Showing posts with label incentives. Show all posts
Showing posts with label incentives. Show all posts

11. Institutions and Incentives in Mortgages and Mortgage-Backed Securities

9:30 PM at 9:30 PM

Capitalism: Success, Crisis and Reform (PLSC 270) Guest speaker Will Goetzmann, Director of the Yale International Center for Finance and professor at the Yale School of Management, provides a brief history of debt and financial crises. Professor Goetzmann begins with a discussion on debt slavery in the ancient world, and moves on to real estate financing in New York City. Professor Goetzmann also presents recent research by himself and others on the collapse of the real estate market. He explores the notion that the collapse of the mortgage market followed from the fallout of the larger financial crisis, rather than the other way around. Data on the real estate market is presented and discussed. Larger claims about responsibility of different players for the economic crisis are briefly assessed. 00:00 - Chapter 1. Financial History, with Will Goetzmann 24:20 - Chapter 2. Current Financial Crisis 26:56 - Chapter 3. Price Growth vs. Subprime Approvals 35:12 - Chapter 4. Estimating the Relationship between Past Growth and Future Growth in Mortgage Prices 40:27 - Chapter 5. 2006 Mortgage Regressions 45:44 - Chapter 6. Evidence for Three Demand Effects and Loan Level Likelihood of Approval Complete course materials are available at the Open Yale Courses website: open.yale.edu This course was recorded in Fall 2009.



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lE0Eu19547Q&hl=en

11 institutions and incentives mortgages and mortgage-backed securities

4:30 AM at 4:30 AM

Capitalism: Achievements, Crisis and Reform (PLSC 270) will be guest speakers Goetzmann, director of the Yale Center for International Finance and a professor at the Yale School of Management, offers a brief history of debt and financial crises. Professor Goetzmann begins with an analysis of debt slavery in the ancient world, and moves on home loans in New York. Professor Goetzmann is also a recent research by himself and others in the collapse of the housing market. Theexplores the idea that the collapse of the mortgage market effects of the financial crisis, instead of going in reverse. We present data on the housing market and discussed. Large claims about the responsibility of different actors in the economic crisis was briefly evaluated. 00:00 - Chapter 1 The financial history, with Will Goetzmann 00:20 - 26:56 Chapter 2 The current financial crisis - Chapter 3 Growth of price approvals against subprime 35:12 - Chapter 4The estimate of the relationship between growth of the past and the future growth of mortgage rates 40:27 - 45:44 regressions mortgage Chapter May 2006 - Chapter 6 Evidence of the effects of three levels of demand and the likelihood of loan documents to complete the cycle approval on the website of the Open Yale Courses: open.yale.edu The course began in the fall of 2009.



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lE0Eu19547Q&hl=en