Speculative Bubbles 2002 - 2007 Holland 1634 - 1637 1996 - 2000 1925-29.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Residential Mortgage Loans
Advertisements

American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations The Foreclosure Crisis: Causes and Solutions.
Assignment for next Mon. Read pgs in materials. Find an article on Explanation of the Mortgage Crisis on the web or in a magazine or newspaper.
Interest Rate Trends What History Tells Us About Real Estate Loans.
What, Who, Where and Why of the Subprime Crisis By: Ken Cyree, University of Mississippi Presented to Carroll University.
Consumer Math p Definitions  Down payment – part of the price paid at the time of purchase  Financed – borrowed  Mortgage – a property loan.
Chapter 4 Understanding Interest Rates
Loans - Mortgages. Amortization Table Just like Credit cards Month Beginning BalancePaymentInterestPrincipalEnd Balance.
Subprime Mortgage Lending Market. Road Map  What Is Subprime?  A Brief History  How Does the Subprime Market Work?  How Does The Subprime Market Differ.
SUBPRIME MORTGAGE LOANS Nwo&feature=related.
The Subprime Mortgage Crisis
Macroeconomic Issues The Great Recession 12/2007-6/2009 Shaded area = recession.
Sub-prime Mortgage. How do banks make money? Deposits Loans Interest Investment.
Homeowners get mortgage loans from lenders in order to buy homes. This has long been the so-called American dream. As homeowners pay off their mortgages.
The U.S. economy is currently in a recession. 1.True 2.False.
The Financial Crisis Marlene Kim Assoc. Prof. Department of Economics University of MA Boston 100 Morrissey Blvd. Boston, MA /
Appendix to Chapter 4: The Housing Boom and Bust1997– – 2006 –Housing prices almost doubled –Bubble Mid-2006 –Falling 1.
The Subprime Mortgage Crisis a.k.a. The Great Recession The Greatest Recession Powerpoint Ever!
 In 2002, subprime mortgage originations totaled about $200 billion or 7% of the mortgage market.  Three years later these originations on these loans.
Subprime Markets Ba: 543 David Vasquez. Outline  Outline  Definitions of Prime and Subprime Borrowers  Walk through example  How this played out during.
Note card  Gallery Walk: Please walk around the room and select a house you would like to purchase.  1: House #  2: Monthly payment for your home.
Mortgages. Home Loans Home Loans are referred to as mortgages First home loans offered were in to 1930’s 67% of all American own their homes.
How to Cook Financial Meth. Act 1 – Where it All Begins People borrow money from a lender to buy a home – this is called a mortgage loan. Every month,
Installment Plans and Stocks Causes of the Great Depression.
How we got here and what it means. I. Lending Standards – Banks were lending too much money to people who couldn’t pay it back. + II. Interest Rates –
THE GREAT CONTRACTION : WHO CAUSED IT & HOW DID IT HAPPEN? By : Charlie Haumesser Discussants : Ashley Hucksoll & Mikael Leveille.
The subprime crisis and the credit crunch MK, Unit 14.
Loans - Mortgages. Amortization Table Just like Credit cards Month Beginning BalancePaymentInterestPrincipalEnd Balance.
1 Simple Interest By: Dilshad Akrayee. 2 Definition  Simple interest is interest that is computed on the original sum.  Formula: Principal amount *
THE PAUL MILSTEIN CENTER FOR REAL ESTATE Professor Chris Mayer (Columbia Business School; NBER; Visiting Scholar, Federal Reserve Bank of New York) Lessons.
The Mortgage Crisis Todd J. Zywicki George Mason University Foundation Professor of Law Senior Scholar, Mercatus Center.
1 Section 2B Financial Crisis of Overview Key events of the economic crisis The four causes of the economic crisis 3 lessons we should learn from.
Unit 2 SL Economics Year 1. Market A market is a situation where potential buyers are in contact with potential sellers. It enables the needs and wants.
Derivatives. derive (derives, deriving, derived): to obtain sg from sg else derivative: sg derived, dependent upon another thing.
The Economic Outlook: Recession and Opportunities By Dean Baker Co-Director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research (CEPR)
Economic Bubbles How the housing market led to the Great Recession.
The Current Economic and Financial Crises. How did we get here? Background Housing Market Mortgage Market Main Street Wall Street.
Britney Melcher Greg Russo Lyndsey Robison Shawn Stormer.
Macroeconomic Issues The Great Recession: GDP begins to drop Shaded area = recession.
Home Buying. Why we need banks Many of us will want to buy a home later in life. Do you have the money to buy one? Many of us do NOT have $100,000 - $400,000.
The Financial Crisis of 2008 By Franz Soerensen. The Creation of the bubble (1 of 8) Prior to deregulation fewer could get mortgages (Ferguson) Lenders.
Unit 2 SL Economics Year 1. Market A market is a situation where potential buyers are in contact with potential sellers. It enables the needs and wants.
Macroeconomic Issues The Great Recession: GDP begins to drop Shaded area = recession.
The Creation of a Housing Bubble. Speculative Bubbles USA Holland Economic Bubbles have existed throughout history!
Wall Street 2 (Day 3) Take Handout Take out notebook – Write down How did this start? You will Understand how events from 1980’s to 2006 led to crash and.
BUSINESS AND PERSONAL LAW DECEMBER 17,   WHEN YOU WATCH….THINK…
The Financial Crisis and the Great Recession 14. Start with the 2001 recession and weak recovery Fed responds by cutting interest rates (FFR = 1%) Since.
Should I consider it?.  Most people buy a house with money they borrow from a lender like a bank or a credit union. The lender in turn holds a lien on.
Subprime Loan Mortgage  A type of loan that is offered at a rate above prime to individuals who do not qualify for prime rate loans.  Quite often, subprime.
#1: What is a mortgage? Housing Bubble Review It is a loan to buy a house.
Chapter 23 – Mortgage Market Property Backed Loans Residential Loans Commercial Loans Process Originators Origination Fee – Points Servicing Fee PTI –
Millennials are biggest part of Labor Force. Interest Rates Loans for Houses, Cars & College.
Home Ownership. Mortgages A mortgage is a loan for buying a house Over a period of many years, the borrower repays the loan, plus interest, until he/she.
Key Terms Financial/Housing Crisis. Debt When you owe more money than you have.
2008 Macroeconomic Highlights. Economic Slowdown Begins Q4 of 2007: – Real GDP declines in Q4 of 2007 Shaded area = recession.
A mortgage is a loan that a person obtains to buy a house For most people, this will be the largest purchase they will make in the course of their lifetime….
US Bubbles and Bursts Housing Crisis and Subprime Mortgages 082SIS85 Ewha International Business Jaeyoung Alleich Shin.
The 2007 Financial Crisis Who is to blame?.
Home Mortgage Loan Defaults In the US and EU
Speculative Bubbles Holland
Subprime Loan Mortgage
What led to the worst financial crisis of our time?
Good news for real estate borrowers Good news for real estate borrowers. By 2003, inflation-adjusted mortgage rates were about as low as government.
Learning from History in Economic Crisis
Interest Rates & Economic Bubbles
Subprime Loan Mortgage
The Creation of a Housing Bubble
The Great Recession: GDP begins to drop
Interest Rates & Loans Borrowing money intelligently.
Compound Interest How money grows exponentially!.
Presentation transcript:

Speculative Bubbles Holland

The Housing Market Crisis What Happened?

“The Economist” Magazine Covers During the Economic Crisis

The Housing Market Crisis What Happened?

Consumers were required to put a 20% down payment For a $500,000 home: –$100,000 down payment & borrow $400,000 (mortgage) –loan is paid back over 30-years at a fixed interest rate (ex: 6%/year) The loan is less than the value of the house –So banks are taking very little/no risk of default PRIME MORTGAGES ONLY!!! Buying a house (before 2000):

New Sub-prime Mortgages Sub-prime mortgages were introduced in the year 2000 These mortgages required no down payment to borrowers with poor credit history Mortgages often had low initial interest rates which adjusted up later –Known as ARMs (Adjustable Rate Mortgage) or variable rate loans –Example: 2% interest rate/year for the first 3 years; after that the interest rate changes to 9%/year –Personal example

Housing Bubble Analysis Subprime Mortgage Example Price Paid: $1,000,000 Down Payment: 0 You owe: $1,000,000 Initial Value of House $1,000,000 Housing Bubble Bursts: New Value of House: $900,000 Homeowner now owes 1 million but only has a house worth $900,000. Now he can’t refinance his loan and his house payments skyrocket when the loan resets. If he can’t pay his monthly mortgage, the Bank will foreclose on his house! Huge incentive to just walk away from the house. Major Problem!

Subprime Mortgage Analysis The Binge Banks made loans to consumers who were not qualified with zero down payments In the short run, this caused home prices to rise In the long run, this led to “inflated” home prices & people unable to pay their mortgage The Hangover : –home prices have fallen substantially –consumers are losing their homes to foreclosure –banks are failing (as they take the losses on foreclosures)

House of Cards Caused by Credit Bubble Led to