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LingLing wrote:Our medical office is located at a not so good area (Fort Pierce of St. Lucie County). Since there is no recent sales, the appraiser used past sales of St. Lucie west for comparison. St. Lucie West is considered to be the center and good/crowded area of St. Lucie County. We didn't choose that St. Lucie west because of the high rent, price and traffic. Because the appraiser used the St. Lucie west as a comp, the seller expects us to pay the downtown price for a condo located in a not so good area. I found it strange that appraiser can use past sales from a hot area as a comp for a "cold" area. Any advice?
LingLing wrote:Ron Paul, thank you very much. I learned a lot.
Steve Owen wrote:LingLing wrote:Ron Paul, thank you very much. I learned a lot.
FYI, LingLing, I am Steve Owen. Ron Paul (quoted signature line) is a Republican candidate for President.
Go here to check him out...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ron_Paul
...and here if you want to get involved.
http://www.ronpaul2008.com/
M L wrote:Ah, I see now why the choice for the location. That may be why the seller is pushing you, he/she thinks they've got you over the barrel. Also, you need to learn a bit about the brokerage end. The medical office management company's job is to try to get the building leased... they are actually working for the landlord. Unless you hired a broker to represent you, the broker works for the seller/landlord.
But about the appraisal... in a case where the sales data is poor at best, I'd rely more heavily on the income and cost approaches. I agree with the others that sales can be found, you just have to go further back in time. I don't know why some appraisers are scared to go back for 2, 3, or 4 years for sales data. I guess it falls back on their years of residential training where Fannie/Freddie has made it sound like it's the Golden Rule to not exceed 6 months. However, a time adjustment is easy to prove, and it's much better to use older sales with a time adjustment than to go to a different and superior city.
M L wrote:Try having a sit down "talk it out" session. In your post you appear to be very, very reasonable, and a professional appraiser would be willing to discuss the case in a non-confrontational manner. You may gain some insight as to the appraiser's analysis, reasoning, and opinions. But the appraiser should also be willing to consider your input and concerns. No one is perfect, and one of the problems in real estate is that we can only use the data that's available, even if it's poor supporting data. That's one reason why we use multiple approaches. However, in the end it is a professional opinion.
LingLing wrote:ML and Edd, Thank you. I actually reviewed the seller the appraisal. In the appraisal, the appraiser wrote that the cost and income approaches to value are not motivating factors. Therefore, only Sales Comparison is valid. Then he used the past sales in another city that is 20 miles away from us and has a booming downtown and high income population.
I don't plan to talk to seller's appraiser. I plan to hire our own appraiser. But before I hire him, I would like to know whether he will use all approaches suggested here 1. Sales Comparison. If there is no recent sale in the city, use the most recent possible, do time adjust. 2. Cost approach. 3. Income approach. Am I too demanding? Is my request reasonable?
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