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The Economics of Structured Finance

TLDR
In this paper, the authors examine how the process of securitization allowed trillions of dollars of risky assets to be transformed into securities that were widely considered to be safe, and argue that two key features of the structured finance machinery fueled its spectacular growth.
Abstract
The essence of structured finance activities is the pooling of economic assets like loans, bonds, and mortgages, and the subsequent issuance of a prioritized capital structure of claims, known as tranches, against these collateral pools. As a result of the prioritization scheme used in structuring claims, many of the manufactured tranches are far safer than the average asset in the underlying pool. This ability of structured finance to repackage risks and to create “safe” assets from otherwise risky collateral led to a dramatic expansion in the issuance of structured securities, most of which were viewed by investors to be virtually risk-free and certified as such by the rating agencies. At the core of the recent financial market crisis has been the discovery that these securities are actually far riskier than originally advertised. We examine how the process of securitization allowed trillions of dollars of risky assets to be transformed into securities that were widely considered to be safe, and argue that two key features of the structured finance machinery fueled its spectacular growth. First, we show that most securities could only have received high credit ratings if the rating agencies were extraordinarily confident about their ability to estimate the underlying securities’ default risks, and how likely defaults were to be correlated. Using the prototypical structured finance security—the collateralized debt obligation (CDO)—as an example, we illustrate that issuing a capital structure amplifies errors in evaluating the risk of the underlying securities.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Deciphering the Liquidity and Credit Crunch 2007-08

TL;DR: The authors summarizes and explains the main events of the liquidity and credit crunch in 2007-08, starting with the trends leading up to the crisis and explaining how four different amplification mechanisms magnified losses in the mortgage market into large dislocations and turmoil in financial markets.
Journal ArticleDOI

Deciphering the Liquidity and Credit Crunch 2007-2008

TL;DR: The financial market turmoil in 2007 and 2008 has led to the most severe financial crisis since the Great Depression and threatens to have large repercussions on the real economy as mentioned in this paper The bursting of the housing bubble forced banks to write down several hundred billion dollars in bad loans caused by mortgage delinquencies at the same time the stock market capitalization of the major banks declined by more than twice as much.
Journal ArticleDOI

Too much finance

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined whether there is a threshold above which financial development no longer has a positive effect on economic growth, and they used dierent empirical approaches to show that there can indeed be too much finance.
Journal ArticleDOI

Markets: The Credit Rating Agencies

TL;DR: In this article, the authors explore how the financial regulatory structure propelled three credit rating agencies (Moody's, Standard & Poor's (S&P), and Fitch) to the center of the U.S. bond markets, and how these ingredients combined to contribute to the subprime mortgage debacle and associated financial crisis.
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Neglected Risks, Financial Innovation, and Financial Fragility

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a standard model of financial innovation, in which intermediaries engineer securities with cash flows that investors seek, but modify two assumptions: first, investors neglect certain unlikely risks.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: In this article, the authors identify five common risk factors in the returns on stocks and bonds, including three stock-market factors: an overall market factor and factors related to firm size and book-to-market equity.
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Journal ArticleDOI

Forecasting Default with the Merton Distance to Default Model

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the accuracy and contribution of the Merton distance to default (DD) model, which is based on Merton's (1974) bond pricing model, and compared the model to a "naive" alternative, which uses the functional form suggested by Merton model but does not solve the model for an implied probability of default.
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The Effect of Bond Rating Agency Announcements on Bond and Stock Prices

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined daily excess bond returns associated with announcements of additions to Standard and Poor's Credit Watch List, and to rating changes by Moody's and S&P.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Relationship between Credit Default Swap Spreads, Bond Yields, and Credit Rating Announcements

TL;DR: In this paper, the relationship between credit default swap spreads and bond yields was examined and conclusions on the benchmark risk-free rate used by participants in the credit derivatives market were reached.
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