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Hi All,
Any Realtors on the line here? If I were to get the properties that sold in a neighborhood, i.e., sold price, square footage, bedrooms, full baths, half baths, pool, screened lanai, water view, garage bays, etc., could a regression analysis tell me what an extra half bath is worth, or a pool, or any of the other variables I just listed? What considerations should I be looking out for? Thanks, Casey Wilkening www.nwtampa.com |
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I'm not a realtor but given the old saw that location, location, location is
the most important factor in pricing I'd bet that you have to factor that into any statistical model. Try your regression and then see how well it actually predicts prices by looking at residuals by location and other factors. You might run into some serious multi-collinearity problems--its highly unlikely that you'd find a house with one bathroom and a swimming pool. I'd personally try a more classical CART model. I also think that googling this topic might be helpful. -----Original Message----- From: SPSSX(r) Discussion [mailto:[hidden email]] On Behalf Of Kurt Wilkening Sent: Thursday, August 23, 2007 6:07 PM To: [hidden email] Subject: Regression For Real Estate Market Analysis Hi All, Any Realtors on the line here? If I were to get the properties that sold in a neighborhood, i.e., sold price, square footage, bedrooms, full baths, half baths, pool, screened lanai, water view, garage bays, etc., could a regression analysis tell me what an extra half bath is worth, or a pool, or any of the other variables I just listed? What considerations should I be looking out for? Thanks, Casey Wilkening www.nwtampa.com |
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In reply to this post by Kurt Wilkening
What you may want is to research the literature dealing with hedonic
estimation. You will find examples dealing with this type of situation. I am thinking that price per square footage could be a function of your predictors. Some of those predictors could be entered as binary variables to represent the extra amenities found in the properties. They could actually have an effect on the intercept and represent the additional price increase. Or they could also be entered as interaction effects with the continuous variables. F. Ornelas -----Original Message----- From: SPSSX(r) Discussion [mailto:[hidden email]] On Behalf Of Kurt Wilkening Sent: Thursday, August 23, 2007 5:07 PM To: [hidden email] Subject: Regression For Real Estate Market Analysis Hi All, Any Realtors on the line here? If I were to get the properties that sold in a neighborhood, i.e., sold price, square footage, bedrooms, full baths, half baths, pool, screened lanai, water view, garage bays, etc., could a regression analysis tell me what an extra half bath is worth, or a pool, or any of the other variables I just listed? What considerations should I be looking out for? Thanks, Casey Wilkening www.nwtampa.com NOTICE: This e-mail (and any attachments) may contain PRIVILEGED OR CONFIDENTIAL information and is intended only for the use of the specific individual(s) to whom it is addressed. It may contain information that is privileged and confidential under state and federal law. This information may be used or disclosed only in accordance with law, and you may be subject to penalties under law for improper use or further disclosure of the information in this e-mail and its attachments. If you have received this e-mail in error, please immediately notify the person named above by reply e-mail, and then delete the original e-mail. Thank you. |
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In reply to this post by Kurt Wilkening
Yes-- this is standard practice for municipal property assessment--
google "Municipal Property Assessment Corporation" for a CDN government site. You will need a large dataset of valid sales across a number of neighbourhoods (the # of sales should be in the thousands to ensure enough cases for the many property characteristics). You will need area of lot area of improvements quality of construction age of improvements neighbourhood indicator variables for property features (type of garage, type of lot, type of heating, fireplace...) indicator variables for the location-- corner lot, school, green space, frontage From experience-- lot size and quality-adjusted area will get you 80% of the variability. The assessment of an individual property is tested by the sales comparison method-- review of 4 comparable properties that were recently sold The assessment to sale ratio (ASR) is a primary measure of the quality of the regression, and SPSS has added a number of ratio testing statistics to support this. --jim -----Original Message----- From: SPSSX(r) Discussion [mailto:[hidden email]] On Behalf Of Kurt Wilkening Sent: Thursday, August 23, 2007 7:07 PM To: [hidden email] Subject: Regression For Real Estate Market Analysis Hi All, Any Realtors on the line here? If I were to get the properties that sold in a neighborhood, i.e., sold price, square footage, bedrooms, full baths, half baths, pool, screened lanai, water view, garage bays, etc., could a regression analysis tell me what an extra half bath is worth, or a pool, or any of the other variables I just listed? What considerations should I be looking out for? Thanks, Casey Wilkening www.nwtampa.com |
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