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Volume 31, Number 1, 2009 of the Journal of Real Estate Research

An Empirical Test of a Contingent Claims Lease Valuation Model

Richard Stanton

Haas School of Business
University of California, Berkeley
Berkeley, California 94720-5404

 
Nancy Wallace

Haas School of Business
University of California, Berkeley
Berkeley, California 94720-5404
Email: wallace@haas.berkeley.edu

Abstract:

Despite the importance of leases in the US economy, and the existence of several theoretical
lease pricing models, there has been little systematic attempt to estimate these models.
This paper proposes a simple no-arbitrage based lease pricing model, and estimates it using a
large proprietary data set of leases on several property types. We also define a new measure,
the Option-Adjusted Lease Spread, or OALS (analogous to an option’s implied volatility,
or a mortgage-backed security’s Option-Adjusted Spread), that allows us to compare leases
with different maturities and contract terms on a consistent basis. We find sizeable pricing
errors that cannot be explained using interest rates, lease maturity, or information on the
options embedded in the contracts. This suggests either that there are significant mispricings
in the market for real estate leases, or that lease terms depend heavily on unobservable,
property-specific characteristics.


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