- andrew.vickery@linklaters.com
- +44 2074564635
- United Kingdom
Admissions
UK (England & Wales), Australia
Services
Sectors
On This Page
Education and Qualifications
Andy studied arts and law at Griffith University, Queensland, Australia.
UK (England & Wales), Australia
Andy studied arts and law at Griffith University, Queensland, Australia.
Andy is a partner in the Structured Finance Group and is the Group Leader. He is a specialist in structured finance and real estate finance.
He has extensive experience in whole business securitisations, synthetic securitisations, warehouse financings, loan portfolio sales/acquisitions, sale-leasebacks and credit tenant leases and single property and property portfolio financings. Andy also leads the firm’s practices in Residential Mortgage-Backed Securities (RMBS) and Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities (CMBS) transactions in the UK, Europe and further afield.
Andy regularly acts for the issuers and arrangers on covered bond programmes throughout the world, including those for RBS, Nationwide Building Society and Leeds Building Society in the UK, DnB Bank, the Sparebank 1 Alliance and SR Bank in Norway, OP Mortgage Bank in Finland, Alpha Bank in Greece, the NAB in Australia, BNZ in New Zealand and DBS and UOB in Singapore. He also leads on a number of key client relationships and is one of the firm’s bank sector leaders.
Andy has worked on some of the most complex and innovative transactions in the market. These include advising:
Andy is named as a ‘leading individual’ in securitisation in Chambers & Partners, the Legal 500 and a ‘leading lawyer’ in securitisation in IFLR1000.
Andy is a regular speaker at the Global ABS Conference in Barcelona, where he has spoken on a range of industry topics including the “Future of CMBS” and “RMBS Post-Issuance Surveillance”.
He represents the firm at the European Covered Bond Council (ECBC) and was an adviser on the establishment of the ECBC’s Covered Bond Label, the industry’s kite mark of quality. He also advised on Bilkreditt 3, the first transaction to attract the Prime Collateralised Securities (PCS) label, which is the equivalent kite mark for the European securitisation industry.