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9320 SW Barbur Blvd | Suite 300 | Portland, OR 97219 503.222.3800 | www.BluestoneHockley.com
How Real Estate Appraisals are being afgected by COVID -19
By Clifg Hockley, President of Bluestone and Hockley Real Estate Services Executive Director , SVN | Bluestone and Hockley 14 June 2020
Real estate appraisers in Oregon, are carefully threading the needle of real estate valuation, as they access the Covid -19 corona virus and its impact on real estate supply and demand. We know, COVID - 19 has created some short-term anxiety for the fjnancial institutions. Lenders are looking for some way to manage their risk, given the challenges of returning to work safely and reemploying those that have been sent home. Financial institutions have shifted their lending priorities from standard real estate lending to business lending because the federal government needed to use them as a conduit for PPP and to help boost the US economy. In the meantime these institutions have either withdrawn from existing real estate loan commitments, stopped lending all together or limited their lending to clients who are very strong and are willing to increase their down payments , which has limited their exposure to the vagaries of non-rent paying tenants. Lenders have turned to real estate appraisers to help manage their risk. Appraisers have stepped up and, in many cases, made adjustments to their current appraisals. Some of the appraisal adjustments are chronicled listed below.: Appraisal Adjustments
- 1. Increase CAP rate estimates (due to estimated lack of rental income or lack of buyer demand)
which inevitably reduces property valuations
- 2. Adjustments to lower values due to lower actual incomes
- 3. NOI adjustments (Both by estimating increased expenses and lowered income)
- 4. Using verbal quotes from real estate brokers; that refmect a slowed real estate marketplace
- This then gives shelter to appraisers to make additional “adjustments to lower the
appraisal value”
- 5. Delete the cost approach from appraisals as not being relevant
- 6. Ignoring relevant near-term sale comps
- 7. Increase the weighting of appraisals to the low end of the income approach