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Week 045 COMPARING SUBSTITUTE DEAL STRUCTURES TO PLAINVANILLA LOANS

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Title: Week 045 COMPARING SUBSTITUTE DEAL STRUCTURES TO PLAINVANILLA LOANS


1
Week 04-5 COMPARING SUBSTITUTE DEAL STRUCTURES
TO PLAIN-VANILLA LOANS
  • Class addresses two issues for five substitute
    activities
  • Value Added in Substitute Activities
  • Differences in Accounting Treatments

2
Bank
3
Point of this Session Be sure you understand
how to advise a bank whether to fill a customers
request for credit assistance with a traditional
loan contract or a substitute credit structure.
4
Lesson of Weeks 3 to 5
  • Active credit enhancement and securitization of
    loan pools has taught markets and academics to
    break down what had traditionally been seen as a
    holistic lending procedure. Contracting now
    unbundles" pieces of what was once an
    "integrated financing process."
  • Competitors can specialize in bearing only a
    subset of the risks and skills needed at
    different stages of the credit process.

5
  • (Review Read to Yourself)
  • When acting as an intermediary an FSF
  • Solicits and holds loans for own account (both
    risk-free and risky portions)
  • funds assets with own indirect debt (e.g.,
    deposits)
  • generates enough value in carrying the loan to
    cover due-diligence investigation, transactions,
    postloan monitoring, and prospective default costs

6
  • Two Products or Activities are substitutes when
    they can take the place of each other.
  • A bank has five substitutes for holding onto a
    business loan a customer might generate
  • credit enhancement
  • pass-through or structured securitization
  • outright sale to an affiliate or third party
  • Syndication or participation
  • Credit Derivatives

7
First Substitute Deal Structure
  • Three Steps in Explaining How Value Creation in
    Enhancing a Loan Differs from Value Creation in
    Intermediation
  • a. Conceptual Differences in service performed
  • b. EVA formulae
  • c. Numerical Illustration of their Consequences

8
CREDIT ENHANCER guarantees i.e., bonds the
performance of a borrowers promise to pay the
ultimate holder of a direct debt.
  • The credit enhancer acts partly as a broker and
    partly as an intermediary.
  • Partial Intermediation It holds (i.e.,
    intermediates) only the default risk of the loan,
    which it must assess to set up and price a
    reserve for losses.
  • Partial Brokerage But it does not fund the
    risk-free portion of the loan, which it sells to
    the securitizing entity and ultimate investors.

9
A borrowers credit-enhanced security bears a
lower interest rate, much as would the indirect
debt that an intermediary might issue against a
pool of similar direct debt held for its own
account.
  • The enhancer must itself have a strong credit
    standing
  • It incurs much the same due-diligence and
    transactions costs as a direct lender, which it
    must plan to cover out of its fee.
  • An example is a bank standby letter of credit.
    An SLC gives a creditor immediate recourse to the
    guarantor if the borrower fails to make timely
    payment.

10
Definition of Recourse
  • In ordinary usage The ability to turn to someone
    else for help when something goes badly
  • In finance, the right or obligation of a creditor
    to demand the assets of a third party if the
    payment from borrower falls into default. The
    third partys obligation is an economic liability
    for that party.

11
Accounting Perspective on DealHow does a
guarantee-issuing banks marginal (i.e.,
incremental) balance sheet and income statement
(T-accounts) differ from those of a traditional
bank lender?
12
1. Accounting Entries for Lending Bank
  • a. Income Statement for a 100 Credit.
  • (RL-RD)L minus net imputed (I.e., allocated)
    administrative and capital costs (CA) of loan
  • Suppose RL6, RD3, and CA2 (CA is meant to
    represent all costs net of implicit returns
    incurred in the deal).
  • Revenue - Costs Income. Accounting profit is
  • 6 - 3 - 2 ?
  • b. Incremental Economic Balance Sheet
  • Assets Liabilities
  • ? Loan 100 ? Deposits
    100
  • PV (? profit) ? NW ?
  • (N.B. We need COE to turn EVA in ?NW)

13
2. Parallel Entries for Credit-Enhancer
  • a. Income Statement
  • Economist would reattribute timing of fees from
    guarantees and record them net of imputed
    (i.e., allocated) operating and capital costs
    CA
  • A weakness of GAAP statements is failure to
    segregate and allocate most elements of CA
  • b. Balance Sheet
  • An enhancement is an off-balance-sheet
    intangible liability. No contingent liability
    is booked in the body of a GAAP balance sheet.
    Should be disclosed in a footnote.

14
Calculation of Income from Credit Enhancement
  • Suppose CA2 and fee is 1? NI1 - 2 -1.
    What if fees are 3? 3 - 2 1 (Same
    accounting income as the loan imputed, but timing
    of revenues and outlays could make the
    enhancement more profitable to the bank)
  • Next slide explains why.

15
Calculation Focusing on the Timing of 3 Cash Flows
  • Timing Assumptions the enhancement fee is booked
    upfront, the costs of investigation (CI) are
    incurred a period earlier, and the cost of making
    good on failed credits across the portfolio of
    enhancements (CMG) is incurred two periods later.
  • Parameters the customer pays a fee of 3 and
    rthe banks cost of capital.
  • As of the date guarantee contract is executed,
    the present value of profit 3-CI(1r)-CMG(1r)-
    2.
  • CI is Carried forward in time
  • CMG is carried back
  • On term loans, time to default could be more than
    two periods

16
Differences in Value Added
  • ? (holding loan) (RL-RD) L (allocated
    value of all other costs)
  • E.g., (6-3) 100 - 2 1
  • ? (enhancmnt) fee-CI(1rE)-CMG(1rE)- 2
  • N.B. Timing issue The second formula recognizes
    that costs may be incurred both before and after
    revenue is received.
  • RE is called COE in the Text.

17
Applying the EVA Formula
  • Suppose that investigative costs are 1, that 2
    of loan value is the appropriate capital
    allocation for either deal, and that the FSFs
    cost of equity capital is 20.
  • ANS. Present-value of profit from the
    enhancement
  • 3-1(1.20)-2(1.20)-2
  • 3-1.2 -
  • 3-1.2-1.375.425

18
Go Over Week 4 ExerciseSuppose scoring program
computes one chance in 106 that the borrower will
default irrevocably and 105/106 that full
repayment will be received. Assume that the bank
increases its loan-loss reserves by the amount
necessary to fund the expected losses under the
loan or guarantee with capital that costs the
bank 20 per annum. Show the banks incremental
balance sheet and projected annual income under
two alternative decisions
19
Case 1) The bank gives a 6 one-year bullet
loan of 100,000 and finances the loan with
deposits of the same maturity, at an all-in
interest cost of 5 per annum.
  • Note an all-in interest cost includes
  • relationship effects
  • capital allocation at COE of 20
  • diversification benefits.

20
Case 1) With no contra-asset for LLR,
accountants project default as a contra-revenue.
21
  • -- A loan-loss reserve (LLR) of 1/1.06 or 1/1.2
    with an appropriate offset could be recorded
    either within the net-worth account or as a
    contra-asset on the asset side. In the
    contra-asset approach, an offsetting entry for
    the PV of deposit-taking opportunity could be
    recognized in principle. The actual write-off of
    the LLR would be projected as part of earnings at
    Date 1.
  • -- What implicit benefit might be relevant?
    Strengthening customers relationship
    diversification of risk concentrations that need
    to be managed.

22
Case 2) The bank decides to sell the customer a
credit enhancement. The bank collects a 1,000
upfront fee from the customer for guaranteeing
purchasers of 100,000 worth of 5.0 one-year
bullet bonds the customer issues in the public
market. The bank promises that each bondholder
will be paid in full and on time in the event the
banks customer does not meet its obligations.
23
Case 2) Prompt and Full LLR Provisioning
24
  • --Why is the credit-enhancement activity more
    profitable? ANS Time value of money and slightly
    lesser exposure to loss at yearend 105K rather
    than 106K.
  • --How might the enhancement be less profitable if
    implicit costs and benefits are introduced?
    Enhancement exposes the customers relationship
    value to observation and capture by a wider
    number of competing FSFs.

25
2. Second Substitute for Holding an Originated
Loan SECURITIZATION
  • Combining loans previously originated into pools
    whose risks can be made interpretable to
    outsiders.
  • Creating liquidity by issuing marketable claims
    against the collateral of particular pools.
  • Effect is to transfer Risk Reduce Geographic
    Segmentation of Localized Markets

26
Three Ways to Mitigate Informationand Monitoring
Risks Posed to Bondholders fromBank-Dependent
Borrowers
  • Make Borrower improve various of the 5Cs
  • 1. Lowering loan-to-value (LTV) ratio
  • 2. Collateralization
  • 3. Covenanting verifiable proxies for changing
    conditions firm performance and value of
    net-worth position
  • Support Risk Retained by Originator
  • 1. Reputation misperformance would cause losses
    on other deals
  • 2. Full recourse or other credit enhancement
  • 3. Retaining a first-loss position
  • -- market for first-loss exposures is virtually
    zero
  • Contract for Third-Party Ratings or Credit
    Enhancements

27
Extent of Lender Risk Retention Substitutes the
Banks Credit for that of the Borrower. Funding
Cost for Bank is Lower when Banks Standards,
Performance, and Condition are
  • Strong
  • Transparent easy to monitor
  • Supervised and guaranteed by government or
    credible private regulator.

28
Plain-Vanilla Passthrough Securitization
Cash
Cash
FSF Originator of Loans
Conduit Institution
End Investors
Loan Instrument info.
Securities info.
  • Other flavors are covered in weeks 10 11 of
    the course stripping timing mismatches
    enhancements reliance on multiple originators or
    multiple conduits.

29
More on Securitization
  • Creating a readily tradeable title to returns
    derived from an illiquid asset securitizes
    that asset. It must be emphasized that
    piggy-backing on a trading system or making a
    market in the titles is an essential part of
    securitization.
  • First step is to set up --or contract with-- a
    legally separate entity (usually a trust) to
    serve as a conduit for cash flows
  • This special-purpose entity (SPE) or special-use
    vehicle (SUV) is designed to align the incentives
    of SPE management with investors.

30
  • SPE must be made free from originator control.
    (Why?)
  • SPE is insulated from bankruptcy risk by limiting
    its business to acquiring and holding the assets
    and issuing the asset-backed securities. (Why?)
  • For Asset Pools to be readily securitized, the
    underlying assets must have identifiable default
    risk.
  • Risk need not be low, but it must be predictable
    from historical data (e.g., credit-card debt).
  • Predictability can be enhanced by pooling that
    eliminates overconcentrations in individual
    borrowers, in industries, or in geographic areas.

31
Links in Chain of Securitization
  • 1. Originate a loan
  • 2. Contact a Packaging Agent (such as FNMA) or
    set up a legally separate trust to be conduit for
    cash flows
  • 3. Sell designated pool of loans to the
    packaging agent
  • 4. Strip and reassemble the cash flows from the
    pool e.g., creating differences in timing or
    seniority (optional)
  • 5. Have the trust issue tradeable claims to
    (possibly repackaged) cash flows from the pool
    and sell the securities to the public
  • 6. Contract with an efficient servicing
    organization to collect loan payments and
    forward them to securities owners (optional)
  • 7. Arrange for a credit rating, perhaps after
    enhancement by the bank or a reputable third
    party
  • 8. Create Tradability Make sure a liquid
    secondary market exists for the securities or
    convey reasonable putback rights. Need for
    tradability to qualify as securitization.

32
Deals Withinand on Top ofDeals Support Mortgage
Derivative Contracts
33
  • 1. In traditional intermediation, the original
    lender holds not just the risk, but the entire
    loan funds the position fully and immediately.
  • 2. In securitization, the original lender may
    hold onto some of or all of the risk (if it sells
    with recourse)
  • may "contract out" all or some of risk to a
    credit enhancer.
  • Must fund only an in-process inventory of new
    loans.

34
Credit-Enhanced Securitization
Cash
Cash
FSF Originator of Loans
End Investors
Conduit Institution
Loan Instrument info.
Securities info.
Fee info.
Credit Enhancer
(Info. contractual obligation)
N.B. Bottom corresponds to the new flavoring
35
Besides securitizing or internally funding loans,
banks might sell or trade them postloan in
increasing liquid secondary markets. 65 bil. in
outstanding loans traded in 1999.Preselling of
large loans to bank and nonbank partners is
called SYNDICATION.
3. Third Substitute for Holding a Loan
36
  • Loan sales and 4th substitute of syndication
    are helpful foils with give insights into
    securitization activity. Syndicated Loan
    structures establish ad hoc partnerships among
    lenders, but the partners shares cannot be
    anonymously traded away.
  • What is a foil in literature and drama?
  • Examples Satan Job Batman Joker Sherlock
    Holmes Dr. Watson.

37
In modern loan sales, the buyer steps into the
shoes of the originators.
  • To make an independent credit analysis,
    purchasers must
  • receive proper information from borrower and
    originator credit scores ratings
  • must obtain copies of all relevant documents
  • must establish plans to remedy bank or borrower
    defaults
  • Separate trading specialists/websites exist for
    par loans and distressed loans. (Accounting for
    sales may differ, too.)

38
4. Syndications Even with financial
engineering, most bank loans are held to maturity
by the originating bank.
  • Selling whole loans faces three potential
    disincentives
  • Borrowers must be notified of sale, which may
    jeopardize their customer relationship
  • Lemons Pricing Pricing of risk may turn on
    expensive-to-verify information
  • Asset sales trigger tax and accounting
    consequences that are often adverse.

39
Query In what ways do loan syndications and
whole-loan sales resemble loan securitization?
In what ways do they differ?
40
  • Transferable participation certificates may be
    sold against any pool of returns from any
    intelligible class of risky receivables car
    loans manufactured housing loans credit-card
    receivables commercial real-estate debt leases
    student loans franchisee debt.
  • Often no secondary market exists in which the
    underlying whole assets can be sold.
  • Usually sold with recourse or a recourse
    substitute. Recourse is a substitute for
    overcollateralization and recourse obligation
    should be reserved for and should be priced.

41
Balance-Sheet Effects
  • Only if the participation certificates can be
    sold without explicit and implicit recourse is
    the asset moved completely off the originators
    economic balance sheet.
  • Accounting treatment turns on ability to prove
    the sale of an interest in the loan. 7-29-04
    FASB proposal treats most participations as loan
    sales only if contract specifies that the
    transaction is not disguising a financing.
    Concern is to avoid participants becoming
    claimants against FDIC in event the originator
    fails.

42
Effects of Loan Sales Differ from Syndications,
Participations, and Credit Derivatives
  • Whole or Partial Loan Sales unbook the amount
    sold transfer ownership and the post-loan
    monitoring and loss-control function to the buyer
    to the extent that recourse is not established.
  • In Loan Syndications and Participations, primary
    responsibility for monitoring and loss-control
    typically stays with the lead bank. But
    sublenders have duty of prudence.

43
COMPARING DEAL STRUCTURES
44
Trend In
45
What Kinds of Loans May be Sold, Syndicated, or
Securitized Most Easily? Loans with low preloan
information risk and low postloan monitoring risk.
  • Those with low preloan and postloan agency
    costs
  • Reliable and readily available information makes
    borrowers creditworthiness easy to assess
    directly or by sampling (low potential for
    hidden information).
  • Minimal need for direct postloan monitoring (low
    potential for hidden actions).

46
Each Syndicate has a Managing Institution
(Commercial or Investment Bank)
  • Choice Agent-only vs. shareholding capacity
  • Preloan information production distribution
  • Pricing and structuring (maturities, covenants)
  • Postloan coordination of postloan covenant
    enforcement relief and repricing
  • Junior Partners include
  • Domestic banks
  • Foreign Banks
  • Finance companies
  • Insurance companies
  • Mutual funds
  • Assorted hard-to-classify funds

duties
47
Top managers expanding their loan-syndication
market shares by megamergers.
48
In 2004
49
5th Substitute is to Use Credit Derivatives
  • Simplest case is to use a Credit Default Swap
    (CDS) to transfer default risk exposure to a
    particular borrower to a third party that is
    willing and able to bear this exposure.
  • Credit risk becomes insurable by a third party
    when it can be defined as the exposure to
    verifiable changes in the market value of a
    traded instrument brought about by the occurrence
    of stipulated credit events
  • Credit events are developments in the
    borrowers corporate affairs that counterparties
    agree may change its ability to perform its
    obligation to service its debts.

50
A CDS Resembles a Casualty Insurance Policy (CIP)
  • Potential Payouts are triggered by a series of
    well-defined loss-causing events
  • One party is designated as providing (i.e.,
    selling) protection against covered events
  • The Party buying protection pays a fee to the
    Protection Seller on a periodic basis as long as
    the coverage exists.
  • The contract stipulates how the loss associated
    with any insured event will be measured and how
    soon claims for damage will be paid.

51
Two Important Differences Between a CDS and a CIP
  • In a CIP, the protection buyer must have an
    insurable interest. In a CDS, the Protection
    Buyer need not have a long position in the
    covered asset. (Hence, the protection buyer in
    a CDS may be speculating rather than hedging.)
  • In a CIP, the insured party has an obligation to
    prove its loss using third-party appraisers. In
    a CDS, the amount of the protection payment due
    is given by the price movement observed in a
    reference security during x days or weeks after
    a covered event occurs. (Much more on credit
    derivatives in later weeks.)

52
Summary of Lending Process
53
Credit risk-mitigation tools
  • Preloan Considerations
  • Collateralization
  • Third-Party Guarantees
  • Diversification
  • Postloan Activities
  • Monitoring and Enforcement
  • Loan Sales
  • Syndication
  • Securitization
  • Credit Derivatives

54
Minicase Consequences of Certifying Earnings
Under SOX
At Sign-Off Deadline, Household Restates From
1994 to 2002, overstated pretax earnings by
600MFrom American BankerThursday, August 15,
2002 By Erick Bergquist Household
International Inc. on Wednesday became the first
financial services company forced to restate
earnings so that its top executives could vouch
for its financials, as required by the Securities
and Exchange Commission. lt /Pgt The restatement -
which lowered pretax earnings by 600 million
over the past eight years - came as the deadline
expired for big public companies to comply with
the SEC's edict. By midday Wednesday all but six
of the nation's largest banking companies had
certified that their statements were accurate, a
move the SEC required to boost investor
confidence amid a string of corporate governance
scandals. Most had filed before the deadline,
but PNC Financial Services Group Inc.,
FleetBoston Financial Corp., Bank of New York
Co., Fifth Third Bancorp, Huntington Bancshares
of Columbus, Ohio, and National City Corp. of
Cleveland waited until Wednesday. The initial
wave of certifications applies only to the
largest publicly traded firms. Under the
Sarbanes-Oxley Act, the leaders of all public
companies will be required to make similar
attestations over the coming months. In a
conference call with analysts and reporters
Wednesday, Household's chairman and chief
executive officer, William F. Aldinger, tried to
downplay the restatement, which he said stemmed
from a "good-faith difference of opinion." On an
after-tax basis, from 1994 to 2002 the company
overstated earnings by 386 million - a
relatively small amount, considering that its
total earnings for the period were roughly 10
billion. "Frankly, we were surprised," Mr.
Aldinger said. "I don't think there is any
culture that says we are cutting corners. We
wouldn't try 'to cook the books' to improve our
rate by two-tenths of one percent."
55
Minicase (cont.)
Some outsiders agreed with his assessment, but
others blasted the Prospect Heights, Ill.,
lender. Moshe Orenbuch, an analyst with Credit
Suisse First Boston Corp., reiterated his "strong
buy" rating on Household, despite shaving 10
cents off his 2002 earnings target, to 4.60.
While the restatement caused Household's capital
ratios to fall about 30 basis points, "this does
not affect the way the company does business," he
said. But Daniel S. Loeb, a managing member with
Third Point Partners LP, a money management firm
in New York, saw it differently. "This is really
a half-billion-dollar pickup," he said on the
call. "When you talked about this thing being a
small matter of a difference of opinion, you seem
to minimize a major error here that involves
something of huge magnitude." Another critic,
William Ryan, an analyst with Portales Partners,
wrote in a report issued Wednesday "When the
going gets tough the accounting department gets
going. Household has a history of using subtle
accounting changes to hit estimates." But
investors seemed to take the news in stride.
Household's stock sank in early trading, but
recovered to gain less than 1, to close at
38.09 a share. However, that is well below the
stock's 52-week high of 68.45 a share last
August. Mr. Aldinger insisted that the
restatement reflected nothing more than a
difference in opinion on how to account for
certain credit card assets. The restatements,
surfaced after a review by Household's new
auditor, KPMG LLP, he said. (Household fired its
longtime auditor, Arthur Andersen, in the wake of
the Enron Corp. scandal). KPMG recommended that
Household revise its accounting policies
regarding three credit card deals it entered
between 1992 and 1999. Two of the deals were part
of its MasterCard/Visa co-branding affinity
credit card business the third dealt with an
unrelated card marketer.
56
Minicase (cont.)
Relying on the advice of Andersen, Household had
treated its payments to these partners as prepaid
assets and had amortized them over longer periods
of time. However, KPMG officials said that
Household should have either charged the payments
against earnings at the time they were made or
amortized them over shorter periods of
time. David Schoenholz, Household's president and
chief operating officer, said that investors
should not expect any more surprises. After
reviewing Household's financials for 1999-2001,
KPMG had signed off on all of the firm's basic
operations, including "merchant partnership
agreements, the provision for credit losses and
loan loss reserves, securitization accounting,
income tax reserves, and litigation matters," Mr.
Schoenholz said. Mr. Ryan and other analysts did
mention litigation as a potential problem for
Household. For instance, the company has been
besieged recently by several high-profile
consumer groups seeking to eradicate predatory
lending. Spreads between the Treasury bond yield
curve and Household's debt have widened to over
350 basis points in recent months. One source
attributed that to concerns in the marketplace
over a spate of lawsuits consumer groups have
filed against Household over the last
year. William Lerach, a partner in the securities
class-action law firm of Milberg, Weiss, Bershad,
Hynes Lerach, said Wednesday that Household
will likely be sued over its restatement.
"Because a restatement is an admission that
financial statements were false before, it is
virtually inevitable that any company that
restates in a material amount will find itself in
sued in a securities case." Asked if his firm,
which is representing Enron shareholders and is
also involved in suits against Andersen and
WorldCom Inc., has been retained to take action
against Household, Mr. Lerach said "A number of
large investors have contacted us, and we are
looking into that." However, Mr. Orenbuch said
that he still expects Hosuehold to maintain or
increase its market share while complying with
various state and local lending
restrictions. What's more, none of the three
major Wall Street debt rating agencies changed
their ratings on Household after the restatement.
Fitch Inc. maintained its "A with negative
outlook" rating on the company. "While the
avoidance of restatements through use of more
conservative accounting would have clearly been
preferable, similar restatements are not expected
for Household in the future," Fitch said in a
press statement.14
57
Minicase on Competition facing Fair Isaac
TrueLink Says It Has Better Credit Profiler
From American BankerThursday, August 22, 2002
By W.A. Lee Six months before Fair, Isaac Co.
made its credit scores available to consumers for
the first time in March 2001, a company formed by
a group of former Citigroup Inc. executives was
already peddling credit products over the
Internet. TrueLink Inc., a 7-year-old company
mostly owned by Lehman Brothers, says it has sold
more than one million credit products, including
scores, reports, and comprehensive profiles of
credit standing. Fair, Isaac says that it and
its credit bureau partner Equifax Inc. have sold
more than 1.5 million. TrueLink is a
well-connected company whose management team
includes the former president and the former
chief financial officer of Citibank's consumer
finance group. It counts Citibank (which owns a
small share of the company - under 1), Conseco
Inc., Cendant Corp., and Providian Financial
Corp. as clients and says its truecredit.com Web
site and its pages on clients' Web sites receive
700,000 visits a month. To boost sales, last week
True -Link, which has offices in New York and San
Luis Obispo, Calif., began to offer free credit
profiles. Consumers who take advantage of the
offer are enrolled in a credit monitoring
service, which costs 79.95 a year. Those who
cancel the monitoring service within 30 days are
not charged for it. Like Fair, Isaac, TrueLink
offers "simulators," which let consumers see how
their payment behavior would affect their scores.
However, Russell Schaub, TrueLink's president and
chief executive officer, said simulators are a
minor part of its package.
58
Minicase, cont
"We don't look at ourselves as selling a gimmick
to consumers to help them raise their scores for
a day or two," he said. TrueLink's credit
profile includes a score generated from a model
developed by Neuristics LLC that consumer Web
sites commonly use. The profile also includes a
credit report with data from all three bureaus, a
"borrowing power analysis" with debt management
advice, and a "debt consolidation tool" with
specific financing or refinancing
guidelines. Despite many consumers' perceptions,
the credit score is not the only or even
necessarily the most important part of their
profiles, Mr. Schaub said. TrueLink shows people
how lenders evaluate their debt, for example,
along with their score, he said. A consumer's
debt level is "a compensating factor," Mr. Schaub
said. "As a consumer's credit score goes down,
lenders will look at their debt burden." If it is
relatively low, "odds are they will still get the
better interest rate," even though the score
alone would not merit a lower rate, he said.
Scores alone do not give consumers a clear
picture of how creditors evaluate them, according
to Mr. Schaub. TrueLink competitors such as Fair,
Isaac have essentially repackaged risk management
products to consumers without making them readily
understandable, he said. TrueLink plans to launch
a site, knowyourloanrate.com, within the next two
months that will feature a product consumers can
use to determine the interest rates lenders would
offer them. Fair, Isaac and its partners offer a
similar product, but Mr. Schaub said that,
instead of plugging in a consumer's credit score,
TrueLink's interest rate evaluator conducts a
"miniunderwriting," by assessing other pertinent
information, such as the collateral value of a
person's home and car, he said. Fair, Isaac
called those criteria "interesting" but said that
the problem with providing that type of analysis
to consumers is that they may be misled into
thinking that all lenders evaluate the data in
the same way - if at all.
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Minicase, cont
The company built its offering around the FICO
score because "it is the one thing that lenders
tend to use very consistently," according to Sue
Simon, a vice president of consumer-direct
products at Fair, Isaac. "How lenders look at
debt-to-income ratios, collateral, or reserves on
a consumer's asset sheet is very different from
one to the other," she said. "It's very
subjective. The bedrock is really the FICO
score." The credit score TrueLink uses is not an
industry standard, Ms. Simon said. "Neuristics is
interesting. You see it on a lot of consumer
information sites, but in reality it's not as
widely used by lenders. "If consumers undertake
an improvement plan based on a score that's not
really used," they could be misled about their
credit standing. Providian says that it has used
TrueLink's products for several years in its
GetSmart card program and has offered TrueLink's
credit report and monitoring services to its
online customers. "TrueLink has developed a very
user-friendly product," said Ellen Rosenfels,
Providian's executive vice president in charge of
customer development. It offers "the flexibility
to tailor a solution to meet our business and
consumer needs, the ability to provide consumers
a three-bureau credit report online and offline,
substantial technological and development
expertise, and a strong site infrastructure to
ensure security," she said.
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MF820 STRUCTURE OF FIRST MIDTERM OF FALL
2004(75 minutes)
  • Please define briefly but carefully any three (3)
    of the following four (4) CONCEPTS OR
    DISTINCTIONS. Note that choice is given 15
    points.
  • CROSSWORD PUZZLE 5 points
  • SHORT-ANSWER ESSAY QUESTIONS. For any three (3)
    of the following five (5) statements, please
    explain briefly what makes them true. Note
    again that choice is given 45 points.
  • CALCULATION EXERCISES 35 points.

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