Your House or Your Credit Card, Which Would You Choose? Personal Delinquency Tradeoffs and Precautionary Liquidity Motives
Preprint
- 1 May 2010
- preprint
- Published by Elsevier in SSRN Electronic Journal
Abstract
This paper presents evidence that precautionary liquidity concerns lead many individuals to pay credit card bills even at the cost of mortgage delinquencies and foreclosures. While the popular press and some recent literature have suggested that this choice may emerge from steep declines in housing prices, we find evidence that individual-level liquidity concerns are more important in this decision. That is, choosing credit cards over housing suggests a precautionary liquidity preference. By linking the mortgage delinquency decisions to individual-level credit conditions, we are able to assess the compound impact of reductions in housing prices and retrenchment in the credit markets. Indeed, we find the availability of cash-equivalent credit to be a key component of the delinquency decision. We find that a one standard deviation reduction in available credit elicits a change in the predicted probability of mortgage delinquency that is similar in both direction and nearly double in magnitude to a one standard deviation reduction in housing price changes (the values are -25% and -13% respectively). Our findings are consistent with consumer finance literature that finds individuals have a preference for preserving liquidity - even at significant cost.Keywords
All Related Versions
This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- Liquidity Management and Corporate Investment During a Financial CrisisPublished by National Bureau of Economic Research ,2010
- Social Influence and Bankruptcy: Why do so Many Leave so Much on the Table?SSRN Electronic Journal, 2009
- Forgive and Forget: Who Gets Credit after Bankruptcy and Why?SSRN Electronic Journal, 2009
- Lines of Credit and Consumption SmoothingSSRN Electronic Journal, 2009
- Payday Loans and Credit Cards: New Liquidity and Credit Scoring Puzzles?Published by National Bureau of Economic Research ,2009
- Where Does it Go? Spending by the Financially ConstrainedSSRN Electronic Journal, 2008
- Personal Bankruptcy and Credit Market CompetitionSSRN Electronic Journal, 2007
- The Household Bankruptcy DecisionAmerican Economic Review, 2002
- The Loan Commitment as an Optimal Financing ContractJournal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis, 1991
- Competition, risk neutrality and loan commitmentsJournal of Banking & Finance, 1987