Estimating Indices in the Presence of Seller Reservation Prices

49 Pages Posted: 8 Apr 2003

See all articles by Liang Peng

Liang Peng

Smeal College of Business, The Pennsylvania State University

William N. Goetzmann

Yale School of Management - International Center for Finance; National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER)

Date Written: April 2003

Abstract

This paper documents the potential bias induced in an index of asset prices when sellers use reservation rules that may include some component of private value. We develop a model in which the seller's asking price is determined by private valuation while the buyer's bid price is determined by the market valuation, and a transaction takes place only if the bid is higher than the ask. Therefore, the trading volume and the observed transaction prices are both affected by the ratio of seller's private valuation to the market valuation, which is called the seller reserve ratio. The higher the seller reserve ratio, the lower is the trading volume and the larger is the difference between the market valuations estimated using observed prices and the actual market valuations.

To address the estimation problem posed by the bias, we propose a three-step econometric procedure. We first estimate the index using observed prices. We next use residuals from the first step and observed trading volume to estimate the latent series of seller reserve ratio and the unconditional population variance of pricing errors. We then use these estimates in step two to correct for the bias in the index based on observed prices in either a hedonic regression or a repeat sale regression. We call the unbiased index a reserve-conditional index.

Simulations show that this remedy effectively mitigates the bias, and the reserve-conditional indices are more accurate than traditional hedonic and repeat sale indices. We apply this technique to Los Angeles housing market, and show that the reserve-conditional index substantially differs from a traditional repeat sale index. In our application, the reserveconditional index is more volatile, has a much smaller autocorrelation, and appears to capture market downturns in a more timely fashion than the conventional repeat sale index.

JEL Classification: C51, G10

Suggested Citation

Peng, Liang and Goetzmann, William N., Estimating Indices in the Presence of Seller Reservation Prices (April 2003). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=387901

Liang Peng (Contact Author)

Smeal College of Business, The Pennsylvania State University ( email )

University Park
State College, PA 16802
United States

William N. Goetzmann

Yale School of Management - International Center for Finance ( email )

165 Whitney Ave.
P.O. Box 208200
New Haven, CT 06520-8200
United States
203-432-5950 (Phone)
203-436-9252 (Fax)

HOME PAGE: http://viking.som.yale.edu

National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER)

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Cambridge, MA 02138
United States

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