Tazmaniac
Sophomore Member
- Joined
- Oct 20, 2007
- Professional Status
- Certified Residential Appraiser
- State
- Georgia
Anyone out there who has appraised awhile knows that this adjustment doesn't belong on an As is appraisal. I am getting more and more requests for an adjustment on my comparable listings, and even on my comparable sales. I keep telling them to get a BPO, but they think that they can force appraisers to do whatever they want. So, for anyone else out there who has this issue, Here is the best comment to write on the report. Hopefully together we can re-educate the underwriters.
"Sale Price to List Ratio:
This ratio adjustment appears to be a more common request. Unfortunately, it is not factual and highly variable depending on sales. For this reason, it is not adjusted for on an "As Is" appraisal report. Using paired data analysis, the ratio between two sale prices and the current sales vs. another set will generally be different as there is no set price for each home. The final price can fluctuate greatly in the negotiation process, and the appraiser cannot predict what a home will sell for. The appraiser can only develop a most approximate market value based on current sales, not listings. The homes listed could sell for more than they are listed for, which would totally skew any predicted adjustments. A BPO would probably be the best way to ascertain any probable Sales Price to List Ratio."
"Sale Price to List Ratio:
This ratio adjustment appears to be a more common request. Unfortunately, it is not factual and highly variable depending on sales. For this reason, it is not adjusted for on an "As Is" appraisal report. Using paired data analysis, the ratio between two sale prices and the current sales vs. another set will generally be different as there is no set price for each home. The final price can fluctuate greatly in the negotiation process, and the appraiser cannot predict what a home will sell for. The appraiser can only develop a most approximate market value based on current sales, not listings. The homes listed could sell for more than they are listed for, which would totally skew any predicted adjustments. A BPO would probably be the best way to ascertain any probable Sales Price to List Ratio."