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Do Big Box Retailers Need Tax Breaks?
2018 Real Estate Symposium Panel Report: Global Capital Flows: Thinking Beyond the Cycle
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REA Students Trek to South Beach for a Sunny Market Overview
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Real Estate Research
Positioning Politics: Kelo, Eminent Domain, and the Press
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- January 1, 2008
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Chapter
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- Land and Power: The Impact of Eminent Domain in Urban Communities
This paper explores the politics of the Kelo backlash by analyzing the content of public opinion published in editorials, op-eds, editorial cartoons, and letters-to-the editor on the pages of the nation's daily papers. Work by Nader, Diamond, and Patton (2006) analyzes public opinion from five polls conducted in fall 2005, after the decision came down.
U.S. House Price Dynamics and Behavioral Economics
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Christopher Mayer and Todd Sinai
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- September 1, 2007
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Chapter
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- Policymaking Insights on Behavioral Economics
There has been considerable debate in recent years regarding the role of behavioral factors in determining housing prices. The question of whether psychology matters in the housing market has been settled long ago: the answer is yes. Rather, economists are now debating in what ways psychology impacts market behavior and how large an effect this impact has on housing prices.
Agency Conflicts, Asset Substitution, and Securitization
Under securitization, agents perform functions (for fees) that would alternatively be performed by a vertically integrated lender with ownership of a whole loan. We examine how outsourcing impacts performance using data on 357 commercial mortgage-backed securities deals with over 46,000 individual loans. To alleviate agency conflicts in managing troubled loans, underwriters often sell the first-loss position to the special servicer, the party who is charged with handling delinquencies and defaults.
Land Assembly, Land Readjustment and Public-Private Redevelopment
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- April 1, 2007
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Chapter
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- Analyzing Land Readjustment: Economics, Law and Collective Action
In this paper I explore the lessons learned from the redevelopment of Times Square at 42nd Street, where 13 acres of prime, if blighted, land was assembled by the customary method of condemnation. This experience vividly argues for a more efficient strategy, though in such large-scale redevelopment project where issues of overall control and the redefinition of land uses are often paramount, land readjustment schemes may be difficult to apply.
Public/Private Development: Lessons from History, Research, and Practice
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- March 1, 2007
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Journal Article
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- Journal of the American Planning Association
Public/private partnerships have become a favored strategy for implementing complex urban developments in the United States and Western Europe, but the large volume of literature on the topic falls short of providing city planners, development experts, and policy analysts the knowledge needed for either teaching or practice. In the late 1970s, the blurring of lines between public and private action spurred significant intellectual debate in the U.S.
Investment Under Uncertainty and Time-Inconsistent Preferences
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Neng Wang and Steven Grenadier
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- January 1, 2007
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Journal Article
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- Journal of Financial Economics
While standard real options models assume that agents possess a constant rate of time preference, there is substantial evidence that agents are impatient about choices in the short term but are patient when choosing between long-term alternatives. We extend the real options framework to model the investment-timing decisions of entrepreneurs with time-inconsistent preferences.
Investment, Consumption, and Hedging Under Incomplete Markets
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Neng Wang and Jianjun Miao
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- January 1, 2007
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Journal Article
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- Journal of Financial Economics
Entrepreneurs often face undiversifiable idiosyncratic risks from their business investments. We extend the standard real options approach to an incomplete markets environment and analyze the joint decisions of business investments, consumption/savings, and portfolio selection. For a lumpsum investment payoff and an agent with a sufficiently strong precautionary savings motive, an increase in volatility can accelerate investment, contrary to the standard real options analysis.
Experimentation under Uninsurable Idiosyncratic Risk: An Application to Entrepreneurial Survival
We propose an analytically tractable continuous-time model of experimentation in which a risk-averse entrepreneur cannot fully diversify the idiosyncratic risk from his business investment. He makes consumption/savings and business exit decisions jointly, while learning about the unknown quality of the project over time.
What Can We Learn About the Sensitivity of Investment to Stock Prices with a Better Measure of Tobin's <i>q</i>?
This paper examines the responsiveness of investment to Tobin's q using data from Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs). We take advantage of high-quality estimates of the market value of a firm's assets instead of the more-commonly used book value of assets to estimate a more accurate value of q. We have three main results. First, while REITs have institutional features that mitigate many of the complications faced by previous studies, we still find little relationship between REIT investment and a traditional accounting-based measure of q.