« Back to Results
Atlanta Marriott Marquis, International 8
Hosted By:
American Economic Association
Expectations and the Real Estate Boom and Bust of the Late 2000s
Paper Session
Sunday, Jan. 6, 2019 1:00 PM - 3:00 PM
- Chair: Itzhak Ben-David, Ohio State University and NBER
Economic Consequences of Housing Speculation
Abstract
By exploiting variation in state capital gains taxation as an instrument, we analyze the economic consequences of housing speculation during the U.S. housing boom in the 2000s. We find that housing speculation, anchored, in part, on extrapolation of past housing price changes, led not only to greater price appreciation, economic expansions, and housing construction during the boom in 2004-2006, but also to more severe economic downturns during the subsequent bust in 2007-2009. Our analysis supports supply overhang and local household demand as two key channels for transmitting these adverse effects.Speculative Dynamics of Prices and Volume
Abstract
We present a dynamic theory of prices and volume in asset bubbles. In our framework, predictable price increases endogenously attract short-term investors more strongly than long-term investors. Short-term investors amplify volume by selling more frequently, and they destabilize prices through positive feedback. Our model predicts a lead-lag relationship between volume and prices, which we confirm in the 2000-2011 US housing bubble. Using data on 50 million home sales from this episode, we document that much of the variation in volume arose from the rise and fall in short-term investment.Expectations During the U.S. Housing Boom: Inferring Beliefs from Actions
Abstract
We assess the role of price expectations in forming the U.S. housing boom in the mid-2000s by studying the dynamics of vacant properties. When agents anticipate price increases, they amass excess capacity. Thus, housing vacancy discriminates between price movements related to housing demand shocks (low vacancy) and expectation shocks (high vacancy). We implement this idea using a structural VAR with sign restrictions. In the aggregate, expectations shocks are the most important factor explaining the boom, immediately followed by mortgage rate shocks. In the cross-section, expectations shocks are the major factor explaining price movements in the Sand States.Discussant(s)
Carlos Garriga
,
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
Monika Piazzesi
,
Stanford University
Andreas Fuster
,
Swiss National Bank
Christopher M. Otrok
,
University of Missouri and Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
JEL Classifications
- E3 - Prices, Business Fluctuations, and Cycles
- G0 - General