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Introduction to Real Estate Valuation

Introduction to Real Estate Valuation. Accelerating success. Definitions. Valuation – a determination of the monetary values at some specified date of the property rights encompassed in an ownership

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Introduction to Real Estate Valuation

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  1. Introduction to Real Estate Valuation Accelerating success.

  2. Definitions • Valuation – a determination of the monetary values at some specified date of the property rights encompassed in an ownership • Appraisal – stated result of valuing a property, making a cost estimate, forecasting earnings, or any combination of two or more of these stated results. It is also an act of valuing, estimating cost or forecasting earnings.

  3. Definitions • Cost estimation – an estimate of the amount of money that would be required at some specified date, to construct, produce, replace or reproduce some tangible and/or tangible thing, without regard to its ownership • Earnings forecast – an estimate or forecast of the future net monetary returns, deliverable from something owned or considered as being owned

  4. Definitions • Therefore, appraisal is an estimate or opinion of value, where an estimate is NOT a: • Statement of value • Determination of value • Fixing of value

  5. Definitions • An appraisal is only one person’s opinion of value • Different appraisers may arrive at different estimates • The accuracy and usefulness of the value estimate depends on the appraiser’s skill, experience and judgment

  6. Definition of Value • Value – means the worth, usefulness or utility of an object to someone for some purpose • Market value – defined as the •  Highest price in terms of money •  That real property is acquired •  By a buyer who is willing to buy and a seller who is willing to sell •  Both of whom have adequate knowledge of the actual and potential use/s of the property •  Which has been offered for a reasonable time in the open and competitive market

  7. International Valuation Standards (IVS) Definition of Value • The estimated amount for which a property should exchange on the date of valuation between a willing buyer and a willing seller in an arm’s length transaction after proper marketing wherein the parties had each acted knowledgeably, prudently and without compulsion

  8. Value in Use and Value in Exchange • Value in Use – refers to the value of a thing or property to the holder which includes the amenities, benefits and income derived from it’s ownership, all of which are estimated in terms of money. This is subjective • Value in Exchange – indicates the value of the property traded in the market. This is synonymous to objective value or market value

  9. Value, Price & Cost • Value and Price – value is the distinct attribute of a thing or commodity to attract and complement another thing or commodity in the market while price is the amount paid or offered for a thing or property. To the seller, the price is subjective value. It is value in exchange. • The objective value of a property may be higher or lower than its current price.

  10. Value, Price & Cost • Value and Cost – Cost is not price. Neither is it value. It represents the capital expense in the formation and construction of a finished product. It includes the original cost of land and construction materials as well as profit and professional services. • Normally, cost is less than price. The difference is profit.

  11. Other Meanings of Value • Land has plottage value when one or more parcels are consolidated so that its increment in value as a whole is much more than the total sum of the value of each parcel of land separately owned • Rental value refers to the price fixed for the right to use a certain property for a specific period of time

  12. Other Meanings of Value • Cash value is the value of the property in an all-out sale. It is synonymous to market value. • Investment value is the present worth of future benefit, or income of the property that the owner, or investor has acquired. • Going concern value is the value of the business in operation, or property that will continue to be utilized. It includes tangible property such as real estate, equipment and machinery, fixtures and inventories plus intangible assets such as franchises, patents and goodwill.

  13. Other Meanings of Value • Book value is the original cost of an asset or property less accrued depreciation. • Corporations under receivership may sell its assets at liquidation value or value. This value could be lower than its market value because the owners are forced to sell, or due to their ignorance of the real value of their assets.

  14. Other Meanings of Value • In estimating the depreciation in account of the corporate assets, the estimated salvage value is one of the factors to be considered. The other factors are (1) cost of the assets, and (2) their estimated useful life. Salvage value is the amount that maybe recovered minus cost of disposal when the assets will be retired or disposed of at a future time.

  15. Other Meanings of Value • Loan value is the maximum level of value, or appraised value, against which a property may be mortgaged to secure payment of the loan. A loan-to-value rate is usually fixed by the lending institution or bank. • The insurance value is the cost of insurance coverage of the building or improvement to cover its loss due to earthquake, fire or other calamity. This is done by estimating the cost of replacing the entire building, or the portion thereof that has been damaged.

  16. Other Meanings of Value • Scrap value is the value of a depreciated building or the materials recovered from it. • Condemnation value is the estimated value of a property that is the object of expropriation for public use. Just compensation is the fair and full equivalent, in money, for the loss sustained. • Assessed value is the value of land and/or improvements for ad valorem tax purposes. The assessed value is multiplied by the tax rate to produce the amount of tax due to payment. It is synonymous to taxable value. • .

  17. Other Meanings of Value • Zonal value is the fair market value of land in a specific zone or area established by the Bureau of Internal Revenue. • .

  18. Characteristics of Value • Utility – ability of the property to satisfy human need • Scarcity. Land is not scarce. It is the use for which it is intended or actually established that is becoming scarce. The scarcity, however, is not absolute. • Effective demand. The desire coupled with the financial capacity of the buyer/s to acquire a piece of real property • Transferability – refers to the quality of the property to be transferred or covered.

  19. Factors that Influence Value • Social forces relate to population growth, birth control measures and migration. • Political forces are government-based. The degree of efficiency in the maintenance of peace and order and the effort of providing primary services such as electric light, water, fuel, and food. Ex. Zoning and land use ordinances

  20. Factors that Influence Value • Economic forces include the nature of basic industry and business activity in the neighborhood like trend of employment, salaries and wages of employees and workers and expansion of the housing program • Physical forces refer to the location and age of the neighborhood: size, area, shape and topography of land; type of improvements and architectural trends; and street pattern, sidewalks and underground drainage

  21. Bundle of Rights • Bundle of rights - rights which are encompassed by ownership of real estate • The right to possess and enjoy the use of the property • The right to dispose • The right to exclude any person from the enjoyment and disposal of the property • The right to recover • The right to convey by inheritance

  22. Legal Rights and Interests • Fee simple estate • Life estate • Leasehold interest • Leased fee interest • Other legal interests such as easement, encroachment

  23. Types of Appraisals • Informal Appraisals –made by almost everyone. They are usually based on a combination of knowledge, experience and intuition • Formal appraisals – usually made by people especially trained for this work and are used in: • Business and finance • Litigation • Taxation • Insurance

  24. Economic Principles to Property Value • Anticipation- the perception that value is created by the expectation of benefits to be derived in the future. Value is based on market participant’s perception of future benefits of ownership. • Balance- relates both to the property as well as the environment in which the property is located. It is related to the property itself, this principle holds that value is achieved and maintained when all elements are in proper proportion.

  25. Economic Principles to Property Value • Anticipation- the perception that value is created by the expectation of benefits to be derived in the future. Value is based on market participant’s perception of future benefits of ownership. • Balance- relates both to the property as well as the environment in which the property is located. It is related to the property itself, this principle holds that value is achieved and maintained when all elements are in proper proportion.

  26. Economic Principles to Property Value • Change -the result of the cause and effect relationship among the forces that influence real property value. Change in the market for real estate due to social, economic, governmental, and environmental forces. Example: depreciation - loss in property value from any cause. • Competition - holds that profits tend to spur competition. The more profitable a venture may appear, the more competition will be created. In other words, success breeds competition, and extremely high success breeds excess competition.

  27. Economic Principles to Property Value • Conformity - real property value is created and sustained when the characteristics of a property conform to the demands of its market. Zoning ordinances establish conformity in basic property characteristics. • Contribution - holds that the value of a component is a function of its contribution to the whole rather than as a separate component. The cost of an item does not necessarily equal its contributory value.

  28. Economic Principles to Property Value • Externalities - outside forces that effect property values. Economies outside a property have positive effects on its value, while diseconomies have a negative effect on value externalities such as the neighbourhood have an effect on value. • Increasing and decreasing returns - relates to the principle of balance as well as to the principle of contribution. This principle holds that as capital units are added, a certain point is reached where the added units do not contribute value commensurate with their costs.

  29. Economic Principles to Property Value • Opportunity cost - the cost of options forgone or opportunities not chosen. Investors will seek to select investments that provide the highest rate of return at the lowest level of risk. In other words, investors seek to maximize returns, yet are risk averse. It is related to the principle of substitution, and is relative to the income approach.

  30. Economic Principles to Property Value • Substitution • when several similar goods or services are available, the one with the lowest price attracts the greatest demand. • a buyer will not pay more for one property than for another that is equally desirable. • property values tend to be set by the cost of acquiring an equally desirable substitute property. • recognizes that buyers and sellers or real property have other options, i.e., other properties are available for similar uses. • fundamental to all three approaches to value, but is the back bone of the sales comparison approach.

  31. Economic Principles to Property Value • Supply and demand - the interaction of the supply and demand relationships for real estate in price determination. It relates to the factors of value - utility, scarcity, desire, and effective purchasing power. • Surplus productivity - the net income that remains after the costs of various agents of production have been paid. It relates to the income approach. The agents of production – land, labour, capitaland management

  32. Valuation Process • Definition of the problem • Collection and analysis of data • Analysis of highest and best use • Application and limitations of each approach to value – sales comparison, cost, income capitalization • Reconciliation and final value estimate • The Appraisal Report

  33. Highest and Best Use Analysis • Four tests – physically possible, legally permitted, economically feasible, maximally productive • Vacant site or as if vacant • As improved • Interim use

  34. Approaches to Value • Sales Comparison Approach (Market Data Approach) - a comparative approach to value that considers the sales of similar or substitute properties and related market data and establishes a value estimate by processes involving comparison. In general, a property being valued (a subject property) is compared to sales of similar properties that have been transacted in the open market. Listing and offerings may also be considered.

  35. Approaches to Value • Essential concepts in the Sales Comparison Approach – • Research and selection of comparables • Elements of comparison • Adjustment process

  36. Approaches to Value • Example – Matrix of comparables

  37. Approaches to Value • Cost approach -a comparative approach to the value of property or another asset, that considers as a substitute for the purchase of a given property, the possibility of constructing another property that is an equivalent to the original or one that could furnish equal utility with no undue cost resulting fro delay. The Valuer’s estimate is based on the reproduction or replacement cost of the subject or asset, less total (accrued) depreciation.

  38. Approaches to Value • Essential concepts in the Cost Approach – • Site description • Improvement description • Basic construction and design • Reproduction vs replacement cost • Information source – Davis, Langdon & Seah Construction Cost Handbook Philippines 2012 • Accrued depreciation

  39. Approaches to Value • Cost Approach procedure • Estimate the value of the land as if vacant and available for use • Estimate the total cost to build the existing structure, figured at today’s construction prices • Decide on an appropriate amount to allow for accrued depreciation, that is, the loss in value of the subject building as compared to a new structure

  40. Approaches to Value • Steps in the Cost Approach • Subtract the estimated depreciation from the cost of the hypothetical new structure, giving a depreciated cost estimate • Add the value of the land to the depreciated cost of the new structure. The result is the indicated property value by the cost approach

  41. Approaches to Value • Example – Cost Approach

  42. Approaches to Value • Example – Cost Approach

  43. Approaches to Value • Income capitalization approach (Income approach) - a comparative approach to value that considers income and expense data relating to the property being valued and estimates value through a capitalization process. Capitalization relates income (usually net income) and a defined value type by converting an income amount into a value estimate.

  44. Approaches to Value • Essential concepts in the Income capitalization approach (Income approach) • Direct Capitalization Technique – V= I/r • Yield capitalization Technique – Discounted Cash Flow • Estimation of income and expenses • Estimation of net income • Capitalization rates

  45. Approaches to Value • Steps in the Income Approach • Obtain annual rent schedules/revenue schedule for the subject property and compare with competition to arrive at a projection of reasonable rents/revenue for the subject • Estimate annual vacancy and collection losses • Subtract these from the gross income to arrive at the effective gross income

  46. Approaches to Value • Steps in the Income Approach • Estimate the annual expenses and subtract them from the effective gross income to arrive at the net income. Net income is sometimes called net operating income • Analyze comparable investments in order to arrive at a capitalization method and rate • Capitalize the projected net income into an estimate of value.

  47. Approaches to Value • Example - Income Approach

  48. Reconciliation of Final Value Estimates When the appraiser arrives at the final value estimate by considering all of the evidence supporting the different value indicators, as well as the relevance of the different appraisal techniques to the particular appraisal problem at hand

  49. The Appraisal Report • Types of appraisal reports – • Formal vs informal • Short form vs narrative

  50. The Appraisal Report • Parts of a Narrative Appraisal Report • Introduction - states the purpose (market value, investment value, insurance value, etc.) and function (use of report, i.e., mortgage, estate, etc.) of the appraisal, identifies and describes the subject property, and presents the value conclusion • Title page • Letter of transmittal • Summary of Salient Facts and Conclusions OR Executive Summary • Assumptions and Limiting Conditions

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