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No, it doesn't, despite the general perception that illiquidity matters in real estates. As expected, the illiquidity costs we estimate for the US residential properties are large. They are on average equivalent to 12% of the total property returns, ranging from 9.5% to 29.5% of property prices...
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We investigate the dynamics of smoothing in the NCREIF index return using time-varying asset pricing models. We find that smoothing time-varies significantly. From the inception of the NCREIF index in 1978 until the early 1990s, there was little evidence of smoothing. Smoothing has increased...
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We investigate if house prices are affected by overconfidence of households who predict house prices using imperfect public information about economic outlook. For this purpose, we develop a new measure of household overconfidence in the Bayesian framework. For the three variables we test –...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012855494
Yes. By observing return reversals following unexpected responses to noisy public signals about market-wide common factors, we show that investors in the US equity market tend to over-respond to public signals for mature firms that are relatively easy to price—old, large, and dividend-paying...
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