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Dive into the research topics where S. Wayne Passmore is active.

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Featured researches published by S. Wayne Passmore.


Journal of Monetary Economics | 2011

Did the Federal Reserve’s MBS Purchase Program Lower Mortgage Rates?

Diana Hancock; S. Wayne Passmore

On November 25, 2008, the Federal Reserve announced it would purchase mortgage-backed securities (MBS). This program affected mortgage rates through three channels: (1) improved market functioning in both primary and secondary mortgage markets, (2) clearer government backing for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and (3) anticipation of portfolio rebalancing effects. We use empirical pricing models for MBS yields and for mortgage rates to measure relative importance of channels: The first two were important during the height of the financial crisis, but the effects of the third depended on market conditions. Overall, the program put significant downward pressure on mortgage rates.


Real Estate Economics | 2005

The Effect of Housing Government-Sponsored Enterprises on Mortgage Rates

S. Wayne Passmore; Shane M. Sherlund; Gillian Burgess

We derive a theoretical model of how jumbo and conforming mortgage rates are determined and how the jumbo-conforming spread might arise. We show that mortgage rates reflect the cost of funding mortgages and that this cost of funding can drive a wedge between jumbo and conforming rates (the jumbo-conforming spread). Further, we show how the jumbo-conforming spread widens when mortgage demand is high or core deposits are not sufficient to fund mortgage demand, and tighten as the mortgage market becomes more liquid and realizes economies of scale. Using MIRS data for April 1997 through May 2003, we estimate that the GSE funding advantage accounts for about seven basis points of the 15-18 basis point jumbo-conforming spread.


Journal of Real Estate Finance and Economics | 2000

Credit Scoring and Mortgage Securitization: Implications for Mortgage Rates and Credit Availability

Andrea J. Heuson; S. Wayne Passmore; Roger Sparks

This paper develops a model of the interactions between borrowers, originators, and a securitizer in primary and secondary mortgage markets. In the secondary market, the securitizer adds liquidity and plays a strategic game with mortgage originators. The securitizer sets the price at which it will purchase mortgages and the credit score standard that qualifies a mortgage for purchase. We investigate two potential links between securitization and mortgage rates. First, we analyze whether a portion of the liquidity premium gets passed on to borrowers in the form of a lower mortgage rate. Somewhat surprisingly, we find very plausible conditions under which securitization fails to lower the mortgage rate. Secondly, and consistent with recent empirical results, we derive an inverse correlation between the volume of securitization and mortgage rates. However, the causation is reversed from the standard rendering. In our model, a decline in the mortgage rate causes increased securitization rather than the other way around.


Journal of Real Estate Finance and Economics | 2008

GSEs, Mortgage Rates, and Secondary Market Activities

Andreas Lehnert; S. Wayne Passmore; Shane M. Sherlund

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are government-sponsored enterprises (GSEs) that purchase mortgages and issue mortgage-backed securities (MBS). In addition, the GSEs are active participants in the primary and secondary mortgage markets on behalf of their own portfolios of MBS. Because these portfolios have grown quite large, portfolio purchases as well as MBS issuance are likely to be important forces in the mortgage market. This paper examines the statistical evidence of a connection between GSE actions and the interest rates paid by mortgage borrowers. We find that both portfolio purchases and MBS issuance have negligible effects on mortgage rate spreads and that purchases are not any more effective than securitization at reducing mortgage interest rate spreads. We also examine the 1998 liquidity crisis and find that GSE portfolio purchases did little to affect interest rates paid by borrowers. These results are robust to alternative assumptions about causality and to model specification.


Journal of Real Estate Finance and Economics | 1996

Putting the Squeeze on a Market for Lemons: Government- Sponsored Mortgage Securitization

S. Wayne Passmore; Roger Sparks

Lenders either sell or obtain insurance for many of the mortgages they originate to reduce credit risk and enhance liquidity. An overwhelming majority of the mortgages sold are purchased by government-sponsored enterprises. The prevailing view is that government-sponsorship of mortgage securitization causes mortgage rates to be lower than they would otherwise be. Using a model that incorporates asymmetric information and adverse selection, we provide an example in which government-sponsored mortgage securitization raises the mortgage rate.


Real Estate Economics | 2015

How Does the Federal Reserve's Large‐Scale Asset Purchases (LSAPs) Influence Mortgage‐Backed Securities (MBS) Yields and U.S. Mortgage Rates?

Diana Hancock; S. Wayne Passmore

We conduct an empirical analysis of the Federal Reserves large-scale asset purchases (LSAPs) on MBS yields and mortgage rates. The Federal Reserves accumulation of MBS and Treasury securities lowered MBS yields and mortgage rates by more than what would have been suggested by changes in market expectations alone, suggesting that portfolio rebalancing effects of LSAPs are an important consideration for monetary policy transmission. Our estimates also suggest that the Federal Reserve must hold a substantial market share of agency MBS or of Treasury securities to significantly lower MBS yields and in turn significantly lower mortgage rates.


Real Estate Economics | 2005

The GSE Implicit Subsidy and the Value of Government Ambiguity

S. Wayne Passmore


Journal of Real Estate Finance and Economics | 2001

GSEs, Mortgage Rates, and the Long-Run Effects of Mortgage Securitization

S. Wayne Passmore; Roger Sparks; Jamie Ingpen


Archive | 1997

The subsidy provided by the federal safety net: theory, measurement, and containment

Myron L. Kwast; S. Wayne Passmore


Social Science Research Network | 2007

Bank Core Deposits and the Mitigation of Monetary Policy

Lamont K. Black; Diana Hancock; S. Wayne Passmore

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Shane M. Sherlund

Federal Reserve Board of Governors

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Elizabeth Laderman

Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco

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