Showing posts with label Pricing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pricing. Show all posts

Saturday, April 4, 2009

lend support to government measures aimed at taking troubled assets off banks’ balance sheets—such as the US Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP)

TO BE NOTED: From Shopyield:

"
The pricing of subprime mortgage risk in good times and bad: evidence from the ABX.HE indices

The pricing of subprime mortgage risk

Ingo Fender (BIS)* and Martin Scheicher (ECB)**

Abstract

This paper investigates the market pricing of subprime mortgage risk on the basis of data for the ABX.HE family of indices, which have become a key barometer of mortgage market conditions during the recent financial crisis. After an introduction into ABX index mechanics and a discussion of historical pricing patterns, we use regression analysis to establish the relationship between observed index returns and macroeconomic news as well as market-based proxies of default risk, interest rates, liquidity and risk appetite. The results imply that declining risk appetite and heightened concerns about market illiquidity—likely due in part to significant short positioning activity—have provided a sizeable contribution to the observed collapse in ABX prices since the summer of 2007. In particular, while fundamental factors, such as indicators of housing market activity, have continued to exert an important influence on the subordinated ABX indices, those backed by AA and AAA exposures have tended to react more to the general deterioration of the financial market environment. This provides further support for the inappropriateness of pricing models that do not sufficiently account for factors such as risk appetite and liquidity risk, particularly in periods of heightened market pressure. In addition, as related risk premia can be captured by unconstrained investors, ABX pricing patterns appear to lend support to government measures aimed at taking troubled assets off banks’ balance sheets—such as the US Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP). ( NB DON )

Keywords: ABX index, mortgage-backed securities, pricing, risk premia.
JEL classification numbers: E43, G12, G13, G14.
*

BIS Working Papers are written by members of the Monetary and Economic Department of the Bank for International Settlements, and from time to time by other economists, and are published by the Bank. The views expressed in them are those of their authors and not necessarily the views of the BIS.

Copies of publications are available from:

Bank for International Settlements

Press & Communications

CH-4002 Basel, Switzerland

E-mail: publications@bis.org

Fax: +41 61 280 9100 and +41 61 280 8100

This publication is available on the BIS website (www.bis.org).

Friday, April 3, 2009

For occasional investors, Travis Larson recommends investinginbonds.com.

TO BE NOTED: From Shopyield:

Retail transparency

Online help for novice bond investors

A Financial Q&A with Steve Dinnen.

from the April 2, 2009 edition, Christian Science Monitor

Q : I have had trouble finding a user-friendly bond site. I seem to keep getting sites where there are runs of transactions bought and sold in the past 12 hours. But I can’t find a site where I could peruse bonds, check out maturities, yield, etc. I would really appreciate it if you can direct a novice user

M.C., Center Sandwich, N.H.

A: The bond market, vastly larger than the stock market, can indeed be a daunting place in which to navigate. There are several for-pay sites, which can be quite expensive and are aimed mainly at professional traders. Your brokerage house also should have web-based information on bonds that’s available to clients.

For occasional investors, Travis Larson recommends investinginbonds.com. This is an educational web site designed by the industry and sponsored by the organization for which he is a spokesman, the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association (formed after a merger that included the Bond Market Association).

Mr. Larson says the site is appropriate for individuals with all levels of financial education, from beginners to experienced investors. It offers bond price information and includes a wide variety of market data, news, commentary, and education about bonds.

You can dive fairly deep into information on corporate, municipal, and government bonds.
This has been ranked as a top investor site for bonds by a number of media outlets, and he says it’s “continually enhanced and updated with new data, information, and features.”

Bonds are a fast-moving target. Here’s an area where it pays to check with your financial adviser, who typically will have access to proprietary research and trading programs.

Submit your question to Steve Dinnen.

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Note to Treasury Secretary Geithner and his team… you could encourage the TARP banks to use this platform to list mortgage securities…

TO BE NOTED: From Shopyield:

"
Trading platform transparency

There are many alternative trading systems (ATS) in the fixed income markets… they have slightly different price discovery, quotation and trade reporting structures… think of them as “liquidity pools”…

I’ve always thought the important thing for market transparency and fairness is that all investors have access to all bids and offers on an ATS (think of eBay’s structure)… this is also how exchanges work… (instead of this structure most fixed income platforms are “request for quote” (RFQ) where a buyside firm puts out a request for bids or offers from dealers… generally other investors don’t see the RFQs… so the ATS are most often dealer controlled markets… I wonder what academic studies are available on this topic?)

Broadridge, which spun off from ADP, announced a new alliance to create access to less liquid mortgage and other bonds… the platform allows equel access to all users (sellside and buyside)…

Note to Treasury Secretary Geithner and his team… you could encourage the TARP banks to use this platform to list mortgage securities… here is what the platform can handle (article follows from Wall Street and Tech):

Trade Discovery ™

• Agency Pools
• Agency CMOs
• Trust IOs / POs

~~~~ Broadridge, Beacon To Help Clients Find Fixed-Income Liquidity

Trading clients allowed to pore over daily fixed-income securities transaction records.
By Penny Crosman
March 31, 2009

Broadridge, a provider of technology-based outsourcing solutions to the financial services industry, and Beacon Capital Strategies, which operates a marketplace dedicated to providing liquidity and electronic trading in the less-liquid fixed-income market, today announced a multi-year strategic alliance. The alliance is meant to help the firms serve their clients who actively trade less-liquid fixed-income securities including agency mortgage-backed securities, asset-backed securities, and collateralized mortgage obligations.

Broadridge is a fixed-income securities processing provider that currently handles on average more than $3 trillion in notional value of U.S. fixed-income securities transactions daily. Beacon established the first trading platform tailored to he less-liquid fixed-income market, which is open to all participants on an anonymous and equal basis. This alliance will help the firms’ clients locate difficult-to-find securities in the less-liquid fixed-income segment, thereby enhancing liquidity and efficiency to the overall marketplace.

By using Broadridge’s impact and MBS Expert products and Beacon’s Trade Discovery platform, clients will be able to search through less-liquid fixed-income securities, find the other side of the trade for instruments that meet specific investment criteria, and transact on liquidity that otherwise would not be publicly advertised in current trading channels.”~~~~