CFM20035 - Securitisation: basic structures: master trust securitisation
Master trust securitisations
In some securitisation structures, rather than the assets being
assigned by the originator to one or more SPVs, the assets are
instead assigned to a trustee, which grants a beneficial interest
in the assets held under the trust to one or more SPVs set up to
act as investor beneficiaries. A separate SPV will normally issue
the bonds to third party investors, and will loan the proceeds of
the issue to the investor beneficiary SPV. A trust of this type is
commonly referred to a ‘Receivables Trust’ or a
‘Master Trust’, and is often used where it is desired
to securitise a large pool of assets over a period of time (as with
a large-scale residential mortgage originator), or where the assets
are short-tem debts that are continually replaced by new debts
arising on the same accounts (as with credit card receivables).
Such structures allow assets to be transferred continuously into
the trust as and when they are originated. Fresh funding can then
be raised from time to time by means of a new (or existing) issuer
SPV raising funds in the market, and paying them, via the investor
beneficiary SPV, to the trustee in return for the grant of a fresh
tranche of beneficial entitlement in the pool of assets held by the
trust. The originator will normally also hold a beneficial interest
under the trust, representing the portion of the asset pool that
has not yet been funded by securitisation, and also carrying the
originator’s right to profit extraction from the portion of
the asset pool that has been securitised. Where an SPV makes a
payment to the trustee to purchase a tranche of beneficial
entitlement the trustee will use the funds so received to make
payments to the originator, either by purchasing further assets
from the originator or be ‘paying down’ the
originator’s own interest in the trust.
See the diagram as
CFM20035a.
