Warehousing

Warehousing

Warehousing is an intermediate step in a collateralized debt obligation (CDO) transaction that involves purchasing loans or bonds that will serve as collateral in a contemplated CDO transaction. Warehousing is an intermediate step in a collateralized debt obligation (CDO) transaction that involves purchasing loans or bonds that will serve as collateral in a contemplated CDO transaction. A collateralized debt obligation (CDO) is a complex structured-finance product that is backed by a pool of loans and other interest-bearing assets. The assets are stored in a warehouse account until the target amount is reached, at which point the assets are transferred to the corporation or trust established for the CDO. The bank may or may not hedge this risk. In 2006 and 2007 Goldman Sachs, Merrill Lynch, Citigroup, UBS and others were actively warehousing subprime loans for CDO deals that the market seemed to have an insatiable appetite for — until it didn't.

Warehousing is the accumulation and custodianship of bonds or loans that will become securitized through a CDO transaction.

What Is Warehousing?

Warehousing is an intermediate step in a collateralized debt obligation (CDO) transaction that involves purchasing loans or bonds that will serve as collateral in a contemplated CDO transaction. The warehousing period typically lasts three months, and it comes to an end upon closing of the transaction when they are ultimately securitized and sold as part of the CDO.

Warehousing is the accumulation and custodianship of bonds or loans that will become securitized through a CDO transaction.
A collateralized debt obligation (CDO) is a complex structured-finance product that is backed by a pool of loans and other interest-bearing assets.
This intermediate step before the transaction is finalized typically lasts three months, during which time the underwriting bank is subject to the risks involved in holding those assets.

Understanding Warehousing

A CDO is a structured financial product that pools together cash flow-generating assets and repackages this asset pool into discrete tranches that can be sold to investors. The pooled assets, comprising mortgages, bond, and loans, are debt obligations that serve as collateral — hence the name collateralized debt obligation. The tranches of a CDO vary substantially with their risk profile. Senior tranches are relatively safer because they have priority on the collateral in the event of a default. The senior tranches are rated higher by credit rating agencies but yield less, while the junior tranches receive lower credit ratings and offer higher yields.

An investment bank carries out the warehousing of the assets in preparation of launching a CDO into the market. The assets are stored in a warehouse account until the target amount is reached, at which point the assets are transferred to the corporation or trust established for the CDO. The process of warehousing exposes the bank to capital risk because the assets sit on its books. The bank may or may not hedge this risk.

CDOs Gone Wild!

In 2006 and 2007 Goldman Sachs, Merrill Lynch, Citigroup, UBS and others were actively warehousing subprime loans for CDO deals that the market seemed to have an insatiable appetite for — until it didn't. When cracks in the dam started appearing, demand for CDOs slowed, and when the dam burst, holders of CDOs collectively lost hundreds of billions of dollars.

In a detailed chronicle of events laid out in a subcommittee report of the U.S. Senate, "Wall Street and the Financial Crisis: Anatomy of a Financial Collapse," it was reported that Goldman "was acquiring assets for several CDOs at once, [and] the CDO Desk generally had a substantial net long position in subprime assets in its CDO warehouse accounts." In early 2007, the report continues, "Goldman executives began to express concern about the risks posed by subprime mortgage-related assets in the CDO warehouse accounts."

How Goldman subsequently handled these assets on its books and other dealings in CDOs is a topic for another discussion, but suffice to say the bank ended up being charged with fraud and forced to pay record fines. It happily took a taxpayer bailout and paid millions in bonuses to employees.

Related terms:

Asset-Backed Security (ABS)

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

Capital Risk

Capital risk is the potential of loss of part or all of an investment. Discover more about the term "Capital Risk" here. 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 Debt Obligation Cubed (CDO-Cubed)

A collateralized debt obligation cubed (CDO-Cubed), which is backed by collateralized debt obligation squared tranches, is a derivative on steroids. read more

Fixed Income & Examples

Fixed income refers to assets and securities that bear fixed cash flows for investors, such as fixed rate interest or dividends. 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

Mortgage Pool

A mortgage pool is a group of mortgages held in trust as collateral for the issuance of a mortgage-backed security.  read more

Synthetic CDO

A synthetic CDO is a form of collateralized debt obligation that invests in credit default swaps or other noncash assets to gain exposure to fixed income. read more

Tranches

Tranches are portions of secuitized financial products structured to divide risk or group characteristics in ways that are marketable to various investors. read more

Warehouse Lending

Warehouse lending is credit extended by a financial institution to a loan originator to fund a mortgage that a borrower initially used to buy a property. read more