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Subprime mortgage defaults have been the focus of attention in recent months, and while the default problem in the prime segment of the market is much less severe, the issues around how to keep borrowers in their homes affect all market segments. In particular, what do we know about defaults and what causes them? Is there an ideal cost-benefit timeframe for the foreclosure process? What are the costs associated with foreclosure? Cutts and Merrill find that the foreclosure process varies widely across states and that the costs associated with foreclosure rise significantly with the length of the foreclosure timeline while the likelihood a borrower successfully cures out of the delinquency falls. |
| Authors: Amy Crews Cutts and William A. Merrill |
Published: 03/2008 |
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James Miller and James Pearce update their 2001 GSE cost/benefit estimates to reflect research during the interim and the recent growth in mortgage markets. They now find that, on net, Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae confer even greater benefits to homeowners and the economy than previously stated. |
| Authors: James E. Pearce and James C. Miller III |
Published: 11/2006 |
Asians represent the second fastest
growing minority population in the United States. Although many
of these immigrant households will become homeowners in the coming
decades, very little is known about this growing market. To gain
a better understanding of the cultural norms and expectations of
Asian first-time homebuyers, Freddie Mac conducted focus groups
involving Chinese, Korean, Vietnamese, Asian Indian, Filipino, and
American-born Asian consumers and real estate professionals. Although
the study revealed many differences among ethnicities, this report
highlights recurring themes across groups that may lead to a greater
understanding of the needs and expectations of Asian consumers. |
| Authors: Corporate
Relations and Housing Outreach |
Published: 12/2005 |
Repeat-sales home-price indices are widely used measures of changes
in home values. These indices use repeated valuations of the same
properties over time to gauge the average change in home prices
and suffer from "revision volatility," a tendency of previously
estimated values for prior quarters to change with a new release.
We examine the sources of the revision volatility and reject a theoretical
correction in favor of a methodological fix that was adopted on
the basis of this research in both the Conventional Mortgage Home
Price Index and the OFHEO House Price Index, the two most widely
cited repeat-sales indices. |
| Authors: J.S. Butler,
Yan Chang and Amy Crews Cutts |
Published: 12/2005 |
The keen interest of the media, and by extension, the public, in the future of house price growth in the United States centers on the question of whether home prices are ready for a fall or merely for a slowing in growth rates. We examine these potential outcomes by forecasting the likely change in prices under four models. In all cases, we find the predicted worst-case outcomes to be much less dire than the "doomsday" predictions reported in the mainstream press and elsewhere. |
| Authors: Amy Crews Cutts and Frank E. Nothaft |
Published: 11/2005 |
This study shows that when it comes
to decent, affordable housing for working families, the landscape
is changing, but not for the better. The number of America's working
families spending more than half their income on housing grew 76
percent in just over half a decade. In addition, six out of 10 immigrant
working families with critical housing needs are Hispanic and one-third
are from Mexico. Freddie Mac funded the study. |
| Authors: Center
for Housing Policy, the research affiliate of the National Housing
Conference |
Published: 04/2005 |
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An examination of the possible role
of mortgage hedging in creating volatility in interest rate markets. |
Authors: Yan Chang,
Douglas McManus,
and Buchi Ramagopal |
Published: 01/2005 |
This research examines recent innovations
in mortgage servicing and their impacts on foreclosure incidence
and loss mitigation. These innovations are shown to reduce costs
and help keep more delinquent borrowers in their homes, regardless
of borrower income. |
| Authors: Amy Crews Cutts and
Richard K.Green |
Published: 07/2004 |
This report authored by Chief Economist Frank Nothaft and four
other leading housing and mortgage finance economists predicts a
strong growth in the nation's housing sector over the coming decade. |
| Authors: David Berson - Fannie
Mae, David Lereah - NAR, Paul Merski - ICBA, Frank Nothaft - Freddie
Mac, David Seider - NAHB |
Published: 06/2004 |
This article reviews the effect of
home equity wealth accumulation upon consumer expenditures, the
beneficial economic role played by the mortgage market in enabling
families to tap their home equity and convert it into cash, and
surveys recent home value trends while addressing the likelihood
of a fall in these values. |
| Author: Frank E. Nothaft |
Published: 03/2004 |
| Reprinted with permission of the
Editorial Board, Urban Policy and Research. |
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