Fixed Income Portfolio Management: Mortgage-Backed Securities
Fixed Income Portfolio Management: Mortgage-Backed Securities
Fixed Income Portfolio Management: Mortgage-Backed Securities
MANAGEMENT
Class 14
Mortgage-Backed Securities
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Outline
2
Mortgage-Backed and Asset-Backed Securities
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Securitization
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Securitization (continued)
This ensures that the cash flows from the pool are entirely
dedicated to servicing the securities backed by this pool.
In case the originator goes bankrupt, the SPV continues to
pay the proceeds from the loans to security holders.
Third, the trustee, that is, the entity that protects the
rights of the security holders.
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Securitization (continued)
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Purpose of Asset Securitization
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Mortgage-Backed Securities
MBS are securities that are backed by the cash flows
of a mortgage or a pool of mortgages.
A mortgage is a loan secured by the collateral of
some specified real estate property.
MBS can be divided into three types:
Mortgage pass-through securities
Collateralized mortgage obligations
Stripped mortgage-backed securities
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Monthly Mortgage Payment
Since
it follows that
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Remaining Outstanding Principal
That is
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Remaining Outstanding Principal (continued)
We can deduce
and
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Example
12%
106
M 12
1
1 180
12%
1
12
M $12,001.68 17
Example (continued)
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Prepayment Feature
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Effect of Prepayments on MBS
As MBSs are backed by mortgages, they are also
subject to prepayment.
This feature makes them equivalent to callable bonds.
For an investor, prepayment risk is a serious issue as
prepayments tend to take place when interest rates are
going down (refinancing motive), that is, at times when
reinvestment opportunities in similar securities are not
particularly attractive.
For an investor, prepayment risk translates into
Cash flow uncertainty because an MBS may be prepaid at any time
before maturity;
Reinvestment risk because the actual maturity of an MBS may be lower
than the investment horizon;
Negative convexity because an MBS has an embedded prepayment 21
option.
Effect of Prepayments on MBS (continued)
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Mortgage Pass-Throughs
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Example of a Mortgage Pass-Through Security
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Collateralized Mortgage Obligations (CMOs)
CMOs differ from mortgage pass-throughs in that
they distribute cash flows to security holders on a
priority basis.
They are structured in maturity classes, called
tranches.
In the sequential pay structure, all principal
payments (regular principal payments as well as
prepayments) are allocated to the first tranche until it
is fully paid off.
Then, it is the turn of the second tranche, and so on.
Prepayment risk is redistributed among the different
tranches.
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Sequential Pay CMOs
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Sequential Pay CMO Example
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MBS Price Quotes
MBSs are quoted in basis points above the on-the-run
Treasury yield curve or above the swap yield curve.
For this purpose, market makers compute what is
called the weighted average life (WAL) of an MBS.
The WAL is based on some prepayment rate
assumption.
WAL is nothing but the average time for receiving
future principal payments, weighted by the amount of
each principal cash flow.
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MBS Price Quotes (continued)
Then the yield of the MBS is compared against either
the interpolated on-the-run Treasury bond yield with
maturity equal to the WAL of the MBS or the
interpolated swap yield with maturity equal to the WAL
of the MBS.
The coupon of an MBS is typically lower than the
weighted average coupon on the underlying mortgage
pool by an amount equal to the fee paid to the servicer
of the mortgage loans.
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32
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Pricing of MBSs
Complex because of the prepayment issue.
Mortgage refinancings change the composition of
the pool:
Removes fast and capable refinancers from the pool at a
faster rate than slow and less capable refinancers.
Therefore, the pool will include a higher and higher
proportion of slow refinancers over time.
This results in a decrease in the refinancing rate over time.
This feature makes MBS path-dependent securities, as their
price is dependent on the past evolution of interest rates.
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Pricing of MBSs
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Prepayment
50 70% 50 30%
R1 50%
100
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Prepayment Rate Example (continued)
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Monte Carlo Methodology
In this equation,
r designates the change in the short-term interest rate
over one period;
t designates the change in time from one period to
another; 40
Monte Carlo Methodology (continued)
or
In this approach,
designates the expected relative return on the
short-term interest rate per time unit;
designates the volatility of the short-term interest
rate per time unit (i.e., the standard deviation of the
relative change unit).
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Monte Carlo Simulation Example
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Interest Rate Paths
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Monte Carlo Methodology (continued)
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Monte Carlo Methodology (continued)
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Sequence of Bond Prices
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Monte Carlo Simulation Example (continued)
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Monte Carlo Methodology (continued)
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Monte Carlo Simulation (continued)
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Valuation of MBS Using Monte Carlo Simulation
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Constant Prepayment Rate (CPR) Model
The prepayment rate is assumed to be constant.
It is expressed on an annual basis.
To review (from the fixed income securities course),
denote by the constant proportion of the outstanding
mortgages that are prepaid within a month.
1 is the constant proportion of the outstanding
mortgages that are still remaining after a month.
After 1 year, the constant proportion of the outstanding
mortgages that are still remaining is equal to (1 )12 or
1 CPR.
Hence the CPR is equal to: CPR = 1 (1 )12 .
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PSA Experience-Based Model
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PSA Experience-Based Model (continued)
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Simple Static Pricing Framework
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100%PSA
Month Remaining Scheduled Monthly Scheduled
Principal Monthly Prepayment And Unscheduled
Amount Payment Rate (%) Monthly Payments
0 1,000,000.00
1 997,998.32 12,001.68 0.02 12,168.17
2 995,976.62 12,001.68 0.03 12,332.23
3 993,934.71 12,001.68 0.05 12,493.76
4 991,872.37 12,001.68 0.07 12,652.68
90 710,030.00 12,001.68 0.51 10,668.98
91 705,128.62 12,001.68 0.51 10,597.01
92 700,178.23 12,001.68 0.51 10,525.34
93 695,178.33 12,001.68 0.51 10,453.95
177 35,296.77 12,001.68 0.51 5,302.17
178 23,648.05 12,001.68 0.51 5,248.96
179 11,882.85 12,001.68 0.51 5,195.90
180 0.00 12,001.68 0.51 5,142.99
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The MPs of the Mortgage Loan Without
Prepayment and With Prepayment
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Mortgage Prepayment Example
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Conclusions
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