Thirty-Fifth Annual MeetingApril 9-13, 2019Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), Arizona
The American Real Estate Society
www.ARESnet.org
American Real Estate Societywww.aresnet.org
International Real Estate Societywww.iresnet.net
Pacific Rim Real Estate Societywww.prres.net
European Real Estate Societywww.eres.org
Asian Real Estate Societywww.asres.org
African Real Estate Societywww.afres.org
Latin American Real Estate Societywww.lares.org.br
OUR LEADING PUBLICATIONS
Journal of Real Estate Research (JRER)
Journal of Real Estate Portfolio Management (JREPM)
Journal of Real Estate Literature (JREL)
Journal of Real Estate Practice and Education (JREPE)
Journal of Housing Research (JHR)
Journal of Sustainable Real Estate (JOSRE)
Research Issues in Real Estate (Periodic Annual Volume)
ARES Newsletter
OUR LEADING GLOBAL AFFILIATIONS
THE AMERICAN REAL ESTATE SOCIETY
appreciates your membership in the leading real estate research and education organization in the world
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Welcometo the
AmericAnreAl estAte
society
35th AnnuAl meetingJW mArriott cAmelbAck inn resort & spApArAdise VAlley (scottsdAle/phoenix), ArizonA
April 9-13, 2019
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April 9, 2019
Dear ARES Meeting Attendees:
It is my pleasure to welcome all of you, on behalf of the entire American Real Estate Society (ARES), to our35th Annual Meeting at the desert oasis of Paradise Valley, Arizona -- the stunning JW Marriott Camelback Inn.Per usual, there will be new scholarship, practitioner meetings, networking, and fun followed by morescholarship, practitioner meetings, networking, and fun ………and finally, the survivor’s party.
Things will be a bit different this year, however, as we continue to transition to a new generation of leadership.We have been making great progress, and I personally want to thank David Funk (Executive Director) and Louiseand Bennie Waller (Meeting Planners) as they have risen to every operational challenge. Additionally, I highlycommend Simon Stevenson for all of his efforts as Program Chair. Nice work Simon; we look forward to yearsof your leadership.
All of that said, ARES stands on the shoulders of giants that came before us building something out of nothing.Steve Pyhrr, Art Schwartz, Joe Albert, Stephen E. Roulac, Chris Manning, Joe Lipscomb, Glenn Muller and scoresof others (my apologies for omissions) that laid the foundation on which we now stand. Representing the currentmembership, I extend a heartfelt thanks to all that have come before. We are where we are in great part due to allyour collective efforts.
As I have mentioned in the past, our time is now. The new environment of impact, engagement, and innovationfrom AACSB and the Carnegie Engagement classification are combining to bring real estate to the forefrontwithin the academy, and we are just the folks to help Deans and Presidents thrive in this new setting. However,some legacy issues exist that we need to address in terms of academic awareness (citations, journal rankings, etc.)and time is of the essence.
At this year’s meeting, among other issues, we will address the topic of open access for our journals, whereopen access is defined as blind peer review with immediate access to articles by all upon acceptance.Additionally, we will not change our longstanding policy of zero submission fee, and ARES will never charge apublication fee. Thus, please come prepared to discuss this (and other related issues) with ARES Board membersand in the general business meeting. It is very important that we come away from this year’s annual meeting withclear action items to increase our society’s presence at all levels – academic, industry, policy, consumer, andmedia.
I would also like to take this opportunity to continue the drumbeat of my personal goals for the society. In nocertain order of importance, they are:
• Promote efforts to make ARES a recognized center of real estate expertise.• Promote efforts to establish additional revenue streams for ARES so as to diversify away from our
dependence on membership dues and conference attendance.• Promote efforts to trend the ARES Board and Executive Committee toward policy development and
oversight and away from operational matters.• Promote efforts to trend the ARES Executive Director toward operations and away from policy development
and oversight.My gray hairs seem now to be increasing exponentially, but everyone is worth it. I love you all and look forward
to seeing everyone in Arizona.
Regards,
Ken H. Johnson, Ph.D.ARES President
Florida AtlanticUniversity
office depot centerBUILDING 93, SUITE 201
777 GLADES ROADBOCA RATON, FLORIDA 33431-0991
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2018-2019 Ares leadeship positions oFFicers
christopher l. cain (2018- 2020)College of Charleston
pernille h. christensen (2018-2023University of Technology, Sydney
J. reid cummings (2016-2022)University of South Alabama
charles dirocco (2018-2023)Altus/ARGUS Groupterry r. dunkin (2017-2022)
Appraisal Institute & Dunkin Real Est. AdvAndrew c. Florance (2015-2020)
CoStar GroupWilliam g. hardin iii (2017-2022)
Florida International Universitydavid m. harrison* (2016-2021)
University of Central Floridamichael J. highfield* (2018-2023)
Mississippi State UniversityAnthony pennington-cross (2018-2023)
Marquette University
s. mckay price (2014-2019)Lehigh University
spenser robinson (2015-2020)Central Michigan University
Andrew r. sanderford (2016-2021)University of Arizona
douglas sawyer (2014-2019)CCIM Institute & Sawyer Properties
michael J. sieler* (2015-2020)College of William and Mary
neil shah (2016-2021)Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors
g. stacy sirmans* (2014-2019)Florida State University
mark sunderman (2014-2019)University of Memphis
bennie Waller (2016-2021)Longwood University
kimberly Winson-geideman (2017-2022)University of Melbourne
* Past President
AmericAn reAl estAte society
2018-2019 boArd oF directors
ires boArd oF representAtiVesVelma zahirovic-herbert, University of Georgia (2016-2019)
karen gibler, Georgia State University (2017-2020)Jeremy gabe, University of Auckland (2018-2021)
2018-2019 JAmes r. Webb Ares FoundAtion Executive Director ......................mauricio rodriguez*, Texas Christian UniversityTreasurer......................................Joseph b. lipscomb*, Texas Christian UniversityDirector of Development ............david m. harrison*, University of Central FloridaSecretary......................................Joseph d. Albert*, James Madison University, EmeritusDoctoral Seminar Director ........elaine m. Worzala*, College of CharlestonCo-International Liaison ............graeme newell, University of Western SydneyCo-International Liaison ............John e. Williams*, Morehouse CollegeInvestment Committee ................glenn r. mueller*, Joseph lipscomb*, chris manning*, Arthur schwartz, Jr.*
President+ ............................................................ken h. Johnson, Florida Atlantic UniversityPresident Elect+ ................................................ sofia dermisi, University of Washington VP & Program Chair+ ...................................... simon stevenson, University of Washington Vice Program Chair++ ...................................... philip A. seagraves, Middle Tennessee State UniversityImmediate Past President+.…………… .......... michael J. highfield, Mississippi State UniversityExecutive Director+ .......................................... david l. Funk, Roosevelt UniversitySecretary++ ...................................................... thomas m. springer, Clemson UniversityTreasurer++ ...................................................... karl guntermann,* Arizona State University, EmeritusDirector of Finance++ ...................................... mauricio rodriguez,* Texas Christian UniversityDirector of Development++ .............................. stephen A. pyhrr,* SynerMark Properties, Inc.Director of Publications++................................ ken h. Johnson, Florida Atlantic University Associate Director of Publications++ .............. eli beracha, Florida International UniversityMeeting Planner++............................................ bennie Waller, Longwood University Director of Strategy++ ...................................... stephen e. roulac* Roulac Global and University of UlsterDirector of Industry Liaison.............................. Will mcintosh,* USAA Real Estate CompanyParliamentarian ................................................ Joseph d. Albert*, James Madison University, EmeritusVice Parlimentarian .......................................... sean salter, Middle Tennessee State UniversityOmbudsman ...................................................... larry e. Wofford,* University of Tulsa
+ Voting member of the Executive Committee. ++Non-voting member of the Executive Committee. *Past President
2018-2019Appointed positions
Associate executive director, research and manuscript prizeschristopher manning*, Loyola Marymount University
Associate executive director, Website content & social mediakimberly goodwin, University of Southern Mississippi
Co-Editors, JRER ko Wang, Editor, Johns Hopkins Carey Business Schoolmichael J. seiler*, Co-Editor, College of William and MaryWilliam g. hardin, iii*, Co-Editor, Florida International University
Co-Editors, JREPM peng liu, Co-Editor, Cornell University simon stevenson, Co-Editor, University of Washington
Co-Editors, JREL david m. harrison*, Co-Editor, University of Central Floridamauricio rodriguez*, Co-Editor, Texas Christian Universityeli beracha, Co-Editor, Florida International University
Co-Editors, JREPE Forthcoming
Co-Editors, JHR michael lacour-little, Editor, Cal-State Fullertonken h. Johnson, Executive Editor, Florida Atlantic Universitygeoff turnbull, Executive Editor, University of Central FloridaJustin d. benefield, Editor, Auburn UniversityVelma zahirovic-herbert, Managing Editor, University of Georgiakimberly goodwin, Managing Editor, University of Southern Mississippi
Co-Editors, JOSRE robert (roby) simons*, Editor, Cleveland State Universitypernille h. christensen, Co-Editor, University of Technology, Sydneyspenser robinson, Co-Editor, Central Michigan UniversityVivek sah, Co-Editor, University of San Diego
Newsletter Editor Julia Freybote, Florida International University
ARES Webmaster mark sunderman, University of Memphis
Doctoral Seminar Director elaine m. Worzala*, College of Charleston
Director of International Liaison eamonn d’Arcy, University of Reading
Director of Placement david l. Funk, Roosevelt University
Director of Development stephen A. pyhrr*, SynerMark Properties, Inc.
President, Alpha Sigma Gamma dustin c. read, Virginia Tech
Elections Officer Joseph d. Albert,* James Madison University
Director, Critical Issues Seminar neil shah, Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS)
proFessionAl positionsManager of Member Services: diane Quarles, Clemson University
Executive Assistant to ARES Leadership: callie riggenbach, Capstone PropertiesExecutive Assistant: Adele mancuso, Florida Atlantic University
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* Past President
AmericAn reAl estAte society
AmericAn reAl estAte society
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publicAtion committeeken h. Johnson, chairEmail: [email protected]: 561-409-6164
eli beracha, Vice chairEmail: [email protected]: 785-841-4470
roby simons, Vice chairEmail: [email protected]: 216-687-5258
reseArch committee spenser robinson, co-chairEmail: [email protected]: 989-774-1243
Andrew sanderford, co-chairEmail: [email protected] : 520-626-9412
prActitioner reseArch AWArds sub-committee to the reseArch committeeclifford lipscomb, chairEmail: [email protected]: 770-334-3952
meeting committee bennie Waller, chairEmail: [email protected]: 434-395-2046
ducAtion committee tom geurts, chairEmail: [email protected]: 202-994-7542
karen mcgrath, Vice chair Email: [email protected]: 979-220-1247
progrAm committee (AnnuAl meeting)simon stevenson, chairEmail: [email protected]: 206-685-9989
philip A. seagraves, Vice chairEmail: [email protected]: 404-808-0376
strAtegy committee stephen e. roulac, chairEmail: [email protected]: 415-451-4300
John Williams, Vice chairEmail: [email protected]: 404-215-2694
John kilpatrick, Vice chairEmail: [email protected]: 206-623-2935
margaret mcFarland, Vice chairEmail: [email protected]: 301-405-6790
succession plAnning roby simons, chairEmail: [email protected]: 216-687-5258
technology committee mark sunderman, chair Email: [email protected]: 901-678-5142
AcAdemic membership committeepatrice derrington, co-chairEmail: [email protected]: 212-851-5873
Jesse saginor, co-chairEmail: [email protected]: 561-297-4283
industry membership committee stephen A. pyhrr, co-chair Email: [email protected]: 512-483-3804
Will mcintosh, co-chairEmail: [email protected]: 312-329-8542
mAnuscript prize committee michael J. highfield, chair Email: [email protected]: 662-325-1984
recognition AWArds committee michael J. highfield, chair Email: [email protected]: 662-325-1984
FinAnce committee mauricio rodriguez*, chairEmail: [email protected]: 817-257-7514
karl guntermann, Vice chairEmail: [email protected]: 480-981-9332
goVernAnce committee Joe Albert, chairEmail: [email protected]: 540-421-7763
margaret mcFarland, Vice chairEmail: [email protected]: 301-405-6790
cAreer deVelopment And plAcement committee david l. Funk, co-chairEmail: [email protected]: 740-591-4738
margot Weinstein, co-chair Email: [email protected]: 312-664-4849
Ares Future leAders committeeramya Aroul, chairEmail: [email protected]
kola Akinsomi, Vice chair Email: [email protected]
2018-2019 committees
past, present and Future presidents
1985 Joseph D. Albert1985-1986 James R. Webb1986-1987 Thomas Pearson1987-1988 Charles H. Wurtzebach1988-1989 Larry E. Wofford1989-1990 Theron R. Nelson1990-1991 Jerome Dasso1991-1992 Terrence M. Clauretie1992-1993 Donald R. Epley1993-1994 Arthur L. Schwartz, Jr.1994-1995 Steven D. Kapplin1995-1996 Stephen E. Roulac1996-1997 Willard McIntosh1997-1998 Glenn R. Mueller1998-1999 Karl L. Guntermann1999-2000 G. Donald Jud 2000-2001 James R. DeLisle2001-2002 Joseph B. Lipscomb2002-2003 Christopher A. Manning2003-2004 Youguo Liang2004-2005 Stephen A. Pyhrr2005-2006 Elaine M. Worzala2006-2007 Norman G. Miller2007-2008 Marc A. Louargand2008-2009 Mauricio Rodriguez2009-2010 Steven P. Laposa2010-2011 John E. Willliams2011-2012 Robert A. Simons2012-2013 Grant Ian Thrall2013-2014 G. Stacy Sirmans2014-2015 Michael J. Seiler2015-2016 David M. Harrison2016-2017 William G. Hardin, III2017-2018 Michael J. Highfield2018-2019 ken Johnson2019-2020 Sofia Dermisi2020-2021 Simon Stevenson2021-2022 Philip A. Seagraves
NOTE: Term of office is July 1st thru June 30th of each year.
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AmericAn reAl estAte society
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JAmes r. WebbAmericAn reAl estAte society FoundAtion
The ARES Foundation was created by the ARES Board of Directors in 1986 and wasrenamed in honor of founder James R. Webb in 2009. Currently, the primary activityof the Foundation is the funding of over forty PhD students to attend the DoctoralSeminar at the ARES Annual Meeting. ARES Foundation grants and prizes havehelped hundreds of scholars. The Foundation has an endowment but it needs your
support to fully fund its current and future activities.
The ARES Foundation has its own corporate charter, bank accounts, and investments. Becausestability, continuity, and a working knowledge of ARES are of critical importance in the governance ofthe Foundation, the Board of Directors consists of past presidents of ARES who serve on the FoundationBoard. Within the Foundation Board, the important four person investment committee consists of GlennMueller, Joseph Lipscomb, Chris Manning and Arthur L. Schwartz, Jr. Joseph Lipscomb serves asTreasurer of the Foundation, David M. Harrison is Director of Development, Joe Albert is Secretary,Elaine Worzala coordinates the Doctoral Seminar and Graeme Newell and John Williams are Co -International Liaisons. Mo Rodriguez serves as Executive Director. The Foundation Board holds itsannual meeting in conjunction with the ARES meeting each year. The Officers and Board of theFoundation are dedicated to vigorously pursuing the Foundation's educational mission as set forth by ourfounder, James R. Webb. All Officers and Directors are unpaid volunteers and the Foundation's overheadis very low.
When the ARES Board created the Foundation, it also created the ARES Fellows program to fund it.Revenue from the strictly voluntary Fellows program goes to the ARES Foundation. Programs supportedby the Foundation have focused on assisting individual participation in ARES activities as well oneducational publications. The Foundation funds the Doctoral Student Seminar by defraying costs forgraduate students to attend the Seminar and ARES Annual Meeting and holding a luncheon in their honoron the day of the Seminar. These graduate students are the future leaders of ARES and the Seminarenables new scholars to be exposed to ARES. The Foundation has also funded the participation of realestate scholars from Africa, Latin America, Asia and Eastern Europe at ARES annual meetings. Involvingthese scholars has enhanced the meeting experience for all ARES members.
The Foundation, thanks to the generosity of numerous donors, sponsors the Marc Louargand BestPaper by a Practicing Professional at the ARES Annual Meeting Award of $1,500/year. Competition forthis coveted prize has resulted in numerous excellent paper submissions.
The Foundation's Board has recently increased funding for the Doctoral Seminar. To maintain highfunding levels, the Foundation needs additional contributions and outside sponsorships as endowmentinvestment earnings are not sufficient to fund large numbers of grant recipients.
The Foundation depends upon the support of the ARES Fellows and other Foundation contributors.Each ARES Fellow currently contributes $250 per year, each ARES Distinguished Fellow contributes$500 per year, and each Benefactor contributes $1000 per year. In addition, each Endowed DoctoralSponsor contributed $10,000 to the Foundation. An Endowed Doctoral Sponsorship enables annualfunding for a doctoral candidate to travel to the ARES Annual Meetings to present his/her research. A$25,000 contribution endows an International Scholar Sponsorship which will provide travel funding fora scholar from a Less Developed Country to present his/her research at the ARES Meeting. Individualswho endow a Sponsorship are lifetime Fellows and are invited to offer their views on the direction of theFoundation at the annual Foundation Board Meeting.
Corporations and foundations are encouraged to directly sponsor a graduate student or an overseasscholar. Student sponsorships are $1,500/year. An overseas scholar can be funded for $2,500/year. Pleasecontact David M. Harrison for additional sponsorship opportunities.
If you are not contributing to the James R. Webb ARES Foundation, we encourage you to considerdoing so. Your gift will help a scholar immediately. As contributions grow, the Foundation will help moredoctoral students and international scholars.
For additional information regarding how you can contribute, please contact David M. Harrison at [email protected].
AmericAn reAl estAte society2018-2019 premium sponsor members
president’s councilAltus Group/ARGUS Software
Appraisal Institute (AI) Barings Real Estate Advisers, LLC
CoStar Group Florida Atlantic UniversityGreenfield Advisors, LLC
Institutional Real Estate, Inc. Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS)
The Center for Financial Responsibility at Longwood University
regentsBuilding Owners & Managers Association (BOMA) International
Carter Real Estate Center, College of CharlestonColvin Institute of Real Estate Development, University of Maryland
Counselors of Real Estate (CRE) Daniel M. DiLella Center for Real Estate – Villanova University
Department of Real Estate & Runstad Center, University of WashingtonDr. P. Phillips School of Real Estate - University of Central Florida
Institute of Real Estate Management (IREM)Jerome Bain Real Estate Institute - Florida International University
LaSalle Investment Management National Apartment Association Education Institute
National Association of Real Estate Investment Trusts (NAREIT) National Investment Center for Seniors Housing & Care, Inc. (NIC)
OnCourse LearningReal Capital Analytics (RCA)
Real Estate Financial Modeling, LLCSarasota Capital Strategies (SCS)
The Mueller Cycle & Sustainability FundTrepp, LLC
UBSUSAA Real Estate Company
sponsorsCalifornia Association of REALTORS®
CCIM Institute CoreNet Global
Dearborn Real Estate EducationInternational Council of Shopping Centers (ICSC)
Johns Hopkins - Carey Business School - Edward St. John Real Estate ProgramKornblau Real Estate Program - Virginia Commonwealth UniversityMaster of Real Estate Development Program - Clemson University
NAIOP The Commercial Real Estate Development AssociationNational Multifamily Housing Council (NMHC)
NYU Schack Institute of Real EstateReal Estate Career Academy
Real Estate Center at DePaul UniversitySavills Studley, Inc.
SynerMark Properties, Inc.The Corky McMillin Center for Real Estate, San Diego State University
The Murray H. Goodman Center for Real Estate Studies, Lehigh UniversityThe University of Arizona - School of Landscape Architecture and Planning - CAPLA
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JAmes r. Webb Ares FoundAtion
endoWed internAtionAl scholAr sponsorship
Arthur l, helen beckett, Arthur l. schwartz, Jr. and susan schwartz twiggsmichael, ryan, and evan seiler
endoWed doctorAl sponsorships
glenn r. & Jan h. mueller • theron r. & susan l. nelson lucy, youguo, michelle and mia liang • michael J. and Vicky l. seiler
department of Finance, texas christian university, tcu
2018-2019 distinguished FelloWs
Joseph d. AlbertJames Madison University/Retired
John d. benjaminAmerican University/Retired
prashant kumar dasEcole Hôtelière de Lausanne
don dorchesterThe Dorchester Group
karl l. guntermannArizona State University/Retired
david m. harrisonUniversity of Central Florida
michael J. highfieldMississippi State University
michael lacour-littleCalifornia State University-Fullerton
Willard mcintoshUSAA Real Estate Company
robert A. simonsCleveland State University
michael c. trübesteinUniversity of Lucerne
John e. WilliamsMorehouse College/Retired
2018-2019 beneFActors
AmericAn reAl estAte society
Continued on page x
david l. FunkRoosevelt University
John kilpatrickGreenfield Advisors, LLC
mark l. levineUniversity of Denver
christopher A. manningLoyola Marymount University
stephen A. pyhrrSynerMark Properties, Inc.
philip A. seagravesMiddle Tennessee State University
Anthony WelchSarasota Capital Strategies
John s. baenUniversity of North Texas
edward A. barylaEast Tennessee State University
Justin benefieldAuburn University
eli berachaFlorida International University
marvin F. christensenDeutsche Asset Management
pernille h. christensenUniversity of Technology-Sydney
J. reid cummingsUniversity of South Alabama
James r. delisleUniversity of Missouri
sofia dermisiUniversity of Washington
Jan deroosCornell University
geoffrey dohrmanInstitutional Real Estate Inc.
Jeremy gabeUniversity of Aukland
karen m. giblerGeorgia State University
thomas W. hamiltonRoosevelt University
William g. hardin, iiiFlorida International University
Jack harrisA&M University, Retired
Forrest e. huffmanTemple University
l. Jide iwarereHoward University
ken h. JohnsonFlorida Atlantic University
daniel kohlheppJohns Hopkins University
steven p. laposaAlvarez & Marsal Holdings LLC
JAmes r. Webb Ares FoundAtion
2018-2019 FelloWs
Joseph b. lipscombTexas Christian University
emil e. maliziaUniversity of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
graeme newellUniversity of Western Sydney-Hawkesbury
peter oppenheimerUniversity of North Carolina
Joseph l. pagliari, Jr.University of Chicago
spenser J. robinsonCentral Michigan University
rudy r. robinson, iiiAustin Valuation Consultants Ltd.
mauricio rodriguezTexas Christian University
stephen e. roulacRoulac Global LLC
ronald c. rutherfordUniversity of South Florida
Andrew r. sanderfordUniversity of Arizona
g. stacy sirmansFlorida State University
mark A. sundermanUniversity of Memphis
grant ian thrallBusiness Geography Advisors
ko WangThe Johns Hopkins Carey Business School
h. h. shelton WeeksFlorida Gulf Coast University
margot b. WeinsteinMW Leadership Consultants, LLC
daniel t. Winkler University of North Carolina-Greensboro
kimberly Winson-geidemanUniversity of Melbourne
elaine m. WorzalaCollege of Charleston
James youngUniversity of Washington
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All checks should be made payable to ARES and remitted to:Diane Quarles, Manager, ARES Member Services
Clemson University, 318 Sirrine Hall, Clemson, SC 29634-1323Tel: 864-656-1373 Fax: 864-656-4892
Email: [email protected]
membership in the AmericAn reAl estAte society brings the FolloWing beneFits And opportunities
subscription to:
Journal of Real Estate Research (JRER)Journal of Real Estate Portfolio Management (JREPM)Journal of Real Estate Literature (JREL)Journal of Real Estate Practice and Education (JREPE)Journal of Housing Research (JHR)Journal of Sustainable Real Estate (JOSRE)Research Issues in Real Estate (Periodic Annual Volume)ARES Newsletter
opportunities to:
Attend and participate in the ARES Annual Meeting.Have contact with a professional learning and networking center.International opportunities through the International Real Estate Society and its members.
AmericAn reAl estAte society
Professional MembershipPrinted Media . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$ 350Electronic Media . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$ 300Both (printed and electronic) . . . . . . . . . .$ 400
Academic Membership Printed Media . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$ 175Electronic Media . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$ 135Both (printed and electronic) . . . . . . . . . .$ 200
Student1, Adjunct4 or Retired Academic Printed Media . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$ 105Electronic Media . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$ 85Both (printed and electronic) . . . . . . . . . .$ 145
Life Member3
2019 membership dues categoriesPremium Membership
Sponsor2 ($1,500)Regent2 ($3,000)President's Council2 ($6,000)Includes both printed and electronic media
Corporate Membership Printed Media . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$ 675Electronic Media . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$ 600Both (printed and electronic) . . . . . . . . . .$ 700
Library – Academic or ProfessionalPrinted Media . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$ 650Electronic Media . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$ 600Both (printed and electronic) . . . . . . . . . .$ 675
1 Attach copy of student ID.2 Sponsor Member - four free individual members included.
Regents Member - six free individual members included. President's Council member - eight free members included.
3 For information on becoming a Life Member, contactStephen A. Pyhrr, ARES Director of Development at512-483-3804 or [email protected]
4 Attach copy of sponsor letter.
2019 Ares Foundation contributionsFellows Contribution – Regular . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$ 250Fellows Contribution – Distinguished . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$ 500James R. Webb ARES Foundation Benefactor . . . . . .$1,000Endowed Doctoral Sponsorship, Lifetime Fellow . . . $10,000Endowed International Scholar Sponsor,
Lifetime Fellow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$25,000
continued on page xiiixii
SEMINAR OVERVIEW AND FOCUS
theme: technology
Opportunities to disrupt the real estate sector span the entire built environment from land, property andconstruction. in new york city alone, there are 575 technology start-ups focused on real estate. these newventures have the best and brightest minds focusing on how they will disrupt the way business is done.The game for many in real estate is changing and will continue to be disrupted and/or enhanced as innovationbuilds our industry.
infotech: The Internet and mobile telephony have enabled a boom in technology platforms applied to nearly allareas of our lives — jobs, homes, education, health, leisure, finance, and romance (dating sites). At the core ofthis technology is information, thus the term developed “Infotech”, which included online information enginessuch as Wikipedia and online newspapers. information is the key ingredient into the due diligence phase ofevery transaction. shopping online, paypal, Amazon, and online banking are good examples of informationtechnology that serves as a medium for the exchange of money, goods and services. Information technologyalso enables the remote control of driverless cars and delivery vehicles, plus bots offering a range of services, andis setting in motion a range of impacts on real estate.
Fintech: this area of real estate technology includes an array of money-oriented industry sectors —mortgage lenders, payments/billing systems, personal finance/wealth management, moneytransfer/remittance, blockchain/bitcoin, institutional investment/capital markets, equity crowdfunding,property insurance, valuation, investment analysis, and so on. Some individuals might consider thesecompanies and industry sectors to be part of “PropTech”, but they can also be considered separately andcategorized by the term “FinTech.”
proptech: these technologies focus primarily on the physical aspects of real estate — land development,architecture and engineering, construction, smart buildings, sustainability, property and assetmanagement, marketing and brokerage, and so on. The rapidly developing area of artificial intelligence andits related technologies are integral to PropTech, FinTech, and InfoTech, thus span the entire realm of real estatetechnology platforms and applications.
criticAl issues seminAr Focus
this seminar will address all the above technology topics in various degrees of depth. We will have a keynotespeaker who will summarize the big picture topics. Then we will have a series of experts who will discuss specific
this seminar will be the opening session of the 35th Annual meeting of the AmericAn reAl estAte societyco-sponsored by:
the Appraisal institute (Ai), ccim institute, royal institution of chartered surveyors (rics), costar, national Association of realtors (nAr)/realtor university, real capital Analytics, the counselors of real estate (cre),
the mueller cycle & sustainability Fund, synermark properties, inc. and usAA real estate company, in conjunction with the American real estate society (Ares) and other sponsors to be named.
orgAnized byneil shah, managing director, rics Americas, and director of the critical issues seminar, Ares; and
stephen A. pyhrr, senior managing director/ceo, synermark properties; and director of development, Ares
Ares eleVenth AnnuAl criticAl issues seminArWednesdAy, April 9, 2019 – 1:00-5:30 p.m.
JW mArriott, cAmelbAck inn • paradise Valley (scottsdale/phoenix), Arizona
CRITICAL ISSUES SEMINAR: TECHNOLOGY (InfoTech, FinTech and PropTech)
THE FUTURE OF REAL ESTATE
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areas of technology applications to data analytics, brokerage, sustainability, property and facilitiesmanagement, and valuation. All the speakers will then join the moderators in a panel discussion that is directedtoward various topics of interest to the speakers and audience, with questions and comments from any participantin the seminar room. With a wide variety of participants from academics and industry, all of whom are experts orhave interestes in some area of research and/or education, the discussions should be lively and interesting.
KEYNOTE SPEAKERS AND TOPICS
The Critical Issues Seminar committee has been working since last summer to develop this program of keynotespeakers and topics. In addition to neil shah (RICS and ARES Director of Critical Issues Seminar) and stevepyhrr (SynerMark Properties and ARES Director of Development), the Seminar Committee is directed by terrydunkin (Appraisal Institute and Dunkin Real Estate Advisors), doug sawyer (CCIM Institute and SawyerProperties), ron throupe (University of Denver and American Valuation Partners), larry Wofford (Universityof Tulsa) and david Funk, (Roosevelt University and ARES Executive Director). This year, the Committeedesigned a program of technology topics and speakers that addresses this major topic of mutual interest to ourindustry and academic members.
speAkers:
technology keynote speaker: dr. Wolfgang schafers, University of Regensburg
technology ApplicAtions by industry sectors:
brokerage: michael mandel, CEO, Compstakdata Analytics: Jay spivey, Senior Director, Analytics, CoStarsustainability: theddi Wright chappell, CEO, Sustainable Valuesproperty and Facilities management: Jim reavey, CEO, VixxoValuation: mark snow, Chief Appraiser, Citibank
pAnel discussion:
All speakers above in a moderated Q&A.
SUMMARY
the overall goal of our 2019 seminar is to develop ideas and insights into how technology developments willaffect the real estate business both positively and negatively, and how decision makers, practitioners, educatorsand researchers can profitably adapt to the massive changes that are coming.
Many organizations work with our ARES leadership on various education, research and publication initiatives, andmany are premium members of ARES and sponsor most of our 22 annual manuscript prizes on subjects they areinterested in. Many have also been involved in panels and paper presentations on education subjects within our“education track,” the nine-session sequence that spans three days of the Ares Annual meeting (thursdaythrough saturday) sessions each year. Thus, the ARES Annual Meeting is progressing rapidly to bring togetherinterests in real estate education and research among academic and professional ARES members and their respectiveorganizations and institutions. Jump on board and make a difference with us!
HOW TO PARTICIPATE
For further information, please contact neil shah, ARES Critical Issues Seminar Director, Managing Director, RICSAmericas, (email: [email protected]); steve pyhrr, ARES Director of Development, Senior Managing Director andCEO, SynerMark Properties, Inc., (email: [email protected]), or melissa miller, Managing Director,SynerMark Properties, Inc. (email: [email protected] ). Your comments, suggestions, and participationare encouraged.
xiv
ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • JW Marriott Scottsdale Camelback Inn • Scottsdale (Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019 1
TUESDAY APRIL 9, 20196:00 pm - 9:00 pm Board of Directors Networking Reception & Registration (Camelback Patio) All are invited
Co-Sponsored by The University of Arizona, School of Landscape Architecture and Planning and BOMA International
WEDNESDAY APRIL 10, 20197:45 am - 5:00 pm ARES Registration (Arizona Ballroom Registration Desk North)
8:00 am - 12:00 pm ARES Board of Directors Meeting (Salons A-B) By invitationSponsored by the National Investment Center for Seniors Housing & Care (NIC)
11:00 am - 1:00 pm Center Directors/Chairholders Meeting (Salon E) By invitation
12:00 pm - 1:00 pm ARES Foundation Meeting (Camelback Patio) By invitation
1:00 pm - 5:30 pm Salons H-I Session 1: “Critical Issues” Seminar: Technology (Info Tech, FinTech and PropTech) The Future of Real Estate Co-Sponsored by AppraisalInstitute (AI), Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS), CoStar Group, REALTOR University/National Association of Realtors (NAR), Real Capital Analytics, USAA Real Estate Company, CCIM Institute, Counselors of Real Estate (CRE), The Mueller Cycle & Sustainability Fund, and SynerMark Properties, Inc. in conjunction with the American Real Estate Society (ARES)
5:30 pm - 6:30 pm IRES Board Meeting (Salon B) All are invited
6:30 pm - 9:00 pm Welcome Reception (Camelback Patio) All are invitedCo-Sponsored by the Appraisal Institute (AI); CCIM Institute; Real Capital Analytics (RCA); and Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS)
MEETING ROOMS
Salons A, B, C, D, E,Salons G, I, J, K, L, M, N
EVENTS
Camelback PatioGarden
Lower GardenLincoln
Salon H-I
progrAm oVerVieWAmericAn reAl estAte society
2019 meeting
exhibitors/publishersAppraisal InstituteArgus/Altus Group
Building Owners & Managers Association (BOMA International)Carter Real Estate Center - College of Charleston
Colvin Institute of Real Estate Development, University of MarylandInstitute of Real Estate Management (IREM)
McGraw-Hill EducationOnCourse Learning
REFM Real Estate Financial Modeling, LLCRoutledge, Taylor and Francis Group
Sage ComputingNational Apartment Association Education Institute
Trepp, LLC
PLEASE NOTE: All ARES sponsored events, including receptions, breakfasts, luncheons, and breaks, arerestricted to registered ARES meeting participants and their registered guests. Thus, we request that youALWAYS WEAR YOUR NAMETAG to ARES events to ensure admission.
THURSDAY APRIL 11, 2019
2 ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019
7:00 am - 9:00 am ARES Networking (Camelback Patio)
7:00 am - 10:00 am C-WI(RE)2 Caucus Networking Followed by Panel (Salon H-I) See Session 8Co-Sponsored by Institute of Real Estate Management (IREM); National Apartment Association Education Institute; CoreNet Global; and Colvin Institute of Real Estate Development, University of Maryland
7:45 am - 5:00 pm ARES Registration (Arizona Registration Desk North)
9:00 am - 10:30 am ARES Significant Other/Spouse Breakfast (Lincoln)
8:00 am-10:00am Salon A Session 2: Big Data, Residential Valuation & Data ModelingSalon B Session 3: House Price DiffusionSalon C Session 4: Investment Strategies in Exchange Traded MarketsSalon D Session 5: Asset Management: Investment PerspectivesSalon E Session 6: Real Estate Agents and BrokerageSalon G Session 7: Panel: COBRA @ ARESSalon H-I Session 8: C-WI(RE)2 Panel: How Can C-WI(RE)2 Help You? Salon J Session 9: Asset Values and RiskSalon K Session 10: Panel: Email, Social Media and Resumes: Do’s and Don’ts for
Getting a Job and Conducting Business in the Digital WorldSalon L Session 11: Infrastructure and Public ProjectsSalon M Session 12: Education Track 1: Panel: Sustainable Real Estate in
the CurriculumSalon N Session 13: Panel: Real Estate Research in Non-Traditional Areas
10:00 am - 10:15 am Break (Camelback Patio)
10.15 am - 12.00 pm Salon A Session 14: Housing AffordabilitySalon B Session 15: Demand Dynamics in the Apartment MarketSalon C Session 16: Corporate Finance Topics in Public Real EstateSalon D Session 17: Modeling and Forecasting Real Estate MarketsSalon E Session 18: Corporate Real Estate StrategiesSalon G Session 19: Panel: Converging Practices and Trends Between the
Hospitality Industry and Institutional Real Estate InvestmentsSalon J Session 20: Issues in Property TaxationSalon K Session 21: Topics in Real Estate Development ISalon L Session 22: Real Estate and Public Policy ISalon M Session 23: Argus Software Demo (ALTUS Group)Salon N Session 24: Education Track 2: Panel: Innovations in Commercial Real Estate
Finance: CLOs, Blockchain, and Artificial Intelligence
12.30 pm-2.00 pm ARES Awards Celebration (Salon H-I) All are invited Co-Sponsored by CoStar Group and Morehouse College
2:00 pm - 2:15 pm Break (Camelback Patio)
progrAm oVerVieW (continued)
PLEASE NOTE: All ARES sponsored events, including receptions, breakfasts, luncheons, and breaks, arerestricted to registered ARES meeting participants and their registered guests. Thus, we request that youALWAYS WEAR YOUR NAMETAG to ARES events to ensure admission.
ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019 3
THURSDAY APRIL 11, 2019progrAm oVerVieW (continued)
2:15 pm - 4.00 pm Salon A Session 25: Brokers, Agents and Residential TransactionsSalon B Session 26: Sustainability in Real Estate Markets Salon C Session 27: Monetary Policy and Financing Conditions – Public Real EstateSalon D Session 28: Risk Factors in Commercial Real EstateSalon E Session 29: Technological Advances in Real EstateSalon J Session 30: Mortgage Delinquency and DefaultSalon K Session 31: Panel: International Real Estate Society at 25Salon L Session 32: Housing Markets and Public PolicySalon M Session 33: Education Track 3: Panel: Corporate Real Estate EducationSalon N Session 34: Panel: Academia to Industry, Leveraging Research
4:00 pm - 4:15 am Break (Camelback Patio)
4:15 pm - 5:15 pm ARES Membership Meeting (Salon H-I) All are invited
5:30 pm - 6:30 pm FLARES Panel and Annual Meeting (Salon G) By invitationSponsored by Strome College of Business – Old Dominion University
6:30 pm - 9:00 pm President’s Reception (Garden) All are invited.Co-Sponsored by Appraisal Institute (AI); CCIM Institute; Real Capital Analytics (RCA); and Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS)
FRIDAY APRIL 12, 20197:00 am - 9:00 am ARES Networking (Camelback Patio)
7:45 am - 5:00 pm ARES Registration (Arizona Registration Desk North)
9:00 am - 10:30 am ARES Significant Other/Spouse Breakfast (Lower Garden)
8:00 am-10:00 am Salon A Session 35: Housing Investment & WealthSalon B Session 36: Housing Affordability IISalon C Session 37: Public Real Estate Markets: Topical IssuesSalon D Session 38: Investment and Risk Analysis in Real Estate PortfoliosSalon E Session 39: Doctoral Seminar I – International Real Estate MarketsSalon J Session 40: Doctoral Seminar II – Real Estate DevelopmentSalon K Session 41: Doctoral Seminar III - Contemporary Issues in HousingSalon L Session 42: The Response of Real Estate Markets to Environmental ShocksSalon M Session 43: Education Track 4: Panel: Big Data and the Future of
Real Estate Research, Practice and Education
10:00 am - 10:15 am Break (Camelback Patio)
10:15 am-12.00 pm Salon A Session 44: Topics in Residential AppraisalSalon B Session 45: Residential Search Models and Listing StrategiesSalon C Session 46: Corporate Governance in Public Real EstateSalon D Session 47: Institutional Ownership and Investment StructureSalon E Session 48: Innovations in Real Estate Data ModelingSalon I Session 49: Doctoral Panel – Life After the PhD
10:15 am - 12:00 pm Salon J Session 50: Mortgage Market Structure and SecuritizationSalon K Session 51: Sector Specific Market AnalysisSalon L Session 52: Neighborhood Regeneration
Salon M Session 53: Education Track 5: Panel: Integration of Professional Organizations in the Curriculum
Salon N Session 54: Panel: Leveraging Technology for Commercial Real Estate Market Analysis (CCIM)
12:30 pm - 2:00 pm Doctoral Student Luncheon (Camelback Patio) By Invitation and Doctoral Sessions I-XSponsored by James R. Webb ARES Foundation
2:15 pm - 4:00 pm Salon A Session 55: Residential Pricing - Location and AestheticsSalon B Session 56: Residential Market DynamicsSalon C Session 57: REIT Operating IssuesSalon D Session 58: Monetary Policy and Financing Conditions – Commercial
and Housing MarketsSalon E Session 59: Asset and Facilities ManagementSalon I Session 60: Information and Sentiment in Real Estate MarketsSalon J Session 61: Topics in Real Estate Development IISalon K Session 62: Innovation Districts and Opportunity ZonesSalon L Session 63: Education Track 6: Panel: Effective Teaching using Case StudiesSalon M Session 64: Panel: The Future of Real Estate Indexation and Portfolio
ApplicationsSalon N Session 65: Panel: Measuring and Assessing Impact in Research
4:00 pm - 4:15 pm Break (Camelback Patio)
4:15 pm - 6:00 pm Salon A Session 66: Spatial Analysis of HousingSalon B Session 67: The Residential Ownership Decision - To Own or Buy?Salon C Session 68: REITs, Private Real Estate and Blended PortfoliosSalon D Session 69: REIT Market Structure and DynamicsSalon E Session 70: Real Estate Professional Service FirmsSalon I Session 71: Topical Issues in Real Estate InvestmentSalon J Session 72: Panel: Real Estate Centers and FundraisingSalon K Session 73: Real Estate and Public Policy IISalon L Session 74: Education Track 7: Panel: Measuring Student LearningSalon M Session 75: Panel: Real Estate Journal RankingsSalon N Session 76: Panel: Corporate Real Estate Research
6:30 pm - 9:00 pm ARES Gala Celebration (Mummy Mountain)Exclusively Sponsored by the CoStar Group
FRIDAY APRIL 12, 2019
4 ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019
progrAm oVerVieW (continued)
ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019 5
PLEASE NOTE: All ARES sponsored events, including receptions (except for Tuesday night), breakfasts,luncheons, and breaks, are restricted to registered ARES meeting participants and their registered guests.Thus, we request that you ALWAYS WEAR YOUR NAMETAG to ARES events to ensure admission.
SATURDAY APRIL 13, 2019progrAm oVerVieW (continued)
7.00am-9.00am ARES Networking (Camelback Patio)
7.45 am - 12.00 pm ARES Registration (Arizona Ballroom Registration Desk North)
8:00 am - 10:00 am Salon A Session 77: Residential AuctionsSalon B Session 78: The Sharing Economy & Short Term Residential LetsSalon C Session 79: Integration across International Public Real Estate MarketsSalon D Session 80: Commercial Real Estate Attributes and Investment PerformanceSalon E Session 81: Doctoral Seminar IV – Real Estate Finance and InvestmentSalon J Session 82: Doctoral Seminar V – Residential Mortgage MarketsSalon K Session 83: Doctoral Seminar VI – Housing MarketsSalon L Session 84: Doctoral Seminar VII – Legal Issues in Real EstateSalon M Session 85: Education Track 8: Contemporary Issues in
Real Estate EducationSalon N Session 86: Climate Change and Sustainability
10:00 am - 10.15 am Break (Camelbck Patio)
10.15 am - 12.00 pm Salon A Session 87: Housing Markets and Public Policy IISalon B Session 88: Housing Market DynamicsSalon C Session 89: Public Real Estate – Disclosure, Information Flows
and SentimentSalon D Session 90: Real Estate Cycles and Capital FlowsSalon E Session 91: Doctoral Seminar VIII - Real Estate Investment TrustsSalon J Session 92: Doctoral Seminar IX – International Housing MarketsSalon K Session 93: Doctoral Seminar X – Public Policy and Real Estate Salon L Session 94: Doctoral Seminar XI - SustainabilitySalon M Session 95: Education Track 9: Education Track Session:
The Future of Real Estate Education
12:00 pm Paper/Panel Sessions Adjourn
2:00 pm - 5:00 pm Post Session Gathering for Conference SurvivorsYou are invited to join the Pyhrrs and Alberts at their hospitlity suite for the ARES Post-Session Gathering for Conference Survivors.
PLEASE NOTE: All ARES sponsored events, including receptions, breakfasts, luncheons, and breaks, arerestricted to registered ARES meeting participants and their registered guests. Thus, we request that youALWAYS WEAR YOUR NAMETAG to ARES events to ensure admission.
6 ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019
detAiled scheduleAmericAn reAl estAte society
2019 meetingTUESDAY APRIL 9, 2019
WEDNESDAY APRIL 10, 2019
6:00pm - 9:00pm – cAmelbAck pAtioboArd oF director’s netWorking reception & registrAtionAll are Welcome – Co-Sponsored by The University of Arizona, School of LandscapeArchitecture and Planning and BOMA International
7:45Am - 5:00pm – ArizonA bAllroom registrAtion deskAres registrAtion
8:00Am - 12:00pm – sAlons A-bAres boArd oF directors meeting – By Invitation Sponsored by the National Investment Center for Seniors Housing & Care (NIC)
Chair: Ken H. JohnsonFlorida Atlantic [email protected]
11.00Am - 1:00pm – sAlon ecenter directors/chAirholders meeting – By Invitation
Chair: James R. DeLisleUniversity of Missouri - Kansas [email protected]
12:00pm - 1:00pm – cAmelbAck pAtioAres FoundAtion meeting – By Invitation
Chair: Mauricio RodriguezTexas Christian [email protected]
WEDNESDAY APRIL 10, 2019
ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019 7
1:00pm - 5.30pm – sAlon h-isession 1: “criticAl issues” seminAr: technology (inFo tech,
Fin tech And prop tech) the Future oF reAl estAteCo-Sponsored by Appraisal Institute (AI), Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS), CoStar Group, REALTOR University/National Association of Realtors (NAR), Real Capital Analytics, USAA Real Estate Company, CCIM Institute, Counselors of Real Estate (CRE), The Mueller Cycle & Sustainability Fund, and SynerMark Properties, Inc. in conjunctionwith the American Real Estate Society (ARES)
Moderators: Neil Shah Stephen A. PyhrrRICS Americas SynerMark Properties, [email protected] [email protected]
Opportunities to disrupt the real estate sector span the entire built environment from land,property and construction. In NYC alone, there are 575 technology start-ups focused onreal estate. These new ventures have the best and brightest minds focusing on how theywill disrupt the way business is done. The game for many in real estate is changing andwill continue to be disrupted and/or enhanced as innovation enters our sector.
1.30pm Welcome and IntroductionsNeil Shah and Stephen A. PyhrrTechnology Keynote SpeakerDr. Wolfgang SchäfersUniversity of Regensburg
2.00pm Presentations by firms in different sector areas Brokerage – Michael Mandel, CEO, Compstak Data Analytics – Jay Spivey, Senior Director, Analytics, CoStar Sustainability – Theddi Wright Chappell, CEO Sustainable Values
3.30pm Break3.45pm Presentations continue
Property Management – Jim Reavey, CEO Vixxo Valuation – Mark Snow, Chief Appraiser, Citibank
4.45pm Panel discussion All speakers in a moderated Q&A
5.30pm Recap & AdjournDavid L. Funk, Executive Director, ARES, Roosevelt Univesity
5.30pm - 6:30pm – sAlon bires boArd meeting
6.30pm - 9.00pm – cAmelbAck pAtioWelcome reception – All are Welcome Co-Sponsored by the Appraisal Institute (AI); CCIM Institute; Real Capital Analytics (RCA); and Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS)
8 ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019
7:00Am - 9:00Am – cAmelbAck pAtioAres netWorking
7:00Am - 10:00Am – sAlon h-ic-Wi(re)2 cAucus netWorking FolloWed by pAnel (See Session 8)Co-Sponsored by Institute of Real Estate Management (IREM); National ApartmentAssociation Education Institute; CoreNet Global; and Colvin Institute of Real EstateDevelopment, University of Maryland
7:45Am - 5:00pm – ArizonA bAllroom registrAtion deskAres registrAtion
9:00Am - 10:30Am – lincolnAres signiFicAnt others breAkFAst
8:00Am - 10:00Am – sAlon Asession 2: big dAtA, residentiAl VAluAtion & dAtA modeling
Chair: Eli BerachaFlorida International [email protected]
paper 1: big data and urban land Valuation
Contact Author: Steven BourassaFlorida Atlantic [email protected]
Martin HoesliUniversity of Geneva and Swiss Finance [email protected]
Louis MerlinFlorida Atlantic [email protected]
John Luciano RenneFlorida Atlantic [email protected]
paper 2: information Value of property description: A machine learning Approach
Contact Author: Lily ShenClemson [email protected]
THURSDAY APRIL 11, 2019
paper 3: Valuing housing services in the era of big data: A user cost Approach
Contact Author: Scott A. WentlandU.S. Bureau of Economic [email protected]
Jeremy G. MoultonUniversity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill [email protected]
Marina GindelskyU.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis [email protected]
paper 4: the Alternative Valuation product landscape – AVm Focus
Contact Author: Clifford A. LipscombGreenfield [email protected]
paper 5: repeat buying Activity and housing supply
Contact Author: Hamilton FoutFannie [email protected]
Ozge Savascin OundeeFannie Mae and Kansas State [email protected]
8:00Am - 10:00Am – sAlon bsession 3: house price diFFusion
Chair: Gerard MildnerPortland State University [email protected]
paper 1: local house price diffusion during the boom, bust, and recovery: evidence from los Angeles
Contact Author: Thom MaloneGeorgia Institute of [email protected]
Richard PeiserHarvard [email protected]
Discussant: François Des RosiersLaval University [email protected]
paper 2: house price diffusion of housing submarkets in greater sydney
Contact Author: Chyi Lin LeeWestern Sydney [email protected]
ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019 9
THURSDAY APRIL 11, 2019
10 ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019
THURSDAY APRIL 11, 2019Mustapha BanguraWestern Sydney [email protected]
Discussant: Thom MaloneGeorgia Institute of [email protected]
paper 3: do housing markets Forecast Future local macroeconomic conditions? evidence from transaction Volume data
Contact Author: Antoine GiannettiFlorida Atlantic [email protected]
Richard PeiserHarvard [email protected]
paper 4: how integrated are us housing markets? evidence from transaction Volume data
Contact Author: Antoine GiannettiFlorida Atlantic [email protected]
8:00Am - 10:00Am – sAlon csession 4: inVestment strAtegies in exchAnge
trAded mArkets
Chair: Richard CurcioUniversity of Central [email protected]
paper 1: reit short selling risk & option predictability
Contact Author: Hainan ShengUniversity of Northern [email protected]
David CashmanMarquette [email protected]
David M. HarrisonUniversity of Central [email protected]
paper 2: using investor utility to determine portfolio choice with reits
Contact Author: Travis JonesFlorida Gulf Coast [email protected]
ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019 11
THURSDAY APRIL 11, 2019Wei FengLynn [email protected]
Marcus T. AllenFlorida Gulf Coast [email protected]
paper 3: long-term equity real estate investing with leveraged exchange-traded-Funds
Contact Author: Richard CurcioUniversity of Central [email protected]
Hany GuirguisManhatten [email protected]
paper 4: cross-border investing Activity – return enhancing or return destroying?
Contact Author: Joshua A. HarrisNew York University [email protected]
Randy AndersonGriffin Capital and Florida Atlantic [email protected]
Hany GuirguisManhatten [email protected]
8:00Am – 10:00Am – sAlon dsession 5: Asset mAnAgement – inVestment perspectiVes
Chair: Jim ClaytonYork [email protected]
paper 1: how do institutions Frame Asset managers? A study of brazilian equity reits
Contact Author: Eliane MonettiUniversity of Sao [email protected]
Odilon CostaPontificia Universidade Catolica de Sao Paulo
paper 2: to make or buy Asset and property management services? operational models in the uk
Contact Author: Patrick McAllisterUniversity of [email protected]
12 ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019
THURSDAY APRIL 11, 2019paper 3: Asset management with externally managed Asian real estate investment
trusts (reits): evidence from reit markets in Japan and singapore
Contact Author: Masaki MoriUniversity of [email protected]
paper 4: real estate Asset management in switzerland: An empirical study of institutional investors
Contact Author: Michael C. TrübesteinLucerne University of Applied [email protected]
paper 5: What does comprehensive real estate Asset management look like in the united states?
Contact Author: Dustin C. ReadVirginia [email protected]
8:00Am - 10:00Am – sAlon esession 6: reAl estAte Agents And brokerAge
Chair: Eamonn D’ArcyUniversity of Reading [email protected]
paper 1: guiding professionals or smart rascals: Aspects of business ethics Among real estate brokers
Contact Author: Inga-Lill SöderbergKTH Royal Institute of [email protected]
Richard EngströmKTH Royal Institute of [email protected]
paper 2: An exploratory Analysis of the determinants of real estate license examinees
Contact Author: Andres JaureguiCalifornia State University, [email protected]
Jacquelin CurryCalifornia State University, [email protected]
Marcus T. AllenFlorida Gulf Coast [email protected]
H. Shelton WeeksFlorida Gulf Coast [email protected]
ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019 13
THURSDAY APRIL 11, 2019paper 3: better Agent or better owner? revisiting the impact of Agent-ownership
on housing prices
Contact Author: Christopher L. CainCollege of [email protected]
Justin BenefieldAuburn [email protected]
Norman MaynardCollege of [email protected]
paper 4: clients satisfaction of Agency service delivery by estate Firms
Contact Author: David Ayock IshayaHussaini Adamu Federal Polytechnic [email protected]
Daniel I. DaboKaduna [email protected]
8:00Am - 10:00Am – sAlon gsession 7: cobrA @ Ares
This panel is to discuss the proposed collaboration between ARES and the RICS andtheir COBRA Conference. It is being proposed to integrate the COBRA Conferenceinto ARES at the 2020 Annual Meeting. This session is to consider the collaborationand think of the strategic opportunities.
Moderator: David L. FunkRoosevelt [email protected]
Panelists: Neil ShahRICS Regional Managing [email protected]
Stephen A. PyhrrDirector of Development ARES (SynerMark Properties)[email protected]
Stephen E. RoulacRoulac [email protected]
14 ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019
THURSDAY APRIL 11, 2019
8:00Am - 10:00Am – sAlon h-isession 8: c-Wi(re)2 pAnel: hoW cAn c-Wi(re)2 help you?
resources, opportunities And eVents designed to promote the cAreers oF Women in reAl estAteCo-Sponsored by Institute of Real Estate Management (IREM); National Apartment Association Education Institute; CoreNet Global; and Colvin Institute of Real Estate Development, University of Maryland
To encourage peer networking among junior, mid-career, and senior female partici-pants and to foster communication between junior and senior members of theprofession, C-WI(RE)2 will organize a mentoring session following our annualbreakfast. At this event, senior members (predom-inately senior women) are pre-assigned to one of a variety of topical tables to provide mentoring advice to early andmid-career women in areas such as research and publishing, tenure and promotion,non-academic careers, teaching, work-life balance, and the job market. Please join usfor a productive networking and mentoring session
Co-Moderator: Pernille H. Christensen Velma Zahirovic-HerbertUniversity of Technology Sydney University of [email protected] [email protected]
Brent C. SmithVirginia Commonwealth [email protected]
Helen Rosemary NeillUniversity of Nevada Las Vegas
8:00Am - 10:00Am – sAlon Jsession 9: Asset VAlues And risk
Chair: James YoungUniversity of [email protected]
paper 1: uncertainty of human capital expenditure and the hedging role of housing
Contact Author: Ying FanNational University of [email protected]
Zan YangTsuinghua [email protected]
paper 2: decisions with risk: understanding risk Aversion and Ambiguity Aversion
Contact Author: Kimberly F LuchtenbergAmerican University [email protected]
Michael J. Seiler Scott GibsonCollege of William and Mary College of William and [email protected] [email protected]
ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019 15
THURSDAY APRIL 11, 2019paper 3: Asymmetric or incomplete information about Asset Values?
Contact Author: Patrick SmithSan Diego State [email protected]
Crocker LiuCornell [email protected]
Adam NowakWest Virginia University [email protected]
paper 4: plot size, density and Value of urban land
Contact Author: Joseph OoiNational University of [email protected]
Dang D.Q. DungNational University of [email protected]
8:00Am - 10:00Am – sAlon ksession 10: pAnel on emAil, sociAl mediA And resumes:
do’s And don’ts For getting A Job And conducting business in the digitAl World
This panel is focused on advising students, but also professors, on how to set up theirsocial media, resumes and communication to successfully be “in business” or get a joband keep the job.
Moderator: Elaine M. WorzalaCollege of [email protected]
Panelists: Dean JordanCoreNet [email protected]
Stephen E. RoulacRoulac [email protected]
Deidre A. SchexnayderBOMA [email protected]
Cory WerkeiserCollege of [email protected]
Margot WeinsteinMW Leadership Consultants LLC and Co-Chair ARES Career [email protected]
16 ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019
THURSDAY APRIL 11, 2019
8:00Am - 10:00Am – sAlon lsession 11: inFrAstructure And public proJects
Chair: Stanimira MilchevaUniversity College [email protected]
paper 1: privately owned public spaces and the olympic legacy: A triple bottom lineAnalysis of perceptions and experiences of the 2012 london games
Contact Author: James David ChapmanUniversity of Central [email protected]
Dan RangeCoventry [email protected]
Tom FisherCoventry [email protected]
Ryan ChapmanUniversity of Central Oklahoma [email protected]
paper 2: the regional impact of inter- and intra-city transit system on residentialproperty prices: A case study of guangFo metro, china
Contact Author: Yiming HeUniversity of Hong [email protected]
paper 3: the role of local railway services on housing Values: empirical evidence from italy
Contact Author: Gianluca MattarocciUniversity of Rome Tor [email protected]
Lucia GibilaroUniversity of [email protected]
paper 4: efficiency of public private partnership in nigeria: A case study of lekki-epehigh Way project
Contact Author: Alfred MesekoPeoples’ Friendship University of [email protected]
Discussant: Gianluca MattarocciUniversity of Rome Tor [email protected]
ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019 17
THURSDAY APRIL 11, 2019
8:00Am - 10:00Am – sAlon msession 12: educAtion trAck 1: pAnel on sustAinAble
reAl estAte in the curriculum
Sustainable Real Estate has claimed its own position within the field of real estatewith a substantial body of research and its own journal. This panel explores how toinclude this important topic into the curriculum and making students more aware ofthe recent developments in this field.
Moderator: Michiel DammaUniversity of [email protected]
Panelists: Karen McGrathBucknell [email protected]
Norman G. MillerUniversity of San [email protected]
Andrew SanderfordUniversity of [email protected]
8:00Am - 10:00Am – sAlon nsession 13: pAnel on reAl estAte reseArch in
non-trAditionAl AreAs
This session will address the current tradition of real estate scholarship and contem-plate what areas of activity in the real estate industry or what valid perspectives on theindustry might not be included. While the achievements and rigor of the mainstreamframework applied to most research presented in the journals of ARES and at theannual conference are commended, with the rapid urbanization that is occurringglobally numerous problematic outcomes are becoming apparent and the resolution ofthese might require an extension of intellectual attention.
Co-Moderators: Patrice DerringtonColumbia [email protected]
Jesse SaginorFlorida Atlantic [email protected]
Panelists: Robert A. SimonsCleveland State [email protected]
Kimberly Winson-GeidemanUniversity of [email protected]
18 ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019
THURSDAY APRIL 11, 2019
10:00Am - 10:15Am – cAmelbAck pAtiocoFFee breAk
10:15Am - 12:00pm – sAlon Asession 14: housing AFFordAbility
Chair Pernille H. ChristensenUniversity of Technology [email protected]
paper 1: A new home Affordability estimate: What share of housing stock can Families Afford?
Contact Author William DoernerFederal Housing Finance [email protected]
Chi-Cheol ChungFederal Housing Finance [email protected]
paper 2: state housing Finance Agencies and low income homeownership: A comparative Analysis of loan performance
Contact Author: Matthew RecordSan Jose State [email protected]
Stephanie Moulton San Jose State University [email protected]
Erik HembreUniversity of Illinois, [email protected]
paper 3: shifts in Affordable housing stock: microevidence from small multifamily homes
Contact Author: Jin Man LeeDePaul [email protected]
Jihwan KimDePaul [email protected]
Discussant: Gregg ColburnUniversity of [email protected]
ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019 19
THURSDAY APRIL 11, 2019paper 4: What are microunits and can this new housing typology help solve
the housing Affordability crisis? A review of the literature
Contact Author: Pernille H. ChristensenUniversity of Technology [email protected]
Xin Janet GeUniversity of Technology [email protected]
Georgia Warren-MyersUniversity of [email protected]
Johannes DjukicUniversity of Technology [email protected]
10:15Am - 12:00pm – sAlon bsession 15: demAnd dynAmics in the ApArtment mArket
Chair: Spenser RobinsonCentral Michigan [email protected]
paper 1: the effects of housing supply Volatility on the housing market
Contact Author Inho SongKorea Development [email protected]
Jongwha ChangUTEP School of [email protected]
Discussant: Minrong ZhengUniversity of Central [email protected]
paper 2: Apartment markets and the cascade of demand
Contact Author: Calvin [email protected]
paper 3: What Factors of urban spatial structure are important in real estate markets?
Contact Author: Jeremy GabeUniversity of San [email protected]
Spenser RobinsonCentral Michigan University [email protected]
20 ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019
THURSDAY APRIL 11, 2019Andrew SanderfordUniversity of Arizona [email protected]
paper 4: the role of land regulation on the size of newly built Apartments in stockholm region
Contact Author: Abukar WarsameKTH Royal Institute of [email protected]
Sviatlana EngerstamKTH Royal Institute of [email protected]
Mats WilhelmssonKTH Royal Institute of [email protected]
paper 5: the effect of rent protection on investment performance of multifamily rental housing
Contact Author: Stanimira MilchevaUniversity College [email protected]
Meagan McCollumUniversity of [email protected]
10:15Am - 12:00pm – sAlon csession 16: corporAte FinAnce topics in public reAl estAte
Chair: David M. HarrisonUniversity of Central [email protected]
paper 1: information Asymmetry, investment and the cost of Financing: evidence from reits
Contact Author: Zifeng FengFlorida International [email protected]
paper 2: the cost of Financial Flexibility: information opacity, Agency conflicts and reit At-the-market (Atm) equity offerings
Contact Author: Benjamin ScheickVillanova [email protected]
George CashmanMarquette [email protected]
ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019 21
THURSDAY APRIL 11, 2019David M. HarrisonUniversity of Central [email protected]
Shelly HowtonVillanova [email protected]
paper 3: the impact of cds on Firm Financing and investment: evidence from reits
Contact Author: Qing BaiDickinson [email protected]
Lu ZhuCalifornia State University, Long [email protected]
paper 4: What do institutions buy? An examination in geographically and culturallydispersed Asia pacific real estate investment Firms
Contact Author: David M. HarrisonUniversity of Central [email protected]
George CashmanMarquette [email protected]
Hainan ShengUniversity of Northern [email protected]
Hilla SkibaColorado State [email protected]
10:15Am - 12:00pm – sAlon dsession 17: modeling And ForecAsting reAl estAte mArkets
Chair: Sotiris TsolacosCity University of [email protected]
paper 1: rental Adjustment in european office markets: A global or a local effect?
Contact Author: Benoit LefebvreParis Dauphine [email protected]
Alain CoenUniversity of Quebec in Montreal [email protected]
22 ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019
THURSDAY APRIL 11, 2019Richard MalleBNP Paribas Real Estate [email protected]
Arnaud SimonParis Dauphine University [email protected]
paper 2: the Accuracy of consensus real estate Forecasts revisited
Contact Author: Patrick McAllisterUniversity of [email protected]
Ilir NaseTU [email protected]
paper 3: rental Value determinants and conceptualization in ghana: stakeholderperception versus empirical evidence
Contact Author: Emmanuel Kofi GavuTechnische Universitaet [email protected]
paper 4: nonlinear macroeconomic effects in commercial real estate Forecast models
Contact Author: Robert JenningsCoStar [email protected]
Andrew FlorenceCoStar [email protected]
Jay SpiveyCoStar [email protected]
John AffleckCoStar [email protected]
Robert Michael TaylorCoStar [email protected]
paper 5: the effects of oil shocks on stock, bond and housing markets: A comparative Analysis of u.s. and developed european economies
Contact Author: Nafeesa YunusUniversity of [email protected]
ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019 23
THURSDAY APRIL 11, 2019
10:15Am - 12:00pm – sAlon esession 18: corporAte reAl estAte strAtegies
Chair: Karen GiblerGeorgia State [email protected]
paper 1: the effect of Firm characteristics on the prime office location decision
Contact Author: Kimberly Winson-GeidemanUniversity of [email protected]
Mariko KimuraUniversity of [email protected]
Christopher HeywoodUniversity of Melbourne [email protected]
paper 2: does geographical diversification matter in corporate real estate? evidence from the us retail sector
Contact Author: Gianluca MattarocciUniversity of Rome Tor [email protected]
Lucia GibilaroUniversity of [email protected]
paper 3: corporate real estate and corporate strategy Alignment in south Africa
Contact Author: Samuel AzasuUniversity of the [email protected]
Tsoanelo NteneRand Merchant [email protected]
Anthony Owusu-AnsahGIMPA Business [email protected]
paper 4: not based Anyplace: A new measure of company geographical location
Contact Author: Evgenii RadetskiiLa Salle [email protected]
Kirill PervunUniversity of South [email protected]
24 ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019
THURSDAY APRIL 11, 2019Discussant: Stephen E. Roulac
Roulac [email protected]
10:15Am - 12:00pm – sAlon gsession 19: pAnel on conVerging prActices And trends
betWeen the hospitAlity industry And institutionAl reAl estAte inVestments
The panel discussion will identify emerging practices and trends that illustrate theconvergence between the hospitality industry and institutional real estate investments.The purpose of the panel is to create a forum for thought-provoking dialogues that canchallenge the existing industry boundaries and construct paradigms for new modes ofpractice in real estate. The panel will focus on three aspects of these convergencetrends: 1) How have institutional investors been adopting service-driven operationslearned from the hospitality industry into their real estate investment managementprocess? These intensive service-oriented operations include but are not limited tobranding, experiential constructs, management, online technology application, andemphases on sustainability. 2) What value-adding strategies and spatial utilizationmethods have been learned and applied from each industry to the other to enhancetheir investment performances given the current macro environment, especially withthe emer-gence of the sharing economy? 3) To what extent can a reciprocalperformance measure matrix be constructed in order to enhance the return measuresfor the investments by each industry and strengthen the communication between thetwo fields? The ultimate goal of the panel is to explore ideas and strategies foroptimizing asset value from cross-fertilization between the two fields and reinforce theneed for transdisciplinary collaboration.
Co-Moderator: A.J. SinghUniversity of Texas, Rio Grande [email protected]
Co-Moderator: Bing WangHarvard [email protected]
Panelists: Barry BloomXenia Hotels
Christopher A. ManningLoyola Marymount [email protected]
John O’NeillPenn State [email protected]
ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019 25
THURSDAY APRIL 11, 2019
10:15Am - 12:00pm – sAlon Jsession 20: issues in property tAxAtion
Chair: Kwame Addae-DapaahUniversity College [email protected]
paper 1: residential occupancy and property tax default
Contact Author: Wilfred Anim-OdameNational Development Planning Commission [email protected]
Precious Angelo BrenniDurham University Business School [email protected]
Damian DamianovDurham University Business [email protected]
Dennis PhilipDurham University Business [email protected]
Discussant: Mark SundermanUniversity of [email protected]
paper 2: An hedonic Approach to determining the sources of inequity in property tax systems
Contact Author: Mark SundermanUniversity of [email protected]
Wei SunUniversity of Memphis [email protected]
Paul BidansetInternational Association of Assessing Officers and Ulster [email protected]
paper 3: the effect of tax reform on owner and renter taxes
Contact Author: David LingUniversity of [email protected]
Patric HendershottUniversity of [email protected]
Gary A. McGillUniversity of [email protected]
26 ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019
THURSDAY APRIL 11, 2019paper 4: A new model for simultaneously testing for Vertical & horizontal equity in
Ad Valorem property tax Valuations
Contact Author: Paul BidansetInternational Association of Assessing Officers and Ulster [email protected]
Mark SundermanUniversity of [email protected]
Michael McCordUlster [email protected]
Peadar DavisUlster [email protected]
10:15Am - 12:00pm – sAlon ksession 21: topics in reAl estAte deVelopment i
Chair: Yiying ChengUniversity of St. Thomas at [email protected]
paper 1: An empirical gis Approach to real estate: Focus on two middle-sized real estate developers in Quebec city
Contact Author: Alex BrassardUniversity [email protected]
Étienne BertholdUniversité Laval [email protected]
Guy MercierUniversité [email protected]
paper 2: signaling and the pricing in condominiums development
Contact Author: Shiawee YangNortheastern [email protected]
Robert MooradianNortheastern [email protected]
ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019 27
THURSDAY APRIL 11, 2019paper 3: the impact of lease-up timing on multifamily rents and development
Contact Author: Will McIntoshUSAA Real [email protected]
Mark FitzgeraldUSAA Real [email protected]
Chenchao ZangUSAA Real Estate
paper 4: the influence of tiF programs on nearby residential real estate property prices
Contact Author: Jeffrey RobertUniversity of [email protected]
Velma Zahirovic-HerbertUniversity of [email protected]
paper 5: development opportunity recognition & Validation: An entrepreneurial Approach
Contact Author: Brian HanlonNorth Central [email protected]
Thomas CavenaghNorth Central [email protected]
Robert MoussetisNorth Central [email protected]
Jamie SamsonMindFolio [email protected]
10:15Am - 12:00pm – sAlon lsession 22: reAl estAte And public policy i
Chair: Paloma Taltavull de La PazUniversity of [email protected]
paper 1: marijuana: the unanticipated and unintended consequences
Contact Author: Mark LevineUniversity of Denver [email protected]
Libbi LevineUniversity of [email protected]
28 ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019
THURSDAY APRIL 11, 2019paper 2: searching for determinants of Fuel poverty:An empirical proposal
Contact Author: Paloma Taltavull de La PazUniversity of [email protected]
Francisco JuárezUniversity of [email protected]
Paloma MonllorUniversity of [email protected]
paper 3: make or buy decision-making in public real estate - Finnish perspective
Contact Author: Jaakko ViholaTampere University of [email protected]
paper 4: institutional Analysis and Welfare state regimes
Contact Author: Lawrence A. SouzaSaint Mary’s College of [email protected]
Jiaxin TangUniversity of San [email protected]
paper 5: market and non-market determinants of property Valuations decided through the court system in Family law separation in Australia: developing a scientificApproach
Contact Author: Deborah LeshinskyAlicante [email protected]
10:15Am - 12:00pm – sAlon msession 23: Argus demonstrAtion (Altus group)
This session contains demonstrations of the Argus software by representatives fromthe ALTUS Group.
Presenter: Jessica LealAltus [email protected]
ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019 29
THURSDAY APRIL 11, 2019
10:15Am - 12:00pm – sAlon nsession 24: educAtion trAck 2: pAnel on innoVAtions in
commerciAl reAl estAte FinAnce: clos, blockchAin, And ArtiFiciAl intelligence
Technology and finance continue to evolve, and commercial real estate has to adapt.We’ll look at various technologies—including big data, AI and blockchain—and someof the responses of the financial community to them. We would also like to discusstheir potential impact on supply and demand for properties.
Moderator: Tom [email protected]
Panelists: Andrea [email protected]
KC ConwayUniversity of [email protected]
Annelise OsbornePropellr Securities
12:30pm - 2:00pm – sAlon h-iAres AWArds celebrAtionCo-Sponsored by CoStar Group and Morehouse College
2:00pm - 2:15pm – cAmelbAck pAtiocoFFee breAk
2:15pm - 4:00pm – sAlon Asession 25: brokers, Agents And residentiAl trAnsActions
Chair: Richard ButtimerUNC [email protected]
paper 1: conflicts of interest, Agent Quality and housing transactions
Contact Author: Yanting WuConcordia [email protected]
Lawrence KryzanowskiConcordia [email protected]
30 ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019
THURSDAY APRIL 11, 2019Discussant: Jia Xie
California State University [email protected]
paper 2: A “cute” and “charming” housing paper: the informational content of Agent remark
Contact Author: Richard ButtimerUNC [email protected]
Steve SwidlerLafayette [email protected]
paper 3: Asymmetric information and entrenchment in brokered housing transactions
Contact Author: Luis LopezPenn State [email protected]
Discussant: Yanting WuConcordia [email protected]
paper 4: the importance of Agent network in residential real estate market
Contact Author: Jia XieCalifornia State University, [email protected]
Discussant: Luis LopezPenn State [email protected]
paper 5: the impact of golf courses on three key metrics: price, time on marketand the likelihood of a transaction
Contact Author: Ken H. JohnsonFlorida Atlantic [email protected]
Denise Gravatt HunterFlorida Atlantic [email protected]
Ksenija BogosavljevicFlorida Atlantic [email protected]
ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019 31
THURSDAY APRIL 11, 2019
2:15pm - 4:00pm – sAlon bsession 26: sustAinAbility in reAl estAte mArkets
Chair: Andres JaureguiCalifornia State University, [email protected]
paper 1: Agent bias in energy performance certificate premiums
Contact Author: Aras KhazalNTNU Business [email protected]
Ole Jakob SønstebøNTNU Business [email protected]
paper 2: A sample-selection Approach to estimating the price impact of solar panelsinstallations on residential property prices in Fresno county, california
Contact Author: Andres JaureguiCalifornia State University, [email protected]
Jacquelin CurryCalifornia State University, [email protected]
paper 3: increasing energy savings for residential housing project by post-paid electricity
Contact Author: Berndt LundgrenKTH Royal Institute of [email protected]
paper 4: public media campaign and energy conservation: A natural experiment in singapore
Contact Author: Tien Foo SingNational University of [email protected]
Sumit AgarwalNational University of [email protected]
Sultana MahanaazNational University of Singapore
paper 5: towards inclusive and sustainable real estate industry competitivenesscomplementing economic definition with stakeholder Focused Approach
Contact Author: Mahmoud ElBuraiDubai [email protected]
32 ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019
THURSDAY APRIL 11, 2019
2:15pm - 4:00pm – sAlon csession 27: monetAry policy And FinAncing conditions –
public reAl estAte
Chair: Justin BenefieldAuburn [email protected]
paper 1: reits price reactions to changes in interest rates before and during the zero lower bound
Contact Author: Alexey AkimovLancaster [email protected]
Simon StevensonUniversity of Washington [email protected]
paper 2: Funding conditions and reit returns
Contact Author: Tracy Margo TurnerIowa State [email protected]
Tyler K JensenIowa State [email protected]
Discussant: Anil KumarAarhus [email protected]
paper 3: stock comovement and Financial Flexibility
Contact Author: Anil KumarAarhus [email protected]
Stefano SacchettoIESE Business School [email protected]
Carles Vergara-AlertIESE Business [email protected]
Discussant: James StevensUniversity of [email protected]
ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019 33
THURSDAY APRIL 11, 2019paper 4: impact of inflation on securitized real estate investments in emerging markets
Contact Author: Daniel Ibrahim DabaraFederal Polytechnic [email protected]
Omotoso Kabir LawalFederal Polytechnic [email protected]
Augustina ChiwuzieFederal Polytechnic [email protected]
Olusegun Joseph OmotehinsheFederal Polytechnic [email protected]
John Oyekunle SoladoyeFederal Polytecnic [email protected]
2:15pm - 4:00pm – sAlon dsession 28: risk FActors in commerciAl reAl estAte
Chair: Glenn R. MuellerUniversity of [email protected]
paper 1: the impact of sale and leaseback on commercial real estate prices and initial yields in the uk
Contact Author: Danielle SandersonUniversity College [email protected]
paper 2: modeling commercial real estate discount risk premiums within the Framework of a real estate Factor model
Contact Author: Richard B. GoldNorthfield Information [email protected]
Emilian BelevNorthfield Information [email protected]
paper 3: introducing synthetic cap rate indices for us commercial real estate
Contact Author: Andreas D. ChristopoulosYeshiva [email protected]
34 ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019
THURSDAY APRIL 11, 2019Discussant: Richard B. Gold
Northfield Information [email protected]
paper 4: sustainable long term investment and the discounted cash Flow model: can they be reconciled?
Contact Author: Robert A. SimonsCleveland State [email protected]
paper 5: inside Value creation and destruction: opportunism and risk management indevelopment deal making strategies
Contact Author: Stephen E. RoulacRoulac [email protected]
2:15pm - 4:00pm – sAlon esession 29: technologicAl AdVAnces in reAl estAte
Chair: Andy KrauseZillow [email protected]
paper 1: the effects of Automation and digitalization on real estate employment
Contact Author: Daniel PiazoloTHM Technische Hochschule [email protected]
Discussant: Mark LevineUniversity of [email protected]
paper 2: driverless Vehicles: Addressing disruption to real estate
Contact Author: Mark LevineUniversity of [email protected]
Libbi LevineUniversity of [email protected]
paper 3: extracting real estate property data From photographs using Automatedimage recognition
Contact Author: Robert JenningsCoStar [email protected]
Andrew FlorenceCoStar [email protected]
ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019 35
THURSDAY APRIL 11, 2019Jay SpiveyCoStar [email protected]
John AffleckCoStar [email protected]
Philip KahnCoStar [email protected]
paper 4: crowdsourcing Architectural beauty: online photo Frequency predicts building Aesthetic ratings
Contact Author: Albert [email protected]
Ariana [email protected]
James BernardBrown [email protected]
paper 5: the impact of Agent choice of Virtual tour platforms on market outcomes
Contact Author: Ken H. JohnsonFlorida Atlantic [email protected]
Denise Hunter GravattFlorida Atlantic [email protected]
Ksenija BogosavljevicFlorida Atlantic [email protected]
2:15pm - 4:00pm – sAlon Jsession 30: mortgAge delinQuency And deFAult
Chair: Anthony Pennington-CrossMarquette [email protected]
paper 1: differential impacts of curtailment on mortgage default
Contact Author: Meagan McCollumUniversity of [email protected]
36 ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019
THURSDAY APRIL 11, 2019Hong LeeWright State [email protected]
Discussant: Helen Rosemary NeillUniversity of Nevada, Las [email protected]
paper 2: local religion and mortgage delinquency
Contact Author: Lingziao LiCalifornia State University, [email protected]
Erdem UcarCalifornia State University, [email protected]
paper 3: mortgage performance in the united states: A comparison of defaults byhomeowners in rural versus urban Areas
Contact Author: Helen Rosemary NeillUniversity of Nevada, Las [email protected]
Terrence M. ClauretieUniversity of Nevada, Las Vegas
2:15pm - 4:00pm – sAlon ksession 31: pAnel on the internAtionAl reAl estAte society
At 25
IRES was founded 25 years ago as an umbrella organization for ARES, ERES, andPRRES. Since then the umbrella has expanded to include AsRES, AfRES, andLARES. The panel will discuss the mission and role of IRES, how it has evolved andwhat members want it to be in the future. Topics will include opportunities forinternational cooperation in education and research, teaching and research fundingsources, the relationship between academics and industry, and improved communi-cation. Audience input will be used in revising the IRES strategic plan.
Moderator: Steven BourassaFlorida Atlantic [email protected]
Panelists: Omokolade AkinsomiThe University of [email protected]
Eamonn D’ArcyUniversity of [email protected]
ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019 37
THURSDAY APRIL 11, 2019Jeremy GabeUniversity of San [email protected]
Larry WoffordUniversity of [email protected]
Elaine M. WorzalaCollege of [email protected]
2:15pm - 4:00pm – sAlon lsession 32: housing mArkets And public policy
Chair: Andrew SanderfordUniversity of [email protected]
paper 1: Are single-Family home Values higher when surrounded by greater development density?
Contact Author: Arthur AcolinUniversity of [email protected]
Gregg ColburnUniversity of [email protected]
Rebecca WalterUniversity of [email protected]
Discussant: Gerard MildnerPortland State University [email protected]
paper 2: densification strategies and housing policy
Contact Author: Gerard MildnerPortland State University [email protected]
paper 3: politics and prices: presidential elections and the housing market
Contact Author: Justin ContatLongwood [email protected]
Geoffrey K. TurnbullUniversity of Central Florida [email protected]
38 ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019
THURSDAY APRIL 11, 2019Bennie D WallerLongwood [email protected]
paper 4: u.s. housing policy, politics, and economics: bias and outcomes
Contact Author: Lawrence A. SouzaSaint Mary’s College of [email protected]
Dustin HartuvGeorgetown University
Joshua MartinezSan Domenico High School
Giacchino H. CinqueSaint Mary’s College of California [email protected]
paper 5: public k-12 school Quality and college sports participation: evidence from housing Values
Contact Author: Robert Francis SalvinoCoastal Carolina [email protected]
Andrew WeinbachCoastal Carolina [email protected]
2:15pm - 4:00pm – sAlon msession 33: educAtion trAck 3: pAnel on corporAte
reAl estAte educAtion
Charged with making real estate a strategic advantage for business operations andtalent recruitment/retention, corporate real estate prof-essionals do far more thanrespond to a corpor-ation’s space needs; instead they flex their development musclesin good times and in downtimes during which many developers retreat to the sidelineor even declare bankruptcy. This panel will hear from two institutions that haveinitiated corporate real estate tracks. The panel will discuss the various reasons behindthe development of the tracks, the opportunities available, and the challengesencountered.
Moderator: Dean JordanCoreNet Global [email protected]
Panelists: Mark SingermanRockefeller [email protected]
Mark StappArizona State [email protected]
ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019 39
THURSDAY APRIL 11, 2019Simon StevensonUniversity of [email protected]
2:15pm - 4.00pm – sAlon nsession 34: pAnel on AcAdemiA to industry:
leVerAging reseArch
An open discussion with a panel of academicians who are active in work with industryvia consulting, expert witness, board membership, book writing, and professionaleducation. Learn how to monetize your academic experience while gaining new avenuesfor research by tackling real world problems.
Moderator: Joshua A. HarrisNew York [email protected]
Panelists: Randy AndersonGriffin Capital and Florida Atlanta [email protected]
Michael J. HighfieldMississippi State [email protected]
Hugh KellyFordham University
Dan KohlheppJohns Hopkins [email protected]
Ron ThroupeUniversity of [email protected]
Julie MelanderCounselors of Real Estate
April 14-18, 2020Sanibel harbour Marriott
resort & SpaFort Myers, Florida
2020 ThirTy-SiXTh AnnuAl MeeTing
40 ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019
FRIDAY APRIL 12, 2019
4:00pm - 4:15pm – cAmelbAck pAtiocoFFee breAk
4:15pm - 5:15pm – sAlon h-iAres membership meeting – All are Welcome
5:30pm - 6:30pm – sAlon gFlAres pAnel, AnnuAl meeting And reception – By Invitationco-Sponsored by Strome College of Business - Old Dominion University and Texas A&M University - Commerce
6:30pm - 9:00pm – gArdenpresident’s reception – Co-Sponsored by Appraisal Institute (AI); CCIM Institute; Real Capital Analytics (RCA); and Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS)
Fillerphotos
ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019 41
FRIDAY APRIL 12, 2019
7:00Am - 9:00Am – cAmelbAck pAtioAres netWorking
7:45Am - 5:00pm – ArizonA bAllroom registrAtion deskAres registrAtion
9:00Am - 10:30Am – loWer gArdenAres signiFicAnt others breAkFAst
8:00Am - 10:00Am – sAlon Asession 35: housing inVestment & WeAlth
Chair: Helen Rosemary NeillUniversity of Nevada, Las [email protected]
paper 1: Wealth, Financial leverage and housing investments
Contact Author: Xun BianLongwood [email protected]
Zhenguo LinFlorida International University [email protected]
Yingchun LiuUniversity of North [email protected]
paper 2: local economic conditions and local equity preferences: evidence from mutual Funds during the us housing boom and bust
Contact Author: Aleksandra Anna RzeznikVienna University of Economics and [email protected]
Chandler LutzSEC [email protected]
Ben SandYork [email protected]
42 ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019
FRIDAY APRIL 12, 2019paper 3: residential housing rents, prices and returns indices in a long-term trend
For the French case
Contact Author: Alexis PourcelotUniversity of [email protected]
paper 4: homebuyer types and Willingness to pay for Alternative Attributes and locations
Contact Author: Helen Rosemary NeillUniversity of Nevada, Las [email protected]
Edward CoulsonUniversity of California – [email protected]
Herman LiSacramento [email protected]
8:00Am - 10:00Am – sAlon bsession 36: housing AFFordAbility ii
Chair: Michael LaCour-LittleFannie [email protected]
paper 1: Filtering to Affordable: the state of the national Apartment stock as it Ages
Contact Author: Andrew G MuellerUniversity of [email protected]
Thomas J. PlahovinsakLongwood University [email protected]
Lauren TerschanFederal Reserve Bank of [email protected]
paper 2: managing the “mission” and the “margin” in the Affordable housing space
Contact Author: Dustin C. ReadVirginia [email protected]
paper 3: Affordable housing redevelopment: From carver estates to Village square
Contact Author: Jesse SaginorFlorida Atlantic [email protected]
ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019 43
FRIDAY APRIL 12, 2019paper 4: Flood risk and the u.s. housing market
Contact Author: Michael LaCour-LittleFannie [email protected]
Howard KunreutherUniversity of [email protected]
Susan WachterUniversity of [email protected]
Carolyn KouskyUniversity of [email protected]
Discussant: Jesse SaginorFlorida Atlantic [email protected]
8:00Am - 10:00Am – sAlon csession 37: public reAl estAte mArkets – topicAl issues
Chair: Sotiris TsolacosCity University of [email protected]
paper 1: An early look at the impact of the gics classification of reits
Contact Author: Randy AndersonGriffin Capital & Florida Atlantic [email protected]
Spencer PropperGriffin Capital [email protected]
Jackson AndersonClaremont McKenna College
paper 2: breaking up is easy to do: effects of Adding a new real estate sector in the gics
Contact Author: Mariya LetdinFlorida State [email protected]
Yalan FengCalifornia State University, Los Angeles [email protected]
Meagan McCollumThe University of [email protected]
44 ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019
FRIDAY APRIL 12, 2019paper 3: opaque markets, Value dispersion, and reit returns
Contact Author: Mariya LetdinFlorida State [email protected]
Stace SirmansAuburn [email protected]
G. Stacy SirmansFlorida State [email protected]
paper 4: time Varying integration of reits with stocks: A kalman Filter Approach
Contact Author: Stephen LeeCity University of [email protected]
paper 5: does listed real estate behave like direct real estate: updated and broader evidence
Contact Author: Elias OikarinenTampere [email protected]
Martin HoesliUniversity of Geneva and Swiss Finance [email protected]
8:00Am - 10:00Am – sAlon dsession 38: inVestment And risk AnAlysis in
reAl estAte portFolios
Chair: Michael J. HighfieldMississippi State [email protected]
paper 1: the geography of real property information and investment: Firm location, Asset location, and institutional ownership
Contact Author: Chongyu WangUniversity of [email protected]
David LingUniversity of Florida [email protected]
Tingyu ZhouFlorida State [email protected]
ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019 45
FRIDAY APRIL 12, 2019paper 2: risk Adjusted Attribution Analysis
Contact Author: Jeffrey FisherHomer Hoyt [email protected]
Joe D’[email protected]
paper 3: real estate’s contribution in a mixed Asset portfolio
Contact Author: Glenn R. MuellerUniversity of [email protected]
Andrew MuellerUniversity of [email protected]
paper 4: the consequences of tenant concentration risk: profitability and the cost of debt
Contact Author: Ryan ChaconUniversity of [email protected]
Discussant: Simon StevensonUniversity of [email protected]
8:00Am - 10:00Am – sAlon esession 39 doctorAl seminAr i: internAtionAl
reAl estAte mArkets
Co-Moderator: Eamonn D’ArcyUniversity of [email protected]
Co-Moderator: Philip A. SeagravesMiddle Tennessee [email protected]
Panelists: Kateryna KurylchykWU Vienna University of Economics and [email protected] Topic: Country Risk and International Real Estate Investment: The Case of Central and Eastern Europe
Muhammad Yusaimi Abdul HamidUniversiti Teknologi [email protected]: Pan-Asia Countries Property Portfolio Cross-Border Volatility Spillover
46 ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019
FRIDAY APRIL 12, 2019Steven Shu-Hsiu ChenUniversity of [email protected]: Interdependence of Property Prices and Building Vacancy Rates inResidential and Commercial Real Estate Markets: Hong Kong and Singapore
Mohammad Muzzammil ZekriUniversiti Teknologi [email protected]: Switching Beta Analysis of Malaysian Listed Property Companies withinAsian Public Real Estate Markets
Alina NichiforeanuWU Vienna University of Economics and [email protected]: The Interests of Real Estate Market Actors in Commercial Property Valuation
Jonas WillwerschInternational Real Estate Business School, University of [email protected]: International Yield Spreads as a Determinant of Foreign Real EstateInvestment Activity
8:00Am - 10:00Am – sAlon Jsession 40: doctorAl seminAr ii: reAl estAte deVelopment
Co-Moderator: Dan KohlheppJohns Hopkins [email protected]
Co-Moderator: Christopher A. ManningLoyola Marymount [email protected]
Co-Moderator: Stephen E. RoulacRoulac [email protected]
Panelists: Christian LutareUniversity of Dar es [email protected]: Assessment of the Challenges Facing Turnkey Construction Projects in Tanzania
Gina McKeeverTemple [email protected]: The Mixed Use Premium: Do Multiple-Use Properties Attract Value Premiums
Rose OkoroCross River University of [email protected]: Assessing the Influence of Accessibility to Land in the Implementation ofFederal Govt.Building Construction Projects in South-South Nigeria (2006-2016)
ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019 47
FRIDAY APRIL 12, 2019Ann-Christin SreballTechnische University of [email protected]: Promoting Cooperation between Property Developers and Municipalities:Analysis of Communication Needs
8:00Am - 10:00Am – sAlon ksession 41: doctorAl seminAr iii: contemporAry issues
in housing
Co-Moderator: Justin BenefieldAuburn [email protected]
Co-Moderator: David WymanCollege of [email protected]
Co-Moderator: Velma Zahirovic-HerbertUniversity of [email protected]
Panelists: Eliza Benites-GambirazioUniversity of [email protected]: Selling Yourself, the Market and the Products to Sell Houses: Relational,Expert, Social and Taste Work in the Real Estate Industry
Ijeoma Jane EmegheUniversity of [email protected] Topic: Housing Quality, Autonomy and Mental Well-being Valuation
Pierre VidalUniversity of Cergy [email protected]: A Dynamic Approach of Real Estate Price Formation
Chad KwonUniversity of Texas, Rio Grande [email protected]: The Role of Acculturation in Housing Markets: Evidence from theInstitutionalization of the Cemetery
Jeffrey RobertUniversity of [email protected]: Zoning’s Influence on Residential Real Estate Prices: A Comparison Between Private and Public Rezoning
48 ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019
FRIDAY APRIL 12, 2019
8:00Am - 10:00Am – sAlon lsession 42: the response oF reAl estAte mArkets to
enVironmentAl shocks
Chair: Mark LevineUniversity of [email protected]
paper 1: the impact of the deepwater horizon gulf oil spill on gulf coast real estate markets
Contact Author: Rebel ColeFlorida Atlantic [email protected]
Richard [email protected]
Charles [email protected]
Discussant: Scott A. WentlandU.S. Bureau of Economic [email protected]
paper 2: the impact of exposure to landslide hazard on property Values – the case of saguenay, Quebec, canada
Contact Author: François Des RosiersLaval [email protected]
Bienvenue TossouAltus [email protected]
Discussant: Sofia DermisiUniversity of [email protected]
paper 3: groundwater contamination and housing prices: evidence from a Jacksonville,md site
Contact Author: Rebel ColeFlorida Atlantic [email protected]
Richard [email protected]
Charles [email protected]
ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019 49
FRIDAY APRIL 12, 2019Discussant: Robert A. Simons
Cleveland State [email protected]
paper 4: effects of Flood hazard on multifamily properties in the houston metropolitan Area
Contact Author: Sofia DermisiUniversity of [email protected]
Himanshu GroverUniversity of [email protected]
paper 5: toxic Assets: how the housing market responds to environmental information shocks
Contact Author: Scott A. WentlandU.S. Bureau of Economic [email protected]
Jeremy G. MoultonUniversity of North Carolina at Chapel [email protected]
Nicholas J. SandersCornell [email protected]
8:00Am - 10:00Am – sAlon msession 43: educAtion trAck 4: pAnel on big dAtA And the
Future oF reAl estAte reseArch, prActice And educAtion (sponsored by ires)
This panel will explore the likely effects of big data on the future of real estateresearch, practice, and education. It will cover applications of big data and thechallenges of working with big data. It will also consider implications for real estateeducation.
Moderator: Steven BourassaFlorida Atlantic [email protected]
Panelists: Andy KrauseZillow [email protected]
Bing WangHarvard [email protected]
50 ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019
FRIDAY APRIL 12, 2019Kimberly Winson-GeidemanUniversity of [email protected]
10:00Am - 10:15Am – cAmelbAck pAtiocoFFee breAk
10:15Am - 12:00pm – sAlon Asession 44: topics in residentiAl ApprAisAl
Chair: Rebel ColeFlorida Atlantic [email protected]
paper 1: housing depreciation revisited: hedonic price modeling Versus Assessor estimates
Contact Author: Steven ShultzUniversity of Nebraska at [email protected]
paper 2: the homestead premium
Contact Author: Thomas ThomsonUniversity of Texas at San [email protected]
Anjelita CadenaUniversity of North [email protected]
paper 3: the Value of a View Amenity: the impact of power lines on residential property pricing
Contact Author: Christopher A. MothorpeCollege of [email protected]
David WymanCollege of [email protected]
paper 4: A hedonic pricing method to estimate Value of Waterfront on the gulf of mexico
Contact Author: Reid CummingsUniversity of South [email protected]
Ram DahalUniversity of [email protected]
Robert GralaMississippi State [email protected]
ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019 51
FRIDAY APRIL 12, 2019Jason GordonMississippi State [email protected]
Ian MunnMississippi State [email protected]
Daniel PetroliaMississippi State [email protected]
paper 5: construction of a rent index in beijing
Contact Author: Zisheng SongKTH Royal Institute of Technology [email protected]
Mats [email protected] Royal Institute of Technology
Zan YangTsuinghua [email protected]
10:15Am - 12:00pm – sAlon bsession 45: residentiAl seArch models And listing
strAtegies
Chair: Ken H. JohnsonFlorida Atlantic [email protected]
paper 1: With or Without recall: evaluation of two search models for real estate sales
Contact Author: Ping ChengFlorida Atlantic [email protected]
Zhenguo LinFlorida International University [email protected]
Yingchun LiuUniversity of North Texas [email protected]
paper 2: is overpricing an effective listing strategy in housing markets
Contact Author: Velma Zahirovic-HerbertUniversity of [email protected]
52 ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019
FRIDAY APRIL 12, 2019Geoffrey K. TurnbullUniversity of Central [email protected]
Seongsu KimUniversity of [email protected]
paper 3: google search trends as leading indicators of housing market sentiment
Contact Author: Kimberly GoodwinUniversity of Southern [email protected]
paper 4: determinants of seller behavior: A test of sell As-is property
Contact Author: Jaeyong YooUniversity of [email protected]
Velma Zahirovic-HerbertUniversity of [email protected]
paper 5: the impact of price changes on time on market and the selling price of single Family houses
Contact Author: Ken H. JohnsonFlorida Atlantic [email protected]
Ksenija BogosavljevicFlorida Atlantic [email protected]
Anita K. PennathurFlorida Atlantic [email protected]
10:15Am - 12:00pm – sAlon csession 46: corporAte goVernAnce in public reAl estAte
Chair: Joseph OoiNational University of [email protected]
paper 1: how is ceo compensation related to hedging and diversification? the case of reits
Contact Author: Angelo CorelliAmerican University in [email protected]
ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019 53
FRIDAY APRIL 12, 2019Peihwang PeiUniversity of New [email protected]
Jatin MalhotraAmerican University in [email protected]
paper 2: reit conversions at a global perspective – Why do reocs Adopt reit status?
Contact Author: Dominik Erwin Georg WagnerUniversity of [email protected]
David DownsVirginia Commonwealth [email protected]
René-Ojas WolteringEcole hôtelière de Lausanne, [email protected]
Steffen SebastianUniversity of Regensburg, [email protected]
paper 3: ceo’s Age and Acquisition behaviors of reits
Contact Author: Joseph OoiNational University of [email protected]
Zhang FanNational University of [email protected]
10:15Am – 12:00pm – sAlon dsession 47: institutionAl oWnership And inVestment
structure
Chair: Patrick McAllisterUniversity of [email protected]
paper 1: capital Flows and the ownership of private commercial real estate in londonand toronto since the gFc
Contact Author: Steven DevaneyUniversity of [email protected]
54 ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019
FRIDAY APRIL 12, 2019David ScofieldRyerson [email protected]
paper 2: institutional investment in real estate and market transparency
Contact Author: Stanimira MilchevaUniversity College [email protected]
Dragana CvijanovicUniversity of North [email protected]
Alex van de [email protected]
paper 3: disparity in private equity real estate Fund investment performance acrossinstitutional investors
Contact Author: Sung Won SuhSt. Edward’s [email protected]
Discussant: Steven DevaneyUniversity of [email protected]
10:15Am - 12:00pm – sAlon esession 48: innoVAtions in reAl estAte dAtA modeling
Chair: Steven BourassaFlorida Atlantic [email protected]
paper 1: Assessing Forecast gains from ‘deep learning’ over time-series methodologies
Contact Author: Yi WuCity University of [email protected]
Sotiris TsolacosCity, University of [email protected]
Discussant: Alexey AkimovLancaster [email protected]
ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019 55
FRIDAY APRIL 12, 2019paper 2: hpir: A software package for house price indexes
Contact Author: Andy KrauseZillow [email protected]
paper 3: high-Frequency real estate data
Contact Author: Robert JenningsCoStar [email protected]
Andrew FlorenceCoStar [email protected]
Jay SpiveyCoStar [email protected]
John AffleckCoStar [email protected]
Philip KahnCoStar [email protected]
Iolaire McFaddenCoStar [email protected]
paper 4: robust house price indices
Contact Author: William DoernerFederal Housing Finance [email protected]
Steven BourassaFlorida Atlantic [email protected]
Martin HoesliUniversity of Geneva and Swiss Finance [email protected]
56 ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019
FRIDAY APRIL 12, 2019
10:15Am - 12:00pm – sAlon isession 49: doctorAl pAnel – All i WAnted to knoW About
liFe About the doctorAte but WAs AFrAid to Ask
Is there life after you earn your doctorate? A diversity of panel members answerquestions about what lies ahead in regards to obtaining tenure, publishing research,managing teaching/research/service workloads, and opportunities for work in industrywith a doctorate qualification. It is mandatory for all doctoral recipients of ARESFoundation grants to attend this panel.
Moderator: Jeremy GabeUniversity of San [email protected]
Panelists: James Shilling David M. HarrisonDePaul University University of Central [email protected] [email protected]
Andy Krause Paloma Taltavull de La PazZillow Group University of [email protected] [email protected]
10:15Am - 12:00pm – sAlon Jsession 50: mortgAge mArket structure And securitizAtion
Chair: Anthony SandersGeorge Mason [email protected]
paper 1: credit risk and housing consumption under information Asymmetry
Contact Author: Xun BianLongwood [email protected]
Justin ContatLongwood [email protected]
paper 2: mortgage servicing pricing and servicer behavior
Contact Author: Moussa DiopUniversity of [email protected]
Chen ZhengUniversity of [email protected]
Discussant: Brent C. SmithVirginia Commonwealth [email protected]
ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019 57
FRIDAY APRIL 12, 2019paper 3: An emerging mortgage market in Africa: the case of ghana
Contact Author: Omokolade AkinsomiUniversity of the Witwatersrand, South [email protected]
Wilfred Anim-OdameNational Development Planning [email protected]
paper 4: exploring the spatial Variation in mortgage loan termination patterns
Contact Author: Lu FangLongwood [email protected]
Henry MunnekeUniversity of [email protected]
Discussant: Michael LaCour-LittleFannie [email protected]
10:15Am - 12:00pm – sAlon ksession 51: sector speciFic mArket AnAlysis
Chair: Bruce ColeRichard T. Greener Institute for Social Policy [email protected]
paper 1: A cross sectional Analysis of self storage Facilities
Contact Author: Jonathan DombrowColorado State [email protected]
Christopher JohnstonColorado State University [email protected]
paper 2: golf as a multi-sided market: ownership implications
Contact Author: Bruce ColeRichard T. Greener Institute for Social Policy [email protected]
David HueberRichard T. Greener Institute for Social Policy [email protected]
58 ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019
FRIDAY APRIL 12, 2019paper 3: examining a locational Advantage of gasoline retailers before and After a
demand shock
Contact Author: Tim AllenFlorida Gulf Coast [email protected]
Jesse T. WrightFlorida Gulf Coast [email protected]
H. Shelton WeeksFlorida Gulf Coast [email protected]
paper 5: What’s still special About special purpose property?
Contact Author: Ron ThroupeUniversity of [email protected]
Kay ZhangCBRE
10:15Am - 12:00pm – sAlon lsession 52: neighborhood regenerAtion
Chair: John E. WilliamsMorehouse [email protected]
paper 1: energy retrofit in cultural heritage: A choice-driven process for 20th century historic buildings
Contact Author: Laura GabrielliUniversity IUAV of [email protected]
Aurora RuggeriUniversity of [email protected]
paper 2: street Art preservation laws v. real estate property rights: the case of 5pointz
Contact Author: Katherine PancakUniversity of [email protected]
paper 3: street Art: the role in neighborhood revitalization and the influence on real estate Values
Contact Author: Andrew J. HanszOld Dominion [email protected]
Michele WoodValbrige Property Advisors [email protected]
ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019 59
FRIDAY APRIL 12, 2019Ramya AroulTexas A&M University - [email protected]
paper 4: the correlation between gentrification and diversity of the Fifty largest u.s.cities and regions
Contact Author: John E. WilliamsMorehouse [email protected]
Jide IwarereHoward [email protected]
10:15Am - 12:00pm – sAlon msession 53: educAtion trAck 5: pAnel on integrAtion oFproFessionAl orgAnizAtions in the curriculum
Professional associations have a rich and exten-sive tradition of providing training,education, and support to the real estate industry, and are increasingly creating innovativepartnerships and alliances with university real estate programs. This session will provide aguide to existing programming and alliances as well as hear from the leadership of realestate professional associations on what unique strategies and innovations hold potential foradvancing real estate education and industry sagacity.
Moderator: David L. FunkRoosevelt [email protected]
Panelists: Jim AmorinAppraisal [email protected]
Paul BernardUrban Land [email protected]
Greg [email protected]
Dean JordanCoreNet [email protected]
Nancye J. KirkInstitute of Real Estate Management (IREM)[email protected]
Deidre A. SchexnayderBOMA [email protected]
60 ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019
FRIDAY APRIL 12, 2019
10:15Am - 12:00pm – sAlon nsession 54: leVerAging technology For reAl estAte
mArket AnAlysis (ccim)
This session will: Identify various leading economic indicators and to examine theirimpact upon future changes in commercial real estate market cycles; Analyze theimpact of the market cycles upon the local market area; Determine the current andfuture supply and demand trends for various submarkets and trade areas to evaluatecurrent market conditions, forecast growing market imbalances and locate future areasof opportunity.; Use the CCIM technology product, Site to do Business, to determineif specific market areas will meet the performance criteria outlined for variousproperty types and scenarios
Co-Moderators: Carol [email protected]
Mary CypertCCIM
12:30pm - 2:00pm – cAmelbAck pAtiophd student luncheon
2:15pm - 4.00pm – sAlon Asession 55: residentiAl pricing – locAtion And Aesthetics
Chair: Wilfred Anim-OdameNational Development Planning Commission [email protected]
paper 1: price and rental differentials in gated Versus non-gated communities: the case of Accra, ghana
Contact Author: Kenneth SoyehCollege of Charlestown [email protected]
Paul AsabereTemple [email protected]
Anthony Owusu-AnsahGhana Institute of Management and Public [email protected]
Discussant: Robert Francis SalvinoCoastal Carolina University [email protected]
ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019 61
FRIDAY APRIL 12, 2019paper 2: the impact of historical preservation on property Value: the case of mobile, Al
Contact Author: Reid CummingsUniversity of South Alabama [email protected]
Ermanno AffusoUniversity of South [email protected]
paper 3: embrace inclusion or Face extinction? the effect of evolving exclusivity at golf courses on house prices
Contact Author: Chad KwonUniversity of Texas, Rio Grande [email protected]
Diego A. EscobariUniversity of Texas, Rio Grande [email protected]
Discussant: Wilfred Anim-OdameNational Development Planning [email protected]
paper 4: determinants of residential property location choice in ibadan metropolis,nigeria
Contact Author: Oluseyi Joshua AdegokeObafemi Awolowo University, [email protected]
Bolanle Felicia AdegokeThe Federal Polytechnic, [email protected]
paper 5: do home owners prefer different home characteristics in different Areas?
Contact Author: Arif QayyumIona [email protected]
Discussant: Xun BianLongwood [email protected]
2:15pm - 4.00pm – sAlon bsession 56: residentiAl mArket dynAmics
Chair: William G. Hardin, IIIFlorida International [email protected]
62 ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019
FRIDAY APRIL 12, 2019paper 1: mortgage losses under Alternative property disposition Approaches
Contact Author: Anthony Pennington-CrossMarquette [email protected]
Arnab BiswasUniversity of Wisconsin, [email protected]
Hamilton FoutFannie Mae [email protected]
paper 2: the effect of relocation companies on residential real estate prices and time on the market
Contact Author: Bruce GordonUniversity of Alabama at [email protected]
Daniel WinklerUniversity of North Carolina - [email protected]
paper 3: Further enhancing Vertical & horizontal equity tests for Ad Valorem property tax Valuations using geographically Weighted regression
Contact Author: Paul BidansetInternational Association of Assessing Officers and Ulster [email protected]
Mark SundermanUniversity of Memphis [email protected]
Michael McCordUlster University [email protected]
Peadar DavisUlster University [email protected]
Frank San PietroUniversity of [email protected]
paper 4: cash is king?: benefit of cash-only purchases of residential property to buyers
Contact Author: Youngme SeoRyerson [email protected]
Cynthia HolmesRyerson [email protected]
ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019 63
FRIDAY APRIL 12, 2019
2:15pm - 4.00pm – sAlon csession 57: reit operAting issues
Chair: S. McKay PriceLehigh [email protected]
paper 1: geographic diversification in real estate investment trusts
Contact Author: S. McKay PriceLehigh [email protected]
Zhilan FengClarkson [email protected]
Maneechit PattanapanchaiNew York State [email protected]
C.F. SirmansFlorida State [email protected]
paper 2: reits legal environment
Contact Author: James MalmCollege of [email protected]
Kenneth SoyehCollege of [email protected]
paper 3: the impact of geographical dispersion on reit Valuation and operating performance
Contact Author: Daniel Huerta-SanchezCollege of [email protected]
Christopher A. MothorpeCollege of Charleston [email protected]
Thanh NgoEast Carolina [email protected]
64 ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019
FRIDAY APRIL 12, 2019paper 4: economies of scale and the operating efficiency of reits: A revisit
Contact Author: Michael J. HighfieldMississippi State [email protected]
Thomas M. SpringerClemson [email protected]
Yannan ShenClemson [email protected]
2:15pm - 4.00pm – sAlon dsession 58: monetAry policy And FinAncing conditions –
commerciAl And housing mArkets
Chair: Justin BenefieldAuburn [email protected]
paper 1: implications of changing u.s. mortgage market and Agency securitization:evidence from gnmA lending
Contact Author: Michael J. HighfieldMississippi State [email protected]
Brian D. BlankMississippi State University [email protected]
Rustin T. YerkesSamford University [email protected]
paper 2: monetary services Aggregation theory under choquet expectation
Contact Author: Qing HanThe University of [email protected]
William BarnettThe University of [email protected]
Jianbo ZhangThe University of [email protected]
ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019 65
FRIDAY APRIL 12, 2019paper 3: Why Are banks slowing commercial real estate lending?
Contact Author: Anthony SandersGeorge Mason [email protected]
2:15pm - 4.00pm – sAlon esession 59: Asset And FAcilities mAnAgement
Chair: Michael C. TrübesteinLucerne University of Applied [email protected]
paper 1: real estate management strategies in switzerland: empirical Analysis 2014-2018
Contact Author: Michael C. TrübesteinLucerne University of Applied [email protected]
paper 2: sustainable Facilities management
Contact Author: Gulshan Kumar GroverRICS School of Built Environment, Amity [email protected]
paper 3: the Facility service industry as a driver of the economy
Contact Author: Eva Ursula StopajnikTU Wien - Vienna University of [email protected]
Alexander RedleinTU Wien - Vienna University of [email protected]
paper 4: management of Voids in properties in nigeria
Contact Author: Okwuchi Juliet AkalemeakuUniversity of [email protected]
Discussant: Michael C. TrübesteinLucerne University of Applied [email protected]
2:15pm - 4.00pm – sAlon isession 60: inFormAtion And sentiment in reAl estAte
mArkets
Chair: Michael J. SeilerCollege of William & [email protected]
66 ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019
FRIDAY APRIL 12, 2019paper 1: news-based sentiment Analysis in real estate: A machine learning Approach
Contact Author: Jochen HauslerUniversity of [email protected]
Jessica RuscheinskyUniversity of [email protected]
Marcel LangUniversity of [email protected]
paper 2: real estate brokers in the commercial office market: their role in a propertysegment with expanded information
Contact Author: Brent C. SmithVirginia Commonwealth [email protected]
paper 3: information Asymmetry and investor learning from their purchase
Contact Author: Yu LiuCalifornia State University, San [email protected]
paper 4: information Asymmetry and cross purchasing
Contact Author: Fongyao ChenChengchi [email protected]
Jenhsu LiangChinese Culture [email protected]
Charles TuUniversity of San Diego [email protected]
Yinyu LiangUniversity of San [email protected]
2:15pm - 4.00pm – sAlon Jsession 61: topics in reAl estAte deVelopment ii
Chair: Sofia DermisiUniversity of [email protected]
ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019 67
FRIDAY APRIL 12, 2019paper 1: the economics of mixed-use development – An empirical study in the
city of seattle
Contact Author: Sofia DermisiUniversity of [email protected]
Feiyang SunUniversity of Washington [email protected]
Shen, QingUniversity of Washington [email protected]
Jan WhittingtonUniversity of [email protected]
paper 2: effects of gated community development on land Values in Adjoiningneighbourhoods of lekki corridor, lagos state, nigeria
Contact Author: Timothy Tunde OladokunObafemi Awolowo University, Ile [email protected]
Femi Adejare OgunjimiObafemi Awolowo University, Ile [email protected]
paper 3: brazilian civil construction panorama in the Face of bim
Contact Author: Cristiane Ramos Magalhã[email protected]
paper 4: designing a rubric to categorise projects of significance to the sunshine coast region
Contact Author: Steven Terence BoydUniversity of the Sunshine Coast, [email protected]
April 6-10, 2021Kaua’i Mariott resort
on Kalapaki Beach lihue, hawaii
2021ThirTy-SevenTh AnnuAl MeeTing
68 ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019
FRIDAY APRIL 12, 2019
2:15pm - 4.00pm – sAlon ksession 62: innoVAtion districts And opportunity zones
Chair: Edward PierzakSan Diego State [email protected]
paper 1: investing in o-zones: Assessing the depth of existing property pools in Qualifiedopportunity zones
Contact Author: Edward PierzakSan Diego State [email protected]
paper 2: urban innovation districts: Assessing the regulatory environment
Contact Author: Ernest SternbergUniversity at [email protected]
Discussant: James YoungUniversity of [email protected]
paper 3: opportunity zones – Assessment of impact and policy implications
Contact Author: David L. FunkRoosevelt [email protected]
Kenneth [email protected]
paper 3: urban innovation districts: Assessing the regulatory environment
Contact Author: Ernest SternbergUniversity at [email protected]
Discussant: David L. FunkRoosevelt [email protected]
ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019 69
FRIDAY APRIL 12, 2019
2:15pm - 4.00pm – sAlon lsession 63: educAtion trAck 6: pAnel on eFFectiVe teAching
using cAse studies
This panel explores the pedagogical strategies in using case study as a teachingmethod. It provides a guide on how to maximize student learning with case studies byenhancing their problem solving and critical thinking skills as well as by exposingthem to the real world complexities. The panel will also help those who are interestedin creating Case Studies for possible publication.
Moderator: Bing WangHarvard [email protected]
Panelists: Helen BaoCambridge [email protected]
Tobias JustUniversity of [email protected]
David L. FunkRoosevelt [email protected]
Scott RoarkColorado State [email protected]
Spenser RobinsonCentral Michigan [email protected]
2:15pm - 4.00pm – sAlon msession 64: pAnel on the Future oF reAl estAte indexAtion
And portFolio ApplicAtions
This panel will look at the past and future of Commercial and Residential Real Estateindexation. It will review applications of these indices for portfolio performance,benchmark-ing, and attribution. It will also consider how these indices and other formsof portfolio construction have led to real estate capital market innovation in both thepublic and private securities markets.
Moderator: Lawrence A. SouzaJohnson Souza [email protected]
Panelists: Robert H. EdelsteinUniversity of California, [email protected]
70 ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019
FRIDAY APRIL 12, 2019Jeffrey FisherHomer Hoyt [email protected]
Richard B. GoldNorthfield Information [email protected]
Richard GreenUniversity of Southern [email protected]
Glenn R. MuellerUniversity of [email protected]
Frank [email protected]
Mark FitzgeraldUSAA Real [email protected]
2:15pm - 4.00pm –sAlon nsession 65: pAnel on meAsuring And Assessing impAct
in reseArch
Real estate publications are a key dimension in all academic staff profiles inestablishing their research stature for promotion and tenure. Numerous papers havebeen published in the real estate journals concerning the significance and publicationstature of specific real estate journals, institutions and individuals. With recent yearsseeing an increased emphasis on research impact (e.g. AACSB), it is also important toassess the impact of this real estate research and how real estate researchers havecontributed to this impact.
Moderator: Elaine M. WorzalaCollege of [email protected]
Panelists: Jeremy GabeUniversity of San [email protected]
Mauricio RodriguezTexas Christian [email protected]
Simon StevensonUniversity of [email protected]
ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019 71
FRIDAY APRIL 12, 20194:00pm - 4:15pm – cAmelbAck pAtiocoFFee breAk
4:15pm - 6.00pm – sAlon Asession 66: spAtiAl AnAlysis oF housing
Chair: John Luciano RenneFlorida Atlantic [email protected]
paper 1: post-recession rental market dynamics in transit station Areas
Contact Author: John Luciano RenneFlorida Atlantic [email protected]
Jyothi ChavaFlorida Atlantic University [email protected]
Bruce AppleyardSan Diego State University [email protected]
Tara TolfordUniversity of New [email protected]
paper 2: highway proximity and elevation effects on home prices: spatial econometricsusing lidAr-derived data
Contact Author: Michael McElveenUrban Economics [email protected]
Brian BrownUrban Economics [email protected]
Charles GibbonsUrban Economics [email protected]
paper 3: Asking and transaction prices: An spatial Autocorrelation Analysis of their distributions
Contact Author: Paloma Taltavull de La PazUniversity of [email protected]
Stanley McGrealUlster [email protected]
72 ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019
FRIDAY APRIL 12, 2019Martin HinchUlster [email protected]
paper 4: the benefits of spatial Analysis in real estate estimation prices
Contact Author: Thomas [email protected]
Sarah SoleimanParis 1 Panthéon Sorbonne University [email protected]
Julien Randon-FurlingParis 1 Panthéon Sorbonne University [email protected]
4:15pm - 6.00pm – sAlon bsession 67: the residentiAl oWnership decision –
to oWn or buy?
Chair: Kimberly GoodwinUniversity of Southern [email protected]
paper 1: Why do young households delay home purchase?
Contact Author: Youngme SeoRyerson [email protected]
Dongshin KimPepperdine [email protected]
paper 2: the millennial homeownership paradox in the immigration nation
Contact Author: Yi WuCity University of [email protected]
Vivek SahUniversity of Nevada, Las Vegas [email protected]
Alan TidwellUniversity of [email protected]
Discussant: Zhenguo LinFlorida International [email protected]
paper 3: disparity of housing conditions for homeowners and renters in china
Contact Author: Mingzhi HuJinan [email protected]
Zhenguo LinFlorida International [email protected]
Yingchun LiuUniversity of North Texas [email protected]
Discussant: Yi WuCity University [email protected]
paper 4: Financial stress and homeownership choice
Contact Author: Jia XieCalifornia State University, [email protected]
Zhenguo LinFlorida International University [email protected]
Yingchun LiuUniversity of North Texas [email protected]
4:15pm - 6.00pm – sAlon csession 68: reits, priVAte reAl estAte And blended
portFolios
Chair: Randy AndersonGriffin Capital and Florida Atlantic [email protected]
paper 1: replicating expected commercial real estate (cre) risk and returns usingliquid market instruments and cre market-related investment risk
Contact Author: Richard B. GoldNorthfield Information [email protected]
Emilian BelevNorthfield Information [email protected]
paper 2: revisiting the Four Quadrants: blending 2.0
Contact Author: Alex MossCity University of [email protected]
ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019 73
FRIDAY APRIL 12, 2019
FRIDAY APRIL 12, 2019Kieran FarrellyStepstone [email protected]
paper 3: Why reits?
Contact Author: Hans Op’t VeldAmsterdam School of Real [email protected]
paper 4: evidence on the price discovery in private and public real estate markets
Contact Author: Randy AndersonGriffin Capital and Florida Atlantic [email protected]
4:15pm - 6.00pm – sAlon dsession 69: reit mArket structure And dynAmics
Contact Author: Bryan MacGregorUniversity of [email protected]
paper 1: performance and market maturity in mutual Funds: is real estate different?
Contact Author: Bryan MacGregorUniversity of [email protected]
Rainer SchulzUniversity of [email protected],
Yuan ZhaoUniversity of Aberdeen [email protected]
Discussant: Jeffrey DiBartolomeoUniversity of Southern [email protected]
paper 2: pay to play: the impact of political capital on reits
Contact Author: Jennifer BrodmannCalifornia State [email protected]
Mahsa KhoshnoudCatawba [email protected]
Omer UnsalMerrimack [email protected]
74 ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019
FRIDAY APRIL 12, 2019paper 3: strategic planning for reits: A brave new World
Contact Author: Alex MossCity University of [email protected]
paper 4: systematic risks and green premiums for reits
Contact Author: Tien Foo SingNational University of [email protected]
4:15pm - 6.00pm – sAlon esession 70: reAl estAte proFessionAl serVice Firms
Chair: Kimberly Winson-GeidemanUniversity of [email protected]
paper 1: sample selection Approaches to estimating and Allocating the gender gap incommercial real estate transaction price/Volume
Contact Author: Eren CifciUniversity of [email protected]
Alan TidwellUniversity of [email protected]
Sandra MortalUniversity of [email protected]
Vishal GuptaUniversity of [email protected]
Discussant: Stanimira MilchevaUniversity College [email protected]
paper 2: explicitly recognizing implicit gender bias in the commercial real estate industry
Contact Author: Kelly AveryVirginia [email protected]
Dustin C. ReadVirginia [email protected]
Discussant: Rosemary GossVirginia [email protected]
ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019 75
FRIDAY APRIL 12, 2019paper 3: the impact of market disrupters on the real estate services sector –
threats or opportunities?
Contact Author: Eamonn D’ArcyUniversity of [email protected]
Stephen E. RoulacRoulac [email protected]
paper 4: Valuer’s consideration of risks in secured lending Valuations
Contact Author: Afees AlabiUniversity of [email protected]
4:15pm - 6.00pm – sAlon isession 71: topicAl issues in reAl estAte inVestment
Chair: Stephen LeeCity University of [email protected]
paper 1: reduced Volatility in pooled real estate Funds at the cost of tradability?
Contact Author: Daniel PiazoloTHM Technische Hochschule [email protected]
Sebastian GlaesnerMSCI [email protected]
Discussant: Simon StevensonUniversity of [email protected]
paper 2: An Analysis of senior housing rents in the u.s. multi-Family housing market
Contact Author: Andrew SanderfordUniversity of [email protected]
Jeremy GabeUniversity of San Diego [email protected]
Spenser RobinsonCentral Michigan [email protected]
Rukon KhanCentral Michigan University
76 ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019
FRIDAY APRIL 12, 2019paper 3: the lease-up of multifamily rehab projects and its impact on rents
Contact Author: Will McIntoshUSAA Real [email protected]
Mark FitzgeraldUSAA Real Estate
Chenchao ZangUSAA Real Estate
paper 4: performance and persistence of private equity infrastructure Funds
Contact Author: Martin HaranUlster [email protected]
Michael McCordUlster University [email protected]
Stanimira MilchevaUniversity College [email protected]
4:15pm - 6.00pm – sAlon Jsession 72: pAnel on reAl estAte centers And FundrAising
A key component of the activity of real estate centers is fundraising, whether it becurrent giving, endowments or research related. This panel will discuss some of thestrategies open to Real Estate centers and some of the challenges that may beencountered.
Moderator: Julie GibsonPortland State University [email protected]
Panelists: Stath KarrasUniversity of San [email protected]
Jessica TaylorVillanova [email protected]
Michael KerchevalUniversity of Colorado [email protected]
ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019 77
FRIDAY APRIL 12, 2019
4:15pm - 6.00pm – sAlon ksession 73: reAl estAte And public policy ii
Chair: Norman G. MillerUniversity of San [email protected]
paper 1: carbon control and real estate growth: A crrem Analysis of challenges to Fulfill the paris Agreement
Contact Author: Paloma Taltavull de La PazUniversity of [email protected]
Francisco JuárezUniversity of [email protected]
Raul Pérez University of [email protected]
paper 2: An empirical study on the nexus of crime, place, Vacant lots, and dangerous buildings
Contact Author: James R. DeLisleUniversity of Missouri - Kansas [email protected]
Brent NeverUniversity of Missouri - Kansas City [email protected]
Terry GrissomEly Research [email protected]
paper 3: policy uncertainty and real estate development: evidences from china
Contact Author: Ling LiUniversity of [email protected]
Helen BaoUniversity of Cambridge [email protected]
Enwei ZhuUniversity of [email protected]
Hongyu LiuUniversity of [email protected]
78 ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019
FRIDAY APRIL 12, 2019paper 4: estimating the impact of neighborhood crime on property Values –
A geospatial Application
Contact Author: Ying HuangUniversity of South [email protected]
Mark SundermanUniversity of [email protected]
Ronald SpahrUniversity of [email protected]
Paul BidansetInternational Association of Assessing Officers and Ulster [email protected]
4:15pm - 6.00pm – sAlon lsession 74: educAtion trAck 7: pAnel on meAsuring
student leArning
It is often seen that student’s performance on exams doesn’t reflect how well they feelthat they know or understand the material. So are current performance measures trulyadequate in measuring student learning? What alterna-tives do we have?
Moderator: Karen McGrathBucknell [email protected]
Panelists: Tanya BansalUniversity of [email protected]
Stephen E. RoulacRoulac [email protected]
Rebecca YorkUniversity of Central [email protected]
ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019 79
FRIDAY APRIL 12, 2019
4:15pm - 6.00pm – sAlon msession 75: pAnel on reAl estAte JournAl rAnkings
Real Estate researchers are increasingly under pressure as journals are absent fromsuch lists as the FT-50, Dallas 24, under represented on ISI/IBSS Index and rankedlower on the Australian ABDC Dean’s list than we would like. This panel will conveycurrent rankings and involve a discussion of how we might improve real estate journalrankings in the eyes of other disciplines (and deans).
Moderator: Michael J. SeilerCollege of William & [email protected]
Panelists: Omokolade AkinsomiUniversity of the [email protected]
David M. HarrisonUniversity of Central [email protected]
Martin HoesliUniversity of Geneva and Swiss Finance [email protected]
Joseph OoiNational University of [email protected]
4:15pm - 6.00pm – sAlon nsession 76: pAnel on corporAte reAl estAte reseArch
This panel will discuss (1) Where is corporate real estate research today? What typesof CRE research/topics get published in leading scholarly and practitioner journals?(2) What opportunities and challenges do academics face when under-taking researchon CRE and attempting to publish in scholarly journals? (3) What corporate real estatetopics would industry professionals be most interested in scholars doing research? (4)What collaboration opportunities exist between academic researchers, industryprofessionals and profession-al organizations (e.g. industry CRE data available toacademic researchers and CRE industry assistance with survey research)? (5) How cancollaborative CRE research findings be best communicated to academics CRE profes-sionals, and students? (6) What steps are needed to formalize a CRE research agendathat can guide and benefit both academic researchers and industry professionals?
Co-Moderators: Julia FreyboteFlorida International [email protected]
Christopher A. ManningLoyola Marymount [email protected]
80 ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019
FRIDAY APRIL 12, 2019Panelists: Karen Gibler
Georgia State [email protected]
Annette Kaempf-DernBauhaus [email protected]
Mike ZamoraAsia Real Estate [email protected]
6:30pm - 9:00pm – mummy mountAinAres gAlA celbrAtion – Exclusively Sponsored by the CoStar Group
ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019 81
SATURDAY APRIL 13, 2019
7:00Am - 9:00Am – cAmelbAck pAtioAres netWorking
7:45Am - noon – ArizonA bAllroom registrAtion deskAres registrAtion
8:00Am - 10:00Am – sAlon Asession 77: residentiAl Auctions
Chair: James YoungUniversity of [email protected]
paper 1: Auction vs. private negotiation in property sales
Contact Author: Reid Cummings Ronald SpahrUniversity of South Alabama University of [email protected] [email protected]
Ying Huang Mark SundermanUniversity of South Alabama University of [email protected] [email protected]
paper 2: strategic bidding in two-stage land Auctions in china
Contact Author: Shuping Wu Simon StevensonTsinghua University University of [email protected] [email protected]
Zan Yang James YoungTsinghua University University of [email protected] [email protected]
Discussant Frank San PietroUniversity of [email protected]
paper 3: hijacking the Auction – sellers or buyers curse?
Contact Author: Marte FlåttNorwegian University of Science and [email protected]
8:00Am - 10:00Am – sAlon bsession 78: the shAring economy & short term
residentiAl lets
Chair: Velma Zahirovic-HerbertUniversity of [email protected]
82 ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019
SATURDAY APRIL 13, 2019paper 1: the sharing economy impact on Asset pricing: evidence from the Airbnb
Contact Author: Ekaterina ChernobaiCalifornia State Polytechnic University [email protected]
Tarique HossainCalifornia State Polytechnic University [email protected]
paper 2: home on the beach: the impact of the sharing economy on residential property pricing
Contact Author: David WymanCollege of [email protected]
Christopher A. MothorpeCollege of [email protected]
Brumby McLeodCollege of [email protected]
paper 3: pilgrimage housing: the camino de santiago
Contact Author: Claire La RocheLongwood [email protected]
paper 4: contemporary residential platforms: co-living in the sharing economy
Contact Author: Bing WangHarvard [email protected]
Van-Tuong NguyenHarvard [email protected]
Discussant: David WymanCollege of [email protected]
8:00Am - 10:00Am – sAlon csession 79: integrAtion Across internAtionAl public
reAl estAte mArkets
Chair: Alexey AkimovLancaster [email protected]
ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019 83
SATURDAY APRIL 13, 2019paper 1: the portfolio Advantages of sukuk: dynamic correlations between
bonds and sukuk
Contact Author: Abduallah AlfalahPrime Real [email protected]
Eamonn D’ArcyUniversity of [email protected]
Simon StevensonUniversity of [email protected]
paper 2: risk-Adjusted performance of reits in African emerging markets
Contact Author: Daniel Ibrahim DabaraFederal Polytechnic [email protected]
Olusegun Adebayo OgunbaObafemi Awolowo University [email protected]
Augustina ChiwuzieFederal Polytechnic Ede, Nigeria [email protected]
Anthony Abbey TinufaFederal Polytechnic [email protected]
John Oyekunle SoladoyeFederal Polytechnic Offa, [email protected]
paper 3: how do south Africa’s real estate investment trusts integrate with major global reits markets? A time-Frequency Approach
Contact Author: Kolawole IjasanUniversity of the [email protected]
George TweneboahUniversity of the Witwatersrand, South [email protected]
paper 4: dependency of real estate and international Financial markets – A gArch-copula Approach to model extreme market risk
Contact Author: Carsten Fritz Steffen SebastianUniversity of Regensburg University of [email protected] [email protected]
Cay Oertel Sven BienertUniversity of Regensburg University of [email protected] [email protected]
84 ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019
SATURDAY APRIL 13, 2019paper 5: us real estate market and reits relationship with international indexes
Contact Author: Arif QayyumIona [email protected]
Walayet KhanUniversity of [email protected]
8:00Am - 10:00Am – sAlon d session 80: commerciAl reAl estAte Attributes And
inVestment perFormAnce
Chair: Hans Op’t VeldAmsterdam School of Real [email protected]
paper 1: the importance of micro-location in pricing commercial real estate Assets
Contact Author: Julia FreyboteFlorida International [email protected]
Prashant DasEcole Hôtelière de Lausanne (EHL)[email protected]
Ines BlaEcole Hôtelière de Lausanne (EHL)[email protected]
paper 2: green premium: What is the implied prognosis for sustainability?
Contact Author: Kwame Addae-DapaahUniversity College [email protected]
Jamie [email protected]
paper 3: toward a market driven signal of Quality on the office building market
Contact Author: Fabrice LarceneuxUniversity Paris [email protected]
Keith RichardsUniversity of [email protected]
ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019 85
paper 4: brexit turmoil and market stability: how resilient is the uk commercial real estate investment market?
Contact Author: Keith LownNottingham Trent [email protected]
Michael WhiteNottingham Trent [email protected]
8:00Am - 10:00Am – sAlon esession 81: doctorAl seminAr iV: reAl estAte FinAnce And
inVestment
Co-Moderator: Andrew MuellerUniversity of [email protected]
Co-Moderator: Stanimira MilchevaUniversity College [email protected]
Panelists: Carsten FritzInternational Real Estate Business School, University of [email protected]: Real Estate, Stocks and Bonds as a Deflation Hedge
Qing HanUniversity of [email protected]: Monetary Services Aggregation Theory under Choquet Expectation
Changyu YangUniversity of [email protected]: Systematic Mispricing: Evidence from Real Estate Markets
Franziska PloesslUniversity of [email protected]: Forecasting Real Estate Markets by its Media Exposure
Felix LorenzUniversity of [email protected]: Underpricing in Seasoned Equity Offerings: Evidence from European REITs and REOCs
86 ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019
SATURDAY APRIL 13, 2019
SATURDAY APRIL 13, 2019
8:00Am - 10:00Am – sAlon Jsession 82: doctorAl seminAr V: residentiAl mortgAge
mArkets
Co-Moderator: David M. HarrisonUniversity of Central [email protected]
Co-Moderator: Michael LaCour-LittleFannie [email protected]
Panelists: Bismark AhaBirmingham City [email protected]: Monetary and Macroeconomic Drivers of Housing Finance and their Impacton House Prices in the United Kingdom
Tomothy DombrowskiLouisiana State [email protected]: Mortgage Portfolio Diversification in the Presence of Cross-Sectionaland Spatial Dependence
Anurag MehrotraUniversity of [email protected]: The Managing of Delinquent Loans by Loan Servicers: Principal-Agent or Conflicting Interest
Chen ZhengUniversity of Wisconsin [email protected]: How Informed Were Investors? Evidence from Mortgage Servicing Pricing
8:00Am - 10:00Am – sAlon ksession 83: doctorAl seminAr Vi: housing mArkets
Co-Moderator: Michael J. HighfieldMississippi State [email protected]
Co-Moderator: Patrick SmithSan Diego State [email protected]
Panelists: Olayiwola OladirinUniversity of [email protected]: Modeling the Effects of Migration on the UK Housing Market
ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019 87
SATURDAY APRIL 13, 2019Sviatlana EngerstamKTH Royal Institute of [email protected]: Determinants of Residential Prices in Sweden over the Long Run
Mustapha BanguraWestern Syndey [email protected]: Housing Affordability and Housing Submarkets: The Case of Greater Sydney
Reza TaebGolden Gate [email protected]: Exploring Bay Area Housing Price Cycles Across Different Value Groups
Yuxi YaoUniversity of Western [email protected]: Accounting for Changes in the Dispersion of House Prices and Rents across U.S. Cities
8:00Am - 10:00Am – sAlon lsession 84: doctorAl seminAr Vii: legAl issues in
reAl estAte
Co-Moderator: Jeremy GabeUniversity of San [email protected]
Co-Moderator: Andrew SanderfordUniversity of [email protected]
Panelists: Liying XiaShanghai University of Finance and [email protected]: Equal Rights of Residents for Children’s Education: An Evaluation of the Real Estate Policy Intervention
Utchay OkorjiUniversity of [email protected]: Assessment and Resolution of Urban Land Conflict in Greater Port HarcourtMetropolis, Rivers State, Nigeria
Philipp MaximilianTechnical University [email protected]: Towards the Automation of Due Diligence Processes in Real Estate – Digital Building Documentation and Machine Learning
88 ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019
SATURDAY APRIL 13, 2019
8:00Am - 10:00Am – sAlon msession 85: educAtion trAck 8: contemporAry issues in
reAl estAte educAtion
Chair: Philip A. SeagravesMiddle Tennessee State [email protected]
paper 1: diversity in commercial real estate — Academic and industry effortsin minnesota
Contact Author: Kelly Andrea JamesonSt Cloud State [email protected]
paper 2: An empirical test of students’ Ability to self-Assess: Are real estate students too optimistic, ignorant or Just incompetent?
Contact Author: Karen McGrathBucknell [email protected]
Tom GeurtsGeorge Washington [email protected]
Discussant: Kenneth SoyehCollege of [email protected]
paper 3: using corenet global Academic challenge to integrate corporate real estate into a real estate management class
Contact Author: Kelly Andrea JamesonSt Cloud State [email protected]
paper 4: entrepreneurship and the Academy: Forming a company of students for real-world experience before graduation
Contact Author: Philip A. SeagravesMiddle Tennessee State [email protected]
8:00Am - 10:00Am – sAlon nsession 86: climAte chAnge And sustAinAbility
Chair: Paloma Taltavull de La PazUniversity of [email protected]
ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019 89
SATURDAY APRIL 13, 2019paper 1: modeling development of building stock – A long-term perspective
Contact Author: Antti Tapio KurvinenTampere University of [email protected]
Juhani HeljoTampere University of [email protected]
Eero NippalaTampere University of Applied [email protected]
Virve RouhiainenStatistics [email protected]
paper 2: effects of Food centers on property Values in pahu, hawaii in the era of climate change
Contact Author: Peiyong YuUniversity of Hawaii West [email protected]
paper 3: developing end of trip Facility best practice: improving our property investment and management Approach
Contact Author: Pernille H. ChristensenUniversity of Technology [email protected]
Natalya DePooterUniversity of Technology Sydney
paper 4: climate change, Flood risks and residential property Values
Contact Author: Norman G. MillerUniversity of San [email protected]
Michael SklarzCollateral [email protected]
10:00Am - 10:15Am – cAmelbAck pAtiocoFFee breAk
10:15Am - 12:00pm – sAlon Asession 87: housing mArkets And public policy ii
Chair: Julia FreyboteFlorida International [email protected]
90 ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019
SATURDAY APRIL 13, 2019paper 1: the impact of municipal Water use restrictions on the pricing of
Water-sensitive Features in single-Family homes
Contact Author: Julia FreyboteFlorida International [email protected]
Riëtte CarstensStellenbosch [email protected]
Yiping FangPortland State University [email protected]
paper 2: the housing price premium Associated with charter schools
Contact Author: Eli BerachaFlorida International [email protected]
William G. Hardin, IIIFlorida International [email protected]
paper 3: the Federal tax policy uncertainty risk premium: evidence from tax credit prices
Contact Author: Bree LangUniversity of California, [email protected]
Pratish PatelCalifornia Polytechnic State University, San Luis [email protected]
10:15Am - 12:00pm – sAlon bsession 88: housing mArket dynAmics
Chair: James YoungUniversity of [email protected]
paper 1: impact of an urban growth boundary on house prices: the two-stage Quantilespatial regression Approach
Contact Author: Shishir MathurSan Jose State [email protected]
paper 2: uk property market segmentation: evidence from a nonlinear model
Contact Author: Omokolade AkinsomiThe University of the [email protected]
ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019 91
SATURDAY APRIL 13, 2019Angela Yan DuOregon State [email protected]
Chi Keung Marco LauUniversity of Huddersfield [email protected]
Jie MaNorthumbria [email protected]
Discussant: Lawrence William BoydUniversity of Hawaii West [email protected]
paper 3: supply, demand in honolulu’s housing market
Contact Author: Lawrence William BoydUniversity of Hawaii West [email protected]
10:15Am -12:00pm – sAlon csession 89: public reAl estAte – disclosure, inFormAtion
FloWs And sentiment
Chair: S. McKay PriceLehigh [email protected]
paper 1: the impact of sec comment letters on the Quality of investor information:the case of us reits
Contact Author: Liesa SchrandUniversity of [email protected]
Julia FreyboteFlorida International [email protected]
Wolfgang SchäfersUniversity of [email protected]
paper 2: narrative information, investment and performance: evidence from reits
Contact Author: Dongshin KimPepperdine [email protected]
Dongkuk LimPepperdine [email protected]
92 ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019
SATURDAY APRIL 13, 2019paper 3: Analyzing daily real estate stock returns: A high-Frequency Application
of textual sentiment
Contact Author: Jochen HauslerUniversity of [email protected]
Johannes BraunUniversity of [email protected]
Wolfgang SchäfersUniversity of [email protected]
paper 4: the Flow of credit risk information Among reit stocks, bonds, and credit default swaps
Contact Author: Kip WomackUNC [email protected]
Ke ShangUNC [email protected]
10:15Am - 12:00pm – sAlon dsession 90: reAl estAte cycles And cApitAl FloWs
Chair: Masaki MoriUniversity of [email protected]
paper 1: detection and prediction of turning points in real estate price cycles
Contact Author: Sotiris TsolacosCity University of [email protected]
paper 2: do patterns in Foreign direct investments predict real estate capital Flows?
Contact Author: Steven P. LaposaAlvarez & [email protected]
Jim CostelloReal Capital [email protected]
paper 3: trends in real estate markets: Forces to impact the 2020s
Contact Author: Joshua A. HarrisNew York [email protected]
ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019 93
SATURDAY APRIL 13, 2019paper 4: commonalities and synchronization across u.s. office markets
Contact Author: Alexey AkimovLancaster [email protected]
Simon StevensonUniversity of [email protected]
James YoungUniversity of [email protected]
10:15Am - 12:00pm – sAlon e session 91: doctorAl seminAr Viii: reAl estAte inVestment
trusts
Co-Moderator: Christopher L. CainCollege of [email protected]
Co-Moderator: Glenn R. MuellerUniversity of [email protected]
Panelists: Paul DelaneyUniversity of [email protected]: The Comparison and Explanatory Variables of Australian Direct and IndirectProperty Performance in the Post-GFC Period
Cay OertelInternational Real Estate Business School, University of [email protected]: Volatility Targeting in REIT Markets - A Trading Strategy to Minimize Tail Risk?
Ke ShangUNC [email protected]: The Characteristics of REITs During the Financial Crisis:Evidence from the Stock and Option Markets
Dominik Erwin Georg WagnerUniversity of [email protected]: REIT Conversions at a Global Perspective – Why Do REOCs Adopt the REIT Status?
Marina KoelblInternational Real Estate Business School, University of [email protected]: MD&A Disclosure and Performance of U.S. REITs: The Information Content of Textual Tone
94 ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019
SATURDAY APRIL 13, 2019
10:15Am - 12:00pm – sAlon Jsession 92: doctorAl seminAr ix: internAtionAl
housing mArkets
Co-Moderators: Justin BenefieldAuburn [email protected]
Paloma Taltavull de La PazUniversity of [email protected]
Panelists: Emmanuel Kofi GavuTechnische Universitaet [email protected]: Rental Value Determinants and Conceptualization in Ghana: Stakeholder Perception versus Empirical Evidence
Ka-man LeungThe Univeristy of Hong [email protected]: A Supply Side Study of Sub-Divided Units in Hong Kong
Paul BidansetUlster [email protected]: Using Locally Weighted Regression with Simultaneous Spatial, Temporal andAttribute Weighting Functions to Improve Accuracy of Mass Appraisal Models
10:15Am - 12:00pm – sAlon ksession 93: doctorAl seminAr x: public policy And
reAl estAte
Co-Moderator: Karen GiblerGeorgia State [email protected]
Co-Moderator: John E. WilliamsMorehouse [email protected]
Panelists: Lewis Abedi AsanteHumboldt-Universitat zu [email protected]: The Urban Regeneration Process and Emerging Trends in Ghana: A Case of Municipal Market Projects in Cape Coast and Kumasi
ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019 95
Hanchen JiangJohns Hopkins [email protected]: Rent Regulation and Labor Market Outcomes: Evidence from New York City
Shuang LinZhejiang [email protected]: Government Size and Capital Flows Across Regions
Alfred MesekoPeoples’ Friendship University of [email protected]: Efficiency of Public Private Partnership in a Developing Country: A Case Study of Lekki-Epe High Way Project
10:15Am - 12:00pm – sAlon lsession 94: doctorAl seminAr xi: sustAinAbility
Co-Moderator: Pernille H. ChristensenUniversity of Technology [email protected]
Co-Moderator: Spenser RobinsonCentral Michigan [email protected]
Panelists: Nonso EwurumUniversity of Nigeria [email protected]: Stakeholder Management Model for Sustainable Public Housing Delivery in South East, Nigeria
Seung Kyum KimHarvard [email protected]: Valuing Adaptation: Real Estate Market Responses to Climate ChangeAdaptation Measures
Longfenf WuHarvard [email protected]: Is Public Green Space Equally Accessible by City Residents: A Case Study on Gated Residential Communities in Beijing
SATURDAY APRIL 14, 2018
96 ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019
10:15Am - 12:00pm – sAlon msession 95: educAtion trAck 9: the Future oF
reAl estAte educAtion
Chair: Elaine M. WorzalaCollege of [email protected]
paper 1: the influence of changes in the Workplace on graduate real estate education?
Contact Author: Margot WeinsteinMW Leadership Consultants [email protected]
Jesse SaginorFlorida Atlantic University [email protected]
Elaine M. WorzalaCollege of Charleston [email protected]
paper 2: real estate education in the era of market disrupters: What are the principalchallenges Facing real estate educators?
Contact Author: Eamonn D’ArcyUniversity of [email protected]
paper 3: the real estate disciplines’ introductory principles textbooks resist schumpeter and change
Contact Author: Stephen E. RoulacRoulac [email protected]
12:00 pm – pAper/pAnel sessions AdJourned
2:00 pm - 5:00 pm – post session gAthering For conFerence surViVors. You are invited to join the Pyhrrs and Alberts at their hospitality suitefor the ARES Post Session Gathering for Conference Survivors.
SATURDAY APRIL 14, 2018
ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019 97
AAcolin, Arthur .............................................................. 37Addae-Dapaah, Kwame .......................................... 25, 85Adegoke, Bolanle Felicia .............................................. 61Adegoke, Oluseyi Joshua .............................................. 61Affleck, John .......................................................... 35, 55Affuso, Ermanno .......................................................... 61Agarwal, Sumit ............................................................ 31Aha, Bismark ................................................................ 87Akalemeaku, Okwuchi Juliet ........................................ 65Akimov, Alexey .......................................... 32, 54, 83, 94Akinsomi, Omokolade ................................ 36, 57, 80, 91Alabi, Afees .................................................................. 76Alfalah, Abduallah ........................................................ 84Allen, Marcus T. .................................................... 11, 12Allen, Tim .................................................................... 58Amorin, Jim .................................................................. 59Anderson, Jackson ........................................................ 43Anderson, Randy .................................. 11, 39, 43, 73, 74Anim-Odame, Wilfred ................................ 25, 57, 60, 61Appleyard, Bruce .......................................................... 71Aroul, Ramya ................................................................ 59Asabere, Paul ................................................................ 60Asante, Lewis Abedi .................................................... 96Avery, Kelly .................................................................. 75Azasu, Samuel .............................................................. 23
BBai, Qing ...................................................................... 21Bangura, Mustapha ................................................ 10, 88Bansal, Tanya ................................................................ 79Bao, Helen .............................................................. 69, 78Barnett, William ............................................................ 64Belev, Emilian ........................................................ 33, 73Benefield, Justin .................................. 13, 32, 47, 64, 95Benites-Gambirazio, Eliza ............................................ 47Beracha, Eli ............................................................ 8, 91Bernard, James .............................................................. 35Bernard, Paul ................................................................ 59Berthold, Étienne .......................................................... 26Bian, Xun .......................................................... 41, 56, 61Bidanset, Paul ...................................... 25, 26, 62, 79, 95Bienert, Sven ................................................................ 84Biswas, Arnab .............................................................. 62Bla, Ines ........................................................................ 85Blank, Brian D. ............................................................ 64Bloom, Barry ................................................................ 24Bogosavljevic, Ksenija .................................... 30, 35, 52Bourassa, Steven .................................... 8, 36, 49, 54, 55Boyd, Lawrence William .............................................. 92Boyd, Steven Terence .................................................. 67Brassard, Alex .............................................................. 26Braun, Johannes ............................................................ 93Brenni, Precious Angelo .............................................. 25Brigden, Charles .......................................................... 48Brodmann, Jennifer ...................................................... 74Brown, Brian ................................................................ 71Buttimer, Richard .................................................... 29, 30
CCadena, Anjelita ............................................................ 50Cain, Christopher L. .............................................. 13, 94
Campbell, Carol ............................................................ 60Carstens, Riëtte ............................................................ 91Cashman, David ............................................................ 10Cashman, George .................................................... 20, 21Cavenagh, Thomas ........................................................ 27Chacon, Ryan ................................................................ 45Chang, Jongwha ............................................................ 19Chapman, James David ................................................ 16Chapman, Ryan ............................................................ 16Chava, Jyothi ................................................................ 71Chegut, Andrea ............................................................ 29Chen, Fongyao .............................................................. 66Chen, Steven Shu-Hsiu ................................................ 46Cheng, Ping .................................................................. 51Cheng, Yiying .............................................................. 26Chernobai, Ekaterina .................................................... 83Chiwuzie, Augustina ..............................................33, 84Christensen, Pernille H. ........................ 14, 18, 19, 90, 96Christopoulos, Andreas D. ............................................ 33Chung, Chi-Cheol ........................................................ 18Cifci, Eren .................................................................... 75Cinque, Giacchino H. .................................................. 38Clauretie, Terrence M. ................................................ 36Clayton, Jim .................................................................. 11Coen, Alain .................................................................. 21Colburn, Gregg ...................................................... 18, 37Cole, Bruce .................................................................. 57Cole, Rebel ............................................................ 48, 50Contat, Justin .......................................................... 37, 56Conway, KC .................................................................. 29Corelli, Angelo .............................................................. 52Costa, Odilon ................................................................11Costello, Jim ................................................................ 93Coulson, Edward .......................................................... 42Cummings, Reid .............................................. 50, 61, 82Curcio, Richard ...................................................... 10, 11Curry, Jacquelin ...................................................... 12, 31Cvijanovic, Dragana .................................................... 54Cypert, Mary ................................................................ 60
DD’Alessandro, Joe ........................................................ 45D’Arcy, Eamonn .......................... 12, 36, 45, 76, 84, 97Dabara, Daniel Ibrahim .......................................... 32, 84Dabo, Daniel I. .............................................................. 13Dahal, Ram .................................................................. 50Damianov, Damian ...................................................... 25Damma, Michiel .......................................................... 17Das, Prashant ................................................................ 85Davis, Peadar .......................................................... 26, 62Delaney, Paul ................................................................ 94de La Paz, Paloma Taltavull .... 27, 28, 56, 71, 78, 89, 95DeLisle, James R. .................................................... 6, 78DePooter, Natalya ........................................................ 90Dermisi, Sofia ............................................ 48, 49, 66, 67Derrington, Patrice ........................................................ 17Des Rosiers, François .............................................. 9, 48Devaney, Steven .................................................... 53, 54DiBartolomeo, Jeffrey .................................................. 74Diop, Moussa ................................................................ 56Djukic, Johannes .......................................................... 19Doerner, William .................................................... 18, 55Dombrow, Jonathan ...................................................... 57
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98 ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019
Dombrowski, Tomothy ................................................ 87Downs, David .............................................................. 53Du, Angela Yan ............................................................ 92Dung, Dang D.Q. .......................................................... 15
EEdelstein, Robert H. ...................................................... 69ElBurai, Mahmoud ...................................................... 31Emeghe, Ijeoma Jane .................................................... 47Engerstam, Sviatlana .............................................. 20, 88Engström, Richard ........................................................ 12Escobari, Diego A. 61Ewurum, Nonso ............................................................ 96
FFan, Ying ...................................................................... 14Fan, Zhang .................................................................... 53Fang, Lu ........................................................................ 57Fang, Yiping 91Farrelly, Kieran ............................................................ 74Feng, Wei ...................................................................... 11Feng, Yalan .................................................................. 43Feng, Zhilan .................................................................. 63Feng, Zifeng .................................................................. 20Fine, Greg .................................................................... 59Fink, Tom ...................................................................... 29Fisher, Jeffrey ........................................................ 45, 70Fisher, Tom .................................................................. 16Fitzgerald, Mark .............................................. 27, 70, 77Flått, Marte .................................................................. 82Florence, Andrew .............................................. 22, 34, 55Fout, Hamilton .......................................................... 9, 62Freybote, Julia .................................... 80, 85, 90, 91, 92Fritz, Carsten .......................................................... 84, 86Funk, David L. ...................................... 7, 13, 59, 68, 69
GGabe, Jeremy .................................. 19, 36, 56, 70, 76, 88Gabrielli, Laura ............................................................ 58Gavu, Emmanuel Kofi ............................................ 22, 95Ge, Xin Janet ................................................................ 19Geurts, Tom .................................................................. 89Giannetti, Antoine ........................................................ 10Gibbons, Charles .......................................................... 71Gibilaro, Lucia ........................................................ 16, 23Gibler, Karen .................................................. 23, 81, 95Gibson, Julie ................................................................ 77Gibson, Scott ................................................................ 14Gilkes, Kenneth ............................................................ 68Gindelsky, Marina .......................................................... 9Glaesner, Sebastian ...................................................... 76Gold, Richard B. .............................................. 33, 70, 73Goodwin, Kimberly ................................................ 52, 72Gordon, Bruce .............................................................. 62Gordon, Jason .............................................................. 51Goss, Rosemary ............................................................ 75Grala, Robert ................................................................ 50Gravatt, Denise Hunter ................................................ 35Green, Richard .............................................................. 70Grissom, Terry .............................................................. 78Grover, Gulshan Kumar ................................................ 65Grover, Himanshu ........................................................ 49Guirguis, Hany .............................................................. 11Gupta, Vishal ................................................................ 75
HHamid, Muhammad Yusaimi Abdul ............................ 45Han, Qing ................................................................ 64, 86Hanlon, Brian ................................................................ 27Hansz, Andrew J. .......................................................... 58Haran, Martin ................................................................ 77Hardin, III, William G. .......................................... 61, 91Harris, Joshua A. .............................................. 11, 39, 94Harrison, M. David ...................... 10, 20, 21, 56, 80, 87Hartuv, Dustin .............................................................. 38Hausler, Jochen ...................................................... 66, 93He, Yiming .................................................................... 16Heljo, Juhani ................................................................ 90Hembre, Erik ................................................................ 18Hendershott, Patric ...................................................... 25Heywood, Christopher .................................................. 23Highfield, Michael J. .................................. 39, 44, 64, 87Hinch, Martin ................................................................ 72Hoesli, Martin .............................................. 8, 44, 55, 80Holmes, Cynthia .......................................................... 62Hossain, Tarique .......................................................... 83Howton, Shelly ............................................................ 21Hu, Mingzhi .................................................................. 73Huang, Ying ............................................................ 79, 82Hueber, David .............................................................. 57Huerta-Sanchez, Daniel ................................................ 63Hunter, Denise Gravatt ................................................ 30
IIjasan, Kolawole .......................................................... 84Ishaya, David Ayock .................................................... 13Iwarere, Jide .................................................................. 59
JJameson, Kelly Andrea ................................................ 89Jauregui, Andres .................................................... 12, 31Jeal, Ian ........................................................................ 59Jennings, Robert .............................................. 22, 34, 55Jensen, Tyler K. ............................................................ 32Jiang, Hanchen .............................................................. 96Johnson, Ken H. .................................... 6, 30, 35, 51, 52Johnston, Christopher .................................................. 57Jones, Travis ................................................................ 10Jordan, Dean .......................................................... 15, 38Juárez, Francisco .................................................... 28, 78Just, Tobias .................................................................... 69
KKaempf-Dern, Annette .................................................. 81Kahn, Philip ............................................................ 35, 55Karras, Stath ................................................................ 77Kelly, Hugh .................................................................. 39Kercheval, Michael ...................................................... 77Khan, Rukon ................................................................ 76Khan, Walayet .............................................................. 85Khazal, Aras .................................................................. 31Khoshnoud, Mahsa ...................................................... 74Kim, Dongshin........................................................ 72, 92Kim, Jihwan .................................................................. 18Kim, Seongsu ................................................................ 52Kim, Seung Kyum ........................................................ 96Kimura, Mariko ............................................................ 23Kirk, Nancye J. ............................................................ 59Koelbl, Marina .............................................................. 95Kohlhepp, Dan ........................................................ 39, 46
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Kousky, Carolyn .......................................................... 43Krause, Andy .............................................. 34, 49, 55, 56Kryzanowski, Lawrence .............................................. 29Kunreuther, Howard .................................................... 43Kurvinen, Antti Tapio .................................................. 90Kurylchyk, Kateryna .................................................... 45Kwon, Chad ............................................................ 47, 61
LLaCour-Little, Michael .............................. 42, 43, 57, 87Lang, Bree .................................................................... 91Lang, Marcel ................................................................ 66Laposa, Steven P. ........................................................ 93Larceneux, Fabrice ........................................................ 85LaRoche, Claire ............................................................ 83Lau, Chi Keung Marco ................................................ 92Lawal, Omotoso Kabir .................................................. 33Leal, Jessica .................................................................. 28Lee, Chyi Lin .................................................................. 9Lee, Hong .................................................................... 35Lee, Jin Man ................................................................ 18Lee, Stephen .......................................................... 44, 76Lefebvre, Benoit .......................................................... 21Lefebvre, Thomas ........................................................ 72Leshinsky, Deborah ...................................................... 28Letdin, Mariya ........................................................ 43, 44Leung, Ka-man ............................................................ 95Levine, Libbi .......................................................... 27, 34Levine, Mark .................................................... 27, 34, 48Li, Herman .................................................................... 42Li, Ling ........................................................................ 78Li, Lingziao .................................................................. 36Liang, Jenhsu ................................................................66Liang, Yinyu ................................................................ 66Lim, Dongkuk .............................................................. 93Lin, Shuang ..................................................................96Lin, Zhenguo .............................................. 41, 51, 72, 73Ling, David ............................................................ 25, 44Lipscomb, Clifford A. .................................................... 9Liu, Crocker .................................................................. 15Liu, Hongyu .................................................................. 78Liu, Yingchun .................................................. 41, 51, 73Liu, Yu .......................................................................... 66Lopez, Luis .................................................................. 30Lorenz, Felix ................................................................ 86Lown, Keith .................................................................. 86Luchtenberg, Kimberly F. ............................................ 14Lundgren, Berndt ..........................................................31Lutare, Christian .......................................................... 46Lutz, Chandler .............................................................. 41
MMa, Jie .......................................................................... 92MacGregor, Bryan ........................................................ 74Magalhães, Cristiane Ramos ........................................ 67Mahanaaz, Sultana ........................................................ 31Malhotra, Jatin .............................................................. 53Malle, Richard .............................................................. 22Malm, James ................................................................ 63Malone, Thom .......................................................... 9, 10Mandel, Michael ...................................................... xiii, 7Manning, Christopher A. ................................ 24, 46, 80Martinez, Joshua .......................................................... 38Mathur, Shishir ............................................................ 91Mattarocci, Gianluca .............................................. 16, 23
Maximilian, Philipp ...................................................... 88Maynard, Norman ........................................................ 13McAllister, Patrick ............................................11, 22, 53McCollum, Meagan ................................................ 35, 43McCord, Michael .............................................. 26, 62, 77McElveen, Michael ...................................................... 71McFadden, Iolaire ........................................................ 55McGill, Gary A. ............................................................25McGrath, Karen ................................................ 17, 79, 89McGreal, Stanley .......................................................... 71McIntosh, Will ...................................................... 27, 77McKeever, Gina ............................................................ 46McLeod, Brumby .......................................................... 83Meagan McCollum ...................................................... 20Mehrotra, Anurag .......................................................... 87Melander, Julie .............................................................. 39Mercier, Guy ................................................................ 26Merlin, Louis .................................................................. 8Meseko, Alfred ...................................................... 16, 96Milcheva, Stanimira ............................ 16, 54, 75, 77, 86Mildner, Gerard ........................................................ 9, 37Miller, Norman G. ............................................ 17, 78, 90Monetti, Eliane .............................................................. 11Monllor, Paloma .......................................................... 28Mooradian, Robert ........................................................ 26Mori, Masaki .......................................................... 12, 93Mortal, Sandra .............................................................. 75Moss, Alex .............................................................. 73, 75Mothorpe, Christopher A. ................................ 50, 63, 83Moulton, Jeremy G. .................................................. 9, 49Moussetis, Robert ........................................................ 27Mueller, Andrew .................................................... 45, 86Mueller, Glenn R. ............................................ 33, 45, 94Munn, Ian ...................................................................... 51Munneke, Henry .......................................................... 57
NNase, Ilir ...................................................................... 22Neill, Helen Rosemary .............................. 14, 36, 41, 42Never, Brent .................................................................. 78Ngo, Thanh .................................................................. 63Nguyen, Van-Tuong ...................................................... 83Nichiforeanu, Alina ...................................................... 46Nippala, Eero ................................................................ 90Nothaft, Frank .............................................................. 70Nowak, Adam .............................................................. 15Ntene, Tsoanelo ............................................................ 23
OO’Neill, John ................................................................ 24Obispo, Luis .................................................................. 91Oertel, Cay .............................................................. 84, 94Ogunba, Olusegun Adebayo ........................................ 84Ogunjimi, Femi Adejare .............................................. 67Oikarinen, Elias ............................................................ 44Okorji, Utchay .............................................................. 88Okoro, Rose .................................................................. 46Oladirin, Olayiwola ...................................................... 87Oladokun, Timothy Tunde ............................................ 67Omotehinshe, Olusegun Joseph.................................... 33Ooi, Joseph ................................................ 15, 52, 53, 80Osborne, Annelise ........................................................ 29Oundee, Ozge Savascin .................................................. 9Owusu-Ansah, Anthony .......................................... 23, 60
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100 ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019
PPancak, Katherine ........................................................ 58Patel, Pratish ................................................................ 91Pattanapanchai, Maneechit .......................................... 63Pei, Peihwang .............................................................. 53Peiser, Richard .......................................................... 9, 10Pennathur, Anita K. ...................................................... 52Pennington-Cross, Anthony .................................... 35, 62Pervun, Kirill ................................................................ 23Petrolia, Daniel ............................................................ 51Philip, Dennis .............................................................. 25Piazolo, Daniel ........................................................ 34, 76Pierzak, Edward ............................................................ 68Plahovinsak, Thomas J. ................................................ 42Ploessl, Franziska ........................................................ 86Pourcelot, Alexis .......................................................... 42Price, S. McKay .................................................... 63, 92Propper, Spencer .......................................................... 43Pyhrr, Stephen A. .................................................... 7, 13
QQayyum, Arif .......................................................... 61, 85Qing, Shen, .................................................................. 67
RRadetskii, Evgenii ........................................................ 23Randon-Furling, Julien ................................................ 72Range, Dan .................................................................. 16Read, Dustin C. .............................................. 12, 42, 75Reavey, Jim ............................................................xiii, 7Record, Matthew .......................................................... 18Redlein, Alexander ...................................................... 65Renne, John Luciano ................................................ 8, 71Richards, Keith ............................................................ 85Roark, Scott .................................................................. 69Robert, Jeffrey ........................................................ 27, 47Robinson, Spenser ...................................... 19, 69, 76, 96Roddewig, Richard ...................................................... 48Rodriguez, Mauricio ................................................ 6, 70Rouhiainen, Virve ........................................................ 90Roulac, Stephen ............................................................ 97Roulac, Stephen E. .................. 13, 15, 24, 34, 46, 76, 79Ruggeri, Aurora ............................................................ 58Ruscheinsky, Jessica .................................................... 66Rzeznik, Aleksandra Anna ............................................ 41
SSacchetto, Stefano ........................................................ 32Saginor, Jesse ............................................ 17, 42, 43, 97Sah, Vivek .................................................................... 72Saiz, Albert .................................................................. 35Salazar, Ariana .............................................................. 35Salvino, Robert Francis .......................................... 38, 60Samson, Jamie .............................................................. 27San Pietro, Frank .................................................... 62, 82Sand, Ben ...................................................................... 41Sanderford, Andrew ............................ 17, 20, 37, 76, 88Sanders, Anthony .................................................... 56, 65Sanders, Nicholas J. ...................................................... 49Sanderson, Danielle ...................................................... 33Schäfers, Wolfgang ............................................ 7, 92, 93Scheick, Benjamin ........................................................ 20Schexnayder, Deidre A. .......................................... 15, 59Schnure, Calvin ............................................................ 19
Schrand, Liesa .............................................................. 92Schulz, Rainer .............................................................. 74Scofield, David ............................................................ 54Seagraves, Philip A. .............................................. 45, 89Sebastian, Steffen .................................................. 53, 84Seiler, Michael J. ............................................ 14, 65, 80Seo, Youngme ........................................................ 62, 72Shah, Neil .................................................. xii, xiii, 7, 13Shang, Ke ................................................................ 93, 94Shen, Lily........................................................................ 8Shen, Yannan ................................................................ 64Sheng, Hainan ........................................................ 10, 21Shilling, James .............................................................. 56Shultz, Steven .............................................................. 50Simon, Arnaud ............................................................ 22Simons, Robert A. .................................................. 17, 34Sing, Tien Foo ........................................................ 31, 75Singerman, Mark .......................................................... 38Singh, A.J. .................................................................... 24Sirmans, C.F. ................................................................ 63Sirmans, G. Stacy ........................................................ 44Sirmans, Stace .............................................................. 44Sklarz, Michael ............................................................ 90Smith, Brent C. ................................................ 14, 56, 66Smith, Patrick ........................................................ 15, 87Snow, Mark ............................................................ xiii, 7Söderberg, Inga-Lill...................................................... 12Soladoye, John Oyekunle ...................................... 33, 84Soleiman, Sarah ............................................................ 72Song, Inho .................................................................... 19Song, Zisheng .............................................................. 51Sønstebø, Ole Jakob ...................................................... 31Souza, Lawrence A. .......................................... 28, 38, 69Soyeh, Kenneth ................................................ 60, 63, 89Spahr, Ronald ..........................................................79, 82Spivey, Jay ............................................xiii, 7, 22, 34, 55Springer, Thomas M. .................................................... 64Sreball, Ann-Christin .................................................... 47Stanimira Milcheva ...................................................... 20Stapp, Mark .................................................................. 38Sternberg, Ernest .......................................................... 68Stevens, James .............................................................. 32Stevenson, Simon .............. 32, 38, 45, 70, 76, 82, 84, 94Stopajnik, Eva Ursula .................................................. 65Suh, Sung Won ............................................................ 54Sun, Feiyang ................................................................ 67Sun, Wei ........................................................................ 25Sunderman, Mark ................................ 25, 26, 62, 79, 82Swidler, Steve .............................................................. 30
TTaeb, Reza .................................................................... 88Tang, Jiaxin .................................................................. 28Taylor, Jessica .............................................................. 77Terschan, Lauren .......................................................... 42Thomson, Thomas ........................................................ 50Throupe, Ron .................................................. xiii, 39, 58Tidwell, Alan .......................................................... 72, 75Tinufa, Anthony Abbey ................................................ 84Tolford, Tara ................................................................ 71Tossou, Bienvenue ........................................................ 48Trübestein, Michael C. ..........................................12, 65Tsolacos, Sotiris .......................................... 21, 43, 54, 93Tu, Charles .................................................................... 66Turnbull, Geoffrey K. ............................................ 37, 52
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ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019 101
Turner, Tracy Margo .................................................... 32Tweneboah, George ......................................................84
UUcar, Erdem .................................................................. 36Unsal, Omer .................................................................. 74
Vvan de Minne, Alex ......................................................54Veld, Hans Op’t ...................................................... 74, 85Vergara-Alert, Carles .................................................... 32Vidal, Pierre .................................................................. 47Vihola, Jaakko .............................................................. 28
WWachter, Susan .............................................................. 43Wagner, Dominik Erwin Georg .............................. 53, 94Waller, Bennie D. .......................................................... 37Walter, Rebecca ............................................................ 37Wang, Bing ................................................ 24, 49, 69, 83Wang, Chongyu ............................................................ 44Warren-Myers, Georgia ................................................ 19Warsame, Abukar .......................................................... 20Weeks, H. Shelton ................................................ 12, 58Weinstein, Margot .................................................. 15, 97Wentland, Scott A. .............................................. 9, 48, 49Werkeiser, Cory ............................................................ 15White, Michael ............................................................ 86Whittington, Jan ............................................................ 67Wilhelmsson, Mats ................................................ 20, 51Wilkinson, Jamie ..........................................................85Williams, John E. ............................................ 58, 59, 95Willwersch, Jonas ........................................................ 46Winkler, Daniel ............................................................ 62Winson-Geideman, Kimberly .................... 17, 23, 50, 75Wofford, Larry ...................................................... xiii, 37Woltering, René-Ojas .................................................... 53Womack, Kip ................................................................ 93Wood, Michele .............................................................. 58
Worzala, Elaine M. .................................... 15, 37, 70, 97Wright, Jesse T. ............................................................58Wright, Theddi ........................................................ xiii, 7Wu, Longfenf ................................................................ 96Wu, Shuping ................................................................ 82Wu, Yanting ............................................................ 29, 30Wu, Yi .............................................................. 54, 72, 73Wyman, David .................................................. 47, 50, 83
XXia, Liying .................................................................... 88Xie, Jia .................................................................... 30, 73
YYang, Changyu .............................................................. 86Yang, Shiawee .............................................................. 26Yang, Zan .......................................................... 14, 51, 82Yao, Yuxi ...................................................................... 88Yerkes, Rustin T. .......................................................... 64Yoo, Jaeyong ................................................................ 52York, Rebecca .............................................................. 79Young, James ...................................... 14, 68, 82, 91, 94Yu, Peiyong .................................................................. 90Yunus, Nafeesa ............................................................ 22
ZZahirovic-Herbert, Velma .............. 14, 27, 47, 51, 52, 82Zamora, Mike ........................................................ 59, 81Zang, Chenchao ...................................................... 27, 77Zekri, Mohammad Muzzammil .................................... 46Zhang, Jianbo ................................................................ 64Zhang, Kay .................................................................. 58Zhao, Yuan .................................................................... 74Zheng, Chen ............................................................ 56, 87Zheng, Minrong ............................................................ 19Zhou, Tingyu ................................................................44Zhu, Enwei .................................................................... 78Zhu, Lu ........................................................................ 21
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102 ARES Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting • Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix), AZ • April 9-13, 2019
Each of the following manuscript prizes will be awarded for the best paper presented on the topic noted belowat the American Real Estate Society 35th Annual Meeting, April 9 – April 13, 2019 in Paradise Valley, Arizona.All are $1,000 prizes except where specifically indicated below as now 8 of the following 22 manuscriptprizes are for $1,500 (3 prizes), $2,000 (1 prize) and $2,500 (4 prizes).
Ò Apartments, sponsored by National Multifamily Housing Council (NMHC)
Ò Corporate Real Estate, sponsored by CoreNet Global (New manuscript prize category since 2018)
Ò CoStar Data, $2,500 sponsored by the CoStar Group for a paper on any topic using CoStar data
Ò Housing, $2,500 sponsored by the Lucas Institute for Real Estate Development and Finance at FloridaGulf Coast University
Ò Industrial Real Estate, sponsored by the NAIOP Research Foundation
Ò Innovative Thinking “Thinking Out of the Box” (any topic), $2,500 sponsored by Greenfield Advisors,Inc.
Ò Marc Louargand Best Research Paper by a Practicing Professional (any category), $1,500 sponsoredby the James R. Webb ARES Foundation. Qualification for this award requires that 50% or more of theauthors be industry professionals and not hold full time academic appointments.
Ò Mixed Use Properties, sponsored by the NAIOP Research Foundation
Ò Office Buildings/Office Parks, sponsored by the NAIOP Research Foundation
Ò Property/Asset Management, $1,500 sponsored by the Institute of Real Estate Management (IREM®)
Ò Real Estate Brokerage/Agency, $2,500 sponsored by the National Association of Realtors (NAR®)
Ò Real Estate Cycles, $2,000 sponsored by Pyhrr/Born Trust for Real Estate Cycle Research
Ò Real Estate Education, sponsored by Dearborn Real Estate Education
Ò Real Estate Finance, sponsored by Real Capital Analytics (RCA)
Ò Real Estate Investment, $1,500 sponsored by the CCIM Institute
Ò Real Estate Investment Trusts, sponsored by the National Association of Real Estate Investment Trusts(NAREIT)
Ò Real Estate Market Analysis, sponsored by the Rawls College of Business, Texas Tech University
Ò Real Estate Portfolio Management, sponsored by the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS)
Ò Real Estate Valuation, sponsored by the Appraisal Institute (AI)
Ò Seniors Housing, sponsored by the National Investment Center for Seniors Housing and Care (NIC)
Ò Spacial Analytics/GIS Applications, sponsored by the Grant Center for Real Estate and Economics atCostal Carolina University
Ò Sustainable Real Estate, sponsored by the NAIOP Research Foundation
After the ARES meeting, but no later than June 1, 2019, authors interested in having their paper consideredfor any of these manuscript prizes should submit an electronic copy of their paper to the portal onaresnet.org. The portal will close on the June 1st deadline. Papers may be considered for up to two prizes, butmay win only one prize.
Winners are strongly encouraged to submit their papers to an ARES journal, as prize sponsors are ARESmembers and significant financial supporters of our journals. However, if a paper’s authorship chooses to submitto a non-ARES journal, winners must acknowledge receipt of the prize and the sponsor of the prize in a cover pagefootnote or acknowledgement section of the paper and notify the ARES Director of Publications as to its election.
Win a $1,000 - $2,500 Manuscript Prizeat the AMERICAN REAL ESTATE SOCIETY MEETING
Paradise Valley (Scottsdale/Phoenix) • April 9 - April 13, 2019
TO OUR VERY SPECIAL DONORS AND FINANCIAL SUPPORTERS OF OUR ANNUAL MEETING IN PARADISE VALLEY (SCOTTSDALE/PHOENIX), ARIZONA
The ARES Officers and Board of Directors want to take this opportunity to enthusiastically thankthe following organizations for their very special financial support of our 35th Annual Meeting atthe JW Marriott Camelback Inn, Paradise Valley, Arizona, April 9-13, 2019:
CoStar Group/PPR – For their exclusive sponsorship of the Friday evening, April 12, 2019 ARES 35thAnnual Gala Celebration and for their co-sponsorship of the Thursday, April 11, 2019 Awards Luncheon.Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS) – For their co-sponsorship of the Wednesday, April10, 2019 Welcome Reception and of the Thursday evening, April 11, 2019 ARES Presidential Reception.Appraisal Institute (AI) – For their co-sponsorship of the Wednesday, April 10, 2019 WelcomeReception and of the Thursday evening, April 11, 2019 ARES Presidential Reception.CCIM Institute – For their co-sponsorship of the Wednesday, April 10, 2019 Welcome Reception andof the Thursday evening, April 11, 2019 ARES Presidential Reception.Real Capital Analytics (RCA) – For their co-sponsorship of the Wednesday, April 10, 2019 WelcomeReception and Thursday evening, April 11, 2019 ARES Presidential Reception.Appraisal Institute (AI), Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS), CoStar Group,REALTOR University/National Association of Realtors (NAR), Real Capital Analytics, USAA RealEstate Company, CCIM Institute, Counselors of Real Estate, The Mueller Cycle & SustainabilityFund, and SynerMark Properties, Inc. in conjunction with the American Real Estate Society(ARES) - For their co-sponsorship of the Wednesday, April 10, 2019 “Critical Issues” Seminar:Technology (InfoTech, FinTech, and PropTech) The Future of Real Estate.National Investment Center for Seniors Housing & Care (NIC) - For their sponsorship of theWednesday morning, April 10, 2019 Board of Directors / Leadership Breakfast Meeting.Morehouse College - For their co-sponsorship of the Thursday, April 11, 2019 Awards Luncheon.James R. Webb ARES Foundation – For their sponsorship of the ARES Foundation Doctoral StudentRecognition Luncheon on Friday, April 12, 2019; their sponsorship of the 2019 Doctoral SeminarPresentations on Saturday, April 13, 2019; and travel grants to 45 doctoral candidates representinguniversities throughout the world. Building Owners and Managers Association (BOMA International) - For their co-sponsorship of theTuesday evening, April 9, 2019 Board of Directors Reception. The University of Arizona, School of Landscape Architecture and Planning – For their co-sponsor-ship of the Tuesday evening, April 9, 2019 Board of Directors Reception. Strome College of Business – Old Dominion University – For their sponsorship of the FLARES SocialHour.Texas A & M University – Commerce - For their co-sponsorship of the FLARES Social Hour.Institute of Real Estate Management (IREM) - For their co-sponsorship of the Thursday, April 11,2019 ARES C-WI(RE)2 Caucus and Breakfast.National Apartment Association Education Institute – For their co-sponsorship of the Thursday, April 11, 2019 ARES C-WI(RE)2 Caucus and Breakfast.Colvin Instituteof Real Estate Development, University of Maryland – For their co-sponsorship ofthe Thursday, April 11, 2019 ARES C-WI(RE)2 Caucus and Breakfast.CoreNet Global– For their co-sponsorship of the Thursday, April 11, 2019 ARES C-WI(RE)2 Caucusand Breakfast.