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Real Estate Study by Professor Chris Mayer Captures National Interest

A recent study confronts misperceptions about the underlying drivers behind the decade-old real estate boom and refutes conventional wisdom saying there is a housing bubble.

Based on Research by
Christopher Mayer, Todd Sinai
Published
July 26, 2006
Publication
CBS Newsroom
Focus On
Real Estate
Jump to main content
Classroom. Photo Credit: Frank Oudeman.
Category
General Release
News Type(s)
Real Estate News
Topic(s)
Milstein Center News

About the Researcher(s)

Christopher Mayer

Christopher Mayer

Paul Milstein Professor Emeritus of Real Estate
Finance Division

View the Research

Assessing High House Prices: Bubbles, Fundamentals, and Misperceptions

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A recent study confronts misperceptions about the underlying drivers behind the decade-old real estate boom and refutes conventional wisdom saying there is a housing bubble. Christopher Mayer, the Paul Milstein Professor of Real Estate; Charles Himmelberg of the Federal Reserve; and Todd Sinai from Wharton looked at 46 single-family housing markets from 1980 to 2004 and found that recent growth in house prices does not reflect a real estate bubble.

The study, “Assessing High House Prices: Bubbles, Fundamentals and Misperceptions,” finds that the run-up in housing prices is largely explained by such basic economic fundamentals as low interest rates, strong income growth among high-income Americans, and unusually low housing prices in the mid-1990s.

Prof. Mayer and his coauthors captured national attention with the work, penning an op-ed for the Wall Street Journal, appearing on national programs including CNBC and Bloomberg Television, and garnering mention in newspapers across the country.

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Christopher Mayer

Christopher Mayer

Paul Milstein Professor Emeritus of Real Estate
Finance Division

About the Researcher(s)

Christopher Mayer

Christopher Mayer

Paul Milstein Professor Emeritus of Real Estate
Finance Division

View the Research

Assessing High House Prices: Bubbles, Fundamentals, and Misperceptions

To learn more about the cutting-edge research being conducted, please visit the Columbia Business School Research website.

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