Comptroller of The Currency Explains Subprime
Comptroller of The Currency Explains Subprime
Comptroller of The Currency Explains Subprime
John C. Dugan
Comptroller of the Currency
Before the
Global Association of Risk Professionals
New York, NY
February 27, 2008
professional association for risk managers, dedicated to the promotion of best practices in
risk management around the globe. In that context, I would like to focus my remarks today
on a particular structured security that certainly has had profound risk management
implications during the credit market disruptions that have been with us since last summer. I
These better-than-triple A tranches were supposed to be the least risky parts of the
subprime securities pyramid. Instead they have generated the clear majority of reported
subprime writedowns in capital markets, which in turn have been at the core of several of the
worst episodes of the market’s disruptions: the seizing up of the asset-backed commercial
paper market because of conduit and SIV investments in these instruments; the huge,
surprising, and concentrated losses in commercial and investment banks that packaged and
sold subprime ABS CDOs; the large losses in regulated firms that thought they had
conservatively purchased “safe” securities, including regional banks from as far away as
Germany; and most recently in the news, the large losses projected for monoline insurance
How could this one instrument, which was supposed to be so safe, generate so much
loss and so many problems for capital markets? Where was the risk management? And how
did this happen at the regulated institutions that are subject to prudential investment
restrictions and supervision, like commercial banks, securities firms, and insurance
companies?
These are all excellent questions. They have been very much on the minds of
policymakers and regulators as we try to learn the right lessons to avoid repeating these
problems in the future – even as markets have reacted predictably in the short term by
Indeed, the performance of credit risk transfer instruments like CDOs and credit
default swaps has been a particular focus of an international group that I chair called the Joint
Forum, which consists of key supervisors of the banking, securities, and insurance industries.
In 2005 the Joint Forum published an excellent paper on Credit Risk Transfer instruments
that anticipated a number of the issues that have come to the surface during the recent market
turmoil. That report preceded the huge recent growth in subprime ABS CDOs, however, so
most recently the Joint Forum has spent a considerable amount of time updating the earlier
paper to reflect the performance of these instruments during the credit market disruptions.
Our intent is to pass along the results of this work to the Financial Stability Forum and other
In fact, I spent all last week at a Joint Forum meeting where ABS CDOs were very
much a topic of discussion, and that has sharpened my focus on the questions I just posed.
Before sharing with you my observations on these questions, however, let me step back and
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provide some basic background and context about ABS CDOs to help frame the discussion
for those of you less familiar with the issue – and for those of you who are already intimately
familiar with these products, please bear with me as I oversimplify somewhat to set the stage.
We start several years ago, of course, with a world flush with liquidity, where interest
rates and credit losses were exceptionally low, and house prices in the United States had a
track record of increasing each year. Investors were hungry for yield, and subprime
Using the principle of credit subordination, structured credit products offered the
“tranches” of varying risk to suit differing risk appetites of different investors. That included
investors with very low risk tolerances looking only for triple A investments. In a simple
diversified pool of lower quality subprime loans to produce a senior tranche of high quality
credit if there are enough investors willing to purchase junior tranches to absorb first losses
Of course, in order for a conservative investor to get comfortable with the credit
quality of the senior tranche, there must be a blessing from a credit rating agency in the form
of a triple A rating. When the credit rating agency provided that designation to the senior
tranche of a mortgage-backed security, it was a judgment that the junior tranches were large
enough to absorb so much of the losses of the underlying mortgages that the probability of
default for the senior tranche was generally as low as it would be for a triple A-rated
corporate security. Thus, the triple A rating sent a very powerful signal to the investor and
regulatory community that the senior tranche was truly low risk.
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A subprime ABS CDO took the whole process to another layer. As many of you
know well, ABS CDOs are a form of re-securitization, where the underlying pool consists of
assets in the pool were not in the triple A-rated senior tranches of these securities, but instead
in the lower-rated junior, or “mezzanine,” tranches. The CDO pool of these mezzanine
tranches was then itself separated into senior and junior tranches using the same basic
subordination principle that was used to tranche each of the underlying asset-backed
subordination is needed in the junior tranches to protect the senior tranches from credit losses
to the same extent as other triple A-rated securities. The difficulty comes in valuing the
underlying mortgage-backed securities in the CDO pool – often as many as a hundred – and
Despite this complexity, the credit rating agencies believed they had enough
information to rate all the tranches of the typical ABS CDO. As with other asset-backed
securities, this included providing a triple A rating to a senior tranche. But unlike a typical
ABS, the structurers of CDOs also included a tranche that was senior to the senior tranche
that was rated triple A – the “super-senior” tranche. By being senior to the triple A tranche,
the super-senior tranche would have an even lower probability of default than triple-A rated
securities generally, including triple A-rated corporate securities. Again, this label was a
Let me make one additional, and important, point about the typical ABS CDO
structure. The junior tranches absorbing first losses obviously had to be big enough to
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provide the amount of credit protection that would give the senior tranches their triple A
designation. Nevertheless, the senior and super-senior tranches were by far the largest
tranches in the CDO, often comprising more than 70 percent of the notional value of the
CDO pool.
backed securities into tranched CDOs? The answer appears to be that there was strong
demand for the junior tranches of these ABS CDOs because they produced relatively higher
yields than other types of securities that had the same credit ratings. In addition, there was
subprime mortgages reflected in the CDO pool, rather than having a single pool. That is, the
larger number of underlying subprime mortgages in the CDO pool meant that the risk of
much greater extent than they would be in a single ABS pool. There was less demand,
however, for the much larger senior and super-senior tranches because of the significantly
lower yield they paid as a reflection of what was thought to be their much lower risk.
With that very basic background, let’s turn to some key consequences of having very
complex, subprime-related, super-senior securities that were widely touted as having a lower
First, because of their triple A rating, virtually any investor could buy super-senior
ABS CDO securities either directly, or indirectly by purchasing commercial paper from triple
A-rated conduits that owned such securities. Among these investors were ones that were
very risk-averse, including some regulated firms that have legal restrictions that prevent or
limit their investing in riskier instruments. I am talking, for example, about banks, thrifts,
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credit unions, insurance companies, money market funds, pension funds, and state and local
governments, all of which have investment restrictions that make direct reference to credit
ratings. As a result, as we now know, a number of such firms purchased super-senior CDO
Second, even though the structured securities market is widely thought to be based on
the “originate-to-distribute” model – with fees generated from distributing securities, not
holding them – the commercial and investment banks that structured subprime ABS CDOs
for sale often retained a very large proportion of the super-senior tranches, which were less in
demand by investors due to their relatively lower yield. Why did they agree to retain them?
Because the firms generated a great deal of fees in selling the junior tranches, and because
the senior and super-senior tranches were thought to involve so little risk – as evidenced by
Third, because the large amount of super-senior tranches were using up the
structuring firms’ balance sheet capacity, they began to look for ways to move the securities
off balance sheet. One means of doing this was selling the securities to triple A-rated asset-
backed conduits and structured investment vehicles sponsored by the firms, which in turn
Fourth, some of the structuring firms that accumulated large positions in super senior
ABS CDOs sought to hedge them by buying credit default swaps referencing the default risk
of such securities. One type of entity prepared to sell such CDS protection in quantity was,
as we now know, monoline insurers. These companies were paid well to enter this new line
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of insurance for debt securities, and they, too, were comforted in doing so by the triple A
Finally, the supervisors that examined the firms that structured CDOs – including the
OCC – provided less scrutiny to super-senior ABS CDOs than they did to lower-rated
securities and unrated loans and other vehicles that exposed the firms to credit risk. In a
instruments that appear to present the greatest risk – which typically does not include triple
A-rated securities.
and 2006. Loans originated in those years were particularly vulnerable to flat
2007, national median home prices fell for the first time in many decades.
• Rating agencies realized that they had been far too generous with their ratings
downgraded 198 triple A-rated ABS CDO tranches. More than half of the
from Aaa to Caa1. In contrast, since 1970 Moody’s has never downgraded a
triple A-rated corporate bond more than six notches (to single A) in a single
step.
• The total publicly reported losses from ABS CDOs were enormous, with a
those instruments.
All of which takes me back to my original questions: How did such a supposedly
super safe investment cause so much loss? And what are the lessons that should be learned
from this experience going forward? While the market and the credit rating agencies have
certainly shied away from subprime ABS CDOs for the foreseeable future, I believe there is
broad agreement among policymakers and supervisors that more needs to be done to prevent
a recurrence of similar problems, not just with respect to super-senior tranches of ABS
CDOs, but also with respect to a range of issues that have arisen out of the market turmoil.
Indeed, these issues are very much the topic of discussion by the Financial Stability Forum,
For today, I will limit my closing observations to the types of actions being
considered in response to the huge losses on super-senior tranches of ABS CDOs. In doing
so, let me emphasize that these observations are my own; the list is not complete; and no
First, and most obviously, underwriting standards for subprime mortgages need to be
improved significantly. The market has already done this in the short term, but for the long
term, more needs to be done by regulators and supervisors. While national banks were not
the primary originators of subprime mortgages that have gone bust – they originated just 10
percent of such mortgages in 2006, for example, with lower delinquency rates than the
national average – the OCC has joined other regulators in raising standards across the board
for all banking organizations. The challenge will be to extend these standards in a
meaningful way to nonbank lenders and brokers regulated exclusively by the states.
Second, the credit rating agencies need to change their approach to rating subprime
ABS CDOs, especially the senior and super-senior tranches. Although, as I will mention
next, investors should never rely exclusively on credit ratings in making investment
decisions, the plain fact is that triple A credit ratings are a powerful green light for
conservative investors all over the world. These include banks, insurance companies, and
other firms whose regulatory regimes are laced with restrictions that reference high credit
ratings as a simple way to limit risk. If the rating agencies get these high credit ratings badly
wrong – as appears to have been the case with the ratings of super-senior tranches of ABS
CDOs – then the consequences can be disastrous, as we have painfully witnessed in firm
So what should the rating agencies do? One thought is that they should simply revise
their rating methodologies to require much more credit subordination in junior tranches in
order for senior tranches to have a probability of default that is similar to the probability of
Our work in the Joint Forum has focused on a critical characteristic of triple A-rated
super-senior ABS CDO securities that may have lead them to perform quite differently than
other types of triple A-rated securities, such as individual corporate securities. Many of you
in this audience will be familiar with this characteristic, which is the fact that the extremely
broad range of subprime loans underlying a super senior tranche of an ABS CDO effectively
diversifies away idiosyncratic risk. Peculiar or idiosyncratic circumstances could well apply
to a single corporate issuer in a way that would cause that issuer to default on a triple A-rated
mortgages in a widely diversified CDO pool are unlikely to lead to a default on the CDO’s
On the other hand, the CDO pool remains very exposed to systematic risk: if an
event occurs that leads to subprime losses generally, then losses on the super-senior tranche
are likely to be extreme. Put another way, as one of our Joint Forum authors has put it, these
notes can be expected to perform well under most conditions, but in times of severe
Because of the difference in the composition of risk – that is, the difference in the
balance between indiosyncratic and systematic risk – I would argue that triple A-rated super-
senior tranches of ABS CDOs perform fundamentally differently from triple A-rated
corporate securities. I also suspect that, while many sophisticated risk managers may have
At a minimum, I believe that the credit rating agencies need to do a much better job in
disclosing the distinctions between the likely performance of triple A-rated structured
securities and triple A-rated corporate securities. If triple A means different things in
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different contexts, then we all need to know that. The credit rating agencies themselves have
recognized this issue by soliciting comment on possible changes to the rating scales that
apply to structured securities, including separate ratings scales or scales that indicate
expressly that the rating applies to a structured credit. I believe that is a healthy subject for
My third observation is to reiterate a point that was made explicitly in the Joint
Forum’s 2005 Report, well before all of the turmoil began: neither investors nor regulators
should rely exclusively on credit ratings when evaluating the credit risk in a highly rated
tranche of an ABS CDO. This may seem obvious to everyone now, but exclusive reliance on
ratings has been all too common a practice. There is really no excuse for institutions that
specialize in credit risk assessment – like large commercial banks – to rely solely on credit
Fourth, as a matter of basic risk management, the packagers of ABS CDOs should not
retain large concentrations of super-senior tranches on their balance sheet no matter how low
they perceive the risk. I think you can make a very good argument that the cause of the
largest losses that brought so much pain to so many large firms was not so much that they
grossly underestimated the risk of super-senior tranches of ABS CDOs; the fact is that nearly
all market participants made this mistake. Instead, what most differentiated the companies
sustaining the biggest losses from the rest was their willingness to hold exceptionally large
positions on their balance sheets – which in turn led to exceptionally large losses. Indeed, in
and if the market forces you into that position, perhaps it’s sending a signal about risk that
Finally, I believe the regulators need to reconsider the part of the Basel II capital rules
that apply to senior tranches of re-securitized structured credit such as subprime ABS CDOs.
While the Basel II framework recognized the greater systematic risk embedded in
look to see if the differences that were incorporated went far enough. For example, should
the securitization provisions of Basel II establish a unique set of higher risk weights for ABS
CDOs and other re-securitizations, reflecting the higher vulnerability to systematic risk as
In conclusion, I have only touched upon a few of the questions facing policy makers
in the coming months, focusing on super-senior tranches of ABS CDOs. There are many
others, and I believe it is our collective responsibility to learn from the current disruptions
and take steps now to help prevent a recurrence of these problems in the future.
Thank you.