Title: ACCION
1Securitization of Microfinance Credits the Next
Frontier?
Rahul Desai VP, Financial Markets
Services ACCION International October 2007
2What is Securitization?
- Securitization is a process in which assets
(typically loans or receivables) are transferred
from the originator to a special purpose vehicle
(SPV), often in the form of a trust. - The SPV is bankruptcy-remote, which means that
its assets will not be consolidated with those of
the originator in case the latter goes bankrupt.
This kind of transfer is called a true sale. - The SPV issues bonds for which the loans or
receivables serve as collateral These bonds are
sold to institutional investors through an
intermediary investment bank. The proceeds of the
bonds are paid to the originator. - In order to achieve the desired credit ratings on
the bonds, credit enhancement can be provided by
a variety of internal and external mechanisms
(e.g. subordination, overcollateralization,
financial guarantees). - The trust would enter into an agreement with the
issuer to collect payments and administer the
trust assets for a specified servicing fee. This
income is used to pay interest and principal on
the notes and any guarantee premium.
3Securitization Transaction Diagram
Stage 1 - Issuance
4Securitization Transaction Diagram
Stage 2 - Operation
Financial Guarantor
Premium
P I
P I
SPV (Trust)
Institutional Investors
Originator (Financial Institution)
Servicing Fee Excess Spread
5Brief History of Securitization
- The first securitization took place in 1970 when
the Government National Mortgage Association, a
US government entity, issued securities using
government guaranteed residential mortgages as
collateral. In the late 1970s two
quasi-government agencies, Fannie Mae and Freddie
Mac, began to securitize conventional mortgage
loans originated by banks and other financial
institutions. - Later, financial institutions began to securitize
their own mortgages using credit enhancement
techniques. The U.S. mortgage securitization
market is now comparable in size and liquidity to
the U.S. Treasury market. - As the market became more comfortable with
securitization, financial institutions began to
securitize other kinds of assets commercial
mortgages, trade receivables, auto loans and
leases, student loans and credit cards. - Securitization has now spread to Europe, Asia and
Latin America.
6Securitization in Latin America
- Securitization has been growing rapidly as a
capital raising instrument in Latin America in
recent years, with more than 400 transactions
issued in local markets in 2006, totaling
approximately US16 billion. - Approximately 20 of these were real estate
related transactions (residential mortgages,
commercial mortgages or residential construction
loans), 30 was traditional ABS including
consumer credits, auto loans, trade receivables,
credit card receivables and bank loans, and 12
future flow transactions. - The largest domestic markets in 2006 were Mexico
(US6.5 billion), followed by Brazil (US5.3
billion), Argentina (2.4 billion) and Colombia
(US1.1 billion). The dominant categories were
residential mortgages in Mexico, auto loans in
Brazil and consumer loans in Argentina. - Different Latin American countries employ
different SPVs for securitization - trust-like
fideicomisos (Argentina, Mexico, Colombia, Peru)
the FIDC, which is a kind of investment fund
(Brazil) and the patrimonio separado (Chile), a
special securitization company. - Source Fitch Ratings
7Typical Mexican RMBS Structure
Hipotecaria Su Casita RMBS Nov 2006
Assets
Liabilities
100
100
Low Income Residential Mortgages
85.1 11.5
- mx AAA Senior Bonds
- mx A rated Mezzanine Bonds
- Unrated Residual Certificates (3.4)¹
¹ Initial level 1 building up to 3.4 through
capture of excess spread
8Characteristics of Assets that can be Securitized
- While new asset classes continue to emerge, the
basic principles to assess whether an asset can
be securitized remain constant. - Known loss rates based on historical information
on default and recovery rates - Predictable cash flow based on historical
experience - Realizable value of underlying collateral
- Diversification of assets in the pool (borrowers,
geographical regions, industry) - Supporting information systems infrastructure to
provide data and track performance -
9Benefits of Securitization to Issuer
- Efficient Means of Funding
- Lower cost funding relative to traditional debt
alternatives because underlying assets may have
higher credit quality than originator. - AAA tranche can usually be structured through
credit enhancement - Risk Reduction
- Allows for transfer of credit, interest rate and
prepayment risk in portfolio to investors? - Generates risk-free fee income from continued
servicing of assets - Provides match funding for the assets
- Benefits to Financial Statements
- Transfer of assets off balance sheet lowers
leverage and enhances borrowing capacity - Frees up capital for future portfolio growth
- Improves financial ratios (ROA, ROE)
- ? Originator may retain top portion of risk in
securitization
10Constraints to Securitization of Microfinance
Credits
- Given the issues most MFIs face with respect to
funding, securitization could be to their great
benefit but has been very challenging for the
following reasons - Transaction Size. Securitization, particularly
the first time, can be very expensive for MFIs
and involves paying legal, accounting, rating
agency, registration and placement fees. To
justify the costs and reap the benefits of a
securitization program, MFIs must generate
sufficiently large portfolios to securitize on a
regular basis. - Investor Reporting. As originator and servicer of
the loans, MFIs must compile detailed
descriptions and payment statistics on the loans,
both at issuance and afterwards. This often
requires an investment in MIS systems. - Correlation between Originator and Credit
Performance. Performance of microfinance loans
depends on high levels of close interaction
between the borrowers and officers of the
originating/servicing institution. As such, it
is almost impossible to separate the risk of the
loans from the risk of the institution. Despite
credit enhancement, rating agencies will give
bonds backed by microfinance credits only a 2-3
notch upgrade above the institutions own rating,
limiting the benefit in terms of lower funding
cost.
11The BRAC transaction appears to constitute a real
breakthrough.
- BRAC is largest MFI NGO in the world serving 5
million mostly women members in Bangladesh.
Average loan per borrower is 165 - In 2006, BRAC successfully initiated a
securitization program that will provide it with
US180 million of financing over 6 years. - This was the first local currency AAA-rated
microcredit securitization in the world, with the
national scale rating provided by the Credit
Rating Agency of Bangladesh. - The bonds were 150 collateralized by micro-loans
but there was no other credit enhancement. - The investors in the first issuance of 15
million were FMO directly, Citibank Bangladesh
with a guarantee from FMO and Citibank itself
along with two local banks. Citigroup arranged
the transaction. - BRAC achieved reduced funding costs vis-Ã -vis its
alternatives. - How was this possible?
- BRACs portfolio is of sufficient size to absorb
transaction costs - The initial pool was selected with sophisticated
software that seeks to replicate the
characteristics of the overall portfolio - BRAC is a superior servicer with daily
reconciliations of collections, but what about a
back-up servicer? -
12Whereas the ProCredit Bulgaria Transaction is
more questionable
- In May 2006, ProCredit Bank Bulgaria (PCB)
securitized 47.8 million of its Euro-denominated
loan portfolio The initial pool consists of 1,286
loans, and the average loan size is 15,000. - Credit enhancement for the Note consisted of a
subordinated loan equal to 5.05 that was
purchased by ProCredit Holding (PCH). PCH also
provided a guarantee facility to cover certain
risks up to 6.6 of the Note balance. - Fitch rated the Note BBB on the international
scale, which is two notches above the rating for
the bank itself (BB). The European Investment
Fund and Kfw provided additional guarantees to
further enhance the credit rating. - The Note was bought by a conduit administered by
Deutsche Bank, which also arranged the
transaction. - PCB acts as servicer of the collateral but upon a
downgrade of PCB, the bank is obliged to
establish a hot backup servicer. - Are these really microfinance credits or SME
loans? - With DB as arranger and buyer and the heavy
credit enhancement is this really a guaranteed
loan rather than a securitization?
13What Has to Happen for Securitization of
Microfinance Credits to Take Off?
- Larger institutions with larger portfolios to
securitize or combination of portfolios of
similar institutions - Better MIS systems for portfolio tracking and
monitoring - Establishment of consistent underwriting
standards and collection procedures - Development of standardized servicing contracts
- Availability of high quality back-up servicers
- Better understanding of product by rating
agencies and institutional investors - Most likely places in Latin America for
microfinance securitization to happen? Bolivia
or Peru. - ?Proposed by Sharon Stieber, innovations/winter
and spring 2007
14THANK YOU !