Is securitization student loans make it easier or harder for students to get a loan?

issue by : Is securitization student loans make it easier or harder for students to get a loan
Is it easier or harder for students to get a loan? How so? Achelios Well, thank you for your answer, but this is true for all loans everywhere. I’m talking about specific securitization. I think I understand the answer anyway. Securitization by private companies that allows them to pay student loans, providing more opportunities for students looking to borrow a loan. I’ll leave the question if someone has a better answer. I was not sure if the pooling loans and selling shares to investors affect interest or not Best response rates:.

response Achelios
once you start paying for the loan, then you make history paiementSi you pay on time and as agreed … then it will help you build créditToutefois, if the amount of student loan (s) is not severely limited, then it can still affect your ability to lend because of debt-revenuune once you get the balance ratio will be paid to a small amount, and if always paid on time and at least the full monthly payment under … then it can be

useful
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Should lenders who use abusive or unfair lending practices be punished?

Question by missnewjerzee: Should lenders who use abusive or unfair lending practices be punished?
these are just some examples
Failure to disclose loan price is negotiable
Failure to clearly and accurately disclose terms and conditions
Servicing agent and securitization abuses (The servicing agent is the entity that receives the mortgage payment, keeps the payment records, provides borrowers with account statements, imposes late charges when the payment is late, and pursues delinquent borrowers. A securitization is a financial transaction in which assets, especially debt instruments, are pooled and securities representing interests in the pool are issued)

now it is our responsiblity to read everything on the loan document do you think the lenders should be punished for the way they do business?
oh I agree now isn’t the time, I just mean in general
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Predatory_lending

Best answer:

Answer by Ben
Yes.

What do you think? Answer below!

What is the private-label securitization market ?

Question by nomethinks: What is the private-label securitization market ?
I have the idea that it is where private investors hold bonds backed by subprime mortgages (in the past, now); I want to know, what is the expanse of the private label sec market? That is to say, what other assets and such can be included in this beyond subprime loans (if any)?

Thanks in advance- I really appreciate all the people who devote time to educate others on Yahoo! Answers.

Best answer:

Answer by jwishz
Secretary Henry M. Paulson, Jr.
Statement on Covered Bond Best Practices

Washington – Good afternoon. Thank you all for coming today. Joining me on stage are FDIC Chairman Sheila Bair, Federal Reserve Governor Kevin Warsh, OCC Comptroller John Dugan and OTS Director John Reich. We also welcome representatives from Bank of America, Citigroup, JP Morgan Chase, and Wells Fargo. I will make a few remarks, my colleagues will also address you and then Jeff Brown with Bank of America will speak.

As we are all aware, the availability of affordable mortgage financing is essential to turning the corner on the current housing correction. And so we have been looking broadly for ways to increase the availability and lower the cost of mortgage financing to accelerate the return of normal home buying and refinancing activity.

The housing government-sponsored enterprises, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the Federal Home Loan Banks, and the Federal Housing Administration are funding more than 70 percent of residential mortgages during these months of market stress. They must continue to be active here.

At the same time, private-label securitization, another important source of mortgage finance, has become severely strained and credit conditions have tightened. In addition to securitization done by housing GSEs, private mortgage-backed securitization benefits the American consumer and our markets. The private-label market will evolve in response to current challenges, and I expect it to return with greater risk-awareness and investor discipline. We also believe it is useful to explore additional mortgage financing options to complement more traditional funding models.

One option we have looked at extensively is covered bonds, which are a $ 3 trillion market used widely in Europe for mortgage funding. I believe covered bonds have the potential to increase mortgage financing, improve underwriting standards, and strengthen U.S. financial institutions by providing a new funding source that will diversify their overall portfolio.

Treasury has been working with our regulatory counterparts to look at ways to support the emergence of the covered bond market in the United States. We consulted with our European counterparts, including the UK Treasury. We also spoke with potential U.S. market participants, including issuers, investors, underwriters and ratings agencies. While many European countries have dedicated covered bond legislation, the U.S. regulatory environment is different. Covered bonds are a promising financing vehicle and we believe this market can grow in the United States absent federal legislative action.

To help achieve our goal of broader choices in mortgage finance, today Treasury is publishing a Best Practices guide for U.S. residential covered bonds. This document is intended to outline practices that will promote covered bond market simplicity and homogeneity, using high quality mortgages as collateral. It is a starting point and complements the FDIC final policy statement of July 15th.

I appreciate the FDIC’s strong leadership in advocating covered bonds and providing clarity to potential investors. Together, the FDIC final policy statement and a Treasury Best Practices guide should give market participants the tools to build a market that will benefit U.S. families and the U.S. economy. A U.S. covered bond market also will present new opportunities for further international investment in the United States.

We knew that this initiative would be successful only if the largest banks paved the way. And so I welcome the announcement by America’s four largest banks, Bank of America, Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase and Wells Fargo, that they intend to establish covered bond programs and kick-start this market in the United States. And, I am also pleased to know that the two existing domestic issuers of covered bonds intend to align their programs with these new practices.

We applaud these banks for their leadership and for recognizing an opportunity to help increase mortgage funding availability and strengthen our financial system. We are at the early stages of what should be a promising path, where the nascent U.S. covered bond market can grow and provide a new source of mortgage financing.

Covered bonds are simply one tool for mortgage financing and will not, alone, complete the housing correction. We will continue to pursue our efforts to avoid preventable foreclosures and to speed, without impeding, the necessary course of this housing correction. Thank you and now

B a c k g r o u n d
The earliest securitized transactions date back to the early
1970s and were the sales of pooled mortgage loans by the
Government National Mortgage Association ( Ginnie Mae).
These transactions were followed by the Federal Home Loan
Mortgage Corporation (Freddie Mac) and Federal National
Mortgage Association (Fannie Mae) in the early 1980s. These
new securities were backed by full faith and credit of the
respective agencies which were either government agencies
(Ginnie Mae) or quasi-government agencies (Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac). Because of such backing and guaranties, these
securities (also known as single-class mortgage pass-throughs)
carried an implied “AAA” credit rating. However, the capital
markets were looking for more technological innovations to
satisfy their investors. They were looking for diverse “maturity
” mortgage product which gave rise to the concept of
collateralized mortgage obligations (multiclass mortgage pass
throughs, CMOs or MBS) soon to be followed by asset-backed
securities (ABS). Some of these securities have managed to
become among the most exotic securities on the street.
Today, the total outstanding issuance of CMOs, MBS and ABS
has reached a staggering level of over two trillion dollars. The
non-agency or private label multiclass mortgage-backed passthrough
market originated in response to an increased
demand for low credit risk mortgage-backed securities with
diverse cashflow and maturity characteristics. The difference
between agency and private label transactions is as follows: in
the case of agency transactions, the underlying single-class
mortgage pass-through pools are government or quasigovernment
obligations and, therefore, the credit risk of such
pools is retained by these agencies and is negligible to the
investors, and in the case of private label transactions, the risk
of the underlying mortgage loans is fully transferred to the
“willing” investors as described below.
Ginnie Mae
The primary purpose of establishing Ginnie Mae was to
fund the government-sponsored residential mortgages
originated by various lenders by creating an active
secondary mortgage market. Unlike Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac, Ginnie Mae does not purchase mortgages
from lenders.
The credit risk is relatively higher in the private label market
because the losses on the mortgage loans must be absorbed
directly by the investors. Unlike agency transactions, there is
no guarantee of timely or eventual payment of either principal
or interest to such investors. For investors, analysis of relative
priority of cashflows as well as the credit risk of the underlying
mortgage loans take a significant role in the private label
market.
The success of securitization in the mortgage market and the
acceptance of new securities by the investors has lent application
of this concept to other assets such as credit cards, auto
loans, leases and many others. The primary focus here is to
deal with the concept of securitization in the context of some of
the other commonly securitized assets. We will assess the
needs of financial institutions and industrial firms to apply this
technology to create a source of funding for themselves.
Fixed income or derivative?
MBS/ABS are considered “fixed-income” securities as well as
“derivative” securities. “Fixed-income” pertains to the fact that
MBS/ABS generate a coupon income (not necessarily a fixed
dollar amount) periodically whereas “derivative” refers to
MBS/ABS being “carved or derived” out of an underlying pool
of assets. Unlike other fixed income securities such as corporate
bonds, MBS/ABS are fairly complex instruments to
analyze. As mentioned above, MBS/ABS are structured to
satisfy the “risk,” “return” and “maturity” characteristics of
different investors. Imagine an upward-sloping yield curve
vertically cut out into small slices where each slice represents a
“tranche” or a “class” in an MBS/ABS. Each “tranche” has a
different priority of payment of interest and principal. This
priority of payment is what makes MBS/ABS somewhat difficult
to analyze.
All “agency” securitizations are implicitly “AAA” rated and
therefore carry negligible credit risk, whereas, the privatelabel
market has produced multiclass mortgage pass-throughs
with ratings ranging from “AAA” to below investment grade.
Basic Analysis
In view of the fact that securitization technology has grown
tremendously not only domestically but also globally calls
for a better understanding of this technology. The basic
rule of thumb to understanding this innovative process is to
stick to the “basics!” “Information overload” can prevent
people from learning and understanding the benefits and
attributes of such technology. We will study some of the
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attributes from both an issuer’s and investor’s perspective. We
will approach this process in two parts. First, we will determine
why securitization may be beneficial to some issuers; and
second, why investors may want to buy these securities.
• Why securitize? Issuer’s perspective.
• Why buy? Investor’s perspective.
Why Securitize? Issuer’s perspective.
Securitization offers several benefits to an issuer. Instead of
simply listing out the benefits, let’s take a methodical
approach to finding out

Give your answer to this question below!

Can someone explain Securitizations and CDOs and how they contributed to the economic collapse?

Question by Charlie: Can someone explain Securitizations and CDOs and how they contributed to the economic collapse?
I’m writing a research paper and I can’t get a grasp of HOW these aided in the collapse of companies.

Best answer:

Answer by LouBee
It made it easy to unload toxic loans on unknowing investors.

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Q&A: On a foreclosed home, who negotiates the price on behalf of the mortgage owner(s)?

Question by Gaetan: On a foreclosed home, who negotiates the price on behalf of the mortgage owner(s)?
Let’s say, a home goes through foreclosure. Its related mortgage was pooled and securitized among thousands of others. Now, the home is for sale. The real estate broker incentive is to set a low price to turnover the property quickly. That’s because for a broker time is money.

So, who negotiates the price and protect the fragmented owners interest (MBS investors). Is it the servicer of the mortgage? But, because of his own operating cost he also would have an incentive to sell quickly at a low price. How about the securitization bond trustee. Does the trustee step in and negotiate with the broker what price is deemed acceptable to the MBS investors?

You can see it is kind of a gnarly question. If you have a clear understanding of this process, please educate me.

Best answer:

Answer by Pengy
No one because in the end you are ultimately responsible, and the interest and charges keep adding up.

Add your own answer in the comments!

What caused the Subprime Mortgage Crisis that Caused 2008 Financial Disaster?

Question by Rocky: What caused the Subprime Mortgage Crisis that Caused 2008 Financial Disaster?
New Study Finds Democrats Fully to Blame for Subprime Mortgage Crisis that Caused 2008 Financial Disaster
Posted by Jim Hoft on Saturday, December 22, 2012, 9:48 AM

In his early activist days, Barack Obama the community organizer sued banks to ease lending practices.

State Sen. Barack Obama and Fr. Michael Pfleger led a protest against the payday loan industry demanding the State of Illinois to regulate loan businesses in January 2000. During his time as a community organizer Barack Obama led several protests against banks to make loans to high risk individuals. (NBC 5 Week of January 3, 2000)

Here’s something that won’t get any play in the liberal media…
A new study by the respected National Bureau of Economic Research found that Democrats are to blame for the subprime mortgage crisis.
Investor’s Business Daily reported:

Democrats and the media insist the Community Reinvestment Act, the anti-redlining law beefed up by President Clinton, had nothing to do with the subprime mortgage crisis and recession.

But a new study by the respected National Bureau of Economic Research finds, “Yes, it did. We find that adherence to that act led to riskier lending by banks.”

Added NBER: “There is a clear pattern of increased defaults for loans made by these banks in quarters around the (CRA) exam. Moreover, the effects are larger for loans made within CRA tracts,” or predominantly low-income and minority areas.

To satisfy CRA examiners, “flexible” lending by large banks rose an average 5% and those loans defaulted about 15% more often, the 43-page study found.

The strongest link between CRA lending and defaults took place in the runup to the crisis — 2004 to 2006 — when banks rapidly sold CRA mortgages for securitization by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and Wall Street.

CRA regulations are at the core of Fannie’s and Freddie’s so-called affordable housing mission. In the early 1990s, a Democrat Congress gave HUD the authority to set and enforce (through fines) CRA-grade loan quotas at Fannie and Freddie.

It passed a law requiring the government-backed agencies to “assist insured depository institutions to meet their obligations under the (CRA).” The goal was to help banks meet lending quotas by buying their CRA loans.

But they had to loosen underwriting standards to do it. And that’s what they did.

Republicans warned Democrats of the impending doom in 2004.
video
Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac Hearings 2004

But Democrats wouldn’t budge.

http://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2012/12/new-study-finds-democrats-fully-to-blame-for-subprime-mortgage-crisis-that-caused-financial-collapse/

http://news.investors.com/ibd-editorials-perspective/122012-637924-faults-community-reinvestment-act-cra-mortgage-defaults.htm?p=full

Best answer:

Answer by Darla
The Gramm(R) Bliley(R) Act of 1999.

What do you think? Answer below!

Q&A: Are we foolish to trust the credit reporting agencies?

Question by Joe in texas: Are we foolish to trust the credit reporting agencies?
Since they do not use debt/equity ratios or income amounts to calculate credit risk.
The credit rating agencies gave a high rating to institutions with bad loans given to unworthy borrowers in the sub-prime mortgage mess. Are the consumer credit rating agencies creating a bigger disaster with their voodoo credit rating system?

Credit rating agencies are now under scrutiny for giving investment-grade ratings to securitization transactions (CDOs and MBSs) based on subprime mortgage loans.

Is concumer credit the next crisis?

Best answer:

Answer by heybulldog
Trust isn’t the right word.

The sub-prime mess came about from fico score lending. They lent people money based on a stupid score and not looking at the person behind the number.

Building credit is the biggest joke of the 21st century.
It will bring nothing but debt.

We have enough Government in our lives.
The Government is not gonna fix you. You are.

Give your answer to this question below!

Q&A: Do conservatives really think this recession was caused by regulation?

Question by Wtfsthe Deal: Do conservatives really think this recession was caused by regulation?
Deregulation allowed the merger of banks that created banks that would be systemic risks if they failed
Deregulation allowed massive increases in financial liabilities of banks, through relaxed leverage limits, and led to insolvency after capital reserves decreased by just a few percent
Deregulation allowed the bribery of the ratings agencies
Deregulation allowed the fraudulent trading of derivatives
Deregulation allowed the securitization of mortgages, which encourages predatory lending
Deregulation allowed several insurance policies to be taken out on the same derivative, which brought AIG to its knees.

How on earth could anyone think that regulation caused this crisis?
Being forced? Are you really talking about the community reinvestment act? What a joke.

The securitzation of mortgages relieves local and investment banks from the responsibility if loans they make dont get paid. It placed all the responsibility on the investor and on AIG, and eventually became a system than encouraged the signing of sub prime loans, just to increase the volume of collateralized debt obligations being packaged and sold. It encourages predatory lending. Relaxed limits on leveraged allows banks to loan out as much as 30 times as much as they actually owned, as opposed to the normal 7 times before the conservatives had their way. If banks werent allowed to loan out that much money, as they hadnt been for years, a small decrease in their capital wouldnt have equated to a huge drop in their reserves to liabilities ratio, and they would have remained solvent and never even needed a bailout.
“What both sides fail to understand is that none of this would have happened if Congress didn’t change the laws set in place during the Great Depression.”

Republicans repealed those laws!!! Republicans repealed glass steagle, made derivatives illegal to regulate, and relaxed leverage limits!!! democrats understand it perfectly well.

Best answer:

Answer by shea c
its all Obama fault

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What is the significance of the Community Reinvestment Act of 1977 (passed during the Carter Administration)?

Question by abe frohman: What is the significance of the Community Reinvestment Act of 1977 (passed during the Carter Administration)?
How did the changes to the law in 1995 (Clinton Administration) affect this law?

“The 1995 revisions were credited with helping to substantially increase the amount of loans to small businesses and to low- and moderate-income borrowers for home loans. Part of the increase in the latter type of lending was no doubt due to increased efficiency in the secondary market for mortgage loans. The revisions allowed the securitization of CRA loans containing subprime mortgages. The first public securitization of CRA loans started in 1997.”

Best answer:

Answer by Jack Hoff
Correct me if I’m wrong but I believe the significance is an old, old wooden ship used by the pioneers in the Civil War Era.

Give your answer to this question below!

Do you agree that the profession of “Economist” and all related professions have been thoroughly discredited?

Question by billke: Do you agree that the profession of “Economist” and all related professions have been thoroughly discredited?
No one predicted and prevented this financial crisis. If anything, the prevailing view of Economists was to add fuel to the flames due to their insistance on globalization, securitization, and idiotic interest rate policies.

But the main point is… why the fck didn’t anyone predict this before it happened. WHy are all these economists with PhD’s running bloviating their theories, yet did absolutely nothing to predict or prevent this. They are all bull-shyt artists.

Best answer:

Answer by SDD
On the contrary. Many, many economists* and other observers predicted this sort of thing based on the way Congress encouraged Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to buy government subsidized high risk loans. The Senate even considered a bill in 2005 to block more of this sort of lending, but Democrats blocked it.

* To name one — Bob Schiller of Yale. You’ll recall that he was also the one that warned about the “irrational exuberance” of the stock market in the late 90s. Few responded then either.

What do you think? Answer below!

What pieces of literature can I read regarding governments?

Question by Vito Perez: What pieces of literature can I read regarding governments?
More specifically, I’m looking for the ones that are about government corruption, proletariat exploitation, capitalism vs. socialism issues, securitization, government-conducted genocides (like the one going on here in America), social Darwinism, man-made HIV virus, and others. Also, those read by Sage Francis, Mos Def, Immortal Technique would be appreciated.

Best answer:

Answer by thecharleslloyd
Here is a review that might help you; http://www.lga.gov.uk/lga/core/page.do?pageId=1314588

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Q&A: What is securitization in finance?

Question by aayntu: What is securitization in finance?
I’m learning about securitization in my finance class right now, but I have a weak grasp of what it really is. Can someone please give me a simple definition of securitization and the process of it?

Best answer:

Answer by ldjamieson
It is basically taking a bunch of financial products, packaging them under some form of contract as a new financial product (a security) and selling it. Making a security out of something is securitization.

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Q&A: Why a few mortgages in a package of mortgages can make the package worthless?

Question by Charles D: Why a few mortgages in a package of mortgages can make the package worthless?
Last night on “60 Minutes,” the reporter stated that one guy made a lot of money on failing securitizations of mortgages b/c he realized that if just a few mortgages failed, the whole security would be worthless. This is one part of the financial mess I never quite understood–or if I did, I’ve forgotten the explanation.

TIA

Best answer:

Answer by d3
The reason they can be worthless is because they are backing loans on homes that are in default. Some of these loan amounts are higher than the value of the home. Basically the value of a loan with negative equity that is in default is 0. Think of these like savings bond, how much would that bond be worth if it is no longer paying any divedents and the company that backs it is going out of business.

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What did Barney Frank have to do with wrecking our economy?

Question by Change Now: What did Barney Frank have to do with wrecking our economy?
I am reading The Big Short by Michael Lewis.

It’s about how the Wall Street geniuses were allowed by the GOP Congress under Clinton to wreck our economy thru the securitization of mortgage loans into AAA rated bonds.

The SEC under Bush was absent or was told to be absent by the Republicans (remember Bernie Madoff)

No where is Barney Frank mentioned. What role if any did he play?

Best answer:

Answer by Chris Christie
Fannie Mae

That book is liberal lying bullshit!

Carter’s Community Reinvestment Act started the ball rolling on the eventual collapse.
Threats of racism accusations by the Congressional Black Caucus kept anyone from repealing it.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Community_Reinvestment_Act

Give your answer to this question below!

Why do people still think the economic meltdown was caused by Jimmy Carter’s Community Reinvestment Act?

Question by Change Now: Why do people still think the economic meltdown was caused by Jimmy Carter’s Community Reinvestment Act?
This is the most ignorant thing I have heard so far from this economic meltdown.

Don’t people know that securitization of residential and commercial mortgage and the out of control derivatives is what caused this mess.

The CRA contributed, but an extremely minor role. I heard that as little as 1 out of 20 bad mortgages were attributable to the these type of subprimes.

If someone can provide evidence to the contrary, I would be grateful.

Best answer:

Answer by Proud Texan
Fox fictional News and Rush Limbaugh told them to believe it without question.

Give your answer to this question below!

Why do people continue to think the banks were forced to create bad mortgages?

Question by Change Now: Why do people continue to think the banks were forced to create bad mortgages?
This is the most ignorant statement I hear people make on this post.

The banks were not forced to make bad loans. They did it on their own free will because of the creative financing technique called securitization.

If they are talking about CRA, that was a very minor part of the overall picture.

Best answer:

Answer by DAR
THe CRA was a key part of the picture, actually. And as for the rest, it is the federal reserve fixing interest rates so low the resulting free money to wall street had to find a bubble to build. The CRA and Fannie Freddie guarantees just guaranteed that that bubble would be in housing.

What do you think? Answer below!

How does the bailout address the more esoteric causes of the crisis?

Question by DeFreeze: How does the bailout address the more esoteric causes of the crisis?
For example, the creation of “exotic” financial instruments, securitization of mortgage debt, etc? Any ideas? I’m learning here folks, so if this question seems overly simple or even stupid, keep your silly comments to yourself.
And isn’t what Wall Street, et. al. did with these bad mortgages similar to what Andrew Fastow went to jail for at Enron?

Best answer:

Answer by Dave
I am wondering the same thing myself. The bail out helps the people that created the mess. The bail out will destroy out currency. This is not a good idea.

What do you think? Answer below!

What ramifications would the US face if Freddie and Fannie were not saved?

Question by ztim21: What ramifications would the US face if Freddie and Fannie were not saved?
How does the facts that these companies buy/sell mortgages through securitization make mortgages more affordable for ordinary people?

The answer is liquidity, but I dont understand how that makes mortgages inexpensive.

Pre-bailout, what is the ownership interested of the US gov’t as Freddie and Fannie are GSEs?

Thanks for all your help in figuring this one out!

Best answer:

Answer by texanskid
I wish they didnt get saved. I have stock in Fannie May and got whiped out today. Granted I didnt put that much in that I couldnt afford to lose which a lot of people didnt do.

Fannie and Freddie own half of the entire country’s loan debt so without these two companies the credit crisis would get even worse and the banks wouldnt get there money either. Without them being saved the economy would have been destroyed and the banks would go out of business as well.

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Will mortgage securitization pass or fail in the future?

Question by : Will mortgage securitization pass or fail in the future?
Will securitization of mortgages succeed or fail in the future markets? What are some reasons why or why not?

Thanks
I was asking more about the general process of the secondary mortgage market where there is securitization of mortgages. (mortgages are pooled together with hundreds or thousands of others, where investors can they invest in them).
Also, do you have any idea what an IO trigger is? an advantage and disadvantage of an IO trigger? I’m not really sure what it means?

Best answer:

Answer by Immortal
Are you talking about the CMO and CDO where there are various different tranches to invest in?

Yes, that sounds very much like CDO/CMO investment. In that case, I don’t think anyone who knows about the true nature of CDO/CMO would bother to invest in it, and ultimately cause it to cease to exist.

Why?
Because these kind of securitization is used to reallocate all the mortgages’ risks (prepayment risk, default risk, interest rate risk, etc) into several different tranches. Some of the tranches will overcompensate the investors based on lower-than-average risks, while some other tranches will be undercompensated based on higher-than-average risks. The average that I mean refers to the average risks of the whole mortgages included in the securitization.

For a smart investor, he will invest in the tranches that overcompensate him. In other words, he was supposed to get average return at average risk if there was no segregation of mortgages by tranches, but because there’s segregation based on tranches, this smart investor will buy the tranches that give him higher return at average risk, or average return at lower risk.

That will leave out the other tranches that undercompensate any investors stupid enough not to realize they are being undercompensated. So these investors will take the most brunt in case of defaults. Even though these tranches are undercompensating, those who package the securitization can make them look very attractive to attract ignorant investors. Only then can all the tranches be sold out. Or else you’ll have half of them sold out and the other half unwanted.

When people get more educated about the nature of these kind of investments, they will stay out of the other half that undercompensate them. Then the party that have liability to the unsold securities will have to continue to bear the mortgage risks. That’s not the purpose of securitization in the first place. Securitization comes with the purpose to transfer the mortgage risk to the buyers, both the smart and the stupid.

I don’t know what you mean by IO trigger, but I know IO stands for Interest Only, which means your investment will receive interest payment only. There will not be any principal amortization. And the higher the interest rates, the lower will be the prepayment rate, and the more certain you’ll continue receiving interest payments into the future.

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Please explain securitization in a simplest way?

Question by closeguy: Please explain securitization in a simplest way?
I wanted to know the concept of secuterization, so when I search google I came across few articles which state – :

Securitization is the taking of an asset or right to a cash flow and then structuring it so that it becomes a security.

Example : mortgage securitization or asset securitization

But, I still don’t think I completely understood the concept.

What does transforming asset into security mean ? Please give short example . When and how does bank securitization?

Best answer:

Answer by Raysor
It is taking a financial instrument and turning it into a share that can be traded. For example a loan is a fixed term, interest producing instrument. This could be turned into a share. Its value would depend on the borrowers ability to repay the loan and the share dividend would depend on the borrowers ability to repay the interest.
A better example might be ETFs. Let’s say you have an index (FTSE100 or DJ30). You cannot buy or sell the index but you could buy all the underlying constituents. With an ETF someone buys all the constituents and securitises them into a share. In this way that someone could sell the “index” to lots of small investors.

What do you think? Answer below!