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Returns and Information Transmission Dynamics in Public and Private Real Estate Markets
144
Citations
27
References
2015
Year
Empirical FinanceReal Estate Price IndexReal Estate FinanceMarket MicrostructureEquity PortfoliosAsset PricingManagementEconomic AnalysisFinancial EconometricsAggregate LevelEconomicsInformation Transmission DynamicsAccountingQuantitative FinanceInformation AsymmetryAsset Pricing InformationFinanceFinancial EconomicsPassive PortfoliosInformation EconomicsBusinessMutual FundsStock Market PredictionFinancial Risk
This paper examines U.S. public and private commercial real estate returns at the aggregate level and by the four major property types over the 1994–2012 time period. Returns are carefully adjusted for differences between public and private markets in financial leverage, property type focus and management fees. Unconditionally, we find that passive portfolios of unlevered core real estate investment trusts (REITs) outperformed their private market benchmark by 49 basis points (annualized) over the 1994–2012 sample period. Our baseline vector autoregression results suggest that REIT returns do not embed additional commercial real‐estate‐specific information useful in predicting private market returns. These results strongly suggest that equity REIT returns react to fundamental (latent) asset pricing information more quickly than private market returns given their greater liquidity and price revelation. REITs therefore serve as a fundamental information transmission channel to private market returns when asset pricing variables are omitted.
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