中国国际投资公司的内部资料ppt.ppt_第1页
中国国际投资公司的内部资料ppt.ppt_第2页
中国国际投资公司的内部资料ppt.ppt_第3页
中国国际投资公司的内部资料ppt.ppt_第4页
中国国际投资公司的内部资料ppt.ppt_第5页
已阅读5页,还剩28页未读 继续免费阅读

下载本文档

版权说明:本文档由用户提供并上传,收益归属内容提供方,若内容存在侵权,请进行举报或认领

文档简介

1、2008 Credit Crisis,China Intl Investment Stock Group Limited 2008-12-3,The Beginnings of the Crisis,You have heard that the current credit crisis began in the housing market. We will look at the basics of the mortgage market to understand how it affected the financial markets. But first, we will loo

2、k at the meaning of some financial terms that you will encounter in this presentation.,Some Terminology,Mortgage to pledge property as security for a loan Collateral the property that is pledged Liquidity ease of conversion of an asset into cash Security A certificate (paper or electronic) that give

3、s certain rights to the lender. Securitization process involving pooling loans and creating securities backed by the loans. Bonds/Debt instrument A security that gives the holder a right to receive a fixed amount (called “face value”) on a fixed date in the future (date of maturity) and right to rec

4、eive periodic interest payments (called the “coupon rate” ).,Conventional Mortgage Process,begins when a buyer wishing to buy a house, approaches a bank/financial institutions for a loan. Bank/Financial Institution checks borrowers credit history, income, other financial data (such as other debts ow

5、ed), and then decides whether to make the loan. Once the loan is made, the banks money is tied up for the duration of the loan (typically 30 years). This made traditional real estate loans very illiquid. Securitization of mortgages was meant to turn these illiquid loans into more liquid assets.,What

6、 is Securitization of Mortgages,Mortgage securitization is the process in which several real estate loans are pooled together and then broken up into smaller pieces to be sold to investors. Just like stock ownership makes it possible for each one of us (no matter how wealthy or not wealthy) to own a

7、 piece of a company (instead of the whole), and enjoy shares of the profits, mortgage securitization, in theory, makes it possible for investors to hold a piece of the mortgage and enjoy shares of the interest (and principal) payments.,Securitization can be a good thing.,.because it allows money to

8、flow from the savers (and investors who are willing to bear the risk), to the borrowers who do not have the money but want to use it. Obviously, the bank (or other financial institution) that made the original loan is also already performing this function. So why the securitization? Answer: The bank

9、 may not be willing to make too many real estate loans if its money will be tied up for such long durations. By breaking the loans into pieces and selling it to investors, the bank turns an illiquid loan into a liquid asset. The money that is now freed up can be used to fund other productive activit

10、ies.,Mortgage Securitization is not new.,In 1968, GNMA (Ginnie May) was first authorized by Congress to issue Mortgage backed Securities to finance its home loans. FNMA (Fannie May) and FHMC (Freddie Mac) have been issuing Mortgage backed securities since the 1980s. The mortgage backed securities cr

11、eated with pools of subprime loans are thought to be the culprits in the current financial crisis and these were issued starting in the mid-1990s. Source: “Credit Crunch of 2008,” by Paul Mizen in Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Review, September/October 2008, 90(5), pp. 531-567.,Mortgages Convent

12、ional Vs. Jumbo, Alt-A, and Subprime,Conventional Mortgages adhered to certain standards. Borrowers must have good credit rating Income documentation required Down payment required (typically 20%) Principal balance could not be higher than a certain amount ($729,750 in 2008) Jumbo Loans Made to borr

13、owers with good credit (i.e., prime borrowers) but the principal balance is larger than the Agency (Fannie and Freddie) limits (729,750 in 2008). Alt-A Loans Made to prime borrowers but lax on other standards such as income documentation or down payment requirements Subprime Loans Made to borrowers

14、with bad credit ratings. Other standards may also be relaxed. Source: “Understanding the Securitization of Subprime Mortgage Credit” Ashcraft and Schuermann, Federal Reserve Bank of New York Staff Report 318, March 2008.,Subprime loans increased dramatically,Source: “Money for Nothing and Checks for

15、 Free” by John Kiff and Paul Mills, IMF Working Paper, July 2007.,But were still a small part of all mortages.,Source: “Money for Nothing and Checks for Free” by John Kiff and Paul Mills, IMF Working Paper, July 2007.,The Subprime Mortgage Securitization Process,Mortgagor (Borrower),Bank/Financial I

16、nstitution (Originator),Requests loan,Provides loan,Arranger/ Issuer,Loan sold,Investors,issues securities,Warehouse Lender (makes short term loans to Issuer for purchase of mortgages),Credit Rating Agency,SPV (Trust),Loans pooled and sold to Trust,Servicer (is employed by Trust to collect loan paym

17、ents etc.),Makes loan payments,Remits loan payments to Trust and advances unpaid interest payments.,Provides customer service to borrower,Adapted from: “Understanding the Securitization of Subprime Mortgage Credit” Ashcraft and Schuermann, Federal Reserve Bank of New York Staff Report 318, March 200

18、8.,Source: “Understanding the Securitization of Subprime Mortgage Credit” Ashcraft and Schuermann, Federal Reserve Bank of New York Staff Report 318, March 2008.,Source: “Understanding the Securitization of Subprime Mortgage Credit” Ashcraft and Schuermann, Federal Reserve Bank of New York Staff Rep

19、ort 318, March 2008.,Source: “Money for Nothing and Checks for Free” by John Kiff and Paul Mills, IMF Working Paper, July 2007.,Creation of the M.B.Securities- A Highly Simplified illustration.,Originator makes, lets say, a 100 loans adding up to, say, $80 million. The expected payback is $80 millio

20、n (Principal) plus the interest payments of, say, $5million (assuming no defaults). The originator pools the 100 loans and sells to the Arranger for, say, $82 million. (The Arranger is willing to pay more than $80 million because it expects to receive some interest payments). The Arranger then divid

21、es up the $80 million into several smaller pieces. Lets say 1000 bonds each with a face value of 80,000 and some interest rate (called a coupon rate). Now it wants to sell these bonds to investors.,Securitization creates a distance between the investor and the borrower.,So how can an investor know w

22、hether the mortgages that secure its investment are healthy? Several checks and balances exist but also many problems also exist at each stage of the securitization process. Investors relied heavily on credit ratings provided by the Rating Agencies.,The Role of Credit Rating Agencies,Credit rating a

23、gencies, such as Moodys, Standard & Poor, and Fitch, are paid by financial institutions to provide easy to read/understand ratings of the risk associated with various debt instruments. Each Agency has its own scale of indicators and own models to determine default risk A sample scale of ratings AAA

24、extremely safe, very low risk AA very strong credit, low risk A strong credit BBB Good credit BB good credit but vulnerable to economic conditions,Role of credit Rating Agencies- contd.,In rating Mortgage Backed Securities (MBS), the rating agencies relied on information provided by the Issuer/Arran

25、ger. Their rating models were publicly available and Issuers often consulted with the rating agencies when constructing the loan pools and creating the MBS. The models used by the rating agencies relied on historical data (typically, 1992-2000) of mortgage default and foreclosure frequency rates. Bu

26、t the type of loans made during 2001-2007 were very different from the types of loans made during 1992-2000. The later loans were much more risky.,Source: “Credit Crunch of 2008,” by Paul Mizen in Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Review, September/October 2008, 90(5), pp. 531-567.,Structuring the D

27、eal- the Devil in the Details,The potential investors in these mortgage backed securities were mainly institutions that were restricted by regulation to buying investment grade bonds. (Typically these are bonds that are rated BBB or better). So, for an Arranger to sell these mortgage backed bonds, a

28、 rating of BBB or better was essential. Working in consultation with the credit rating agencies, the deals were structured in a way that would give most of the bonds AAA (safe) rating.,Structured Deals Converting Subprime Loans into AAA bonds,To convert a pool of loans to AAA securities, the Issuer

29、had to provide Credit Enhancements (CE) in the form of Over Collateralization: For example, $80 million loans are backed by real estate that is valued at more than $80 million. Or, more typically, the collective face value of the MBS is less than the underlying loan. Excess Spread: The weighted aver

30、age of the coupon rates on the MBS is less than the interest rate on the underlying home loan. Subordination: In our example, the 1000 securities are divided into tranches (groups)- senior, mezzanine, equity, and residual tranches. Typically, about 80% of the bonds were designated senior tranche and

31、 were rated AAA, the rest were rated A, BBB and lower. The mezzanine, equity, and residual tranches are “subordinated” to the senior tranche. That means any money repaid by the borrower is first applied to the AAA tranche before any money is paid to the mezzanine, equity, and residual tranches. Addi

32、tionally, the investors were assured of the safety of the bonds by the insurance provided by monoline insurers such as AMBAC, MBIA etc. Source: “Money for Nothing and Checks for Free” by John Kiff and Paul Mills, IMF Working Paper, July 2007.,Collateralized Debt Obligations (CDOs),No natural market

33、for BB and C rated MBS. Repackaged into CDOs with other collateralized loans such as car loans. No natural market for lower tranches of CDOs. These are repackaged into CDO2. Lower tranches of CDO2 are repackaged into CDO3. Source: “Money for Nothing and Checks for Free” by John Kiff and Paul Mills,

34、IMF Working Paper, July 2007.,Structured Deals Each MBS and CDO is unique.,For any given pool of loans the rating agency, (or its publicly available rating model), told the Issuer how much credit enhancement would be necessary for the MBS tranches to receive AAA rating. The Issuers often bundled car

35、 loans and credit card loans with subprime mortgages to get the desired credit enhancements (especially for the CDOs). This turned the previously standardized MBS market (with virtually no chance of default) into a market with high risk. And, especially, into a market with risk that was very difficu

36、lt to price. Compounding the risk pricing problems, were falling housing prices and several incentive and information problems at each stage of the securitization process.,Incentive Problems in the Securitization Process,Mortgagor (Borrower),Originator (gets closing costs, points paid by borrower PL

37、US sale proceeds of loan) Makes warranties to Arranger,Predatory Borrowing,Predatory Lending,Arranger/ Issuer (gets fees paid by investors plus any premium paid over the par value),Mortgage Fraud,Investors,Principal Agent problem,Warehouse Lender (Makes short term loans to Issuer for funding mortgag

38、e purchases),Credit Rating Agency,SPV (Trust),Adverse Selection,Servicer (gets paid fixed fee based on outstanding loan value),Moral Hazard,Adverse Selection,Moral Hazard,Model Error,Adapted from: “Understanding the Securitization of Subprime Mortgage Credit” Ashcraft and Schuermann, Federal Reserve

39、 Bank of New York Staff Report 318, March 2008.,Source: “Understanding the Securitization of Subprime Mortgage Credit” Ashcraft and Schuermann, Federal Reserve Bank of New York Staff Report 318, March 2008.,Source: “Understanding the Securitization of Subprime Mortgage Credit” Ashcraft and Schuerman

40、n, Federal Reserve Bank of New York Staff Report 318, March 2008.,What triggered the credit crunch?,Falling housing prices increased defaults. Investors began to exercise “put back” options that put the Originators on the hook for the bad loans. High leverage meant that a small loss on subprime loan

41、s translated into huge losses of capital. The run on the banks started a chain reaction that resulted in the failure of several stand-alone (monoline) banks and insurers. Doubts about the extent of losses suffered by each institution created large scale uncertainty that froze the credit market.,What

42、 Now?,Credit Crisis is real. But what is the solution? Is a bailout necessary? If so, what should a good bailout do? Depends on whether the credit crisis is due to Inadequate capital, or Lack of confidence, or Both inadequate capital and lack of confidence,The current bailout/rescue plan,Mainly addr

43、esses the problem of lack of confidence. Seeks to restore confidence by: Govt. buying up the “toxic” assets Critical question is “at what price?” Seeks to find the price through a reverse auction.,Reverse Auctions,Problems with using reverse auctions in this case Each “toxic” asset is different. The CDOs and MBS are not all alike. Asymmet

温馨提示

  • 1. 本站所有资源如无特殊说明,都需要本地电脑安装OFFICE2007和PDF阅读器。图纸软件为CAD,CAXA,PROE,UG,SolidWorks等.压缩文件请下载最新的WinRAR软件解压。
  • 2. 本站的文档不包含任何第三方提供的附件图纸等,如果需要附件,请联系上传者。文件的所有权益归上传用户所有。
  • 3. 本站RAR压缩包中若带图纸,网页内容里面会有图纸预览,若没有图纸预览就没有图纸。
  • 4. 未经权益所有人同意不得将文件中的内容挪作商业或盈利用途。
  • 5. 人人文库网仅提供信息存储空间,仅对用户上传内容的表现方式做保护处理,对用户上传分享的文档内容本身不做任何修改或编辑,并不能对任何下载内容负责。
  • 6. 下载文件中如有侵权或不适当内容,请与我们联系,我们立即纠正。
  • 7. 本站不保证下载资源的准确性、安全性和完整性, 同时也不承担用户因使用这些下载资源对自己和他人造成任何形式的伤害或损失。

评论

0/150

提交评论