R. Kelley Pace

Professor Louisiana State University

  • Baton Rouge LA

Dr. Pace's research interests center around the development of spatial statistical and spatiotemporal statistical techniques.

Contact

Louisiana State University

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Areas of Expertise

Real Estate Economics
Spatial Economics
Market Analysis
Real Estate
Commercial Property

Research Focus

Real Estate Economics & Spatial Econometrics

Dr. Pace’s research focuses on real-estate economics and finance, emphasizing spatial econometrics. He applies advanced spatial models to analyze housing prices, sales, mortgage performance, and commercial-property valuation, delivering data-driven insights that refine market analysis and guide investment and policy decisions.

Spotlight

2 min

Largest Cohort in LSU History: Six Distinguished Faculty Members Named Boyd Professors

Named in honor of brothers Thomas and David Boyd, early presidents and faculty members of LSU, the Boyd Professorship recognizes faculty who bring honor and prestige to LSU through their national and, as appropriate, international recognition for outstanding achievements. Before today, only 79 faculty members from all of LSU’s campuses have ever achieved this distinguished rank. The newest cohort of Boyd Professors represent a wide variety of disciplines and hail from three of LSU’s eight campuses: LSU A&M, Pennington Biomedical Research Center, and LSU Shreveport. This group includes LSU Shreveport’s first-ever Boyd Professor, a landmark achievement for the campus and a testament to its academic distinction. As the largest group of Boyd Professors ever named at one time, this cohort underscores LSU’s rising reputation for research excellence across all of its campuses. “This is a moment of real pride for LSU. Naming six new Boyd Professors is not only historic in scale, it's a clear reflection of the extraordinary strength and momentum of our academic enterprise,” said Interim LSU President Matt Lee. “These scholars are advancing knowledge in ways that reach far beyond our campuses, and their work is helping to define LSU’s place on the national and global stage. I am especially proud to see LSU Shreveport represented for the first time, a milestone that reflects the growing excellence across our campuses. This achievement is a powerful reminder of our commitment to advancing scholarship and shaping the future through research, education, and service.” The newest Boyd Professors are: Mette Gaarde, Les and Dot Broussard Alumni Professor, Department of Physics and Astronomy, College of Science, LSU A&M John Maxwell Hamilton, Hopkins P. Breazeale LSU Foundation Professor, Manship School of Mass Communication, LSU A&M Steven Heymsfield, Professor of Metabolism and Body Composition, Pennington Biomedical Research Center Michael Khonsari, Dow Chemical Endowed Chair and Professor, Department of Mechanical Engineering, College of Engineering, LSU A&M Alexander Mikaberidze, Professor of History, Ruth Herring Noel Endowed Chair, College of Arts & Sciences, LSU Shreveport R. Kelley Pace, Professor, Department of Finance, E. J. Ourso College of Business, LSU A&M Nominations for the Boyd Professorship are initiated in the college, routed for review and support at the campus level, then considered by the LSU Boyd Professorship Review Committee, which seeks confidential evaluations from dozens of distinguished scholars in the candidate’s field of expertise. Once endorsed by the review committee, the nomination is forwarded to the LSU President and Board of Supervisors for consideration. With this distinction, a Boyd Professor’s compensation is elevated to reflect the stature of LSU’s most distinguished faculty, with a salary set at no less than the 95th percentile of full professors in comparable disciplines at peer public institutions across the southeastern United States. They also receive an annual stipend to further support their research and scholarly pursuits. Please join us in congratulating these faculty on this outstanding accomplishment.

R. Kelley Pace

Education

University of Georgia

Ph.D.

Real Estate

1985

College of Idaho

B.A.

Finance

1979

Media Appearances

How will businesses reopen after coronavirus restrictions? Post-Katrina era offers clues

NOLA  online

2020-05-02

This does not bode well for working-class areas following COVID-19. “Like Katrina, businesses with poorer clientele will be hit harder,” Pace, a member of that study group and a professor of finance at LSU and director of its Real Estate Research Institute, predicted. Nor does it bode well for enterprises operating on the edge. “To the degree that disasters effectively fast-forward trends, many firms that were declining prior to the current crisis or had older ownership may choose not to reopen,” Pace wrote.

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Articles

Modeling Spatial, Temporal, and Multivariate Autoregressive Dependence in Real Estate Prices

The Journal of Real Estate Finance and Economics

2024

We use parallel processing and improved algorithms to search for the weights given to two locational coordinates as well as three non-locational dimensions to find multidimensional neighbors (previous in time) to fit a multidimensional STAR model. We find that the improvements allow for quick specification searches. The effect of the improved specifications is a material reduction in the standard deviation of the residuals.

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Differential measurement error in house price indices

The Journal of Real Estate Finance and Economics

2024

This article investigates measurement errors when using indices to model house prices over time. Our analysis, comparing index prices to actual transaction values, reveals that in many cases, widely-used indices display measurement errors correlated with the index values. Measurement error correlated with predictors constitutes “differential measurement error” at the level of the data generating process (DGP). We further explore the presence of differential measurement error within the context of mortgage lending. Our findings uncover substantial measurement errors in mortgage data, which not only diminish the predictive accuracy of models but also introduce notable biases in the coefficient estimates of variables.

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Impacts of extreme weather events on mortgage risks and their evolution under climate change: A case study on Florida

European Journal of Operational Research

2024

We develop an additive Cox proportional hazard model with time-varying covariates, including spatio-temporal characteristics of weather events, to study the impact of weather extremes (heavy rains and tropical cyclones) on the probability of mortgage default and prepayment. We compare the survival model with a flexible logistic model and an extreme gradient boosting algorithm. We estimate the models on a portfolio of mortgages in Florida, consisting of 69,046 loans and 3,707,831 loan-month observations with localization data at the five-digit ZIP code level.

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Affiliations

  • Homer Hoyt Institute : Fellow
  • American Real Estate Society
  • American Real Estate and Urban Economics Association
  • International Association of Assessing Officers

Research Grants

BP Oil Spill Grant

Louisiana State University

2010-2011

SES-0729259, SES0729264

National Science Foundation

2007-2011