JeffSH
Senior Member
- Joined
- Sep 19, 2015
- Professional Status
- Certified Residential Appraiser
- State
- Illinois
You've never done a private appraisal with a pricing narrative? ROFL!My/our price opinion is $____. Tell me what happens...
You've never done a private appraisal with a pricing narrative? ROFL!My/our price opinion is $____. Tell me what happens...
FIne, but that is their concern, our concern is out profession doing what we said we did, and if our appraisal ends up in a review we better be a bit concerned, and if we do review work, we need to do it per what the assignment purpose is not what the lender cares about. A client ordering a review can actually care about the value, a disgrungled investor who bought a portfolio of loans or a reviewer who flagged a report in audit etc.Again. More semantics. The person ordering the appraisal review doesn't give a crap about the concept of value. They want to know whether or not the original appraiser provided them with a reasonable price for sale.
Basic logic... if A = $100, and B = $100, then by definition, A=B. It's called the transitive property of equality.A price and a market value opinion can be the same numerical dollar amount - but they are not the same THING.
What difference does it make ? How did you express your value opinion in the pricing narrative portion?You've never done a private appraisal with a pricing narrative? ROFL!
Is it possible that the definition of MV does NOT apply to 'the broadest pie slice of buyers in that micro market'? From the definition: "...the buyer and seller, each acting prudently..." To me it infers a single buyer and single seller. You see it differently?Market value as used in a appraisal report reflects an opinion of value that appeals to the broadest pie slice of buyers in that micro market.
Not necessarily - the math is the same, but the things themselves are not the same...Basic logic... if A = $100, and B = $100, then by definition, A=B. It's called the transitive property of equality.
If a client cares about the value, then they care about the price. Because value is a priceFIne, but that is their concern, our concern is out profession doing what we said we did, and if our appraisal ends up in a review we better be a bit concerned, and if we do review work, we need to do it per what the assignment purpose is not what the lender cares about. A client ordering a review can actually care about the value, a disgrungled investor who bought a portfolio of loans or a reviewer who flagged a report in audit etc.
How did you express your value opinion in the pricing narrative portion?
The analogy was not of different things, J. $100 is $100. You can call it price, or you can call it MV. Either way, it's $100. Think of it this way - cash is the same as dollars, no? BTW - you never answered my question about how an appraiser's EMV is measured. Is it not measured against the PRICE the property sells for?Not necessarily - the math is the same, but the things themselves are not the same...
A pound of apples and a pound of oranges both weigh the same (math ) but they are still different things. And a pound of solid gold ingot sure has a different value then a pound of apples...
If A is a low quality gem but someone paid $100 for it, and B is a high quality gem and someone paid $100, the math is the same but not the values ...