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Loan Pricing


Using An Investment “Bogey” Approach For Pricing Portfolio Loans

By Tom Parliment
July-August 1994

In this article, Tom Parliment lays out the concept of using benchmark securities as bogeys in determining whether portfolio loans are well or poorly priced.

Making Effective Loan Pricing Decisions - Part 1

Tom Farin
January-March 2001

In this first article in a multi-part series, Tom Farin talks generally about how the loan pricing process must be upgraded. He then introduces the concept of using benchmark securities in pricing evaluating whether portfolio loans are well or poorly priced. Examples are taken from the MissFed case.

Making Effective Loan Pricing Decisions - Part 2

By Tom Farin
January-March 2001

In this second article in a multi-part series, Tom begins with a discussion of how technology can improve pricing decisions. He then introduces a well-priced loan then introduces a marginal yield calculation as a way of deciding whether a modification should be made to the loan's rate. Finally, he illustrates how the decision can be modeled in the context of the institution's balance sheet. This involves use of a simulation model to evaluate risk/return tradeoffs.

Making Effective Loan Pricing Decisions - Part 3

By Tom Farin
January-March 2001

In this third article in a multi-part series, Tom looks at pricing loans that do not meet secondary market standards and may not be offered by the competition. He makes the point that the most profitable loans are generally not commodities. He goes on to prove it using pricing techniques introduced in the first two articles in this series.