Why is Intermediating Houses so Difficult? Evidence from iBuyers
Abstract/Contents
- Abstract
- We study the frictions in dealer-intermediation in residential real estate through the lens of “iBuyers,” technology entrants, who purchase and sell residential real estate through online platforms. iBuyers supply liquidity to households by allowing them to avoid a lengthy sale process. They sell houses quickly and earn a 5% spread. Their prices are well explained by a simple hedonic model, consistent with their use of algorithmic pricing. iBuyers choose to intermediate in markets that are liquid and in which automated valuation models have low pricing error. These facts suggest that iBuyers’ speedy offers come at the cost of information loss concerning house attributes that are difficult to capture in an algorithm, resulting in adverse selection. We calibrate a dynamic structural search model with adverse selection to understand the economic forces underlying the tradeoffs of dealer intermediation in this market. The model reveals the central tradeoff to intermediating in residential real estate. To provide valuable liquidity service, transactions must be closed quickly. Yet, the intermediary must also be able to price houses precisely to avoid adverse selection, which is difficult to accomplish quickly. Low underlying liquidity exacerbates adverse selection. Our analysis suggests that iBuyers’ technology provides a middle ground: they can transact quickly limiting information loss. Even with this technology, intermediation is only profitable in the most liquid and easy to value houses. Therefore, iBuyers’ technology allows them to supply liquidity, but only in pockets where it is least valuable. We also find limited scope for dealer intermediation even with improved pricing technology, suggesting that underlying liquidity will be an impediment for intermediation in the future.
Description
Type of resource | text |
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Date created | September 10, 2021 |
Creators/Contributors
Author | Buchak, Greg |
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Author | Matvos, Gregor |
Author | Piskorski, Tomasz |
Author | Seru, Amit |
Organizer of meeting | Diamond, Rebecca |
Organizer of meeting | van Dijk, Winnie |
Organizer of meeting | Schneider, Martin |
Organizer of meeting | Tsivanidis, Nick |
Subjects
Subject | fintech |
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Subject | proptech |
Subject | iBuyers |
Subject | real estate market |
Subject | housing |
Subject | liquidity |
Genre | Text |
Genre | Working paper |
Genre | Grey literature |
Bibliographic information
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- User agrees that, where applicable, content will not be used to identify or to otherwise infringe the privacy or confidentiality rights of individuals. Content distributed via the Stanford Digital Repository may be subject to additional license and use restrictions applied by the depositor.
- License
- This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (CC BY).
Preferred citation
- Preferred citation
- Buchak, G., Matvos, G., Piskorski, T., and Seru, A. (2022). Why is Intermediating Houses so Difficult? Evidence from iBuyers. Stanford Digital Repository. Available at https://purl.stanford.edu/yx070gh5719
Collection
SITE Conference 2021
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