New Empirical Paper on Home Mortgage Foreclosure and Bankruptcy

10/25/13

RibbonHouse Cross-campus colleagues and I have posted a paper that studies intersections between mortgage foreclosure, chapters of bankruptcy, and other variables, using the Center for Community Capital's unique panel dataset of lower-income homeowners. An excerpt from the abstract:

We
analyze 4,280 lower-income homeowners in the United States who were more
than 90 days late paying their 30-year fixed-rate mortgages. Two dozen
organizations serviced these mortgages and initiated foreclosure between
2003 and 2012. We identify wide variation between mortgage servicers in
their likelihood of bringing the property to auction. We also show that
when homeowners in foreclosure filed for bankruptcy, foreclosure
auctions were 70% less likely. Chapters 7 and 13 both reduce the hazard
of auction, but the effect is five times greater for Chapter 13, which
contains enhanced tools to preserve homeownership. Bankruptcy’s effects
are strongest in states that permit power-of-sale foreclosure or
withdraw homeowners’ right-of-redemption at the time of auction.

Bear in mind that most homeowners in foreclosure in this sample did not file for bankruptcy. Among the 8% or so who did, the majority filed chapter 13. For even more context, please read the paper - brevity is among its virtues, and exhibits take credit for page length. A later version will ultimately appear in Housing Policy Debate.

Ribbon house image courtesy of Shutterstock.

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