Abstract
This paper examines the contribution of out-of-town second-house buyers to mispricing in the housing market. We show that demand from out-of-town second-house buyers during the mid 2000s predicted not only house-price appreciation rates but also implied-to-actual-rent-ratio appreciation rates, a proxy for mispricing. We then apply a novel identification strategy to address the issue of reverse causality. We give supporting evidence that out-of-town second-house buyers behaved like misinformed speculators, earning lower capital gains (misinformed) and consuming smaller dividends (speculators).
Full Citation
Chinco, Alex and Christopher Mayer. “Misinformed Speculators and Mispricing in the Housing Market.”
Review of Financial Studies
vol. 29,
(January 01, 2016): 486-522.