The American dream of home ownership has created the world's largest debt market - exceeding the stock and corporate bond markets combined. Mortgage-backed securities, financially engineered products of that debt, represent a unique challenge to professional investors, mortgage originators, bankers, regulators, and financial economists. This book describes the economic forces that molded the mortgage market and evaluates the variety of mortgage designs and the securities created from them. It explains each aspect of contemporary mortgages, the development of the secondary mortgage market, and the characteristics of mortgage-backed securities (passthroughs, collateralized mortgage obligations, and stripped mortgage-backed securities). The text also provides techniques for analyzing and hedging these complex securities.
Frank J. Fabozzi is Professor in the Practice of Finance and Becton Fellow at the Yale School of Management and Editor of the Journal of Portfolio Management. He is a Chartered Financial Analyst and earned a doctorate in economics from the City University of New York.
