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

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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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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Fintech, regulatory arbitrage, and the rise of shadow banks

TL;DR: In this article, the authors study how two forces, regulatory differences and technological advantages, contributed to the growth of shadow banks in residential mortgage origination, concluding that traditional banks contracted in markets where they faced more regulatory constraints; shadow banks partially filled these gaps.
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Forced Sales and House Prices

TL;DR: The market for housing differs in several important ways from the textbook model of a liquid asset market with exogenous fundamentals as mentioned in this paper, which implies that the price at which a house is sold can be influenced not only by general supply and demand conditions, but also by idiosyncratic factors, including the urgency of the sale and the effects of ownership transfer on the physical quality of the house.
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Interest Rate Pass-Through: Mortgage Rates, Household Consumption, and Voluntary Deleveraging

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors exploit variation in the timing of resets of adjustable-rate mortgages (ARMs) to find that a sizable decline in mortgage payments (up to 50 percent) induces a significant increase in c...
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What "Triggers" Mortgage Default?

TL;DR: The authors assesses the relative importance of two key drivers of mortgage default: negative equity and illiquidity, with comparably sized marginal effects, and find that negative equity is significantly associated with mortgage default.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The failure of models that predict failure: Distance, incentives, and defaults ☆

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that over time lenders set interest rates only on the basis of variables that are reported to investors, ignoring other credit-relevant information, and that among borrowers with similar reported characteristics, over time the set that receives loans becomes worse along the unseen information dimension.
Journal ArticleDOI

What "Triggers" Mortgage Default?

TL;DR: The authors assesses the relative importance of two key drivers of mortgage default: negative equity and illiquidity, with comparably sized marginal effects, and find that negative equity is significantly associated with mortgage default.
Journal ArticleDOI

Foreclosures, House Prices, and the Real Economy

TL;DR: This paper showed that foreclosures led to a large decline in house prices, residential investment, and consumer demand from 2007 to 2009, and showed that the foreclosure rates in non-judicial and judicial requirement states converged and showed some evidence of a stronger recovery in nonjudicial states.
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The role of securitization in mortgage renegotiation

TL;DR: In this article, the effects of securitization on renegotiation of distressed residential mortgages over the current financial crisis were studied. But, the authors did not examine the effect of bank-held loans on postmodification default rates.
Journal ArticleDOI

Political Intervention in Debt Contracts

TL;DR: This article developed a dynamic general equilibrium model of an agricultural economy in which poor farmers borrow from rich farmers, and compared equilibria with and without political intervention, showing that state-contingent debt moratoria always improve ex post efficiency and may also improve ex ante efficiency.
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