Housing valuation, wealth perception, and households' portfolio composition
Event Title
EcoMod2017
Year (definitive publication)
2017
Language
English
Country
Slovenia
More Information
Web of Science®
This publication is not indexed in Web of Science®
Scopus
This publication is not indexed in Scopus
Google Scholar
Abstract
This paper empirically explores the relationship between wealth
perception from homeownership and households’ preference towards
asset categories pooled by risk. We use household survey data from
the Household Finance and Consumption Survey to obtain a measure
of the rate of housing valuation to be used in regressions against
shares of safe, medium risk, and risky assets from a single portfolio.
Shares are treated as a fraction of total wealth and estimated
with fractional multinomial logit models and fractional logit models.
Data shows incomplete household portfolios along with housing capturing
the largest share of households’ wealth in accordance with the
literature (e.g. Campbell, 2006). Our findings indicate robust empirical
evidence that perceived wealth from the rate of housing valuation
matters to portfolio choices. The estimations predict that an increase
in the rate of housing valuation increases the demand for risky assets
of mixed type, together with negative effects on the demand for safe
deposits held within the strictly financial portfolio.
Acknowledgements
--
Keywords
Household finance,portfolio composition,wealth perception,real assets,homeownership,fractional models
Funding Records
Funding Reference | Funding Entity |
---|---|
UID/GES/00315/2013 | FCT |