TL;DR: In this paper, a simple model of trade in the housing market is presented, where a minimum down payment is required for the purchase of a new home and the model has direct implications for the volatility of house prices, as well as for the correlation between prices and trading volume.
Abstract: This paper presents a simple model of trade in the housing market. The crucial feature is that a minimum down payment is required for the purchase of a new home. The model has direct implications for the volatility of house prices, as well as for the correlation between prices and trading volume. The model can also be extended to address the correlation between prices and time-to-sale, as well as certain aspects of the cyclical behavior of housing starts.
TL;DR: In this article, a life-cycle model of the housing market with a property ladder and a credit constraint is proposed, focusing on equilibria which replicate the facts that credit constraints delay some households' first home purchase and force other households to buy a home smaller than they would like.
Abstract: We propose a life-cycle model of the housing market with a property ladder and a credit constraint. We focus on equilibria which replicate the facts that credit constraints delay some households' first home purchase and force other households to buy a home smaller than they would like. The model helps us identify a powerful driver of the housing market: the ability of young households to afford the down payment on a starter home, and in particular their income. The model also highlights a channel whereby changes in income may yield housing price overshooting, with prices of trade-up homes displaying the most volatility, and a positive correlation between housing prices and transactions. This channel relies on the capital gains or losses on starter homes incurred by credit-constrained owners. We provide empirical support for our arguments with evidence from both the U.K. and the U.S.
TL;DR: This paper found that children of homeowners have better outcomes than children of renters whether their parents make a large or small initial investment in their home, as long as they make a minimal down payment when they buy their homes.
Abstract: We find that children of homeowners have better outcomes than children of renters whether their parents make a large or small initial investment in their home, as long as they make a minimal down payment when they buy their homes. Children with parents who made no down payment have similar outcomes to children of renters. The effect of homeownership holds up under myriad specifications, measuring initial housing investment as either an LTV ratio or a down payment dollar amount, and controlling for parent and family characteristics and geographic and year fixed effects.
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that an owner's equity position determines his experience as a seller and provide evidence for equity-based aggregate theories of price volume movements in the housing market.
Abstract: Evidence from the Boston condominium market of the early 1990s reveals that an owner's equity position determines his experience as a seller. An owner of a property with a high loan-to-value ratio sets a higher asking price, has a higher expected time on the market and, if he sells, receives a higher price than an owner with proportionately less debt. The down payment requirement for purchasers, but not incumbent owners, provides a simple explanation for this phenomenon among owner-occupants. The results provide supporting evidence for equity-based aggregate theories of price- volume movements in the housing market. Copyright 1997 by American Economic Association.
TL;DR: In this article, the authors explore the determinants of the distribution of owner occupancy rates across age groups using a collection of microeconomic data on 14 OECD countries, and find strong evidence that the availability of mortgage finance, as measured by down payment ratios, affects the distributions of ownership rates across different age groups, especially at the young end.