Prepayment Inputs
Key Formulas
Prepayment Results
PSA Prepayment Ramp
Calculation Steps
Model Assumptions
- Uses the standard PSA benchmark designed for 30-year fixed-rate mortgages.
- PSA ramp: CPR starts at 0.2% in month 1, increases 0.2% per month, reaches 6% plateau at month 30.
- Monthly prepayment is approximate: Balance × SMM. Actual MBS cash flows also include scheduled principal.
- PSA is a benchmark, not a forecast. Actual prepayment speeds vary with rates, housing turnover, and borrower behavior.
- For educational purposes. Not financial advice. Consult MBS analytics for actual pool projections.
Understanding MBS Prepayment Speeds
What Are CPR, SMM, and PSA?
CPR (Conditional Prepayment Rate) is the annualized percentage of a mortgage pool's outstanding principal that prepays. A 6% CPR means that if prepayments continue at the current monthly rate for a full year, 6% of the pool would prepay.
SMM (Single Monthly Mortality) is the monthly equivalent of CPR. It represents the actual percentage of the beginning-of-month balance that prepays in that month. SMM and CPR are mathematically linked but not simply divided by 12.
PSA (Public Securities Association) is a standardized prepayment benchmark for 30-year mortgages. At 100% PSA, new mortgages prepay slowly and ramp up over 30 months to a 6% CPR plateau. Actual speeds are expressed as multiples of this benchmark (e.g., 150% PSA = 1.5x faster).
SMM to CPR: CPR = 1 - (1 - SMM)12
PSA Model: CPR = min(0.2% × month, 6%) × PSA%
The PSA Prepayment Ramp
Seasoning Ramp (Months 1-30)
New mortgages prepay slowly. CPR starts at 0.2% and increases by 0.2% each month. This reflects borrower behavior: homeowners rarely refinance or move immediately after closing.
Plateau (Month 30+)
After 30 months, prepayments reach a steady state at 6% CPR. The pool is now "seasoned" and prepayment behavior stabilizes.
Why Prepayments Matter
Prepayment speeds directly impact MBS investors:
- Faster prepayments return principal sooner, shortening duration and reducing total interest income. This is unfavorable when rates fall (reinvestment risk).
- Slower prepayments extend duration, increasing interest rate sensitivity. This is unfavorable when rates rise (extension risk).
- Prepayment uncertainty creates negative convexity in MBS, making them harder to hedge than standard bonds.