When
Homeowners Walk Away: New Research Reveals More Than 25 Percent of Mortgage
Loan Defaults Are Strategic
Financial
Trust Index Researchers Study Economic and Moral Factors In
Strategic Default
CHICAGO, June 26,
2009 /PRNewswire/ -- While the Obama administration's housing policy has been
largely influenced by a study of the Boston housing market during the 1990-91
recession in which homes devalued by approximately 10 percent, new research
suggests that a novel phenomenon is at hand in the fallout of today's more
severe housing crisis - strategic default on mortgage loans. Given that homes
in numerous parts of the country have lost more than 30 to 40 percent of their
value, many homeowners say they would simply walk away from their loans -
without fear of repercussion.
A new paper, entitled
"Moral and Social Restraints to Strategic Default on Mortgages,"
looks at American homeowners' propensity to default when the value of a
mortgage exceeds the value of their house, even if they can afford to pay their
mortgage. By using new survey data, the paper estimates that more than a
quarter of defaults on mortgage loans are strategic, especially when home
values have fallen by more than 15 percent.
The new research was
led by Paola Sapienza (Kellogg School of Management
at Northwestern University) and Luigi Zingales
(University of Chicago Booth School of Business) - co-authors of the quarterly
Chicago Booth/Kellogg School Financial Trust Index - as well as Luigi Guiso (European University Institute). With data collected
from surveys conducted within the last six months as part of the Financial
Trust Index, this paper is the first to examine the economic and moral
implications of strategic default in the current recession.
Negative
Equity
The study of the
Massachusetts housing market during the 1990-91 recession found that very few
people who could afford their mortgage chose to walk away from their homes.
Consistent with the earlier paper, this new research shows that homeowners refrain
from defaulting as long as negative equity does not exceed 10 percent of the
value of the home.
After that level,
however, the researchers found that homeowners start to default at an
increasing pace, and walk away massively after decreases of 15 percent and
more. In fact, 17 percent of households would default, even if they can afford
to pay their mortgage, when the equity shortfall reaches 50 percent of the
value of the house.
"Housing policy
under the current administration has focused on reducing households' cash flow
problems in response to the housing crisis, but no one has addressed the
negative equity issue as part of public policy regarding housing," said Sapienza "We're in a completely different economic
environment today, where for the first time since the Great Depression millions
of Americans have mortgage loans that exceed the value of their home."
Moral
and Social Factors in Strategic Default
According to the
researchers, moral and social variables play a significant role in predicting
strategic default. People surveyed who said it was immoral to default were 77
percent less likely to declare their intention to do so, while people who know
someone who defaulted were 82 percent more likely to say they would default
themselves.
"The most important
barriers to strategic default seem to be both moral and social," said Zingales. "Our research showed there is a
'multiplication effect,' where the social pressure not to default is weakened
when homeowners live in areas of high frequency of foreclosures or know others
who defaulted strategically. In fact, the predisposition to
default increases with the number of foreclosures in the same ZIP code."
"Factors such as
age, location, political affiliation and attitudes toward government
intervention also impacted respondents' responses to the morality of strategic
default," he added.
Specifically, the
researchers highlighted the following data:
-- People under the age of 35 and over
the age of 65 were less likely to
say it was
morally wrong to default compared to middle-aged respondents.
-- People with a higher education (eight
percentage points) and
African-Americans (14 percentage
points) are less likely to think it is
morally wrong
to default, whereas respondents with a higher income are
more likely to
think it is morally wrong.
-- Default is considered less morally
wrong in the U.S. Northeast (six
percentage
points) and West (8 1/2 percentage points).
-- There was little difference in the
moral view of strategic default among
Republicans and Democrats, but
Independents were less likely to say
defaulting is
immoral.
-- Respondents who supported government
intervention to help homeowners
were 12
percentage points less likely to say strategic default is
immoral.
"As defaults
become more common, the social stigma attached with defaulting will likely be
reduced, especially if there continues to be few repercussions for people who
walk away from their loans," concluded Sapienza.
"This has an adverse effect on homeowners who do pay their mortgages, and the after-effects of more defaults and more
price collapse could be economic catastrophe."
ABOUT
THE SURVEY: On
a quarterly basis, the Financial Trust Index captures the amount of trust
Americans have in the private institutions in which they can invest their
money. The survey is conducted by Social Science Research Solutions (SSRS)
using ICR's weekly telephone omnibus service. To assess the frequency and
determinants of strategic default, the researchers included variables in
surveys conducted with more than 1,000 individuals over two two-week periods in
December 2008 and March 2009.
MORE
INFORMATION:
To learn more about the key findings in "Moral and Social Restraints to
Strategic Default on Mortgages," or to learn about the Chicago
Booth/Kellogg School Financial Trust Index, visit www.financialtrustindex.org. To arrange an
interview, contact Meg Washburn or Allan Friedman at the contact information
listed above.
To learn more about
the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University, visit www.kellogg.northwestern.edu.
To learn more about
the University of Chicago Booth School of Business,
visit www.chicagobooth.edu.
MEDIA CONTACTS:
Meg Washburn
Kellogg School of Management
Office: 847-491-5446
Mobile: 773-848-4461
m-washburn@kellogg.northwestern.edu
Allan Friedman
The University of Chicago Booth School of
Business
Office: 773-702-9232
allan.friedman@chicagobooth.edu
Kellogg
School of Management
Web site:
http://www.kellogg.northwestern.edu/
http://www.chicagobooth.edu/
http://www.financialtrustindex.org/