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Ryan Lundquist is a Certified Residential real estate appraiser serving the Greater Sacramento Region. He is FHA approved and does work for brokers, banks, governmental agencies, Realtors, attorneys, home owners and more. Ryan speaks some Spanish too.

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The material and information contained on this website is the copyrighted property of Ryan Lundquist and Lundquist Appraisal Company. Content on this website may not be reproduced or republished without prior written permission from Ryan Lundquist. The information on this website is meant soley for educational purposes and is not intended in any way to support an opinion of value for your appraisal needs or any sort of value conclusion for a loan, litigation or any other potential appraisal-related purpose. The material found on this website is meant for casual reading only. For more detailed market analysis to be used for an appraisal report or any appraisal-related purpose, please contact us for more information. Thank you.

Fannie Mae’s Definition of Market Value

As an FYI for any readers, this is Fannie Mae’s definition of market value, which is contained in the Fannie Mae appriasal form (1004) that is used for most conventional loans:

imagesMarket value is the most probable price which a property should bring in a competitive and open market under all conditions requisite to a fair sale, the buyer and seller, each acting prudently, knowledgeably and assuming the price is not affected by undue stimulus. Implicit in this definition is the consummation of a sale as of a specified date and the passing of title from seller to buyer under conditions whereby: (1) buyer and seller are typically motivated; (2) both parties are well informed or well advised, and each acting in what he considers his own best interest; (3) a reasonable time is allowed for exposure in the open market; (4) payment is made in terms of cash in U.S. dollars or in terms of financial arrangements comparable thereto; and (5) the price represents the normal consideration for the property sold unaffected by special or creative financing or sales concessions granted by anyone associated with the sale.

Examples: If you sell your house and include your red corvette in the garage as part of the sale, it probably wouldn’t fit the definition above because the buyer very likely paid a higher price for the house because of the machine parked in the garage (#5). Or if there are $50,000 of concessions contained in the purchase price, chances are that the buyer paid more for the house to get the benefit of money back, right? (#5) Or if a property is listed on the market for 1 day only, it may have been under-priced and not reflective of the market, right? (#3) (not always the case if a property goes quickly, but often so). Or consider when a family member sells to another family member and how the sales price is often much lower than it would have been if a non-family member purchased the house. This would very likely not be an arms-length transaction where each party is acting in his own best interest (#4). Or imagine a couple is getting divorced and they need to sell their house quickly. The house sells $30,000 below other recent sales in the neighborhood and so it does not fit the definition of market value (# 2 & # 3).  These are the types of issues that appraisers must consider constantly (and these are the reasons why speaking with local Realtors is a crucial part of our job. Having reliable and accurate information leads to better appraisals). 

If anyone has questions, feel free to contact me at 916-595-3735 or www.lundquistcompany.com

http://www.lundquistcompany.com/blog  Fannie Mae’s Definition of Market Value

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  1. Ann’s avatar

    Does anyone know a phone number to contact fannie mae regarding their unrealistic value as the investor in a short sale. We are trying to dispute the value of an appraisal done in May 09. We offered more recent comps to BofA (servicer) but BofA states Fannie Mae will not consider.

    Do you know of anyway to dispute value with Fannie Mae? All help is greatly appreciated.

  2. Ryan Lundquist’s avatar

    Hi Ann, you can reach Fannie Mae at http://www.fanniemae.com and 1-800-732-6643 (Resource Center). I don’t know if they will hear you out or not. Does Fannie Mae already own the loan or does it still belong to BofA? If FNMA does own the loan, then they be interested to hear what you have to say. If not, then you may need to take another stab with BofA. Let me know what happens. I’d be curious to hear more about your situation too. Feel free to comment, call or email me if you’d like.

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