- Joined
- Jan 15, 2002
- Professional Status
- Certified General Appraiser
- State
- California
I still think someone will buy it and either remove it or convert it to another use.
That's what HBU analysis is all about - developing your opinion about the basis upon which the property will sell. Now all you gotta do is back that analysis up in your report.
This is not some minor little housekeeping issue like requiring an appraiser to include their license number wherever they sign their name in an appraisal report. The Market Value of a property will be attained as a result of the HBU (as improved). Identifying the basis upon which the property would sell enables the appraiser to identify which attributes are of the most effect on value, which types of buyers the property would be marketed to, and which comps would be considered by those buyers to be the most similar.
For example, in this assignment if the property is worth more as land then the dominant attributes of the property would include the lot area, topo, utilities, zoning, etc. The house would be considered by the average buyer to be an expense, not an extra. Conversely, if the property is worth more in its current residential use then the house is the thing and the lot attributes are very secondary. If an appraiser approaches the valuation portion of the assignment under the wrong HBU conclusion it causes them to look for the wrong comps and make the wrong adjustments, most likely resulting in an unreasonable value conclusion.
You may very well be facing an underimprovement for the site; and while the existing structure does have some contributory value it ain't much. It is very possible that the remaining economic life of these improvements is limited when considering the trends and economic cycle in its neighbrhood or market segment. If so, you'd still base the appraisal on the existing use because it still represents the market value of the property. However, you would also include your opinion about the limited remaining economic life so that your readers could understand your valuation in context. This is one example of where the final number on the appraisal may not be the most important piece of information to their decision process. Having provided them with this information, your intended users can then make an informed decision.
I would go so far as to suggest that if an appraiser is unable or unwilling to develop a reasonable HBU analysis for an assignment involving MV they probably shouldn't be appraising the property.