Valuation COPY Flashcards
What is stamp duty?
Stamp Duty is a tax you might have to pay when buying a property or a piece of land
When does the new Red Book 2025 apply from?
31 January 2025.
Why has the red book been updated (2025)?
Future proof valuation practice, e.g., updates relating to technology and ESG
Help valuers to provide the highest standard of service
Simply and clarify guidance for valuers
Build trust in valuations provided by RICS Registered Valuers
Reflect the changes to the latest version of IVS
Incorporate changes from the RICS Valuation Review
What are the 2 types of valuer?
- An internal valuer is employed by the company to value the assets for internal purposes only, there is no third-party reliance.
- An external valuer has no material link with the company or assets.
What three things should you consider as first steps before undertaking a valuation?
- Competence – do you have correct knowledge/skills
- Independence – no conflicts of interest
- Terms of Engagement – full confirmation of instruction, confirm competence of valuer.
What are some examples of statutory DD?
- EPC rating
- Flooding (EA website)
- Fire Safety Compliance
- Health and Safety Compliance
- Legal Title and Tenure
- Planning history (any onerous conditions such as listed/conservation area)
- Asbestos register
- Contamination
Describe the timeline of a valuation
Preamble:
- Receive instruction from the client
- Check competence
- Check independence (no Conflicts of interest)
- Issue terms of engagement (inc. Scope of works, fee, PII, CHP)
- Receive Countersigned terms
Due Diligence
- Gather information – leases, title, planning doc, OS plans etc.
- Undertake statutory due diligence (listed previously)
- Inspect and measure
- Research market / analyse comps
Valuation & Reporting
- Undertake the Valuation
- Draft Report
- Have another Surveyor review your work
- Finalise and sign report
- Report your valuation to the client
Completion
- Issue invoice
- Ensure filing in good order for audit/archiving
what are the 5 methods of valuation?
- Comparative Method
- Investment Method
- Profits Method
- Residual Method
- Contractors Method (Depreciated Replacement Cost - DRC)
Describe the Methodology of the Comparable Method of Valuation?
- Search and select comps
- Verify information (triangulated approach, analyse headline rent)
- Assemble comps into Schedule
- Adjust comparables according to a hierarchy of evidence
- Analyse comparable evidence to form opinion of value
- Report value and prepare file note
What RICS document concerns the comparable method?
RICS Professional Standard ‘Comparable Evidence in Real Estate Valuation’ – 1st edn, 2019.
How would you find relevant comparables?
- Inspect local area
- Agent’s boards,
- speak to local agents,
- third party databases
- inhouse records
- EGI
Evidence must be ‘contemporary’ – i.e. recent! The date is important
When is the investment method of valuation used?
- Used when there is an income stream to value.
- Income is capitalised at a yield to provide a capital value.
- Conventional approach assumes growth is implicit.
- An implied growth rate is derived from the market capitalisation rate (yield).
What is an implied growth rate?
An implied growth rate is the rate at which an asset’s value is expected to grow, based on the market’s expectations.
What is a term and reversion valuation, when is it used?
- Used for reversionary investments (i.e. Market Rent more than passing rent). i.e. when the property is under-rented.
- Term is capitalised until next review/break/lease expiry at an initial yield.
- Reversion to Market Rent is capitalised into perpetuity at a reversionary yield.
What is a layer and hardcore method, when is it used?
- Used for over rented investments (passing rent more than market rent)
- Income flow divided horizontally.
- Higher yield applied to top slice to reflect additional risk in achieving market rent.
- Different yields used depending on comparable investment evidence and risk .
- Bottom slice – market rent
- Top slice – rent passing minus market rent until next lease event
What is Years Purchase? How do you calculate Years Purchase in perpetuity?
- A Years purchase shows us how many years would be required for the income to repay the purchase price.
- It is calculated by dividing 100 by the yield.
100/i where ‘i’ is the yield
What is key concept to consider when discussing yields?
RISK
What is a Yield?
A yield is a measure of investment return, expressed as a percentage of capital invested.
Formula is Income / (Price x 100).
What is an All Risks Yield?
The remunerative rate of interest used in the valuation of fully-let property, let at market rent, reflecting all prospects and risks attached to the particular investment.
What is True Yield?
Assumes rent is paid in advance, most traditional valuation assumes that rent is paid in arrears.
What is Nominal Yield?
Initial yield assuming rent is paid in arrears
What is Gross Yield?
Yield is not adjusted for purchaser’s costs (such as an auction result)
What is Net Yield?
The resulting yield adjusted for purchaser’s costs
What is Equivalent Yield?
Average weighted yield when a reversionary property is valued using an initial and reversionary yield.
What is Initial Yield?
Simple income yield for current income and current price.
What is Reversionary Yield?
Market Rent (MR) divided by current price on an investment let at a rent below the MR.
What is Running Yield?
The yield at one moment in time.
what is a NIY
the current annualised rent, net of costs, expressed as a percentage of capital value, after adding notional purchaser’s cost
How does a discounted cash flow work?
- Growth explicit investment method of valuation
- Projects estimated cash flows over an assumed investment holding period
- with an exit value at the end of this period
- The cash flow is then discounted back to the present day at a discount rate (known as desired rate of return) to reflect the perceived level of risk.
- Approach separates out and explicitly identifies growth assumptions rather than incorporating them within an ARY.
- A method that sets out inflows and outflows
What is a growth explicit method of valuation?
An explicit discounted cash flow model uses predicted input changes, such as growth, rather than existing values.
what is the concept behind a DCF?
- A method for estimating the value of an asset by discounting its future cash flows.
- It’s based on the idea that money is worth more today than it will be in the future.
Why is a Discounted Cash Flow important?
- DCF considers the time value of money, which is the idea that money is worth more today than it will be in the future
- DCF can help identify the most important factors that drive an investment’s valuation
What RICS document concerns Discounted Cash Flows?
RICS Guidance Note on ‘Discounted Cash Flows for Commercial Property Investments’ (2010)
What is the methodology to find MV via DCF?
- Estimate the cash flow
- Estimate the exit value at the end of the holding period
- Select a discount rate
- Discount cash flow at discount rate
- Value is the sum of the completed discounted cash flow to provide the NPV
Define NPV
- Net Present Value is the sum of all the discounted cash flows of the project.
- NPV positive = investment has exceeded investor’s target rate of return
- NPV negative = it has not achieved the investor’s target rate of return
Define IRR
“The rate at which all future cash flows must be discounted to produce an NPV of 0”.
IRR used to assess the total return from an investment opportunity making some assumptions regarding rental growth, re-letting and exit assumptions.
How is IRR calculated?
- Input current MV as a negative cash flow
- Input projected rents over holding period as a positive value
- Input projected exit value at end of term assumed as positive value
- Discount Rate (IRR) is the rate chose which provides a NPV of 0
- If NPV is more than zero, then target rate of return is met.
When is the Profits Method used?
- valuations of trade related property
- Used where the value of the property depends upon profitability of its business and its trading potential.
What is the basic principle of the profits method?
value of the property depends on the profit generated from the business, not the physical building or location.
How Many Years of Audited Accounts would you ideally like to see for a Profits Method Valuation?
3 years
(Audited accounts are superior to management accounts)
If it is a new business (profits method), how would you value it?
Use estimates/business plan for new business
What is the method of the profits method?
Annual turnover (income received)
LESS costs/purchases
= Gross Profit
LESS reasonable working expenses
= Unadjusted Net Profit
LESS operator’s remuneration
= Adjusted net profit known as the Fair Maintainable Operating Profit (FMOP)
Capitalised at appropriate yield (datamultiplier) to achieve Market Value
Cross Check with comparable sales evidence
What is EBITDA?
Earnings before interest, taxation, depreciation and amortisation.
Hotel profits method
Revenues - expenses = Operating profits
Operating profit - undistributed operating expenses = GOP
GOP - other expenses (mgt, insurance, tax etc)
= EDITDA / NOI
What is a Development Appraisal?
- Tool to financially assess viability of development scheme.
- Used to assess viability/suitability/profitability of proposed scheme and its sensitivity to changing inputs or assessing viability of different uses, rents, yields, S106, CIL etc.
- Can be used to establish residual site value or can assume site value.
- Can be based on client inputs.
What is a Residual Valuation?
- Valuation to appraise the value of development site/land to find market value.
- It is based on market inputs.
- It is ONE moment in time, at the valuation date, for a particular purpose.
- Inputs are taken at valuation date.
- Can be simple residual valuation or DCF method.
What are some examples of site prepartion?
Demolition,
remediation works,
site clearance
What is the finance rate?
blended rate (cost of debt + risk)
(5%-7%)
what is s106?
Legal agreement between local authority and developer for planning obligations (e.g. affordable housing, local training) to gain planning consent.
It is site-specific, and is a figure that can be negotiated.
How would you estimate S106 in your appraisal?
Look at past schemes that have been developed, and look on planning website to see the S106 figure agreed as a benchmark/comparable analysis.
What is CIL
Community Infrastructure Levy charged by Local Planning Authorities for new development area (on the uplift on GIA). It is not necessarily site specific, and can be used on local infrastructure such as schools and healthcare.
CIL is excluded for existing floorspace, charities, social housing.
How is CIL calculated?
Multiplying the NEW floorspace that a development will be creating by the relevant CIL rate set out in the Local Authority CIL Charging Schedule.