Mortgage Pool

  

Categories: Mortgage

See: Mortgage.

You may have heard of a mortgage-backed security. They became famous during the financial crisis of 2007-2008. They were debt instruments (similar to bonds) that were backed by a group of home mortgages. Watch The Big Short if you haven't.

Wall Street banks bought tons of them during a housing boom of the early part of the 2000s, thinking they were safe investments. They were then stuck holding a bunch of them when the market collapsed, leading to a financial crisis and an eventual government bailout.

Mortgage pools provide the basis of mortgage-backed securities...like how batter provides the basis of a cake, or how water provides the basis of a wet t-shirt contest. A mortgage pool consists of a group of similar mortgages...borrowers with similar credit scores buying houses of similar values. These get bundled together (or pooled, if you'd rather). Then this big pile of mortgage debt becomes the basis of securities (those mortgage-backed securities we mentioned before), which can then be sold on the open market.

Having a mortgage pool provides some diversification, in that a single default by one of the associated homeowners doesn't cause a major threat to securities issued based on the pool. However, this diversification is limited.

All the mortgages in a pool are similar...that's part of the plan. They likely have the same risk, duration, geographic area, size, type of collateral (a house), color of paper used to sign the documents, etc. This means that all the mortgages will react in a similar way to market forces. An economic downturn that increases the number of home defaults will impact all the homeowners that contribute to the pool in the same way. It's like a school of sardines when a shark enters the area...they all turn the same direction at once.

Since everything reacts in a similar way to market influences, when things go bad, they go bad for all the pool contributors. In that case, it's not diversification. It's more like...gasoline on a fire.

Hence the issues that came up in the mortgage meltdown that led up to the 2007-2008 financial crisis. When the market turned, it turned for everyone in the same way. Many pools became completely toxic, because they weren't filled with completely independent actors. They were filled with a bunch of situations likely to react exactly the same to a bad housing market...i.e. with people who stopped paying their mortgages.

Related or Semi-related Video

Finance: What is a Reverse Mortgage?6 Views

00:00

Finance allah shmoop What is a reverse mortgage All right

00:07

people let's start with a normal mortgage You put one

00:09

hundred grand down borrow three hundred grand and are the

00:12

proud new owner of this baby in palo alto california

00:15

You make payments for thirty years at five percent interest

00:18

and then you retire their debt free So that's a

00:21

mortgage but what's a reverse mortgage Like one of these

00:25

egg trump Well kind of at least financially the payments

00:29

go in the opposite direction of a normal mortgage Like

00:32

you're old you just want to live out your remaining

00:35

years with the basic comforts Shower seats stair lift high

00:39

absorption adult diapers You own all of your home No

00:43

mortgage on it You paid it all off The home

00:45

is now worth a million box Nice shoebox There you

00:49

can do a reverse mortgage pledging your home is an

00:53

asset and basically just receiving a payment of l say

00:56

five grand a month from that reverse mortgage and you'll

01:00

get to deduct interest costs as you go Justus if

01:03

it were a normal mortgage well after forty months you

01:07

you know croak in that time period you've taken out

01:09

Forty times five grand or two hundred grand in loans

01:12

plus some interest and you sell your home for a

01:15

cool million Rather your heirs dio So what happens now

01:19

Well they just take the million bucks from the sale

01:21

write a check for two hundred grand and change to

01:24

the bank to pay off the reverse mortgage that you

01:27

had accrued while you were you know wasting away to

01:29

nothing and your heirs end up happy like they miss

01:33

you But you know a free stair lift Who are 00:01:37.997 --> [endTime] you

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 second mortgage?
4 Views

What's a second mortgage? Easy: it comes after a first mortgage. Hit play for more details.

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