Latest on Real Estate
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Finance & Economics
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How Will AI Change Real Estate?
Commercial Real Estate Distress and Elevated Interest Rates Pose Solvency Risks For Banks
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Finance & Economics
- Date
What is the Silent Depression in the US?
Real Estate Faculty
Real Estate Research
Housing, Mortgages, and Retirement
- Authors
- Date
- Forthcoming
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Chapter
- Book
- Evidence and Innovation in Housing Law and Policy
An Equilibrium Model of Housing and Mortgage Markets with State-Contingent Lending Contracts
We develop a tractable general equilibrium framework of housing and mortgage markets with aggregate and idiosyncratic risks, costly liquidity and strategic defaults, empirically relevant informational asymmetries, and endogenous mortgage design. We show that adverse selection plays an important role in shaping the form of an equilibrium contract. If borrowers' homeownership values are known, aggregate wages and house prices determine the optimal state-contingent mortgage payments, which efficiently reduces the costs of liquidity default.
Optimal Dynamic Contracts with Moral Hazard and Costly Monitoring
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Tomasz Piskorski and Mark Westerfield
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- November 1, 2016
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Journal Article
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- Journal of Economic Theory
We introduce a tractable dynamic monitoring technology into a continuous-time moral hazard problem and study the optimal long-term contract between principal and agent. Monitoring adds value by allowing the principal to reduce the intensity of performance-based incentives, reducing the likelihood of costly termination. We present a novel characterization of optimal dynamic incentive provision when performance-based incentives may decline continuously to zero. Termination happens in equilibrium only if its costs are relatively low.
Misinformed Speculators and Mispricing in the Housing Market
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Alex Chinco and Christopher Mayer
- Date
- January 1, 2016
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Journal Article
- Journal
- Review of Financial Studies
This paper examines the contribution of out-of-town second-house buyers to mispricing in the housing market. We show that demand from out-of-town second-house buyers during the mid 2000s predicted not only house-price appreciation rates but also implied-to-actual-rent-ratio appreciation rates, a proxy for mispricing. We then apply a novel identification strategy to address the issue of reverse causality.
Spatial Asset Pricing: A First Step
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Francois Ortalo-Magne and Andrea Prat
- Date
- January 1, 2016
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Journal Article
- Journal
- Economica
People choose where to live and how much to invest in housing. Traditionally, the first decision has been the domain of spatial economics, while the second has been analyzed in finance. Spatial asset pricing is an attempt to combine equilibrium concepts from both disciplines. In the finance context, we show how spatial decisions can be framed as an expanded portfolio problem. Within spatial economics, we identify the consequences of hedging motives for location decisions.
Maximizing the Information Content of a Balanced Matched Sample in a Study of the Economic Performance of Green Buildings
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Cinar Kilcioglu
- Date
- January 1, 2016
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Journal Article
- Journal
- Annals of Applied Statistics
Buildings have a major impact on the environment through excessive use of resources, such as energy and water, and large carbon dioxide emissions. In this paper we revisit the study of Eichholtz et al. (2010) about the economics of environmentally sustainable buildings and estimate the effect of green building practices on market rents. For this, we use new matching methods that take advantage of the clustered structure of the buildings data.
Asset Quality Misrepresentation by Financial Intermediaries: Evidence from the RMBS Market
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- Date
- December 1, 2015
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Journal Article
- Journal
- Journal of Finance
We document that contractual disclosures by intermediaries during the sale of mortgages contained false information about the borrower's housing equity in 7–14% of loans. The rate of misrepresented loan default was 70% higher than for similar loans. These misrepresentations likely occurred late in the intermediation and exist among securities sold by all reputable intermediaries. Investors — including large institutions — holding securities with misrepresented collateral suffered severe losses due to loan defaults, price declines, and ratings downgrades.
Mortgage Rates, Household Balance Sheets, and the Real Economy
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- Date
- September 1, 2014
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Working Paper
This paper investigates the impact of lower mortgage rates on household balance sheets and other economic outcomes during the housing crisis. We use proprietary loan-level panel data matched to consumer credit records using borrowers' Social Security numbers, which allows for accurate measurement of the effects. Our main focus is on borrowers with agency loans, which constitute the vast majority of U.S. mortgage borrowers.
Mortgage Modification and Strategic Behavior: Evidence from a Legal Settlement with Countrywide
- Authors
- Date
- September 1, 2014
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Journal Article
- Journal
- American Economic Review
We investigate whether homeowners respond strategically to news of mortgage modification programs by defaulting on their mortgages. We exploit plausibly exogenous variation in modification policy induced by U.S. state government lawsuits against Countrywide Financial Corporation, which agreed to offer modifications to seriously delinquent borrowers with subprime mortgages throughout the country. Using a difference-in-difference framework, we find that Countrywide's relative delinquency rate increased more than ten percent per month immediately after the program's announcement.