Auto loan credit characteristics fall somewhere between those of mortgages and credit cards. They are secured but on a depreciating asset and are relatively short-term loans. Data on default rates is reasonably accessible where auto loan securitization issues are common.The main risk to all lenders comes from changes in tax policies that have a direct impact on the value of new and second-hand cars and a particular concentration on a particular class of vehicle or type of customer.
If a government acts to reduce taxes or import tariffs on new cars this will at a stroke lower the value of recently bought second-hand cars and the price of new cars. In cases where the reductions are extreme some people who have bought their vehicle on credit may simply return the keys for their original purchase and buy a new car.
Some lenders specialize in lending to taxi drivers or owner–drivers of coaches or trucks. The number of taxi licenses is frequently restricted and it is not uncommon for the cost of the license to be considerably more than the cost of the taxi itself. An increase in the number of licenses issued, a downturn in business or relaxation of licensing requirements will all have a negative impact on the value of the licenses and hence the lender’s collateral.
Auto loans
Posted by admin on July 29th, 2010 | Comments Off
Filed under credits | Tags: credit, loan, loans
Currency Hedging
Posted by admin on July 6th, 2010 | Comments Off
For its part, this section should be the focus of passive currency managers and corporations. Here too, the discipline of how one puts together a currency strategy is the same, though the purpose is different. The currency market practitioner has to form a currency view. That view can come from the bank counterparties that the corporation or asset manager uses, but the currency market practitioner should also have a currency view themselves, with which to compare against such external views. The view itself is created from the signal grid, incorporating currency economics, technicals, flow analysis and long-term valuation. The currency market practitioner should be aware of all these aspects of the currency to which they are exposed. Not being aware is the equivalent of not knowing the business you are in. In the example I have chosen, we keep the focus on emerging market currencies, this time looking at the risk posed by exposure to currency risk in the countries of Central and Eastern Europe.
Filed under Currency Hedging | Tags: Currency Hedging
Mortgage characteristics
Posted by admin on July 9th, 2009 | Comments Off
Home mortgages are a relatively homogeneous product with the major difference being between fixed rate mortgages and those that are floating rate. Historical default rates across the world have generally been among the lowest of any asset class. There are a number of qualitative reasons why this is the case. Owner–occupiers have to live somewhere and their choice is usually between paying rent or making the mortgage payments; mortgages have a form of long-term option on property prices and given their typical term have significant time value. Mortgagors do not default simply because they have negative equity and this option is out-of-the-money. The personal consequences of defaulting on a mortgage are extreme and mortgagors will usually default only in extreme circumstances.
For default rates to rise sharply from their very low “normal” levels usually requires some combination of falling property prices, rising unemployment, falling wages and in the case of floating rate loans higher interest rates.
There are a few examples where mortgage default rates have soared and in recent years these have occurred in countries where there has been a form of managed foreign exchange system that has subsequently collapsed. Mortgagors who took out “cheaper” foreign currency loans found that the value and servicing costs of their loan in local currency terms shot up. Other factors such as falling property prices and higher unemployment also occurred in these cases but were of secondary importance.
In countries where mortgage securitization issues are common there is a wealth of data available on both default and loss rates. In the US these are available on a regional basis and can be analyzed by type of loan and borrower. Publicly available data in most other countries is either sparse or non-existent.
LIED rates vary with the remaining term on the loan and volatility of property prices. In the event of foreclosure banks usually act to sell the properties at auction.
Industry level statistics on home loans are less useful to specialist lenders focusing on segments where most lenders are not prepared to make loans. These include loans made where standard loan-to-value criteria are lowered (and this may be as a result of upfront subsidies on mortgagors’ legal and other costs), on older properties that are difficult to sell or to borrowers with an erratic earnings and employment history.
In some countries individuals may take out mortgages to purchase homes to let. These are riskier than loans to owner–occupiers and ability to meet payments is usually dependent on rental income. Such borrowers are at particular risk if they have taken out floating rate loans, interest rates rise and property prices and hence rental yields fall. Portfolio risks are particularly vulnerable to location concentration.
Filed under Currencies, Currency Hedging, Mortgage | Tags: credit, crisis, loan, mortgage
Exposure at time of default
Posted by admin on June 29th, 2009 | Comments Off
The actual exposure is likely to vary over the term of the loan. In the case of mortgages the principal outstanding falls over time. Continued drawdowns on loans for project financing or real estate will result in the principal increasing over time. Where the exposure is a credit facility it is likely that the customer in financial distress will draw down to the maximum allowed under the terms of the facility before defaulting on any other loans. Derivative and other transactions may also result in the bank having an outstanding exposure and these will need to be taken into account.
Filed under Currency Hedging | Tags: crisis, Currency, rent
LOSSES IN EVENT OF DEFAULT
Posted by admin on June 19th, 2009 | Comments Off
The level of expected losses arising from delinquencies should be viewed as a part of the costs of doing business. Actual losses may be higher or lower. Expected credit losses for individual loans depend on the probability that the loan will become delinquent and the likely level of losses in such an event. It is much harder to estimate the probability of default than likely loss rates on delinquent loans.
Loss rates on delinquent accounts depend on four variables. The actual exposure at the time the account was frozen, the level and quality of collateral, the time taken to resolve the case and other direct costs such as legal fees.
Filed under Business | Tags: business, Finance, income, losses, risk
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