Pricked by the Virus for good? Real Estate Bubbles and the Grand European Shutdown

Marko Malovic, Milos Roganovic, M. Özer
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Abstract

Research Question: The objective of this particular piece of research was to evaluate the condition of the real estate market in the period preceding the pandemic outbreak. Motivation: Our goal was to determine whether real estate has been overpriced, i.e., whether and when speculative bubbles began to form and whether there were indications of their bursting. This paper brings together the need for discussing theories that can potentially explain the real estate market bubbles and boom-bust cycles (Gleaser &Nathanson, 2014) and the new approach which proved promising to detect the exuberance of economic and financial activities (Phillips, Shi &Yu, 2015). Potential collapse of real estate prices would have devastating effects and would likely cause a collapse of the financial system. Idea: The core idea of this paper was to evaluate whether speculative bubbles could be detected in the real estate market over the period immediately before the outbreak of the COVID-19 virus pandemic, and whether the pandemic or the financial crisis arising from it led to bursting of bubbles in this market and consequently brought their economies into even deeper crises. Data: Quarterly price movements were analyzed in the real estate market in six countries: Italy, Spain, the United Kingdom, Serbia, Croatia and Slovenia in the period Q1 1980 - Q4 2019 for Italy, Spain and the United Kingdom; Q1 2002 - Q4 2019 for Serbia and Croatia and Q1 2007 - Q4 2019 for Slovenia. Tools: Empirical analysis has been performed by utilizing generalized sub-augmented Dickey-Fuller (GSADF) test of unit roots for the detection and data stamping of bubbles in the real estate market in time series at hand. Findings: In conclusion, grand European shutdown and COVID pandemic apparently did not prick multiplicity of previously formed real estate bubbles, at least not for the time being. Moreover, in several developing countries with stunted financial markets, the virus may have somewhat paradoxically solidified real estate prices and even sustained a build-up of rational real estate bubbles. Contribution: This paper expands previous research on real estate bubbles and provides new insights into the initial consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic.
永远被病毒刺痛?房地产泡沫和欧洲大停摆
研究问题:这一特定研究的目的是评估大流行爆发前一段时期的房地产市场状况。动机:我们的目标是确定房地产是否被高估,即投机泡沫是否以及何时开始形成,以及它们是否有破裂的迹象。本文将讨论可能解释房地产市场泡沫和繁荣-萧条周期的理论(Gleaser &Nathanson, 2014)和新方法(Phillips, Shi &Yu, 2015)的必要性结合在一起,新方法被证明有希望检测经济和金融活动的繁荣(Phillips, Shi &Yu, 2015)。房地产价格的潜在崩溃将产生毁灭性的影响,并可能导致金融体系的崩溃。思路:本文的核心思路是评估在新冠肺炎疫情爆发前的一段时间内,房地产市场是否可以发现投机泡沫,以及疫情或由此引发的金融危机是否导致该市场泡沫破裂,从而使其经济陷入更深的危机。数据:分析了意大利、西班牙、英国、塞尔维亚、克罗地亚和斯洛文尼亚这六个国家1980年第一季度至2019年第四季度房地产市场的季度价格走势,其中意大利、西班牙和英国;2002年第一季度至2019年第四季度为塞尔维亚和克罗地亚,2007年第一季度至2019年第四季度为斯洛文尼亚。工具:利用单位根的广义子增广Dickey-Fuller (GSADF)检验对房地产市场泡沫在时间序列中的检测和数据盖章进行了实证分析。研究结果:总之,欧洲大停工和COVID大流行显然没有刺破先前形成的房地产泡沫的多样性,至少目前没有。此外,在一些金融市场发育不良的发展中国家,这种病毒可能在某种程度上自相矛盾地巩固了房地产价格,甚至维持了理性房地产泡沫的积累。贡献:本文扩展了之前关于房地产泡沫的研究,并对COVID-19大流行的初步后果提供了新的见解。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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