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Volume 32, Number 2, 2010

Sale Leaseback Transactions: Price Premiums and Market Efficiency
 

C.F. Sirmans
Florida State University
PO Box 3261110
Tallahassee, Florida 32306-1110
Email: cfsirmans@cob.fsu.edu

Barrett A. Slade
Brigham Young University
692 TNRB
Provo, Utah 84602
Email: bslade@byu.edu

Abstract:

Sale-leaseback transactions are ubiquitous in real estate markets in the United States with annual volume estimated to be greater than $7 billion. However, there is no evidence concerning the price impact of such transactional arrangements. Using a data set of sale-leaseback transactions, this study examines the price impact on commercial property transactions across seven markets. The findings reveal that transactions structured as saleleasebacks occur at significantly higher prices than market transactions. In addition, after accounting for income differentials, buyers and sellers are appropriately pricing the transactions resulting in no undue advantage to either party, that is, the expected price premium is accounted for in the saleleaseback prices.


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