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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Explaining the Housing Bubble

TLDR
The authors proposed the standardization of private-label mortgage-backed securities (PLS) as an information-forcing device to encourage accurate risk pricing, which is necessary to rebuild a sustainable, stable housing-finance market.
Abstract
There is little consensus as to the cause of the housing bubble that precipitated the financial crisis of 2008. Numerous explanations exist: misguided monetary policy; a global savings surplus; government policies encouraging affordable homeownership; irrational consumer expectations of rising housing prices; inelastic housing supply. None of these explanations, however, is capable of fully explaining the housing bubble. This Article posits a new explanation for the housing bubble. First, it demonstrates that the bubble was a supply-side phenomenon attributable to an excess of mispriced mortgage finance: mortgage-finance spreads declined and volume increased, even as risk increased—a confluence attributable only to an oversupply of mortgage finance. Second, it explains the mortgage-finance supply glut as resulting from the failure of markets to price risk correctly due to the complexity, opacity, and heterogeneity of the unregulated private-label mortgage-backed securities (PLS) that began to dominate the market in 2004. The rise of PLS exacerbated informational asymmetries between the financial institutions that intermediate mortgage finance and PLS investors. These intermediation agents exploited informational asymmetries to encourage overinvestment in PLS that boosted the financial intermediaries’ volume-based profits and enabled borrowers to bid up housing prices. This Article proposes the standardization of PLS as an information-forcing device. Reducing the complexity and heterogeneity of PLS would facilitate accurate risk pricing, which is necessary to rebuild a sustainable, stable housing-finance market.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Inequality, Leverage, and Crises†

TL;DR: In this article, the authors studied how high leverage and crises can arise as a result of changes in the income distribution and presented a theoretical model where these features arise endogenously as a shift in bargaining powers over incomes.
Book ChapterDOI

shadow banking: a review of the literature

TL;DR: The shadow banking system is a web of specialised financial institutions that channel funding from savers to investors through a range of securitisation and secured funding techniques as discussed by the authors, which are inherently fragile, not unlike the commercial banking system prior to the creation of the public safety net.
Journal ArticleDOI

Finance and Business Cycles: The Credit-Driven Household Demand Channel

TL;DR: In this article, the credit-driven household demand channel has been used to explain the recent global recession, and it also describes economic cycles in many countries over the past 40 years.
Journal ArticleDOI

Credit Supply and the Housing Boom

TL;DR: This article showed that a slackening of collateral constraints at the peak of the lending cycle triggers a fall in home prices in their framework, providing a novel perspective on the possible origins of the bust.
Posted Content

Shadow banking regulation

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors review the rapidly growing literature on shadow banking and provide a conceptual framework for its regulation, and find that progress in achieving a more stable shadow banking system has been uneven.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The arbitrage theory of capital asset pricing

TL;DR: Ebsco as mentioned in this paper examines the arbitrage model of capital asset pricing as an alternative to the mean variance pricing model introduced by Sharpe, Lintner and Treynor.
Journal ArticleDOI

Wages, Rents, and the Quality of Life

TL;DR: In this paper, the role of wages and rents in allocating workers to locations with various quantities of amenities is discussed, and it is shown that if the amenity is also productive, then the sign of the wage gradient is unclear while the rent gradient is positive.
Journal ArticleDOI

Speculative Investor Behavior in a Stock Market with Heterogeneous Expectations

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors consider a common stock that pays dividends at a discrete sequence of future times: t = 1,2, taking all other prices and the random process that determines future dividends as exogenously given, they can ask what will be the price ofthe stock?
Journal ArticleDOI

Overconfidence and Speculative Bubbles

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a continuous time equilibrium model of bubbles where overconfidence generates disagreements among agents regarding asset fundamentals, and they show how overconfidence can justify the use of corporate strategies that would not be rewarding in a "rational" environment.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Rise in Mortgage Defaults

TL;DR: The first hints of trouble in the mortgage market surfaced in mid-2005, and conditions subsequently began to deteriorate rapidly as mentioned in this paper, and by the third quarter of 2008, the share of seriously delinquent mortgages had surged to 5.2%.