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The Risks of Homeownership

Paper Session

Saturday, Jan. 5, 2019 2:30 PM - 4:30 PM

Hilton Atlanta, 204
Hosted By: American Real Estate and Urban Economics Association
  • Chair: Edward Coulson, University of California-Irvine

Attitudes Toward and Perceptions of the Ambiguity of House and Stock Prices

Yu Zhang
,
University of International Business and Economics
Donald Haurin
,
Ohio State University

Abstract

This study estimates individuals' attitudes toward and perceptions of ambiguity of house prices and stock prices, using experiment data from the Rand American Life Panel (ALP) survey. We estimate two important parameters in multiple prior models and α-MaxMin ambiguity preferences: the degree of ambiguity aversion and the degree of confidence in the reference prior distribution of future prices, this being a measurement of the perceived level of ambiguity. Regarding attitudes, we find that individuals are slightly ambiguity seeking with regard to house prices while they are slightly ambiguity averse with regard to stock prices. Their degree of confidence in the reference distribution for stocks is lower than for house prices. We also find that increased state-level house price volatility during the past year and growth of house price in the past three years increase perceived ambiguity. Moreover, ambiguity matters in that ambiguity-averse renters are less likely to buy a house. Correspondingly, ambiguity-averse stock investors tend to have less stock holdings.

Natural Disasters and Housing Markets: The Tenure Choice Channel

Pedro Gete
,
IE Business School
Lei Ge
,
Georgetown University
Robin Dillon-Merrill
,
Georgetown University

Abstract

We analyze a new database of natural disasters in the U.S. that we integrate with real estate and mortgage variables. We uncover several new facts: 1) Natural disasters permanently increase housing rents. The effects on housing prices are ambiguous. 2) Conforming mortgage applications for low-mid size homes fall. However, jumbo applications slightly increase. Lending standards do not change; 3) Homeownership rates decline. The previous facts suggest a new tenure choice channel in which low and mid income households hedge natural disasters by moving from the ownership to the rental market. Wealthy households expand their housing holdings. The tenure choice channel seems especially strong for flooding, which are the riskiest disasters as insurance companies do not cover them.

House as a Portfolio: Are Risks Important?

Barbara Bukhvalova
,
Gabler Investments

Abstract

"There are two features of housing that differentiate it from most everything else one could buy. First, residential real estate is both investment and consumption good. Second, all real estate assets are at least to some extent unique. This uniqueness is a product of numerous characteristics, some easily observable and quantifiable, others---not. The simplest observable characteristics include square footage, age, and the number of bathrooms. The well-known hedonic model considers a house as a portfolio of its characteristics, where the price of the house is based on the value of each characteristic, while the values are determined by utility derived from each characteristic. Hence, the standard hedonic estimation can price a house, but does so in the paradigm of a house as a consumption good. We utilize the hedonic framework, but do so through the prism of portfolio analysis. Different combinations of characteristics endow the house with its particular risk exposures, different from its neighbors. The same set of characteristics in different locations is also associated with varying levels of risk. We find that these house-specific risk variations are substantial. They are also materially related to the owner's behavior in terms of chosen home improvements, financing and foreclosure decisions. Hence, the personal choice of a house, and its implied value risk, spills over to other financial risks and financial risks of others."

The Effects of Local Risk on Homeownership

Daxuan Zhao
,
Renmin University of China
Sisi Zhang
,
Jinan University

Abstract

Housing is a local good, and local risk could affect housing decisions. We develop a household intertemporal choice model to illustrate how local income risks affect household tenure choice and housing price through financial investment effect and consumption hedging effect. We decompose income dynamics into three components: idiosyncratic growth (local alpha), systematic risk (local beta) and idiosyncratic risk (local sigma). Using the Current Population Survey 1999-2014, we find that households have stronger incentives to purchase housing asset in a region with higher systematic risk and lower idiosyncratic risk, due to consumption hedging effect and financial investment effect respectively. Effects are stronger in the areas with low housing supply elasticity. Price-to-rent ratios also increase with local alpha and local beta and decrease with local sigma.
Discussant(s)
Thao Le
,
Georgia State University
Adele Morris
,
Brookings Institution
Helen Neill
,
University of Nevada-Las Vegas
Lynn Fisher
,
American Enterprise Institute
JEL Classifications
  • R3 - Real Estate Markets, Spatial Production Analysis, and Firm Location
  • J2 - Demand and Supply of Labor