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Articles:
Expected Return of Housing and
Mortgage Termination
Authors:
Nai Jia Lee
Start Page:75
End Page: 101
Volume: 6
Issue Number: 1
Year: 2003
Publication: International Real Estate Review
Abstract:
The prepayment risk of adjustable rate mortgages, unlike that of fixed rate
mortgages, greatly depends on the decision of mortgagors to move. Given that
housing also serves as an investment asset for the owner, it is hypothesised
that the expected capital returns of housing are likely to affect his
decision to move and hence, prepay. This paper aims to test the capital
gains hypothesis using Singapore?s housing market as a case study. In
addition, this paper also explores how the expected returns from alternative
types of housing affect the decision of households to move/prepay. The
expected returns of housing are computed in accordance with the definitions
of the Rational Expectation Hypothesis, Adaptive Expectation Hypothesis, and
Exogenous Expectation Hypothesis, which are well established in
macroeconomic literature and the explanation of cycles. The results showed
that the expected returns of public housing formed under the assumptions of
rational and adaptive expectation hypothesis are significant. The rational
expected return for private housing, however, does not have a significant
relationship with the decision of mortgagors to move/prepay, although the
adapted expected return for private housing is not significantly related to
the households? length of stay.
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