Three Essays on the Efficiency of Real Esate Markets

Three Essays on the Efficiency of Real Esate Markets

Author: Zhao, Xi

Publisher:

Published: 2015

Total Pages:

ISBN-13:

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The U.S. real estate markets have undergone substantial fluctuations in recent years. This dissertation attempts to understand the effects of some market fundamentals on residential real estate market outcomes and efficiency from both theoretical perspective and empirical evidence. This research contains three research projects. First, a number of papers have identified the positive return of market size on matching outcomes when the market exhibits frictions. In the second chapter, I develop a novel directed search model that connects home list price, reservation price with the sale outcomes and empirically test the thick market effects on trading efficiency in housing market using home transaction data in Dallas metropolitan area during 2006 to 2008. The results present strong and robust market size effects that houses on thicker market are listed and sold at higher prices and significantly faster speed. The third chapter studies principal-agent problems in real estate markets, where the brokerage service is often used to facilitate home sales. The seller agent gets percentage commissions from the home owner and splits with the buyer agent in reward for producing the buyer. A seller agent sometimes serves as dual agent that represents both the seller and buyer sides and gets all commissions. I introduce a theoretical model and present evidence from Dallas metropolitan housing market that the agency structure may create principal-agent problems. I find that the dual-agent-assisted home sales on average give 2.6% more discount on final price than home sales that are assisted by two agents. Competition among home buyers may reduce the severity of principal-agent problems. The fourth chapter deviates from the rational agent assumption and investigates the behavioral impacts of price endings on home sales. Recent literature in behavioral economics suggests that price endings have some psychological impacts on buyer's purchasing decision. In real estate markets, both round price and precise price (or nine ending price) strategies are used in home sales. From the panel data and regression discontinuity analysis of Dallas housing market transactions, I find homes listed with precise price are on average sold at 4.6% higher price than homes listed at round price only when prices are less than their nearby round prices, favoring the nine ending price literature. The electronic version of this dissertation is accessible from http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/155741


Three Essays in Applied Financial Econometrics

Three Essays in Applied Financial Econometrics

Author: Horatio M. Morgan

Publisher:

Published: 2009

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13:

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Efficiency is perhaps one of the most important concepts associated with the functioning of markets in modern economies. When markets are efficient, economic theory suggests that the prices we observe reflect the relative scarcity of resources; and hence, effectively channel those resources to their most productive use. The primary objective of this dissertation is to investigate the efficiency property of the U.S. housing market for single-family homes and the stock market. It does so through the application of advanced techniques in financial and time series econometrics. In relation to the housing market, the empirical evidence is consistent with the version of the efficiency market hypothesis which suggests that asset prices follow a random walk. However, in relation in relation to the stock market, the empirical evidence is inconsistent with the version of the efficient market hypothesis that attributes price changes to the random arrival of new information. For both markets, however, we do not find the empirical evidence to be definitive. In the context of the crisis that emerged in the subprime mortgage segment of U.S. housing market in 2006, this dissertation also investigates the interdependency structure of the housing market as a secondary objective. The main result suggests that home prices do not comove systematically over time.