Mortgage Market Concentration, Foreclosures, and House Prices
Author(s) -
Giovanni Favara,
Mariassunta Giannetti
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
ssrn electronic journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1556-5068
DOI - 10.2139/ssrn.2270669
Subject(s) - secondary mortgage market , business , loan to value ratio , mortgage underwriting , commercial mortgage backed security , monetary economics , financial system , house price , shared appreciation mortgage , finance , mortgage insurance , economics , casualty insurance , insurance policy
In mortgage markets with low concentration, lenders have an excessive propensity to foreclose defaulting mortgages. Though rational, foreclosure decisions by individual lenders may increase aggregate losses because they generate a pecuniary externality that causes house price drops and contagious strategic defaults. In concentrated markets, instead, lenders internalize the adverse effects of mortgage foreclosures on local house prices and are more inclined to renegotiate defaulting mortgages. Thus, negative income shocks do not trigger strategic defaults, foreclosure rates are lower, and house prices less volatile. We provide empirical evidence consistent with the theory using U.S. counties during the 2007-2009 housing market collapse.
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