Home Is Where the Bias Is Público
Brincks, Stephen (Summer 2019)
Abstract
My dissertation consists of two essays, (“Home is Where the Bias Is: The Disposition Effect in the Housing Market and its Impact on the Financial Crisis,” and “How Does Political Uncertainty Impact Bank Lending? Evidence from Close US Gubernatorial Elections”). In my first essay, I study the disposition effect (i.e., the tendency for individuals to be reluctant to realize their losses) in the housing market. I find strong evidence for the disposition effect in the housing market. Homeowners are 25 times more likely to sell homes for zero-profit (break-even) than at any other price point, leave money on the table when selling homes with gains, and avoid selling homes with unrealized losses. I find a strong inverse relationship between the percentage of homes with unrealized losses and future housing sales and price appreciation at the zip code level. During the recent housing boom and bust, zip codes with the strongest disposition effect peaked a year later than zip codes with the weakest disposition effect, had a 12% smaller price run-up, and a 10% smaller crash. The evidence is consistent with the hypothesis that the disposition effect mitigated the financial crisis by reducing the housing price run-up and subsequent crash. In my second essay, I examine how political uncertainty impacts US bank lending. I find that banks reduce new lending by about 60% in the two quarters prior to close gubernatorial elections. Bank stock volatility spikes by 11% and bank stock returns are 5.7% lower in the quarter before close elections. Lending only partially recovers after close elections, suggesting that political risk persists after elections are over. My results hold for subsamples of contiguous border counties and MSAs (including matched samples) and are stronger for small banks, highly leveraged banks, and geographically concentrated banks. Using a variety of tests, I show that my lending supply-side channel is distinct from a corporate demand-side channel. Overall, the evidence suggests that political risk has a negative impact on bank lending.
Table of Contents
ESSAY 1: Home Is Where the Bias Is: The Disposition Effect in the Housing Market
and its Impact on the Financial Crisis
Section 1: Hypothesis and Introduction
Section 2: Data and Variable Construction
Section 3: Are Homeowners Reluctant to Realize Losses?
Section 4: Realization Utility and Prospect Theory Tests
Section 5: Does the Disposition Effect Impact Overall Housing Sales and Prices?
Section 6: Impact of Disposition Effect on Transactions and Price Appreciation
Section 7: The Disposition Effect and the Financial Crisis
Section 8: Conclusion of First Essay
ESSAY 2: How Does Political Uncertainty Impact Bank Lending? Evidence from Close US
Gubernatorial Elections
Section 9: Hypothesis and Introduction
Section 10: Data and Variables
Section 11: Motivation and Channel
Section 12: Model and Identification
Section 13: Results
Section 14: Supply-Side or Demand-Side?
Section 15: Robustness
Section 16: Conclusion of Second Essay
References
Figures and Tables
About this Dissertation
School | |
---|---|
Department | |
Subfield / Discipline | |
Degree | |
Submission | |
Language |
|
Research Field | |
Palabra Clave | |
Committee Chair / Thesis Advisor | |
Committee Members |
Primary PDF
Thumbnail | Title | Date Uploaded | Actions |
---|---|---|---|
Home Is Where the Bias Is () | 2019-07-11 08:30:15 -0400 |
|
Supplemental Files
Thumbnail | Title | Date Uploaded | Actions |
---|