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Commercial Real Estate Valuation: Fundamentals Versus Investor SentimentJim ClaytonPension Real Estate Association David C. LingUniversity of Florida - Warrington College of Business Administration Andy NaranjoUniversity of Florida - Warrington College of Business Administration April 2008 Abstract: This paper investigates the role of fundamentals and investor sentiment in commercial real estate valuation. In real estate markets, heterogeneous properties trade in illiquid, highly segmented and informationally inefficient local markets. Moreover, the inability to short sell private real estate restricts the ability of sophisticated traders to enter the market and eliminate mispricing. These characteristics would seem to render private real estate markets highly susceptible to sentiment-induced mispricing. Using error correction models to carefully model potential lags in the adjustment process, this paper extends previous work on cap rate dynamics by examining the extent to which fundamentals and investor sentiment help to explain the time-series variation in national-level cap rates. We find evidence that investor sentiment impacts pricing, even after controlling for changes in expected rental growth, equity risk premiums, T-bond yields, and lagged adjustments from long run equilibrium.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 43 Keywords: Sentiment measures, limits to arbitrage, principal components, error-correction working papers seriesDate posted: May 15, 2008Suggested CitationContact Information
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