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#1756725 - 11/09/12 03:17 PM
Flood Insurance Coverage
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100 Club
Joined: Sep 2009
Posts: 234
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We have a loan secured by 2 commercial properties, both in flood zones. Total loan balance is $2.3 million. Appraisal for Property A $850,000 Property B $900,000. R/C Property 1 $200,000 and Property 2 $250,000. Max NFIP $1M Am I correct that the total insurance required is $450,000?
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#1756761 - 11/09/12 04:10 PM
Re: Flood Insurance Coverage
dac
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Gold Star
Joined: Nov 2008
Posts: 403
East
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#1756776 - 11/09/12 04:31 PM
Re: Flood Insurance Coverage
dac
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Gold Star
Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 253
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Commercial properties are only insurable for ACV. You need to use ACV for each property instead of RCV.
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#1760543 - 11/25/12 12:54 PM
Re: Flood Insurance Coverage
dac
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10K Club
Joined: Jul 2001
Posts: 85,424
Galveston, TX
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If your appraisers are not familiar with a cost approach appraisal, you might want to be looking for some new ones. You should be performing your FHD first and if in a SFHA require a cost approach in your engagement letters. USPAP Standard Rule 7-4 requires appraisers to consider and use all approaches to value that are applicable in an appraisal assignment.
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The opinions expressed here should not be construed to be those of my employer: PPDocs.com
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#1760558 - 11/26/12 02:10 PM
Re: Flood Insurance Coverage
dac
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10K Club
Joined: Nov 2002
Posts: 20,656
The Swamp
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Appraisers seem to be notorious about attempting to exclude (there is an actual term for this and I cannot think what it is) cost approaches because it involves more work. This is why requiring it, when needed, as Randy has described, is your best defense in getting it when you actually need it.
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My opinion only. Not legal advice. Say you'll haunt me - Stone Sour
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#1760592 - 11/26/12 03:12 PM
Re: Flood Insurance Coverage
dac
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10K Club
Joined: Nov 2002
Posts: 20,656
The Swamp
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Yes, you are correct on the above translations.
They will feed you that line and use the Departure Rule (that's what I couldn't think of earlier), to leave it out..but irrelevant to market value or not, you need it for flood purposes. That's why it's proactive to pull your determination first and require ACV if it's in a designated zone.
I also don't believe that line of BS because that's the entire purpose of having a depreciation piece. That accounts for the age.
Last edited by RR Joker; 11/26/12 03:12 PM.
_________________________
My opinion only. Not legal advice. Say you'll haunt me - Stone Sour
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#1761670 - 11/28/12 05:08 PM
Re: Flood Insurance Coverage
dac
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10K Club
Joined: Jul 2001
Posts: 85,424
Galveston, TX
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You might be better off talking directly to the appraisers on your approved appraisal list rather than other institutions. Ask them in situations in which involve a building in a flood zone, you would like to either have a cost approach or insurable value included with such appraisal. I'm sure they would be willing to work with you. If not, find some other appraisers. If you have a couple of appraisers that will work with you - just give them the few loans that you might do in a SFHA to them.
Or, just go with the insured values from the other hazard insurance on the properties.
I think you are making this way too hard.
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The opinions expressed here should not be construed to be those of my employer: PPDocs.com
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#1763479 - 12/03/12 10:16 PM
Re: Flood Insurance Coverage
dac
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10K Club
Joined: Jul 2001
Posts: 85,424
Galveston, TX
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Insurable value is the amount on which flood insurance will pay, that would be ACV on other structures or RCV on primary residences.
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The opinions expressed here should not be construed to be those of my employer: PPDocs.com
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#1763872 - 12/04/12 10:44 PM
Re: Flood Insurance Coverage
dac
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10K Club
Joined: Jul 2001
Posts: 85,424
Galveston, TX
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"So for example, on non residential buildings the agents will issue the policy at ACV and therefore the hazard insurance coverage will be for that amount."
That may or may not be true. Other hazard insurance is a whole other animal and most likely RCV coverage may be available on non-primary residences. You need to determine what the other hazard insurance is based on and make appropraite adjustments as available. The other option is to allow the flood insurance agent to make an assessment and as long as it appears reasonable, there should be no problems. People make this out as a huge deal, but there is more than one way to skin a cat.
They addressed this in the interagency Q&A #9 on 10/17/11:
In calculating the amount of insurance to require, the lender and borrower (either by themselves or in consultation with the flood insurance provider or other appropriate professional) may choose from a variety of approaches or methods to establish the insurable value. They may use an appraisal based on a cost-value (not market-value) approach, a construction-cost calculation, the insurable value used in a hazard insurance policy (recognizing that the insurable value for flood insurance purposes may differ from the coverage provided by the hazard insurance and that adjustments may be necessary; for example, most hazard policies do not cover foundations), or any other reasonable approach, so long as it can be supported.
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The opinions expressed here should not be construed to be those of my employer: PPDocs.com
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#1764010 - 12/05/12 03:39 PM
Re: Flood Insurance Coverage
dac
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Diamond Poster
Joined: Jul 2007
Posts: 1,074
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