Special offer

Attention Mortgage Applicants: Pay more for an appraisal , then pay again!

By
Managing Real Estate Broker with arrivva, inc. CABre#0157615 NMLS#133975

CNBC Washington correspondent and real estate reporter did a great job or reporting on the HVCC that was implemented today.

Here is the report:

Home Valuation Code of Conduct: Fix or Fraud?
Posted By:Diana Olick

But don’t talk to an appraiser or a mortgage broker about it, or you’ll get an earful. Most of them claim it was crammed down the collective throat of Fannie and Freddie by the very powerful Mr. Cuomo, and that it puts good solid appraisers out of business, complicates the loan process for mortgage brokers, and inevitably hurts consumers.

“One of the biggest stories here is that my appraiser, I've been using for twelve years, he just got his business ripped out from him,” says Craig Strent of Apex Home Loans in Bethesda, MD.

The HVCC requires a firewall between appraisers and those who produce loans, i.e. mortgage lenders and brokers, and that ends up being Appraisal Management Companies, middlemen essentially, that order up independent appraisals. So the appraisal fee, which would have gone wholly to the appraiser, now gets split between the AMC and the appraiser. That’s sending a lot of good appraisers right out of the business.

“Yesterday, Thursday, appraisers may have had 50 or 60 clients that they could deal with, so if they were getting undue pressure from somebody they could just tell that client no, I'm not doing any more work for you,” says Jim Amorin, of the Appraisal Institute. “Today the number of players in the field have been drastically reduced to generally these appraisal management companies, so the pressure that's going to be brought to bear on appraisers we fear is going to be as strong if not stronger than it was before, the whole thing the code of conduct was trying to address.”

Another concern is that the AMC’s may hire appraisers who don’t know the particular neighborhood where the house is, and may use the lowest bidders, again, putting good local appraisers, who know their market best, out of business.

But the biggest issue is something Dana, a mortgage broker, cites in a blast to the RealtyCheck:

Based on Attorney General Cuomo’s website, the appraisal fraud in the mortgage industry was due to the practices used by some of the country’s largest banks pressuring appraisers to artificially inflate the value of homes.

Why is it that some of the largest banks in the country are allowed to have partial ownership in the Appraisal Management Companies ?? Isn’t this once again the fox watching the hen house??

Interestingly, as I wrote earlier, the HVCC arose out of a 2007 lawsuit against First American Corp. and its subsidiary, eAppraiseIT, whose largest client was Washington Mutual. It charged eAppriaseIT with conspiring with WaMu to “inflate real estate appraisals.”

If the whole idea is to get the appraisal system out of the banking/lending system, then why is it that First American Corp., still has joint venture appraisal management companies with: JP Morgan Chase (Quantrix), Citigroup (Finiti), Wells Fargo (Rels), making First American one of the largest Appraisal Management Companies in the nation? Oh, and there’s currently a class action lawsuit against Rels, claiming it rigged the appraisal process for Wells Fargo.

A press release from Attorney General Cuomo’s office, from March of 2008, states: Lenders will be prohibited from using “in-house” staff appraisers to conduct initial appraisals and Lenders will be prohibited from using appraisal management companies that they own or control.

I contacted Fannie Mae, Attorney General Cuomo’s office and the FHFA for comment, but nobody wanted to talk. FHFA Director James Lockhart gave me a statement, which, interestingly, hammers home the need to rid the system of fraudulent appraisals, but never actually, in words, directly supports the HVCC.

Posted by

Fred Glick

CEO, Broker/Owner, Multi-state Licensed Real Estate Brokerage U S Spaces, Inc./Arrivva
CEO, NMLS Certified Mortgage Brokerage U S Loans Mortgage, Inc. NMLS 51022/133975

215.238.9400 East Coast
310.741.7169 West Coast
http://fredglick.com

Licensed Real Estate Broker PA- U S Spaces, Inc. 2158298850, CA Dept of Real Estate BRE#01507615 , NJ Licensed Real Estate Salesperson

Mark MacKenzie
Phoenix, AZ

I read this too, Fred.  What a fiasco.  The market can often be the best regulator, unfortunately government very rarely allows the market to work.

May 01, 2009 10:17 AM
Katiejo Franks
Real Estate and Beyond, LLC - Scottsdale, AZ

Big Brother is at it again. It will be a fun ride. We will continue to look in this matter each week. Great post

May 01, 2009 10:26 AM
Paula Swayne
Dunnigan, Realtors, Sacramento (916) 425-9715 - Sacramento, CA
Realtor-Land Park, East Sac & Curtis Park -Dunniga

Hi Fred!
FINALLY SOMEONE IS WRITING ABOUT THIS IDIOCY!  What was suppose to protect the buyer has become the biggest boondoggle in the escrow process! We had an out of town appraiser appraise a single family home, comparing it to a condo and a duplex...and we are surprised it came in low?  Instead of using appraisers who are familiar with the nuances of a neighborhood, we have appraisers who are now calling Realtors to ask them about the neighborhood. I had an appraiser contact me and wanted to know what I thought the house I sold would sell for if put on the market again and if I should have asked a higher price to begin with. He wanted to know what the market was like in the neighborhood..OM gosh...please bring back our knowledgeable appraisers..PLEASE!!!

May 01, 2009 03:29 PM