
Volume 30, Number 1, 2008
The 1998 – 2005 Housing "Bubble" and the Current "Correction": What’s
Different This Time?
William C. Wheaton
Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cambridge, MA 02139
Email: wheaton@mit.edu |
Gleb Nechayev
Torto Wheaton Research
Boston, MA 02110-3036
Email: gnechayev@twr.com
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Abstract:
This paper examines the
inflation in housing prices between 1998 and 2005 and investigates
whether this run-up in prices can be ‘‘explained’’ by increases in
demand fundamentals such as
population, income growth, and the decline in interest rates over this
period. Time series models are estimated for 59 MSA markets and price
changes from 1998 to 2005 are dynamically forecast using actual economic
fundamentals to drive the models. In all 59 markets, the growth in
fundamentals from 1998 to 2005 forecasts price growth that is far below
that which actually
occurred. An examination of the 2005 forecast errors reveals they are
greater in larger MSAs, in MSAs where second home and speculative buying
was prevalent, and in MSAs where indicators
suggest the sub-prime mortgage market was most active. These latter
factors are unique to the recent housing market and hence make it
difficult to asses if and how far housing prices will
‘‘correct’’ after 2005.

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