collateralized mortgage obligation
Collateralized mortgage obligation (CMO)
Collateralized Mortgage Obligation
collateralized mortgage obligation (CMO)
Collateralized mortgage obligation (CMO).
CMOs are fixed-income investments backed by mortgages or pools of mortgages.
A conventional mortgage-backed security has a single interest rate and maturity date. In contrast, the pool of mortgages in a CMO is divided into four tranches, each with a different interest rate and term.
Owners of the first three tranches receive regular interest payments and principal is repaid to reflect the order in which the tranches mature. The fourth tranche is usually a deep-discount zero coupon bond on which interest accrues until maturity, when the full face value is repaid.
CMOs usually involve high-quality mortgages or those guaranteed by the government. Their yield may be lower than those of other mortgage-backed investments.
However, the way in which they are repaid makes them especially attractive to institutional investors including insurance companies and pension funds.
The risk, as with all mortgage-backed securities, is that a change in interest rates can affect the rate of repayment and the market value of the CMO.
collateralized mortgage obligation (CMO)
A security or bond backed (collateralized) by a pool of mortgages.The issuer of the security segmented the cash flow in such a manner that it could create bonds with maturities at differing dates and appeal to a broad spectrum of investors.Today,the CMO has largely been replaced by the REMIC—real estate mortgage investment conduit—although the terms are often used interchangeably.