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Reconciling the Reconciliation

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Reconciling the Reconciliation Presented to: IAAO Councils & Sections Public Utility Section Thursday May 11, 2006 Charleston, SC Presented by: Mark Pomykacz, MAI – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Reconciling the Reconciliation


1
Reconciling the Reconciliation
Presented to IAAO Councils Sections Public
Utility Section Thursday May 11, 2006Charleston,
SC
  • Presented by
  • Mark Pomykacz, MAI
  • Federal Appraisal Consulting LLC
  • Phone (908) 823-0607
  • E-mail mark_at_federalappraisal.com

2
Mark Pomykacz, MAI
  • Managing Partner, Federal Appraisal Consulting
    LLC
  • Real estate and business appraisal and advisory
    services
  • Specialize in complex issues and properties,
  • IRS, SEC and other financial reporting
  • Utilities, power plants and telecommunications
    assets
  • Member of Appraisal Institute (MAI)
  • Member of the National Board of Directors of the
    Appraisal Institute
  • Teach Income Capitalization, USPAP and Various
    Seminars for the Appraisal Institute, IAAO,
    Baruch (CUNY) and New York University, and
    others
  • State certified general real estate appraiser in
    multiple states
  • Published several articles on appraisal and
    property taxes

3
The Reconciling Issue
  • Theory and Practice leaves many unprepared for
    complex reconciliation issues.
  • The major appraisal treatises and journals
  • Provide limited coverage.
  • Often imply reconciliation is required.
  • Often imply if a reconciliation is not completed,
    then it is due to appraiser incompetence, or
    worse.
  • Usually a reconciliation is so obvious, that
    little thought is required, and even poorly
    written reconciliations are rarely challenged.

4
Limited Coverage in the Major Treatises and
Journals
The Appraisal of Real Estate, 12th Edition 7
pages of 759 pages (0.9)
The Appraisal Journal and Other Journals 3
Articles
Valuing a Business, 4th Edition, Shannon Pratt 12
pages of 923 pages (1.3)
5
Articles on Reconciliation
Proper Reconciliation in Narrative Reports Favors
Substance Over Form By Ralph H. Emerson, III,
MAI Notes and Issues, pg 94 Real Reconciliation
By R.H. Holstein, III, A.R.A 2003 JOURNAL OF THE
ASFMRA, pg 37 The Myth about Appraisal By Joe
Roberts Eric Roberts The Appraisal Journal,
April 1991, pg 212
6
Definition - Reconciliation
  • The last phase of any valuation assignment in
    which two or more value indications derived from
    market data are resolved into a final value
    opinion, which may be either a final range of
    value or a single point estimate.
  • In the sales comparison approach, reconciliation
    may involve two levels of analysis 1) derivation
    of a value indication from the adjusted prices of
    two or more comparable sales expressed in the
    same unit of comparison and 2) derivation of a
    value indication from the adjusted prices of two
    or more comparables expressed in different units
    of comparison.

The Dictionary of Real Estate Appraisal, 4th
Edition
7
Definition - Reconciliation Criteria
The criteria that enable an appraiser to form a
meaningful, defensible conclusion about the final
value opinion. Value indications are tested for
the appropriateness of the approaches and
adjustments applied, the accuracy of the data,
and the quantity of evidence analyzed.
The Dictionary of Real Estate Appraisal, 4th
Edition
8
USPAP Reconciliation
  • Standards Rule 1-6
  • (This Standards Rule contains binding
    requirements from which departure is not
    permitted.)
  •  
  • In developing a real property appraisal, an
    appraiser must 
  • reconcile the quality and quantity of data
    available and analyzed within the approaches
    used and
  • reconcile the applicability or suitability of
    the approaches used to arrive at the value
    conclusion(s).  
  • Comment See the Comments to Standards Rules
    2-2(a)(ix), 2-2(b)(ix), and 2-2(c)(ix) for
    corresponding reporting requirements.

9
USPAP Reconciliation, 2
  • Departure is not permitted (AO-15)
  • A reconciliation must be adequate for the
    reports purpose and use. (10-2)
  • Sales history must be reconciled with other
    indications of value. (AO-22)
  • USPAP reconciliation requirements apply to
  • Real
  • Personal
  • Consulting
  • Mass Appraisal
  • Business and Intangibles
  • Assistants who can conduct most other aspects of
    the appraisal, may need help from a principle to
    reconcile. The report should disclose which
    parts were done by whom. (AO-5)
  • Self Contained
  • Summary
  • Restricted Use

10
The Appraisal of Real Estate
  1. Diverse indications are common.
  2. Reconciliation is not just for final indications
    of value
  3. Also for reconciling adjusted sales comparables
  4. And for reconciling various appraisal aspects.
  5. The purpose and use of the appraisal will impact
    the scope of the reconciliation.
  6. A reconciliation requires judgment. It is not an
    averaging process.
  7. A reconciliation must be supported and explained.
  8. Data may be best available, may not yield
    appropriate value.
  9. Reconciliation involves setting a rounding policy

12th Edition
11
Common Reconciliation Mistakes
  1. Completing a reconciliation by rote.Conversely,
    failing to complete an approach/analysis because
    in otherwise similar circumstances, it is
    commonly not done.

12
Common Reconciliation Mistakes, 2
  1. Mixing indications that assume a different
    highest and best use.
  2. Failing to account for needed, but incomplete,
    adjustments in deriving the indications.
  3. Expecting all completed approaches to be
    reconcilable.
  4. With out good reason, and/or in an inconsistent
    matter, simply changing various analysis
    assumptions in order to get the various
    indications to be the same.

13
The Criteria
  1. Appraisal Parameters Consistency with appraisal
    purpose, use and scope, and with highest and best
    use.
  2. Theory What does appraisal theory say you
    should do?
  3. Data Quality and Quantity Regardless of theory,
    what does the quality and quantity of the data
    allow you to do?

14
The Theory Criteria

Question What does appraisal theory say you
should do? Answer Whatever your peers would
do. Question But what should my peers
do? Answer Whatever buyers and sellers
do. Question But what do buyers and sellers
do? Answer It depends on the property, and
the market. But whatever they do, we assume
it will follow rational laws of economics
concerning value, i.e. appraisal theory .
15
The Theory Criteria, 2
  • Examples
  • SFH use sales, maybe cost, if new enough, but
    not income.Reconcile with all or nearly all
    weight to the sales.
  • An apprentice appraiser, in their first month on
    the job, learns that both his peers and the
    market do this.
  • Apartment Building - primarily use income, maybe
    sales (if data is good), and maybe cost, if new
    enough and if market is near equilibrium.
  • An apprentice appraiser, in their first year on
    the job, learns that both his peers and the
    market do this.
  • Thereafter its rote.
  • But what are the economic principles that explain
    the actions.

16
The Economic Theory - SFH
  • Buyers do not buy for the income. They buy for
    their own use.
  • They sometimes build for their own use.
  • Buyers comparison shop.
  • They even compare the cost to build versus the
    price of existing homes.
  • Overwhelmingly, they do not consider the income
    potential.
  • Principles of substitution, not principles of
    economic anticipation, apply.
  • So use sales, sometimes use cost, do not need
    income.
  • If clients purpose and use is limited, then use
    sales only.
  • If clients purpose and use is expansive, then
    use sales and cost, but still not income, unless
    subject and/or market has an income potential.

17
The Economic Theory - Apartments
  • Buyers buy apartment homes for the income. They
    do not buy for their own use.
  • They sometimes build for income potential.
  • Buyers comparison shop.
  • They even compare the cost to build versus the
    price of existing.
  • They emphasize the income potential.
  • Principles of economic anticipation apply, but
    principles of substitution are used to measure
    the value of the anticipated income.
  • So use sales, sometimes use cost, but emphasize
    income.
  • Sales must have similar income potentials, and
    highest best uses.
  • Cost must reflect all economic obsolescence,
    along with functional and physical obsolescences.

18
Market CyclesU.S. Office Market Cycle Positions

Source Pricewaterhouse Coopers
19
Market CyclesU.S. Multifamily Market Cycle
Positions

Source Pricewaterhouse Coopers
20
Cost vs. Value
Probably Excess Profit
Probably Economic Obsolescence
21
Cost vs. Value
Probably Excess Profit
Probably Economic Obsolescence
22
The Appraiser as Mimic
  • Appraisers should do what the market does!

23
Appraisers in Action
Survey of Assessors, Owners, Appraisers and
Representatives

24
Question 1a

25
Question 1b
26
Question 1c
27
Question 2a
28
Question 2b
29
Question 2c
30
Question 3a
31
Question 3b
32
Question 3c
33
Question 4a
34
Question 4b
35
Question 4c
36
Question 5
37
Question 6a
38
Question 6b
39
Question 7a
40
Question 7b
41
Question 8
42
Question 10
43
Cost, Income, Sales
RegulatedMarket DeregulatedMarket
Minimal Most Minimal Some
Minimal Most
44
Cash is King
All businesses produce the same thing CASH!
AKA Income or Cash Flow Thus, The Income
Approach is King
Not Capitalist. Rather Cash Flowist Cash
Flowite Cash Flowian
45
Practical Considerations
  1. Size of absolute adjustments
  2. Typical data quality and quantity

46
Conclusions
  1. Avoid the usual mistakes.
  2. Not all completed approaches can be reconciled.
  3. Use appraisal theory to the extent possible to
    reconcile
  4. Mimic the market
  5. Use economic theory
  6. Use practical considerations
  7. Size of absolute adjustments
  8. Typical data quality and quantity

47
Questions?
  • Questions?
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