Amortizing Security

Amortizing Security

An amortizing security is a class of debt investment in which a portion of the underlying principal amount is paid in addition to interest with each payment made to the security's holder. An amortizing security is a class of debt investment in which a portion of the underlying principal amount is paid in addition to interest with each payment made to the security's holder. Another popular type of amortizing security would be car loans since repayment by the borrower generally includes interest plus principal payments. The interest-only strip will take on all the prepayment risk and the principal-only strip actually benefits from prepayment because the investor gets the money back sooner, benefiting from the time value of money since there is no interest coming anyway. This is also referred to as reinvestment risk, and it is part of the trade off investors must make for a higher interest rate on an amortizing security compared to a non-amortizing bond.

Amortizing securities are debt securities like bonds, but they pay the principal back with each payment rather than upon maturity. Mortgage-backed securities (MBS) are among the most common forms of an amortizing security.

What Is an Amortizing Security?

An amortizing security is a class of debt investment in which a portion of the underlying principal amount is paid in addition to interest with each payment made to the security's holder. The regular payment that the security holder receives is derived from the payments that the borrower makes in paying off the debt.

Amortizing securities are debt-backed, meaning a loan or a pool of loans has been securitized. From the borrower's perspective, nothing has changed from the original loan agreement, but the payments made to the bank flow through to the investor who holds the security created from the loan.

Amortizing securities are debt securities like bonds, but they pay the principal back with each payment rather than upon maturity. Mortgage-backed securities (MBS) are among the most common forms of an amortizing security.
Depending upon the way in which a security is structured, holders of amortizing securities may be subject to prepayment risk.
It is not uncommon for the underlying borrower to prepay a portion, if not all, of the debt's principal if interest rates drop to a point where refinancing makes financial sense.

How an Amortizing Security Works

Amortizing securities are debt securities like bonds, but they pay the principal back with each payment rather than upon maturity. Mortgage-backed securities (MBS) are among the most common forms of an amortizing security.

With an MBS, the monthly mortgage payments that the borrowers make are pooled together and are then distributed to MBS holders. This is an excellent system for freeing up credit to issue more loans as long as the creditor is properly vetting borrowers. Amortizing securities in the form of mortgages and NINJA loans were at the center of the mortgage meltdown.

Another popular type of amortizing security would be car loans since repayment by the borrower generally includes interest plus principal payments. Pools of these loans are called Asset Backed Securities (ABS). To note, prepayment speeds for these types of loans can be quite different compared to MBS.

Amortizing Securities and Prepayment Risk

Depending upon the way in which a security is structured, holders of amortizing securities may be subject to prepayment risk. It is not uncommon for the underlying borrower to prepay a portion, if not all, of the debt's principal if interest rates drop to a point where refinancing makes financial sense.

In the event that prepayment occurs, the investor will receive the rest of the principal and no more interest payments will occur. This leaves the investor with dollars to invest in a lower interest environment than was likely the case when they purchased the amortizing security.

As a consequence, the investor will lose out on interest that they may have otherwise enjoyed if they hadn't chosen an amortizing security. This is also referred to as reinvestment risk, and it is part of the trade off investors must make for a higher interest rate on an amortizing security compared to a non-amortizing bond.

Stripping Amortizing Securities

Because of the unique two-portion payments, an amortizing security can be stripped into interest-only and principal-only products, or some combination where the proportion of the two are unequally allotted to a tranche. The interest-only strip will take on all the prepayment risk and the principal-only strip actually benefits from prepayment because the investor gets the money back sooner, benefiting from the time value of money since there is no interest coming anyway. In this case, the two strips of an amortizing security become proxies for the investor's thesis on the future movement of interest rates.

Related terms:

Asset-Backed Security (ABS)

An asset-backed security (ABS) is a debt security collateralized by a pool of assets. read more

Average Life

Average life is the length of time the principal of a debt issue is expected to be outstanding. The average life is an average period before a debt is repaid through amortization or sinking fund payments. read more

Conditional Prepayment Rate (CPR)

A conditional prepayment rate is an estimate of the percentage of a loan pool's principal that is likely to be paid off prematurely. read more

Interest Only (IO) Strips

Interest only (IO) strips are a financial product created by separating the interest and principal streams of a debt-backed security.  read more

Maturity

Maturity refers to a finite time period at the end of which the financial instrument will cease to exist and the principal is repaid with interest.  read more

Mortgage-Backed Security (MBS)

A mortgage-backed security (MBS) is an investment similar to a bond that consists of a bundle of home loans bought from the banks that issued them. read more

NINJA Loan

A NINJA loan is a slang term for a loan extended to a borrower with "no income, no job and no assets." NINJA loans have largely ceased to exist in the United States due to tighter lending standards put in place after the 2008 financial crisis. read more

Original Face

Original face is the total outstanding balance of a mortgage-backed security (MBS) at the time it is issued. read more

Principal Only Strips (PO Strips)

Principal only strips (PO strips) are the portion of a stripped mortgage backed security that benefits when the underlying mortgages in the pool are paid down faster. read more

Reinvestment Risk

Reinvestment risk is the possibility that an investor might be unable to reinvest cash flows at a rate comparable to their current rate of return. read more