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Discussion Paper Details
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Title: Mortgage Market Disruptions
Author(s): Philippe Bracke, Karen Croxson, Daoud Fakhri, Paolo Surico and Tommaso Valletti
Publication Date: October 2020
Keyword(s): Covid pandemic, credit supply, financial crisis and mortgage originations
Programme Area(s): Monetary Economics and Fluctuations
Abstract: Using the universe of residential mortgage contracts offered and originated in the United Kingdom, we document the major trends associated with the pandemic of 2020 and compare them to the financial crisis of 2007-09. Looking at initial impact, the mortgage market disruptions of 2020 were larger and more abrupt than in 2007-09; as of June 2020, the recovery had been much faster, although uncertainty remains over whether the momentum will persist. Products with loan-to-value above 90% or loan-to-income above 4 took the largest hit but their market shares had begun to rebound since May 2020. In contrast, the Great Recession was characterised by a more gradual but far more persistent decline in originations, especially among riskier borrowers, as the recovery did not start until 18 months after the onset of the financial crisis. The share of remortgagors that extract housing equity has declined significantly in the first months of the 2020 pandemic and the amount withdrawn has been typically smaller than in most of the previous years. By the end of 2020 Q2, roughly one in five mortgages were benefitting from payment deferrals while repossession orders had virtually disappeared following the temporary ban introduced by the Financial Conduct Authority in March 2020.
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Bibliographic Reference
Bracke, P, Croxson, K, Fakhri, D, Surico, P and Valletti, T. 2020. 'Mortgage Market Disruptions'. London, Centre for Economic Policy Research. https://cepr.org/active/publications/discussion_papers/dp.php?dpno=15381