Mortgage-Backed Securities: Products, Structuring, and Analytical Techniques
Product Description
An in-depth look at the latest innovations in mortgage-backed securities The largest sector of the fixed-income market is the mortgage market. Understanding this market is critical for portfolio managers, as well as issuers who must be familiar with how these securities are structured. Mortgage-Backed Securities is a timely guide to the investment characteristics, creation, and analysis of residential real estate-backed securities. Each chapter contain… More >>
Mortgage-Backed Securities: Products, Structuring, and Analytical Techniques
5 Responses to “Mortgage-Backed Securities: Products, Structuring, and Analytical Techniques”
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Compared to other books and especially handbook of mbs this book has very uniform treatment you don’t feel like it is a collection of articles written by different people. The subject is discussed with detail and flow which will allow a person to put it in practice. Have not read the book from cover to cover yet but whatever random parts I read I got answers to questions I had been having for quite sometime.
Rating: 5 / 5
The guy next to our office was working with AFT/Intex and doing some ABS/MBS modeling. He did some presentation on the subject, but I didn’t understood a word he spoke. However, the product looked interesting. So I decided to check it out in this book.
I have to say it is presented very nicely. I only read about 3/4th of the book. I have not used the knowledge for anything yet. So I cannot say how much it has helped me. But the topic is clear and well presented.
Rating: 5 / 5
A well-written, easy-to-follow book that serves as a fantastic addition to any fixed income or real estate curriculum. Those already in or looking to enter the mortgage securitization business should have the information contained in this book as part of their arsenal.
Rating: 5 / 5
This book can be used either as a reference for specific technical securities questions or for generic background reading on a related topic. Many people in our office find it very useful and it always seems to disappear from my desk. A must have five star book!
Rating: 5 / 5
If you are a securities analyst wanting to understand recent innovations in financial instruments, Fabozii’s topic can be very germane. He describes the myriad ways that bundling together mortgages can produce, in terms of cash flow and risk. Naturally, the book delves heavily into how well both can be modelled.
Specifically, there is a key section on how to measure prepayments and defaults. Both act against the “ideal” nature of a given instrument. Where ideal means that all debtholders will repay the debts in full and on the regular predicated schedule. We see different measures of delinquency – for example – current, 30 days delinquent, 60 days delinquent, and 90+ days delinquent. This is one very common classification, used by the US Office of Thrift Supervision. Other groups has similar measures.
Much other space in the book explains how the cash flow can be divided into tranches. Different ones based on differing yields and risk.
A cynical reader might surmise that the implementation of ideas like those in the book have contributed to the recent turmoil in the mortgage industry. Aiding and abetting.
Rating: 4 / 5