The Long View of Property Valuation: e2Value on Why Historical Context Matters in a New Era of AI
May 27, 2026 – 1:06 pm
Image by: e2Value
TL;DR
e2Value co-founder Todd Rissel argues that AI-powered property valuation relies on decades of historical context, construction trends, economic cycles, and shifting cost environments to accurately define replacement cost.
For many within the insurance and property sectors, current valuation challenges are the result of cumulative factors over time:
- Economic cycles
- Demographic shifts
- Evolving construction practices
- Changing consumer expectations
Limited historical visibility has complicated modern valuation discussions. e2Value focuses on studying the long arc of property intelligence, combining historical context with modern technology for a more informed perspective.
Current valuation conversations often start with present conditions, but a broader historical lens offers valuable insight.
“In earlier decades, people generally saw homeownership through a simpler financial lens,” states Todd Rissel, co-founder and CEO of e2Value. "A house was viewed as simply a place to live, and estimating its value tended to feel more straightforward because prices, replacement costs, and household budgets usually stayed closer together."
Over time, economic growth, rising home values, and shifting household wealth introduced complexities:
- Evolving building standards
- Energy considerations
- Increased private investment in residential markets
These changes transformed property ownership into a long-term wealth accumulation vehicle, blurring the lines between purchase price, market value, replacement cost, and appreciation.
Rissel emphasizes: "Every economic era leaves behind a set of assumptions that people tend to hold onto. Those assumptions can keep shaping decisions long after the conditions that formed them have shifted."
Additional economic developments, including rising incomes and access to capital, further complicated the relationship between property values and financial systems. The post-2008 financial disruption added another layer of adjustment.