Has SARS Infected the Property Market? Evidence from Hong Kong
Grace Wong
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Grace Wong: Princeton University
No 11, Working Papers from Princeton University, Department of Economics, Industrial Relations Section.
Abstract:
This paper uses the SARS epidemic as a natural experiment to provide new evidence on how housing markets react to adverse shocks, in terms of both prices and transaction volume. I employ a weekly panel data set on 44 large-scale housing complexes in Hong Kong. To isolate the impact of this unanticipated event from underlying time trends, I exploit cross-sectional variation in SARS infection risk due to pre-SARS building characteristics. The impact of SARS is measured by an estate-specific government SARS-list indicator, a count of newspaper stories connecting SARS to each estate, an estate-level SARS infection rate and a predicted SARS infection risk variable, in addition to a Hong Kong-wide-start-of-epidemic indicator. I find a price drop of 1-2 percent in response to SARS, which is consistent with the standard asset pricing model in the event of a severe but transitory averse shock; no signs of overreaction in terms of prices are found. I also find significant volume decreases of 20-40 percent, which were persistent after the SARS infection rate declined, suggesting that SARS led to both increases in search costs and "fishing" behavior on the part of sellers. Volume fell most sharply in buildings that had experienced the least severe price drops in the preceding 7 years, which lends some support for a loss aversion model.
Keywords: natural experiment; housing markets; adverse shocks; Hong Kong (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: D80 G14 R0 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2004-04
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:pri:indrel:488
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