Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Yield-curve spread

 
Wikipedia: Yield-curve spread
Finance

Banknotes.jpg


Financial markets

Bond market
Stock (Equities) Market
Foreign exchange market
Derivatives market
Commodity market
Money market
Spot (cash) Market
OTC market
Real Estate market
Private equity


Market participants

Investors
Speculators
Institutional Investors


Corporate finance

Structured finance
Capital budgeting
Financial risk management
Mergers and Acquisitions
Accounting
Financial Statements
Auditing
Credit rating agency
Leveraged buyout
Venture capital


Personal finance

Credit and Debt
Employment contract
Retirement
Financial planning


Public finance

Tax
Government debt
Deficit spending
Warrant (of payment)


Banks and banking

Fractional-reserve banking
Central Bank
List of banks
Deposits
Loan
Money supply


Financial regulation

Finance designations
Accounting scandals


Standards

ISO 31000
International Financial Reporting


Economic history

Stock market bubble
Recession
Stock market crash
History of private equity


Yield curve spread on a simple mortgage-backed security (MBS) is the flat spread over the treasury yield curve required in discounting a pre-determined coupon schedule to arrive at its present market price.

That is, the MBS yield curve spread is based on a comparison of the market price to a model of the bond which includes no variability in interest rate or mortgage repayment rates.

Definition

For mortgage-backed securities, a model of typical repayment rates tends to be given; for example, the PSA formula for a particular Fannie Mae MBS might equate a particular group of mortgages to an 8 year amortizing bond with a 5% mortality per annum. This gives a single series of nominal cash flows (like a riskless bond). If these payments are discounted to net present value with a static treasury yield curve the sum of their values will tend to overestimate the market price of the MBS. The parallel shift, which, if applied to the yield curve makes the NPV of the anticipated receipts equal to the market price is the Yield curve spread.

See also

References

Hayre, L. 2001, Salomon Smith Barney Guide to Mortgage-Backed and Asset-Backed Securities, Wiley ISBN 0-471-38587-5


Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
 
 

 

Copyrights:

Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Yield-curve spread" Read more