Don’t feel like I understand prepayment risk very well. Reading the chapter and some concepts seems to conflict. For example, prepayment risk is: “The uncertainty that the timing of the actual cash flows will be different from the scheduled cash flows as set forth in the loan agreement due to the borrowers’ ability to alter payments, usually to take advantage of interest rate movements”.
Based on this, I’m inferring that any change in interest rates will affect the way the mortgage loan holders will pay their loans back. This is confirmed in the CFAi book, and later on it says:
This prepayment risk has two components : contraction risk and extension risk , both of which largely reflect changes in the general level of interest rates.”
Contraction risk: The risk that when interest rates decline, the security will have a shorter maturity than was anticipated at the time of purchase because borrowers refinance at the new, lower interest rates.
Extension risk: is the risk that when interest rates rise, prepayments will be lower than forecasted because homeowners are reluctant to give up the benefits of a contractual interest rate that now looks low. As a result, a security backed by mortgages will typically have a longer maturity than was anticipated at the time of purchase.
So if we are a holder of an MBS, wouldn’t we want borrowers to pay back the loans sooner, before market interest rates changes?
But later on when discussing CMOs, PAC, and support tranches, CFAi book says “If the support tranches are paid off quickly because of faster-than-expected prepayments, they no longer provide any protection for the PAC tranches” (Pg. 495).
But isn’t that exactly what MBS holders want, is for borrowers to pay back as quickly as possible at the interest rates specified in the loan agreement, before interest rates change (which increases extension or contraction risk)?
I guess I’m either not interpreting the definitions right or there is something else I am missing. Does anyone underestand prepayment risk well?
It seems like the only way to eliminate the risks mentioned above is to not allow refinancing when interest rates change.