Definition Collateralized Debt Obligation (CDO)

CDO stands for Collateralized Debt Obligation and it involves the pooling of debt to reduce risk and raise returns. CDOs have been widely blamed for the 2008 financial crisis, but most people do not know what they are. When a lot of debt (such as home mortgages) is pooled together, bonds can be issued on this debt. The debt is split into different tranches, and each tranche is assigned a different payment priority and interest rate. This process is known as securitization.

CDO Tranche

When there is a lack of debt to securitize, it is possible to create a synthetic product by pooling all of the lowest tranches (highest interest payments, highest risk) to create a new product known as a CDO. The theory behind this is that even though the assets behind the bonds are risky, by pooling large amounts together it is possible to minimize risk whilst still receiving the high interest rates.

The problem with CDOs is that although they are split into tranches with the top tranche being rated AAA (i.e. no risk) and the bottom tranche being rated as junk, they are all based on the same asset - the worst subprime mortgages from a large mortgage pool.

CDO Ratings

Much of the problem with CDOs in the mid 2000s was that they were assigned AAA ratings whilst being based on less-than-investment grade assets. The reasons for the rating agencies giving these CDOs top ratings were:

  • Conflict of Interest - the issuer of a CDO is not obliged to take any rating assigned to it, therefore the issuers would always use the best rating they could obtain, so the agency giving the highest rating was paid the fees
  • Faulty Models - Historical data suggested that no more than 4-6% of homeowners would default, so the holders of the AAA tranches which required default rates of 15% or higher were assumed to be entirely safe. However, once US house prices fell, subprime borrowers defaulted en masse

The theory is that mortgage default rates would need to be very high in order for the top AAA rated tranche to experience losses, but the reality was that when some of the worst subprime mortgage owners defaulted, they all defaulted. Therefore the risk on the AAA tranche was almost the same as on the junk tranche, so as soon as US housing prices stopped rising and people started defaulting, hundreds of billions of dollars of CDO's were effectively wiped out.

CDO Trading

Trading and structuring CDOs was such huge business for the large bulge bracket banks and was responsible for such a vast portion of their profits that when the US housing economy started to slow and mortgage originators started running out of fresh loans to make, the banks had to come up with an alternative. The solution was to create synthetic CDO's which were not actually based on any mortgage or debt or anything else, they were made up of credit default swaps.

CDS And CDOs

The idea here is reasonably complex and the details are not that relevant but in essence banks sold tranches of insurance (CDS) on tranches of mortgage CDOs. You could buy the top tranche of a synthetic CDO and you would be writing a credit default swap on the top tranche of another CDO which was based on actual mortgages. As long as that 'real' tranche did not default, you continued to collect the premiums on the CDS's you had written.

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