University of Southern California

University of Southern California Legal Studies Working Paper Series

 

How "Spec" Condo and Tract Home Buyers Helped Sink Our Housing and Finance Markets: Should the Alienability of Their Interests Be Restrained by Law?

George Lefcoe, University of Southern California

Article comments

Forthcoming 36 J. Legis. (2009).

Abstract

This paper begins by recounting the extent to which speculating buyers contributed more than proportionately to housing price volatility and the rate of mortgage foreclosure. The second section turns to the way spec buyers deceived mortgage lenders by committing occupancy fraud, claiming falsely that they were buying as owner occupants so they could benefit from more favorable mortgage rates and terms. The third section starts by describing the mischief spec buyers caused home builders and condo developers by signaling phantom housing demand, and degrading ‘for sale’ housing tracts and condo developments by leaving newly bought homes vacant or filling them with short term rentals. The fourth section explores the rationale for a government imposed ban on home flipping. This would be a publicly imposed constraint on alienability.

Subject Area

Civil Law, Commercial Law, General Law, Housing Law, Land Use Planning, Law and Society, Property-Personal and Real

Recommended Citation

George Lefcoe, "How "Spec" Condo and Tract Home Buyers Helped Sink Our Housing and Finance Markets: Should the Alienability of Their Interests Be Restrained by Law?" (August 2009). University of Southern California. University of Southern California Legal Studies Working Paper Series. Working Paper 50.
http://law.bepress.com/usclwps/lss/art50

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