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Borrower expectations and mortgage performance: Evidence from the COVID-19 pandemic

William D Larson1; Christos Makridis2,3,4,5; Chad A. Redmer6

1 United States Department of the Treasury · 2 University of Nicosia · 3 University of St.Gallen · 4 Arizona State University · 5 Stanford University · 6 United States Naval Academy

Journal of Financial Intermediation 2025

We assess issues related to borrower beliefs and mortgage performance using new individual panel data that simultaneously cover borrower expectations, forbearance status during the COVID-19 pandemic, and a wide array of demographic characteristics. First, we establish the determinants of borrower expectations, with local experiences and those of social networks playing important roles. We then show that households who, at origination, were optimistic about future house price appreciation or pessimistic about the possibility of future unemployment were more likely to enter forbearance in 2020. However, by early 2021, appreciation-optimistic borrowers who were in forbearance were likely to have cured or prepaid their loan, while those who expected unemployment were likely to still be in forbearance. We offer three channels by which expectations affect forbearance behavior: choices of initial loan terms, associations with actual future events, and factors related to belief formation that are also plausibly associated with forbearance. Our findings highlight the crucial role borrower expectations play in both leverage choices and mortgage performance.

DOI
10.1016/j.jfi.2025.101181
Volume
64
Pages
101181
Language
en
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