| Authorised and Approved by the
Governing Council Meeting held on January 23, 1999.
The Practising Valuers Association (India)
is an organization of valuation professionals and others
interested in the valuation profession. It is a self-supporting
and independent body. The first in Maharashtra and only
valuation organization representing all of the disciplines
of valuation specialists actually practising valuation.
The society is incorporated in 1999. The Headquarter of
PVAI is in the metropolitan city MUMBAI (Maharashtra), Commercial
capital of India.
The Association is for the benefit of the
Decision makers, financial institutions, taxation authorities,
professional accountants and is working in the larger interest
of the public. Professionals practising valuation also stand
to benefit from the information, the knowledge and experience
that is shared on this platform.
When you solicite the services of our member,
you are assured the best valuation expertise on the market,
because our members possess the adequate knowledge of the
market and the profession. Their experience and exposure
built reputation for our organisation and developes a confidence
in those who are availing the services.
INTRODUCTION
1.1 Membership Composition of the PVAI
The PVAI is a professional organization
of individuals and corporates. Each of its member who has
demonstrated, to the satisfaction of the Association, that
he is qualified to appraise one or more of the existing
kinds of assets, has been granted the right to use the identification,
‘Member of the PVAI’ as Promoter Members, Life
Members, Ordinary Members, Honorary Members and Student
Members as per the constitution approved by the authorities
1.2 Definition of the terms "Valuation
Practice" and the term "Assets"
1.21 The term valuation practice, as defined
by the Association, applies to any of the four following
operations,
singly or in combination, these operations being executed
within a framework of general principles of
technical procedure and personal conduct :
(1) Determination of the value of assets
(the transitive verb determine having the meaning: "to
come to a decision concerning, as the result of investigation,
reasoning, etc.") ;
(2) Forecasting of the earning power of
assets ;
(3) Estimation of the cost of : -
a) Production of a new asset (production
having the meaning: "brought into being by assembly
of elements, fabrication, construction, manufacture or natural
growth of living things") ;
b) Replacement of an existing asset by
purchase or production of an equivalent asset :
c) Reproduction of an existing asset by
purchase or production of an identical asset.
(4) Determining non-monetary benefits or characteristics
that contribute to value. The rendering of judgments as
to age, remaining life, condition, quality, or authenticity
of physical assets, amenities: an estimate of the amount
of a natural resources, population increase, nature of market,
rate of absorption, etc.
1.22 In valuation and in forecasting of
the earning power, the word asset is used to describe the
rights to the future benefits of something owned or possessed
to the exclusion of other persons. The "something owned"
may be tangible, intangible or both.
In a cost estimation, the word asset is
used to describe the "something owned" without
regard to its ownership.
1.3 Purpose of Promulgating the Principles
of Valuation Practice and Code of Ethics
The Principles of Valuation Practice and
Code of Ethics of the Practising Valuers Association (India)
are promulgated
to
1.31 Inform those who use the services
of valuers as to what, in the opinion of Association, constitutes
competent
and ethical valuation practice ;
1.32 Serve as a guide to its own members in achieving competency
in valuation practice and in adhering to ethical standards
;
1.33 Aid in the accomplishment of the
purposes of the Association, which include :
(a) Fostering the age of valuation education,
(b) Improvement and development of modern
valuation techniques,
(c) Encouragement of sound professional
practices,
(d) Establishment of criteria of sound
performance for use of employers of staff valuers,
(e) Enforcement of ethical conduct and
practice by its members ;
1.34 Provide means, auxiliary to those already used, for
examining candidates who desire admission to membership
of the association as Senior Members.
The means to facilitate judging of individual
skills, competence, and depth of ethical understanding in
valuation practice ;
1.35 Epitomize those valuation practices
which the experience has found to be effective in protecting
the public
interests against un-scruplous exploitation.
Knowledge And Experience
Each member of the Practising Valuers Association
(India) has earned a professional designation in one or
more specialized areas of valuation. To be admitted as a
member of PVAI the valuer must submit representative valuation
reports for perusal and be screened for intended members
ethical behavior.
Every valuer would be admitted as an Ordinary
member. In order to be accepted for Ordinary membership,
the prospective Candidate must be interviewed and approved
by selection commitee of association for members valuation
skills, knowledge and ethical behavior.
The Candidate technical valuation proficiency
and understanding of the fundamentals of valuation ethics,
principles and concepts are evaluated by intensive written
and oral examinations. Copies of the Candidate's valuation
reports are reviewed and must meet professional criteria.
When the Candidate has met all these requirements and has
gained the necessary experience, member may apply for advancement
(presently we have only four categories of members i.e.
promoter member, life member, ordinary member and honorary
member. However, there is a proposal to introduce more categories
at a later date)
Reputation
Each candidate member seeking membership
of Practising Valuers Association (India) must furnish professional
and personal references and be subject to local credit and
background investigations.
One of PVAI's primary objectives is to ensure ethical practices
and procedures on the part of its members. The association
is diligent in its efforts to strengthen the findings and
to protect the client.
PVAI has developed a mechanism for the
enforcement of the Code of Ethics whereby clients may file
written complaints directly with the Headquarters of the
PVAI, if they feel that valuation services rendered by a
PVAI member violates sound professional practice. PVAI has
permanent internal procedures for processing all documented
grievances, assuring due process. Sanctions against members,
if found to be in violation of the Code of Ethics, range
from censure to expulsion with loss of professional standing
(proposed designation at a later date).
REGISTRATION CERTIFICATES
The Practising Valuers Association (India)
is an organization of appraisal professionals and others
interested in the appraisal profession. It is a self-supporting
and independent body. The first in Maharashtra and only
major appraisal organization representing all of the disciplines
of appraisal specialists, the society originated and incorporated
in 1999. PVAI’s headquarter is in the metropolitan
Mumbai,(Maharashtra),Commercial capita of India.
The society is dedicated to the benefit
of the appraisal profession.
When you hire an PVAI-accredited appraiser,
you are assured the best valuation expertise on the market,
because PVAI-accredited appraisers bring knowledge of the
market and profession, experience, and solid reputation
to the job.
UNETHICAL AND UNPROFESSIONAL VALUATION
PRACTICES
The principles of valuation practice recorded
hereinabove relate to the primary objective of a valuation
undertaking, namely the determination of the apposite numerical
result with that degree of accuracy required by the attendant
circumstances, whereas the principles recorded hereinafter
relate to the establishment and maintenance of the confidence
of clients and other interested parties in the validity
of the results of valuation undertakings. To this end, certain
practices are declared by the Association to be unethical
and unprofessional.
Contingent Fees
If a valuer were to accept an engagement
for which the amount of his compensation is contingent upon
the amount of an award in asset settlement or a court action
where his services are employed; or is contingent upon the
amount of a tax reduction obtained by a client where his
services are used; or is contingent upon the consummation
of the sale or financing of a asset in connection with which
his services are utilized or is contingent upon his reaching
any finding or conclusion specified by his client; then,
anyone considering using the results of the valuers undertaking
might well suspect that these results were biased and self-serving
and therefore, invalid. Such suspicion would militate against
the establishment and maintenance of trust and confidence
in the results of valuation work. Generally; therefore the
Association declares that the contracting for or acceptance
of any such contingent fee is unethical and unprofessional.
As a corollary to the above principle relative
to contingent fees. The Association declares that it is
unethical and unprofessional for a valuer (a) to contract
for or accept compensation for valuation services in the
form of a commission, rebate, division of brokerage commissions,
or any similar forms and (b) to receive or pay finder's
or referral fees.
Percentage Fees
The Association takes the position that
it is unprofessional and unethical for the valuer to contract
to do work for a fixed percentage of the amount of value,
or of the estimated cost (as the case may be) which he determines
at the conclusion of his work, except, when in the law and
when insisted by the client.
Disinterested Valuations
Anyone using a valuer with an interest
or a contemplated future interest in the assets valued,
might well suspect that the report was biased and self-serving
and, therefore, that the findings were invalid. Such suspicion
tends to break down trust and confidence in the results
of valuation work, generally.
Interests which a valuer may have in a
asset to be valued, include ownership of the subject asset:
acting, or having some expectation of acting, as agent in
the purchase, sale, or financing of the subject asset; and
managing, or have some expectation of managing, the subject
asset. Such interests are particularly apt to exist if the
valuer, while engaged in professional valuation practice,
is also engaged in a related retail business (real estate,
jewellery, furs, antiques, fine arts, etc.).
The Association declares that, subject
to the provision for disclosure given in the following paragraph,
it is unethical and unprofessional for a valuer to accept
an assignment to value a asset in which he has an interest
or a contemplated future interest.
However, if a prospective client, after
full disclosure by the valuer of his present or contemplated
future interest in the subject asset, still desires to have
the valuer do the work, the latter may properly accept the
engagement provided he discloses the nature and extent of
his interest in his valuation report.
Responsibility Connected with Signatures
to Valuation Reports
The user of a valuation report, before
placing reliance on its conclusions, is entitled to assume
that the party signing the report is responsible for the
findings, either because he did the work himself or because
the work was done under his supervision.
In cases where two or more valuers are
employed to prepare a joint report, the user thereof is
entitled to assume that, if all of them sign it, they are
jointly and severally responsible for the validity of all
of the findings therein; and, if all do not sign, he has
a right to know what the dissenting opinions are.
To implement these principles, the Association
declares that it is unethical (a) to misrepresent who made
a valuation by appending the signature of any person who
neither did the work himself nor had the work done under
his supervision, (b) in the case of a joint report to omit
any signatures or any dissenting opinions, (c) in case two
or more valuers have collaborated in a valuation undertaking,
for them, or any of them, to issue separate valuation reports,
and (d) in case two or more valuers have been engaged by
a single client to make independent valuations of the same
asset, for them to collaborate or consult with one another
or make use of each other's findings or figures.
A valuation firm or corporation may properly
use a corporate signature with the signature of a responsible
officer thereof. But the person who actually did the valuation
for the corporation must sign the corporate valuation report
or the report must acknowledge the person who actually made
the valuation.
Advocacy
If a valuer, in the writing of a report
or in giving an exposition of it before third parties or
in giving testimony in a court action suppresses or minimizes
any facts, data, or opinions which, if fully stated, might
militate against the accomplishment of his client's objective
or, if he adds any irrelevant data or unwarranted favorable
opinions or places an improper emphasis on any relevant
facts for the purpose of aiding his client in accomplishing
his objective, he is, in the opinion of the Association,
an advocate. Advocacy, as here described, affects adversely
the establishment and maintenance of trust and confidence
in the results of professional valuation practice and the
Association declares that it is unethical and unprofessional.
Unconsidered Opinions and Preliminary
Reports
If a valuer gives an opinion as to the
value, earning power, or estimated cost of a asset without
having ascertained and weighed all of the pertinent facts,
such opinion, except by an extraordinary coincidence, will
be inaccurate. The giving of such offhand opinions tends
to be little the importance of inspection, investigation,
and analysis in valuation procedure and lessens the confidence
with which the results of good valuation practice are received,
and therefore the Association declares the giving of hasty
and unconsidered opinions to be unprofessional.
If a valuer makes a preliminary report
without including a statement to the effect that it is preliminary
and that the figures given are subject to refinement or
change when the final report is completed, there is the
possibility that some user of the report, being under the
impression that it is a final and completed report, will
accord the figures a degree of accuracy and reliability
they do not possess. The results of such misplaced confidence
could be damaging to the reputation of professional valuers,
generally, as well as of the valuer concerned. To obviate
this possibility, the Association declares it to be unprofessional
valuation practice to omit a proper limiting and qualifying
statement in a preliminary report. (N.B. It is desirable
practice to give a range of assessed value)
Advertising and Solicitation
It is not unethical to advertise the availability
of valuation services. It is unethical to use any inaccurate,
misleading, false or deceptive claim, promise or representation
in connection with any assignment. These unethical practices
are considered by the Association to be detrimental to the
establishment and maintenance of public confidence in the
results of valuation work. The Association declares that
such practices on the part of a valuer constitute unethical
and unprofessional conduct. It would be unethical to do
the following:
(a) Misrepresent in any way one's connection
or affiliation with the PVAI or any other organization;
(b) Misrepresent one's background, education,
training or expertise:
(c) Misrepresent services available or
a valuer's prior or current service to any client, or identify
any client without the express written permission of such
client to be identified in advertising,
(d) Represent, guarantee or imply that
a particular valuation or estimate of value or result of
an engagement will be tailored or adjusted to any particular
use or conclusion other than that a valuation will be based
upon an honest and accurate adherence to the Principles
of Valuation Practice.
Causes for Disciplinary Action
by the Association
Disciplinary action against the members
of the Association shall be taken in the event of violations
of specific provisions of the Association's Constitution
and Bylaws or of its Principles of Valuation Practice and
the Code of Ethics incorporated therein. Such actions are
under of jurisdiction of the Governing Council. Violations
may fall under six categories:
(1) Deviations from standard valuation
practice
(2) Failure to fulfill obligations and
responsibilities
(3) Unprofessional conduct
(4) Unethical conduct
(5) Conviction in any Court
After due investigation, the Association
may take action in the form of suggestion, censure, suspension,
or expulsion, in the last event the member will be required
to surrender his certificate and other evidences.
VALUATION REPORTS
Description of the Asset Which
Is the Subject of a Valuation Report
It is required that the asset with which
a valuation report is concerned, whether tangible, intangible,
real, or personal, be fully described therein, the elements
of such description being: (a) identification, (b) legal
rights and restrictions encompassed in the ownership, where
these are not obvious, (c) value characteristics, and (d)
physical condition, where applicable.
Statement of the purposes of the
Valuation Work
It is required that a valuation report
include a statement of the purposes for which the work was
performed: to determine a value, to estimate a cost, to
forecast an earning power, to ascertain certain facts to
reach conclusions and make recommendations for action in
specified matters, etc.
It is required that the meaning attached
by the valuer to any specific kind of value or estimated
cost which is the purpose of the valuation undertaking be
described and explained in the valuation report.
It is required that a valuation report
include a statement as to the date which applies to the
value estimate, cost estimate or forecast of income.
When appropriate, an analysis of the highest
and the best use of the asset should be included in the
investigation and study.
Statement of the Contingent and
Limiting Conditions to Which the Valuation Findings Are
Subject
It is required that statements, information,
and/or data, which were obtained by the valuer from members
of other professions, or official or other presumably reliable
sources, and the validity of which affects the valuation
findings, be summarized or stated in full in the valuation
report and the sources given, so that verification desired
by any user of the report may be accomplished.
If a valuation is a hypothetical one, it
is required that it be labeled as hypothetical, that the
reason a hypothetical valuation was made be stated, and
that the assumed hypothetical conditions be set forth.
If a valuation is a fractional valuation,
it is required that it be labeled as fractional and that
the limitations on the use of the reported figure be stated.
If a preliminary valuation report is issued,
namely, one in which the figures are subject to refinement
or change, it is required that the report be labeled as
preliminary and that the limitation on its use be stated.
Description and Explanation in
the Valuation Report of the Valuation Method Used
It is required that the method selected
by the valuer as applicable to the subject valuation undertaking
be described and explained in the valuation report.
Statement of the Valuer's Disinterestedness
It is required that the valuer include
a statement in his valuation report that he has no present
or contemplated future interest in the subject asset or
any other interest which might tend to prevent his making
a fair and unbiased valuation or, if he does have such an
interest, to set forth fully the nature and extent of that
interest.
Valuers Responsibility to Communicate
Each Analysis, Opinion and Conclusion in a Manner that is
not Misleading.
The valuer should state in each report
"I hereby certify that, to the best of my knowledge
and belief, the statements of fact contained in this report
are true and correct, and this report has been prepared
in conformity with the Principles of Valuation Practice
and Code of Ethics of the Practising Valuers Association
(India)"
Signatures to Valuation Reports
and the Inclusion of Dissenting Opinions
It is required that the party who makes
the valuation or who has the valuation made under his supervision
sign the valuation report.
It is required that all collaborating valuers,
issuing a joint report, who agree with the findings, sign
the report, and that any collaborating valuer who disagrees
with any or all of the findings of the others, prepare,
sign, and include in the valuation report his dissenting
opinion.
PURPOSES OF VALUATION WORK
Various Kinds of purposes of Valuation
Work
A valuation is undertaken for one or more
of several purposes, namely: to determine the value of a
assets; to estimate the cost of producing, acquiring, altering,
or completing an asset: to estimate the monetary amount
of damages to an asset; and to forecast the monetary earning
power of an asset. In specific instances, the work may have
additional purposes, such as: the formulation of conclusions
and recommendations or the presentations of alternatives
(and their consequences) for the client's actions.
Objective Character of the Results
of a Valuation Undertaking
The primary purpose of a monetary valuation,
is determination of a numerical result, either as a range
or most probable point magnitude, the rupee amount of a
value, the rupee amount of an estimated cost, the rupee
amount of an estimated earning power. This numerical result
is the purpose and is unrelated to the desires, wishes,
or needs of the client who engages the valuer to perform
the work. The amount of this figure is independent of what
someone desires it to be. All the principles of valuation
ethics stem from this central fact.
Your Thirst for Validation
In short, PVAI-accredited valuers are experts.
The meticulous PVAI accreditation process ensures that PVAI-accredited
valuers are accurate, impartial, and credible. They are
educated and experienced in their fields and are respected
members of their communities. They can deliver independent
valuations that assure your property is appraised at its
fair market value.
VALUER'S PRIMARY DUTY AND RESPONSIBILITY
The valuer's duty and responsibility, in
each subject case, is two fold.
Valuer's Obligation to Determine and Describe
the Apposite (well expressed/ appropriate) Value or Estimated
Cost
First, because there are several kinds
of values and several kinds of cost estimates, each of which
has a legitimate place as the end point of some class of
valuation engagement, it is the valuer's obligation to ascertain
which one of these is pertinent to the particular undertaking.
In meeting this obligation, the valuer may consider his
client's instructions and/or may obtain legal or other professional
advice, but the designating of the apposite value or estimated
cost is the valuer's sole responsibility. Also, it is his
obligation, in this connection, fully to explain and describe
what is meant by the particular value or cost estimate which
he has determined, in order to obviate misunderstanding
and to prevent unwitting or deliberate misapplication.
Valuer's Obligation to Determine Numerical
Results with Whatever Degree of Accuracy which the Particular
purposes of the Valuation Necessitate
It is the valuer's obligation to determine
the appropriate and applicable numerical results with as
high a degree of accuracy as the particular purposes of
the valuation necessitate.
Valuer's Obligation to Avoid Giving
a False Numerical Result
Obviously, the valuer has every obligation
to avoid giving a false figure. The numerical result of
a valuation could be false for one of the two reasons: it
could be false because it is a grossly inaccurate estimate
of the apposite value or cost estimate, or it could be false,
even though numerically accurate, because it is an estimate
of an inapposite value.
Valuer's Obligation to Competency
and Ethical Practice.
In order to meet his obligations, the valuer
must be competent in his field. This competency he attains
by education, training, study, practice, and experience.
He must also recognize, understand, and abide by those ethical
principles that are interwoven with and are an essential
part of truly professional practice.
Professional Character of Valuation
Practice
The members of the Association are engaged
in a professional activity. A profession is based on an
organized body of specific knowledge - knowledge not possessed
by laymen. It is of such a character that it requires a
high degree of intelligence and considerable expenditure
of time and effort to acquire it and to become adept (skilful)
in its application. A valuer's client relies on the valuer's
professional knowledge and abilities to the extent it may
be necessary to accomplish the purposes of the work. Members
of the Association recognize this relationship.
Valuer's Responsibility to Third
Parties
Under certain specific circumstances a
valuation report may be given by a client to a third party
for their use. If the purpose of the valuation includes
a specific use by a third party, the third party has a right
to rely on the validity and objectivity of the valuer's
findings as regards the specific stated purpose and intended
use for which the valuation was originally made. Members
of the Association recognize their responsibility to those
parties, other than the client, who may be specifically
entitled to make use of their reports.
VALUER'S OBLIGATION TO HIS CLIENT
The valuer's primary obligation to his
client is to reach complete, accurate, and pertinent conclusions
and numerical results regardless of the client's wishes
or instructions in this regard. The relationship between
client and valuer is not one of principal and agent. However,
the valuer's obligation to his client go somewhat beyond
this primary obligation. These secondary obligations are
set forth in the following sections.
Confidential Character of a Valuation
Engagement
The very fact that a valuer has been employed
to make a valuation, is itself a confidential matter. In
some instances, the very fact of such employment may be
information that a client, whether private or a public agency,
prefers for valid reasons, to keep confidential. Knowledge
by outsiders of the fact of employment of a valuer may jeopardize
a client's proposed enterprise or transaction. Consequently,
it is improper for the valuer to disclose the fact of his
engagement, unless the client approves of the disclosure
or clearly has no interest in keeping the fact of the engagement
confidential, or unless the valuer is required by due process
of law to disclose the fact of his engagement.
In the absence of an express agreement
to the contrary, the identifiable contents of a valuation
report are the assets of the valuer's client or employer
and, ethically, cannot be submitted to any professional
Association as evidence of professional qualifications,
and cannot be published in any identifiable form without
the client's or employer's consent.
Valuer's Obligation to Give Competent
Service
It is not proper for a valuer to accept
an engagement to make a valuation of assets of a type he
is not qualified to value or in a field outside his Association’s
membership classification, unless (a) he fully acquaints
the client with the limitations of his qualifications or
(b) he associates himself with another valuer or valuers
who possess the required qualifications.
As a corollary to the above principle,
the Association declares that it is unethical for a valuer
to claim or imply that he has professional qualifications
which he does not possess or to state his qualifications
in a form which may be subject to erroneous interpretation.
Valuer's Obligations Relative to
Giving Testimony
When a valuer is engaged by one of the
parties in a controversy, it is unethical for the valuer
to suppress any facts, data, or opinions which are adverse
to the case his client is trying to establish; or to over-emphasize
any facts, data, or opinions which are favorable to his
client's case, or in any other particulars to become an
advocate. It is the valuer's obligation to present the data,
analysis, and value without bias regardless of the effect
of such unbiased presentation on his client's case. Advocacy
affects adversely to establish and maintain trust and confidence
in the result of professional valuation.
Valuer's Obligation to Document
Valuation Testimony
When a member accepts employment to make
a valuation, or to testify as to the value of assets before
a court of law or other judicial or quasi-judicial forums,
the valuer shall, before testifying, complete an adequate
written valuation report, or have complete documentation
and substantiation available in his files.
Valuer's Obligation Relative to
Serving More Than One Client in the Same Matter
When two or more potential clients seek
a valuers’ services with respect to the same assets
or with respect to the same legal action, the valuer may
not properly serve more than one party, except with the
consent of all parties.
Agreements and Contracts for Valuation
Services
It is good practice to have a written contract,
or atleast a clear oral agreement, between valuer and client,
covering objectives and scope of work, time of delivery
of report, and amount of fees. In certain circumstances,
it may be desirable to include in the valuation-service
contract a statement covering the objective character of
valuation findings and a statement that the valuer cannot
act as an advocate or a negotiator.
VALUER'S OBLIGATION TO OTHER VALUERS
AND TO THE ASSOCIATION
Protection of Professional Reputation
of Other Valuers
The valuer has an obligation to protect
the professional reputation of all valuers (whether members
of the Association or not) who subscribe to and practice
in accordance with the Principles of Valuation Practice
of the Association. The Association declares that it is
unethical for a valuer to injure, or attempt to injure,
by false or malicious statements or by innuendo the professional
reputation or prospects of any valuer.
Valuer's Obligation Relative to
Association's Disciplinary Actions
A member of the association, having knowledge
of an act by another member which, in his opinion, is in
violation of the ethical principles incorporated in the
Principles of Valuation Practice and Code of Ethics of the
Association, has the obligation to report the matter to
the association.
It is the valuer's obligation to cooperate
with the Association and its officers in all matters, including
investigation, censure, discipline, or dismissal of members
who are charged with violation of the Principles of Valuation
Practice and Code of Ethics of the Association.
VALUATION METHODS AND PRACTICES
Various Kinds of Values
The Association recognizes that different
kinds of assets may have different kinds of values depending
on the particular attendant circumstances and, further,
that there are both basic and subordinate kinds of values.
Good professional practice requires that
the valuer describe in sufficient detail, in each case,
the nature and meaning of the specific value that he is
determining.
Selection of Valuation Method
The procedure and method for determining
the particular value in question is a matter for the valuer
himself to determine; he cannot be held responsible for
the result unless he has a free hand in selecting the process
by which that result is to be obtained. However, good valuation
practice requires that the method selected be adequate for
the purpose, embrace considerations of all the factors that
have a bearing on the value, and be presented in a clear
and logical manner.
Fractional Valuations
Certain classes of assets (real estate,
business enterprise, collections of goods/ materials, etc.)
can be considered as made up of components. If an element
is considered as an integrated part of the whole asset,
its value, in general, is different from the value the same
element has if considered as a fraction separated from the
whole asset.
A valuation of an element of a whole asset,
considered by itself and ignoring its relation to the rest
of the whole asset, is called a "fractional valuation."
There are legitimate uses for fractional valuations (valuation
of buildings for fire insurance purposes; valuation to determine
the value of land as if cleared of existing improvements:
etc.) but good practice requires that a fractional valuation
be labeled as such and that the limitations on its use by
the client and/or third parties be clearly stated.
Contingent and Limiting Conditions
Affecting a Valuation
In many instances the validity of the valuer's
conclusions as to the value of a subject asset is contingent
upon the validity of statements, information, and/or data
upon which he has relied, supplied to him by member of other
professions or secured by him from official sources. Such
material may be obtained, for example, from architects,
engineers, lawyers, accountants, government officials, government
agencies, etc. It is proper for the valuer to rely upon
and use such material provided (1) he states in his report
that he has done so, (2) he stands ready to make his sources
and/or the material itself available for any required verification,
and (3) he does not pass to others the responsibility for
matters that are, or should be, within the scope of his
own professional knowledge.
Standard valuation practice requires that
the valuer state any other contingent or limiting conditions
which affect the valuation, such as, for example, that the
value is contingent upon the completion of projected public
or private improvements, etc.
Hypothetical Valuations
A hypothetical valuation is a valuation
based on assumed conditions which are contrary to fact or
which are improbable of realization or consummation. The
Association takes the position that there are legitimate
uses for some hypothetical valuations, but that it is improper
and unethical to issue a hypothetical valuation report unless
(1) the value is clearly labeled as hypothetical (2) the
legitimate purpose for which the valuation was made is stated,
and (3) the conditions which were assumed contrary to fact
are set forth.
A hypothetical valuation showing the value
of a company which it is proposed to form by merging two
existing companies would he deemed to serve a legitimate
purpose.
Valuations In Which Access to Pertinent
Data is Denied
Situations sometimes occur in which data
that the valuer considers pertinent to the making of a valid
valuation are in existence but access to them is denied
to the valuer, either by the client or some other party.
In such a case, the valuer, at his option, may properly
decline to carry out the assignment. In the event he considers
such data essential to the making of a valid valuation,
he may not properly proceed with the assignment.
Ranges of Value or Estimated Cost
and Reliability Estimates
Some valuation engagements call for the
determination of a probable range of values or estimated
costs, either with or without a collateral statement of
the most probable figure within that range. It is entirely
within the scope of good valuation practice to give a range
of values or estimated costs.
In as much as the valuer's determination
of the amount of a value or an estimated cost cannot, by
its very nature, be exact, it is good valuation practice
to append to such numerical results a statement as to the
degree of reliability to be accorded thereto. Such reliability
estimates are usually expressed as plus and minus percentages.
Values or Estimated Costs Under
Different Hypotheses
The objective of a valuation undertaking
may be the determination of different values or different
cost estimates based on different hypotheses. It is entirely
within the scope of good valuation practice to give such
differing numerical results, provided the valuer adheres
to the principles set forth earlier. (Refer Sec. 3.1 and
Sec. 6.5)
Inspection, Investigation, Analysis,
and Description of Subject Asset
The valuation of assets is a procedure
based on an analysis of all the characteristics of the assets
which contribute to or detract from its value; good valuation
practice requires that the valuer's inspection, investigation,
and study be thorough enough to uncover all of the pertinent
characteristics.
Good valuation practice requires that the
description of the asset, tangible or intangible, which
is the subject of a valuation, cover adequately
identification of the asset
statement of the legal rights and restrictions
comprised in the ownership, and the characteristics of the
asset which contribute to or detract from its value.
In the case of land and prospective real
estate improvements, identification is particularly important
in order to prevent unscrupulous persons from representing
the valuation as applying to substituted inferior assets.
The physical condition of land plots or
real estate is an element contributing to or detracting
from their value; good valuation practice requires adequate
inspection and investigation to determine it.
Collaboration Between Valuers and
Utilization of the Services of Members of Other Professions
Collaboration between valuers is desirable,
in some situations, to expedite the completion of work and,
in other situations, to obtain the benefits of combined
judgment or combined data. Such collaboration is entirely
proper providing all the collaborators sign a joint report
or, if there be dissenting opinions, providing these dissenting
opinions are made a part of the report.
In some cases, the nature of the valuation
undertaking calls for special professional knowledge and
abilities in addition to those possessed by the valuer.
In such an instance, it is both necessary and proper for
the valuer to employ other valuers and/or members of other
professions to obtain data and derive conclusions relative
to specific parts of the work. The principal valuer builds
his final conclusions, in part, on these contributions,
taking responsibility for the final result but subject to
the validity of the underlying or constituent contributions. |