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Mortgage Modification and Strategic Behavior: Evidence from a Legal Settlement with Countrywide

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TLDR
The authors investigated whether homeowners respond strategically to news of mortgage modification programs and found that the increase in default rates is largest among borrowers least likely to default otherwise, suggesting that strategic behavior should be an important consideration in designing mortgage modification program.
Abstract
We investigate whether homeowners respond strategically to news of mortgage modification programs. We exploit plausibly exogenous variation in modification policy induced by settlement of US state government lawsuits against Countrywide Financial Corporation, which agreed to offer modifications to seriously delinquent borrowers. Using a difference-in-differences framework, we find that Countrywide's monthly delinquency rate increased more than 0.54 percentage points—a 10 percent relative increase—immediately after the settlement's announcement. The estimated increase in default rates is largest among borrowers least likely to default otherwise. These results suggest that strategic behavior should be an important consideration in designing mortgage modification programs. (JEL D14, G21, K22, R31)

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Journal ArticleDOI

Per-Customer Quantity Limit and Price Discrimination: Evidence from the U.S. Residential Mortgage Market

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors find that borrowers bunching at the conforming loan limit pay higher interest rates due to price discrimination, and they rule out the alternative explanation that those borrowers are of higher risk than other borrowers.
Journal ArticleDOI

Households Debt Restructuring: The Re-default Effects of a Debt Suspension

TL;DR: This article showed that a debt suspension has a very significant and negative effect on the likelihood to re-default but that this impact is only short-lived, and that rather than focusing on a specific debt profile, above all a deeper restructuring of the expenditure side is necessary to make the plan sustainable in case of an uniform increase of the debt severity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Liquidation policy and credit history in financial contracting: An experiment

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present an experimental analysis of the impacts of liquidation policy on borrowers' incentive to engage in strategic default and disclosure of credit history information on lending relationships and borrowers' behaviors.
Journal Article

Guarding the Subjective Premium: Condemnation Risk Discounts in the Housing Market

TL;DR: In this article, the authors propose the condemnation risk discount theory, whereby home buyers deduct a discount from housing prices in the absence of insurance against the risk that the government will condemn their property for private transfer.

The Home Mortgage Foreclosure Crisis: Lessons Learned

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors studied the loan modification experience post-2008 and showed that the best way to optimize foreclosure prevention is to design loan modifications to lower monthly payments, including through principal reduction whenever appropriate.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Interaction terms in logit and probit models

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present the correct way to estimate the magnitude and standard errors of the interaction effect in nonlinear models, which is the same way as in this paper.
ReportDOI

Unemployment insurance and unemployment spells

Bruce D. Meyer
- 01 Jul 1990 - 
TL;DR: In this article, the effects of the level and length of unemployment insurance benefits on unemployment durations were investigated and individual behavior during the weeks just prior to when benefits lapse was found to have a strong negative effect on the probability of leaving unemployment.
ReportDOI

The Consequences of Mortgage Credit Expansion: Evidence from the U.S. Mortgage Default Crisis

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors conduct a within-county analysis using detailed ZIP code-level data to document new findings regarding the origins of the biggest financial crisis since the Great Depression, finding that the sharp increase in mortgage defaults in 2007 is significantly amplified in subprime ZIP codes, or ZIP codes with a disproportionately large share of subprime borrowers as of 1996.
Journal ArticleDOI

Collective Moral Hazard, Maturity Mismatch, and Systemic Bailouts †

TL;DR: In this article, the authors characterize the optimal regulation, which takes the form of a minimum liquidity requirement coupled with monitoring of the quality of liquid assets, and establish the robustness of their insights when the set of optimal regulations is set.
Journal ArticleDOI

House Prices, Home Equity-Based Borrowing, and the U.S. Household Leverage Crisis

TL;DR: Mian and Sufi as mentioned in this paper examined the home equity-based borrowing channel using a dataset consisting of anonymous individual credit files of a national consumer credit bureau agency and showed that existing homeowners borrow significantly more debt as their house prices appreciate from 2002 to 2006.
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