Economic Policy Review Executive Summary
Monetary Policy Transmission to Residential Investment
Recapping an article from the May 2002 issue
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of the Economic Policy Review, Volume 8, Number 1 View full article PDF

 

20 pages / 225 kb

Authors: Jonathan McCarthy and Richard W. Peach

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Index of executive summaries
Overview
The authors examine how the transmission of monetary policy to residential investment has changed since the mid-1980s. They find that the ultimate magnitude of residential investment's response to a monetary policy "shock" is more or less the same in 1986-2000 as it was in 1975-85. However, the response does not occur as quickly today as it did in the past; the timing of the response is now similar to the timing of the overall economy's response to a policy action. Today, a monetary policy shock affects residential investment solely through the price of mortgage credit, whereas in the past, its effect was felt largely through nonprice forms of mortgage credit rationing.
Background
The volatility of residential investment in single-family structures has declined considerably since the mid-1980s, in conjunction with a fundamental restructuring of the nation's housing finance system (chart). The system is essentially three interrelated but distinct markets: the primary mortgage market, the secondary mortgage market, and the market for mortgage-backed securities. Over the past thirty years, the underlying institutional setting of those markets has changed dramatically in response to macroeconomic conditions, deregulation, and financial and technological innovations. Before the mid-1980s, the housing finance system was heavily regulated and dominated by thrift institutions; it has since shifted to a relatively unregulated system centered on mortgage companies (chart) and mortgage securitization (chart). As a result of these changes, the housing markets have become more fully integrated with the broader capital markets. The supply of mortgage credit is therefore no longer subject to sharp fluctuations in inflows and outflows of deposits at thrift institutions.
Argument and Methodology
The authors reason that the transmission of monetary policy to residential investment may have changed with the restructuring of the housing finance system. The decline in the volatility of mortgage credit, along with greater competitiveness in the mortgage markets prompted by deregulation, suggests that a policy action is now likely to have a different effect on nonprice rationing of mortgage credit than it did before the mid-1980s. Accordingly, the authors examine whether the changes in the housing finance system have altered the strength and/or timing of monetary policy's effect on the housing sector.
Findings
The study relies on a two-part analysis of the transmission of monetary policy changes to residential investment. In the first part, a macroeconomic model is used to examine the response of the housing markets to a policy shock. Because the restructuring of the housing finance system was largely completed by the mid-1980s, the authors estimate their model over 1975:1-1985:4 and 1986:1-2000:3. The effects of monetary policy in each period are measured by the market response to a 50-basis-point change in the federal funds rate. The model's results suggest that the effect on residential investment is equally strong in both periods, but it now takes longer for that effect to be realized. In the second part, the authors employ a structural model of investment in single-family housing. Their intent is to examine the effect of changes in the housing finance system on the housing markets and on the markets' response to changes in monetary policy. Here, most of the model's supply and demand pricing factors are found to have significant effects only after the mid-1980s. The evidence suggests that policy is now transmitted to housing through such pricing channels as mortgage interest rate costs and transaction costs, rather than through quantitative financing restrictions, as was typical before the mid-1980s.

After peaking in the mid-1980s, the volatility of mortgage credit began to decline as the primary mortgage market became more fully integrated with the capital markets.

Residential Investment: Single-Family Structures
Billions of 1996 Chain-Weighted Dollars
Chart 1 - Residential Investment: Single-Family StructuresSources: Bureau of Economic Analysis; Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System,
Flow of Funds.

Note: Shaded regions indicate periods of deposit outflows.

The primary mortgage market was once dominated by the heavily regulated thrift industry; today, the relatively unregulated mortgage banking industry has taken center stage.

Market Shares of Long-Term Loan Originations for
Single-Family Properties
Chart 2 - Market Shares of Long-Term Loan Originations for Single-Family PropertiesSource: Housing and Urban Development Agency, Office of Financial Management,
Survey of Mortgage Lending Activity.

Note: Figures are based on quarterly averages of monthly survey data.

With the growth of mortgage securitization, the market share of government-sponsored mortgage pools rose to an average of 50percent by the 1990s.

Ratio of Net Acquisitions to Total Originations for
Long-Term Single-Family Loans
Chart 3 - Ratio of Net Acquisitions to Total Originations for Long-Term Single-Family LoansSource: Housing and Urban Development Agency, Office of Financial Management,
Survey of Mortgage Lending Activity.

Note: Figures are based on quarterly averages of monthly survey data.

Commentary on article by Christopher MayerPDF3 pages / 47kb

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The views expressed in this article are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the position of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York or the Federal Reserve System.

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