Mortgage Cash Flow Obligation - MCFO

  

Categories: Mortgage

See: Mortgage.

You’ve got a few hundred thousand bucks in the bankie-pie and you’re looking to invest the funds. You decide to go into the mortgage business.

You go through all the licensing and legal procedures to become an official mortgage lender in your state. Once all the paperwork is filed and approved, you’re ready to loan cash. You still just have the few hundred thousand bucks to make the mortgage. You’re a legal mortgaging company...just not a very well-capitalized version. But you’ve gone this far, so you decide to push ahead.

You basically have enough for one mortgage. But what if that one mortgage doesn’t pay? If they default, you lose everything.

Even if you think mortgages are good investment, it makes sense to diversify. Instead of directly loaning the money out for a single mortgage, you can invest those funds in a Mortgage Cash Flow Obligation. It lets you participate in a bunch of mortgages at once.

Buy an MCFO and you get access to revenue generated from a pool of mortgages. It’s considered a pass-through investment, with the payments from homeowners passing through to the holders of the associated MCFO. So instead of payments from a single client in your thread-bare mortgage business, your payments are derived from a group of similar mortgages. An individual default doesn’t dry up your entire return.

The MCFO comes with its own downside. You don’t actually have a claim on the underlying property. If you loan money out for individual mortgages, you can respond to any defaults with foreclosure and take possession of the house. You don’t have that recourse with an MCFO.

Related or Semi-related Video

Finance: What is a second mortgage?4 Views

00:00

Finance allah shmoop What is a second mortgage Okay you

00:07

know what a first mortgages it's otherwise cleverly named what

00:12

is called it is called oh yeah Mortgage it's Just

00:14

a loan on a house You paid four hundred grand

00:17

for this baby Hundred grand down two hundred fifty grand

00:19

in a first mortgage And they're still fifty grand You

00:23

owe well where's that fifty large coming from the bank

00:27

wouldn't loan you any more on a first mortgage that

00:30

was costing you six percent a year Tio you know

00:32

to rent that money So you had to get a

00:34

second mortgage which should things go awry and you become

00:40

a statistic Well that's it's fully behind the first mortgage

00:44

in the priority stack of payback So in a bankruptcy

00:48

situation the first mortgage first what's called a first mortgage

00:52

get it fully paid along with any fees associated with

00:55

it and back interest accrued and any other things that

00:59

are associated with that first mortgage it stands in line

01:02

first in priority Then any cash leftover gets attributed to

01:07

that second mortgage So not surprisingly second mortgage money costs

01:13

a lot more to rent then first mortgage money because

01:16

the risk of non payment in a bad situation is

01:20

meaningful E higher especially when the borrowed does this for 00:01:25.136 --> [endTime] a living

Up Next

Finance: What is a Mortgage?
345 Views

What is a mortgage? A mortgage is a loan on property. Obviously not many individuals, or companies for that matter, can or want to pay cash for the...

Finance: What is Adjustable-Rate Mortgage (ARM)?
17 Views

What is an Adjustable-Rate Mortgage (ARM)? An adjustable-rate mortgage is a mortgage that has a changing interest rate. Whatever it changes to is b...

Finance: What is Interest Only Mortgage?
17 Views

An interest-only mortgage is a mortgage on which you only pay the rent on money borrowed, rather than on the principal.

Finance: What is a Reverse Mortgage?
6 Views

With a reverse mortgage, payments go in the opposite direction of a normal mortgage, where you pledge your home as an asset, and receive $ each month.

Find other enlightening terms in Shmoop Finance Genius Bar(f)