Housing wealth, consumption channels and mortgage liberalization

Lingxiao Li, Bing Zhu

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

This paper investigates two types of housing wealth effects: conventional housing wealth and collateral. We incorporate home equity extraction (HEE) and the influence of mortgage liberalization into the model in Campbell and Mankiw (1989). Based on U.S. data during the 1977Q1–2019Q4, our empirical results suggest that consumption is remarkably influenced by the use of HEE, rather than home equity. Furthermore, the rapid expansion of mortgage securitization significantly amplifies the collateral effect. Conditional on the use of HEE and the share of non-bank mortgage holdings, housing wealth has an average marginal propensity to consume (MPC) of 0.84 cents and a maximum MPC of 6.06 cents. In 2007, when market-based mortgage pools and issuers of asset-backed securities held more than 60% of home mortgages, the HEE shock explained for over 50% of the forecasting variance of consumption growth. The results provide evidence that with a focus on collateral value, lenders allow more equity withdrawal, which leads to higher consumption.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1059-1091
Number of pages33
JournalInternational Real Estate Review
Volume23
Issue number4
StatePublished - 1 Dec 2020

Keywords

  • Consumption
  • Home equity extraction
  • Housing wealth
  • Market-based mortgage holdings
  • Time-varying cointegration

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