Dr. Chengho Hsieh earned his Ph.D. in Finance from Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge in 1990. Dr. Hsieh had previously earned a Bachelor's and Master's degrees in Business Administration from the National Chengchi University in Taiwan, and the University of Missouri, respectively. Dr. Hsieh's research interests include examining the applications of the asset pricing models, and exploring issues related to investments in financial securities and real estate.
Dr. Hsieh's recent publications and presentations include: Ching-Chun Hus, Chin-Oh Chang, and Chengho Hsieh, “The Price-Volume Relationships between the Existing and the Pre-Sales Housing Markets in Taiwan,” International Real Estate Review, forthcoming; Douglas S. Bible and Chengho Hsieh, “Gated Communities and Residential Property Values,” The Appraisal Journal, Vol. LXIX, No. 2, April 2001, 140-145; and Chengho Hsieh and James D. Peterson, “Book Assets, Real Estate, and Returns on Common Stock,” The Journal of Real Estate Finance and Economics, Vol. 21, No. 3, November 2000, 221-233.
His recent presentations include: “The Effects of Site Contamination upon Residential Property Values with An Emphasis on the Use of Geographic Information Systems,” presented at the 2001 International Real Estate Conference, American Real Estate and Urban Economics Association, Cancun, Mexico, May 2001; and “The Effects of Site Contamination upon Residential Property Values with An Emphasis on the Use of Geographic Information Systems,” presented at First World Congress of the International Real Estate Society, Anchorage, Alaska, July 2001, both with Douglas Bible, Gary Joiner and David Volentine, as well as” Macroeconomic Forces in the Context of the Arbitrage Pricing Theory: The New Economy vs. the Old Economy,” presented at the 2001 Meeting of the Academy of Financial Services, Toronto, Canada, October 2001, with Su-Jane Chen.