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The Demand for New Houses Robert T. Gordon MBA 570.

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Presentation on theme: "The Demand for New Houses Robert T. Gordon MBA 570."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Demand for New Houses Robert T. Gordon MBA 570

2 ABSTRACT The demand theory was used to determine if the demand for new homes is explained by overall market conditions.

3 INTRODUCTION  Real Estate boom  High levels of unemployment  Low interest rates  Metropolitan areas  Mid-West

4 Historical Studies  “Housing and Economics” by William F. Solomon (http://www.personal.psu.edu/users/w/f/wfs120/ist110_wfs/ Portfolio.html )  Attributes increased demand for housing to the increasing “civilian non-institutional population” of the U.S.

5 Historical Studies cont.  Federal Reserve bank of San Francisco indicates that the demand for new houses is a factor of job growth,  http://www.frbsf.org/econrsrch/wklyltr/wklyltr99/el99- 24.html

6 Excluded variables  Unemployment Rate  Population  FFR  Total Production Index  Consumer Price Index  DSPI (disposable personal income)  Average Price

7 The Model  Qnh = f(M1, FXYEN, HS, DJI) Where Qnh= Quantity of new homes demanded in the U.S. M1= M1 (Money Stock). FX= Foreign Exchange rate. Yen= Japanese Yen HS= New housing starts. DJI= Dow Jones Industrial Average

8 Null Hypothesis H0: The demand for new homes is explained by market conditions

9 Parameters VariableTypeExpected Sign Actual Sign M1Exogenous++ FXExogenous++ HSExogenous+- DJIExogenous++

10 Variable Description  M1 (Money Stock) is a measure of total money supply. The M1 money supply includes only checkable demand deposits.

11 Variables cont..  FX & Yen represents the dollar to yen foreign exchange rate.

12 Variables cont..  HS represents new housing starts  DJI represents the Dow Jones Industrial Average.

13 Source Data  Data was gathered from the following web sites. Economagic.com: Economic Time Series Page U.S. Department of Commerce: Bureau of Economic Analysis (http://www.bea.doc.gov/bea/an/nipaguid.pdf)

14 ANOVA

15 P-Value  The P-Value noted in the ANOVA Table (P=0.00001) indicates a confidence level greater than 99.99%. The F- Value is statistically significant. A statistically significant proportion of the total variation in the dependent variable is explained.

16 ANOVA

17 R2R2  The R-squared noted (75.75%) indicates that 75.75% of the variation in the dependent variable is explained by the variation in the independent variables.

18 Adjusted R 2  The adjusted R-squared noted (75.16%) has properly adjusted for the number of independent variables.  Change is immaterial in this case, it is important to have an accurate portrayal of the information.  Adjusted R-squared indicates that 75.16% of the variation in the dependent variable is explained by variation in the independent variables.

19 ANOVA cont..

20 Durbin-Watson Statistic  The information indicates that there is auto- correlation. The Durbin statistic (.721) is unsatisfactory.  The null hypothesis (Ho: Rho = 0) “Reject” indication in ORS.  This was resolved using First Differencing.

21 First Difference

22 Multicollinearity  As noted in the ANOVA tab, the average VIF comes out to 1.762.  This is far below the acceptable limit of “10”.  NOT deemed problematic.  Multicollinearity is not a problem.

23 White’s Test  P-Value for the White’s test is.05024 indicating a confidence level less than 95%. This means that the residual error terms are homoskedastic. This is a satisfactory outcome and we accept the null hypothesis.

24 Constant Variance

25 Normal Probability

26 Parameters

27 Elasticities

28 Conclusion  As money supply increases (M1) the demand for new homes will increase.  As the dollar grows stronger against the Yen, the demand for new homes will increase.  As housing starts increase, demand for new homes will slightly decrease.  As the DJI average increases, the demand for new homes will increase.


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