Q&A: A reason for securitizing mortgages is to allow a bank to do what?

Question by foxtrot: A reason for securitizing mortgages is to allow a bank to do what?

Best answer:

Answer by ThatGuy
Securitizing mortgages allows banks to a) minimize risk exposure b) take advantage of lower capital requirements.

a) When a bank makes a loan, it is exposed to the risk that the borrower may default. However, through the process of securitization the bank sells the loan to what is called a ‘conduit’ (likely for price greater than the principal of the loan, but less then the overall expected value after the loan has been paid), which then packages the loan with others to form a ‘bond.’ In this process the bank has profited from the loan but is not exposed to any risk attributed to the borrower.

b) Banks are held to certain capital requirements, i.e. they have to hold a certain level of capital to support their loans. However, they have to hold less capital to back up investments in securities. Hence, a general strategy is to make a loan, securitize it, then buy into a senior tranche of the new security. Thus the bank has transformed a loan into a less risky asset (the bond pools risk) with which it needs to hold less capital against.

Know better? Leave your own answer in the comments!

Q&A: a package of nontraded financial instruments can be transformed into a traded financial instrument through the

Question by sweetie pie: a package of nontraded financial instruments can be transformed into a traded financial instrument through the
process of?

a. collateralization
b. repurchasing
c. underwriting
d. securitization

Best answer:

Answer by MuaRung
d. securitization.

Securitization is the process of homogenizing and packaging financial instruments into a new fungible one. (Fungible means being of such nature or kind as to be freely exchangeable or replaceable, in whole or in part, for another of like nature or kind.)

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

Add your own answer in the comments!

Q&A: Lehman Brothers investment job?

Question by IvyLeagueBch: Lehman Brothers investment job?
I am currently applying for an internship at Lehman Brothers. I’m not sure what the difference is between “capital markets” and “securitization banking” and “investment banking.”

Any info on that (Yes, I realize I should know the difference, but this is an internship…so I presume training.)

Best answer:

Answer by frank m
They are all part of the same machine. The Capital Markets portion of the bank raises money for firms, and in this case it is likely all debt-based capital; it refers to the sales (call mutual/hedge/pension funds and sell them bonds), trading (price bonds), research/strategy (analyze markets), and banking groups (work with issuers of bonds and structure bonds) that cover that process. Capital Markets generally includes Investment Banking, which at most banks includes securitization banking. Investment Bankers can do anything from work with Toyota to help it raise money to build more cars, to structure the bonds that Toyota is selling to investors in a way that will get the most money for Toyota (and the banker, of course). Securitization Banking is focused on MBS/ABS/CMBS bonds, which derive their cash flows from a pool of assets (for instance car loans originated by Toyota Finance) rather than Corporate Bonds that derive cash flows from the revenue the corporation earns while doing business (i.e. revenue Toyota earns from selling cars). Securitization is definitely where you want to be – it is where all of the real money is flowing around, but the general public is completely unfamiliar with it. CDOs and especially CRE CDOs (Commercial Real Estate Collateralised Debt Obligations) are going to be particularly hot in 2007, although I don’t know about going with them over the long-term. Some Consumer ABS such as Auto Loans/Leases and residential mortgages (especially subprime or HEL) will likely be very interesting this year because both of those markets will likely have the greatest hardships (and you don’t care if they don’t do great since you’re not getting a significant bonus at this point, but you’ll probably have an opportunity to learn a lot). If I could start over, I’d start in structuring, there will be (and already is) big demand in new markets for folks who have some structuring experience to segue into trading, banking, even origination. But I’d also like to start over in Sales – you’re forced to know a little about everything, and all of my co-workers in sales make big coin (they get handed accounts, and get paid whether the trade makes money or not – you can’t beat that). I’ll stop here, but if you want more feel free to send me a message under my profile – if you haven’t interviewed yet, I’ll shoot you some recent Lehman research so you’ll have some good questions to ask.

Add your own answer in the comments!

Anyone know where I can find conferences addressing structured finance issues?

Question by rio180: Anyone know where I can find conferences addressing structured finance issues?

Best answer:

Answer by Joe B.
A search on Yahoo! and/or Google for “structured finance” along with the terms conference and sessions should yield some leads. You may want to do a search for “global securitization” instead of “structured finance” but still including the other terms (conference and sessions).

Know better? Leave your own answer in the comments!

The last banking collapse in 1989 Conservatives didnt have a fake news network covering their tracks for them?

Question by Smoking Joe: The last banking collapse in 1989 Conservatives didnt have a fake news network covering their tracks for them?
….and bankers actually went to jail (Keating and Milken, among others).
Do the banks now realize they don’t have to tell the truth anymore because they have Fox News and AM radio lying for them 24/7, confusing and enraging their doltish listeners?

Best answer:

Answer by team
They must have fooled obama too

Do you think obama is so hapless he couldn’t have Eric Holder haul them into court???

Give your answer to this question below!

Q&A: Does anyone know what securitization of criminal law is?

Question by blackholesun: Does anyone know what securitization of criminal law is?

Best answer:

Answer by Mitch
Either consult a lawyer or try Black’s law dictionary. Should be available for you to use in a law library near you.

I am not telling you the answer, I am telling you where YOU can find answer yourself.

Feed a man a fish and you feed him for a day. Teach a man to fish and you feed him for the rest of his life.

Add your own answer in the comments!

Can someone explain Wall Street, market capitalization, company equity, *stock exchange & more?

Question by KAI: Can someone explain Wall Street, market capitalization, company equity, *stock exchange & more?
I’m really stupid, and would like to know.

10 POINTS AND APPRECIATION FOR THE PERSON WITH THE BEST ANSWER!
was unsure of what section to put this in, sorry.

Best answer:

Answer by juicebox
wall street: a financial district in New York, home of various stock exchanges, like the New York Stock Exchange. It’s essentially the financial center of the world.
Market Capitalization: the number of shares a company has multiplied by their market price. So if a company had 1,000,000 shares at 5$ each, it’s market capitalization would be $ 5,000,000. A share is basically a security that represents ownership in a company.
Company Equity: the assets of a company minus its liabilities. Assets are anything that generate revenue for a firm or increase its value, like plant equipment, cash, inventory, and accounts receivable (accounts receivable is very simply “money owed to a company by its debtors”. An example would be when you purchase a car. You don’t normally pay the whole thing up front; you enter a plan where you make monthly payments to pay it off). Liabilities are financial obligations a company has. So this means, in the future they will have to spend revenue to meet those obligations. An example would be a company that has financed itself through bonds which are debt instruments.
Stock Exchange: a stock exchange is the market for securities and equity derivatives trading (the trading of company shares, equity derivates: search options and futures).
Search “equity financing investopedia” or “share investopedia” and there will be a more clear and comprehensive definition with articles that will give you a walk through. Investopedia is actually the best site for finance and economics; it has articles and definitions for introductory financial and economic concepts all the way up to the more complex ones like derivatives, securitization and hedging. Sorry if this wasn’t any help

Give your answer to this question below!

what does “tranches” mean in a financial environment ?

Question by Noble Athavan: what does “tranches” mean in a financial environment ?
ex:- tranches in securitization

Best answer:

Answer by j
A piece, portion or slice of a deal or structured financing. This portion is one of several related securities that are offered at the same time but have different risks, rewards and/or maturities.

Tranche is a term often used to describe a specific class of bonds within an offering wherein each tranche offers varying degrees of risk to the investor. For example, a CMO offering a partitioned MBS portfolio might have mortgages (tranches) that have one-year, two- year, five-year and 20-year maturities. It can also refer to segments that are offered domestically and internationally.

Know better? Leave your own answer in the comments!

securitization and subprime investment?

Question by hetbh123: securitization and subprime investment?
I don’t really understand this concept and how these two are related are are causing the financial crisis it is today. the ethical issue that is imposing on companies such as AIG….Can someone explain to me? thank you very much.

Best answer:

Answer by Ed Atun
In 2003 bank accounts were paying 1% interest. Many people had their life savings in the bank. Merrill Lynch was investing money in mortgages that paid 6%. Merrill said they would pay people 5% which was great compared to 1% at the bank. Merrill made 1% profit and people got 5% on their life savings. Everyone was happy. So Merrill started loaning to people with bad credit (subprime) at 8%. The people could now get 7% on their money. Much better than 1%. Merrill still made its 1% profit on every mortgage. This worked great. Merrill was not selling mortgages to the citizens of the USA. They were selling investments in a giant pool of mortgages. When a citizen received their 7% interest, they did not own a mortgage. They owned a “security” that was invested in mortgages.
But the people with bad credit did not pay their mortgages. People quickly realized that they might not get their 7% interest. They might not get anything at all. All of a sudden, the old 1% in the bank looked very safe. So everyone pulled out at once. The money disappeared. Merrill Lynch had no money to pay employees; no money to buy new mortgages; no money to do anything. So it all folded…

Add your own answer in the comments!

Can someone summarize this book for me?

Question by rmz_usa: Can someone summarize this book for me?
Can someone summarize the book “The business of Investment Banking, A Comprehensive overview” for me in 1 or 2 paragraphs? It is a large textbook, so I would appreciate it very much.

Best answer:

Answer by cactusgene
Synopsis

The business of investment banking has become intensely competitive. With a growing number of clients who prefer to deal with a single financial adviser for all their capital needs, firms must now engage in all major capital-market activities in order to meet this demand. Rapid advances in information technology have closely linked the international capital markets and, as a result, major securities firms have gone global to better serve their clients. To fully understand this changing environment and remain players in the game, new and seasoned professionals alike will require detailed, in-depth information on a broad scope of banking operations.

The Business of Investment Banking: A Comprehensive Overview, 2nd Edition is a complete guide to the major banking activities in today’s global marketplace. This convenient, one-volume reference identifies and analyzes key trends worldwide, allowing banking and finance professionals to effectively manage deals and incorporate trends into operations. In The Business of Investment Banking: A Comprehensive Overview, 2nd Edition, Professor K. Thomas Liaw goes beyond traditional banking topics and includes extensive coverage of rarely discussed subjects that are integral to investment banking, such as emerging markets, proprietary trading, repurchase transactions, operations, money management, and how foreign firms list on Wall Street.

Beginning with an overview, covering everything from underwriting to M&As to global presence, Liaw provides a thorough and rigorous analysis of the current market practices in all relevant business segments. He presents an investment banker’s perspective on the current environment, with a detailed description of the strategic decision-making process that is crucial to successfully managing the investment bank.

This thorough guide is divided into four main sections:

Basic Business-explores venture capital investment, mergers and acquisitions, underwriting, and asset securitization
Global Perspective-detailed information about foreign listing on Wall Street, international capital markets, and emerging markets
Trading and Risk Management-extensive data on proprietary trading, repurchase agreements, financial engineering, and money management
Special Topics-discusses clearing and settlement, securities regulation, ethics, major trends, and Section 20 subsidiaries

Comprehensive, unparalleled coverage of a wide range of topics makes The Business of Investment Banking: A Comprehensive Overview, 2nd Edition an invaluable, one-stop resource for all practicing investment banking professionals and for graduate students interested in a career in capital markets.

Here are 22 more customer reviews of people who have actually used it. Half of them say it is a 5-star book (the best) and give you what they liked or learned from it:

http://www.amazon.com/Business-Investment-Banking-Comprehensive-Overview/product-reviews/0471739642/ref=dp_top_cm_cr_acr_txt?ie=UTF8&showViewpoints=1

Give your answer to this question below!

Q&A: Do you agree this is what caused the economic crisis?

Question by what?: Do you agree this is what caused the economic crisis?
I found this on fact check

The Federal Reserve, which slashed interest rates after the dot-com bubble burst, making credit cheap.

Home buyers, who took advantage of easy credit to bid up the prices of homes excessively.

Congress, which continues to support a mortgage tax deduction that gives consumers a tax incentive to buy more expensive houses.

Real estate agents, most of whom work for the sellers rather than the buyers and who earned higher commissions from selling more expensive homes.

The Clinton administration, which pushed for less stringent credit and downpayment requirements for working- and middle-class families.

Mortgage brokers, who offered less-credit-worthy home buyers subprime, adjustable rate loans with low initial payments, but exploding interest rates.

Former Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan, who in 2004, near the peak of the housing bubble, encouraged Americans to take out adjustable rate mortgages.

Wall Street firms, who paid too little attention to the quality of the risky loans that they bundled into Mortgage Backed Securities (MBS), and issued bonds using those securities as collateral.

The Bush administration, which failed to provide needed government oversight of the increasingly dicey mortgage-backed securities market.

An obscure accounting rule called mark-to-market, which can have the paradoxical result of making assets be worth less on paper than they are in reality during times of panic.

Collective delusion, or a belief on the part of all parties that home prices would keep rising forever, no matter how high or how fast they had already gone up.

http://www.factcheck.org/elections-2008/who_caused_the_economic_crisis.html

Best answer:

Answer by new mom
uh, yep that about sums it up

Give your answer to this question below!

What is an investment banker and what does he/she do?

Question by HeavenlyBliss: What is an investment banker and what does he/she do?
In addition, is the position very lucrative?

Best answer:

Answer by heart_and_troll
There are numerous job functions in investment banking. Yes, the positions can be very lucrative, but they are also very time consuming kinds of work – long hours, 90 hrs a week, and hard to get hired into, because it’s so competitive.

Give your answer to this question below!

What is the value of 750,000 pounds in Great Britain converted to us dollars amount to?

Question by Ms. TAM TAM: What is the value of 750,000 pounds in Great Britain converted to us dollars amount to?
I keep getting this email that I have won a contest from the Coca Cola company from the UK that is worth 750,000 pounds and they need me to claim it right away…what kind of bogus thing is this>>>has anyone else received or heard of an email contest>>>>

Best answer:

Answer by rarguile
Obviously you didn’t enter a contest in Britain, so I am very confident that this is a well-known scam. Why would any legitimate enterprise give away $ 1.5 million to a complete stranger? It isn’t exactly a brilliant publicity stunt by “Coca Cola” to just email a winner. If you had won, there would be TV vans and reporters on your doorstep!
It is a junk email!

Know better? Leave your own answer in the comments!

What’s the main purpose of john bellamy foster’s monopoly-finance capital article?

Question by Roberto Alvarez: What’s the main purpose of john bellamy foster’s monopoly-finance capital article?
Capitalism?

Best answer:

Answer by BeachBum
You can find your answer from an interview with the author provided in the link.

Interview of John Bellamy Foster for Norwegian Daily, Klassekampen

Klassekampen: Is the credit crisis a symptom of overaccumulation of capital? It seems to me that investments worldwide, but especially in the United States, were funneled into the traditionally “safe” housing market following the bursting of the dotcom-bubble. This overinvestment in turn generated a new bubble, thus causing today’s havoc. Is this correct?

JBF: Yes, I agree that this is due to what might be called an overaccumulation of capital in a number of senses: an overbuilding of productive capacity (physical capital) in relation to a demand constrained by monopoly within what economists call the “real” (as opposed to financial) economy, an overamassing of profits and wealth at the top of society, and a hypertrophy of financial claims to wealth. In terms of the financial crisis itself, there has been a massive, highly leveraged expansion of money claims to wealth, creating a huge debt overhang, and forcing, at this moment, a massive devaluation of capital. All of this is related, however, to the breakdown of the capital formation process, accumulation proper, in an increasingly stagnant real economy. These are contradictions of what I have called the phase of “Monopoly-Finance Capital” (Monthly Review, December 2006).

The bursting of the dot.com or New Economy bubble in 2000 resulted in what has been dubbed “the great bubble transfer” whereby the bursting of the New Economy bubble compelled the Federal Reserve to lower the main interest rate it controls (the Federal Funds rate), leading to a new and more massive bubble based in home mortgages, the dangers of which were apparent early on (see “The Household Debt Bubble,” Monthly Review, May 2006). This involved an enormous expansion of consumer debt despite the fact that real wages had been stagnant in the United States since the 1970s creating an unstable situation. It also involved the need on the part of capital to book ever increasing profits from finance, achieved through securitization of every form of what had previously been individual debts — especially home mortgages. This in turn led to the extension of mortgage financing to riskier and riskier customers under the theory that new “risk management” techniques had devised the means (hailed — bizarrely — by some as the equivalent of the great technological advances in the real economy) with which to separate the weaker from the stronger debts within the new securities. These new debt securities were then “insured” against default by such means as credit-debt swaps, supposedly reducing risk still further. This was the ideology behind the housing bubble. (See “The Financialization of Capital and the Crisis,” Monthly Review, April 2008.)

What do you think? Answer below!

Q&A: What does securitizing an asset mean. Asset securitization? In plain english please. Thanks?

Question by ivette s: What does securitizing an asset mean. Asset securitization? In plain english please. Thanks?

Best answer:

Answer by puremonopoly
Financial cash-flow producing assets that are pooled together and sold to investors in packages. These asset packets don’t hold high yielding returns.

Sub-prime lenders use this technique when issuing a loan. They’ll secure the loan from many lenders that contribute partial amounts of money so as to lower the total risk of each lender, thereby allowing each lender to partially secure loans for more than one party. Its a form of risk management that didn’t do so well in the mortgage industry recently because of bad investment techniques.

Its advised to risk no more than 15% of your total assets in Asset Securitization if you do choose to go down that investment route.

What do you think? Answer below!

Securitization: Understanding?

Question by kehoejck: Securitization: Understanding?

Consider a bank, ABC Bank. The loans given out by this bank are its assets. Thus, the bank has a pool of these assets on its balance sheet and so the funds of the bank are locked up in these loans. The bank gives loans to its customers. The customers who have taken a loan from the ABC bank are known as obligors.

To free these blocked funds the assets are transferred by the originator (the person who holds the assets, ABC Bank in this case) to a special purpose vehicle (SPV).

The SPV is a separate entity formed exclusively for the facilitation of the securitisation process and providing funds to the originator. The assets being transferred to the SPV need to be homogenous in terms of the underlying asset, maturity and risk profile.

What this means is that only one type of asset (eg: auto loans) of similar maturity (eg: 20 to 24 months) will be bundled together for creating the securitised instrument. The SPV will act as an intermediary which divides the assets of the originator into marketable securities.

These securities issued by the SPV to the investors and are known as pass-through-certificates (PTCs).The cash flows (which will include principal repayment, interest and prepayments received ) received from the obligors are passed onto the investors (investors who have invested in the PTCs) on a pro rata basis once the service fees has been deducted.”

I am trying to understand exaclty what the bank does to free up more cash. I would really appreciate help with this.

What I understand
Ok, banks give out loans to their customers and the properties are assets on balance sheet.How exactly by securitization does the company actually get in more funds> A very simple explanation would be appreciated.
What exactly are these investors getting?? Who do they make money from it?

Best answer:

Answer by frak1a12345
The investors gave money(puchased) for these PTCs. That money goes to the bank. The bank now has its money back and the investors have the PTCs.

What do you think? Answer below!

Explain how AAA assets may be created from pools of risky mortgages?

Question by : Explain how AAA assets may be created from pools of risky mortgages?
Explain how AAA assets may be created from pools of risky
mortgages each of which individually may be rated as riskier than
AAA. When so many AAA securities defaulted was it because the rat-
ing agencies were corrupt, incompetent or unlucky? To what extent
was this process of the creation of structured products responsible
for the 2007 …financial crisis?

Best answer:

Answer by I didn’t do it!
The process is known as ‘credit enhancement’. There are various ways how this can be achieved.

For example, a Company A whose overall credit rating is BB sells its assets to a special purpose vehicle (SPV). The SPV funds the purchase of these assets by issuing asset backed securities to investors. The investors rely on the performance of the particular assets in the SPV and not on the performance of Company A; and this is a major difference: if the transaction is properly structured, a bankruptcy of Company A will not interfere with the payments of the assets, now isolated from the BB rated company. A rating agency, for example Standard & Poors, rate the ability of the company to pay their debt. If the assets are held in an SPV, isolated from Company A with its BB rating, the SPV can have a higher rating if the assets are considered good quality. If this is not sufficient, a bank may issue some form of guarantee, for example a letter of credit issued by a bank for a fee, which guarantees the payment.

Another argument for risk reduction goes as follows: diversifying the risks by pooling and repackaging them into a series of bonds, would reduce the overall risk. For example, the total potential loss amount is higher if you are exposed to the mortgage of one borrower, than if you are exposed to two or more borrowers for the same amount: it is less likely that all different borrowers default at the same time.

However, there is one major flaw, among others, in this concept, which proved to be fatal in the recent financial crises: the buyers of securitized debt instruments do no longer have transparency and understanding of the underlying risks of the instrument that they hold. A holder of a bond which is the result of securitized credit card receivables, for example, does not need to and cannot have a complete understanding of the credit quality of the individual credit card debt that makes up the bond. All he relies on is an abstract mathematical concept of aggregate default probability, which is partly the result of a rating issued by a rating agency exposed to a potential conflict of interest: the rating agencies had an incenticve to issue high ratings because they were paid by the issuer (risk of moral hazard!).

In summary: in theory, securitization of credit should result in a reduction in the overall risk through diversification, compared to the individual components of the asset pool. However, this risk reduction was more than offset through the risk of mispricing the individual risk component and the risk of moral hazard in the origination of these instruments. All this made such instruments much more vulnerable to external shocks, such as an interest rate hike, which ultimately led to the recent collapse of the financial markets.

The securitization of credit and the mispricing of the risks did significantly contribute to the financial crisis, although on their own they would not have been sufficient; other ingredients, such as regulatory imprudence or massive capital inflows into the economy were necessary to create a financial crisis of such a magnitude.

What do you think? Answer below!

selling bonds backed by payments from tobacco settlement funds to private is called?

Question by Tbaby: selling bonds backed by payments from tobacco settlement funds to private is called?
a. securitization. b. robbery c. conservatism gone wild d. unreimbursed health care expenditures

Best answer:

Answer by iTroll
e) CRAZYYY

Add your own answer in the comments!