ACST101 Lecture Notes - Lecture 12: Special Purpose Entity, Mortgage Broker, Credit Risk

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ACST101 LECTURE 30/5/18
WK12; THE GLOBAL FINANCIAL CRISIS
“The sharp increase in high-risk mortgages that went into default beginning in 2007,
contributing to the most severe recession in decades. The housing boom of the mid-2000s
combined with low interest rates at the time prompted many lenders to offer home loans
to individuals with poor credit. When the real estate bubble burst, many borrowers were
unable to make payments on their subprime mortgages”.
THE FINANCIAL CRISIS
- Early 2000’s interest rates in the US were at historically low levels.
- Many took the opportunity to take out a mortgage and this put pressure on housing
prices in the US.
- US. Affordable Housing policy also created a setting where home ownership among
poorer population encouraged.
- Financial institutions often outsourced the mortgage origination to a mortgage
broker and they were paid commission per mortgage (not risk adjusted….’agency
cost’ brokers meant to act in best interest of those for whom they are agent, but had
conflict of interest and didn’t need to worry about the credit risk)
- Very loose lending standards
- Agency problem and incentive problem
- Result Subprime loans with very attractive honeymoon periods and these reset to
a dramatically higher interest rate later
- Investors also looking for better rates on ‘safe assets’ in the low interest rate
environment
- The mortgage loans were then repackaged and sold to investors;
oSecuritisation (using a special purpose vehicle)
oMortgage back securities (MBS)
oAsset backed securities (ABS)
oCredit Derivatives (CDS, CDO)
- The subprime mortgages start to reset to a higher rate and loan defaults spiked
(starting in 2007 and peaking in 2009)
- The rush of foreclosures puts downwards pressure on the housing market and bursts
the pricing bubble
- The value of the MBS depends on the repayment of the underlying loans – subprime
and in default – so MBS value falls dramatically
- Enormous losses investments in risky mortgage related securities
- The fallout was a major contributor to the global recession that followed
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EXAMPLE – MOTGAGE RESETS
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Document Summary

The sharp increase in high-risk mortgages that went into default beginning in 2007, contributing to the most severe recession in decades. The housing boom of the mid-2000s combined with low interest rates at the time prompted many lenders to offer home loans to individuals with poor credit. When the real estate bubble burst, many borrowers were unable to make payments on their subprime mortgages . Early 2000"s interest rates in the us were at historically low levels. Many took the opportunity to take out a mortgage and this put pressure on housing prices in the us. Affordable housing policy also created a setting where home ownership among poorer population encouraged. Result subprime loans with very attractive honeymoon periods and these reset to a dramatically higher interest rate later. Investors also looking for better rates on safe assets" in the low interest rate environment.

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