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Single-tranche CDO

Single-tranche CDO or bespoke CDO is an extension of full capital structure synthetic CDO deals,
which are a form of collateralized debt obligation. These are bespoke transactions where the bank and the
investor work closely to achieve a specific target.

In a bespoke portfolio transaction, the investor chooses or agrees to the list of reference entities, the rating
of the tranche, maturity of the transaction, coupon type (fixed or floating), subordination level, type of
collateral assets used etc. Typically the objective is to create a debt instrument where the return is
significantly higher than comparably rated bonds. In a nutshell, a single-tranche CDO is a CDO where the
arranging bank does not simultaneously place the entirety of the capital structure. These CDOs are also
called arbitrage CDOs because the arranging bank seeks to pay a lower return than the return available
from hedging the single-tranche exposure.

Full-capital-structure CDOs
In a full capital structure transaction, the total nominal of the notes issued equals to the total nominal of the
underlying portfolio. Therefore, the full capital structure transaction requires all of the tranches being placed
with investors.

Full-capital-structure deal example

Consider a US$1,000,000,000 portfolio consisting of 100 entities. Furthermore, consider an SPV which
has no assets or liabilities to start with. In order to purchase this $1,000,000,000 portfolio it has to borrow
$1,000,000,000. Instead of borrowing $1,000,000,000 in one go, it borrows in tranches and which have
different risks associated with them. As an example consider the following transaction:

Full capital structure CDO


Class A US$800,000,000 AAA/Aaa

Class B $100,000,000 A+/A1

Class C $70,000,000 B+/B1


Class D $30,000,000 Unrated

Issuer SPV Registered in Cayman Islands

Maturity 5 years
Reference portfolio $1,000,000,000 total of 100 entities

Class D notes are not rated and they are called equity or the first loss piece. As soon as there are defaults
within the portfolio, the principals of the Class D notes are reduced with the corresponding amount. If there
are a total of $12,000,000 of losses in the portfolio during the life of the deal, Class D noteholders receive
only $18,000,000 back, having lost $12,000,000 of their capital. Class A, B, and C noteholders receive all
of their money back. However, if there are $42,000,000 of losses in the portfolio during the life of the
transaction then the entire capital of the Class D noteholders is gone and the Class C noteholders receive
only $58,000,000.

What drives full capital-structure deals?

The investor who is most at risk is the equity investor. In the above example this is the investor of the Class
D notes. The equity piece is the most difficult part of the capital structure to place. Therefore the equity
investor has the most say in shaping up a full capital structure deal. Typically the sponsor of the CDO will
take a portion of the equity notes with the condition of not selling them until maturity to demonstrate that
they are comfortable with the portfolio and expect the deal to perform well. This is an important selling
point for the investors of mezzanine and senior notes.

Structure of full-capital-structure deals

In synthetic transactions, credit risk of the Reference Portfolio is transferred to the SPV via credit default
swaps. For each name in the portfolio the SPV enters into a credit default swap where the SPV sells credit
protection to the bank in return for a periodically paid premium. The cash raised from the sale of the various
classes of notes, i.e.; Class A, B, C and D in the above example, is placed in collateral securities. Typically
these are AAA rated notes issued by supranationals, governments, governmental organizations, or covered
bonds (Pfandbrief). These are low-risk instruments with a return slightly below the interbank market yield.
If there is a default in the portfolio, the credit default swap for that entity is triggered and the bank demands
the loss suffered for that entity from the SPV. For example if the bank has entered into a credit default swap
for $10,000,000 on Company A and this company is bankrupt the bank will demand $10,000,000 less the
recovery amount from the SPV. The recovery amount is the secondary market price of $10,000,000 of
bonds of Company A after bankruptcy. Typically recovery amount is assumed to be 40% but this number
changes depending on the credit cycle, industry type, and depending on the company in question. Hence, if
recovery amount is $4,000,000 (working on 40% recovery assumption), the bank receives $6,000,000 from
the SPV. In order to pay this money, the SPV has to liquidate some collateral securities to pay the bank.
Having lost some assets, the SPV has to reduce some liabilities as well and it does so by reducing the
notional of the equity notes. Hence, after the first default in the portfolio, the equity notes, i.e.; Class D
notes in the above example are reduced to $24,000,000 from $30,000,000.

A typical single-tranche CDO is a note issued by a bank or an SPV where in addition to the credit risk of
the issuing entity, the investors take credit risk on a portfolio of entities. In return for taking this additional
credit risk on the portfolio, the investors achieve a higher return than the market interest rate for the
corresponding maturity. A typical Single Tranche CDO will have the following terms depending on
whether it is issued by the bank or by the SPV:
Single tranche CDO terms (issued from a bank's balance sheet)
Issuer MyBank

Nominal $10,000,000

Maturity 5 years
Coupon 6m Libor + 1.00%

Rating A+/A1

$1,000,000,000 portfolio of 100 investment grade entities based in USA


Reference portfolio
and Canada
Attachment point 5%

Detachment point 6%

Single Tranche CDO Terms (issued from an SPV)


Issuer CDO Company I Cayman Islands Ltd.

Nominal $10,000,000
Maturity 5 years

Rating A+/A1

5yr MTN issued by the International Bank for Reconstruction and


Collateral
Development (World Bank) rated AAA/Aaa
Coupon 6m Libor + 1.00%

$1,000,000,000 portfolio of 100 investment grade entities based in USA


Reference portfolio
and Canada

Attachment point 5%
Detachment point 6%

Bespoke portfolio
According to researchers at Joseph L. Rotman School of Management, the [1]

Tranches of nonstandard portfolios are regularly traded. These are referred to as “bespokes.”
Bespoke portfolios differ in the names that are included in the portfolio, the average CDS
spread for the names in the portfolio, and in the dispersion of the CDS spreads. The approach
to estimating tranche spreads for a bespoke depends on its characteristics.

— Hull and White 2008

How does it work?

In the above example, the investor is making a $10,000,000 investment. He will receive 6 month Libor +
1.00% as long as the cumulative losses in the Reference Portfolio remain below 5%. If for example at the
end of the transaction the losses in the portfolio remain below $50,000,000 (5% of $1,000,000,000) the
investor will receive $10,000,000 back. If however, the losses in the portfolio amount to $52,000,000,
which corresponds to 5.2% of pool notional, the investor will lose 20% ($2,000,000) of his capital, i.e. he
will receive only $8,000,000 back. The coupon he receives will be on the reduced notional from the
moment the portfolio suffers a loss that affects the investor.

References
1. Hull, John; White, Alan (June 2008), An Improved Implied Copula Method and its Application
to the Valuation of Bespoke CDO Tranches, Toronto, Canada: Joseph L. Rotman School of
Management, University of Toronto, CiteSeerX 10.1.1.139.2245 (https://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/
viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.139.2245)

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