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13 Income Capitalization Approach

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Presentation on theme: "13 Income Capitalization Approach"— Presentation transcript:

1 13 Income Capitalization Approach
Based on the premise that there is a relationship between the income a property can earn and the property’s value— principle of anticipation

2 Potential Gross Income
Rent Market (Economic) Rent Scheduled (Contract) Rent Historical Rent Other Income Laundry Facilities Parking Spaces Vending Machines

3 Effective Gross Income
Derived by totaling potential income from all sources, then subtracting vacancy and collection losses, which are affected by: Present and past rental losses of subject Competitive conditions in the area Estimate of population/economic trends Quality of tenants Length of leases

4 Net Operating Income (NOI)
Calculated by subtracting the operating expenses of owning a property from its effective gross income Operating expenses include: Variable expenses (management, wages, utilities, repairs) Fixed expenses (real estate taxes, insurance) Reserves for replacement (heating, air conditioning, roof, carpeting)

5 Expenses for Appraisal Purposes— Not Accounting Purposes
Available or probable financing not considered, except under the mortgage equity capitalization method Income tax payments are not considered Depreciation charges on building or other improvements not considered Payments for capital improvements are not treated as operating expenses but are taken from replacement reserve monies

6 Operating Statement Makes use of either
Cash basis accounting in which revenue is recorded when received and expenses are recorded when paid, or Accrual basis accounting in which revenue includes all revenue earned, whether or not received during the period; expenses recorded when incurred, whether or not they have actually been paid during the period

7 Operating Statement Ratios
Three ratios: Operating Expenses Effective Gross Income = Operating Expense Ratio Net Operating Income Effective Gross Income = Net Income Ratio Operating Expenses + Debt Service Potential Gross Income = Break-even Ratio

8 Gross Income Multiplier
Formula: __Sales Price__ Gross Income = GIM Potential gross income multiplier method considers income from all sources before any deduction for vacancy and collection losses or operating expenses Effective gross income multiplier method deducts vacancy and collection losses from gross income before the multiplier is derived

9 Gross Income Multiplier Analysis Part 1
Sale No. Market Value Annual Gross Income GIM 1 $276,000 $32,500 ? 2 $279,000 $31,000 3 $263,000 $26,300 4 $238,000 $21,600 5 $297,000 $27,000 Subject $30,000

10 Gross Income Multiplier Analysis Part 2
Sale No. Market Value Annual Gross Income GIM 1 $276,000 $32,500 8.5 2 $279,000 $31,000 9 3 $263,000 $26,300 10 4 $238,000 $21,600 11 5 $297,000 $27,000 Subject ? $30,000

11 Gross Income Multiplier Analysis Part 3
Sale No. Market Value Annual Gross Income GIM 1 $276,000 $32,500 8.5 2 $279,000 $31,000 9 3 $263,000 $26,300 10 4 $238,000 $21,600 11 5 $297,000 $27,000 Subject $300,000 $30,000

12 Sales Price__ Gross Rent
Gross Rent Multiplier Sales Price__ Gross Rent = GRM Used primarily for single-family residences that are not usually purchased as income-producing properties

13 Gross Rent Multiplier Analysis Part 1
Sale No. Sales Price Monthly Rental GRM (rounded) 1 $138,000 $1,250 ? 2 $124,000 $1,100 3 $129,500 $1,200 4 $137,000 $1,225 5 $128,000 $1,175 Subject $1,230

14 Gross Rent Multiplier Analysis Part 2
Sale No. Sales Price Monthly Rental GRM (rounded) 1 $138,000 $1,250 110 2 $124,000 $1,100 113 3 $129,500 $1,200 108 4 $137,000 $1,225 112 5 $128,000 $1,175 109 Subject ? $1,230

15 Gross Rent Multiplier Analysis Part 3
Sale No. Sales Price Monthly Rental GRM (rounded) 1 $138,000 $1,250 110 2 $124,000 $1,100 113 3 $129,500 $1,200 108 4 $137,000 $1,225 112 5 $128,000 $1,175 109 Subject $136,500 $1,230 111

16 Income Approach Using URAR Form
Enter the subject property’s estimated monthly market rent Enter the GRM applicable to the subject property Multiply the monthly market rent estimate by the GRM Enter the value estimate indicated by the income approach


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