Title: Global Financial Engineering Institute
1Global Financial Engineering Institute
GFEI
2Islamic Financial Products
- Mudaraba
- Musharaka
- Ijara with diminishing Musharaka
- Murabaha
- Qard
- Wakala
- Takaful
- Istisnaa
- Sukuk
3Transparency in Islamic products?
- Fee based banking, no transparency
- Income provided in the form of gift, an
inconvenient truth. - Surely, we can do better
- Tax implication and deductibility as tax shelter.
- WWJD?
- WWMD?
4A to Z of The Securitization in Islamic Countries
- Introduction
- Major Players
- Rating Agencys Function in a Typical
Securitization - Credit Enhancement
- External Credit Enhancements
- Internal Credit Enhancements
- Over- collateralization
- Senior/Subordinated Structure
- Dynamics of Underwriting Process
- Requirements for Successful Securitization
- Secondary Market Provider
- Benefits of Securitization
- Cost of Securitization
- Fixed and Variable Costs of Securitization
- Case Study
5Financial Engineering Process
- Characteristics of Assets to Be Securitized
- Structure of the Assets Created in a
Securitization Process - Residential Mortgage Backed Islamic Securities
RMBIS - Commercial Islamic Mortgage Backed Securities
CIMBS - Legal and Structural Issues
- Sale Accounting
- Sales of Loan
- Assignment
- Participation
- Case Study
-
-
6Algorithm of Securitization
- Legal Framework
- Macro Economics of Securitization
- Implications
- Construction of Monthly Cash Flow for
Pass-through Securities - Multi Class Sequential-Pay Pass-through
- Creating Islamic Floater and Inverse Floater
- Creating Commodity based Accrual Bonds (zero
coupon) - Islamic CDs
- Case Study
7Islamic Products
- Ijara Buy and Lease, ownership remains with the
party who purchased the product. - Ijara-wa-iktana It is similar to Ijara, except
the custmer agrees to buy the product at the end
of lease period. - Ijara with diminishing Musharaka for home-buying
purposes, where home owneres equity increases
over time as payment is made over and above
preagreed term, and final transfer of tittle to
the homeowner. - Mudaraba an investment on behalf of a party by a
professional . This is an agreement between two
counterparties where one provides the funds and
the other who provides the expertise and who
agree to the division of any profits made in
advance.
8Islamic Products
- Murabaha This is a financing arrangement where a
party usually a bank who purchases the product
for resale to a counterparty at a margin over the
price. Installment payment - Musharaka Partnership, where loss is
proportional to equity investment. - Qard Loan free of any profit, to be paid back on
demand. - Wakala An agency contract where the creditor
pays management fee to the bank.
9Islamic products
- Takaful is an Islamic insurance based on the
principle of Taawun (cooperative assistance of
many) and Tabarru (voluntary contribution), where
risk to anyone is shared by individuals. - Istisnaa is a financing instrument that could be
used for funding construction projects,
industrial equipment, and various other heavy
equipments purchase. - Contracts in PPP, such as BOT (Build, operate,
and Transfer) can be categorized as Istisna'a
transactions. - Istisna'a has wide applications for the Islamic
banks to finance the public goods for the greater
good.
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11Example
Treasury Time Warner Texas Utility United Airline Coupon .05625 .0818 .06375 .0631 Yield Maturity .0464 5 .0547 5 .06125 5 .0599 5 Par 125 85 36 69 Price Rate 130.384 -- 98.84 BBB 36.37 BBB 69.93 BBB
Default rate in all 3 bonds is 5 percent with recovery of .48
12Example continued
- Create 2 tranches of floating rate note and
Inverse floater, with 80/20 allocation from the
portfolio of 3 corporate bonds rated BBB. - WAC.0715 WAM 5
- WAC of 2-tranches .07
- Coupon of Floating rate note L 2
- Assume 6-month LIBOR is 3.5 percent.
- Coupon of Inverse floater .27- 4(L)
- Both issues are priced at par initially
13Example continued
- Floater is rated AAA, and has default rate of 1
percent - Inverse floater is rated B, and absorbs the first
loss in the underlying collateral. - Market value weighted average of default of the
2-tranches has to be equal that of the
collateral. - Tranche floater is less risky, therefore, the
inverse floater must be more risky, with default
rate of 21 percent.
14Islamic Financial Instruments
- Islamic CDs
- Preserves purchasing power
- Risk free
- Does not require partnership in the spirit of
Sukuk - Provides returns in excess of inflation premium
- It is close cousin to TIPs issued by the U.S.
Treasury
15Treasury Inflation Protection Bonds
Inflation Indexed Treasury Inflation Indexed Treasury Inflation Indexed Treasury Inflation Indexed Treasury Inflation Indexed Treasury Inflation Indexed Treasury
COUPON MATURITYDATE CURRENTPRICE/YIELD PRICE/YIELDCHANGE TIME
5-Year 0.625 04/15/2013 97-01 / 1.29 -0-00 / .004 1107
10-Year 1.375 07/15/2018 97-07 / 1.68 0-01 / -.006 1108
20-Year 1.750 01/15/2028 93-08 / 2.18 -0-07 / .015 1108
30-Year 3.375 04/15/2032 123-04 / 2.12 -0-07 / .011 1108
16Sharia Principles
- Over the long run the real return on fixed income
securities is 2 percent or less, and most of the
rate of return investors receive is for capital
preservation and not a real increase in value of
capital. - Fiat money has created some problems
(opportunities) for Muslim scholars. During the
prophet era financial transactions were conducted
via gold, silver and commodities. Hence, fiat
money inflation was not a problem. -
- There is a common thread in Islamic trade and
business transactions that neither party should
be hurt or penalized (La Darara Wala Derar) due
to loss of value of fiat money. - Sharia Law states that if you borrow x Bushels
you should return x Bushels of the same commodity
(value-capital preservation), (Al Kailu be Al
Kail). It never stated that you should pay back
in dirham (dinar, Reyal, dollar, fiat money).
17Challenges and Opportunities
- Are the prevailing property laws in Islamic
countries conducive for securitization? New Acts
conducive for securitization need to be enacted. - Which types of securitization are consistent with
the existing laws in Islamic countires? - How to create SPV, to preserve clean break
criteria as outlined in Basle II Accord and that
is consistent with the prevailing assignment law
in the Islamic countries? - Given high inflation and interest rates in most
Islamic countries. Can financially engineering
ABS or MBS attract investors to this type of
securities in Islamic countries? - Who will appraise the underlying collateral?
- How the external guarantees are achieved?
- How much over-collateralization is needed to
insure safety of interest and principal on the
first generation of MBS?
18Sharia Laws and its implications
- According to Article 14 of the Monetary and
Banking Law of Iran, the CBI is authorized to set
RRR within 10 to 30 percent depending on banks
nature of assets and liabilities composition. - Banking profit rates - With the implementation of
Usury-free Banking Law, the profit rate or
expected rate of return on banking facilities are
determined by the Money and Credit Council (MCC).
- Issuing bonds with fixed interest rate is
prohibited according to Islamic Sharia however,
participation certificates and investors
partnership in economic activities and payment of
profit is encouraged. -
- MCC can intervene in determining rates both for
investment projects or partnership and for credit
facilities extended by banks. - Source http//www.cbi.ir
19- The Sharia encourages the use of profit sharing
and partnership schemes, and forbids riba
(interest), maysir (gambling and pure games of
chance), and gharar (selling something that is
not owned or that cannot be described in accurate
detail i.e., in terms of type, size, and amount
El-Gamal (2000). - Unlike conventional mutual fund managers, Islamic
fund managers are not allowed to speculate. - Source Haddad, Homaifar and Elfakhani (2007)
20- Some Islamic scholars allow partially
contaminated earning income to be cleansed or
purified. - For example, an Islamic Mutual Fund has 8
percent interest-related income, then 8 percent
of every dividend payment must be given away to
purify the fund earnings. Cleansing capital
gains, however, remains debatable. - Another form of purification is Zakah. The rate
of zakah differs with the type of the asset, 2.5
percent being the rate on most forms of monetary
wealth and earned income Al-Qaradawi (1999).
21Islamic Certificate of Deposit (ICD)
- Investors have to be compensated
- For the loss of purchasing power
- For the time value of money
- Therefore, in an Islamic setting where interest
(Reba) is forbidden, conventional CDs can not be
offered by an Islamic bank. - Islamic CDs of varying maturities can mitigate
problems embedded in the conventional CDs.
22Pay off of ICD
- Investors will be compensated investing in the
ICD in the following two ways - NP(1G(CPIt /CPIt-1-1)), where CPI is the
consumer price index at time t and t-1, NP is the
notional principal invested and G is set to be
equal .80. - Max (NPwt (Pt - Pt-1)/Pt-1, 0)
- Where P is the price of a commodity at time t and
t-1 , i.e., oil price, gold price, stock price.
and wt is the percentage that is an increasing
function of time t taking values of up to 100
percent at the limit.
23Example
- Consider an Islamic investor in SA who invests
20,000 Dinnar over one year horizon in a 1-year
ICD. Assume that consumer price index is equal to
175 at the time of investment and 185.50 after
one year. Furthermore assume that the SA stock
index is at 715 at the time of investment and
786.50 by the end of the year. The pay-off of the
ISD for our hypothetical investors is as follows - 20000(1.80(185.5/175-1))D 20,960.00
- 20000.10.10 D 200.00
- Total pay-off D 21,160.00
24Example continued
- Realized return .058
- 80 percent of the loss of purchasing power is
restored - 1 percent in the form of appreciation in the
price of commodity assuming bank passed 10
percent of the appreciation to the investor in a
completely riskless transaction.
252-Year ICD
- Likewise in a 2-year ICD, in the same example
assuming CPI increased by 4 percent in the second
year, while stock index retreated to 860 by the
end of the second year. The pay-off of 2-year ISD
will be as follows assuming the bank funnels 20
percent of the increase in the price of the
commodity to investors. - Year 1 pay-off D 1260
- D960 for the loss of PP
- D200 for the appreciation of the commodity price
- 2. Year 2 Pay-off D 640 for the loss of PP
- Zero for the decrease in the price of
commodity - Plus initial investment of D20,000.
- Total pay of 2-y ICD D21,900.00
- Total return 9.5 percent over 2-year investment
horizon
26Continued
- Criteria 1 insures that investors purchasing
power is maintained, consistent with the Islamic
Sharia (Al-kailabo bel kail), - Criteria 2 insures that investors pay off is
either zero or positive in excess of the loss of
purchasing power.
27Is the firm facing higher funding cost?
- The lender is likely to securitize its loan
assets when removing assets than when keeping
them on balance sheet creates more value. - Firms rated AAA can secure credit in the market
at a substantially lower cost than their
counterparts with low ratings and with higher
funding cost.
28Securitize or not securitize
- Does the firm need cash to grow and expand its
existing operation, - To retire maturing debt, or buy back firms own
stocks? - What are the alternatives cost of funding?
29Alternative Funding
- First alternative The firm can borrow 25
million by issuing 7-year unsecured debt at
all-in-cost of 7.25 percent from its bank. - Second alternative Secured debt can be issued
by pledging mortgage loan assets as collateral at
all-in-cost of 6.75 percent. - Both funding scenarios are achieved by
increasing assets and liabilities on balance
sheet
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33What is Securitization?
- The process of transforming relatively homogenous
illiquid assets into heterogeneous ABS for sale
to third party investors is known as
securitization. - Securitization involves the economic or legal
transfer of assets to a third party, SPV. - A bank can only remove the assets from its
balance sheet using clean break criteria
according to the new Basle Accord.
34True Sale
- There are three basic principles that ensure that
an originator has surrendered control of
financial assets and can legally record a sale of
the assets - - Asset isolation,
- - Originator or SPV control,
- - Originator or seller non-control.
35- Structure of typical securitization
Sponsor/originator Balance sheet
Receivables Current or future
Credit enhanced
SPV Balance sheet
Receivables Current or future
Issues ABS backed by the pool of receivables
Tranche 1 L-risk Tranche 2 Mezzanine
M-risk Tranche 3 5 F-loss H-risk
36Structure of Creating ABS/MBS
Obligor
Clean sale/no recourse
Proceed
Credit enhancer
Rating Agency
SPV
Arranger Underwriter
Liquidity Enhancer
Swap Counterparty
Investors
37South Korean Bank Securitization
38Shinhan Bank Securitization
39Structuring and Pricing CDO
Pool
AAA BBB BB B NR/equity
Senior Mezzannine Junior
75
Corporate bonds
8
7
5
5
40Example Creating Synthetic CDO
- Consider the underlying collateral is 1.5
billion worth of corporate debts with 150
obligors each 10 million with WAM of 10 years,
WAC of 7.5 percent and weighted average duration
of 7.2 years. - Creating MBS, CMOs, CDOs
- SPV issues multiple tranches
- The senior tranche is 1.125 billions
- The mezzanine tranche is 300 millions.
- The equity tranche is 75 millions or 5 of the
underlying collateral.
41- The equity tranche is not rated. Due to leverage
and priority rules, the return and risk are very
high for this tranche. - The equity tranche is exposed to 5 first loss.
- For example, cumulative loss of 75 millions can
wipe out equity tranche. - What ever transformation is executed on the
collateral, the package of new securities must
obey basic laws of conservation, namely..
42Pricing Equity Tranche
- Investors for taking first loss, are compensated
in two ways - Up-front fees
- Running spread
- Up-front fee usually is quoted at say 40-50
percent of investment grade CDO. - Suppose investors in the equity tranche get 30
up-front for assuming the 5 first loss. - Investors hedge their exposure to 150 obligors by
buying say 2 million notional CDS on the same150
obligors for 2.5. - 300 x .025 7.5 Millions
- Assume zero recovery in the event of default
43Case Study J.P Morgan/ Enron
- J.P Morgan purchased 2.1billion worth of 5-7
year gas and oil forward from Enron in 1999. - J.P Morgan off-load risk to Enron by buying
surety bonds from 11 insurers. - Enron collapsed November 2001.
44Historical Perspectives
- The process of securitization in the United
States has gone through a trial-and-error phase,
with the changes in legal, accounting,
regulatory, tax, and other issues occurring. - The first triple-A rated 30- year pass-through
security issued by Bank of America in 1977,
entitled the investor to a pro rata share of the
cash flows. - It turned out that the new pass-through
securities by the blue-sky laws, the States legal
investment laws, did not qualify as an investment
vehicle except in fifteen of the fifty States in
the union.
45- Freddie Mac exemption from the blue-sky laws as a
federal agency proved to be crucial. - In this process Freddie Mac purchased seasoned
mortgage securities and issued MBS by
guaranteeing interest and principal with
relatively higher yield . - The initial 30-year MBS appealed to fewer
investors in the market. - As initial 30-year MBS exposed investors to
prepayment risk
46- The market needed to offer wider array of
securities. - The ability to predict average life of the pool
of mortgages was crucial to sustaining wider
classes of investors. -
- Furthermore, because of the complexities of the
new MBS, with unknown cash flows, investors
needed to be educated about these securities. - The key was to convince investors that new
securities offered them relatively more yield. - Therefore, these securities initially issued
relatively cheap. - The next phase in securitization came in the
creation of collateralized mortgage obligations
(CMOs) that solved many of the earlier problems.
47RTC and Real Estate Crisis
- The real estate crisis associated with the
insolvency of the SL of the late 1980s, and the
creation of the Resolution Trust Corporation RTC
by congress in 1989 are two related such events. - The RTC had several mandates
- To manage liquidation of the performing and
non-performing residential mortgages originated
by SL. - Minimize the impact of real estate crisis on the
financial market and the economy - To preserve affordable housing
- These mandates proved to be the catalyst to jump
start securitization in this sector of the U.S.
economy.
48Problems and Lessons
- Securitization was extended to second mortgages
up until early 1980s as the U.S. economy faced
double-digit inflation and interest rates. - Rising interest rates caused market value of
homes particularly in California to drop
substantially. - The real estate scam of the century. Californian,
having secured a second mortgage in the property
walked out of their residence by turning over the
property to the lenders. -
49Review of Literature
- Data from (Call Report) by (FFIEC) reveals that
on average, banks with total assets greater than
2.5 billions securitize 20 percent of their
assets quarterly Markose and Dong (2005). - Securitization lowers mortgage interest rate, and
eliminates regional variations in mortgage
interest rates Jaffee and Renaud (1995), Jaffee
and Rosen (1990), Olson (1990).
50Review of Literature
- Jaffee and Rosen (1990) show that rising
foreclosure rates, increases in (ARM) securities,
and reduced federalization in the mortgage market
adversely affect securitization. - Calomiris and Mason (2003) investigate the degree
to which securitization permits banks to obtain
greater return on capital by avoiding regulatory
capital requirement. - Calomiris and Mason point out that the benefits
of securitization stem from three sources. - First, less capital is required to be held in
support of the securitized loans. - Second, securitization reduces other regulatory
costs associated with on-balance-sheet assets. - Third, the value of the equity in the banks is
increased given that the deposit insurance
premium remains the same.
51Review of Literature
- Elul (2005) points out that securitization is
driven by the banks desire to reduce indirect
bankruptcy costs. - If the bank retains the mortgages, investors have
to share the risks. As a result, investors is
likely to offer low price for these securities. - Therefore, investors would be willing to pay
higher price for the window dressed ABS.
Consequently, the banks indirect costs of
raising funds is reduced. - Loutskina (2005) studies the effect of
securitization on bank lending. - She suggests that securitization increases banks
lending and alleviates the effect of restrictions
in availability of funds on banks loan supply. - In particular, securitization weakens the link
from monetary policy to bank lending activity.
52Lessons
- Securitization of mobile homes was also a
sobering experience for the industry. - Unlike home mortgages, The underlying asset tends
to depreciate, rather than appreciate over time. - Securitization of airplane leases is difficult as
single airplane crash can be catastrophic for the
underlying bond issue. The cost of credit
enhancement for such deal can be extremely
prohibitive.
53Absence of Prepayment
- Challenges and opportunities
- Implications for ABS to be created
- Creating contraction risk synthetically
- Exposing other classes to extension risk
- Simple Pass-through may not be appealing
- Sequential pay structure offers potential
- Definitely Zero coupon bond has to be created
54Implications
- The longer the maturity of the assets the larger
is the amount of over-valuation. - For example, a typical 27 percent auto loan has a
maturity of three years and an implied rate of
24.2 percent - Therefore, this asset class is overvalued in the
bank balance sheet by approximately three percent - On the other hand, a ten year mortgage is
overvalued by approximately 6.5 percent--the
difference between the rate in the legal loan
documentation of 27 percent and the rate of 20.52
percent implied from the installment payments. - Flawed algorithm conveys faulty information to
average depositors and borrowers in some Islamic
countries.
55Major Players
- Loan Originator (Sponsor)
- Third Party Guarantor (Credit enhancer)
- Rating Agency
- Special Purpose Vehicle SPV
- Arranger (underwriter)
- Liquidity Enhancer (secondary market provider)
- Swap Counterparty
- Investors
56Intermediation
- Banks and Savings Loans were largely responsible
to perform all functions of - originating,
- servicing,
- credit risk taking and managing it,
- and investing in a typical mortgage loan.
57Disintermediation
- Disintermediation has shuffled various functions
into different entities that specialized to
perform. For example, an originator does not need
to use its own funds to finance a mortgage. - Rather, using the capital markets to acquire
funds cheaply has created thousands of mortgage
companies, thereby - Increased price and rate competition, and the
range of available products. - The volume of securitized instruments speaks
loudly of the success.
58Breakdown of Financial risks
- Commercial Investment
Treasury Retail Asset - Banking Banking
Management Management Management -
operational
Credit
Market
Source Robert Gescke
59Operational Risk
- The Basle Committee on Banking Supervision BCBS
reported recently that, - An informal survey highlights the growing
significance of risks other than credit and
market risks, such as operational risk, which
have been at the heart of some important banking
problems in recent years. - Few definitions
- Any financial risk other than credit and market
risk. - Risk arising from operation, such as back office
problems, failure in processing transactions and
in systems, and technology breakdown, - The risk of loss from failed internal processes,
people, and systems, or from external events
60Market Risk
- Risk of sudden shock, which could damage the
financial system that the wider economy would
suffer is an example of systematic or market
risk. - Contagious transmission of the shock due to
actual or suspected exposure to a failing bank or
banks. Followed by flight to quality. - Panicky behavior of depositors or investors or
- Interruption in the payment system
61- Financial Engineering Process
- Securitization is financial engineering in a
classic sense. The process of financial
engineering is as follows - Diagnosis is the firm facing high funding cost?
- Analysis Are the assets suitable for
securitization? - Production Repackaging and unbundling the pool
into marketable securities (underwriting) - Pricing The structure of securities created from
the pool. What is the Risk/return profile of new
securities and types of credit enhancement
attached to them? - Customization Tailoring the new product to the
specific needs of customers - Legal Framework The law governing securitization
in the country of issuance.
62Process
Diagnosis
Analysis
Production
Underwriting
Legal framework
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64Rating Agencys Functions
- Analyzes individual assets in the pool, compares
them to the historical performance of assets in
its data bank, and subjects the pool to stress
tests based on severe market conditions. - Looks at the seasoning of the pool, as mortgages
are more likely to default in the first four
years. - Evaluates geographic diversification of the
loans. - Projects the amount of credit enhancement needed
based on the worst-case scenario. - Secures legal certification that assets
transferred to the SPV are true sale, and thus
legally isolated from the reach of originator.
65Internal Credit Enhancements
- These come in several different forms and are
custom designed to enhance the quality of the
underlying pool of the collateral. They possibly
may alter characteristics of the cash flow of the
securitized products. They can be classified as
follows - Over-collateralization
- Senior/subordinate structure
- Reserve funds
- Excess spread
66Shift to Securitization in 1980
- Deterioration of the credit quality of the major
banks portfolio as a result of less developing
countries LDC debt crisis of 1982. - Mushrooming innovative products induced by
liberalization of regulatory landscape that
transferred risk from banks other
intermediaries to ultimate investors.
- Return to a more favorable macro-economic
conditions, i.e., reappearance of positive real
interest rates and upward sloping yield curves - Disintermediation of credits induced through
securitization
67Asset on Balance Sheet
- Illiquid and non-tradable
- Not transparent
- Valued by originator
- Risk assessed by originator
- Originator has high cost of funding
- Have lower ratings
- Concentration risk is high
- Market is local
- Limited in terms, rates, duration, convexity, etc.
68Asset backed securities ABS off-balance sheet
- Highly liquid and tradable
- Transparent
- Value is determined in the market daily
- Risk assessed by rating agencies
- Originator has low cost of funding
- Credit enhanced with higher ratings
- Diversified
- Market is national and global
- Offers investors/borrowers variety of options
69Summary of the basic requirements for
Securitization
- Standardization of contracts
- Standardization of underwriting and appraisal
process - Actuarial analysis of risk
- Standardization of governing laws
- Historical data base for estimation of default
and delinquencies - Reliable secondary market players
- Reliable supply of third party guarantor
- Reliable management information system
70The keys for the success
- The success of securitization in the United
States is related to the following phenomena - Attracting private capital to the housing sector
by meeting investors needs. - Providing lower cost financing for home ownership
through increased price and rate competition
among various lenders in a securitization
process. - Reducing overall riskiness of the pool of
mortgages through diversification, - To increase income stability and enhance the
management of risks inherent in mortgage
products.
71Benefits to borrowers/consumers
-
- Access to competitive rates and terms
- Access to cheaper financing
- Availability of array of financing alternatives
- Funding availability for all types of borrowers
- Reduced processing time
- Benefits to originators
- Reduce funding cost
- Improve profit margin on asset and equity
- Removing illiquid assets off-balance sheet
- Improve asset/liability management
- Reduce concentration risk
-
72Benefits to arranger/investment bankers
- Increased product lines and fees
- Increased opportunities to expand operation
nationally and globally - Increased trading volume and profit
- Improved efficiency and specialization
- Benefits to investors
- Attractive yields on rated securities
- Diversification of risk
- Improved liquidity
- Availability of vast array of products that meet
their desire in terms of duration, convexity,
etc.
73The growth in securitization of RMBS
- May be attributed to several reasons
-
- Homogeneity of the residential mortgages in terms
of underwriting standards encouraged by federal
government involvement to promote home ownership
that helps to increase job creation in a labor
intensive sector of the U.S. economy. - Mitigation of default risk on the RMBS due to the
existence of government or private insurers in
this market. - Availability of large historical data base
reflecting performance of the pool of mortgages
in terms of delinquencies, default rates,
payments, and prepayments that helped the
investors to price various risks in determination
of the fair market value of these asset backed
derivative instruments. - Government and quasi government agencies created
through congress various Acts is to be credited
for establishing infrastructures i.e., active
secondary markets (needed for providing
liquidity), and the legal frameworks that
encourage securitization.
74- The need is the mother of all inventions. To
manage and mitigate imbalance in duration of the
assets and liabilities of the depository
institutions, new innovative asset backed
securities needed to improve asset/liability
management. - Passage of the 1986 Tax Reform Act that permitted
real estate mortgage investment conduits REMICS
to be tax exempt entities as well as allowing
REITs to invest in mortgages and their
derivatives MBS products fueling growth of the
securitization. - Last but not least was the profitability of these
instruments as the proceeds from the sale of the
pool was greater than the amount the pool paid to
investors in the ABS credit enhanced by the
originator or third party guarantor, thereby
improving ratings beyond the rating of the
sponsor or originator allowing the new securities
to be sold to the ultimate investors at a
premium.
75Legal and Structural Issues
- Revolving Credits
- Achieving Capital Relief
- Moral Hazard Problem
- Relationship Banking
- Cherry Picking Lemon Selling
- Liquidity Facilities and Large Exposure
- Which Regulator?
76Over-collateralization
- Establishes more collateral than the underlying
ABS created from the pool, the amount of which
depends on - The coupon rates underlying the collateral
- The rates offered to investors,
- The type of rating sought,
- The psychology of the market at the time of the
issue, among other things.
77Indication of over-collateralization levels for
traditional and defeasance mortgage backed bonds
(percent of par)
78Senior/Subordinated Structure
- This is a self-imposed structure by the issuer by
prioritizing cash flows of the entire pool of the
underlying collateral. - This is also the most widely used internal credit
enhancement. - The senior class of bondholders is willing to
sacrifice yield in securing priority of claims
over subordinated class.
79Shifting Interest Structure
- All securitization programs involving
senior/subordinated structures have incorporated
a shifting interest structure which allows
disproportionate redistribution of prepayments
from subordinate class to senior class. -
80Example Shifting Interest Structure
81New Basel Risk Weights Securitization Tranches
AAA / A / BBB / BB / B and below
AA A BBB BB or unrated
Tranche 20 50 100 350 1250 (deduction)
82Types of Assets to be Securitized
- Types of assets chosen for securitization pose a
serious concern for regulatory authorities. - It is likely that the originating bank cherry
picking portfolio of its loans for
securitization. - Attempt to securitize good credits leads to the
deterioration of the remaining assets in the
portfolio. - This is likely to increase originators
capital/risk-asset ratio.
83Cherry Picking and Lemon Selling
- Lemon selling of the loans for securitization may
lead to improvement in the bank portfolio. - Based on the Basle Accord, banks need to lessen
their exposure to credit risk through
diversification of their overall portfolios by - Industry,
- Economic sector,
- Country of the borrower,
- and types of borrower and credit facility.
- Absent of this diversification, minimum capital
ratio would be greater than eight percent. - Assets chosen for securitization, therefore need
to be randomly selected. - The originating bank must maintain a delicate
balance between the on and off balance sheet
without provoking a regulatory backlash.
84Sales of Loan
- Under the existing common law regarding true
sales there are three methods by which a loan
sale by the bank originator can achieve relieve
of regulatory capital. These methods are - Novation
- Assignment and
- Participation
85Novation
- Novation, involves transfer of an asset from the
originator to the SPV with the consent of the
obligor (debtor). - In this tri-party arrangement, the originator and
obligor jointly agree to transfer the asset(s) to
third party the SPV. - Originator unconditional agreement to terminate
all of his security interest, and SPV assumes all
rights and obligations.
86Securitization Through Novation Process
87Assignment
- Under the Common Law, assets can be assigned
through legal assignment and equitable
assignment. - An assignment is a legal assignment that
satisfies four criteria of the section 136 of the
1925 of the Law of Property Act, that the
assignment is - (a) an absolute assignment,
- (b) in writing,
- (c) of the full amount of debt,
- and (d) notified in writing.
- In the event any of the four criteria is not
satisfied, the assignment is termed as an
equitable assignment. - The method of assignment in transfer of assets to
SPV in a securitization is through an equitable
assignment, as originator is unwilling to inform
the customers that their assets are being sold.
88Participation
- This is an agreement where the originating bank
transfers the right to the investors a pro rata
share of interest and principal from the
borrower. - Participation does not transfer voting rights and
does not require the consent of the borrower. -
- It imposes limits on the ability of the
originating bank to the changes in interest
rates, principal, scheduled payments, guarantor,
and collateral without approval of the buyers
(investors).
89Example Participation
- Consider a multinational corporation who wishes
to borrow a 1.25 billion jumbo loan in the
Eurodollar market at LIBOR plus 1.25 percent over
a 7-year period with an up-front fee of 1.25
percent. The lead arranger bank retains 250
million in its book and spread the risk and
reward proportionally among the sub-participants
as illustrated in figure 1.9. The arranger bank
books 4.225 million arranger fee of the total
up-front fee of 15.625 million collected from
the borrower.
90Participation and Sub-Participation
91The Participation Process
92Syndication
- ATLANTA, October 1, 2007 (SPC NYSE)
Spectrum Brands, Inc. announced today that it
has successfully closed a 225 million
asset-based revolving credit facility with
Goldman Sachs Credit Partners L.P. and Wachovia
Bank, National Association. - This facility at rate of 225 basis points over
LIBOR, is available to finance seasonal working
capital and other general corporate needs. - Spectrum Brands generated net sales of 2.5
billion in fiscal 2006 and has approximately
7,500 employees worldwide.
93Transfer Risk
- Transfer risk is analyzed on a qualitative basis,
using several risk indicators such as economic
development, the balance of payment situation,
foreign debt, and the stability and
predictability of economic policies, political
and social stability, and other qualitative
factors.
94Sovereign Creditworthiness Risk Weights
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96Correlations Between Ratings and Variables
97Sovereign Migration
98Transfer risk Migration
Malaysia (1998, Asian crisis), South Korea (1998,
Asian crisis), Kuwait (1990, Gulf war) and Russia
(1991)
99Events and Spread
- Recent work by Kaminsky and Schmukler (2002) who
conclude not only that rating agencies contribute
to financial instability and cross-country
contagion, but also confirm that rating agencies
act pro-cyclical. - The rating agencies do not so much lead but lag
the market and the rating agencies are overall
slow to adjust their ratings.
100Cost of Transfer Risk
- The probability of a transfer event happening has
become lower as governments are perceiving higher
costs of a transfer event in the form of
exclusion of foreign borrowing, losses from FDI
and trade flows. - Transfer rating and sovereign ratings provide, as
expected, very similar assessments of country
risks and based on similar considerations of
countries fundamentals.
101Legal Framework
- Common law governs the process of securitization
in the United States, United Kingdom and
Australia. - Civil Law is the governing principle in the most
other nations in a securitization process. - Civil law restricts the assignment or transfer of
assets. - Also, Insolvency Laws dictate that the obligor is
to give its express consent. - Otherwise, the transfer would not constitute a
true sale.
102Problems for emerging market economies
- 1. Countrys legal issues as to whether assets
can be assigned to an SPV, - 2. Limits imposed by rating agencies (sovereign
ratings ceilings), - 3. Local customs, such as direct debits may be
used for receivables and thereby qualify for
securitization, - 4. Lack of availability of currency swaps if
receivables are denominated in the local currency.
103Potential Achievements in Securitization
- Improved return on assets and return on equity
- Credit risk is reduced as securitization spreads
the risk. - Interest rate risk is mitigated as securitization
of the assets improves asset/liability
management, - Concentration risk to particular obligor(s) and
or industry is mitigated. - Strictly speaking, novation represents the
cleanest form of transfer from legal standpoint.
However it is rarely used.
104Contraction Risk
- Contraction risk arises in the event of falling
interest rates, as prepayments speed up. - The fall in interest rates makes refinancing
attractive for mortgagors or individuals
relocating and selling property. - The pass-through life therefore shortens and
subjects investors to contraction risk.
105Extension Risk
- As rates drop issuer is likely to call the bond
to reissue at a lower rate. - As rates increase, the maturity of the issue is
extended, exposing investors to extension risk. - The market imperfections of the cartel era
provided the financial engineers in the Wall
Street the opportunities
106- There are three basic principles that ensure that
an originator has surrendered control of
financial assets and can legally record a sale of
the assets - - Asset isolation,
- - Originator or SPV control,
- - Originator or seller non-control.
107- The emerging market economies are faced with few
problems in securitization, which include - 1. Countrys legal issues as to whether assets
can be assigned to an SPV, - 2. Limits imposed by rating agencies (sovereign
ratings ceilings), - 3. Local customs, such as whether direct debits
(automatic/electronic payment of debt servicing
obligation by a financial institution on behalf
of an obligor or borrower) may be used for
receivables and thereby qualify for
securitization, - 4. Lack of availability of currency swaps if
receivables are denominated in the local currency.
108Case Study
- We will demonstrate construction of monthly cash
flow for a hypothetical pass-through with
notional of IR850 billion, assuming the
underlying mortgages have WAC of 20.52 percent
and WAM of 102 months and pass-through rate of 19
percent. Furthermore, we assume the underlying
mortgagors prepay at an average rate of 3 percent
per year with seasoning of 18 months.
109Rules for distribution of cash flows
- 1. Periodic coupon interest Disburse coupon
interest to all four-tranche based on the
principal balance at the beginning of the month
for each tranche at the respective coupon
interest rate applicable to the tranche. - 2. Principal Payment Disburse scheduled
principal payment plus prepayment of the entire
pool of collateral to tranche A until it is
completely paid off, followed sequentially to
tranche B, tranche C, and finally the retirement
of the tranche D.
110Four-Tranche Sequential-Pay Structure
Par amount Coupon Rate Maturity in Months Principal Pay-down Window In Months Average Life
Tranche A 21,125,000,000 0.174 36 36 1.625 year
Tranche B 21,125,000,000 0.181 64 29 4.4 years
Tranche C 21,125,000,000 0.190 85 22 6.36 years
Tranche D 21,125,000,000 0.215 102 18 7.84 years
Total collateral IR850 billion
Pass-through Rate 0.190 4.96 years
WAC of Collateral 0.2052
WAM of Collateral 102 Months
G.A. Homaifar, The Case for securitization
of credit in Iran, International Economics, Vol.
LIX. No 2- May 2006
111Four-Tranche Sequential-Pay Structure
Par amount Coupon Rate Maturity in Months Principal Pay-down Window In Months Average Life In year
Tranche A 21,500,000,000 0.174 24 23 1.04
Tranche B 21,500,000,000 0.181 43 20 2.82
Tranche C 21,500,000,000 0.190 61 18 4.40
Z Bonds 21,500,000,000 0.215
Total collateral IR850 billion
Pass-through Rate 0.190 102 4.96 years
WAC of Collateral 0.2052
WAM of Collateral 102 Months
G.A. Homaifar, The Case for securitization
of credit in Iran, International Economics, Vol.
LIX. No 2- May 2006
112Future Flow Securitization
- This transaction involves the borrowing entity to
sell future receivables that would have been
generated by selling future products directly or
indirectly to an off-shore facility known as
special purpose entity (SPE).
113Four-Tranche Sequential-Pay Structure
Par amount Coupon Rate Maturity in Months Principal Pay-down Window In Months Average Life
Par amount Coupon Rate Maturity in Months Principal Pay-down Window In Months In year
Tranche A 21,500,000,000 0.174 24 23 1.04
Tranche B 21,500,000,000 0.181 43 20 2.82
Tranche C 21,500,000,000 0.19 61 18 4.4
Z Bonds 21,500,000,000 0.215
Total collateral IR850 billion
Pass-through Rate 0.19 102 4.96 years
WAC of Collateral 0.2052
WAMof Collateral 102 Months
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117International Balance of Payments Current Account
1978 1979 1980 1981 1982
Total OECD 12.2 -27.7 -69.1 -31 -26.4
Non-OPEC Developing -24 -39 -63 -73 -60
OPEC 4.5 62 115 67 -5
Other Countries -9 -4 -11 -10 3
Major Industrialized Countries Major Industrialized Countries Major Industrialized Countries Major Industrialized Countries
Including Sino-Soviet area Including Sino-Soviet area Including Sino-Soviet area
Source National Westminster Bank Source National Westminster Bank Source National Westminster Bank Source National Westminster Bank
118Hierarchy in future flow-Backed Transactions
-
- Heavy crude oil receivables
- Airline ticket receivables, telephone
receivables, credit card receivables, and
electronic remittances - Oil and gas royalties, export receivables
- Paper remittances
- Tax revenue receivables
- Source Standard Poors (1999b), Fitch (2000b)
119Spreads of Pemex Finance Ltd. Securitized Debt
and UMS Versus US Treasuries
Rating US million Average life (year) Final life (year) Spread over US Treasuries Coupon Issue date
Pemex Finance A AAA 500 3 5 125 5.72 12/4/1998
Pemex Finance A BBB 350 7 8.5 350 7 12/4/1998
Pemex Finance A AAA 400 10 11.5 175 6.3 12/4/1998
Pemex Finance A BBB 250 18 20 412.5 9.15 12/4/1998
Pemex Sr. Unsecured BB 600 10 462.5 9.375 12/2/1998
UMS BB 1500 10 571 9.875 12/4/1998
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122Summary Statistics of Pemex 7-year and 18-year
oil-backed papers and UMS 2026 (Unsecured)
Pemex 7-years Pemex 18-years UMS 2026
Mean 309 356 372
Range 205 202 324
Standard deviation 63 62 79
123Future Flow Securitization by Sector
million Share of total dollar volume No. of transactions
Oil and gas receivables 16,362 45 25
Non-oil export receivables 7,537 20.7 40
Credit card receivables 4,314 11.8 37
Project finance 2,467 6.8 6
Telephone receivables 2,519 6.9 15
Remittances 1,731 4.8 14
Other receivables 1,443 4 11
36,372 100 148
Source Fitch, Moodys and SP Source Fitch, Moodys and SP Source Fitch, Moodys and SP
124Source Basel Committee on Bank Supervision, Bank
for International Settlements
125Source Islamic Republic of Iran Central Bank DAY
1381
126Source Islamic Republic of Iran Central Bank DAY
1381
127Various types of Risks
- Various risks Involved in Future Flow
Securitization are - Sovereign risk will the originator government
take steps to disrupt the payment arrangement set
out in the structured transaction? - Performance risk will the originator have the
ability and willingness to produce and deliver
the product? - Product risk will there be sufficient demand for
the product at a stable price and will the buyer
meet his payment obligation? - Diversion risk can the product or the receivable
be diverted to customers other than designated
customers?
128Total Return Swaps
- TRS are HLT that motivate the receiver to take on
the credit risk of an asset it does not own. - The bank who wishes to layoff the risk to the
reference asset has high concentration risk. - The bank motivations may include
- Reducing exposure without selling the asset
- Preserving banking relationship with the client
- Realizing regulatory capital relief
- Managing balance sheet to originate
129Total Return Swap Example
- A Bank enters into a TRS with a hedge fund on the
reference credit rated BBB to layoff credit risk,
with the notional principal of 50 million. The
bank agrees to pay LIBOR300bps?MV and receives
LIBOR 75 bps.
130Motivations of the Receiver of TRS
- The receiver is likely to have a host of reasons
to enter into this HLT, for example - Financing huge transaction with limited capital
- Exploiting the leverage as the return/risk can be
magnified - Arbitrage profit albeit risky
- Access to capital market not previously available
- Sectoral arbitrage of credit risk in the high
yield market