Joyce Potts
Elite Member
- Joined
- Feb 6, 2005
- Professional Status
- Certified Residential Appraiser
- State
- Florida
Back when the Fannie and Freddie invoked the defintiion of MOST PROBABLE SELLING PRICE as the defintiion of Market Value, which by the way has changed over the years, no body even knew what a short sale was.
For the 4,754th time: If the property started out as an arm's-length offering, had adequate market exposure and failed to achieve a higher price at or in excess of the existing mortgages and finally found it's selling point in the open market, how is that not an example of the Principle of Substitution?
Stop qualifying comps primarily by price and analyze it on a case by case basis and on their own merits.
If short sales typically involve longer approval periods and excess complexity in getting them closed, that is the major distinction for me. But this traditional vs. distress sale discussion with the across the board answer is ludicrous. Again, I've had short sales that sold HIGHER than so called arm's-length sales. That's not typical, but it has happened in my market.
Beat that dead horse some more!
For the 4,754th time: If the property started out as an arm's-length offering, had adequate market exposure and failed to achieve a higher price at or in excess of the existing mortgages and finally found it's selling point in the open market, how is that not an example of the Principle of Substitution?
Stop qualifying comps primarily by price and analyze it on a case by case basis and on their own merits.
If short sales typically involve longer approval periods and excess complexity in getting them closed, that is the major distinction for me. But this traditional vs. distress sale discussion with the across the board answer is ludicrous. Again, I've had short sales that sold HIGHER than so called arm's-length sales. That's not typical, but it has happened in my market.
Beat that dead horse some more!