Definition
The financial alchemy of bundling loans or other assets into securities that can be sold to investors, because why hold boring old mortgages when you can slice, dice, and trade them? This process converts illiquid assets into tradable securities, spreading risk around like a game of hot potato—which worked great until 2008 taught us what happens when the music stops. Banks love it because it gets debt off their books; investors tolerate it for the yields.
Example Usage
The bank used securitization to package my mortgage with thousands of others, so now my monthly payment technically goes to a SPV managed by an asset manager I've never heard of.
Source: Financial services terminology
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