Abstract

Credit risk transfer (CRT) securities were introduced by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac in 2013. As of the end of 2017, in combination, the two government sponsored housing enterprises had issued a total of $53 billion in CRTs linked to residential mortgage loans with a total face value of $1.79 trillion. The goal is to shift mortgage risk from tax payers to the private sector. In return, investors expect to be compensated. The authors document the returns earned by investors in the various CRT tranches since their inception. The most senior tranches have provided an average representative return of 0.26% per month. The most junior tranches have provided an average representative return of 1.71% per month. These compare with average monthly returns of 0.03%, 0.15%, and 0.87% to T-bills, 15-year agency mortgage-backed securities, and 10-year high-yield corporate bonds, respectively, over the same time periods.

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