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Introduction to Securitized Investing: Turning Complexity into Opportunity

Securitized bonds can provide differentiated sources of risk-adjusted returns that remain underutilized in many portfolios and underrepresented in common benchmarks, supported by their diversification, yield, and structural advantages.

The securitized bond market represents one of the largest and most dynamic segments of global fixed income, with outstanding size approaching $14 trillion. Despite its scale and significance, securitized investing remains underappreciated by many allocators who tend to focus on corporate or government bonds when constructing fixed income portfolios. This guide is intended to demystify the securitization process, clarify the critical distinction between agency-backed and securitized credit bonds. As well as articulate a compelling case for incorporating securitized sectors into a diversified fixed income portfolio.

The Securitization Process: Transforming cash flow generating assets into Investable Securities

Securitization is the process by which illiquid, cash-flow-producing assets — such as mortgages, auto loans, credit card receivables — are pooled together and structured into liquid, tradeable securities. Understanding this process is foundational to evaluating the risk and return characteristics of the instruments it produces.

The process begins with an originator, typically a bank, mortgage lender, or finance company, which generates loans through its normal course of business. These loans are aggregated and transferred to a special purpose vehicle (SPV) — a bankruptcy-remote legal entity created solely to hold the assets and issue securities against them. The SPV's bankruptcy-remote status is a cornerstone of the securitization architecture; it ensures that even if the originator experiences financial distress or insolvency, the pooled assets remain legally isolated and available to service investor claims.

Once the assets reside in the SPV, the structuring and underwriting process begins which then establishes the capital structure of the deal. The cash flows for the deal are generated by the underlying loans as principal and interest payments made are by the borrowers. The cash flows are then directed to different tranches (or slices) of the deal in a predetermined order of priority, a mechanism known as the cash flow waterfall. Senior tranches sit at the top of the waterfall and receive payments first, offering lower yields but greater protection from losses (please see the table above). Subordinate, or junior, tranches absorb losses before senior holders are affected, and in exchange they offer higher yields to compensate for the elevated risk. This tranching mechanism allows a single pool of assets to produce securities with a wide range of credit profiles, from AAA-rated senior bonds down to unrated equity or residual pieces. In addition, the subordination creates a protective cushion for senior tranches—losses must fully exhaust the lower tranches from bottom up before a dollar of principal loss reaches top tranche. An investor purchasing a AAA-rated CLO tranche, for example, has a very different risk and return expectation than one purchasing a BB-rated tranche from the same deal, even though both are exposed to the same underlying loan portfolio.

The end result of this process is a set of securities that convert illiquid, granular loans into liquid, often rated instruments with defined risk profiles — broadening the investor base for the underlying credit and providing originators with an efficient mechanism to recycle capital.

Agency-Backed Securities vs. Securitized Credit: A Critical Distinction

Not all securitized products carry the same risk profile, and perhaps the most important line of demarcation in the market is between agency mortgage-backed securities (Agency MBS) and securitized credit securities. Though both emerge from the securitization process, they differ fundamentally in their risk characteristics, return drivers, and role within a portfolio.

Agency MBS is one of the largest and most liquid fixed income markets in the world. These are securities backed by residential mortgages and guaranteed either by Ginnie Mae (explicit U.S. full faith and credit) or by Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac (historically implicit, effectively made explicit under the 2008 conservatorship). Because of this guarantee, investors in Agency MBS bear essentially no credit risk. The dominant risk in Agency MBS is instead interest rate risk and, more specifically, prepayment risk — the risk that borrowers refinance or pay off their mortgages faster or slower than expected as interest rates move, altering the timing of cash flows to investors.

Securitized credit, by contrast, encompasses a broader universe of sectors including asset-backed securities (ABS), non-agency residential mortgage-backed securities (RMBS), commercial mortgage-backed securities (CMBS), and collateralized loan obligations (CLOs) that do not carry a government guarantee. Private securitizations or Asset Based Lending are relatively more recent products showcasing the evolution and innovation in securitized assets. Whether private or public, investors in securitized credit assume credit risk — the risk that borrowers in the underlying pool default and that realized losses exceed the credit enhancement protecting their tranche. The return profile of securitized credit is therefore driven by a combination of interest rate movements and the credit performance of the collateral pool.

The collateral backing securitized credit is extraordinarily diverse. The exhibit below profiles some of the common types of collateral by sub-sector.

The Investment Case: Why Securitized Assets Deserve a Place in Your Portfolio

The case for allocating to securitized rests on the size of the opportunity set as well as several advantages that are difficult to replicate through traditional corporate or government securities alone. It offers a massive and diverse opportunity set and one that is underrepresented in traditional benchmarks (like the Bloomberg Aggregate). Second only to Treasuries in terms of size, securitized assets can serve as a differentiator, a diversifier, and a yield enhancer when assessing portfolio construction. Some of the key benefits of securitized assets are below:

1. Yield Advantage for Comparable Credit Risk

Securitized credit assets can offer additional spread or yield over comparably rated corporate credit bonds. A sample of securitized credit and Single-A rated IG corporate index sectors can be seen in the chart below to illustrate this point. One can see from the chart that in some instances, single-A rated corporate credit is comparable to AAA rated securitized assets in terms of its average life and spread compensation.

Securitized assets are structurally more complex than corporate bonds, requiring specialized expertise and robust research capabilities to evaluate collateral, model cash flow waterfalls, and stress-test credit enhancement levels. Before arriving at an investment decision, it is critically important to understand the deal structure, the originator or servicer, the underlying collateral, and the borrower profile. These complexities often create challenges for fair value analysis hence the reason for additional spread compensation.

2. Diversification of Risk Factors

One of the most compelling attributes of securitized investing is the diversification it introduces at multiple levels:

  • At the asset-class level, securitized sectors broaden credit exposure beyond the corporate balance sheet, tying performance primarily to consumer fundamentals—household leverage, employment, home prices, and auto credit—rather than corporate earnings and issuer leverage that typically drive IG and HY markets. While the consumer and corporate financial conditions are interconnected and can influence each other, they often diverge in timing and magnitude, leading to less correlated outcomes and driving potentially diversifying performance outcomes for these two credit sectors over a full market cycle. Access to consumer balance sheets serves as an excellent complement and a diversifier from corporate risk, which increasingly dominates investor portfolios through both equity and bond allocations.
  • At the pool level, securitized products benefit from granularity. A single auto loan ABS deal may contain tens of thousands of individual borrower obligations, and a credit card ABS trust may hold millions of accounts. This granularity means that idiosyncratic borrower defaults have a negligible impact on overall pool performance — a stark contrast to corporate credit, where a single issuer default can cause significant portfolio losses.
  • At the portfolio level, the low-to-moderate correlation between securitized credit spreads and corporate credit spreads and stocks means that adding securitized products to a portfolio dominated by stocks and bonds can improve the overall efficiency of the portfolio.

Conclusion

The asset class has seen material improvement since the Global Financial Crisis. Post-crisis regulatory reforms—most notably the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act—in conjunction with improved market discipline and investor expectations, introduced more conservative underwriting standards and enhanced disclosure requirements. Risk retention rules further oblige originators and sponsors (with some exceptions) to retain a meaningful economic interest in the deals they create. Together, these measures have strengthened the alignment of interests between issuers and investors, contributing to the greater safety and stability of the asset class.

Fixed income is an asset class that prioritizes wealth preservation and risk management. Securitized bonds offer opportunities to reduce risk in portfolios while still generating strong levels of income. We believe most portfolios can benefit from an allocation to securitized assets, whether as a standalone mandate or as part of a multi-sector portfolio. It offers a diversifying sources of risk-adjusted returns that remain underutilized in many allocations—and underrepresented in common benchmarks—through the diversification, yield, and structural advantages these instruments provide.

J.P. Morgan Asset Management has over $200 billion allocated across various strategies with long track record of investments in both agency and non-agency backed securities, up and down the capital stack, including privately originated mortgages. The firm has deep research analyst bench to evaluate individual bonds; a global trading platform with the scale and relationships to source targeted issues; and an experienced portfolio management team to underwrite and construct portfolios.

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All investments contain risk and may lose value. This advertisement has been prepared and issued by JPMorgan Asset Management (Australia) Limited (ABN 55 143 832 080) (AFSL No. 376919) being the investment manager of the fund. It is for general information only, without taking into account your objectives, financial situation or needs and does not constitute personal financial advice. Before making any decision, it is important for investors to consider the appropriateness of the information and seek appropriate legal, tax, and other professional advice. For more detailed information relating to the risks of the Fund, the type of customer (target market) it has been designed for and any distribution conditions please refer to the relevant Product Disclosure Statement and Target Market Determination which have been issued by Perpetual Trust Services Limited, ABN 48 000 142 049, AFSL 236648, as the responsible entity of the fund available on https://am.jpmorgan.com/au.