• C++ Programming for Financial Engineering
    Highly recommended by thousands of MFE students. Covers essential C++ topics with applications to financial engineering. Learn more Join!
    Python for Finance with Intro to Data Science
    Gain practical understanding of Python to read, understand, and write professional Python code for your first day on the job. Learn more Join!
    An Intuition-Based Options Primer for FE
    Ideal for entry level positions interviews and graduate studies, specializing in options trading arbitrage and options valuation models. Learn more Join!

August subprime mortgage remittance report

Joined
9/8/04
Messages
295
Points
28
August subprime mortgage remittance report concerning deals in the subprime ABX.HE index. Source: JPMorgan

60+ delinquencies continue to rise at an above average pace, but the
increases (while off the charts from a historic perspective) remain
consistent with the steep trajectory so far. Historically,
delinquencies reach a steady state at months 16-18, and then begin
to decline at around month 24 (on a prepay-adjusted basis).
Clearly, this trend will not apply for this vintage.

Prepayment-adjusted 60+ delinquencies (as % of original balance)
increased by 54bp, 78bp, 150bp and 193bp for ABX 06-1, 06-2, 07-1
and 07-2, respectively for the August reporting date (Charts 1 to
4). That is a larger increase versus last month for all but ABX.06-
2. The pace of increase remains extraordinarily high relative to
the seasoning, particularly on 07-2.

60+ delinquency rates continue to show significant tiering. In ABX-
07-1, average 60-day prepayment-adjusted delinquencies were at 9.2%,
but the low (CMLTI 06-WFH3 60+ at 6.5%), and high (MSAC 06-HE6 at
17.1%) differ by over 10 percentage points. That is reflected in
ABX.07-1.BBB- pricing in the low 30s, which indicates that a small
number of deals will avoid principal loss, using an assumed duration
of 2-3 years for the most junior tranches.

Prepayment-adjusted 30+ day delinquencies rose by 65bp, 77bp, 170bp
and 236bp for 06-1, 06-2, 07-1 and 07-2, respectively. New
delinquencies are easily keeping pace with any loans leaving the
pipeline via liquidation. The weakest deal in each index using 30+
delinquencies: MABS 05-NC2 (14.8%), SAIL 06-4 (19.5%) MSAC 06-HE6
(21.8%) and NHELI 07-2 (16.7%).
 
Back
Top