Agency Choice and Financial Consequences: Evidence from the Sydney Housing Market
- Publisher:
- Taylor and Francis Group
- Publication Type:
- Journal Article
- Citation:
- Journal of Real Estate Research, The, 2024, ahead-of-print, (ahead-of-print)
- Issue Date:
- 2024
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Filename | Description | Size | |||
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Agency Choice and Financial Consequences Evidence from the Sydney Housing Market.pdf | Accepted version | 597.18 kB |
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This paper studies the seller’s agency choice and the financial consequences of this decision. Specifically, at sale, sellers can choose to use either the same agency they originally purchased the house from, or a different agency. Since the same agency sold the property before, it has an informational advantage by knowing the property and principal. Using housing market transaction data in Sydney, the largest capital city in Australia, we show that sellers make their agency choice based on past purchase experience, non-salient features of the property, and the current market shares of the agency. Furthermore, our analysis of pair sale transactions reveals that using the same agency results in a 1.1–1.4% return discount compared to using a different agency. The findings support agency theory, which suggests that using the same agency may not be financially beneficial for the principals due to its informational advantage.
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