Explainer

Securitization Fundamentals

The complete guide to how securitization works—from originating assets to issuing securities and beyond.

18 min readUpdated
SecuritizationABSCapital Markets
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What is Securitization?

Securitization is financial alchemy. It takes thousands of individual loans—each with its own borrower, terms, and risks—and converts them into standardized securities with defined risk profiles that institutional investors can analyze, price, and trade.

At its core, securitization pools financial assets—such as loans, receivables, or leases—and issues securities backed by those assets' cash flows. It transforms illiquid individual assets into tradeable securities that can be sold to capital markets investors.

The technique originated in the US mortgage market in the 1970s and has since expanded to encompass virtually every asset class that generates predictable cash flows: auto loans, credit cards, student loans, equipment leases, trade receivables, and more.

Why Securitize?

Securitization offers benefits to multiple parties across the transaction:

For Originators

Funding & Capital Benefits

  • Funding diversification beyond traditional bank lending
  • Lower cost of funds than corporate debt
  • Balance sheet management via true sale treatment
  • Regulatory capital efficiency for banks
For Investors

Investment Benefits

  • Portfolio diversification into new asset classes
  • Risk-adjusted returns via structured tranches
  • Credit enhancement protections on senior notes
  • Predictable amortizing cash flows

Basic Structure

At its simplest, securitization involves a straightforward sequence:

1

Asset Origination

An originator creates or acquires financial assets—consumer loans, mortgages, receivables.

2

True Sale to SPV

Assets are sold to a special purpose vehicle, achieving bankruptcy remoteness from the originator.

3

Securities Issuance

The SPV issues tranched securities backed by asset cash flows to capital markets investors.

4

Servicing & Administration

A servicer collects payments while a trustee distributes cash according to the waterfall.

The Securitization Process

Bringing a securitization to market is a complex, multi-month process involving numerous parties and workstreams. Here's how it typically unfolds.

T-16 to T-8 weeks

Phase 1: Preparation

Mandate: Select underwriters (investment banks) to structure and market the deal
Due diligence: Underwriters review originator operations and historical performance
Rating agency engagement: Preliminary discussions on structure and credit enhancement
Legal structure: Establish SPV, begin drafting transaction documents
T-8 to T-4 weeks

Phase 2: Structuring

Pool selection: Identify assets meeting eligibility criteria
Capital structure: Determine tranching and credit enhancement levels
Cash flow modeling: Model performance under various stress scenarios
Documentation: Finalize offering documents and legal opinions
T-4 to T-1 weeks

Phase 3: Marketing

Preliminary ratings: Rating agencies assign expected ratings
Investor outreach: Roadshow presentations, one-on-one meetings
Order book building: Collect investor indications of interest
Price guidance: Narrow pricing range based on demand
T-1 to T weeks

Phase 4: Pricing & Closing

Pricing: Final spreads set based on order book
Allocation: Securities allocated to investors
Closing: Assets transferred to SPV, securities issued, proceeds disbursed
Final ratings: Rating agencies publish final ratings

Asset Selection and Pooling

Not all assets qualify for a securitization pool. Eligibility criteria ensure the assets have the characteristics needed for predictable performance and investor confidence.

Common Eligibility Criteria

Seasoning
Minimum age (e.g., 3+ payments made) to demonstrate payment history
Delinquency status
Assets must be current—not past due
Credit quality
Minimum credit score or rating requirements
Loan-to-value
Maximum LTV ratios for secured assets
Concentration limits
Limits on exposure to any single borrower or region
Documentation
Complete and valid loan documentation

Pool Characteristics

The aggregate pool is analyzed across several weighted average metrics:

WAC
Weighted Average Coupon: Average interest rate weighted by balance
WAL
Weighted Average Life: Average time to principal repayment
FICO
Weighted Average FICO: Average credit score (consumer assets)
LTV
Weighted Average LTV: Average loan-to-value (secured assets)
Definition

Stratification

The breakdown of a pool by various characteristics—credit score bands, LTV ranges, geographic distribution. Stratification tables are a standard part of offering documents, allowing investors to assess concentration risks and portfolio composition.

Tranching and Credit Enhancement

Tranching divides the securities into classes with different priorities for receiving cash flows. Senior tranches are paid first; junior tranches absorb losses first. This creates different risk/return profiles from the same asset pool.

The Tranche Waterfall

Class A (AAA)
First priority for interest and principal. Last to absorb losses. Largest tranche, lowest yield.
Class B (AA)
Paid after Class A. Absorbs losses after junior tranches exhausted.
Class C (A/BBB)
Mezzanine tranches with intermediate risk/return.
Class D/Equity
First to absorb losses. Receives excess spread. Highest yield, highest risk. Often retained by originator.

Credit Enhancement Types

TypeDescriptionTypical Level
SubordinationJunior tranches absorb losses first5-30%
OvercollateralizationAssets exceed liabilities2-10%
Excess spreadAsset yield minus liability cost1-5% p.a.
Reserve accountsCash set aside for losses/liquidity0.5-3%
Letters of creditBank guarantee for liquidityVaries

For detailed coverage, see our Credit Enhancement explainer.

Rating Agency Process

Rating agencies (S&P, Moody's, Fitch, DBRS) assign credit ratings to ABS tranches. These ratings influence pricing, investor eligibility, and regulatory treatment.

The Rating Process

1

Preliminary Engagement

Issuer shares deal terms and asset data. Agencies provide initial feedback on required enhancement levels.

2

Asset Analysis

Agencies analyze historical performance, loss and prepayment expectations, concentration risks.

3

Structural Analysis

Review waterfall mechanics, triggers, legal structure, counterparty risks.

4

Cash Flow Modeling

Run scenarios to test tranche performance under stress.

5

Committee Approval

Internal committee reviews analysis and approves ratings.

6

Surveillance

Ongoing monitoring and potential rating adjustments post-issuance.

Rating Factors

Asset credit quality: Historical default and loss rates
Credit enhancement: Subordination, OC, reserves
Structural protections: Triggers, performance tests
Servicer quality: Operational capability, backup arrangements
Legal structure: True sale, bankruptcy remoteness
Counterparty risk: Account bank, swap counterparty ratings

Post-Crisis Changes

Following 2008, rating agency practices evolved significantly. Requirements for transparency increased, methodologies became more conservative, and regulatory oversight intensified. Investors now conduct more independent analysis rather than relying solely on ratings.

The Investor Base

ABS investors range from conservative insurance companies buying AAA tranches to hedge funds seeking equity returns. Understanding the investor base helps issuers structure deals to meet market demand.

Investor Types by Tranche

TrancheTypical InvestorsKey Considerations
AAAInsurance, banks, money marketsRegulatory treatment, duration, liquidity
AA/AInsurance, pension funds, asset managersYield pickup, credit quality
BBBAsset managers, hedge fundsRisk-adjusted return, convexity
EquityOriginators, hedge funds, specialist fundsExcess spread, call rights, alignment

Investor Considerations

Spread
Yield relative to benchmark (SOFR, Treasuries)
Duration/WAL
Interest rate sensitivity, cash flow timing
Credit quality
Rating, enhancement levels, historical performance
Liquidity
Secondary market trading, deal size
Regulatory treatment
Risk weights, eligible investments

Ongoing Reporting

After issuance, extensive reporting keeps investors informed about pool performance and structural status.

Monthly Reports

Typical monthly investor reports include:

Pool statistics: Balance, WAC, WAL, prepayment rates
Delinquency and default data: By bucket and trend
Loss data: Gross losses, recoveries, cumulative net loss
Trigger status: Compliance with performance triggers
Waterfall distribution: Payments to each tranche
Credit enhancement: Current subordination and OC levels

Loan-Level Data

Event Notifications

Trigger breaches or curesServicer changesRating actionsMaterial events affecting the pool

Regulatory Framework

Securitization operates within extensive regulatory frameworks, particularly following the Global Financial Crisis. Key regulations vary by jurisdiction.

Definition

Risk Retention

Requirement that originators/sponsors retain economic interest in securitized assets, ensuring “skin in the game.” Typically 5% of the transaction, held as horizontal slice (first loss), vertical slice, or combination.

EU Securitization Regulation

STS framework
Simple, Transparent, and Standardized securitizations receive preferential capital treatment
Due diligence requirements
Institutional investors must conduct independent analysis
Disclosure templates
ESMA-mandated formats for loan-level and transaction data
Reporting repositories
Data submitted to registered securitization repositories

US Regulation

Reg AB II
Enhanced disclosure requirements for registered ABS
Risk retention
Generally 5% retention with certain exemptions
Volcker Rule
Limits on bank proprietary trading and fund investments
Basel capital rules
Risk weights for securitization exposures

STS Benefits

Preferential Treatment

Securitizations meeting STS criteria receive lower capital requirements for bank and insurance investors, eligibility for more investor types, market signaling of structural quality, and liquidity coverage ratio benefits.

Putting It Together

Securitization is a powerful tool that connects asset originators with capital markets investors. When properly structured, it provides efficient funding for originators, diversified investment opportunities for investors, risk distribution across the financial system, and transparency through extensive disclosure requirements.

Understanding the fundamentals—asset selection, tranching, credit enhancement, and regulatory requirements—is essential for anyone working with securitized products.

Further Reading

5 curated resources from industry experts

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