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Title: Can Owning a Home Hedge the Risk of Moving?

Citation Type: Working Paper

Publication Year: 2009

Abstract: Conventional wisdom holds that one of the riskiest aspects of owning a house is the uncertainty surrounding its sale price, especially if one moves to another housing market. However, households who sell a house typically buy another house, whose purchase price is also uncertain. We show that for such households, home owning often hedges their net exposure to housing market risk, because their sale price covaries positively with house prices in their likely new market. That expected covariance is much higher than previously recognized because there is considerable heterogeneity across city pairs in how much house prices covary and households tend to move between the highly correlated housing markets. Taking these two considerations into account increases the estimated median expected correlation in real house price growth across MSAs from 0.35 to 0.60. Moreover, we show that households decisions whether to own or rent are sensitive to this moving-hedge? value. We find that the likelihood of home owning for a mobile household is more than one percentage point higher when the expected house price covariance rises by 38 percent (one standard deviation). This effect attenuates as a households probability of moving diminishes and thus the moving-hedge value declines.

User Submitted?: No

Authors: Souleles, Nicholas S.; Sinai, Todd M.

Series Title:

Publication Number: w15462

Institution: National Bureau of Economic Research

Pages:

Publisher Location:

Data Collections: IPUMS USA

Topics: Housing and Segregation, Migration and Immigration, Other

Countries:

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