17 - Secondary Mortgage Market - ch. 19, 20
ucla | MGMT 170 | 2023-05-31T10:53
Table of Contents
Supplemental
- FDIC (federal deposit insurance corporation) insures up to $250k in a single account
Lecture
- fannie mae (NYSE:FNMA) and freddie mac (NYSE:FMCC)
- fannie mae - federal national mortgage association, created 1938, privatized 1968
- freddie mac - federal home loan mortgage corporation, created by Emergency Home Finance Act of 1970, largest buyers of home loans in the US
- HUGE companies together owning 50% of residential home loans and $7 trillion in loans and securities
- during 2007-8 crisis, they nearly went bankrupt and were placed in conservatorship of the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA - housing an economic recovery act of 2008)
- ginnie mae
- Government National Mortgagge Associate (HUD act of 1968)
- US govt corp within Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD)
- ginnie mae guarantees mortgage backed securities
- conforming loans
- mortgage loans that conform to fannie mae and freddie mac underwriting guidelines for:
- loan size, creditworthiness (FICO), DSCR, LTV, and others
- non-conforming loans
- mortgage loans that don’t conform to the previous guidelines - at a time
- subprime loans
- mortgages that fall BELOW the underwriting guidelines of fannie mae and freddie mac
- in FICO, DSCR, LTV
- NOT considering loan size
- seasoned mortgages
- mortgages that have been paying monthly principal and interest on time
- longer the payments stay current, the more seasoned it is
- RMBS and CMBS
- residential mortgage backed securities and commerical mortgage backed secuirities
- created when pools of resi or comm mortgages are tranched into securities for sale to investors in the capital markets
- primary riskss are dfault risk and prepayment risk
- default risk
- when default rate on the mortgages in the traunch of a MBS is higher than projected at time of MBS offering
- prepayment risk
- when prepayment rate on the mortgages in the traunch of a MBS is higher than projected at time of MBS offering
- CMOs
- collateralized mortgage obligations
- debt securities issued using a pool of mortgage loanss as collateral
- issuer retains ownership of the loans
- CDOs
- collateralized debt obligations
- any debt can be collateral for the securities
- POs, IOs, and floaters and inverse floaters
- principal only tranches, interest only traunches, and tranches tied to an index like LIBOR
- unqiue securitiess creaated to appeal to different investors
Discussion
Resources
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