7. Fnancial Innovation Flashcards
Q: What are different types of financial innovation?
a) Institutional innovation
Creation of new financial firms.
b) Product innovation
New products such as derivatives, securitized assets, foreign currency mortgages and so on. Are introduced to respond better to changes in market demand or to improve market efficiency.
c) Process innovation
New ways of doing financial business including online banking, phone banking and new ways of implementing IT-technology and so on
Q: Examples of financial innovations?
a) ATM
b) Credit and Debit cards
c) Online payment systems like Paypal
Q: Example of a bad financial innovation that was popular until 2008?
a) Collateralized Debt Obligations (CDOs):
Pool together various types of debt, such as mortgages, loans, or bonds, into a single investment vehicle. Divided into tranches that investors can buy.
b) Structured Investment Vehicles (SIVs):
Off-balance-sheet entities created by financial institutions, like banks. Designed to generate profit by borrowing money at a low short-term interest rate and investing those funds in longer term, higher yielding assets.
c) Credit Default Swap (CDSs):
Derivatives contracts that provide insurance-like protection against the default or credit risk of a particular debt instrument, like a bond or loan. Lets say you give a loan to a company. To protect yourself from the risk of default, you buy a CDS. You pay regular premiums to the seller of a CDS, and the seller promises to compensate you if a specific credit event occurs
Q: Why did Collateralized Debt Obligations (CDOs), Structured Investment Vehicles (SIVs), and Credit Default Swaps (CDSs) fail during the 2008 crisis?
a) Collateralized Debt Obligations (CDOs):
Many of them were backed by mortgage-related assets, particularly subprime loans.
b) Structured Investment Vehicles (SIVs):
Failed due to the heavy reliance on short-term borrowing to finance long-term investments. When the crisis hit, the market for short-term debt froze. As a result, they faced liquidity problems, and many SIVs were unable to meet their debt obligations. The decline in the value of the underlying assets, particularly mortgage-related securities, further exacerbated their financial distress.
c) Credit Default Swap (CDSs):
Many financial institutions and investors bought and sold CDSs as a form of insurance against default risk. Problem arose when CDS market became highly speculative. Investors betting on failure of certain companies. Failure of one major institution triggered a chain reaction of CDS payouts, causing further financial instability
Q: What is a CDS?
a financial swap agreement that the seller of the CDS will compensate the buyer (the creditor of the reference loan) in the event of a loan default (by the debtor) or other credit event. The buyer of the CDS makes a series of payments (the CDS “fee” or “spread”) to the seller and, in exchange, receives a payoff if the loan defaults.
Q: What is Securitization?
Securitization is the process in which certain types of assets are pooled so that they can be repackaged into interest-bearing securities. The interest and principal payments from the assets are passed through to the purchasers of the securities.
Q: What is Mortgage-backed securities (MBS)?
Securitization. Combines mortgages into one large pool, then divides the large pool into smaller pieces based on each individual mortgage’s inherent risk of default and then sell those smaller pieces to investors.
Q: How does Mortgage-backed securities (MBS) create liquidity?
The process create liquidity by enabling smaller investors to purchase shares in a larger asset pool.
Q: Economic benefits of Mortgage-Backed Securities?
“originate and distribute” - spreading out credit exposures, thereby spreading risk concentrations and reducing systemic vulnerabilities
Q: What is Asset-backed Securities (ABS)?
Asset-backed securities (ABS) are securities backed by the cash flows of a pool of assets. The process involves transfering the ownership of the underlying assets to a special purpose vehicle (SPV) or a trust. The SPV then issues securities backed by the cash flows generated from the underlying assets. Investors can purchase these ABS, which represent a share in the cash flows generated by the underlying assets.
Q: Benefits of Asset-backed securities (ABS)?
a) Allow financial institutions to convert illiquid assets, such as individual loans, into marketable securities
b) Provide diversification for investors by allowing them to gain exposure to a pool of assets rather than holding individual loans directly.
Q: Give an overview of the securitization market
a) Mortgage-backed securities (MBS)
b) Asset-backed securities (ABS)
c) HELOANs are home equity loans;
d) HELOCs are home equity lines of credit;
e) CMBS are commercial mortgage-backed securities;
f) CDOs are collateralized debt obligations
Q: What are the options of a company to raise new capital? And what are their cons?
a) Loan
Often very expensive due to credit rating of company and the associated rise in interest rates
b) Bond issue:
Often very expensive due to credit rating of company and the associated rise in interest rates
c) Issuance of stock:
Dilute the ownership and control of company
Q: Explain the process of pooling and transfer from a company’s standpoint
- The originator:
Company wants to raise capital. Loan, bond issue or issuance of new stocks are not preferred. - Revenue-generating assets:
Company has a constantly revenue-generating part. This part might be more worth than the company as a whole - Transform future cash flows:
Sells the rights to the cash flows to someone else. Hence, transfers the income stream to a lump sum today. - Creating a special purpose vehicle (SPV):
To facilitate the transaction, the company creates a special purpose vehicle (SPV). The company then transfer some of its assets to the SPV. - Originator loses claim:
Once they are here, the company (originator) doesn’t have control or claim over them anymore. Company cant use it to pay its debts. - Involvement of an investment bank:
The originator often seeks the assistance of an investment bank, known as the arranger, to help structure and set up the transaction.
Q: The Process of Securitization (short):
- Pooling and transfer
- Issuance
- Credit enhancement and tranching
- Servicing
- Repayment structures