And what does a high default rate do to the flow of payments, especially the junior tranches of those MBSs? Which you can bet are the ones the banks are offloading first. MBSs are generally structured to deal with a default rate of no higher than 3% or so on the underlying pools, more than that and real fun stuff starts to happen. With a >10% default rate even the senior and super-senior tranches take a hit and the lower tranches are zeros as has happened in the US.Magis wrote:A decrease in housing prices does not decrease the value of mortgage-backed securities. What affects the value of mortgage-backed securities is the flow of payments from the mortgagee.
And, as we've both already mentioned, the mortgages in question are already insured by a Crown Corporation, meaning that that the feds were already on the hook for these mortgages in the case of default.
The key here is the liability is limited under the previous arrangement, once the CHMC loses $8 billion is broke and it's all over & done. If there are $20 billion in losses the banks will eat the remainder. This is no longer true, we get eat the remainder now after that $8 billion is gone.
I haven't provided direct evidence since they've buried the transactions where I can't find them. None of this stuff shows up on the Bank of Canada reports, government flow of funds or any of the other financial reports I keep an eye on. All I can say is there's a lot of crappy mortgages which are going to default at a very high rate, a ton of MBSs are using these mortgages as the underlying, and unless the banks are retarded beyond belief they've offloaded as much of this dogshit as they can onto the government in exchange for cash. We know the government has carried out bond sales in the exact amount as these mortgage and MBS purchases so the banks are sitting on cold hard cash while the government is left holding a bag of used dog food.In any case, you haven't provided any evidence that the Government has lost money on those market transactions, and quoting a general decrease in housing prices in the 1990s certainly doesn't cut it, especially since housing prices don't directly affect the value of these securities.