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Published byPatrick Rodgers Modified over 9 years ago
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Efficient portfolios when housing is a hedge against rent risk ► Housing is a big part of household portfolios ► What does this mean for optimal portfolio allocation of financial assets? ► What role can housing wealth play in financing retirement? Age Housing wealth (net of mortgage) Financial assets < 40 £57,000£7,500 40 – 59 £100,000£28,500 60 + £110,000£37,000 UK, BHPS 2000, mean values (>0) Banks, Blundell & Smith
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Houses aren’t like other assets Investment: asset in wealth portfolio Consumption: flow of housing services Consumption: utility from home-ownership Hedge against rent risk (Souleles & Sinai) Hedge against house price risk (Banks et al) Bequest
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The model ► Exogenously-determined demand for housing services + optimal decision to rent or buy given level of housing wealth ► What does this do to optimal holdings of other financial assets? ► Hedge term –H Cov(r r r h )/ Var(r r ) ► For Italy, negative correlation between returns to housing and returns to shares implies greater holdings of shares for people with positive housing wealth
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The model ► Housing is a hedge against rent risk ► H = (Value of house) – PDV(future_rent) ► Dramatically reduces estimated housing wealth (on average) ► Gross housing wealth = 200 000; net = 11 000 ► Financial wealth = 44 109 ► Human capital (incl DB pension) = 656 707 ► Young are typically short on housing wealth ► Old are more likely to be long on housing wealth but role as hedge reduces incentive to sell, particularly for a group for whom the cost of rent risk is fairly high
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The results ► Compare actual portfolios with efficient frontier ► Around half Italians have “efficient” portfolios ► More likely to be “efficient”: negligible housing wealth, South, middle-aged, higher financial wealth, less-well educated ► What does this mean? ► Moving the inefficient towards more efficient portfolios? information, education, barriers to holding particular financial instruments (tax treatment, costs), financial instruments ► Is the “efficiency” benchmark the right one? Housing as a hedge, but different numbers/ assumptions Housing as something else
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What is an efficient portfolio? ► Housing as a hedge, but look at some of the numbers/ assumptions: ► Demand for future housing is uncertain – and endogenous ► House price risk (assumption of perfect correlation) Idiosyncratic house price risk > market average Idiosyncratic rent risk < market average Rent risk affected by benefit system ► How do Italians finance house purchase? Fewer & smaller mortgages, more saving – want to save in assets whose returns are positively correlated with house prices
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What is an efficient portfolio? ► How do people view housing in their portfolios? ► Highest proportion of efficient portfolios occur where there is negligible housing wealth → c omparing with benchmark with no housing wealth considerations would yield higher proportion of “efficient” portfolios ► Bequest motive? ► Human capital Why risk-free? Particularly risky for the young Level, and risk, likely to affect decision to rent/ buy Implications of including human capital for efficient portfolios, and optimal pension arrangements
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