The CA as a market value indicator must reflect the ACCRUED depreciation, but does not need to separate the Ex Ob from Fun Ob from Phys Dep...And SALES are the way you extract the accrued depreciation. If you thoroughly analyze the sales and break out the value thereof, then you can estimate the RCN and the diff = Accrued depreciation. If you take straight line (or use a cost book chart) depreciation off as a proxy for PHYSICAL depreciation, the balance of that deficiet is Functional and/or External Obsolescence. If anyone needed a reminder....
Terrel, good succinct post on how to extract it...the sticking point would be, is the CA supposed to be a market value indicator, or is the CA a value indicator that may not reflect MV?
The final line on the CA says "value indicator", not "MV indicator", (just like the final line on every apprroach says "value indicator". It is up to teh appraiser to reconcile the diff value indicators, and then decide which, if any , should be relied on as a MV indicator, and the appraiser from their gives the opinion of MV.
Including EO in the CA does make it a MV indicator, my question and maybe there is something wrong with me for asking, but my question is, by including EO we turn the CA value indicator into a MV indicator, and does this give better, or worse information to the user of the appraisal? If it costs more to build then to buy in this down market, is shaping the CA to a MV indicator misleading when it looks like the value of new is about the same as an older resale? And in the prior high market, was it misleading to make the CA indicator a MV indicator bu including high EP when EP is a market force and not a CA factor, with the CA figures already figuring in builder profit?
Why do I even care about such things I have no idea wish I didn't lol. Would certainly be easy to extract the EO and stick it in the depreciation box that is for sure!