- Joined
- Jan 6, 2010
- Professional Status
- Certified General Appraiser
- State
- Dom. Republic
No.
Ignoring it, using it as a pending, or not using it could be misleading. You can use sales before or after the effective date. There is no difference. A comp 1 month after the effective date is just as good as a sale 1 month before the effective date. There is NO requirement that all sales close on exactly the effective date, otherwise we would have no comps. The problem is that most of us have a 1 or 2 day turn around time, so this issue rarely is a concern. The closer to the effective date that you can get, (Before or after), the more reliable the data.
Using it as a pending, places it on the second page (Per FNMA) and uses a pending sales price ($200,000) that is much too high.
Ignoring it, using it as a pending, or not using it could be misleading. You can use sales before or after the effective date. There is no difference. A comp 1 month after the effective date is just as good as a sale 1 month before the effective date. There is NO requirement that all sales close on exactly the effective date, otherwise we would have no comps. The problem is that most of us have a 1 or 2 day turn around time, so this issue rarely is a concern. The closer to the effective date that you can get, (Before or after), the more reliable the data.
Using it as a pending, places it on the second page (Per FNMA) and uses a pending sales price ($200,000) that is much too high.
