There are
more than 2 exceptions.
This is
determined by the AVR's price-point...
If a brand is pushing for shelf space @ Best Buy the power output specs are hyped to the stinky side (BS), since Best Buy has difficulty in selling any AVR > $499 SRP. Also it makes little economic sense for a lower cost AVR (SRP < $499)to drive a 4 Ohms load as 90% of these AVRs are pushing bandwidth
limited mini-cube satellites..
Now if the loudspeakers are quality full-range towers, and the AVR is a quality name brand whose SRP price point is > $1299 then it will have a
much better probability for driving a 4 Ohm load...
As it will typically use more robust internal components such as power transformer, power supply capacitors, heat sinks, output devices.
One thing that many consumers have little understanding of is the
royalty cost structure an HD AVR (HDMI 1.3 or higher) compared to an SD AVR (HDMI 1.2 or less).
The royalties of the HD AVR are
3x higher than the SD AVR..
Next question..
Just my $0.02...