Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Speculation In Financial Markets : More Instability

Interesting work - just where do speculators fit into the housing mess and just what has their impact been.

The Role of Flippers in the Housing Market
Source: Patrick Bayer, Christopher Geissler and James W. Roberts, "Speculators and Middlemen: The Role of Flippers in the Housing Market," National Bureau of Economic Research, February 2011.

In thinly traded markets for heterogeneous, durable goods, such as housing, intermediaries may play especially important roles. Using a unique micro-level dataset of housing transactions in Los Angeles from 1988-2008 and a novel research design, researchers Patrick Bayer, Christopher Geissler and James W. Roberts identify and measure the importance of two very distinct types of intermediaries, also known as "flippers."

The first type act as middlemen who quickly match sellers and buyers, operate throughout housing market cycles and earn above average returns when they buy and sell.

The second type act as speculators who attempt to time markets by holding assets for longer periods of time, perform relatively poorly when buying and selling and are strongly associated with price instability in their targeted areas.

The presence of these unsophisticated speculators and positive feedback trading contribute the first pieces of evidence from the housing market to a growing body of work in other financial markets that questions whether speculators always act to stabilize prices, say Bayer, Geissler and Roberts.

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