P1 or P2
Today Bloomberg published a brief piece "Mortgage Prepayment Rate Reaches Highest Level Since 2005." I like how it gives color to our FRM topic on prepayment as a key risk factor in an MBS; and I like how it illustrates that prepayment can have several causes (financial versus non-financial) and influences (e.g., so-called burnout effect).
In the FRM, prepayment is firstly a call option, held by the borrower (mortgagor), which attaches to the loan (embedded option) and creates the negative convexity at low yields (btw, does it also contribute to negative convexity at high yields?).
About this Bloomberg piece, I have two questions:
Today Bloomberg published a brief piece "Mortgage Prepayment Rate Reaches Highest Level Since 2005." I like how it gives color to our FRM topic on prepayment as a key risk factor in an MBS; and I like how it illustrates that prepayment can have several causes (financial versus non-financial) and influences (e.g., so-called burnout effect).
In the FRM, prepayment is firstly a call option, held by the borrower (mortgagor), which attaches to the loan (embedded option) and creates the negative convexity at low yields (btw, does it also contribute to negative convexity at high yields?).
About this Bloomberg piece, I have two questions:
- Is this statement (in the piece) true? "Prepayment speeds also reflect borrower defaults and debt retired in home sales, which increased in August to a two-year high as the housing market showed signs of recovery."
- Is this statement (in the piece) true? "Mortgage bond investors monitor prepayment rates as they influence returns. Bondholders risk losses when buying debt for more than 100 cents on the dollar as the value can be erased when homeowners take out new mortgages too quickly to repay existing debt. With debt trading below face value, returns increase when repayments accelerate."