scholarly journals Does the real estate market behavior predict the trust crisis in the financial sector? The case of the ECB and the Euro

Equilibrium ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 16 (4) ◽  
pp. 711-740
Author(s):  
Maryna Brychko ◽  
Tetyana Vasilyeva ◽  
Zuzana Rowland ◽  
Serhiy Lyeonov

Research background: Based on the history of financial crises, real estate market behavior could be thought of as a key benchmark of trust shifts in the financial sector of the economy. Plunging real estate asset prices accompanied by the financial "bubbles" explosion could be viewed as the harbinger ? even the cause ? of the public trust crash in the financial sector. Purpose of the article: This study intends to assess the extent to which the real estate market behavior determinants, along with financial sector consumers' feelings, are able to predict trust crises in the financial sector, namely to its primary institutions ? European Central Bank and the Euro. Methods: In order to estimate the probability of a trust crisis in the financial sector, two logistic regression logit models were developed based on two types of dependent variables as they reflect trust violations in the financial system primary institutions ? net trust in European Central Bank (Model I) and net support for the Euro (Model II). The research was conducted on quarterly panel data of the EU countries from the euro area covering the period from 2000 to 2019. Logit regressions employed for data processing and analysis were performed in the computational system STATISTICA. Findings & value added: The logit-modeling results show that determinants of irrational real estate buyers' behavior are powerless in predicting the escalation of the trust crisis in the Euro. However, binary models of real estate market behavior could be successfully used to predict the probability of the trust crisis in the European Central Bank. The results show that real house price indices, price to income ratio, price to rent ratio, and rent prices accompanied by the financial sector consumers' feelings are statistically significant, providing the best distribution between the normal times and periods of trust crisis in the European Central Bank. Irrational real estate market behavior may indicate serious problems in the trust violations in the European Central Bank, and it should be a signal for policymakers to take actions towards more efficient financial and real estate market regulation following the behavioral approach.

Author(s):  
Gabriel Moss QC ◽  
Bob Wessels ◽  
Matthias Haentjens

The consequences of the international financial crisis that started in 2007 unveiled a real estate bubble crisis in Spain that left the majority of its financial sector on the verge of insolvency. National financial institutions had been financing the over-development of the real estate market for years, borrowing abroad to lend locally at an unsustainable pace. The moment the international interbank market dried up, Spanish financial entities were unable to refinance their debts and stopped financing the development and retail acquisition of housing. This happened at a time when the international sovereign context was extremely troublesome. Greece, Portugal, and Ireland were undergoing a rescue process, and Spain and Italy started experiencing a sharp rise in the spread of their bonds vis-à-vis the German Bundesbond. Spain’s debt-to-GDP ratio then was still low (considerably lower than that of Germany, France, or the UK), and yet the cost of financing was soaring, threating the very solvency of the nation. The reason for this threat was the over-indebtedness of the private sector, with special intensity in the case of the financial sector. The Spanish government realized that a recapitalization of the troubled financial entities was a precondition of its own survival.


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