Title: Fundamentals of Appraisal Review Course 105
1Fundamentals of Appraisal Review Course 105
- Instructor Diana T. Jacob
- Phone 225.378.9994
- Email dtjacob_at_bellsouth.net
2Introduction to Appraisal Review
- The USPAP defines review as the act or process
of developing and communicating an opinion about
the quality of another appraisers work - Intended Use and the Intended Users are equally
as relevant in an appraisal review as it is in
any assignment under USPAP - Knowing the purpose of the review can identify
the task or tasks - To judge the quality of another appraisers work
and in some instances, - To form an opinion about the value
3Introduction to Appraisal Review
- If the review assignment involves also forming an
opinion about the value then there are actually
two subjects - The appraisal report, and
- The real property that is the subject of the
report under review - In these circumstances where an opinion of value
is also required the appraiser can use data
contained in the appraisal report that is
otherwise unverified data through an
extraordinary assumption
4Introduction to Appraisal Review
- The process of reviewing anothers work does not
mean the reviewing appraiser changes the value of
the appraisal under review - The possible differing of an opinion of value or
even the concurrence of a value is a separate
opinion, not a shared or joint effort neither is
it an extension of the appraisal assignment under
review - Reviewing an appraisal is a separate assignment
of an independent appraiser
5Introduction to Appraisal Review
- The review of anothers work requires the
appraiser to rely on five common accepted areas
of knowledge - Intended use/user of the work under review
- Economic Principles of Value
- Specific Performance Standards of USPAP
- Typical Practice
- Personal professional opinion
6Introduction to Appraisal Review
- Typical practice under USPAP is measured by two
benchmarks - The appraisers peers (those who have competency
in similar assignments) and - The users (market participants) of the assignment
7Economic Principles
- The characteristics of economic principles used
in the appraisal process are interdependent of
one another, not separate and independent - The application of valuation principles requires
the understanding of real estate characteristics - Immovable
- Durable
- Long Life
- Heterogeneous (the differing or opposite nature
of real estate, i.e. the varying ways land can be
used)
8Economic Principles
- Supply and Demand
- Highest and Best Use
- Balance and Surplus Productivity
- Increasing and Decreasing Returns
- Contribution
- Change
- Conformity
- Anticipation
- Competition
9Economic Principles
- Essential Elements (components) of value are
- D Demand
- U Utility
- S Scarcity
- T Transferability
10Review of the Approaches to Value
- The Cost Approach is sometimes referred to as the
Summation Approach - There are three elements of the Cost Approach
- Land Value
- Reproduction/Replacement Cost New of the
Improvements - Depreciation (the loss to the cost new)
11Sales Approach to Value
- Once the subject has been identified comparable
properties sold prior to the effective date of
the appraisal can be selected - When market value is the opinion being sought
sales are viewed and adjusted for dissimilar
characteristics according to the market reaction - CBS (comparable sale better subtract)
- CIA (comparable inferior add)
12Income Approach to Value
- The Income Approach is used when the decision to
purchase involved the consideration of the income
production - Income can be viewed from its characteristics of
gross income and then converted to value
through multipliers - Income can be processed from a gross to a net
operating income and converted into value through
a capitalization rate
13Review of USPAP
- Definitions of USPAP
- July 1, 2006 definition of appraisal will no
longer contain the terms complete or limited
due to the retirement of the Departure Rule - The retirement of the Departure Rule will
eliminate the need to differentiate between
specific or binding requirements. All
requirements are considered performance
requirements.
14Review of USPAP
- Rules of USPAP are sequenced as
- Ethics Rule
- Competency Rule
- Departure Rule (retired on July 1, 2006) replaced
with Scope of Work Rule - Jurisdictional Exception Rule
- Supplemental Standards Rule
15Review of USPAP
- Standard 1 is the development of a real property
appraisal - SR 1-1 Competency Pre-requisite
- SR 1-2 Scope of Work/Problem Identification
- SR 1-3 Land Use
- SR 1-4 Approaches to Value
- SR 1-5 Flipping and Fraud
- SR 1-6 Final Reconciliation
16SR 3 Appraisal Review
- The judgment of quality about anothers work
- Judgment must include
- Completeness
- Adequacy
- Relevance
- Appropriateness, and
- Reasonableness of the work under review
applicable to that work
17SR 3-1 Appraisal Review
- Scope of Work is defined in this development
standard - Intended use of reviewers opinions and
conclusions are in the context of the clients
use of the review and include, without
limitation, - Quality control
- Audit,
- Qualification, or confirmation
18SR 3-1 Appraisal Review
- The reason/purpose of the review assignment
relates to the reviewers objective such as - Evaluate compliance with relevant USPAP
requirements, with a - Clients requirements, or with
- Applicable regulations
19SR 3-1 Appraisal Review
- The reviewer must ascertain whether the purpose
of the assignment includes the development of
their own opinion of value about the subject
property of the work under review - That opinion is an appraisal whether it
- Concurs with the opinion in the work under review
as of the date of value in that work or a
different date of value or - Differs from the opinion as of the date of value
in that work or a different date of value
20SR 3-2 Appraisal Review
- Reporting Subsection of SR for appraisal review
- The reviewer must
- State the identity of the client, by name or
type, and intended users the intended use of the
assignment results and the purpose of the
assignment - State the information that must be identified in
accordance with Standards Rule 3-1(b), i.e. - Subject of the appraisal review
- Effective date of the review
- Property and ownership interest appraised
- Date of the work under review and effective date
of opinion and conclusions under review and - Appraiser(s) who completed the work under review
unless that identity was withheld
21SR 3-2 Appraisal Review
- What happens when the identity of the
appraiser(s) who completed the work under review
is withheld? - ANSWER The appraiser must state that fact in the
review report!
22SR 3-2 Appraisal Review (continued)
- In reporting the results of an appraisal review,
the reviewer must - State the nature, extent, and detail of the
review process undertaken (i.e., the scope of
work) identified in accordance with Standards
Rule 3-1 (c) (and state the extent of any portion
of the work that involved significant assistance
including stating the name(s)s of those who
provided the assistance in the certification). - Scope of work highlights of 3-1(c) include
- Identifying precise extent of review process
sound reasoning supporting the scope of work
decision evidence of why the review has
credibility
23SR 3-2 Appraisal Review (continued)
- Continued highlights of 3-1(c) include the
requirement to report clearly how the review was
conducted in the context of the market conditions
as of the effective date of the work being
reviewed - The reviewer can use information available to the
reviewer that was not made available to the
appraiser subsequent to the review but cannot
hold the appraiser accountable for information
unavailable to the appraiser - The effective date of the reviewers opinion of
value may be the same or different from that date
of the work under review - The reviewer does not have to replicate the steps
completed by the original appraiser but must
follow the appropriate development standards when
developing an opinion that differs from the work
under review
24Illustrations of Language WITHOUT an Opinion of
Value
- The value opinion stated in the appraisal report
is (or is not) adequately supported - The value conclusion is (or is not) appropriate
and reasonable given the data and analyses
presented - I reject the value conclusion as being
unreliable due to the errors and/or
inconsistencies found - The value conclusion is not appropriate due to a
significant math error in the Sales Comparison
approach-if calculated properly, the value
conclusion would change to XXX
25Illustrations of Language WITH an Opinion of Value
- I concur (or do not concur) with the value
- I agree (or disagree) with the value
- In my opinion, the value is (the same)
- In my opinion, the value is incorrect and should
be XXX - In my opinion, the value is too high (or too
low)
26Federal Regulations based on Title XI
- 12 CFR Part 34.42 (g) Definition of Market Value
- 12 CFR Part 34.43 clearly states that appraisals
can be performed by either a state certified or
licensed appraiser - 12 CFR Part 34.44 are the five points/minimum
standards under the Federal Financial
Institutions Reform Recovery Act (FIRREA)
27Unacceptable Appraisal Practice
- Unsupported opinions of market value
- Improper selection of comparable sales
- Creation of comparable sales
- Unsupported adjustments in the sales comparison
approach, inadequate analysis of, and reporting
on, the sales history of the subject property and
comparable sales - Lack of analysis of, and reporting on , the
listing, offering, or contract sale for the
subject property and - Misrepresentation of the physical characteristics
of the subject property, improvements, or
comparable sales
28Fannie Mae Announcement
- Letter dated December 17, 2002
- The second revision dated March 2005 did not have
an accompanying letter - The consequence is a difference sequence in the
questions found in the sections of the letter
detailing how the form should be completed (Note
question 1 is really question 9 on the revised
form) - This lack of sequence conformity does not
eliminate the requirements of the March 2005 form
to be completed with the same information found
within the letter
29Reviewers Scope of Work (pg 3 of letter)
- Read the entire appraisal report under review
- Inspect the subject property and comparables
described in the appraisal from the street (if
the reviewer inspects the interior of the subject
they must not such in the appraisal review
report) - Inspect the neighborhood in which the subject is
located - Research all appropriate data
- Verify the data in the original appraisal report
using ALL reliable sources and - Assume the property condition reported in the
original appraisal report is accurate unless
evidence to the contrary
30Revised Form 2000
- The revised form defines the role of the review
appraiser - Addresses the purpose, intended use, and the
scope of work for the appraisal field review
assignment - Provides guidance on performing the appraisal
review and completing the form - Provides standardized sales comparison analysis
adjustment grid supporting the review appraisers
opinion of value and - Includes a statement of limiting conditions and
appraisers certifications
31Case Study 1
- Items of concern
- There is 168 spread between the adjusted sale
price - The first paragraph states equal weight is given
which lacks evidence of competent judgment - There is no explanation of how the adjustments
were derived. Superior market condition of sales
1 2 or to summarize what type of financing was
considered typical - Second paragraph has outdated language term
estimated was removed in 1999 USPAP - Appraiser concluded a value of 100,050 which is
not typical practice appraiser should have
rounded the value conclusion
32Case Study 2
- Items of Concern
- Comments note city of San Antonio location but
market area is marked Suburban - Land Use shows 86 One family but built-up area
shows 25-75 - There is no mention of typical site sizes or
design of house styles in neighborhood section - Dimensions are not stated just shown as
irregular and then cited as typical - Depreciation is noted as average with no comment
as to what average is - Environmental comments indicate no research into
EPA website was made conclusions limited to on
site visit
33Case Study 2 (continued)
- Items of concern
- Land ratio of 17 is not cited as being typical
in Cost Approach - No comments on how Cost Approach contributed to
the final - There was no discussion on the listing price to
sale price of the subject in the Sales Approach - Condition is cited as good in Sales Approach but
average on page 1 of the form - Sale 4 was a dated sale with no time adjustment