Note Pool
A bundle of multiple notes bought or sold together; individual sellers usually sell a single whole note instead.
A note pool is a group of multiple mortgage notes bundled together and bought or sold as a single transaction. Institutional sellers — banks, funds, and large note holders — frequently trade in pools because it is efficient to move many loans at once. For an individual note holder, the relevant contrast is simple: you almost always sell a single whole note, not a pool, but understanding pools clarifies how the broader secondary market works and why pricing can differ between a one-off note and a bulk sale.
How note pools work
In a pool sale, a seller assembles many notes — sometimes dozens or hundreds — and offers them together. Pools are often organized by characteristics so buyers can price them as a unit:
- Performance: all performing, all non-performing (NPL), or re-performing (RPL)
- Geography: notes concentrated in certain states (often chosen for favorable foreclosure law)
- Lien position: first liens vs. junior liens
- Loan size or property type
The buyer underwrites the pool in aggregate, often sampling individual files and applying portfolio-level assumptions about default and recovery.
Pool pricing vs. single-note pricing
Pools and individual notes are priced differently:
- Pools trade on portfolio economics — the buyer expects some notes to underperform and prices the whole bundle to a blended return. Bulk buyers may pay a lower per-note price in exchange for volume and the convenience of one transaction, and they accept that diligence is done on a sample rather than every loan.
- Single whole notes are underwritten individually and thoroughly — every document, the specific payor, the exact ITV and lien position. A clean, strong individual note can often command a better price per dollar than the same note buried in a pool, because the buyer can fully verify it and is not pricing in pool-level uncertainty.
Why this matters to an individual seller
If you hold one note (or a few), you are a whole-loan seller, and that is good news: a single, well-documented note gets the buyer's full attention and individualized pricing. You do not need to assemble a pool or accept bulk-discount economics. A principal buyer like Mortgage Note Capital purchases individual notes directly, underwriting yours on its own merits.
If you happen to hold several notes, you can usually still sell them individually (often the best net result) or, if you prefer one transaction, as a small pool — the right approach depends on the notes' quality and your goals.
What it means when you sell
For most note holders, the takeaway is reassuring: you sell your whole note to a principal buyer who values it individually, not at a bulk-pool discount. Focus on what makes your single note strong — seasoning, low LTV, first-lien position, and clean documentation — and you will be priced on the merits, not on portfolio averages.