The Delinquency of Subprime Mortgages
Preprint
- 1 March 2005
- preprint
- Published by Elsevier in SSRN Electronic Journal
Abstract
This paper focuses on understanding the determinants of the performance of subprime mortgages. A growing body of literature recognizes the substantial lag between the time that a borrower stops making payments on a mortgage and the termination of the loan. The duration of this lag and the method by which the delinquency is ultimately terminated play a critical role in the costs borne by both borrower and lender. Using nested and multinomial logit, we find that delinquency and default are sensitive to current economic conditions and housing markets. Credit scores and loan characteristics also play important roles.Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- Subprime Lending and Real Estate PricesReal Estate Economics, 2010
- Default correlation: An empirical investigation of a subprime lenderJournal of Banking & Finance, 2004
- Some Loans Are More Equal than Others: Third–Party Originations and Defaults in the Subprime Mortgage IndustryReal Estate Economics, 2002
- The Hazard Rates of First and Second DefaultsThe Journal of Real Estate Finance and Economics, 2000
- Community Reinvestment and Credit Risk: Evidence from an Affordable‐Home‐Loan ProgramReal Estate Economics, 1999
- Modeling the Conditional Probability of Foreclosure in the Context of Single‐Family Mortgage Default ResolutionsReal Estate Economics, 1998
- Loan delinquency in community lending organizations: Case studies of neighborworks organizationsHousing Policy Debate, 1998
- Pricing Mortgage Default and Foreclosure DelayJournal of Money, Credit and Banking, 1997
- Cost-benefit analysis of single-family foreclosure alternativesThe Journal of Real Estate Finance and Economics, 1996
- Privatized Default Risk and Real Estate Recessions: The U.K. Mortgage MarketReal Estate Economics, 1995