"Overall, the net effect of the surging real estate market...is that the financial well-being of American households hinges...on the continued strength of property values. And...many Americans have taken on mortgages that exceed the true market value of their homes, thanks to appraisal fraud."
This type of fraud, simply stated, is commissioning, demanding, or falsifying an appraisal that justifies a value that may or may not be an accurate indication of that value.
The report makes a stunningly simple explanation of the reasons behind mortgage fraud: that the financial incentives of those involved in the mortgage loan process often work against the very idea of securing an honest appraisal.
- Lenders or brokers are generally paid a commission based on the value of the mortgage and thus their livelihood depends on ensuring that the loan will close without any problems;
- The surge in refinancing has increased the incentives for dishonesty - i.e. a homeowner who is refinancing to pay off other debt will need the new loan to come in at a certain level in order to pay off that debt. If the non-mortgage obligations cannot be reduced below the lender's required debt to income level, the loan will not get past the underwriters. Thus it becomes a circular problem; the lender's own rules contribute to the necessity to hit a dollar figure with the appraisal.
- Those persons who originate loans are increasingly less likely to care if their loans default. In the old days banks originated loans and kept and serviced them until the debt was retired. Today most loans are quickly sold into the secondary market where only Freddie, Fannie, FHA, or the VA knows who will ultimately pay the price when a property that is foreclosed turns out to be worth far less than the appraisal in the loan file said it was.
- Appraisers' livelihoods are dependent on a flow of work from lenders and brokers. An appraiser who does not bring in the desired value on properties may soon find him or herself losing clients and income.
- Consumers are also to blame because they often look only at the short term. A prospective or current homeowner wants to buy the house or wants the cash out and fails to think ahead to the day that he may want to sell or refinance and find that he is "upside-down" with a mortgage that exceeds the value of his home.
Ppolled 500 appraisers in 44 states. 55% of the appraisers reported that they had been pressured to overstate property values. 25 percent of appraisers reported that they had experienced such pressure in at least half of the appraisals they were commissioned to perform. The report also cites data collected from 2000 to 2003 by the Mortgage Asset Research Institute (MARI) which indicated that incidents of appraisal fraud rose from 10 percent of all mortgage fraud in 2000 to 38 percent in 2003. MARI also was quoted as stating that the actual incidence of appraisal fraud was likely "higher than the data indicated"
But does it matter if property values are inflated? With skyrocketing prices, certainly real values will quickly catch up with anything an appraiser would dare put in his report, right?
And if it does matter, what can be done about it. Surely state and federal regulators must have an interest in what is happening in this sector of the housing industry.
We will talk about what Demos has to say about this and other appraisal related topics later this week.
What the hell was that first comment? Oh well,.....regarding your post, I'm sure that appraisal fraud did indeed happen, but I really think that the appraisal process is better than your post would lead people to believe. If you read the appraisal, it's not hard to see if the appraiser is bullshxtting you. From what I understand, there are programs that they can run the appraisals through that check the adjustments and such.
People are looking for someone to "blame" for the crises when the true culprits aren't that hard to identify...the problem is that they all have a bunch of money and can fuel the misdirection.....oh, by the way, I mean the big wall street institutions that created the sub-prime programs in the first place and the ratings agencies that rated the CDO's as AAA. Just my opinion.
Bob Mitchell
ValueList Real Estate Services, Inc