Title: Fair Value The Valuers Perspective
1Fair ValueThe Valuers Perspective
Chris Thorne FRICS FCIArb Board Member
IVSC Stanley Booton MA MRICS Chairman RICS
Valuation for Financial Statements Group
2Overview
- Nature and objectives of IVSC
- Valuation for financial reporting
- Where we are now
- Fair value and Market Value
- Other practical issues
- What do valuers need from IASB?
3What is IVSC?
- Formed in 1981 by various professional bodies
involved in real estate valuation - Members are professional bodies. Over 50
countries now represented. - Non Governmental Organisation member of UN
- Latest standards (7th edition) published early
2005 - IVS now adopted or incorporated into national
standards in many developed economies USA have
agreed convergence of USPAP and IVS - Membership and standards now extend beyond real
estate to other classes of asset and liability
4IVSC funding
- Members pay a annual fee
- Majority of funding comes from sponsorship
Current sponsors include - larger professional institutes, e.g. RICS and
Appraisal Institute (USA). - Major firms of real estate valuers, e.g.
Atisreal, CBRE, Cushman Wakefield, DTZ, Jones
Lang LaSalle, King Sturge, Knight Frank, - Users of real estate valuations, e.g. Verband
Deutscher Hypothekenbanken. - Funds committed from some accountancy firms for
current business valuation project
5IVSC restructuring
- Current structure considered inappropriate for
further development. - Need to
- broaden scope of markets addressed
- Improve relevance to different applications
- Increase output
- All require additional funding
- Strategic review underway future structure may
well be modeled on IASCF /IASB
6Role of IVSC
- IVSCs role is to produce, publish and promote
valuation standards - It is not a regulatory body
- It has no individual members
- It has no power to enforce or compel compliance
with the standards - Compliance with IVS is through the member
organisations of IVS. - Red Book is RICS regulatory document that
requires members to adopt IVS, supported by
monitoring and compliance powers.
7What are Standards?
- They ARE statements of
- recognised principles and concepts
- best practice in procurement and reporting
- accepted definitions
- They do NOT
- Prescribe specific methods of valuation for
different purposes - Teach valuers how to value!
8Valuation for Financial Reporting
- Accounting Standards were original motivation for
Valuation Standards - Although IVS cover valuation generally, principal
driver remains IFRS - In states such as UK and Australia, long
tradition of valuation in financial statements - Also long tradition of valuers liaising with
national accounting standard setters - In UK FRS 15 quotes RICS Red Book and vice versa
9Valuation for Financial Reporting
- IVSC has had more limited influence on IASB
- Although IAS /IFRS allowed valuation option, not
widely adopted outside Commonwealth - National standards, such as FRS 15, and
equivalents in other countries had clear guidance
on valuation bases and assumptions - IAS in contrast just stipulate fair value, with
only a definition and limited guidance on
application - Accordingly existing IVS guidance also vague
10Light at the end of the tunnel?
- IVSC welcomes both Canadian Measurement and FASB
Fair Value projects - Both shine light on some of the issues that have
been troubling valuers and auditors, e.g. - What is Fair Value?
- Is Fair Value the same as Market Value?
- Is FV always applied in the same context under
different standards? - How is Fair Value determined?
11Fair Value
- the amount for which an asset could be
exchanged between knowledgeable, willing parties
in an arms length transaction. (IAS 16 para.
6) - Currently no conceptual framework for
application. - IAS 16 and 1AS 40 provide some help by
stipulating that normally determined having
regard to market evidence or current market
conditions, but - In general use fair value is price that is fair
to the particular parties in the transaction - It reflects the advantages and disadvantages to
them of the transaction synergistic value is
expressly included - Commonly used in share transfers and business
combinations
12Other FV Definitions
- FASB October 05
- Fair value is the price that would be received
for an asset or paid to transfer a liability in a
current transaction between marketplace
participants in the reference market for the
asset or liability - FASB March 06
- Fair value is the price that would be received
for an asset or paid to transfer a liability in a
transaction between market participants at the
measurement date
13Market Value
- Market Value is the estimated amount for which
a property should exchange on the date of
valuation between a willing buyer and a willing
seller in an arms-length transaction after
proper marketing wherein the parties had each
acted knowledgeably, prudently and without
compulsion. (IVS 1) - Supported by Conceptual Framework in IVS
- Definition well tested and now becoming
established in regulation international e.g. EU
Directive on Solvency Ratios
14Market Value
- Conceptual Framework highlights include
- estimated amount excludes any element of
special value ie synergy gains available from a
specific party have to be disregarded. - a willing buyer is motivated but not compelled
to buy - a willing seller is neither over eager or
forced but motivated to sell at whatever price is
available in current market - proper marketing means property has been
exposed to market in most appropriate manner
15Definitions of ValueThe Valuers View
16Fair v Market Value
- In many cases price obtainable in the general
market for that asset will be a price that is
deemed fair by both parties - However
- MV disregards any such synergistic value as this
could only be realised if a specific party was
willing to transact on date of valuation - MV does not require price to be fair to either
party it is simply the price determined by
market participants generally - FV is generally a broader concept than MV. For
many purposes ignoring synergistic value and
whether deal was right for the particular
entity would be wholly inappropriate
17Fair v Market Value
- Fair Value and Market Value overlapping concepts
but are NOT synonymous - FASB had proposed in include in its Fair Value
definition a direct comparison to a reference
market. - Also clear from Canadian paper that entity
specific considerations should normally be
disregarded. - Is not obvious solution to stipulate that MV as
defined in IVS as appropriate measure for
financial reporting?
18Practical Issues Is asset measured under going
concern concept?
- IAS 1 stipulates that accounts prepared on going
concern basis unless intention is to liquidate - Measurement takes place at asset level not entity
level - Assets (or liabilities) can have markedly
different market values depending on which
assumption made - that they are part of a transfer of the whole
operation or, - that they are sold away from the enterprise as a
separate item
19Practical Issues Is asset measured under going
concern concept? - 2
- Potential conflict between IAS 16 and IAS 36
- Is Fair Value under revaluation option supposed
to be the same as Fair Value in impairment test? - Intention of IAS 36 appears to be to establish
minimum carrying amount by comparing ViU of
holding asset with net proceeds of liquidation
(FV less costs) - Same FV (without costs deduction) might be
thought to be carrying amount under IAS 16.
However, this figure then used to calculate
depreciation under same standard, which assumes
asset continuing useful life to entity.
20Practical IssuesReal Estate
- Real estate has characteristics that distinguish
it from other types of asset and liability - It has to be transacted in-situ if owner
occupied the entity has to remove or relocate if
not transferred as part of going concern - Land does not normally depreciate
- Land and buildings may have potential for more
valuable uses - Buildings often adapted to suit particular
operation - These pose particular measurement questions
21Practical IssuesReal Estate Measurement
Questions - 1
- If land and buildings declared surplus
liabilities for contamination may be triggered
but not if transferred as part of going concern - Land may have higher value for alternative use
but this could not be realised without closure or
relocation must be correct that potential is
revealed in notes but - is it logical that carrying amount reflects a use
inconsistent with the going concern assumption? - If carrying amount does reflect alternative use,
how are costs consequential on realising the
higher value reflected?
22Practical IssuesReal Estate Measurement
Questions - 2
- An entity may construct a building that is
specialised for its operation includes
buildings that are otherwise conventional but
that are of abnormal size or in an abnormal
location - If valued on assumption that transfer of real
estate interest is as part of transfer of whole
entity the estimated price will reflect need of
purchaser for that facility - If valued without regard to going concern, ie as
if surplus, there may be no identifiable
purchaser at all, and price will reflect costs of
redevelopment or reconfiguration for uses that
would be in demand.
23Practical IssuesWhat do valuers need from
accounting standards?
- Stipulating Fair Value alone will not achieve
consistency, transparency and credibility in IFRS - Problems identified are not valuation problems
valuers can provide answers under any of the
alternative scenarios - Standards need to clarify the measurement
objective for different purposes e.g. initial
recognition, subsequent recognition, depreciating
accounting or assessing impairment write downs - Valuation standards can then stipulate
appropriate assumptions for each purpose
24Reasons to be Cheerful Part 1
- Canadian Project recognises some of the issues
that can affect the assessment of value. - IVSC generally in agreement with main
conclusions, pleased to see that impact of
different assumptions (value-affecting
properties) is acknowledged and discussed - Draft FASB Standard also advances debate.
Clarifies that - FV for Financial Reports should normally reflect
MV - Discusses affect of valuation premise on value
25Reasons to be Cheerful Part 2
- IVSC has recently met with both IASB and FASB
Boards and Fair Value project teams - Board level commitments to improve understanding
of issues and produce suitable guidance - IVSC broadening its scope and in dialogue with
other groups interested in valuation of
intangibles
26Fair ValueThe Valuers Perspective
Chris Thorne FRICS FCIArb Board Member
IVSC Stanley Booton MA MRICS Chairman RICS
Valuation for Financial Statements Group