320 likes | 433 Views
Business F723. Fixed Income Analysis Week 7 Mortgage Backed Securities. Monthly Cash Flows. Example p. 243, for a 100 PSA with a pass through rate of 7.5% a WAC of 8.125% and WAM of 357 months
E N D
Business F723 Fixed Income Analysis Week 7 Mortgage Backed Securities
Monthly Cash Flows • Example p. 243, for a 100 PSA with a pass through rate of 7.5% a WAC of 8.125% and WAM of 357 months • The calculations for this table are a bit involved, because the monthly payments on the mortgage pool decrease as prepayments are made on some of those mortgages
Monthly Payments • Calculating the scheduled monthly payment requires keeping track of the total amount of accumulated prepayments as a fraction of the initial principal • Exact formula for this calculation is not given in this textbook
Principal • The scheduled principal is the difference between the monthly payment and the interest on the outstanding principal • Prepayment estimates = SMM multiplied by (the outstanding principal less the scheduled principal payment) • Outstanding balance = previous balance less scheduled principal and prepayment
Actual Cash Flows • The cash flows forecast in the previous table are just predictions • If the estimate of 100 PSA is reasonable, the cash flows will still be different from what was predicted note: most of the PSA benchmark is based on experience, but the linear slope for the first 30 months is just an assumption
Prepayment Rate • The actual rate of prepayments can vary over time for several different reasons • Prevailing mortgage rates; spread, path (refinancing burnout), and level • Characteristics of the loans • Seasonal factors (low housing turnover in winter months) • General economic activity
Prepayment Models • To account for the changing factors over the life of MBS, some have built models to predict prepayment behaviour • From Goldman, Sachs: monthly prepayment = (refinancing incentive)x(seasoning multiplier) x(month multiplier)x(burnout multiplier) • Typically not publicly reported
Non-Agency Pass-throughs • Since these mortgages are not fully insured, we need to adjust for potential defaults • Public Securities Association has also defined a benchmark for the default rate • Standard Default Assumption (SDA) • ## SDA is the relative rate of defaults expected compared to the average (100 SDA)
Cash Flow Yield • Similar to IRR, the discount rate that sets the present value of the forecast cash flows equal to the price • Market convention converts the monthly yield into a bond equivalent basis
Limitations of Cash Flow Yield • Can not be used for future value calculation due to reinvestment risk • Assumes security is held to maturity (price risk) • Prepayment rates and default/delinquency rates must be equal to what was predicted
Yield Spread • The main difference between treasury bonds and agency (fully modified) MBS is the prepayment risk • What level of spread would compensate for the added risk? • Option pricing models have been used to determine the appropriate spread
Average Life • To which maturity treasury bond should we compare the MBS? • Could use Macaulay duration, but main measure in use is average life
Average Life vs. PSA • The average life will be different with different prepayment assumptions • As prepayments increase, average life will decrease
Negative Convexity • Prepayments are similar to call provisions with no call premium • Not all mortgages will prepay since there is a cost to the borrower to refinance • Price increases will be limited due to the increased likelihood of prepayments as the interest rate declines
Contraction Risk • If interest rates decrease, the amount of prepayments will increase • As prepayments increase, the principal will have to be reinvested at lower rates • Average life, and Macaulay’s duration will decrease… this is called contraction risk
Extension Risk • If interest rates rise, prepayments will decline • Expected cash flows will be unavailable for reinvestment at new, higher rates • Average life, and Macaulay’s duration will increase… this is called extension risk
Asset/Liability Management • Depository institutions are more concerned with extension risk • Pension funds and others with very long investment horizons are more concerned with contraction risk • Synthetic securities can be built to transfer some of these risks
Prepayments and Return • Prepayments can enhance the return compared to the cash flow yield, if the MBS trades at a discount • A prepayment causes the realized capital gain to occur earlier • If the MBS trades at a discount, its coupon rate is lower than required, so prepayments allow beneficial reinvestment
CMOs • Collateralized Mortgage Obligations are a variant of MBSs • Called a pay-through structure rather than a pass-through structure because there are different classes of owners receiving different cash flows, but having the same level of seniority • Different classes are called tranches
Sequential Pay Tranches • Principal payments are directed at each tranche in turn until that tranche is paid off • principal pay-down window is the time period in which that tranche is receiving payments towards the principal • Tranche B in example on p. 261 has a principal pay-down window from month 81-100
Accrual Bonds • A class of tranche that receives no interest or principal until the other tranches have been fully paid off • The interest payments that this tranche would have received are treated as principal prepayments for the other tranches
Floating Rate Tranches • A floating rate tranche can be created by splitting a tranche into a floating rate tranche and an inverse floating rate tranche • The total interest paid to the two tranches will be the same as the interest paid to the original tranche • coupon leverage will be created if the two tranches are not of the same size
Planned Amortization Class • A PAC tranche is protected from prepayment risk because it gets principal payments at a fixed rate • This is accomplished by issuing support bond tranches • The PAC gets principal payments according to the schedule, anything left over goes to the support bond tranche
PAC Collars • If the support bond tranche is paid off, the PAC tranche will lose its protection • The range of prepayment speeds that can be handled is called the collar • The size of the collar can change over time based on the actual speed of prepayments
Targeted Amortization Class • A TAC bond tranche is protected against contraction risk, but not extension risk • Prepayments in excess of a certain rate are borne by the support bonds, but slower than expected prepayments are shared equally • A reverse TAC bond protects vs. extension risk, but not contraction risk
VADM • Very Accurately Determined Maturity bonds are created much like PACs except that there is also an accrual bond tranche • The accrued interest for the accrual bond tranche can be used to satisfy the scheduled principal payments if the prepayment speed is slower than expected
Support Bonds • These bonds are the tranches that take extra prepayment risk to allow the PAC, TAC, or VADM to reduce that risk • As such these bonds are very risky and investors will demand a higher rate of return to buy these tranches
Credit Risk • A CMO is a business entity • If issued by an agency or fully modified, there is no credit risk • If issued by a private conduit, the level of credit risk must be assessed • Private label CMO; assets are agency MBS • Whole loan CMO; assets are mortgages
Structural Credit Enhancement • Senior/subordinated tranches • Subordinated tranches absorb the first wave of defaults • Given the example on p. 302 you can give the different tranches credit ratings from NR to B to AAA depending on how much protection they have
Stripped MBS • Interest only or principal only tranches • All interest collected is paid to one tranche, all principal payments, scheduled or prepayments is paid to the other tranche • Interest only tranche hurt by prepayments • Principal only tranche gets money quicker if prepayments increase
Notional Interest Only • A tranche that is created by paying one or more tranches lower coupon payments than the WAC • The excess interest is paid out to a tranche as a percent of a notional value • e.g. $100 m tranche receives 6%, WAC 7% • 1% of $100 m = 5% of $20 m • so a tranche can be created paying 5% on a notional value of $20 m