Housing Wealth or Collateral: How Spending and Home Equity Extraction Respond to Unanticipated Housing Wealth Gains

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Standard

Housing Wealth or Collateral: How Spending and Home Equity Extraction Respond to Unanticipated Housing Wealth Gains. / Leth-Petersen, Søren; Andersen, Henrik Yde.

I: Journal of the European Economic Association, Bind 19, Nr. 1, 2021, s. 403–440.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Leth-Petersen, S & Andersen, HY 2021, 'Housing Wealth or Collateral: How Spending and Home Equity Extraction Respond to Unanticipated Housing Wealth Gains', Journal of the European Economic Association, bind 19, nr. 1, s. 403–440. https://doi.org/10.1093/jeea/jvz083

APA

Leth-Petersen, S., & Andersen, H. Y. (2021). Housing Wealth or Collateral: How Spending and Home Equity Extraction Respond to Unanticipated Housing Wealth Gains. Journal of the European Economic Association, 19(1), 403–440. https://doi.org/10.1093/jeea/jvz083

Vancouver

Leth-Petersen S, Andersen HY. Housing Wealth or Collateral: How Spending and Home Equity Extraction Respond to Unanticipated Housing Wealth Gains. Journal of the European Economic Association. 2021;19(1):403–440. https://doi.org/10.1093/jeea/jvz083

Author

Leth-Petersen, Søren ; Andersen, Henrik Yde. / Housing Wealth or Collateral: How Spending and Home Equity Extraction Respond to Unanticipated Housing Wealth Gains. I: Journal of the European Economic Association. 2021 ; Bind 19, Nr. 1. s. 403–440.

Bibtex

@article{2572a255ddfb4ae0b83f194b85c909af,
title = "Housing Wealth or Collateral:: How Spending and Home Equity Extraction Respond to Unanticipated Housing Wealth Gains",
abstract = "We examine whether unanticipated changes in home values drive spending and mortgage-based equity extraction. To do this, we use longitudinal survey data with subjective information about current and expected future home values to calculate unanticipated home value changes. We link this information at the individual level to high quality administrative records containing information about mortgage borrowing as well as savings in various financial instruments. We find that the marginal propensity to increase mortgage debt is 3%–5% of unanticipated home value gains. We find no adjustment to other components of the portfolio, and we find that mortgage extraction leads to an increase in spending. The effect is driven by young households with high loan-to-value ratios, which is consistent with the effect being driven by collateral constraints. Further, we find that the effect is driven by home owners who actively take out a new mortgage. The price effect is magnified among fixed rate mortgage (FRM) borrowers who have an incentive to refinance their loans to lock in a lower market rate. These results point to the importance of the mortgage market in transforming price increases into spending and suggest that monetary policy can play an important role in transforming housing wealth gains into spending by affecting interest rates on mortgage loans. ",
author = "S{\o}ren Leth-Petersen and Andersen, {Henrik Yde}",
year = "2021",
doi = "10.1093/jeea/jvz083",
language = "English",
volume = "19",
pages = "403–440",
journal = "Journal of the European Economic Association",
issn = "1542-4774",
publisher = "Wiley",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Housing Wealth or Collateral:

T2 - How Spending and Home Equity Extraction Respond to Unanticipated Housing Wealth Gains

AU - Leth-Petersen, Søren

AU - Andersen, Henrik Yde

PY - 2021

Y1 - 2021

N2 - We examine whether unanticipated changes in home values drive spending and mortgage-based equity extraction. To do this, we use longitudinal survey data with subjective information about current and expected future home values to calculate unanticipated home value changes. We link this information at the individual level to high quality administrative records containing information about mortgage borrowing as well as savings in various financial instruments. We find that the marginal propensity to increase mortgage debt is 3%–5% of unanticipated home value gains. We find no adjustment to other components of the portfolio, and we find that mortgage extraction leads to an increase in spending. The effect is driven by young households with high loan-to-value ratios, which is consistent with the effect being driven by collateral constraints. Further, we find that the effect is driven by home owners who actively take out a new mortgage. The price effect is magnified among fixed rate mortgage (FRM) borrowers who have an incentive to refinance their loans to lock in a lower market rate. These results point to the importance of the mortgage market in transforming price increases into spending and suggest that monetary policy can play an important role in transforming housing wealth gains into spending by affecting interest rates on mortgage loans.

AB - We examine whether unanticipated changes in home values drive spending and mortgage-based equity extraction. To do this, we use longitudinal survey data with subjective information about current and expected future home values to calculate unanticipated home value changes. We link this information at the individual level to high quality administrative records containing information about mortgage borrowing as well as savings in various financial instruments. We find that the marginal propensity to increase mortgage debt is 3%–5% of unanticipated home value gains. We find no adjustment to other components of the portfolio, and we find that mortgage extraction leads to an increase in spending. The effect is driven by young households with high loan-to-value ratios, which is consistent with the effect being driven by collateral constraints. Further, we find that the effect is driven by home owners who actively take out a new mortgage. The price effect is magnified among fixed rate mortgage (FRM) borrowers who have an incentive to refinance their loans to lock in a lower market rate. These results point to the importance of the mortgage market in transforming price increases into spending and suggest that monetary policy can play an important role in transforming housing wealth gains into spending by affecting interest rates on mortgage loans.

U2 - 10.1093/jeea/jvz083

DO - 10.1093/jeea/jvz083

M3 - Journal article

VL - 19

SP - 403

EP - 440

JO - Journal of the European Economic Association

JF - Journal of the European Economic Association

SN - 1542-4774

IS - 1

ER -

ID: 231645475