- Joined
- May 2, 2002
- Professional Status
- Certified General Appraiser
- State
- Arkansas
Sales look at the PAST
Cost looks at the PRESENT
Income looks at the FUTURE
I don't buy the idea that the Com appraisers lose touch with the nuances of subdivisions. On the contrary, I see appraisers ignore competition from nearby subdivisions that I argue have the same market appeal to concentrate on sales that are impacted by statistical noise. The fact I have 2 REOs in a small subdivision does not mean the entire subdivision is going south. It can be mere the way the cookie crumbled.
Appraisers need to run more regression analyses of their market data and see if the data actually is significant or merely a couple of outliers. I saw a lot of claims about how the market was changing 20-30% in a single quarter, when if fact, it probably wasn't changing at all. Just a couple of below or above market sales skewed the microeconomic pix for a single quarter...statistical noise, not a real trend.
Locally we have a couple of data providers who consistently for 3 years or so indicated that year to year sale averages have fell by 5% or so annually. Plotting the sales by the month and the data line looks far more ragged... that's noise. The MSA has a uniform appeal for the most part, access to work revolves around the Univ. of Arkansas, the poultry industry, and Wal-mart and the 3000 or so Wallyworld vendors who have a presence in the region...
Cost looks at the PRESENT
Income looks at the FUTURE
or in any owner operated business, it it the cash flow of the BUSINESS that motivated the buyer who sees the building in question as the best available to operate their business out of. If the business is small, then a large expensive building is out of question. The building they buy has to fit what they do. An old diner is more appealing to the Chef than a new C store. Only if the C store is really cheap and can be economically modified would it be justified to try and make it into a cafe.primarily motivated by profit - usually, but not always, the cash flow potential.
I don't buy the idea that the Com appraisers lose touch with the nuances of subdivisions. On the contrary, I see appraisers ignore competition from nearby subdivisions that I argue have the same market appeal to concentrate on sales that are impacted by statistical noise. The fact I have 2 REOs in a small subdivision does not mean the entire subdivision is going south. It can be mere the way the cookie crumbled.
Appraisers need to run more regression analyses of their market data and see if the data actually is significant or merely a couple of outliers. I saw a lot of claims about how the market was changing 20-30% in a single quarter, when if fact, it probably wasn't changing at all. Just a couple of below or above market sales skewed the microeconomic pix for a single quarter...statistical noise, not a real trend.
Locally we have a couple of data providers who consistently for 3 years or so indicated that year to year sale averages have fell by 5% or so annually. Plotting the sales by the month and the data line looks far more ragged... that's noise. The MSA has a uniform appeal for the most part, access to work revolves around the Univ. of Arkansas, the poultry industry, and Wal-mart and the 3000 or so Wallyworld vendors who have a presence in the region...