monitoring residential property prices: measurement issues & the handbook project geert...
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Monitoring Residential Property Prices: Measurement Issues & The
Handbook Project
Geert Bruinooge
Statistics Netherlands
Seminar in Memory of Svein Longva
Measuring Property Prices
New York, 23 February 2010
Interest in the topic
Much interest in the development of residential property (house) prices. Some examples:
– Economic analysis (relating house prices to fundamentals, detection of bubbles, etc.)– Risk management by mortgage providers– Indicator of Financial Soundness (IMF/BIS)– Principal European Economic Indicator (Eurostat)– Wealth measurement (National Accounts, international comparisons)– Measurement of dwelling services (CPI)
Thinking about measurement
Primary target of measurement: (Market) value change of residential property (housing) stock.
Various secondary targets can be imagined.
Main measurement issues are:– The universe (housing stock) changes by addition, removal, depreciation, renovation– Prices are only observed for (potential or actual) transactions– Observed prices are registered at different dates by different agencies– Not sure whether registered prices represent market values– Registered prices may include or exclude land– There is seasonality and how to deal with that?
Main methods
– Comparing (stratified) mean, median, etc. of transaction prices– Comparing repeat sales transaction prices– Comparing transaction prices to assessment (appraisal) prices
Ideally each method uses quality adjusted prices– by some ad hoc method– by a hedonic method
Data sources
– Official registers– Mortgage companies / banks– Organisations of real estate agents– Surveys by NSOs
Trade-offs
– Completeness of transactions during accounting period– Completeness of quality characteristics– Timeliness of results– Cost
Sales Price Appraisal Ratio Method (SPAR)
Designed to solve the problem of mix change between two comparison periods.
Appraisals are estimates of the market values of all the houses at some reference period by some official authority.
The ratios of sales prices and appraisal values are used for calculating the mean price change. In stylized form: price change between periods 0 and 1 is measured by (p1/pr) / (p0/pr) where p1/pr is based on the period 1 sample and p0/pr is based on the period 0 sample.
Value-weighted SPAR index: sales price appraisal value ratios are weighted according to the (base period) values of the houses
SPAR method (continued)
The method
• controls for compositional (mix) change because based on matched pairs of houses;• does, however, not automatically adjust for quality change of houses;• may suffer from sample selection bias.
To better control for sample selection bias, stratification must be used: SPAR indexes are compiled at the level of strata (region X type of house) and then aggregated.
Results for Netherlands (1)
The next slide compares– the monthly value-weighted SPAR index based on all sales data from the official Land Registry office;– the monthly (naive) arithmetic mean index based on the same data;– an index based on quarterly (trimmed) median prices from an organisation of real estate agents.
Results for Netherlands (2)2005=100
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
110
120
1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009
Value-weighted SPAR naive (arithmetic mean) NVM median
Growing demand for guidance
There are a number of international Manuals/Handbooks on price statistics, such as
– Consumer Price Index Manual (ILO)– Producer Price Index Manual (IMF)– Export and Import Price Index Manual (IMF)– Measuring Capital (OECD)– Measuring Productivity (OECD),
but there is nothing for house prices. Agencies want guidance. International harmonisation is desirable.
The RPPI Handbook Project
Under the aegis of the Intersecretariat Working Group on Price Statistics (IWGPS), Eurostat commissioned this project in May 2009 to Statistics Netherlands.
The project is executed by an international team of experts.
Team
Bert M. Balk – Statistics Netherlands; Rotterdam School of Management, Erasmus University
Jan de Haan – Statistics Netherlands
W. Erwin Diewert – University of British Columbia
Marc Prud’homme – Statistics Canada; University of Ottawa
David Fenwick – international consultant (formerly ONS, United Kingdom)
Tentative contents of the Handbook
Chapter
1. Preface
2. Introduction
3. Uses
4. Conceptual elements
5. Methods
6. Data sources
7. Catalogue of available indices + some cases
8. Recommendations
9. Glossary + index
10. Annex: Examples
Timing of activities
May 2009 Start of projectNov 2009 Eurostat-IAOS-IFC (Basel)
Conference on RPPI: presentation of project and gathering of user
needsMay 2010 UNECE/ILO CPI Meeting:
first draft available (also on website)
Feb 2011 RPPI Workshop: near-final draft available
May 2011 Final draft