Aames Financial Corporation Received Fitch Ratings 'RPS3-' Servicer Rating for Subprime Product.LOS ANGELES -- Aames Financial Corporation (OTCBB OTCBB See OTC Bulletin Board (OTCBB). :AMSF AMSF Australian Motor Sport Foundation AMSF Area Maintenance and Supply Facility (US Army) AMSF Army Morale Support Fund AMSF Area Maintenance Support Facility AMSF Army Maintenance Supply Facilities AMSF Alkali Metal Storage Facility ), a 50 year old national subprime mortgage lender, announced that it received Fitch Ratings Fitch Ratings An international rating agency for financial institutions, insurance companies, and corporate, sovereign, and municipal debt. Fitch Ratings has headquarters in New York and London and is wholly owned by FIMALAC of Paris. 'RPS3-' residential primary servicer rating for subprime product. Aames's total loan servicing portfolio at June 30, 2004 was $2.3 billion, including mortgage loans serviced on an interim basis of $1.9 billion and mortgage loans in securitization trusts serviced in-house of $229.3 million at that date. At June 30, 2004, Aames operated 99 retail branches, including the National Loan Centers, and five regional wholesale operations centers throughout the United States. For more information, contact either Ronald J. Nicolas, Jr., Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, or Jon D. Van Deuren, Senior Vice President, Finance and Chief Accounting Officer, in Aames's Investor Relations Investor relations The process by which the corporation communicates with its investors. Department at (323) 210-5311 or at info@aamescorp.com via email. Additional information may also be obtained by visiting www.aames.net, the company's website. From time to time the company may publish forward-looking statements relating to such matters as anticipated financial performance, business prospects and similar matters. The Private Securities Litigation Reform Act The Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 (PSLRA) implemented several significant substantive changes affecting certain cases brought under the federal securities laws, including changes related to pleading, discovery, liability, class representation and awards fees and of 1995 provides a safe harbor Safe Harbor 1. A legal provision to reduce or eliminate liability as long as good faith is demonstrated. 2. A form of shark repellent implemented by a target company acquiring a business that is so poorly regulated that the target itself is less attractive. for forward-looking statements. In order to comply with the terms of the safe harbor, the company notes that a variety of factors could cause the company's actual results and experience to differ materially from the anticipated results or other expectations expressed in the company's forward-looking statements. The risks and uncertainties that may affect the operations, performance and results of the company's business include the following: increases in mortgage lending interest rates; adverse changes in the secondary market for mortgage loans; decline in real estate values; decreases in earnings from the company calling securitization trusts; limited cash flow to fund operations; dependence on short-term financing facilities; obligations to repurchase mortgage loans and indemnify investors; concentration of operations in California, Florida, New York Florida is the name of some places in the U.S. state of New York:
A report from management to shareholders that accompanies the firm's financial statements in the annual report. It explains the period's financial results and enables management to discuss topics that may not be apparent in the financial of Financial Condition and Results of Operations - Risk Factors" in the company's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended June 30, 2004 and subsequent filings by the company with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission. |
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