The Impact of Auctions on Residential Sale Prices : Australian Evidence

This study re-examines the variation in selling prices between the auction and private treaty method of sales.Using sales data from five major Australian capital cities over a four year period, we estimate a hedonic pricingmodel. Results indicate that for house sales, auctions lead to greater sellin...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Alex Frino, Andrew Lepone, Vito Mollica, Anthony Vassallo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Wollongong 2010-09-01
Series:Australasian Accounting, Business and Finance Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ro.uow.edu.au/aabfj/vol4/iss3/2
Description
Summary:This study re-examines the variation in selling prices between the auction and private treaty method of sales.Using sales data from five major Australian capital cities over a four year period, we estimate a hedonic pricingmodel. Results indicate that for house sales, auctions lead to greater selling prices across all cities examined.However, results for unit sales reveal that this auction premium is only evident in two cities where auctionsare less prevalent. Further analysis reveals that self-selection (where a particular method of sale is selected tomaximise the selling price) is evident across the sample. After controlling for this self-selection bias using atwo-stage model, houses sold via auction generally command a higher price. This suggests that the auctionmethod of selling provides a price premium over the private treaty method of sale.
ISSN:1834-2000
1834-2019