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Transmission of shocks across global real estate and equity markets: An examination of the 2007–2008 housing crisis
15
Citations
66
References
2018
Year
Financial IntegrationReal Estate Price IndexInternational Financial CrisisReal Estate FinanceGlobal Real EstateHousing CrisisInternational FinanceManagementGlobal Financial MarketsEquity MarketsU.s. Real EstateHousingEconomicsU.s. Financial CrisisFinanceGlobal MarketsFinancial EconomicsShock (Economics)BusinessInternational RiskFinancial Crisis
This study analyses the impact of the 2007–2008 U.S. financial crisis on the structure of interdependence among several major global real estate and equity markets. Moreover, it performs a step-by-step comparative analysis to evaluate similarities and differences in the convergence patterns of global real estate markets vis-à-vis global equity markets. Long-run results indicate that global real estate markets were less integrated than global equity markets prior to the crisis. Since the crisis, however, both global real estate and global equity markets have become highly integrated with the U.S. real estate and equity markets, respectively, and have fully converged. Short-run analyses indicate that during the pre-crisis period, global real estate markets were highly exogenous and independent. In contrast, global equity markets were comparatively more interdependent with one another and more endogenous. After the crisis, however, both global real estate and equity markets reacted strongly to shocks emanating from the U.S. markets, although the impact of the U.S. real estate market on the global real estate market is more pronounced than the effect of the U.S. equity market on the global equity markets. Finally, the study shows that U.S. real estate and equity markets are the channels of transmission or the sources of trends that drive global markets over the long-run and the short-run.
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