Automated Underwriting and the Profitability of Mortgage Securitization
This paper develops a game-theoretic model of mortgage securitization, which is then used to examine a potential effect of automated underwriting. The paper's primary supposition is that automated underwriting lowers the costs to competitive mortgage originators and a monopolist securitizer of identifying mortgage applicants who are good credit risks. Faced with lower underwriting costs, originators will screen a larger number of mortgage applicants in the hopes of holding more good risks in their portfolios and passing through more bad risks to the securitizer. This mounting adverse-selection problem causes the securitizer's expected revenues to decline; this effect can outweigh the cost-saving benefit of automated underwriting, causing the securitizer's return on equity to fall. Copyright American Real Estate and Urban Economics Association.
Year of publication: |
2000
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Authors: | Passmore, Wayne ; Sparks, Roger W. |
Published in: |
Real Estate Economics. - American Real Estate and Urban Economics Association - AREUEA. - Vol. 28.2000, 2, p. 285-305
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Publisher: |
American Real Estate and Urban Economics Association - AREUEA |
Saved in:
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