To read this content please select one of the options below:

Causal relationships between the price-to-rent ratio and macroeconomic factors: a UK perspective

Daniel Lo (Faculty of Computing Engineering and the Built Environment, Ulster University, Coleraine, UK)
Michael McCord (Faculty of Computing Engineering and the Built Environment, Ulster University, Coleraine, UK)
Peadar T. Davis (Faculty of Computing Engineering and the Built Environment, Ulster University, Coleraine, UK)
John McCord (School of Law, Ulster University, Coleraine, UK)
Martin Edward Haran (Belfast School of Architecture and the Built Environment, Ulster University, Coleraine, UK)

Journal of Property Investment & Finance

ISSN: 1463-578X

Article publication date: 2 February 2022

Issue publication date: 14 February 2023

604

Abstract

Purpose

House price-to-rent (P-t-R) ratios are among the most widely used measures of housing market conditions. Given the theoretical and apparent bidirectional, causal relationships and imbalances between the housing market, broader economy and financial market determinants, it is important to understand the relationship between macro- and micro-economic characteristics in relation to the P-t-R ratio to enhance the understanding of housing market dynamics. This paper studies the joint dynamics and persistence of house prices and rents and examines the temporal interactions of the P-t-R ratio and economic and financial determinants.

Design/methodology/approach

The authors examine the lead–lag relationships between the P-t-R ratios and a spectrum of macroeconomic variables using cointegration and causality methods, initially at the aggregate position and also across housing types within the Northern Ireland housing market to establish whether there are subtle differences in how various housing segments react to changes in economic activity and market fundamentals.

Findings

The findings reveal price switching dynamics and some very distinct long- and short-run relationships between macroeconomic and financial indicators and the P-t-R ratios across the various housing segments. The results exhibit monetary supply, foreign exchange markets and the stock market to be important drivers of the P-t-R ratio, with P-t-R movements seemingly tied, or are in tandem, with the overall economy, particularly with the construction sector.

Practical implications

The study shows that the P-t-R ratio can be used as an early measure for establishing the effects of macroprudential policy changes and how these may manifest across housing tiers and quality, which can further act as a signal for preventing or at least mitigating future irrational price cyclicity. These insights serve to inform housing and economic policy and macroprudential policy design, principally within lending policy and the effect of regulatory interventions and further enhance the understanding of the P-t-R ratio on housing market structure and dynamics.

Originality/value

This study is the first in the housing literature that examines the causal relationships between the P-t-R ratio and macroeconomic activity at the sub-market level. It investigates whether and how money supply, inflation, foreign exchange markets, general economic productivity and other important macroeconomic factors interact with the pricing of different property types over time.

Keywords

Citation

Lo, D., McCord, M., Davis, P.T., McCord, J. and Haran, M.E. (2023), "Causal relationships between the price-to-rent ratio and macroeconomic factors: a UK perspective", Journal of Property Investment & Finance, Vol. 41 No. 1, pp. 11-34. https://doi.org/10.1108/JPIF-08-2021-0068

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2022, Emerald Publishing Limited

Related articles