Wednesday, October 21, 2009

 

Fitch Expects CMBS Loss Severity To Rise Markedly Next Year

As anyone who has spent even a day looking at securitization tranching or CDS trading will tell you, there are two critical components to any investment that involves risky fixed income: cumulative loss probability and loss severity: the first tells about how likely any given security is to default within a given amount of time, while the second determines what the final recovery will be assuming there is an actual even of default. The two are usually tied in very closely, as any (forced) delays in reaching a default state usually come at the expense of exhausting any underlying asset value (and in some cases being primed by additional layer of debt which get a first look on assets in the case of liquidation).

Which is why today's announcement by Fitch that CMBS loss severity is expected to risk markedly next year should be viewed with extreme caution...

Zero Hedge: Fitch Expects CMBS Loss Severity To Rise Markedly Next Year

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