Modeling Financial Products and their Supply Chains
This research provides insights into the factors influencing the performance and failure risk of residential mortgage-backed securities for financial analysts and regulators, particularly by identifying the impact of supply chain communities.
This paper models residential mortgage-backed securities (resMBS) and their supply chains using unsupervised probabilistic methods, specifically dynamic topic models (DTM), to extract features from prospectus data. The study found that the composition of the prospectus and the communities within the supply chain, particularly those linked to institutions involved in the subprime crisis, significantly impact resMBS performance and risk of failure.
The objective of this paper is to explore how financial big data and machine learning methods can be applied to model and understand financial products. We focus on residential mortgage backed securities, resMBS, which were at the heart of the 2008 US financial crisis. These securities are contained within a prospectus and have a complex waterfall payoff structure. Multiple financial institutions form a supply chain to create prospectuses. To model this supply chain, we use unsupervised probabilistic methods, particularly dynamic topics models (DTM), to extract a set of features (topics) reflecting community formation and temporal evolution along the chain. We then provide insight into the performance of the resMBS securities and the impact of the supply chain through a series of increasingly comprehensive models. First, models at the security level directly identify salient features of resMBS securities that impact their performance. We then extend the model to include prospectus level features and demonstrate that the composition of the prospectus is significant. Our model also shows that communities along the supply chain that are associated with the generation of the prospectuses and securities have an impact on performance. We are the first to show that toxic communities that are closely linked to financial institutions that played a key role in the subprime crisis can increase the risk of failure of resMBS securities.