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CHAPTER12 Introduction to Asset Liability Management What is in this Chapter? INTRODUCTION SOURCES OF INTEREST-RATE RISK Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)
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CHAPTER12 Introduction to Asset Liability Management What is in this Chapter? INTRODUCTION SOURCES OF INTEREST-RATE RISK Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

Dec 19, 2015

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Page 1: CHAPTER12 Introduction to Asset Liability Management What is in this Chapter? INTRODUCTION SOURCES OF INTEREST-RATE RISK Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

CHAPTER12Introduction to Asset Liability Management

What is in this Chapter?

INTRODUCTION

SOURCES OF INTEREST-RATE RISK

Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS) 

Page 2: CHAPTER12 Introduction to Asset Liability Management What is in this Chapter? INTRODUCTION SOURCES OF INTEREST-RATE RISK Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

INTRODUCTION

Asset liability management (ALM) interest rate risk: The interest-rate risk arises from the

possibility that profits will change if interest rates change.

liquidity risk: The liquidity risk arises from the possibility of losses due in the bank having insufficient cash on hand to pay customers.

Both risks are due to the difference between the bank's assets and liabilities.

Page 3: CHAPTER12 Introduction to Asset Liability Management What is in this Chapter? INTRODUCTION SOURCES OF INTEREST-RATE RISK Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

INTRODUCTION

The best illustration of ALM : U.S. savings and loan (S&L) crisis Savings and loan banks: retail banks, receive retail

deposits and make retail loans For many years, interest rates stable. Deposits for

around 4% (floating rate), and they lent 30-year mortgages paying about 8% at fixed rates.

Then in the 1980s, the Federal Reserve allowed interest rates to float. Short-term interest rates rose to 16%.

Page 4: CHAPTER12 Introduction to Asset Liability Management What is in this Chapter? INTRODUCTION SOURCES OF INTEREST-RATE RISK Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

Many deposit customers withdrew their funds or demanded the higher rates

The rate of mortgages is fixed with 8%, however the rate of deposits is floating and the banks have to pay 16% to deposit customers

This causes the banks a lot of loss and go to bankrupt

Page 5: CHAPTER12 Introduction to Asset Liability Management What is in this Chapter? INTRODUCTION SOURCES OF INTEREST-RATE RISK Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

INTRODUCTION

Several keys of the above example The rate of deposit is floating and the rate of mortgage

is fixed The deposit (loan) is more (less) sensitive to interest

rate Or, the deposits (one kind of banks’ liabilities) is rate-

sensitive and the mortgage (one kind of banks’ assets) is rate-insensitive.

Page 6: CHAPTER12 Introduction to Asset Liability Management What is in this Chapter? INTRODUCTION SOURCES OF INTEREST-RATE RISK Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

The interest rate risks will rise when the RSL (rate-sensitive liabilities) is not equal to RSA (rate-sensitive assets)

Question: How to evaluate the size to rate sensitivity?

Page 7: CHAPTER12 Introduction to Asset Liability Management What is in this Chapter? INTRODUCTION SOURCES OF INTEREST-RATE RISK Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

Duration of First National Bank's Assets and Liabilities

Duration in year (or in %)

0.4 X (5/100)

Page 8: CHAPTER12 Introduction to Asset Liability Management What is in this Chapter? INTRODUCTION SOURCES OF INTEREST-RATE RISK Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

Review: Duration Analysis for Bonds

Page 9: CHAPTER12 Introduction to Asset Liability Management What is in this Chapter? INTRODUCTION SOURCES OF INTEREST-RATE RISK Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

Review: Duration Analysis for Bonds

Duration in year (or %)=duration in dollars (or $)/V (the initial value)

(Duration in dollars) x (change in interest rate)= the change of V in dollars ($)

(Duration in year) x (change in interest rate)=the change of V in percentage (%)

The change of V in dollars=(the chance of V in %) x the initial value (V)

Page 10: CHAPTER12 Introduction to Asset Liability Management What is in this Chapter? INTRODUCTION SOURCES OF INTEREST-RATE RISK Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

10

Duration Gap Analysis

%V DUR r

r 5%, from 10% to 15%

Asset Value = %P Assets

= 2.7 .05 $100m

= $13.5m

Liability Value = %P Liabilities

= 1.03 .05 $95m

= $4.9m

NW = $13.5m ($4.9m) = $8.6m

DURgap = DURa [L/A DURl]

= 2.7 [(95/100) 1.03]

= 1.72

%NW = DURgap r

= 1.72 .05

= .086 = 8.6%

NW = .086 $100m

= $8.6m

Page 11: CHAPTER12 Introduction to Asset Liability Management What is in this Chapter? INTRODUCTION SOURCES OF INTEREST-RATE RISK Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

Example of Finance Company

Page 12: CHAPTER12 Introduction to Asset Liability Management What is in this Chapter? INTRODUCTION SOURCES OF INTEREST-RATE RISK Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)
Page 13: CHAPTER12 Introduction to Asset Liability Management What is in this Chapter? INTRODUCTION SOURCES OF INTEREST-RATE RISK Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

Duration Analysis

If r 5%

Duration Gap Analysis

DURgap = DURa [L/A DURl]

= 1.16 [90/100 2.77] = 1.33 years

% NW = DURgap X r

= (1.33) .05

= .0665 = 6.5%

Page 14: CHAPTER12 Introduction to Asset Liability Management What is in this Chapter? INTRODUCTION SOURCES OF INTEREST-RATE RISK Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

Managing Interest-Rate Risk

Strategies for Managing Interest-Rate Risk

In example above, shorten duration of bank assets or lengthen duration of bank liabilities

To completely immunize net worth from interest-rate risk, set DURgap = 0

Reduce DURa = 0.98 DURgap = 0.98 [(95/100) 1.03] = 0

Raise DURl = 2.80 DURgap = 2.7 [(95/100) 2.80] = 0

Page 15: CHAPTER12 Introduction to Asset Liability Management What is in this Chapter? INTRODUCTION SOURCES OF INTEREST-RATE RISK Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

INTRODUCTION

liquidity risks This is the challenge of ensuring that the bank has

sufficient liquid assets available to meet all its required payments, including the possibility of a "run on the bank."

A run on the bank occurs when deposit customers lose confidence in a bank's creditworthiness and rush to the bank to take out their savings before the bank collapse

Page 16: CHAPTER12 Introduction to Asset Liability Management What is in this Chapter? INTRODUCTION SOURCES OF INTEREST-RATE RISK Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

In most developed countries, this risk is greatly reduced by deposit insurance backed by the government.

In the United States the Federal Deposit Insurance Company (FDIC) guarantees that retail depositors will be compensated up to $100,000 if their bank fails

Page 17: CHAPTER12 Introduction to Asset Liability Management What is in this Chapter? INTRODUCTION SOURCES OF INTEREST-RATE RISK Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

INTRODUCTION

By modeling and understanding ALM risks: banks seek to minimize the risks and know how much

to charge customers to cover the capital consumed by the risks.

Another important aspect of ALM is determining the fair, risk-minimizing interest rates that should be charged internally between the bank's business units when the lend funds to each other.

Page 18: CHAPTER12 Introduction to Asset Liability Management What is in this Chapter? INTRODUCTION SOURCES OF INTEREST-RATE RISK Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

SOURCES OF INTEREST-RATE RISK

Many banks in emerging-market countries have a large portion of their balance sheets in the form of loans denominated in U.S. dollars Both the structural interest rate and the structural FX

positions are managed in the ALM framework

Page 19: CHAPTER12 Introduction to Asset Liability Management What is in this Chapter? INTRODUCTION SOURCES OF INTEREST-RATE RISK Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

The primary cause of structural interest-rate risk is: customers want both long-term loans and quick access t

o any deposits This leaves banks in a position in which they are receiv

ing long-term, fixed-rate interest payments from borrowers and paying short-term, floating-rate interest to depositor.

Page 20: CHAPTER12 Introduction to Asset Liability Management What is in this Chapter? INTRODUCTION SOURCES OF INTEREST-RATE RISK Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

SOURCES OF INTEREST-RATE RISK

Figure 12-1a illustrates a possible scenario

Figure 12-1b shows the net interest income (NII), i.e., interest income minus interest costs

Page 21: CHAPTER12 Introduction to Asset Liability Management What is in this Chapter? INTRODUCTION SOURCES OF INTEREST-RATE RISK Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

SOURCES OF INTEREST-RATE RISK

Figure 12-1c: noninterest expenses are partially floating

Figure 12-1d : the result is the net earnings for the bank

Page 22: CHAPTER12 Introduction to Asset Liability Management What is in this Chapter? INTRODUCTION SOURCES OF INTEREST-RATE RISK Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

SOURCES OF INTEREST-RATE RISK

The measurement of ALM risks is made more difficult than the management of a simple bond portfolio. because of the indeterminate maturities of assets and

liabilities. The indeterminate maturity describes the uncertainty as

to when customers will make or ask for payments We will discuss the above behaviors in detail in the

following discussion Uncertain prepayment and withdraw behaviors

Page 23: CHAPTER12 Introduction to Asset Liability Management What is in this Chapter? INTRODUCTION SOURCES OF INTEREST-RATE RISK Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

SOURCES OF INTEREST-RATE RISK

What are the differences between the risk of the structural interest-rate position and the market risk of the trading room? In the trading room, all transactions are clearly

structured. With bonds, the maturity is known, and the term is fixed by the contract underlying the security.

With options, the expectation is that every option will be exercised to maximize the advantage to the holder

Page 24: CHAPTER12 Introduction to Asset Liability Management What is in this Chapter? INTRODUCTION SOURCES OF INTEREST-RATE RISK Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

In contrast, ALM products such as mortgages and deposits have many implicit or embedded options that make the values dependent not only on market rates, but also on customer behavior.

For example, customers have the option to withdraw their deposit accounts whenever they wish, or to prepay a mortgage early if they find a cheaper mortgage elsewhere.

Page 25: CHAPTER12 Introduction to Asset Liability Management What is in this Chapter? INTRODUCTION SOURCES OF INTEREST-RATE RISK Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

MAIN PRODUCT CLASSES HELD IN ALM PORTFOLIOS

The main classes of products for asset liability management are the following:Assets Retail personal loans Retail mortgages Credit-card receivables Commercial loans Long-term investments Traded bonds Derivatives

Page 26: CHAPTER12 Introduction to Asset Liability Management What is in this Chapter? INTRODUCTION SOURCES OF INTEREST-RATE RISK Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

MAIN PRODUCT CLASSES HELD IN ALM PORTFOLIOS

Liabilities Retail checking accounts Retail savings accounts Retail fixed-deposits accounts Deposits from commercial customers Bonds issued by the bank

Page 27: CHAPTER12 Introduction to Asset Liability Management What is in this Chapter? INTRODUCTION SOURCES OF INTEREST-RATE RISK Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

In the United States, there is a large market of traded mortgage-backed securities (MBS) 不動產抵押貸款債券 In an MBS, the payments from many mortgages are pooled together. This pool of payments is then used to guarantee payments on several tranches of bondsThe tranches can also be split as to whether they are entitled to the interest payments only (IO) or principal payments only (PO)

Page 28: CHAPTER12 Introduction to Asset Liability Management What is in this Chapter? INTRODUCTION SOURCES OF INTEREST-RATE RISK Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

The value of a tranche principal payments increases when prepayments increase because the cash flows happen sooner

Tranches entitled to interest payments drop significantly in value when prepayments occur because the interest-payment stream stops

The valuation of payment streams therefore depends heavily on customer behavior.

Page 29: CHAPTER12 Introduction to Asset Liability Management What is in this Chapter? INTRODUCTION SOURCES OF INTEREST-RATE RISK Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

The Public Securities Association (PSA) has published a standard for the expected conditional prepayment rate (CPR)固定提前清償率 It says that 0% are expected to prepay in the first month, rising linearly to 6% per annum at month 30

Thereafter, each year 6% of the remaining borrowers are expected to prepay

An MBS with a prepayment rate matching this profile is said to be at 100% PSA. An MBS with twice the prepayment rate would be at 200% PSA

Page 30: CHAPTER12 Introduction to Asset Liability Management What is in this Chapter? INTRODUCTION SOURCES OF INTEREST-RATE RISK Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

A term related to CPR is the SMM (single monthly mortality rate)

This is the percentage of the remaining poll that prepays each month

The CPR and SMM are simply related:

Page 31: CHAPTER12 Introduction to Asset Liability Management What is in this Chapter? INTRODUCTION SOURCES OF INTEREST-RATE RISK Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

Figure 12-2 shows the amount of principal outstanding on a 20-year, 8% mortgage, assuming that the installments are equal and there is no prepaymen

Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

Page 32: CHAPTER12 Introduction to Asset Liability Management What is in this Chapter? INTRODUCTION SOURCES OF INTEREST-RATE RISK Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

Figure 12-3 shows the same mortgage but with prepayments at 100% PSA

>100% PSA: in each year, 6% of the remaining borrowers are expected to prepay

With prepayment, the stream of interest payment is reduced

With prepayment, the principle payment will increase first and drop in the last

Page 33: CHAPTER12 Introduction to Asset Liability Management What is in this Chapter? INTRODUCTION SOURCES OF INTEREST-RATE RISK Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

Table 12-1 shows the NPV of the principal and interest payments for different speeds of prepayment

> Notice that as the PSA increases, the value of the principal payments increases, and the value of the interest payments decreases

Page 34: CHAPTER12 Introduction to Asset Liability Management What is in this Chapter? INTRODUCTION SOURCES OF INTEREST-RATE RISK Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

The PSA standard is a very simple model. The main simplification is that in reality, the prepayment rate is strongly affected by changes in interest rates. When market rates drop, new mortgages have lower interest payments, and homeowners are tempted to refinance their homes by taking out a new mortgage and prepaying the old one In other words, the prepayment is not a constant and is related with interest rate

Page 35: CHAPTER12 Introduction to Asset Liability Management What is in this Chapter? INTRODUCTION SOURCES OF INTEREST-RATE RISK Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

The value of the option to prepay is the difference in the NPV of the two alternative sets of interest payments, minus the strike price

The strike price includes any prepayment penalties and the plain hassle involved in refinancing

A typical prepayment function can be approximated as a logistic function:

Page 36: CHAPTER12 Introduction to Asset Liability Management What is in this Chapter? INTRODUCTION SOURCES OF INTEREST-RATE RISK Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

>The value equals one when x equals negative infinity and equal to zero when x equals positive infinity

>the function has the shape of S curve between one and zero

Page 37: CHAPTER12 Introduction to Asset Liability Management What is in this Chapter? INTRODUCTION SOURCES OF INTEREST-RATE RISK Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

The prepayment rate as a percentage of the PSA can be modeled as follows:

100% PSA: in each year, 6% of the remaining borrowers are expected to prepay

r is the market-refinancing rate

>if r decrease, then prepayment rate?

a, b, c and d are constant

Page 38: CHAPTER12 Introduction to Asset Liability Management What is in this Chapter? INTRODUCTION SOURCES OF INTEREST-RATE RISK Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

>Typical values for the parameters are given in the equation above

>This function is shown in Figure 12-4

Page 39: CHAPTER12 Introduction to Asset Liability Management What is in this Chapter? INTRODUCTION SOURCES OF INTEREST-RATE RISK Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

Page 40: CHAPTER12 Introduction to Asset Liability Management What is in this Chapter? INTRODUCTION SOURCES OF INTEREST-RATE RISK Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

Constant prepayment rate: 6% in each year

The non-constant prepayment rate and the prepayment rate is negatively relative with interest rate

Figure 12-5 shows the effect of rate changes on the NPV of principal-only (PO) payments.

>The sudden drop in value occurs in the region where prepayment rates drop and the average time for the cash flows increases dramatically

Page 41: CHAPTER12 Introduction to Asset Liability Management What is in this Chapter? INTRODUCTION SOURCES OF INTEREST-RATE RISK Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

>As the rate begins to increase from 6% to 8%, the value drops because of the greater discounting

>From 8% to 10% as rates increase, so does the value of the security. This is because there are significantly fewer prepayments of principal, and therefore more interest payments

Once the prepayment rate stabilizes at a new low level, the discounting effect again begins to dominate

Hint: the interest rate has two effects: (1) the discounting effect (2) prepayment effect!!

Page 42: CHAPTER12 Introduction to Asset Liability Management What is in this Chapter? INTRODUCTION SOURCES OF INTEREST-RATE RISK Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

MAIN PRODUCT CLASSES HELD IN ALM PORTFOLlOS

The example above shows that the change in value of an MBS can be a complex function of interest rates

In reality, the value of an MBS is even more complex because customer payments are also path dependent

They are path dependent because the prepayment rates depend not only on the current market rate, but also on the previous rates

Page 43: CHAPTER12 Introduction to Asset Liability Management What is in this Chapter? INTRODUCTION SOURCES OF INTEREST-RATE RISK Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

If rates have previously been low, most of the financially sophisticated borrowers will have already prepaid, and a renewed drop in rates will not cause a significant increase in prepayments

The accurate valuation of mortgage-backed securities is highly complex and the subject of many trading models, but the key points to be aware of are as follows:

Page 44: CHAPTER12 Introduction to Asset Liability Management What is in this Chapter? INTRODUCTION SOURCES OF INTEREST-RATE RISK Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

Mortgage-backed Securities (MBS)

Mortgage-backed securities can be structured to have values that are very complex functions of interest rates.

The value of an MBS is greatly dependent on the prepayment rate.

The prepayment rate is a complex function of interest rates.

The response to changes in interest rates can have significant negative convexity; i.e., the value can rise as rates rise.