Super Floater
A super floater is a collateralized mortgage obligation (CMO) tranche whose coupon rate is the leveraged reference interest rate, usually LIBOR, minus the fixed rate (spread). If one-year LIBOR is 3%, the coupon rate would be 2 \* 3% - 4% = 2%. If LIBOR rises to 4%, the coupon rate would be 2 \* 4% - 4% = 4%, even though the reference rate rose by only 1%. All types of floating-rate tranches may be structured as planned amortization class (PAC), targeted amortization class (TAC) — which offer fixed principal payment schedules — companion tranches or sequential pay CMOs. A super floater is a collateralized mortgage obligation (CMO) tranche whose coupon rate is the leveraged reference interest rate, usually LIBOR, minus the fixed rate (spread). A super floater is a collateralized mortgage obligation (CMO) tranche whose coupon rate is the leveraged reference interest rate, usually LIBOR, minus the fixed rate (spread). Super floaters magnify changes in the reference interest rate, which is why they are often used to hedge interest rate risk in portfolios.

What is Super Floater?
A super floater is a collateralized mortgage obligation (CMO) tranche whose coupon rate is the leveraged reference interest rate, usually LIBOR, minus the fixed rate (spread).



Understanding Super Floater
Super floaters are like floaters, except floaters are only linked to the underlying interest rate, rather than being a multiple of it. Since the super floaters coupon rate floats according to a formula based on a multiple of an underlying index, it moves up or down by more than one basis point for each basis point increase or decrease in the index. To prevent the coupon rate from getting negative, super floaters often have a floor rate on the coupon.
Super floaters become interest rate sensitive securities, because they magnify any change in the reference interest rate or index. However, this is also why they are often used to hedge interest rate risk in portfolios. Super floaters offer low base case yields, but can offer very high yields when interest rates rally. Conversely, coupon income can be rapidly eroded when mortgage prepayments speed up in response to falling interest rates — which is known as prepayment risk.
For example, take a super floater with the following coupon formula:
All types of floating-rate tranches may be structured as planned amortization class (PAC), targeted amortization class (TAC) — which offer fixed principal payment schedules — companion tranches or sequential pay CMOs.
Related terms:
Asset-Backed Security (ABS)
An asset-backed security (ABS) is a debt security collateralized by a pool of assets. read more
Collateralized Debt Obligation (CDO)
A collateralized debt obligation (CDO) is a complex financial product backed by a pool of loans and other assets and sold to institutional investors. read more
Collateralized Mortgage Obligation (CMO)
A collateralized mortgage obligation is a mortgage-backed security where principal repayments are organized by maturity and level of risk. read more
Companion Tranche
A companion tranche is designed to provide support to the planned amortization class (PAC) tranche by absorbing variable prepayment rates. read more
Coupon Rate
A coupon rate is the yield paid by a fixed income security, which is the annual coupon payments divided by the bond's face or par value. read more
Floater
A floater, also known as a floating rate note, is a bond whose interest payment is tied to a predetermined benchmark index, such as LIBOR. read more
Interest Rate Risk
Interest rate risk is the danger that the value of a bond or other fixed-income investment will suffer as the result of a change in interest rates. read more
London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR)
LIBOR is a benchmark interest rate at which major global lend to one another in the international interbank market for short-term loans. read more
Planned Amortization Class (PAC) Tranche
A planned amortization class (PAC) tranche is a type of asset-backed security designed to protect investors from prepayment risk and extension risk. read more
What Is Prepayment Risk?
Prepayment risk is the risk associated with the early unscheduled return of principal on a fixed-income security. read more