Median Price Indices
Overview
The
median price series forms an index of price levels in the residential
real estate market by tracking the median price of transacted properties
in a given time period. It is relatively straightforward to implement
and is inclusive of all sales. It can be calculated for any period
and region in which at least one sale has occurred.
However, the median price series is subject to severe “compositional
bias.” Compositional bias refers to movements in an index
that are the result of changes in the average quality of homes sold
in a given period rather than movements in the true underlying index.
That is, movements in the median price series may simply reflect
the quality (and hence, prices) of houses sold at a point in time,
rather than actual price movements in the total housing stock.
Stratification is a technique for creating more homogenous subsets
from a highly heterogeneous total population. Additionally, stratified
indices are able to reflect divergences in the patterns of price
movements for different types of properties.
Stratification involves constructing separate median price series
for each subset – or “stratum” – of the
data set and then aggregating up. Strata are typically defined by
existing housing submarkets, such as property type and location.
The ability of stratified series to control quality without the
use of complex statistical analysis is a major advantage of this
method.
Education / Methodology
The median price series is constructed by taking the median price
of all property transactions in a given area and time period. That
is, if all sales in a given area and time period were sorted by
their price, the middle sale price in each period forms the median
price series. This measure is different to the average sales price
in that average prices consider the values of all sales, whereas
median prices consider all sales but are not affected by extremely
high or low values (Mark and Goldberg, 1984).
The median price series is a straightforward measure of general
price movements, but is affected by the quality of properties that
sell between periods. One method for overcoming this is stratification
(Rossini, 2002). For residential units, a stratified index which
groups suburbs based on their long term median sales price is used,
following the methodology outlined by Prasad and Richards (2007).
Specifically, the long term median price (i.e. the median sales
price achieved over a number of years) for every suburb is obtained.
Suburbs are then ranked by this median price, and are assigned to
strata by their rank. For each stratum, a separate median price
series is calculated, as already described, An average of price
levels at each time period is then estimated to form the stratified
price series.
For residential houses a similar stratified model is used, but
suburbs are grouped by their long term median “price-of-land.”
That is, an estimate of land-value is obtained as sale price divided
by land-size. This is then used to form the long-term price-of-land
for each suburb, from which strata are created.
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