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Loan Bond with surety and Hypothecation of Property

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hypothecation

What Is Hypothecation?


Hypothecation occurs when an asset is pledged as collateral to secure a loan, without giving up title, possession or ownership rights, such as income generated by the asset. However, the lender can seize the asset if the terms of the agreement are not met.

A rental property, for example, may undergo hypothecation as collateral against a mortgage issued by a bank. While the property remains collateral, the bank has no claim on rental income that comes in; however, if the landlord defaults on the loan the bank may seize the property.

How Hypothecation Works ?

It occurs most commonly in mortgage lending. The borrower technically owns the house, but as the house is pledged as collateral, the mortgage lender has the right to seize the house if the borrower cannot meet the repayment terms of the loan agreement – which occurred during the foreclosure crisis. Auto loans are similarly secured by the underlying vehicle. Unsecured loans, on the other hand, do not work with hypothecated since there is no collateral to claim in the event of default.

As hypothecation provides security to the lender because of the collateral pledged by the borrower, it is easier to secure a loan, and the lender may offer a lower interest rate than on an unsecured loan.

• Hypothecation occurs when an asset is pledged as collateral to secure a loan, without giving up title, possession or ownership rights, such as income generated by the asset.
• Hypothecation occurs most commonly in mortgage lending, where the home serves as collateral but the bank does not have any claim on cash flows or income generated from it unless the borrower defaults.
•Margin lending in brokerage accounts is another common form of hypothecation found in securities trading and investing.

Hypothecation in Investing

Margin lending in brokerage accounts is another common form of hypothecation. When an investor chooses to buy on margin or sell-short, they are agreeing that those securities can be sold if necessary if there is a margin call. The investor owns the securities in their account, but the broker can sell them if they issue a margin call that the investor cannot meet, to cover the investors’ losses.

When banks and brokers use hypothecated collateral as collateral to back their own transactions and trades with their client’s agreement, in order to secure a lower cost of borrowing or a rebate on fees — this is called rehypothecation. While certain types of rehypothecation can contribute to market functioning, if collateral collected to protect against the risk of counterparty default has been rehypothecated, it may not be available in the event of a default. This, in turn, may increase systemic risk and amplify market stresses by causing a chain reaction of asset sales. So, when collateral is rehypothecated, investors need to understand how long the collateral chain is.

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