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Bubbling Up?: What Consumer Expectations Reveal About U.S. Housing Market Exuberance

Research output: Working paper

Published

Standard

Bubbling Up? What Consumer Expectations Reveal About U.S. Housing Market Exuberance. / Martinez-Garcia, Enrique; Pavlidis, Efthymios.
Lancaster: The Department of Economics, 2025. (Economics Working Papers Series).

Research output: Working paper

Harvard

Martinez-Garcia, E & Pavlidis, E 2025 'Bubbling Up? What Consumer Expectations Reveal About U.S. Housing Market Exuberance' Economics Working Papers Series, The Department of Economics, Lancaster.

APA

Martinez-Garcia, E., & Pavlidis, E. (2025). Bubbling Up? What Consumer Expectations Reveal About U.S. Housing Market Exuberance. (Economics Working Papers Series). The Department of Economics.

Vancouver

Martinez-Garcia E, Pavlidis E. Bubbling Up? What Consumer Expectations Reveal About U.S. Housing Market Exuberance. Lancaster: The Department of Economics. 2025 May. (Economics Working Papers Series).

Author

Martinez-Garcia, Enrique ; Pavlidis, Efthymios. / Bubbling Up? What Consumer Expectations Reveal About U.S. Housing Market Exuberance. Lancaster : The Department of Economics, 2025. (Economics Working Papers Series).

Bibtex

@techreport{c13282d076104129b9dd3e7538a5a56d,
title = "Bubbling Up?: What Consumer Expectations Reveal About U.S. Housing Market Exuberance",
abstract = "We investigate the presence of speculative bubbles in the U.S. housing market after the global financial crisis. Unlike standard approaches that rely on observed economic fundamentals, our method leverages subjective price expectations from the University of Michigan Survey of Consumers to test for exuberance without imposing a specific model of intrinsic housing values. By applying recursive least-squares and quantile-based unit root tests to cumulative expectational errors, we uncover novel evidence of speculative dynamics at the aggregate level and across broad demographic and socioeconomic groups. A date-stamping exercise reveals widespread exuberance in the second half of the 2010s, which paused before the pandemic recession and resurfaced amid the subsequent housing boom in 2021. For the Covid-19 period, we document notable differences in the timing of exuberance between observed house prices and survey-based indicators—a finding that underscores the importance of controlling for fundamentals when identifying speculative behavior. A complementary analysis using the New York Fed{\textquoteright}s Survey of Consumer Expectations corroborates the baseline results. Overall, our findings highlight the value of survey data for monitoring housing markets. ",
keywords = "U.S. housing market, rational bubbles, consumer demographics, right-tailed recursive unit root tests;, quantile autoregressions",
author = "Enrique Martinez-Garcia and Efthymios Pavlidis",
year = "2025",
month = may,
language = "English",
series = "Economics Working Papers Series",
publisher = "The Department of Economics",
type = "WorkingPaper",
institution = "The Department of Economics",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - Bubbling Up?

T2 - What Consumer Expectations Reveal About U.S. Housing Market Exuberance

AU - Martinez-Garcia, Enrique

AU - Pavlidis, Efthymios

PY - 2025/5

Y1 - 2025/5

N2 - We investigate the presence of speculative bubbles in the U.S. housing market after the global financial crisis. Unlike standard approaches that rely on observed economic fundamentals, our method leverages subjective price expectations from the University of Michigan Survey of Consumers to test for exuberance without imposing a specific model of intrinsic housing values. By applying recursive least-squares and quantile-based unit root tests to cumulative expectational errors, we uncover novel evidence of speculative dynamics at the aggregate level and across broad demographic and socioeconomic groups. A date-stamping exercise reveals widespread exuberance in the second half of the 2010s, which paused before the pandemic recession and resurfaced amid the subsequent housing boom in 2021. For the Covid-19 period, we document notable differences in the timing of exuberance between observed house prices and survey-based indicators—a finding that underscores the importance of controlling for fundamentals when identifying speculative behavior. A complementary analysis using the New York Fed’s Survey of Consumer Expectations corroborates the baseline results. Overall, our findings highlight the value of survey data for monitoring housing markets.

AB - We investigate the presence of speculative bubbles in the U.S. housing market after the global financial crisis. Unlike standard approaches that rely on observed economic fundamentals, our method leverages subjective price expectations from the University of Michigan Survey of Consumers to test for exuberance without imposing a specific model of intrinsic housing values. By applying recursive least-squares and quantile-based unit root tests to cumulative expectational errors, we uncover novel evidence of speculative dynamics at the aggregate level and across broad demographic and socioeconomic groups. A date-stamping exercise reveals widespread exuberance in the second half of the 2010s, which paused before the pandemic recession and resurfaced amid the subsequent housing boom in 2021. For the Covid-19 period, we document notable differences in the timing of exuberance between observed house prices and survey-based indicators—a finding that underscores the importance of controlling for fundamentals when identifying speculative behavior. A complementary analysis using the New York Fed’s Survey of Consumer Expectations corroborates the baseline results. Overall, our findings highlight the value of survey data for monitoring housing markets.

KW - U.S. housing market

KW - rational bubbles

KW - consumer demographics

KW - right-tailed recursive unit root tests;

KW - quantile autoregressions

M3 - Working paper

T3 - Economics Working Papers Series

BT - Bubbling Up?

PB - The Department of Economics

CY - Lancaster

ER -