Collateralised
Debt Obligations
OTC Description
Collateralized
Debt Obligations (CDOs) are structured fixed-income and equity securities backed
by a variety of assets including corporate loans, bonds, residential and commercial
mortgages and other asset-backed securities. CDOs can also include synthetic exposure
to these assets through credit default swaps. CDOs are securitized products issued
out of a special purpose vehicle or trust structure, with a variety of tranches
issued that vary in seniority, coupon rate and credit quality. It is estimated
that approximately $1 trillion in face value of CDO securities remain outstanding.
Largely intended to be buy-and-hold securities, CDOs were generally issued on
a 144A or Reg S basis, with limited information available for a buyer to accurately
determine pricing in the secondary market. When they have traded, CDOs have traditionally
traded over-the-counter (OTC) among a scattered array of dealers around the globe
- usually only with the dealer who originally underwrote the CDO. Due to the insolvency
and financial instability of the traditional large dealers, virtually no secondary
trading market exists. Currently, investors have nowhere to turn to find buyers
for their troubled CDO investments. SecondMarket has leveraged its state-of-the-art
technology, deep buyer and seller bases, and centralization of data and analytical
tools to create an independent marketplace for a wide variety of CDO types including
cash & synthetic CDOs of ABS, loans, bonds, hybrids, synthetics and CDO-squared.
Collateralized
Debt Obligations (CDOs) are structured fixed-income and equity securities backed
by a variety of assets including corporate loans, bonds, residential and commercial
mortgage and other asset-backed securities- and can include synthetic exposure
to these assets through credit default swaps.
CDOs
are generally securitized and issued out of a special investment vehicle or trust
structure, with a variety of tranches issued that vary in seniority, coupon rate
and credit quality. A
typical CDO structure may have 5-6 tranches, with ratings varying from AAA to
BB or B and equity (generally unrated). First developed in 1987 by bankers at
Drexel Burnham Lambert, the CDO market grew to over $500 billion in issuance in
2006, the peak issuance year for CDOs.
According
to SIFMA, over $1.4 trillion in CDO securities have been issued in the past 5
years, with a few hundred billion in additional issuances not accounted for in
statistics.
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Excluding CDOs that have been liquidated, it is estimated that there are approximately
$1 trillion in face value of current outstanding securities. The CDOs themselves
are very complex; in addition to having different collateral types, CDOs can be
structured in various ways depending upon their purpose (such as risk management
or arbitrage) including cash-flow deals, pure synthetic transactions, hybrids
of the two and market value. CDO Liquidity Largely intended to be “buy and hold”
securities, investment banks placed CDO securities on a 144A or Reg S basis, with
limited information available for a buyer to accurately price. Accordingly, there
has historically not been a very active secondary market for CDOs. In addition,
due to the 144A nature of the securities, as well as the counterparty agreements
with some of the tranches, some CDOs have transfer restrictions. When they have
traded, CDOs have traditionally traded over-the-counter (OTC) among a scattered
array of dealers around the globe – usually only with the dealer who originally
underwrote the CDO. Due to the insolvency and financial instability of the traditional
large dealers, the secondary trading market virtually no longer exists. Currently,
investors have nowhere to turn to for price discovery for their CDO securities.
SecondMarket has leveraged its technology and deep buyer base, adding CDO data
and analytical tools to centralize trading through its online trading platform,
to help correct this imbalance. Major CDO Structures and Classifications As mentioned
above, there are myriad collateral types underlying the CDO structures. CDOs can
be described and classified by the major asset types, which include: • Asset backed
Securities including RMBS, CMBS and other consumer ABS; • Corporate bonds (these
structures are also known as Collateralized Bond Obligations or CBOs); • Banks
loans (the structures are also known as Collateralized Loan Obligations or CLOs);
• Emerging market debt; • Credit derivatives; • Other CDOs (these structures are
also known as CDO-squared); • Other specialized debt types. Additionally, CDOs
can be classified by the motivation for CDO formation. CDOs serve two general
functions- balance sheet reduction and arbitrage. The motivation of the issuing
institution for balance sheet transactions, often large financial institutions
such as banks, is often to remove assets from their balance sheets to free up
capital and/or lower their risk profile
Arbitrage
CDOs
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attempt to capture a spread between relatively higher yielding assets in the collateral
pool and lower yielding CDO issued liabilities. The following four structures
achieve these objectives: Cash
CDOs The exposure to underlying assets or transference of risk from assets can
either be done by purchasing the asset outright or synthetically. Cash CDOs actually
own the underlying MBS, bonds, loans or other collateral. The asset portfolios
are typically managed in one of two ways: Cash-flow With cash-flow CDOs, the portfolio
is structured such that asset managers pay principal and interest to holders of
the senior and mezzanine CDO tranches with proceeds generated from interest payments
and principal payments from maturing securities of the pool collateral. Certain
restrictions are placed upon the manager, with any purchase or disposition of
assets usually tied to credit (and not market) considerations. Market Value Market
value structures are unique in that their asset pool can increase and decrease
over time based upon changes in the value of the portfolio over time. Underlying
collateral is bought and sold to manage liability payments to investors. With
this type of structure, a close monitoring of collateral market trading activity
is undertaken, and the collateral is marked to market. The manager has much more
purchase and disposition freedom than with a cash flow CDO. Synthetic CDOs Synthetic
CDOs attempt to diversify risk of certain collateral for the seller and give the
buyer exposure to the same asset on the other side of the transaction. The underlying
collateral is not owned, but diversification and exposure are achieved through
the writing of a variety of credit default swaps which are tied to the desired
asset exposure, also known as “reference entities.” Hybrid CDOs With hybrid CDOs,
the collateral is usually a pre-determined mix of both funded securities and credit
derivatives. This structure usually results in a deal with a super-senior tranche
and the remainder of the structure similar to any other cash-flow transaction
as described above. The super-senior performs two functions: first to fund for
any cash-flows required to cover losses on the credit derivatives, and second,
to provide for “super-catastrophic losses” – usually losses far in excess of normal
AAA assumptions.
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