The credit derivative and structured credit markets have grown very rapidly in size
and complexity in recent years. The flourishing world of credit derivatives has in turn
spurred huge growth in structured products. The demand for more tailored, tradable,
and investment-grade instruments have been an important motivation for developments
in the structured credit markets. The dominant structured product is basket credit
default swaps and Collateralized Debt Obligation (CDO). The most common type of
basket default swaps is the First-to-Default Swap (FTDS), where the seller compensates the
buyer for any loss of the principal and also, possibly, the accrued interest of the asset in
the reference basket which defaults first. The main difference between FTDS and a
Credit Default Swap (CDS) is the event causing payout for the contract (in one case, it is
the first default of any of a list of names and in the other default of a single name). An
nth to default basket default swap gives protection against the
nth default in the underlying pool of credits.
In order to understand the significance of developments in the Japanese markets, it
is useful to review what is happening in the global market. The global market in
credit derivatives is expected to rise to $33 tn by the end of 2008 according to a report to
be published by the British Bankers' Association (BBA) at its Credit Derivatives
conference. The report, based on a survey of market leaders in credit derivatives, predicts that
London will remain as one of the world's dominant centers for credit derivative
products. According to SIFMATM, Global CDO issuance through the third quarter of 2006, at
$322 bn, has exceeded full-year 2005 issuance by 20%. Issuance in the third quarter of
2006, at $117.8 bn, also exceeded issuance in the third quarter of last year by 30%.
European Sclerotisation Forum (ESF) forecasts issuance to grow to a new record of
531 bn in 2007, led by Residential Mortgage-Backed Securities (RMBS),
Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities (CMBS), and CDOs. Then, a 16.4% growth rate
from
456 bn issued in 2006.
|