Person
O. Emre Ergungor
Contributing Author
O. Emre Ergungor is a contributing author and former employee of the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland.
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Working Papers
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Working Paper
Where the Wild Things Are: Measuring Systemic Risk through Investor Sentiment
08.12.2016 | WP 16-08RThis paper presents a systemic risk measure derived from investor sentiment that has predictive power over future economic activity and market returns. -
Working Paper
Sovereign Default in the US
03.14.2016 | WP 16-09I use evidence from the Arkansas state archives to provide a description of the events surrounding the default of the state in 1933. I examine the evolution of the negotiations, the outcomes, and the role of fiscal policy. -
Working Paper
Where the Wild Things Are: Measuring Systemic Risk through Investor Sentiment
02.19.2016 | WP 16-08This paper presents a systemic risk measure derived from investor sentiment that has predictive power over future economic activity and market returns. -
Working Paper
Premium Municipal Bonds and Issuer Fiscal Distress
12.31.2015 | WP 15-34Economic theory suggests that bond issuers of lower credit quality or higher opacity should be more likely to issue bonds with premium coupons (higher coupon rates relative to yields at issuance). -
Working Paper
Do Public Pension Obligations Affect State Funding Costs?
05.22.2014 | WP 13-01RStates' unfunded pension obligations to their current and retired employees have exploded in recent years to levels that are estimated to be between $750 billion and $4.4 trillion. -
Working Paper
Do Public Pension Obligations Affect State Funding Costs?
02.14.2013 | WP 13-01States' unfunded pension obligations to their current and retired employees have exploded in recent years to levels that are estimated to be between $750 billion and $4.4 trillion. -
Working Paper
The Impact of Recovery Efforts on Residential Vacancies
01.20.2012 | WP 12-03We investigate the impact on vacancy rates in Cuyahoga County of federal funds received for acquiring and remediating foreclosed and abandoned properties. -
Working Paper
Beyond the Transaction: Depository Institutions and Reduced Mortgage Default for Low-Income Homebuyers
08.01.2011 | WP 11-15We evaluate the effects of the lending institution and soft information on mortgage loan performance for low-income homebuyers. -
Working Paper
Banking Relationships and Sell-Side Research
06.28.2011 | WP 11-14This paper examines disclosures by sell-side analysts when their institution has a lending relationship with the firms being covered. -
Working Paper
Homeownership for the Long Run: An Analysis of Homeowner Subsidies
02.01.2011 | WP 10-21RThis paper examines the impact of interest-rate and down-payment subsidies on default rates and losses given default, and finds that down-payment subsidies create successful homeowners at a lower cost than interest-rate subsidies. -
Working Paper
Homeownership for the Long Run: An Analysis of Homeowner Subsidies
11.02.2010 | WP 10-21This paper examines the impact of interest-rate and down-payment subsidies on default rates and losses given default, and finds that down-payment subsidies create successful homeowners at a lower cost than interest-rate subsidies. -
Working Paper
Foreclosures in Ohio: Does Lender Type Matter?
12.01.2007 | WP 07-24Whether mortgages are originated mostly by depository institutions regulated by the Federal agencies or by less-regulated lenders does not seem to affect the foreclosure filing rate in Ohio's counties. -
Working Paper
Foreclosures: Relationship Lending in the Consumer Market and its Aftermath
12.01.2006 | WP 06-17Relationship lending theory suggests that lenders in close proximity to their borrowers might be the most efficient providers of screening and monitoring services, because the cost of collecting information declines with distance. -
Working Paper
Bank Branch Presence and Access to Credit in Low-to-Moderate Income Neighborhoods
12.01.2006 | WP 06-16Banks specialize in lending to informationally opaque borrowers by collecting soft information about them. Some researchers claim that this process requires a physical presence in the market to lower information collection costs. -
Working Paper
Offer-Price Discount of Bank Seasoned Equity Offers: Do Voluntary and Involuntary Offers Convey Different Information?
12.01.2005 | WP 05-15Seasoned equity offers made by undercapitalized banks (labeled involuntary offers) could be different from other seasoned equity offers because the issuer is presumably under regulatory duress to make up the shortfall in required capital. -
Working Paper
Bank Seasoned Equity Offers: Do Voluntary & Involuntary Offers Differ?
12.01.2004 | WP 04-14Recent research has shown that for industrial and utilities’ seasoned equity offers (SEOs) the offer price discount is informative and has significant price effects. -
Working Paper
Financial System Structure and Economic Development: Structure Matters
07.01.2003 | WP 03-05This paper investigates how the structure of a financial system—whether it is bank or market oriented—affects economic growth. -
Working Paper
Community Banks as Small Business Lenders: The Tough Road Ahead
05.01.2002 | WP 02-03This paper investigates the performance of community banks as small business (relationship) lenders. -
Working Paper
Market- vs. Bank-Based Financial Systems: Do Investor Rights Really Matter?
03.01.2002 | WP 01-01RWhy are common-law countries market-dominated and civil-law countries bank-dominated? This paper provides an explanation tied to legal traditions. -
Working Paper
Market- vs. Bank-Based Financial Systems: Do Investor Rights Really Matter?
03.01.2001 | WP 01-01Why are common-law countries market-dominated and civil-law countries bank-dominated? This paper provides an explanation tied to legal traditions. -
Working Paper
Relationship Loans and Information Exploitability in a Competitive Market: Loan Commitments vs. Spot Loans
11.01.2000 | WP 00-13Despite the numerous benefits of loan commitments, only 79% of the commercial and industrial loans are made under commitment. I show that two factors limit the use of loan commitments.
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Economic Commentaries
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Economic Commentary
When States Default: Lessons from Law and History
10.12.2017 | EC 2017-16This Commentary discusses how a severe fiscal crisis at the state level could impact the interests of the state’s public pension holders. Drawing lessons from the relevant laws, historical precedents, and the case of Arkansas after its default in 1933, I argue that in spite of the protections that exist, no public retirement system is completely immune toimpairment if the money runs out. -
Economic Commentary
Recession Probabilities
08.23.2016 | EC 2016-09The reliability of the term spread as a predictor of future economic activity may have been affected by short-term interest rates being at zero. I enhance a simple model with two variables that should have predictive power for recessions. -
Economic Commentary
The Employability of Returning Citizens is Key to Neighborhood Revitalization
11.19.2013 | EC 2013-17One problem low-income communities may face in trying to revitalize is dealing with a high share of residents who are returning home after serving prison terms. -
Economic Commentary
Are We Like Sweden? Recovery in the Labor Market
02.07.2013 | EC 2013-03More than 20 years ago Sweden suffered a severe financial crisis that brought unemployment to an all-time high. -
Economic Commentary
Exchange-Traded Funds
05.03.2012 | EC 2012-05ETFs are one of the most successful financial innovations of the last few decades. -
Economic Commentary
Do Bank Branches Matter Anymore?
08.04.2011 | EC 2011-13Bank branches have been disappearing in some major metropolitan areas, as their populations and economic activity decline. -
Economic Commentary
Buy a Home or Rent: A Better Way to Choose
04.28.2011 | EC 2011-06Knowing whether buying a home is a better financial move for a family than renting requires a consideration of costs and options that people often neglect to factor in. One aspect of the calculation that is almost always overlooked is uncertainty—the fact that no matter how good one’s estimates of the future are, the future can turn out differently than projected. Incorporating uncertainty into the rent-or-buy calculation gives potential homebuyers information that can improve their decisions. While incorporating uncertainty is complicated, it’s made easier with the Cleveland Fed’s online calculator. -
Economic Commentary
Homeowner Subsidies
02.23.2011 | EC 2011-03Programs that were created to promote homeownership in the United States, like Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, have been harshly criticized in the wake of the housing crisis. -
Economic Commentary
Effective Practices in Crisis Resolution and the Case of Sweden
02.12.2009 | EC 2/1/2009The current financial crisis is a painful reminder that the developed world is not yet immune to these devastating shocks. -
Economic Commentary
Covered Bonds: A New Way to Fund Residential Mortgages
07.01.2008 | EC 7/1/2008Like the now government-owned Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, large investment banks helped create funds to financenew mortgages by issuing securities backed by pools of existing mortgages. -
Economic Commentary
Trouble Ahead for Student Loans?
05.01.2008 | EC 5/1/2008The market for student loans may differ in some respects from other financial markets, but private lenders are the primary source of funds. As in other markets, the incentive to lend those funds comes from the ability to make a profit. -
Economic Commentary
Prepayment Penalties on Subprime Mortgages
09.01.2007 | EC 9/1/2007As a result of the subprime mortgagemess, prepayment penaltiesare under close scrutiny. -
Economic Commentary
Home Price Derivatives
01.15.2007 | EC 1/15/2007Until recently, homeowners had noway to protect the value of theirhomes against losses that couldresult from housing market downturns. -
Economic Commentary
Industrial Loan Companies
08.01.2006 | EC 10/1/2006Once Wal-Mart announced its intention to acquire an industrial loan company, a public furor arose that has brought a lot of attention to a type of institution that has existed for quite some time. -
Economic Commentary
Dividends
04.01.2004 | EC 4/1/2004In recent years, there has been increasingpressure on U.S. corporationsto distribute earnings toshareholders in the form of dividends. -
Economic Commentary
Securitization
08.15.2003 | EC 8/15/2003Obscure just 20 years ago, the securitization of loan portfolios by private and government-sponsored enterprises is a $5 trillion business today. This Commentary explains why the use of asset-backed securities has grown so spectacularly. -
Economic Commentary
Information and Prices
05.01.2003 | EC 5/1/2003Information problems pervade the economy. This Commentary describes the challenges they create and the clever solutions markets find to overcome them. -
Economic Commentary
Legal Systems and Bank Development
02.01.2002 | EC 2/1/2002In some countries, banks are firms’ key source of financing. In others, firms look mainly to credit markets to meet their financial needs.
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Community Development Reports
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Community Development Reports
Applying Research to Policy Issues in Distressed Housing Markets: Data-Driven Decision Making
Thomas J. Fitzpatrick IV O. Emre Ergungor Kyle D. Fee Daniel A. Hartley Francisca García-Cobián Richter Youngme Seo Stephan D. Whitaker Mary Zenker06.01.2015This publication is a compilation of research published by the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland on housing markets that are experiencing foreclosure and/or a large number of vacant properties, including a policy white paper released May 2013...
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Forefront
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Forefront
Generation Recession
Anne M. DiTeodoro O. Emre Ergungor Thomas J. Fitzpatrick IV Daniel A. Hartley Margaret Jacobson Daniel A. Littman Lou Marich Cindy Merritt Filippo Occhino Sandra Pianalto Murat Tasci Stephan D. Whitaker Mary Zenker11.07.2011 | Fall 2011, Vol. 2, No. 3Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland economists examine the many forces that will determine how “great” the most recent recession turns out to be. Find the articles, plus our interview with economic historian Price Fishback, in the fall 2011 issue of Forefront. -
Forefront
The Future of Financial Market Regulation
O. Emre Ergungor Thomas J. Fitzpatrick IV Elizabeth Hanna Joseph G. Haubrich Natalie Karrs Daniel A. Littman Lou Marich April McClellan-Copeland Sandra Pianalto Jennifer K. Ransom03.01.2011 | Winter 2011, Vol. 2, No. 1The Dodd–Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010 will help regulatory agencies and the Federal Reserve develop rules to protect consumers and curb future financial crises. -
Forefront
A Proposal: Using the CRA to Fight Vacancy and Abandonment
O. Emre Ergungor Kyle D. Fee Thomas J. Fitzpatrick IV Lou Marich Todd Morgano Lisa A. Nelson Anne O’Shaughnessy Sandra Pianalto Ann Marie Wiersch05.03.2010 | Spring 2010, Vol. 1, No. 2In 2009, banks became the reluctant holders of more than 1,500 foreclosed properties in Cuyahoga County, Ohio. Most of these houses are in Cleveland, worth little to nothing, and in danger of remaining vacant for the foreseeable future—destined to define neighborhood decay.
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