Estimating Strategic Impacts Of Foreclosed Housing Redevelopment Using Spatial Analysis

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University of Massachusetts Boston From the SelectedWorks of Michael P. Johnson Estimating Strategic Impacts Of Foreclosed Housing Redevelopment Using Spatial Analysis Michael P Johnson, Jr. Available at: https://works.bepress.com/michael_johnson/78/

Estimating Strategic Impacts of Foreclosed Housing Redevelopment Michael P. Johnson University of Massachusetts Boston 2016 INFORMS National Conference, Nashville, TN

Acknowledgements Funding National Science Foundation, Collaborative Proposal: Decision Models for Foreclosed Housing Acquisition and Redevelopment, grant #1024968, September 15, 2010 August 31, 2014 Joseph P. Healey Grant Program, University of Massachusetts Boston, Decision Modeling for Foreclosed Housing Acquisition in a Large Urban Area, grant #51216, July 2009 July 2010 Collaborators Jeffrey Keisler, College of Management, University of Massachusetts Boston Senay Solak, Isenberg School of Management, University of Massachusetts Lowell David Turcotte, Department of Economics, University of Massachusetts Lowell Rachel Bogardus Drew, PhD 14, University of Massachusetts Boston Armagan Bayram, PhD 15, University of Massachusetts Amherst Emily Vidrine, M.S., 12, University of Massachusetts Lowell Felicia Sullivan, PhD. 15, University of Massachusetts Boston 2

Motivation Foreclosed housing crisis in U.S. and Great Recession has had severe impacts on individuals and housing markets: 2.0 million homeowners are severely delinquent on mortgage payments and 2.2. million are in the foreclosure process 11.1 million homeowners have negative equity; real equity is $6.3 trillion, down from $14.9 trillion in 2006 and less than $10.1 trillion in mortgage debt Case-Schiller index of home prices in 18 of 20 large metropolitan areas have decreased over 2010; prices overall are at 2003 levels 19.4 million households pay more than half of their income for housing (Joint Center for Housing Research 2011) Federal government has spent over $11 billion in foreclosure-related programs: Neighborhood Stabilization Program American Recovery and Reinvestment Act Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010 but progress, measured by number of homeowners with permanentlymodified loans, or number of foreclosed properties acquired and redeveloped, has fallen short of expectations 3

Role of community-based organizations CBOs lead local responses to foreclosure crisis and are essential to neighborhood stabilization and revitalization: Homebuyer education Foreclosure counseling Renter advocacy Family support Housing and economic development Community planning Mission-driven CBOs have significant experience and expertise, but often lack commensurate technical resources to generate maximum impact 4

Decision modeling opportunities Researchers have focused on foreclosed housing and acquisition by community-based organizations Values elicitation to identify goals, objectives, attributes and decision opportunities Short-term bidding policy design for foreclosed housing acquisition opportunities Long-term investment strategies across neighborhoods, housing types and time periods 5

Research questions What characteristics of foreclosed housing are salient to the problem of community-based foreclosed housing acquisition and redevelopment? How can such characteristics be quantified? How can they be used in decision models? 6

Social impacts of housing foreclosures Families: Financial insecurity and economic hardship Personal and family stress, disruption and ill health Communities: Property values, vacancies, prices and rents Disorder, crime and violence Public sector costs and fiscal health Data to estimate many of these impacts are limited (Kingsley, Smith and Price 2009) 7

Aspects of foreclosed housing relevant to CBOs Social value Impacts upon community distress measures associated with foreclosed housing Criminal offending Blight Property values Strategic value Ability of redevelopment projects to further CBO goals Proximity to neighborhood amenities and disamenities Support for economic redevelopment Development value Ability of project success Acquisition and redevelopment costs Likelihood of successful acquisition 8

Foreclosed housing attributes for decision modeling We identify and measure attributes known to be important to CBOs: Property values What is the expected foregone loss in property values associated with successful acquisition and redevelopment of certain foreclosed housing units? Strategic values What location-based measures of foreclosed properties embody a CBO s strategic goals and resident preferences? If these measures vary across candidate properties and are not highly correlated, then they are candidates for inclusion in multi-criteria decision models 9

Research results for foreclosed housing attributes Property values: Johnson, M.P., Solak, S., Drew, R.B. and J. Keisler. 2013. Property Value Impacts of Foreclosed Housing Acquisitions under Uncertainty. Socio- Economic Planning Sciences 47(4): 292 308. Strategic values: Johnson, M.P., Drew, R.B., Keisler, J. and D. Turcotte. 2012. What is a Strategic Acquisition? Decision Modeling in Support of Foreclosed Housing Redevelopment. Socio-Economic Planning Sciences 46(3): 194 204. Entire project: Johnson, M.P., Keisler, J., Solak, S., Turcotte, D., Bayram, A. and R.B. Drew. 2016. Decision Science for Housing and Community Development: Localized and Evidence Based Responses to Distressed Housing and Blighted Communities. New York: John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Focus for this presentation is strategic values 10

Strategic value analysis How can we represent the value of a foreclosed acquisition opportunity with respect to a CDC s mission? Unit characteristics Proximity to local amenities and disamenities Antecedents: Implicit markets for housing attributes (Rosen 1974) Hedonic price functions (Bartik and Smith 1987) Household utility maximization as a function of housing attributes (Sheppard 1999) Push and pull factors in hedonic models (Li and Brown 1980) Limited research on housing and neighborhood amenities influence housing acquisition and redevelopment decisions of CDCs 11

What are amenities and disamenities? Amenities: Schools, parks, cultural venues, full-service grocery stores, other CDC-developed housing, transit stops, strategic corridors Disamenities: Crime hot spots, vacant lots, distressed housing, excessively busy intersections Notions of amenities and disamenities that are believed to influence strategic value of properties may vary widely 12

A theory of strategic value for foreclosed housing acquisition Assumptions: Proximity to amenities and disamenities within a given neighborhood are the only relevant considerations Amenities and disamenities can be grouped into discrete categories (e.g. schools, crime locations ) Decisionmaker has defined preferences for categories of amenities and disamenities Decisionmaker has defined preferences for amenities (overall) as compared to disamenities Strategic value of a given property is a function of: Aggregate value of property with respect to all local amenities Aggregate value of property with respect to all local disamenities 13

Strategic value functions Definitions and Sets Amenities j = index of amenities; j = 1, 2,. J l = index of class of amenities; l = 1, 2,.L w l = weight or priority assigned to amenity class l d l ij= distance between property i and amenity j in class l Disamenities k = index of disamenities; k = 1, 2,. K p = index of class of disamenities; p = 1, 2,. P w p = weight or priority assigned to disamenity class p d p ik= distance between property i and disamenity k in class p. 14

Strategic value functions A l i D p i S i = aggregate value of property i with respect to all local amenities in class l g({w l },{d l ij}) = aggregate value of property i with respect to all local disamenities in class p h({w p },{d p ik}) = strategic value associated with candidate property i, accounting for all local amenities and disamenities = f({a l i}, {D p i}) 15

Strategic value functions Suppose that there are two competing frames through which amenities and disamenities may be viewed: Individual residents, who may care only about the closest amenity, or disamenity CBOs, which may care most about cumulative impact of amenities and disamenities on neighborhood revitalization efforts 16

Alternative functional forms Individual resident frame: A l i = value to property i of all nearby amenities j in class l = pi D p i value to property i of all nearby disamenities k in class p = CBO frame: A l i = value to property i of all nearby amenities j in class l = D p i value to property i of all nearby disamenities k in class p = 17

Aggregating class-level measures We use linear additive measures to aggregate class-level measures for the individual and CBO frames: 18

Case Study: Chelsea, MA Between 2009 2010, we collaborated with a local CDC to understand foreclosed housing development processes, gather data and refine our decision models We apply the SVI model to 35 foreclosed residential properties as of October 2009 19

Amenities and disamenities are distributed widely 20

Researchers and CBO s views of amenities and disamenities differ 21

SVI measures vary by frame, amenity definition, weighting scheme CBO frame, CBO-specified amenities and disamenities, base weights Individual resident frame, all amenities and disamenities, alternative weights 22

Implications of strategic value impacts analysis Significant losses, as measured by percent of normalized estimated strategic value associated with actual CBO purchases compared to top three properties within each analysis category 23

What is the relationship between different strategic value measures? Correlations between alternative SVI measures are: Strong and positive (bold) for same sets of features across two weighting schemes Strong and negative (italics) for resident frames with all features, and for CDCdefined features, either frame, for both weighting schemes Moderate and negative for CDC frame, all features vs. CDC-defined features, either frame, both weighting schemes Functional form of the strategic value equations is less important than the choice of features to include and weights to apply 24

What is the relationship between different foreclosed property attributes? Correlations between SVI measures and PVI are moderate to low Correlations between SVI measures and assessed value are very low Correlation between PVI and assessed value has been shown to be low No correlations between impact measures are strong and positive, supporting a multi-objective optimization approach to property selection 25

Discussion First known instance of quantifying strategic value of candidate foreclosed housing acquisitions Field research with community partners is essential to identifying salient amenities and disamenities Frames and alternative amenities sets provide rich source of variation in SVI reflecting specific problem contexts and stakeholder perspectives PVI, SVI and assessed value (proxy to market value) may serve as inputs to biobjective knapsack problem for foreclosed housing property selection 26

Questions? 27