Shulin Shen   Associate professor

Shulin Shen is an Assistant Professor of School of Economics, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, China. She received her Ph.D. in economics from Syracuse University (USA) in 2018.Her research lies in the areas of Financial Econometrics, Urban Economics, and Real Estate Finance and Housing, with publications on Journal of Applied Econometrics, Pacific-Basin Finance Journal, and Trav...Detials

Local Housing Market Sentiments and Returns: Evidence from China

Release time:2024-03-01  Hits:

  • Indexed by:Journal paper
  • First Author:Shulin Shen
  • Correspondence Author:Jindong Pang
  • Co-author:Yiyi Zhao
  • Journal:The Journal of Real Estate Finance and Economics
  • Included Journals:SSCI
  • Discipline:Economics
  • First-Level Discipline:Applied Economics
  • Document Type:J
  • Issue:68
  • Page Number:488-522
  • ISSN No.:0895-5638
  • Key Words:Housing market · Sentiment · Market liquidity · Speculation · PLS
  • DOI number:10.1007/s11146-022-09933-w
  • Date of Publication:2024-05-01
  • Abstract:This paper examines the impacts of local housing sentiments on the housing price dynamics of China. With a massive second-hand transaction dataset, we construct monthly local housing sentiment indices for 18 major cities in China from Janu ary 2016 to October 2020. We create three sentiment proxies representing the local housing market liquidity and speculative behaviors from the transaction dataset and then use partial least squares (PLS) to extract a recursive look-ahead-bias-free local housing sentiment index for each city considered. The local housing sentiments are shown to have robust predictive powers for future housing returns with a salient short-run underreaction and long-run overreaction pattern. Further analysis shows that local housing sentiment impacts are asymmetric, and housing returns in cities with relatively inelastic housing supply are more sensitive to local housing sentiments. We also document a significant feedback effect between housing returns and market sentiments, indicating the existence of a pricing-sentiment spiral which could potentially enhance the ongoing market fever of Chinese housing markets. The main estimation results are robust to alternative sentiment extraction methods and alternative sentiment proxies, and consistent for the sample period before COVID-19.