Differences in housing price forecastability across US states
Rapach, D.E.
, Strauss, J.K.
Pages 351-372
AbstractGiven the marked differences in housing price growth across US regions
since the mid-1990s, we investigate forecasts of state-level real housing
price growth for 1995-2006. We evaluate forecasts from an autoregressive
benchmark model as well as models based on a host of state, regional, and
national economic variables. Overall, our results highlight important
differences in the forecastability of real housing price growth across US
states, especially between interior and coastal states. More specifically,
we find that autoregressive models, and especially models that incorporate
information from numerous economic variables, often provide relatively
accurate housing price forecasts for a number of interior states during the
period 1995-2006; all forecasting models, however, tend to perform
relatively poorly for a group of primarily coastal states that experienced
especially strong housing price growth during this period, pointing to a
''disconnect'' between housing prices and economic fundamentals for these
states.
Keywords: Real housing price growth
, Autoregressive distributed lag model
, Combination forecasts
, Mean square forecast error
, Coastal/interior US states