ThirdHatt
Legendary Member
- Joined
- Jun 13, 2005
- Messages
- 2,324
- Status
- OWNER - I own a Hatteras Yacht
- Hatteras Model
- Not Currently A Hatteras Owner
The recent post titled "Insurance Renewal Survey" reminded me of a concern that I have about the relationship between survey value and insurable value. Rather than derail that thread I decided to post a new thread and see what you guys think.
Boat sale prices are down considerably as we all know but there have been a few that have sold here and there significantly lower than the recent/current comps due to particularly distressed situations. One of my concerns as a buyer in this market is when a buyer has managed to secure a contract price that is significantly under current market value, will a surveyor appraise the boat according to the comps in current market conditions or will he take under consideration the actual selling price of that particular boat and appraise the boat well under what recent comps have suggested. Apparently surveyors do not like to appraise a boat significantly above a selling price because of the remote possibility of insurance fraud. How widespread is this with surveyors? Just because a buyer strikes an incredible deal and gets a seller to agree to sell his boat well below market value, the buyer should not be penalized with a low appraisal just because of past insurance frauds.
I understand that surveyors have to take into account many different factors in determining a value, but IMHO a fair market valuation should have nothing to do with what the buyer is paying for the boat. Brokers have told me that often some time during the sea trial surveyors will ask the broker what the sales price is and miraculously the survey value will usually come in slightly above that. I see no reason why the surveyor would need to know the actual selling price, but maybe the asking price to give him an idea. The buyer might suggest what he thinks the value should be (within reason of course), and hopefully the surveyor can come to a value that is close to that amount with his own research and findings.
Obviously insurance companies would be concerned about survey appraisals that are significantly above actual sales prices for the fear of potential fraud. Often one of the questions asked when applying for boat insurance these days is "What is the sales price?" even though they are already requiring a full survey. I think that the sales price is irrelevant if they are selling an agreed value insurance policy. They have a professional survey report stating what it is worth. The underwriters should sell that policy based on that, not the quality of the deal that the buyer was able to put together.
I guess this type of sale can put surveyors in a somewhat uncomfortable position but there has to be some sort of a balance. A buyer needs full protection for his investment which is what the insurance is purchased for. He may have to replace the vessel in the event of a total loss and chances are he may not be able to recreate such an incredible deal. He should be insured for fair market value so that he can replace his boat with a comparable one.
Comments, thoughts, suggestions?
Boat sale prices are down considerably as we all know but there have been a few that have sold here and there significantly lower than the recent/current comps due to particularly distressed situations. One of my concerns as a buyer in this market is when a buyer has managed to secure a contract price that is significantly under current market value, will a surveyor appraise the boat according to the comps in current market conditions or will he take under consideration the actual selling price of that particular boat and appraise the boat well under what recent comps have suggested. Apparently surveyors do not like to appraise a boat significantly above a selling price because of the remote possibility of insurance fraud. How widespread is this with surveyors? Just because a buyer strikes an incredible deal and gets a seller to agree to sell his boat well below market value, the buyer should not be penalized with a low appraisal just because of past insurance frauds.
I understand that surveyors have to take into account many different factors in determining a value, but IMHO a fair market valuation should have nothing to do with what the buyer is paying for the boat. Brokers have told me that often some time during the sea trial surveyors will ask the broker what the sales price is and miraculously the survey value will usually come in slightly above that. I see no reason why the surveyor would need to know the actual selling price, but maybe the asking price to give him an idea. The buyer might suggest what he thinks the value should be (within reason of course), and hopefully the surveyor can come to a value that is close to that amount with his own research and findings.
Obviously insurance companies would be concerned about survey appraisals that are significantly above actual sales prices for the fear of potential fraud. Often one of the questions asked when applying for boat insurance these days is "What is the sales price?" even though they are already requiring a full survey. I think that the sales price is irrelevant if they are selling an agreed value insurance policy. They have a professional survey report stating what it is worth. The underwriters should sell that policy based on that, not the quality of the deal that the buyer was able to put together.
I guess this type of sale can put surveyors in a somewhat uncomfortable position but there has to be some sort of a balance. A buyer needs full protection for his investment which is what the insurance is purchased for. He may have to replace the vessel in the event of a total loss and chances are he may not be able to recreate such an incredible deal. He should be insured for fair market value so that he can replace his boat with a comparable one.
Comments, thoughts, suggestions?