Conference Agenda

Please note that all times are shown in the time zone of the conference. The current conference time is: 9th May 2025, 09:17:32am CEST

 
 
Session Overview
Session
FI 09: Real estate markets
Time:
Friday, 23/Aug/2024:
9:00am - 10:30am

Session Chair: Lu Liu, University of Pennsylvania
Location: Reduta | Chamber Studio (via courtyard, floor 2)


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Presentations
ID: 111

Understanding Rationality and Disagreement in House Price Expectations

Zigang Li1, Stijn Van Nieuwerburgh2, Renxuan Wang3

1University of Toronto Rotman School of Business, Canada; 2Columbia University Graduate School of Business, United States of America; 3CEIBS Shanghai, China

Discussant: Xiao Yin (UCL)

Professional house price forecast data are consistent with a rational model where agents must learn about the parameters of the house price growth process and the underlying state of the housing market. Slow learning about the long-run mean generates overreaction to forecast revisions, a modest response of forecasts to lagged realizations and a weak response to contemporaneous realizations, and forecast bias. Heterogeneity in signals and prior beliefs about the long-run mean helps the model account for cross-sectional dispersion in forecasts. Introducing behavioral biases, either diagnostic expectations or over-confidence, helps improve the model’s predictions for short-horizon overreaction and dispersion. Using a cross-section of forecasters and a term structure of forecasts are crucial for inference.

EFA2024_111_FI 09_Understanding Rationality and Disagreement in House Price Expectations.pdf


ID: 989

In Search of the Matching Function in the Housing Market

Cristian Badarinza1, Vimal Balasubramaniam2, Tarun Ramadorai3

1National University of Singapore; 2Queen Mary University of London, United Kingdom; 3Imperial College London

Discussant: Timothy McQuade (University of California Berkeley Haas School of Business)

The aggregate matching function is at the core of structural search and matching models, but its micro-foundations remain elusive. We use granular and comprehensive data from the U.K. housing market to identify individual behaviour at different stages of the matching process (online search, physical meetings, final transactions). A Cobb-Douglas functional form finds broad support in the data, with an estimated demand elasticity of 0.2. We find constant returns to scale; different from other over-the-counter markets, frictions are not reduced as the market increases in size. Congestion effects primarily occur in physical meetings and when bargain- ing over prices. Information beyond market tightness, including pricing strategy and price revisions, helps to predict matches, consistent with an important role for seller optimization. We validate these insights using the 2022 “mini-budget” natural experiment.

EFA2024_989_FI 09_In Search of the Matching Function in the Housing Market.pdf


ID: 1027

Unintended Consequences of QE: Real Estate Prices and Financial Stability

Tobias Berg1, Rainer Haselmann1, Thomas Kick2, Sebastian Schreiber1

1Goethe University, Germany; 2Deutsche Bundesbank, Germany

Discussant: Julia Selgrad (NYU Stern)

We analyze the effects of central bank corporate debt purchases in a setting where the banking sector frictions they are supposed to address do not exist. We find that banks reallocate funding almost entirely to the real estate sector, which fuels real estate overvaluation and impairs nancial stability. Our results imply an elasticity of residential real estate prices to credit supply of 0.84, which is considerably higher than prior estimates in the literature. Our findings show that in economies that do not suffer from credit supply frictions, central bank policies that further stimulate loan provision come with substantial adverse effects.

EFA2024_1027_FI 09_Unintended Consequences of QE.pdf


 
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