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Collateralized mortgage obligation

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A collateralized mortgage obligation (CMO), created in June 1983 by investment banks Salomon Brothers and First Boston, is a type of mortgage-backed security, which has been divided up into tranches. This article is essentially restricted to CMO bonds as traded in the United States of America. Every time some principal payments are made on the underlying mortgages, that principal is paid to some (or all) of the tranches. In most CMO transactions, the total balance of the tranches is equal to the total balance of the collateral, and they remain equal, as each time the balance of the collateral changes (because of the principal payments on the underlying mortgages) the total balance of the tranches is also changed. The tranches typically separate the original bond (referred to as the collateral) cash flows in time or by interest and principle.

The tranches could be made in several ways.

The process of dividing an MBS into CMO tranches is referred to as structuring.

See also

 


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