YankeeFan
Sophomore Member
- Joined
- Feb 21, 2012
- Professional Status
- Licensed Appraiser
- State
- North Dakota
let me clarify this, as its not as clear as I had indicated it appears and I will amend the commentary. Im not using the UAD C Codes in the individual components section let me make that clear, I agree now I don't thinks its appropriate given FAQ 34 now. Im doing as I always have done prior to UAD implementation, Im still using Excellent or E, Good or G, Average or A, Fair of F et cetera, I think this commentary in this analysis just ties everything together for the reader and helps with reasoning.
≅ is approximately equal to or what I call...comparable to, a term used by appraisers every day I believe.
Here is what I've decided to start implementing, and Im pretty sure it satisfies FAQ 34 and wont get me in trouble with Fannie Mae or reviewers...its solves the problem and is the solution I believe. I acknowledge VolcanoLvr for showing the light at the end of the tunnel!
SUBJECT INDIVIDUAL COMPONENT CONDITION RATINGS (Improvements section, Form Page 1):
This report is written to the 'new' UAD reporting conventions mandated by FannieMae/FreddieMac. Those entities have required appraisers to adopt new proprietary numerical reporting 'rating numbers' for the Overall Condition of the property. The GSE's have abandoned the former reporting conventions of 'average, good' etc. as an "overall" or holistic view of a property because there are no defined definitions for those words, except in the copyrighted manual produced by a cost rating agency, which the UAD process does not use.
Definitions for the new numerical ratings are included with the report. Any reader or reviewer must consult those pages to determine what the numerical ratings mean for the overall rating. This inclusion is consistent with the appraiser's obligation under USPAP to produce a report that is not misleading.
The problem with this numerical rating system is the UAD condition rating is primarily applicable to the overall condition rating shown in various places on the form pages and FannieMae in FAQ #34 indicates not to use these proprietary codes in the individual property component sections of the URAR, but the overall Subject rating is determined from the individual component ratings. It makes perfect sense to use the 'abandoned' words shown above for the individual components by translateing or relating them into the overall UAD condition rating.
In order for the appraiser to report the overall Condition of the Subject property, individual rating letters have been applied to the individual components on Form page 1, Improvements section. Those are then analyzed and amalgamated into the overall Condition rating applied to Form page 1, and in the Comps grid. This is a process based on logic and the ratings defined and mandated by Fannie/Freddie.
The appraiser has related/interpreted the individual component descriptions to the UAD Appendix D condition ratings and has applied those observed condition conclusions to individual components in this way:
(New or N) ≅ C1 - Individual components new; no physical depreciation
(Excellent or E) ≅ C2 - Individual components nearly new or recently repaired, refinished or rehabilitated to meet current standards
(Good or G) ≅ C3 - Individual components are well maintained and have limited physical depreciation; some but not all Individual components may be updated or recently rehabilitated
(Average or A) ≅ C4 - Individual components have minor deferred maintenance and physical depreciation, but have been adequately maintained and are functionally adequate
(Fair or F) ≅ C5 - Individual components need repairs, rehabilitation or updating but are useable and functional
(Poor or P) ≅ C6 - Individual components need substantial repair and rehabilitation due to damage or deferred maintenance; immediate corrections needed to maintain livability of the dwelling
Example: Flooring: Crpt,Vinyl,G....not only does this solution solve the problem for appraisers it also adds another character of space for utilization in the report...ie G is better then C3!
This solution can also be adopted or amended to include the quality component codes of UAD. Just add that to the commentary. Also note, if you use a P code on an individual component item...its not exactly a C6 or required repair tied to a "subject to" condition of the report...it could be but it doesn't have to . Now if I have 4 G's, 2 A's...ie 4C3's and 2 C4's,,Im gonna rate the property a UAD C3 overall. Feel free to copy this as part of your comments, if your wish and feel as I do that this is a logical and practical solutions to these issues.
≅ is approximately equal to or what I call...comparable to, a term used by appraisers every day I believe.
Here is what I've decided to start implementing, and Im pretty sure it satisfies FAQ 34 and wont get me in trouble with Fannie Mae or reviewers...its solves the problem and is the solution I believe. I acknowledge VolcanoLvr for showing the light at the end of the tunnel!
SUBJECT INDIVIDUAL COMPONENT CONDITION RATINGS (Improvements section, Form Page 1):
This report is written to the 'new' UAD reporting conventions mandated by FannieMae/FreddieMac. Those entities have required appraisers to adopt new proprietary numerical reporting 'rating numbers' for the Overall Condition of the property. The GSE's have abandoned the former reporting conventions of 'average, good' etc. as an "overall" or holistic view of a property because there are no defined definitions for those words, except in the copyrighted manual produced by a cost rating agency, which the UAD process does not use.
Definitions for the new numerical ratings are included with the report. Any reader or reviewer must consult those pages to determine what the numerical ratings mean for the overall rating. This inclusion is consistent with the appraiser's obligation under USPAP to produce a report that is not misleading.
The problem with this numerical rating system is the UAD condition rating is primarily applicable to the overall condition rating shown in various places on the form pages and FannieMae in FAQ #34 indicates not to use these proprietary codes in the individual property component sections of the URAR, but the overall Subject rating is determined from the individual component ratings. It makes perfect sense to use the 'abandoned' words shown above for the individual components by translateing or relating them into the overall UAD condition rating.
In order for the appraiser to report the overall Condition of the Subject property, individual rating letters have been applied to the individual components on Form page 1, Improvements section. Those are then analyzed and amalgamated into the overall Condition rating applied to Form page 1, and in the Comps grid. This is a process based on logic and the ratings defined and mandated by Fannie/Freddie.
The appraiser has related/interpreted the individual component descriptions to the UAD Appendix D condition ratings and has applied those observed condition conclusions to individual components in this way:
(New or N) ≅ C1 - Individual components new; no physical depreciation
(Excellent or E) ≅ C2 - Individual components nearly new or recently repaired, refinished or rehabilitated to meet current standards
(Good or G) ≅ C3 - Individual components are well maintained and have limited physical depreciation; some but not all Individual components may be updated or recently rehabilitated
(Average or A) ≅ C4 - Individual components have minor deferred maintenance and physical depreciation, but have been adequately maintained and are functionally adequate
(Fair or F) ≅ C5 - Individual components need repairs, rehabilitation or updating but are useable and functional
(Poor or P) ≅ C6 - Individual components need substantial repair and rehabilitation due to damage or deferred maintenance; immediate corrections needed to maintain livability of the dwelling
Example: Flooring: Crpt,Vinyl,G....not only does this solution solve the problem for appraisers it also adds another character of space for utilization in the report...ie G is better then C3!
This solution can also be adopted or amended to include the quality component codes of UAD. Just add that to the commentary. Also note, if you use a P code on an individual component item...its not exactly a C6 or required repair tied to a "subject to" condition of the report...it could be but it doesn't have to . Now if I have 4 G's, 2 A's...ie 4C3's and 2 C4's,,Im gonna rate the property a UAD C3 overall. Feel free to copy this as part of your comments, if your wish and feel as I do that this is a logical and practical solutions to these issues.