Linking US State-level housing market returns, and the consumption-(Dis)Aggregate wealth ratio

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Elsevier

Access Rights

info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess

Abstract

Using state-level data for the U.S. housing market over the period of 1975:Q1-2012:Q2, we show that the consumption-wealth ratios derived from aggregate wealth (cay) and disaggregate (i.e. financial and housing) wealth (cday) are strong predictors of real housing returns (and their volatility). Additionally, we find that, barring the extreme ends of their respective conditional distributions, such effect is stronger for housing return volatility than housing returns. All in all, our findings show that state-level regressions can recover a large degree of heterogeneity that country-level exercises typically ignore. Such heterogeneity is prominent not only in terms of consumption smoothing behavior, but also with regard to housing return predictability.

Description

Keywords

Consumption-wealth ratio, Housing returns, Volatility, Forecasting, Nonparametric causality-in-quantiles test

Journal or Series

International Review of Economics & Finance

WoS Q Value

Scopus Q Value

Volume

71

Issue

Citation

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By