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I believe in "Baptism by fire" that will transform me from an average joe to a true blue bee's knees in corporate finance and investment banking

Thursday, April 03, 2008

Random notes on subprime

The sub-prime mortgage crisis is the major financial crisis of the new millennium whose origin is in the United States (US) housing market. Subsequently, this spread to Europe and some other parts of the world. The gradual softening of international interest rates during the last few years, coupled with relatively easy liquidity conditions across the world, provided for increased risk appetite of investors leading to expansion in the sub-prime market. The word ‘sub-prime’ refers to borrowers (who are not rated as ‘prime’) and who do not have a sound track record of repayment of loans. The risks inherent in sub-prime loans were sliced into different components
and packaged into a host of securities, referred to as asset-backed securities and collateralised debt obligations (CDOs). Credit rating agencies had assigned risk ranks (e.g. AAA, BBB) to them to facilitate marketability. Because of the complex nature of such new products, intermediaries such as hedge funds, pension funds and banks, who held them in their portfolio or through SPVs, were not fully aware of the risks involved. When interest rates rose leading to defaults in the housing sector, the value of the underlying loans declined along with the price of these products. Institutions were saddled with illiquid and value-eroded instruments, leading to liquidity crunch; the crisis in the credit market subsequently spread to the money market as well. The policy response in the US and the Euro area has been to address the issue of enhancing liquidity as well as to restore the faith in the financial system. The sub-prime crisis has also impacted the emerging economies, depending on their exposure to the sub-prime and the related assets.
India has remained relatively insulated from this crisis. The banks and financial institutions in India do not have marked exposure to the sub-prime and related assets in matured markets. Further, India’s gradual approach to the financial sector reforms process, with the building of appropriate safe-guards to ensure stability, has played a positive role in keeping India immune from such shocks.

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