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Accession Number: 200912
Title: Recourse and Residential Mortgage Default: Theory and Evidence from U.S. States
Author(s): Ghent, Andra C.
Kudlyak, Marianna
Publication Date: 2009
Availability: Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond, Richmond, VA, www.richmondfed.org/publications/research/working_papers/2009/pdf/wp09-10.pdf
Notes:
Descriptors: deficiency judgment, foreclosure, negative equity, residential mortgage default, recourse
Abstract: We analyze the impact of lender recourse on mortgage defaults theoretically and empirically across U.S. states. We study the effect of state laws regarding deficiency judgments in a model where lenders can use the threat of a deficiency judgment to deter default or to shorten the default process. Empirically, we find that recourse decreases the probability of default when there is a substantial likelihood that a borrower has negative home equity. We also find that, in states that allow deficiency judgments, defaults are more likely to occur through a lender-friendly procedure, such as a deed in lieu of foreclosure. [Author Abstract]