Title: Overhead Set
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2Overhead Set2 VALUATION APPROACHES
- 3 Approaches to Valuation
- Cost Approach
- Income Approach
- Sales Comparison or Market Approach
31. Cost Approach
- a. cost of duplicating property minus
depreciation - b. most fruitful in engineering or cost-to-cure
cases - c. potential problems in ranking projects
- 1. new vs. established structures--different
risks from being leased up - 2. non-viable structures e.g., the World Trade
Center in Kansas City
42. Income or Cap Rate Approach
- a. capitalizes cash flow as perpetuity via a cap
rate - 1. VI/r
- where Vproperty value, Istabilized income
flow, rcap rate - b. cap rates vs. discount rates
- 1. cap rate reflects purely real estate/property
factors - a. e.g., site-specific factors, property-type
issues, property-specific factors - 2. discount rates reflect opportunity cost of
capital as learned in introductory finance
52. Income or Cap Rate Approach
- 1. Direct Capitalization
- V NOI / R
- 2. Present Value Method
- V NOI / (r-g)
- r competitive discount rate
- g growth rate
- R r-g
- 3. Mortgage/Equity Method
- V D E
- D mortgage debt
- E equity
6Cap Rate Example
- Building Cash Flow 100,000/yr for 25 yrs.
- Loan Amount 700,000 at 10 for 25 yrs.
- Pmt 77,177.65
- Required Rate of Return 15
- Investors Cash Flow 100,000 - 77,177
22,882.35 - Present Value 147,915
- Value 700,000 147,915 847,915
- IRR 10.91
- Cap Rate NOI/V 100,000/847,915 11.79
- Assumption NOI remains level
7gtold exam question on meaning of cap rates
- Assume that AA noncallable corporate bonds with
ten years to maturity currently are yielding 10.
Further assume that the real estate cap rate is
7 for an entirely owner-occupied office building
with a standard lease whose occupant also has a
AA credit rating. If the building owner were to
come to you and propose a sale/leaseback with a
ten year term, you would consider the AA
corporate bond rate as more appropriate than the
real estate cap rate for determining the present
value of the cash flows on the sale/leaseback.
82. Income or Cap Rate Approach
- c. potential problems if cash flows are not
stable-- - large differences in PVs of equal dollar flows if
one is cyclical and the other is not - d. potential problems from no attempt to
differentiate among the components of cash flow
by risk level - e. in practice, often very ad hoc assumptions
made in determining I
93. Market Approach
- a. identify comparable properties and value
accordingly - b. how should this be implemented empirically?
- e.g., how to value a warehouse in terms of its
value for conversion to condominiums?
104. Mass Appraisal (Hedonic)
- (means implicit in the Greek)
- a. used first by consultants to the auto industry
- b. simple regression analysis
- 1. HPi a bjXij ei ,
- where HP is the price of the ith home,
- X is the vector of house traits
- a is the regression intercept term
- b is the coefficient vector of trait prices
- e is the error term
- 2. b ?HP/?X
- the marginal effect of a small change in trait j
on home price HP
114. Mass Appriasal (Hedonic)
- 3. Potential problems with the statistical
approach - a. specification error--never know all the
relevant traits - b. some traits very hard to quantify--e.g., style
features - c. changes in trends in neighborhood from which
sample of comparables is drawn - ?in absence of transactions-based prices, any
approach gives you at best an educated guess
about asset value market approach is the best
from a conceptual perspective (simple market
approach valuation now required in house
appraisals by secondary market agencies)
12Linear Regression
- Simple Real Estate Example
- We wish to explain/predict the price of single
family homes (find their value). - Dependent Variable (Y) Sales Price
13Linear Regression
- Independent Variable (X)
- What causes sales prices to vary?
- Size of property?
- Test to see if sales prices change as property
size changes. - X size in square feet.
14Linear Regression
- SCATTER PLOT
- diagram that plots the relationship between two
variables - In our case, we wish to plot the relationship
between sales price and property size.
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16Linear Regression
17Linear Regression
- Linear model is estimated by least squares
- Ordinary Least Squares (OLS)
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19Regression Equation
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21Multiple Regression
- Add independent variables to model to explain
more of the price. - of bedrooms
- of bath rooms
- year built
- location
- amenities
- fireplace, garage, deck, etc..
22Multiple Regression
- Problem Collinearity
- As you add variables, some of the independent
variables may be collinear with each other. - Example As the number of bed rooms increases,
you expect the number of bathrooms to increase as
well. - This will bias your regression equation. (Makes
it difficult to support the results in court.)
23Example
- Factors that influence warehouse valuation.
- building size
- office space
- ceiling height
- doors (dock and drive-in)
- rail service
- sprinklers
- age
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