“That collateralized debt obligation is now effectively worthless because the collateral behind the debt can no longer be collected. ...
Let’s say you have 10 mortgages at $1 million a piece, the sum total of those mortgages are $10 million. So, the banks took the 10 mortgages and bundled them together into a collateralized debt obligation or CDO with a face value of $10 million.
They then sold that new entity that they created to an investment group of some sort, a pension fund, hedge fund, etc. promising them a yield of let’s say 7%. The sales pitch would emphasize the fact that this CDO was backed by real collateral. In the event of loan defaults by the borrowers, the banks would tell the buyer of the CDO that the collateral behind the loan could be sold to recapture any potential losses on the part of the purchaser.
Everything seemed to work fine until the defaults began and the foreclosure process kicked into high gear. The foreclosure process has exposed fatal flaws in the system and the flaw is that the banks cannot prove clear ownership of the mortgage.
Consequently, they are then barred from foreclosing on the property. Because they can no longer foreclose on the properties, the CDO is now effectively worthless.
[Mooncliff comment: And I think nearly everyone significantly underwater will stop paying their mortgages, so the income from the toxic fraction of the mortgages in the CDO will crash to near zero in a matter of months.]
http://kingworldnews.com/kingworldne...he_System.html
If you haven't listened to this highly entertaining story about Toxie the toxic asset, it perfectly illustrates how a $100,000 bundle of toxic mortgages can go to zero pretty fast.
http://www.npr.org/blogs/money/2010/...0/toxie-s-dead
Let’s say you have 10 mortgages at $1 million a piece, the sum total of those mortgages are $10 million. So, the banks took the 10 mortgages and bundled them together into a collateralized debt obligation or CDO with a face value of $10 million.
They then sold that new entity that they created to an investment group of some sort, a pension fund, hedge fund, etc. promising them a yield of let’s say 7%. The sales pitch would emphasize the fact that this CDO was backed by real collateral. In the event of loan defaults by the borrowers, the banks would tell the buyer of the CDO that the collateral behind the loan could be sold to recapture any potential losses on the part of the purchaser.
Everything seemed to work fine until the defaults began and the foreclosure process kicked into high gear. The foreclosure process has exposed fatal flaws in the system and the flaw is that the banks cannot prove clear ownership of the mortgage.
Consequently, they are then barred from foreclosing on the property. Because they can no longer foreclose on the properties, the CDO is now effectively worthless.
[Mooncliff comment: And I think nearly everyone significantly underwater will stop paying their mortgages, so the income from the toxic fraction of the mortgages in the CDO will crash to near zero in a matter of months.]
http://kingworldnews.com/kingworldne...he_System.html
If you haven't listened to this highly entertaining story about Toxie the toxic asset, it perfectly illustrates how a $100,000 bundle of toxic mortgages can go to zero pretty fast.
http://www.npr.org/blogs/money/2010/...0/toxie-s-dead
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