Recourse and (Strategic) Mortgage Defaults: Evidence from Changes in Housing Market Laws

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alin Marius Andries ◽  
Anca Copaciu ◽  
Radu Popa ◽  
Razvan Vlahu
2019 ◽  
Vol 46 (3) ◽  
pp. 381-400
Author(s):  
MeiChi Huang

Purpose The purpose of this paper is to investigate linkages between households’ expectations and credit markets in the housing crisis. Design/methodology/approach In the Markov-switching framework, the sample period is classified into high- and low-impact regimes based on impacts of expectations on default rates, and the good-time-to-buy (GTTB) index is chosen to proxy for expectations toward the housing-market dynamics. Findings The results suggest that in high-impact regimes, optimistic expectations are substantially associated with lower defaults for all default rates analyzed, and second mortgage defaults are more sensitive to households’ expectations than first mortgage defaults. In low-impact regimes, the GTTB index significantly influences composite and first-mortgage default rates, but its impact is insignificant for second mortgage and bankcard default rates. Originality/value The results provide compelling evidence that households’ expectations play more important roles in credit markets in turmoil periods.


Subject Australia's housing market. Significance Construction activity fell to its lowest level for five years in December as housing prices slumped and bank lending conditions tightened. Economic growth and employment both probably declined in the fourth quarter last year. Impacts Prices should bottom out this year, after a net 10-15% drop; a steeper decline is possible, especially in Sydney. Economic growth will be affected, with construction and retail most vulnerable to reduced private spending. Falling household savings and existing high debt levels will lift risks of mortgage defaults as repayment costs rise.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Min-Sung Kim ◽  
Jinseok Kim ◽  
Boram Lee
Keyword(s):  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document