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Chapter 6: Market research

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Title: Chapter 6: Market research


1
Chapter 6 Market research
  • Real Estate Principles A Value Approach
  • Ling and Archer

2
Outline
  • The structure of market research
  • A case

3
Top-down
  • The major approach for real estate market
    research is basically a top-down one.
  • That is, one needs to first understand
    macro-level conditions, and then study
    micro-level ones. The reason is that without
    choosing a right horse, even the greatest jockey
    cannot win the race.
  • Macro-level analyses in real estate consist of
    two sets of studies (1) urban economics, and (2)
    market segmentation.

4
Urban economics
  • We learned from the previous chapter that RE is
    about location, location, and location.
  • The value of RE depends on its linkages to
    office, school, shopping, etc.

5
Market segmentation
  • Understand the preferences or needs of market
    subgroups, i.e., market segmentation.
  • In the field of marketing, this is known as
    target market.
  • The main concept is that if you develop a luxury,
    high-scale subdivision, the size of the market
    for affordable housing is simply irrelevant to
    your development.

6
Toll Brothers goes condo
  • Toll Brothers Inc. is known for building upscale
    suburban homes.
  • It sees growth in city living because of the
    increasing cost of traveling and life-style
    shift.
  • The target market young professional buyers and
    aging baby boomers.
  • It is going to build its first Washington-area
    condo 7-story, 60 luxury condo units.
  • Condo sales increased 30 in 2012 with prices of
    new units climbing 3.7.
  • WSJ, 01/16/2013.

7
Relevant data?
  • Market segmentation makes RE research difficult.
  • Most RE data are not geared to a specific target
    market they tend to cover all segments.
  • For your research tasks, effective market
    research is largely a matter of excluding the
    irrelevant.

8
Product-level analysis
  • Micro-level analyses are about property
    themselves.
  • Do the land use density, anchor tenant, the size
    of dwelling, the mix of rooms, quality of
    construction, and public facilities seem to be
    attractive to our targeted households?
  • Question whether we have the right product
    (design).

9
Case Elysian Forest
  • In a small college community, University City, a
    large national developer introduced the first
    planned unit development (PUD), Elysian Forest.
  • This PUD had 900 units.
  • These units were mostly some blend of attached
    single family and townhouses.
  • The lots averaged less than half of the size of a
    typical single family size lots prevailing for
    University City at the time.

10
Urban economics
  • University City was a small college town with
    small changes in the size of population and in
    urban linkages.
  • The estimated sales ( of houses) in the
    University City housing market for the next 5
    years were 1500, 1500, 1550, 1600, and 1700,
    respectively.

11
Market segmentation
  • The units were relatively high end the
    lowest-priced unit is higher than 70 of the
    house prices transacted in the University City
    market.
  • Since these units are relatively small, the
    primary market segment was an upper income range
    (70th-92nd income percentile) that are not
    traditional full-nest families, i.e., families
    with husband, wife, and children at home.

12
Typical Elysian Forest home pair
13
Competitive norm from local homes
14
Estimating the target market
  • From U.S. Census, University City had 48,084
    households.
  • There were 10,121 households in the 70th-92nd
    income range.
  • There were 3,479 households in this income range
    that were traditional families.
  • The target market had a size of 6,642
    (10121-3479) households.
  • The market share of the target market was 13.81
    (6642/48084).

15
Capture rate
  • In a normal community where there is competition
    among developers, builders, and sellers of
    existing homes, a single project rarely can
    capture more than a small percentage of a given
    market segment.
  • Let us assume a capture rate of 20, which
    normally would be optimistic.

16
Forecast of sales
17
The results
  • The resulting forecast of sales was so low that
    the analysis could stop at this point, and the
    project should be abandoned.
  • The firm went on to build the first 20
    speculative units, but never sold any.
  • Firm went into bankruptcy.
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