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Prepayment Speed

Prepayment Speed is a measure of how quickly borrowers are paying off their debts ahead of the scheduled payment plan. Think of it as the churn rate for loans. While this can apply to various types of debt, it's a superstar concept in the world of mortgage-backed securities (MBS) and other asset-backed securities (ABS). When you buy an MBS, you're essentially buying a stream of income from thousands of underlying mortgage payments. Prepayment speed tells you how fast the homeowners in that pool are paying off their mortgages, either by refinancing or selling their homes. This rate is a critical, and often unpredictable, variable that can dramatically impact an investor's return. It's not just an academic footnote; it’s a core risk that can either supercharge your returns or sink them, depending on the price you paid for the security.

Why Prepayment Speed Matters to Investors

Imagine you're a landlord, and you've just rented your property to a fantastic tenant on a long-term lease at a great rate. Suddenly, the tenant decides to move out and pays off the entire lease. You get your money back, which sounds good, but now you have to find a new tenant. If rental rates in your area have plummeted, you're stuck reinvesting your capital (the property) for a lower return. This is precisely the dilemma for an MBS investor. The speed of prepayments creates two major, opposing risks:

What Drives Prepayment Speed?

Prepayment behavior is notoriously tricky to predict because it's driven by human decisions. However, the key drivers are well-understood.

Interest Rates

This is the most powerful driver. The difference between a homeowner's current mortgage rate and prevailing market rates is the primary incentive to refinance. A significant drop in market rates can trigger a refinancing wave, causing prepayment speeds to accelerate dramatically.

Economic Conditions

A strong economy and a hot housing market are a recipe for high prepayments. When people feel confident, they are more likely to sell their homes and move—a transaction that forces the mortgage to be paid off in full. High home price appreciation also builds home equity, making it easier for homeowners to qualify for refinancing. Conversely, a recession tends to slow everything down.

Loan Characteristics

Not all loans are created equal. Several factors specific to the loans themselves influence prepayment speed:

Measuring Prepayment Speed

To tame this uncertainty, analysts use standardized models to measure and forecast prepayment speeds.

CPR and SMM

Two fundamental metrics are used to express prepayment speed:

The PSA Benchmark Model

To create a common language for comparing prepayment speeds, the industry uses the Public Securities Association (PSA) prepayment model (now managed by SIFMA). The PSA model isn't a forecast; it's a benchmark.

A Value Investor's Take

For a value investing practitioner, prepayment risk is not just a danger to be avoided but an opportunity to be exploited. The key lies in the price you pay for the bond.

Ultimately, understanding prepayment speed is about looking beyond the stated yield of an MBS and forming an independent judgment about the future behavior of the underlying borrowers. It's a classic value investing scenario: find a security where the market's assumptions are flawed and a more probable reality offers an attractive return.