  all  or a  portion  of  taxes  withheld  by the
Partnership  Trust  Fund if,  in  particular,  the  Owner's  allocable  share of
interest from the Partnership Trust Fund constituted  "portfolio interest" under
the Code.

         The interest,  however,  may not  constitute  "portfolio  interest" if,
among other reasons,  the underlying  obligation is not in registered form or if
the interest is determined without regard to the income of the Partnership Trust
Fund,  in the  later  case,  the  interest  being  properly  characterized  as a
guaranteed  payment  under  Section  707(c) of the Code.  If this were the case,
Non-United  States Owners would be subject to a United States federal income and
withholding  tax at a rate of 30

                                      128


percent on the Partnership Trust Fund's gross income,  without any deductions or
other allowances for costs and expenses incurred in producing the income, unless
reduced  or  eliminated  pursuant  to an  applicable  treaty.  In this  case,  a
Non-United  States  Owner would only be entitled to a refund for that portion of
the taxes,  if any, in excess of the taxes that should have been  withheld  with
respect to the interest.

(11)     Backup Withholding

         Distributions  made on the Partnership  Certificates  and proceeds from
the  sale  of  the  Partnership  Certificates  will  be  subject  to a  "backup"
withholding tax of 31 % if, in general, the Partnership  Certificate Owner fails
to comply with  particular  identification  procedures,  unless the holder is an
exempt  recipient  under  applicable  provisions  of the Code and, if necessary,
demonstrates  such status.  Any amounts so withheld would be refunded by the IRS
or allowable as a credit  against the Non-United  States Owner's  federal income
tax.

CONSEQUENCES FOR PARTICULAR INVESTORS

         The federal tax discussions above may not be applicable  depending on a
securityholder's   particular  tax  situation.  The  depositor  recommends  that
prospective  purchasers  consult their tax advisors for the tax  consequences to
them of the  purchase,  ownership and  disposition  of REMIC  Securities,  FASIT
Securities,   Grantor  Trust  Securities,   Partnership  Certificates  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.

                       STATE AND OTHER TAX CONSIDERATIONS

         In  addition  to the  federal  income  tax  consequences  described  in
"Material  Federal  Income  Tax  Considerations,"   potential  investors  should
consider the state and local tax consequences of the acquisition, ownership, and
disposition  of the Notes or  Certificates,  as  applicable,  offered under this
prospectus.  State  tax law may  differ  substantially  from  the  corresponding
federal tax law,  and the  discussion  above does not  purport to  describe  any
aspect  of  the  tax  laws  of  any  state  or  other  jurisdiction.  Therefore,
prospective  investors should consult their own tax advisors for the various tax
consequences of investments in the Notes or Certificates, as applicable, offered
under  this  prospectus.   In  particular,   individuals   should  consider  the
deductability of the expenses (including interest expense) of a partnership.

                              ERISA CONSIDERATIONS

GENERAL

         A fiduciary of a pension, profit-sharing,  retirement or other employee
benefit plan subject to Title I of ERISA should consider the fiduciary standards
under the Employee  Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, as amended ("ERISA")
in the context of the plan's  particular  circumstances  before  authorizing  an
investment  of a portion of such plan's assets in the  Securities.  Accordingly,
pursuant to Section 404 of ERISA,  such  fiduciary  should  consider among other
factors  (i)  whether  the  investment  is for  the  exclusive  benefit  of plan
participants and their beneficiaries;  (ii) whether the investment satisfies the
applicable  diversification  requirements;  (iii)  whether the  investment is in
accordance  with the documents  and  instruments  governing  the plan;  and (iv)
whether the  investment is prudent,  considering  the nature of the  investment.
Fiduciaries  of plans also  should  consider  ERISA's  prohibition  on  improper
delegation of control over, or responsibility for, plan assets.

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         In addition,  employee benefit plans or other  retirement  arrangements
subject to ERISA, as well as individual  retirement  accounts,  certain types of
Keogh plans not subject to ERISA but subject to Section 4975 of the Code, or any
entity  (including   insurance  company  separate  or  general  accounts)  whose
underlying  assets include plan assets by reason of such plans,  arrangements or
accounts  investing in the entity (each, a "Plan") are prohibited  from engaging
in a broad  range of  transactions  involving  Plan  assets and  persons  having
certain   specified   relationships   to  a  Plan  ("parties  in  interest"  and
"disqualified   persons").   Such   transactions   are  treated  as  "prohibited
transactions"  under  Sections  406 of  ERISA  and  excise  taxes  and/or  other
penalties are imposed upon such persons  under ERISA and/or  Section 4975 of the
Code  unless an  exemption  applies.  The  depositor,  underwriter,  each master
servicer or other servicer,  any insurer, the trustee, the indenture trustee and
certain  of their  affiliates  might be  considered  "parties  in  interest"  or
"disqualified  persons" with respect to a Plan. If so, the acquisition,  holding
or disposition of Securities by or on behalf of such Plan could be considered to
give rise to a "prohibited transaction" within the meaning of ERISA and the Code
unless a  statutory,  regulatory  or  administrative  exception  or exemption is
available.

ERISA CONSIDERATIONS RELATING TO CERTIFICATES

         PLAN ASSETS

         In 29 C.R.F  ss.2510.3-101  (the "Plan  Asset  Regulations"),  the U.S.
Department  of Labor  ("DOL") has defined  what  constitutes  "plan  assets" for
purposes  of ERISA and  Section  4975 of the Code.  The Plan  Asset  Regulations
provide that if a Plan makes an investment in an "equity interest" in an entity,
an undivided  portion of the assets of the entity will be considered  the assets
of such Plan unless certain  exceptions set forth in such Regulations apply. The
Certificates  will be deemed an equity  interest  for purposes of the Plan Asset
Regulations,  and the depositor can give no assurance that the Certificates will
qualify for any of the exceptions under the Plan Asset Regulations. As a result,
(i) a Plan may be deemed to have acquired an interest in the Assets of the trust
fund  and not  merely  an  interest  in the  Certificates,  (ii)  the  fiduciary
investment  standards of ERISA could apply to such Assets and (iii) transactions
occurring in the course of managing,  operating and servicing the trust fund and
its  Assets  might  constitute  prohibited  transactions,  unless  a  statutory,
regulatory or administrative exemption applies.

         PROHIBITED TRANSACTION CLASS EXEMPTION 83-1

         The DOL has issued an administrative exemption,  Prohibited Transaction
Class Exemption 83-1 ("PTCE 83-1"),  which under certain conditions exempts from
the application of the prohibited  transaction rules of ERISA and the excise tax
provisions  of  Section  4975  of the  Code  transactions  involving  a Plan  in
connection  with the operation of a "mortgage  pool" and the purchase,  sale and
holding of Certificates  which are "mortgage pool pass-through  certificates." A
"mortgage  pool" is  defined as a fixed  investment  pool  consisting  solely of
interest-bearing  obligations  secured by first or second  mortgages or deeds of
trust on single-family  residential  property,  property acquired in foreclosure
and undistributed cash. A "mortgage pool pass-through certificate" is defined as
a Certificate  which  represents a beneficial  undivided  interest in a mortgage
pool which  entitles  the  holder to pass  through  payments  of  principal  and
interest from the mortgage loans. PTCE 83-1 requires that: (i) the depositor and
the trustee  maintain a system of insurance or other protection for the mortgage
loans, the property securing such mortgage loans and for indemnifying holders of
Certificates against reductions in pass-through payments due to defaults in loan
payments or property damage in an amount at least equal to the greater of (x) 1%
of the  aggregate  principal  balance  of the  mortgage  loans  or (y) 1% of the
principal balance of the largest covered pooled mortgage loans; (ii) the trustee
may not be an affiliate of the  depositor;  and (iii) the payments  made to, and
retained by, the depositor in connection with the trust fund,  together with all
funds inuring to its benefit for administering the trust fund, represent no more
than "adequate  consideration"  for selling the mortgage loans,  plus reasonable
compensation  for services  provided

                                      130


to the  trust  fund.  In  addition,  PTCE  83-1  exempts  the  initial  sale  of
Certificates  to a Plan with respect to which the  depositor,  the insurer,  the
master  servicer or other  servicer or the trustee is a party in interest if the
Plan does not pay more  than fair  market  value for such  Certificates  and the
rights and interests  evidenced by such Certificates are not subordinated to the
rights and interests evidenced by other Certificates of the same pool.

         PTCE  83-1  also  exempts  from the  prohibited  transaction  rules any
transactions  in  connection  with the  servicing  and operation of the mortgage
pool,  provided that any payments made to the master servicer in connection with
the servicing of the trust fund are made in accordance with a binding agreement,
copies of which must be made available to  prospective  Plan  investors.  In the
case of any Plan with respect to which the depositor,  the master servicer,  the
insurer or the trustee is a fiduciary, PTCE 83-1 will only apply if, in addition
to the other  requirements:  (i) the  initial  sale,  exchange  or  transfer  of
Certificates is expressly approved by an independent fiduciary who has authority
to manage and control those Plan assets being invested in Certificates; (ii) the
Plan pays no more for the  Certificates  than  would be paid in an  arm's-length
transaction; (iii) no investment management, advisory or underwriting fee, sales
commission or similar  compensation  is paid to the depositor with regard to the
sale,  exchange or transfer of Certificates to the Plan; (iv) the total value of
the Certificates purchased by such Plan does not exceed 25% of the amount issued
and (v) at least 50% of the  aggregate  amount of  Certificates  is  acquired by
persons independent of the depositor,  the trustee,  the master servicer and the
insurer.  Before purchasing  Certificates,  a fiduciary of a Plan should confirm
that the trust  fund is a  "mortgage  pool,"  that the  Certificates  constitute
"mortgage pool  pass-through  certificates" and that the conditions set forth in
PTCE 83-1 would be satisfied.  In addition to making its own determination as to
the  availability  of the  exemptive  relief  provided  in PTCE  83-1,  the Plan
fiduciary should consider the  availability of any other prohibited  transaction
exemptions.  The Plan  fiduciary  should also  consider  its  general  fiduciary
obligations  under ERISA in determining  whether to purchase any Certificates on
behalf of a Plan pursuant to PTCE 83-1.

         UNDERWRITER EXEMPTION

         The DOL has  granted to Deutsche  Bank  Securities  Inc. an  individual
exemption,  Prohibited  Transaction  Exemption  94-84,  and to  Deutsche  Morgan
Grenfell/C.J.  Lawrence  Inc.,  similar  approval (FAN 97-03E),  which were both
amended by  Prohibited  Transaction  Exemption  97-34 ("PTE  97-34") and further
recently  amended  pursuant to Prohibited  Transaction  Exemption  2000-58 ("PTE
2000-58")  (collectively,  the "Exemption")  which is applicable to Certificates
which meet its  requirements  whenever the  underwriter  or its affiliate is the
sole underwriter,  manager or co-manager of an underwriting  syndicate or is the
selling or placement agent. The Exemption generally exempts certain transactions
from the  application  of certain of the  prohibited  transaction  provisions of
ERISA and the Code provided that the  conditions  set forth in the Exemption are
satisfied.  These transactions include the servicing,  managing and operation of
investment  trusts holding fixed (generally  non-revolving  pools) of enumerated
categories of assets which include: single and multi-family residential mortgage
loans, home equity loans or receivables  (including  cooperative housing loans),
manufactured housing loans and guaranteed  government mortgage pool certificates
and the purchase,  sale and holding of Certificates  which represent  beneficial
ownership interests in the assets of such trusts.

         GENERAL CONDITIONS OF EXEMPTION

         The Exemption sets forth general conditions which must be satisfied for
a transaction involving the purchase, sale and holding of the Certificates to be
eligible for exemptive relief thereunder. First, the acquisition of Certificates
by Plans  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
Assets  held by the trust fund must be fully  secured  (other  than  one-to-four
family residential  mortgage loans and home equity loans or receivables  backing
certain types of

                                      131


Certificates,  as described  below).  (Mortgage  loans,  loans,  obligations and
receivables will be collectively referred to herein as "loans.").  Third, unless
the  Certificates are issued in "designated  transactions"  (as described below)
and are backed by fully-secured loans, they may not be subordinated. Fourth, the
Certificates  at the time of  acquisition by the Plan must generally be rated in
one of the  three  (or in the case of  designated  transactions,  four)  highest
generic rating categories by Standard & Poor's Ratings  Services,  a division of
The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., Moody's Investors Services, Inc. or Fitch, Inc.
(each,  a  "Rating  Agency").  Fifth,  the  trustee  and the  indenture  trustee
generally  cannot be  affiliates of any member of the  "Restricted  Group" which
consists of any (i) underwriter as defined in the Exemption, (ii) the depositor,
(iii)  the  master  servicer,  (iv) each  servicer,  (v) the  insurer,  (vi) the
counterparty  of any "interest rate swap" (as described  below) held as an Asset
of the trust fund and (vii) any obligor with respect to loans  constituting more
than 5% of the aggregate  unamortized principal balance of the loans held in the
trust fund as of the date of initial  issuance of the  Certificates.  Sixth, the
sum of all payments made to, and retained by, such  underwriters  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 loans to the related  trust fund must  represent not more than
the fair market value of such loans;  and the sum of all  payments  made to, and
retained by, the master  servicer and any servicer must  represent not more than
reasonable  compensation  for such  person's  services  under the  Agreement and
reimbursement  of such person's  reasonable  expenses in  connection  therewith.
Seventh,  (i) the  investment  pool  must  consist  only of  assets  of the type
enumerated in the  Exemption  and which 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  (or  in the  case  of  designated
transactions,  four)  highest  generic  rating  categories  by one of the Rating
Agencies for at least one year prior to a Plan's  acquisition  of  Certificates;
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
a Plan's  acquisition of  Certificates.  Finally,  the investing Plan must be an
accredited  investor  as  defined  in  Rule  501(a)(1)  of  Regulation  D of the
Commission under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended. If Securities are being
sold under the  Exemptions,  the  depositor  assumes  that only Plans  which are
accredited  investors  under the federal  securities  laws will be  permitted to
purchase the Certificates.

         RECENT AMENDMENTS TO EXEMPTION

         PTE 2000-58 (the  "Amendment")  recently  amended the Exemption to make
the  acquisition  of  Certificates  by  Plans  in an  initial  offering  or in a
secondary  market  transaction,  the holding or transfer of Certificates and the
servicing, management and operation of the trust fund and its Assets on or after
November  13,  2000  eligible  for  exemptive  relief  to  a  broader  range  of
Certificates.  Prior to such amendment,  the Exemption generally permitted Plans
to purchase  only  unsubordindated  Certificates  rated within the highest three
generic rating categories backed by secured collateral. Such Certificates had to
be issued by a trust  fund  which was a grantor  trust,  REMIC or a FASIT  whose
corpus could not include certain types of Assets such as interest-rate swaps.

         TYPES OF TRUST FUNDS

         The  Amendment  has  expanded  the types of  permitted  trust  funds to
include owner-trusts, as well as grantor trusts, REMICs and FASITs. Owner-trusts
are subject to certain  restrictions in their governing documents to ensure that
their Assets may not be reached by the  creditors of the  depositor in the event
of bankruptcy or other insolvency and must provide certain legal opinions.

         DESIGNATED TRANSACTIONS

         In the case where the  Certificates  are  backed by trust  fund  Assets
which are residential,  home equity,  manufactured housing or multi-family loans
which are  described  and defined in the

                                      132


Exemption as designated transactions ("Designated Transactions"),  the Amendment
permits the  Certificates  issued by the trust fund in such  transactions  to be
rated in one of the highest four generic  rating  categories  by a Rating Agency
and/or to be  subordinated.  The Assets will qualify for Designated  Transaction
treatment  under the  Exemption  unless  otherwise  specified in the  prospectus
supplement.  In addition,  one subset of  Designated  Transactions,  residential
(one-  to-four  family) and home equity loans,  may be less than fully  secured,
provided that the rights and interests  evidenced by Certificates issued in such
Designated  Transactions  are: (a) not  subordinated to the rights and interests
evidenced by Securities of the same trust fund; (b) such  Certificates  acquired
by the Plan  have  received  a rating  from a Rating  Agency at the time of such
acquisition that is in one of the two highest generic rating categories; and (c)
any loan  included  in the  corpus or Assets of the  trust  fund is  secured  by
collateral  whose  fair  market  value  on the  closing  date of the  Designated
Transactions  is at  least  equal  to 80% of the  sum of:  (i)  the  outstanding
principal  balance  due under the loan  which is held by the trust fund and (ii)
the  outstanding  principal  balance(s) of any other loan(s) of higher  priority
(whether  or not  held  by  the  trust  fund)  which  are  secured  by the  same
collateral.

         INSURANCE COMPANY GENERAL ACCOUNTS

         In the event  that  Certificates  do not meet the  requirements  of the
Exemption  solely because they are  Subordinate  Certificates  or fail to meet a
minimum rating requirement under the Exemption, certain Plans may be eligible to
purchase  Certificates  pursuant to Section III of Prohibited  Transaction Class
Exemption 95-60 ("PTCE 95-60") which permits  insurance company general accounts
as defined in PTCE 95-60 to purchase such  Certificates  if they  otherwise meet
all of the other requirements of the Exemption.

         PERMITTED ASSETS

         The Amendment  permits an interest-rate  swap to be an Asset of a trust
fund which issues  Certificates  acquired by Plans in an initial  offering or in
the  secondary   market  on  or  after  November  13,  2000  and  clarifies  the
requirements regarding yield supplement agreements. An interest-rate swap (or if
purchased  by or on behalf  of the trust  fund) an  interest-rate  cap  contract
(collectively,  a "Swap" or "Swap Agreement") is a permitted trust fund Asset if
it: (a) is an "eligible  Swap;" (b) is with an "eligible  counterparty;"  (c) is
purchased by a "qualified plan investor;" (d) meets certain additional  specific
conditions  which depend on whether the Swap is a "ratings  dependent Swap" or a
"non-ratings  dependent Swap" and (e) permits the trust fund to make termination
payments to the Swap  counterparty  (other than  currently  scheduled  payments)
solely  from  excess  spread or amounts  otherwise  payable to the  servicer  or
depositor.

         An "eligible  Swap" is one which:  (a) is denominated in U.S.  dollars;
(b) pursuant to which the trust fund pays or receives,  on or immediately  prior
to the respective  payment or distribution date for the class of Certificates to
which the Swap relates,  a fixed rate of interest or a floating rate of interest
based on a publicly  available index (E.G.,  LIBOR or the U.S. Federal Reserve's
Cost of Funds Index  (COFI)),  with the trust fund receiving such payments on at
least a  quarterly  basis  and  obligated  to  make  separate  payments  no more
frequently than the  counterparty,  with all simultaneous  payments being netted
("Allowable  Interest  Rate");  (c) has a notional  amount  that does not exceed
either: (i) the principal balance of the class of Certificates to which the Swap
relates,  or (ii) the portion of the principal balance of such class represented
by  obligations  ("Allowable  Notional  Amount");  (d) is not  leveraged  (i.e.,
payments are based on the applicable  notional amount,  the day count fractions,
the fixed or floating rates  permitted  above,  and the  difference  between the
products  thereof,  calculated on a one-to-one  ratio and not on a multiplier of
such difference) ("Leveraged");  (e) has a final termination date that is either
the earlier of the date on which the issuer  terminates  or the related class of
Certificates  are fully repaid and (f) does not  incorporate any provision which
could cause a unilateral alteration in the interest rate requirements  described
above or the prohibition against leveraging.

                                      133


         An "eligible  counterparty" means a bank or other financial institution
which has a rating at the date of issuance of the Certificates,  which is in one
of the  three  highest  long-term  credit  rating  categories  or one of the two
highest  short-term  credit rating  categories,  utilized by at least one of the
Rating  Agencies  rating the  Certificates;  provided that, if a counterparty is
relying  on its  short-term  rating to  establish  eligibility  hereunder,  such
counterparty  must either have a  long-term  rating in one of the three  highest
long-term  rating  categories or not have a long-term rating from the applicable
Rating Agency.

         A  "qualified  plan  investor" is a Plan or Plans where the decision to
buy such class of  Certificates  is made on behalf of the Plan by an independent
fiduciary  qualified to understand the Swap  transaction and the effect the Swap
would have on the rating of the  Certificates and such fiduciary is either (a) a
"qualified  professional  asset manager"  ("QPAM") under Prohibited  Transaction
Class  Exemption  84-14  ("PTCE  84-14") (see  below),  (b) an  "in-house  asset
manager" under Prohibited  Transaction Class Exemption 96-23 ("PTCE 96-23") (see
below) or (c) has total assets (both Plan and non-Plan)  under  management of at
least $100 million at the time the Certificates are acquired by the Plan.

         In  "ratings   dependent  Swaps"  (where  the  rating  of  a  class  of
Certificates  is dependent on the terms and  conditions  of the Swap),  the Swap
Agreement  must  provide  that  if the  credit  rating  of the  counterparty  is
withdrawn or reduced by any Rating Agency below a level  specified by the Rating
Agency, the servicer must, within the period specified under the Swap Agreement:
(a) obtain a replacement Swap Agreement with an eligible  counterparty  which is
acceptable  to the Rating  Agency and the terms of which are  substantially  the
same as the current Swap  Agreement  (at which time the earlier  Swap  Agreement
must  terminate);   or  (b)  cause  the  Swap   counterparty  to  establish  any
collateralization  or other  arrangement  satisfactory to the Rating Agency such
that the then current  rating by the Rating  Agency of the  particular  class of
Certificates  will  not be  withdrawn  or  reduced  (and  the  terms of the Swap
Agreement must  specifically  obligate the  counterparty to perform these duties
for any class of  Certificates  with a term of more than one year). In the event
that the servicer fails to meet these obligations,  Plan certificateholders must
be notified in the  immediately  following  periodic report which is provided to
certificateholders  but in no  event  later  than  the end of the  second  month
beginning  after the date of such failure.  Sixty days after the receipt of such
report,  the exemptive  relief  provided under the Exemption will  prospectively
cease  to be  applicable  to any  class  of  Certificates  held by a Plan  which
involves such ratings dependent Swap.

         "Non-ratings   dependent   Swaps"   (those  where  the  rating  of  the
Certificates  does not  depend  on the  terms  and  conditions  of the Swap) are
subject to the following conditions. If the credit rating of the counterparty is
withdrawn or reduced below the lowest level permitted  above, the servicer will,
within a specified period after such rating withdrawal or reduction:  (a) obtain
a replacement Swap Agreement with an eligible  counterparty,  the terms of which
are  substantially  the same as the current  Swap  Agreement  (at which time the
earlier Swap  Agreement  must  terminate);  (b) cause the  counterparty  to post
collateral  with the trust fund in an amount equal to all  payments  owed by the
counterparty if the Swap transaction were terminated;  or (c) terminate the Swap
Agreement in accordance with its terms.

         An  "eligible  yield  supplement  agreement"  is any  yield  supplement
agreement or similar  arrangement  (or if purchased by or on behalf of the trust
fund) an interest rate cap contract to supplement the interest  rates  otherwise
payable on  obligations  held by the trust fund  ("EYS  Agreement").  If the EYS
Agreement has a notional  principal amount and/or is written on an International
Swaps and Derivatives Association,  Inc. (ISDA) form, the EYS Agreement may only
be held as an Asset of the trust fund with respect to Certificates  purchased by
Plans on or after April 7, 1998 if it meets the following conditions:  (a) it is
denominated in U.S. dollars;  (b) it pays an Allowable  Interest Rate; (c) it is
not Leveraged;  (d) it does not allow any of these three preceding

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requirements to be unilaterally  altered without the consent of the trustee; (e)
it is entered into between the trust fund and an eligible  counterparty  and (f)
it has an Allowable Notional Amount.

         PRE-FUNDING ACCOUNTS

         The  Exemption was amended by PTE 97-34 to extend  exemptive  relief to
Certificates issued in transactions using pre-funding accounts whereby a portion
of the loans backing the Certificates are transferred to the trust fund within a
specified  period  following  the closing date ("DOL  Pre-Funding  Period") (see
below)  instead  of  requiring  that all  such  loans be  either  identified  or
transferred  on or  before  the  closing  date.  The  relief  is  effective  for
transactions  occurring  on or after May 23, 1997  provided  that the  following
conditions are met. First,  the ratio of the amount allocated to the Pre-Funding
Account  to the  total  principal  amount  of  the  Certificates  being  offered
("Pre-Funding  Limit") must not exceed  twenty-five  percent (25%).  Second, all
loans  transferred  after the  closing  date  (referred  to here as  "additional
loans") must meet the same terms and conditions for  eligibility as the original
loans  used to create  the trust  fund,  which  terms and  conditions  have been
approved by the Rating Agency.  Third,  the transfer of such additional loans to
the  trust  fund  during  the DOL  Pre-Funding  Period  must not  result  in the
Certificates  receiving  a lower  credit  rating  from the  Rating  Agency  upon
termination of the DOL  Pre-Funding  Period than the rating that was obtained at
the time of the initial issuance of the Certificates by the trust fund.  Fourth,
solely  as a result  of the use of  pre-funding,  the  weighted  average  annual
percentage  interest rate (the "average  interest rate") for all of the loans in
the trust fund at the end of the DOL  Pre-Funding  Period  must not be more than
100 basis points lower than the average  interest  rate for the loans which were
transferred  to the trust  fund on the  closing  date.  Fifth,  either:  (i) the
characteristics of the additional loans must be monitored by an insurer or other
credit  support  provider  which is  independent  of the  depositor;  or (ii) an
independent accountant retained by the depositor must provide the depositor with
a letter (with copies  provided to the Rating Agency,  the  underwriter  and the
trustee)  stating  whether or not the  characteristics  of the additional  loans
conform  to  the  characteristics   described  in  the  Prospectus,   Prospectus
Supplement,  Private  Placement  Memorandum  ("Offering  Documents")  and/or the
Agreement.  In preparing such letter,  the  independent  accountant must use the
same type of procedures as were  applicable to the loans which were  transferred
as of the closing date. Sixth, the DOL Pre-Funding Period must end no later than
three  months  or 90  days  after  the  closing  date  or  earlier,  in  certain
circumstances,  if the amount on deposit in the  Pre-Funding  Account is reduced
below the minimum level specified in the Agreement or an event of default occurs
under the Agreement.  Seventh,  amounts  transferred to any Pre-Funding  Account
and/or Capitalized  Interest Account used in connection with the pre-funding may
be invested only in investments which are permitted by the Rating Agency and (i)
are direct  obligations of, or obligations fully guaranteed as to timely payment
of principal and interest by, the United States or any agency or instrumentality
thereof  (provided that such obligations are backed by the full faith and credit
of the United  States);  or (ii) have been rated (or the obligor has been rated)
in one of the three  highest  generic  rating  categories  by the Rating  Agency
("Acceptable Investments"). Eighth, certain disclosure requirements must be met.

         REVOLVING POOL FEATURES

         The Exemption only covers Certificates backed by "fixed" pools of loans
which  require  that all the loans  must be  transferred  to the  trust  fund or
identified at closing (or  transferred  within the DOL  Pre-Funding  Period,  if
pre-funding  meeting  the  conditions  described  above is  used).  Accordingly,
Certificates  issued by trust funds which feature revolving pools of Assets will
not be eligible  for a purchase by Plans.  However,  Securities  which are Notes
backed by  revolving  pools of Assets  may be  eligible  for  purchase  by Plans
pursuant to certain other  prohibited  transaction  exemptions.  See  discussion
below in "ERISA Considerations Relating to Notes."

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         LIMITATIONS ON SCOPE OF THE EXEMPTION

         If the general conditions of the Exemption are satisfied, the Exemption
may provide an exemption from the restrictions  imposed by ERISA and the Code in
connection  with  the  initial   acquisition,   transfer  or  holding,  and  the
acquisition or  disposition  in the secondary  market,  of the  Certificates  by
Plans.  However, no exemption is provided from the restrictions of ERISA for the
acquisition or holding of a Certificates  on behalf of an "Excluded Plan" by any
person who is a fiduciary  with respect to the assets of such Excluded Plan. For
those  purposes,  an  Excluded  Plan is a Plan  sponsored  by any  member of the
Restricted  Group.  Exemptive  relief may also be provided for the  acquisition,
holding  and  disposition  of  Certificates  by  Plans if the  fiduciary  or its
affiliate  is the obligor with respect to 5% or less of the fair market value of
the Loans in the trust fund provided that: (i) the Plan is not an Excluded Plan,
(ii) each Plan's investment in each class of Certificates does not exceed 25% of
the outstanding Certificates in the class, (iii) after the Plan's acquisition of
the  Certificates,  no more than 25% of the assets over which the  fiduciary has
investment  authority are invested in Certificates of a trust containing  assets
which are sold or  serviced  by the same  entity and (iv) in the case of initial
issuance (but not secondary market transactions),  at least 50% of each class of
Certificates  and at least 50% of the aggregate  interests in the trust fund are
acquired by persons independent of the Restricted Group.

ERISA CONSIDERATIONS RELATING TO NOTES

         Under the Plan Asset Regulations, the Assets of the trust fund would be
treated as "plan  assets" of a Plan for the  purposes of ERISA and the Code only
if the Plan  acquires  an  "equity  interest"  in the trust fund and none of the
exceptions  contained in the Plan Asset  Regulations  is  applicable.  An equity
interest is defined under the Plan Asset  Regulations  as an interest other than
an instrument  which is treated as indebtedness  under  applicable local law and
which has no substantial equity features. Assuming that the Notes are treated as
indebtedness  without substantial equity features for purposes of the Plan Asset
Regulations,  then such Notes will be eligible for  purchase by Plans.  However,
without regard to whether the Notes are treated as an "equity interest" for such
purposes, the acquisition or holding of Notes by or on behalf of a Plan could be
considered to give rise to a prohibited  transaction if the trust fund or any of
its  affiliates  is or becomes a party in interest or  disqualified  person with
respect to such Plan,  or in the event that a Note is purchased in the secondary
market and such  purchase  constitutes  a sale or exchange  between a Plan and a
party in interest or disqualified person with respect to such Plan. There can be
no assurance that the trust fund or any of its affiliates  will not be or become
a party in  interest  or a  disqualified  person  with  respect  to a Plan  that
acquires Notes.

         The  Amendment to the  Exemption  permits trust funds which are grantor
trusts, owner trusts,  REMICs or FASITs to issue Notes, as well as Certificates,
provided a legal opinion is received to the effect that the  noteholders  have a
perfected  security  interest in the trust fund's Assets.  The exemptive  relief
provided  under the Exemption  for any  prohibited  transactions  which could be
caused as a result of the  operation,  management or servicing of the trust fund
and its Assets would not be necessary  with respect to Notes with no substantial
equity  features  which are issued as  obligations  of the trust fund.  However,
effective for the acquisition, holding or transfer of Notes between a Plan and a
party in interest  which occurs on or after  November 13,  2000,  the  Exemption
would provide prohibited  transaction  exemptive relief,  provided that the same
conditions of the Exemption  described  above relating to  Certificates  are met
with  respect  to the  Notes.  The same  limitations  of such  exemptive  relief
relating to acquisitions of Certificates by fiduciaries with respect to Excluded
Plans would also be applicable to the Notes as described  herein in "Limitations
on Scope of the Exemption."

         In the event that the Exemption is not applicable to the Notes,  one or
more  other  prohibited  transactions  exemptions  may  be  available  to  Plans
purchasing  or  transferring  the Notes  depending in part upon the type of Plan
fiduciary making the decision to acquire the Notes and the

                                      136


circumstances under which such decision is made. These exemptions  include,  but
are not limited to,  Prohibited  Transaction  Class  Exemption  90-1  (regarding
investments  by  insurance   company  pooled  separate   accounts),   Prohibited
Transaction  Class  Exemption  91-38  (regarding  investments by bank collective
investments  funds), PTCE 84-14 (regarding  transactions  effected by "qualified
professional  asset managers"),  PTCE 95-60 (regarding  investments by insurance
company general  accounts) and PTCE 96-23  (regarding  transactions  effected by
"in-house asset  managers")  (collectively,  the  "Investor-Based  Exemptions").
However, even if the conditions specified in these Investor-Based Exemptions are
met, the scope of the relief provided under such  Exemptions  might or might not
cover all acts which might be construed as prohibited transactions.

         EACH  PROSPECTUS   SUPPLEMENT  WILL  CONTAIN   INFORMATION   CONCERNING
CONSIDERATIONS RELATING TO ERISA AND THE CODE THAT ARE APPLICABLE TO THE RELATED
SECURITIES.   BEFORE  PURCHASING  SECURITIES  IN  RELIANCE  ON  PTCE  83-1,  THE
EXEMPTION, THE INVESTOR-BASED  EXEMPTIONS OR ANY OTHER EXEMPTION, A FIDUCIARY OF
A PLAN SHOULD ITSELF CONFIRM THAT REQUIREMENTS SET FORTH IN SUCH EXEMPTION WOULD
BE SATISFIED.

         ANY PLAN  INVESTOR  WHO  PROPOSES  TO USE "PLAN  ASSETS" OF ANY PLAN TO
PURCHASE  SECURITIES OF ANY SERIES OR CLASS SHOULD CONSULT WITH ITS COUNSEL WITH
RESPECT TO THE POTENTIAL  CONSEQUENCES  UNDER ERISA AND SECTION 4975 OF THE CODE
OF THE ACQUISITION AND OWNERSHIP OF SUCH SECURITIES.

         Governmental plans and church plans as defined in ERISA are not subject
to ERISA or Code Section  4975,  although  they may elect to be qualified  under
Section 401 (a) of the Code and exempt from  taxation  under  Section 501 (a) of
the Code and would then be subject to the prohibited transaction rules set forth
in Section 503 of the Code.  In addition,  governmental  plans may be subject to
federal,  state and local  laws which are to a  material  extent  similar to the
provisions  of ERISA or a Code Section 4975  ("Similar  Law").  A fiduciary of a
governmental  plan should make its own  determination  as to the propriety of an
investment  in  Securities  under  applicable   fiduciary  or  other  investment
standards and the need for the  availability  of any exemptive  relief under any
Similar Law.

                                LEGAL INVESTMENT

         The  prospectus  supplement  will specify which classes of the Notes or
Certificates,   as  applicable,   if  any,  will  constitute  "mortgage  related
securities"  for purposes of the Secondary  Mortgage  Market  Enhancement Act of
1984, as amended ("SMMEA").  Generally, only classes of Offered Notes or Offered
Certificates, as applicable, that (1) are rated in one of the two highest rating
categories  by one or  more  rating  agencies  and  (2)  are  part  of a  series
representing  interests  in, or  secured  by, a trust fund  consisting  of loans
secured by first liens on real property and  originated  by particular  types of
originators  specified  in SMMEA,  will be  "mortgage  related  securities"  for
purposes of SMMEA.

         Those classes of Offered Notes or Offered Certificates,  as applicable,
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  of the  United  States
constitute legal investments for those entities.  Pursuant to SMMEA, a number of
states enacted  legislation,  on or before the October 3, 1991 cut-off for those
enactments,  limiting  to  varying  extents  the  ability of

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some 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.

         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  these
securities,  and national  banks may  purchase  these  securities  for their own
account  without regard to the  limitations  generally  applicable to investment
securities  set  forth in 12 U.S.C.  ss.24  (Seventh),  subject  in each case to
regulations that the applicable federal regulatory  authority may prescribe.  In
this  connection,  the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (the "OCC") has
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 general standards concerning "safety
and soundness" and retention of credit  information in 12 C.F.R.  ss.1.5),  some
"Type  IV  securities,"   defined  in  12  C.F.R.   ss.1.2(l)  to  include  some
"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  some  limited
circumstances,   other  than  stripped  mortgage  related  securities,  residual
interests  in mortgage  related  securities,  and  commercial  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.  Thrift  institutions  that are subject to the  jurisdiction  of the
Office of  Thrift  Supervision  (the  "OTS")  should  consider  the OTS'  Thrift
Bulletin 13a (December 1, 1998),  "Management of Interest Rate Risk,  Investment
Securities,  and Derivatives Activities," before investing in any of the Offered
Notes or Offered Certificates, as applicable.

         All   depository   institutions   considering   an  investment  in  the
Certificates  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 ("FFIEC"), 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 NCUA,  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) applicable to all securities (including mortgage pass-through  securities
and mortgage-derivative products) used for investment purposes.

         If specified in the  prospectus  supplement,  other  classes of Offered
Notes  or  Offered  Certificates,  as  applicable,   offered  pursuant  to  this
prospectus will not constitute  "mortgage  related  securities" under SMMEA. The
appropriate  characterization  of those classes  under various legal  investment
restrictions, and thus the ability of investors subject to these restrictions to
purchase  these Offered Notes or Offered  Certificates,  as  applicable,  may be
subject to significant interpretive uncertainties.

         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 those  authorities  before  purchasing  any Offered
Notes or Offered Certificates,  as applicable, as some classes or subclasses may
be deemed unsuitable  investments,  or may otherwise be restricted,  under those
rules, policies or guidelines (in some 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-

                                      138


assets limits provisions that may restrict or prohibit  investment in securities
that are not  "interest  bearing"  or "income  paying,"  and with  regard to any
Offered Notes or Offered Certificates, as applicable, issued in book-entry form,
provisions  that may restrict or prohibit  investments  in  securities  that are
issued in book-entry form.

         Except as to the status of some  classes  of  Offered  Notes or Offered
Certificates, as applicable, as "mortgage related securities," no representation
is made as to the  proper  characterization  of the  Offered  Notes  or  Offered
Certificates,  as  applicable,  for  legal  investment,   financial  institution
regulatory,  or other purposes,  or as to the ability of particular investors to
purchase  any  Offered  Notes or  Offered  Certificates,  as  applicable,  under
applicable legal investment restrictions. The uncertainties described above (and
any unfavorable future  determinations  concerning legal investment or financial
institution   regulatory   characteristics  of  the  Offered  Notes  or  Offered
Certificates,  as applicable,) may adversely affect the liquidity of the Offered
Notes or Offered Certificates, as applicable.

         Accordingly,  all investors whose investment  activities are subject to
legal investment laws and regulations, regulatory capital requirements or review
by  regulatory  authorities  should  consult  with their own legal  advisors  in
determining   whether  and  to  what   extent  the  Offered   Notes  or  Offered
Certificates,  as applicable, of any class constitute legal investments for them
or are subject to investment, capital or other restrictions, and, if applicable,
whether SMMEA has been overridden in any jurisdiction relevant to that investor.

                             METHODS OF DISTRIBUTION

         The Notes or  Certificates,  as applicable,  offered by this prospectus
and by the  supplements  to this  prospectus  will be  offered  in  series.  The
distribution of the Notes or Certificates,  as applicable,  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 specified in the  prospectus
supplement, the Notes or Certificates,  as applicable,  will be distributed in a
firm  commitment  underwriting,  subject  to the  terms  and  conditions  of the
underwriting  agreement,  by Deutsche  Bank  Securites  Inc.  ("DBS")  acting as
underwriter  with  other  underwriters,   if  any,  named  in  the  underwriting
agreement.  In that event,  the prospectus  supplement may also specify that the
underwriters  will not be  obligated  to pay for any Notes or  Certificates,  as
applicable, agreed to be purchased by purchasers pursuant to purchase agreements
acceptable  to the  depositor.  In  connection  with  the  sale of the  Notes or
Certificates,  as applicable,  underwriters  may receive  compensation  from the
depositor or from purchasers of the Notes or Certificates, as applicable, in the
form of discounts,  concessions or commissions.  The prospectus  supplement will
describe any compensation paid by the depositor.

         Alternatively,  the prospectus supplement may specify that the Notes or
Certificates,  as  applicable,  will be distributed by DBS acting as agent or in
some cases as principal  with respect to Notes or  Certificates,  as applicable,
that it has previously purchased or agreed to purchase.  If DBS acts as agent in
the sale of Notes or  Certificates,  as  applicable,  DBS will receive a selling
commission for each series of Notes or Certificates, as applicable, depending on
market  conditions,  expressed as a percentage of the total principal balance of
the related mortgage loans as of the Cut-off Date. The exact percentage for each
series  of  Notes or  Certificates,  as  applicable,  will be  disclosed  in the
prospectus  supplement.  To the  extent  that DBS  elects to  purchase  Notes or
Certificates,  as  applicable,  as principal,  DBS may realize losses or profits
based upon the difference  between its purchase  price and the sales price.  The
prospectus  supplement  for any series  offered other than through  underwriters
will  contain  information  regarding  the  nature  of  that  offering  and  any
agreements to be entered into between the  depositor and  purchasers of Notes or
Certificates, as applicable, of that series.

                                      139


         The  depositor  will  indemnify  DBS  and  any   underwriters   against
particular civil liabilities,  including liabilities under the Securities Act of
1933, or will contribute to payments DBS and any underwriters may be required to
make in respect of these civil liabilities.

         In the ordinary course of business, DBS and the depositor may engage in
various securities and financing  transactions,  including repurchase agreements
to provide interim financing of the depositor's  mortgage loans pending the sale
of those  mortgage  loans or interests in those  mortgage  loans,  including the
Notes or Certificates,  as applicable.  DBS performs management services for the
depositor.

         The  depositor   anticipates  that  the  Notes  or   Certificates,   as
applicable,  will be sold primarily to  institutional  investors.  Purchasers of
Notes or Certificates,  as applicable,  including dealers, may, depending on the
facts and  circumstances  of those  purchases,  be  deemed to be  "underwriters"
within the meaning of the Securities Act of 1933 in connection with reoffers and
sales by them of Notes or Certificates,  as applicable.  Securityholders  should
consult with their legal  advisors in this regard  before any reoffer or sale of
Notes or Certificates, as applicable.

         As to each series of Notes or Certificates,  as applicable,  only those
classes rated in one of the four highest rating  categories by any rating agency
will be  offered by this  prospectus.  Any lower  rated or 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.

                             ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

         The Depositor has filed with the Commission a registration statement on
Form S-3 under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, with respect to the Notes
or Certificates, as applicable, (the "Registration Statement"). This prospectus,
which forms a part of the Registration Statement,  omits some of the information
contained in the Registration Statement pursuant to the rules and regulations of
the Commission.  The Registration Statement and the exhibits to the Registration
Statement  can be  inspected  and  copied  at the  public  reference  facilities
maintained by the Commission at 450 Fifth Street, N.W., Washington,  D.C. 20549,
and at Regional Offices in the following locations:

         o        Chicago Regional  Office,  175 West Jackson  Boulevard,  Suite
                  900, Chicago, Illinois 60604; and

         o        New York Regional  Office,  233 Broadway,  New York,  New York
                  10279.

Copies of these materials 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  Commission  also  maintains  a  site  on  the  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 to
the  Registration  Statement,  through  the EDGAR  system  and  therefore  these
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.

         Copies  of the  most  recent  Fannie  Mae  prospectus  for  Fannie  Mae
certificates and Fannie Mae's annual report and quarterly  financial  statements
as well as other  financial  information  are  available  from the  Director  of
Investor Relations of Fannie Mae, 3900 Wisconsin Avenue, N.W., Washington,  D.C.
20016  (202-752-7115).  The Depositor did not  participate in the preparation of

                                      140


Fannie Mae's  prospectus or its annual or quarterly  reports or other  financial
information  and,  accordingly,  makes no  representation  as to the accuracy or
completeness of the information in those documents.

         Copies  of  the  most  recent   Offering   Circular   for  Freddie  Mac
certificates  as well as Freddie  Mac's most recent  Information  Statement  and
Information  Statement  supplement  and any quarterly  report made  available by
Freddie  Mac  may be  obtained  by  writing  or  calling  the  Investor  Inquiry
Department of Freddie Mac at 8200 Jones Branch  Drive,  McLean,  Virginia  22102
(outside  Washington,  D.C.  metropolitan area, telephone  800-336-3672;  within
Washington,  D.C. metropolitan area, telephone 703-759-8160).  The Depositor did
not  participate  in  the  preparation  of  Freddie  Mac's  Offering   Circular,
Information  Statement or any  supplement  to the  Information  Statement or any
quarterly  report  of the  Information  Statement  and,  accordingly,  makes  no
representation  as to the accuracy or  completeness  of the information in those
documents.

                 INCORPORATION OF CERTAIN DOCUMENTS BY REFERENCE

         All  documents  subsequently  filed by or on behalf  of the trust  fund
referred to in the prospectus supplement with the Commission pursuant to Section
13(a), 13(c), 14 or 15(d) of the Exchange Act, after the date of this prospectus
and prior to the  termination of any offering of the Notes or  Certificates,  as
applicable,  issued by that  trust  fund will be  deemed to be  incorporated  by
reference in this  prospectus and to be a part of this  prospectus from the date
of the  filing  of  those  documents.  Any  statement  contained  in a  document
incorporated  or deemed to be  incorporated by reference in this prospectus will
be deemed to be modified or  superseded  for all purposes of this  prospectus to
the extent that a statement  contained in this  prospectus (or in the prospectus
supplement)  or in any  other  subsequently  filed  document  that also is or is
deemed to be incorporated by reference modifies or replaces that statement.  Any
statement so modified or superseded will not be deemed, except as so modified or
superseded, to constitute a part of this prospectus.

         The Trustee on behalf of any trust fund will provide  without charge to
each person to whom this prospectus is delivered, upon request, a copy of any or
all of the documents  referred to above that have been or may be incorporated by
reference in this prospectus (not including  exhibits to the information that is
incorporated by reference unless the exhibits are  specifically  incorporated by
reference into the information that this prospectus incorporates).  Requests for
information  should be directed  to the  corporate  trust  office of the Trustee
specified in the prospectus supplement.

                                  LEGAL MATTERS

         Certain legal matters, including the federal income tax consequences to
securityholders of an investment in the Notes or Certificates, as applicable, of
a series, will be passed upon for the depositor by McKee Nelson LLP, Washington,
D.C.,  Sidley Austin Brown & Wood LLP, New York, NY and Thacher  Proffitt & Wood
LLP, New York, NY.

                              FINANCIAL INFORMATION

         A  new  trust  fund  will  be  formed  for  each  series  of  Notes  or
Certificates,  as  applicable,  and no trust  fund will  engage in any  business
activities or have any assets or obligations  before the issuance of the related
series  of  Notes  or  Certificates,  as  applicable.   Accordingly,   financial
statements for a trust fund will generally not be included in this prospectus or
in the prospectus supplement.

                                      141


                                     RATING

         As a condition to the issuance of any class of Offered Notes or Offered
Certificates, as applicable, they must not be rated lower than investment grade;
that is, they must be rated in one of the four highest rating  categories,  by a
rating agency.

         Ratings on mortgage pass-through certificates and mortgage-backed notes
address the likelihood of receipt by securityholders of all distributions on the
underlying  mortgage  loans.  These ratings  address the  structural,  legal and
issuer-related aspects associated with the Notes or Certificates, as applicable,
the nature of the underlying assets and the credit quality of the guarantor,  if
any. Ratings on mortgage  pass-through  certificates,  mortgage-backed notes and
other asset backed  securities do not represent any assessment of the likelihood
of principal  prepayments  by  borrowers  or of the degree by which  prepayments
might differ from those  originally  anticipated.  As a result,  securityholders
might  suffer a lower than  anticipated  yield,  and,  in  addition,  holders of
stripped  interest  certificates  in extreme  cases  might fail to recoup  their
initial investments.

         A  security  rating  is not a  recommendation  to  buy,  sell  or  hold
securities  and may be  subject to  revision  or  withdrawal  at any time by the
assigning  rating  organization.   Each  security  rating  should  be  evaluated
independently of any other security rating.

                                      142


                                               INDEX OF DEFINED TERMS



                                                                                                        
1986 Act...........................................92          FASIT Regular Securities..........................111
1997 Act..........................................121          FDIC...............................................44
1998 Policy Statement.............................139          FHA.................................................4
Accrual Period.....................................17          Freddie Mac.........................................1
Accrual Securities.................................24          Freddie Mac Act....................................11
Accrued Security Interest..........................26          Freddie Mac Certificate Group......................12
Adjustable Rate Assets..............................1          Garn-St. Germain Act...............................79
Agency Securities...................................1          GEM Assets..........................................2
Agreement..........................................39          Ginnie Mae..........................................1
ARM Loans...........................................5          GPM Assets..........................................2
Asset Conservation Act.............................78          Grantor Trust Fund Stripped Bond..................119
Asset Group........................................24          Grantor Trust Fund Stripped Coupon................120
Asset Seller........................................1          Home Equity Loans...................................3
Available Distribution Amount......................25          Housing Act.........................................9
Balloon Payment Assets..............................2          HUD................................................52
Bankruptcy Code....................................75          Increasing Payment Asset............................2
Beneficial Owner...................................33          Increasing Payment Assets...........................2
Bi-weekly Assets....................................2          Indirect Participants..............................34
Book-Entry Securities..............................24          Insurance Proceeds.................................25
Buy Down Assets.....................................1          Interest Rate......................................26
Buydown Mortgage Loans.............................20          Interest Reduction Assets...........................2
Buydown Period.....................................20          land sale contract.................................70
Capitalized Interest Account.......................15          Land Sale Contracts.................................3
Cash Flow Agreement................................16          Level Payment Assets................................1
CERCLA.............................................77          Liquidation Proceeds...............................25
Certificates.......................................23          Lock-out Date.......................................6
Charter Act........................................10          Mortgaged Properties................................3
Code...............................................86          Mortgages...........................................3
Collection Account.................................44          Nonrecoverable Advance.............................29
Commission..........................................5          Notes..............................................23
contract borrower..................................70          Offered Securities.................................24
contract lender....................................70          OID Regulations....................................87
Convertible Assets..................................2          Participants.......................................33
Cooperative........................................69          Partnership Certificate Owners....................124
Cooperative Corporation............................35          PCBs...............................................77
Cooperative Loans..................................69          Permitted Investments..............................44
Cooperatives........................................3          Pre-Funded Amount..................................15
Covered Trust......................................64          Pre-Funding Account................................15
CPR................................................19          Pre-Funding Period.................................15
Crime Control Act..................................82          Prepayment Premium..................................6
Cut-off Date........................................4          Purchase Price.....................................41
Definitive Securities..............................24          RCRA...............................................77
Determination Date.................................24          Record Date........................................24
Distribution Date..................................17          Regular Securities.................................88
DTC................................................33          Regular Securityholder.............................91
ERISA.............................................130          Relief Act.........................................81
Euroclear..........................................33          REMIC Regulations..................................87
Euroclear Operator.................................35          REMIC Securities...................................39
European Depositaries..............................36          REO Property.......................................30
Exchange Act.......................................34          Residual Holders...................................99
Fannie Mae..........................................1          Residual Securities................................88
FASIT Ownership Security..........................111          Retained Interest..................................54


                                      143


Revolving Credit Line Loans.........................6
RICO...............................................82
Rules..............................................36
Securities.........................................23
Security Balance...................................27
Senior Securities..................................23
Servicemen's Readjustment Act......................14
Servicing Standard.................................47
Shortfall Amount..................................120
Single Family Property..............................3
SPA................................................19
Special servicer...................................56
Step-up Rate Assets.................................2
Strip Securities...................................24
Stripped Agency Securities.........................13
Subordinate Securities.............................23
Subsequent Assets..................................15
Superliens.........................................77
Taxable Mortgage Pools.............................87
Terms and Conditions...............................35
Tiered REMICs......................................91
Title V............................................80
Title VIII.........................................81
UCC................................................34
UST................................................77
VA..................................................4
VA Guaranty Policy.................................53
Value...............................................4
Warranting Party...................................42
Yield Considerations...............................27

                                      144






                           $144,443,000 (APPROXIMATE)


                              ACE SECURITIES CORP.
                                    DEPOSITOR


                      ACE SECURITIES CORP. HOME EQUITY LOAN
                             TRUST, SERIES 2005-SD1
                     ASSET BACKED PASS-THROUGH CERTIFICATES
                              PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT
                             DATED JANUARY 12, 2005


                             OCWEN FEDERAL BANK FSB
                         OPTION ONE MORTGAGE CORPORATION
                        SELECT PORTFOLIO SERVICING, INC.
                                    SERVICERS


                     WELLS FARGO BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION
                                 MASTER SERVICER


                            DEUTSCHE BANK SECURITIES
                                   UNDERWRITER


YOU SHOULD RELY ONLY ON THE  INFORMATION  CONTAINED OR INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE
IN THIS  PROSPECTUS  SUPPLEMENT  AND THE  ACCOMPANYING  PROSPECTUS.  WE HAVE NOT
AUTHORIZED ANYONE TO PROVIDE YOU WITH DIFFERENT INFORMATION.

We are not offering the  certificates  offered by this prospectus  supplement in
any state where the offer is not permitted.

Dealers will be required to deliver a prospectus  supplement and prospectus when
acting as  underwriters  of the  certificates  and with  respect to their unsold
allotments  or  subscriptions.  In  addition,  all  dealers  selling the Offered
Certificates,  whether or not participating in this offering, may be required to
deliver a prospectus  supplement and prospectus  until 90 days after the date of
this prospectus supplement.

                                JANUARY 12, 2005