Phase transitions in debt recycling
Sabrina Aufiero, Preben Forer, Pierpaolo Vivo, Fabio Caccioli, Silvia, Bartolucci

TL;DR
This paper models debt recycling as a dynamic system to analyze its phases, revealing conditions under which it accelerates mortgage repayment or leads to default, highlighting its risks and potential benefits.
Contribution
It introduces a dynamical model of debt recycling, characterizing its phases and identifying key parameters influencing its success or failure.
Findings
Identifies strongly and weakly successful phases of debt recycling.
Discovers default and permanent remortgaging phases.
Shows high sensitivity to initial conditions and economic parameters.
Abstract
Debt recycling is an aggressive equity extraction strategy that potentially permits faster repayment of a mortgage. While equity progressively builds up as the mortgage is repaid monthly, mortgage holders may obtain another loan they could use to invest on a risky asset. The wealth produced by a successful investment is then used to repay the mortgage faster. The strategy is riskier than a standard repayment plan since fluctuations in the house market and investment's volatility may also lead to a fast default, as both the mortgage and the liquidity loan are secured against the same good. The general conditions of the mortgage holder and the outside market under which debt recycling may be recommended or discouraged have not been fully investigated. In this paper, to evaluate the effectiveness of traditional monthly mortgage repayment versus debt recycling strategies, we build a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHousing, Finance, and Neoliberalism
