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The Economics of Structured Finance

Überblick

"(...) The essence of structured finance activities is the pooling of economic assets (e.g. loans, bonds, mortgages) and 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 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. (...)"

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Titel:
The Economics of Structured Finance
Autor_in:
Joshua D. Coval; Jakub Jurek; Erik Stafford
Herausgeber_in:
Harvard Business School
Gruppe/n:
Sonstiges
Ort:
Boston, MA
Verlag:
Harvard Business School
Erscheinungsjahr:
2008
Reihe:
Working Paper 09-060

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