Characteristics of Securitizations that Determine Issuers’ Retention of the Risks of the Securitized Assets
- 1 September 2008
- journal article
- Published by American Accounting Association in The Accounting Review
- Vol. 83 (5) , 1181-1215
- https://doi.org/10.2308/accr.2008.83.5.1181
Abstract
We hypothesize and provide evidence that characteristics of banks’ loan securitizations accounted for as sales determine the extent to which banks retain the risks of the securitized loans. We show that banks retain more risk when: (1) the types of loans have higher and/or less externally verifiable credit risk, (2) the loans are closed-ended and banks retain larger contractual interests in the loans, and (3) the loans are closed-ended and banks retain types of contractual interests that more strongly concentrate the risk of the securitized loans. We show that the magnitude and type of retained contractual interests are not risk-relevant in revolving loan securitizations, because banks have more incentive and ability to provide implicit recourse, a non-contractual interest.Keywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- Do Managers Time Securitization Transactions to Obtain Accounting Benefits?SSRN Electronic Journal, 2006
- Are Asset Securitizations Sales or Loans?SSRN Electronic Journal, 2006
- Asset-Backed Securities: Costs and Benefits of Bankruptcy RemotenessSSRN Electronic Journal, 2005
- Regulatory Capital and Earnings Management in Banks: The Case of Loan Sales and SecuritizationsSSRN Electronic Journal, 2005
- What is the value of recourse to asset-backed securities? A clinical study of credit card banksJournal of Banking & Finance, 2003
- Banks' Capital, Securitization and Credit Risk: An Empirical Evidence for CanadaSSRN Electronic Journal, 2003
- The impact of FDICIA and prompt corrective action on bank capital and risk: Estimates using a simultaneous equations modelJournal of Banking & Finance, 2001
- A reexamination of mean-variance analysis of bank capital regulationJournal of Banking & Finance, 1990
- Bank funding modesJournal of Banking & Finance, 1987
- The Effect of Interest Rate Changes on the Common Stock Returns of Financial InstitutionsThe Journal of Finance, 1984