Title: A Variable-Rate Loan-Prepayment Model for Australian Mortgages (
1A Variable-Rate Loan-Prepayment Model for
Australian Mortgages(Daniel Model)
- Evan Rosenberg
- Hui Gang Wu
2I. Objective of This Paper
- To investigate Australian mortgage prepayment by
developing and testing prepayment models for
loans in Australian MBSs
3II. Method
- Daniel used U.S. MBS variable-rate loan
prepayment models (notably McConnell and Singh
1991 and the related Sanyal 1994 model) as
foundations and then accounted for the
differences between the U.S. and Australian
markets
4III. Differences between U.S. and Australian
Markets
- Tax (in Australia occupying owners cannot deduct
their mortgage payments ? more incentive to
prepay than in U.S.) - Fixed-Rate Loan Term Period (sub-periods in
Australia) - Variable-Rate Mortgage Rate (set by lender in
competitive mkt in Australia ? acts more like a
floating rate than in U.S. where rates are tied
to indices) - Ratio of FRM and VRM (VRM dominates in Australia
FRM dominates in U.S.) - Partial Prepayment (uniquely significant in
Australia avg. approx. 1/3 of full prepayments
often deemed insignificant in U.S.) - Resource/Non-resource Mortgage Loans (lenders in
Australia can access assets beyond the property
if borrower defaults) - Subprime/Low Documented Loans (far less in
Australia est. 2 v. 15) - Caps/Floors (Australian VRMs do not have caps or
floors unlike U.S.)
5IV. Types of Prepayers And Variables
- Relocators sell their home and move to other
places (maybe due to job change etc.) - Refinancers refinance to take the advantage of
lower market interest rates - Switchers change the loan type from FRM to VRM
or vice versa - Partial Prepayers (ADDED FOR UNIQUE AUSTRALIAN
MODEL) prepay less than the full amount Daniel
considered potential causes of tax, partial
prepayment by default (maintaining constant
payments despite decrease in rate), and aversion
to debt and/or future interest-rate volatility
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7A. Relocator Variables
- AgePool ? expected to have positive correlation
with Conditional Prepayment Rate (CPR) - Weighted Average Seasoning (WAS) ? average age
of the mortgages in the pool, weighted by the
value of the mortgages - MAXWAS ? maximum WAS over all pools
8- 2. Squareroot of AgePool (SQR(AGEPL)) ?
expected to have negative correlation with CPR
3. Seasonal ? expected to have a positive
correlation with CPR (people tend to move during
summer)
9B. Refinancer Variables
- 1. Differential between pool origination
coupon rate and current market rate (FXDdifl) ?
expected to have a positive correlation with CPR
(this is a commonly used variable to express
refinancing incentive in U.S. FRM pools)
(where 3yrFXDthree year fixed mortgage rate)
102. Burnout variables
Fixed-rate mortgagors are differentially
sensitive to declines in the rate on fixed-rate
mortgages when making refinancing decisions. The
first time that the market coupon rate on
fixed-rate mortgages falls below the coupon rate
of an existing mortgage, e.g., the most sensitive
mortgagors in a pool will refinance. That is, the
most rate-sensitive fixed-rate mortgage
refinancers will ?burnout? of the pool. The
second time that the pool is subject to a decline
in the current market rate to this same level,
prepayments will be lower than during the first
interest-rate cycle. Only if the current rate on
fixed-rate mortgages falls below its previous low
will the next level of rate-sensitive fixed-rate
refinancers be induced to refinance their loans.
- a. r new min (adopted from U.S. models) ?
expected to have a positive correlation
b. BURNOUT ? expected to have a negative
correlation
11C. Switcher Variables
- 1. New Long Minimum (NLM)? each time the fixed
mortgage rate declines to a new minimum,
switchers will tend to prepay to switch to a FRM
? expected to have a positive correlation
12- 2. The change in the slope of the yield curve
the relative change in spread over each month
between long- and short-term interest rates ? the
expected sign of the coefficient is left as
indeterminate.
13D. Partial Prepayer Variables
- 1. Alternative Investment (ALTINV) ? due to
non-deductibility of owner/occupier mortgage
interest in Australia there is an incentive to
prepay ? partial prepayment funds effectively
earn the mortgage rate as an after-tax interest
rate (alternative investments are only attractive
if the after-tax return exceeds the mortgage
rate) ? expected to have a positive correlation - RAOA the average continuous compounded return
on the All Ordinaries Accumulation Index (over
the previous twelve months) - SVR an acronym for standard variable rate,
the standard variable-rate in Australia,
calculated, (by the RBA), by averaging the
variable-rates of Australian commercial lenders.
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15- 2. Default Partial Prepayment (ParDFLT) ?
prepayment by default where a borrower optionally
maintains payment levels even as the rate and
amount due declines (common in Australia where
banks encourage borrowers to maintain payment
levels and often directly debit borrowers
accounts) ? expected to have a positive
correlation
16- 3. Rate Volatility ? aversion to debt may lead
borrowers to partially prepay in response to
increasing rate volatility ? expected to have a
positive correlation
17V. Empirical Evaluation of the Australian
Variable-Rate Model
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25- After using statistical methods to examine the
aforementioned variables, some variables are
eliminated. Finally, the following formulas can
be defined for CPR Partial, CPR Full, and CPR
total.
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27VI. Findings
- a) most noteworthy result of empirical tests is
how well the restricted model performed compared
to the unrestricted model
unrestricted model CPR f(AGEPOOL,SQR(AGEPL),ParD
FLT,ALTINV,FXDdifl, BURNOUT,VOLy,
SLYC,NLM,SEASONAL,rNewMin)
restricted model CPR f(AGEPOOL,SQR(AGEPL),ParDFL
T)
28VI. Findings (cont.)
- b) the ParDFLT1 variable is highly significant
as a predictor for full prepayments and partial
prepayments, whereas it was intended as a
predictor for partial prepayments only ? ParDFLT
is a measure of the differential rate between
rates of a (variable-rate) borrower repaying by
direct debit and the current market
variable-rate. Daniel had assumed that there was
not a significant enough difference between
competing lenders variable-rates to induce
VRM-to-VRM refinancing ? In review the
possibility that some variable-rate borrowers
find refinancing to another more competitive
variable-rate loan clearly cannot be excluded
(same for switch to FRM) ? thus, the way the
ParDFLT variable is calculated results in the
capture of partial prepayers, refinancers, and
perhaps switchers
29VI. Findings (cont.)
- c) the age of the pool is a strong influence on
full prepayment. (Age means the average number of
months since origination of the mortgages in the
pool). - d) FXDdifl, VOLy1, and SLYC were univariately
significant and correct sign interest-rate
variables for full prepayments of VRM holders
(though not significant as variables for the best
model multivariate tests) - e) the prepayment data revealed that in
Australia partial prepayment is on average
approximately one third of full prepayments for
variable-rate loans. - f) the independent variables explain full
prepayment much more effectively than partial
prepayment. - g) the new Australian prepayment model proved
successful when tested on (Reuters) Australian
MBS data parsimonious forms of the model were
able to successfully explain both total
prepayment and the components of total
prepayment full and partial prepayment.