| Determinants of the Closing Probability
of Residential Mortgage Applications Author: John P. McMurray and Thomas A. Thomson
Start Page: 55
End Page: 64
Volume: 14
Issue Number: 1
Year: 1997
Publication: Journal of Real Estate Research
Abstract: After allowing
applicants to "lock" the interest rate, mortgage originators are concerned with
protecting themselves from adverse outcomes due to interest-rate changes. One may expect
applicants would strive to close applications when rates rose, while letting themselves
fall out when rates decline. Our results show that applicant response to interest-rate
changes and volatility are modest. The most important predictor of closing probability is
the length of the lock period, with shorter locks being more likely to close. Applications
for single-family are more likely to close than are those for multiunit dwellings.
Applications for owner-occupied properties are more likely to close than are those for
investment properties. Applicant characteristics such as loan affordability, education and
age have a small influence on closing rate. Gender has an effect for some loan programs,
and marital status appears to be irrelevant. Discount points affect refinance mortgages
more than purchase mortgages. Conventional applications are more likely to close than FHA
and VA, and applications for refinance, in general, are less likely to close. Results are
mixed for ARM and fifteen-year applications, as well as for whether it was the original
application, or a relock.
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