Homeownership as a Constraint on Asset Allocation
Personal preferences and financial incentives make homeownership desirable for most families. Once a family purchases a home they find it impractical (costly) to frequently change their ownership of residential real estate. Thus, by deciding how much home to buy, a family constrains their ability to adjust their asset allocation between residential real estate and other assets. To analyze the impact of this constraint on consumption, welfare, and post-retirement wealth, we first investigate a representative individual’s optimal asset allocation decisions when they are subject to a “homeownership constraint.†Next, we perform a “thought experiment†where we assume the existence of a market where a homeowner can sell, without cost, a fractional interest in their home. Now the housing choice decision does not constrain the individual’s asset allocations. By comparing these two cases, we estimate the differences in post-retirement wealth and the welfare gains potentially realizable if asset allocations were not subject to a homeownership constraint. For realistic parameter values, we find that a representative homeowner would require a substantial increase in total net worth to achieve the same level of utility as would be achievable if the choice of a home could be separated from the asset allocation decision.
Year of publication: |
2005-03-21
|
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Authors: | Cauley, Stephen D ; Pavlov, Andrey D. ; Schwartz, Eduardo S |
Institutions: | Anderson Graduate School of Management, University of California-Los Angeles (UCLA) |
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