KEY POINTS OF THE CHAPTER

A collateralized debt obligation (CDO) employs securitization technology to pools assets and finance the purchase of those assets by the issuance of securities.
A CDO is a generic name for collateralized loan obligations (the pool of assets consists of loans) and collateralized bond obligations (the pool of assets consists of bonds).
A CDO may acquire assets in cash or synthetically.
The cash asset CDO acquires assets in a traditional manner—raising the funding required equal to the size of the CDO and investing the same by acquiring the assets.
The assets are acquired either from one originator (in the case of balance sheet CDOs) or from the market (in the case of arbitrage CDOs).
For synthetic CDOs, the assets are acquired synthetically by using credit derivatives.
The basic difference between cash and synthetic CDOs is the amount of funding raised and the manner of its investment: (1) a synthetic CDO does not have to pay for the assets it acquires unless it is required to do so as result of its position in a credit derivative; so funding is much less than in a cash CDO; and (2) in a cash CDO the assets are purchased while in a synthetic CDO the exposure to an asset is acquired by a position in a credit derivative.
There are balance sheet and arbitrage CDOs and they may be of the cash or synthetic variety.
The motivation for a balance sheet CDO is to transfer the risk of a particular pool of assets and thereby reduce the balance ...

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