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Exploitation, Expropriation and Capital Assets: The Economics of Commercial Real Estate Leases

Exploitation, Expropriation and Capital Assets: The Economics of Commercial Real Estate Leases This study reviews commercial real estate leases as one transaction form to finance corporate capital assets. Credit risk is common to leases and debt as substitute transactions; but the two credit forms generate different transaction costs and agency conflicts, and thus differential pricing. Causal relationships resulting in explicit options in leases reflect complex agency considerations, which complicate the application of current option pricing principles to value the options. In general, it seems as if lease pricing phenomena are poorly researched. This article aims to identify where more narrowly demarcated research could assist in unraveling lease pricing behavior. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Journal of Real Estate Literature Taylor & Francis

Exploitation, Expropriation and Capital Assets: The Economics of Commercial Real Estate Leases

Exploitation, Expropriation and Capital Assets: The Economics of Commercial Real Estate Leases

Journal of Real Estate Literature , Volume 11 (1): 34 – Jan 1, 2003

Abstract

This study reviews commercial real estate leases as one transaction form to finance corporate capital assets. Credit risk is common to leases and debt as substitute transactions; but the two credit forms generate different transaction costs and agency conflicts, and thus differential pricing. Causal relationships resulting in explicit options in leases reflect complex agency considerations, which complicate the application of current option pricing principles to value the options. In general, it seems as if lease pricing phenomena are poorly researched. This article aims to identify where more narrowly demarcated research could assist in unraveling lease pricing behavior.

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References (6)

Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Copyright
© 2003 American Real Estate Society
ISSN
1573-8809
DOI
10.1080/10835547.2003.12090116
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

This study reviews commercial real estate leases as one transaction form to finance corporate capital assets. Credit risk is common to leases and debt as substitute transactions; but the two credit forms generate different transaction costs and agency conflicts, and thus differential pricing. Causal relationships resulting in explicit options in leases reflect complex agency considerations, which complicate the application of current option pricing principles to value the options. In general, it seems as if lease pricing phenomena are poorly researched. This article aims to identify where more narrowly demarcated research could assist in unraveling lease pricing behavior.

Journal

Journal of Real Estate LiteratureTaylor & Francis

Published: Jan 1, 2003

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