Improved Methods for Predicting Property Prices in Hazard Prone Dynamic Markets
Koen Koning (),
Tatiana Filatova and
Okmyung Bin ()
Additional contact information
Koen Koning: University of Twente
Okmyung Bin: East Carolina University
Environmental & Resource Economics, 2018, vol. 69, issue 2, No 2, 247-263
Abstract:
Abstract Property prices are affected by changing market conditions, incomes and preferences of people. Price trends in natural hazard zones may shift significantly and abruptly after a disaster signalling structural systemic changes in property markets. It challenges accurate market assessments of property prices and capital at risk after major disasters. A rigorous prediction of property prices in this case should ideally be done based only on the most recent sales, which are likely to form a rather small dataset. Hedonic analysis has been long used to understand how various factors contribute to the housing price formation. Yet, the robustness of its assessment is undermined when the analysis needs to be performed on relatively small samples. The purpose of this study is to suggest a model that can be widely applicable and quickly calibrated in a changing environment. We systematically study four statistical models: starting from a typical standard hedonic function and gradually changing its functional specification by reducing the hedonic analysis to some basic property characteristics and applying kriging to control for neighbourhood effects. Across different sample sizes we find that the latter performs consistently better in the out-of-sample predictions than other traditional price prediction methods. We present the specific improvements to the traditional spatial hedonic model that enhance the model’s prediction accuracy. The improved model can be used to monitor price changes in risk-prone areas, accounting for changes in flood risk and at the same time controlling for autonomous market responses to flood risk.
Keywords: Hedonic analysis; Price prediction; Flood risk; Natural hazards; Kriging; Climate change; Small sample; Out-of-sample prediction (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2018
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (5)
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DOI: 10.1007/s10640-016-0076-5
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