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Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac Change the Appraisal Process

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Mortgage and Lending

Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae will implement a revised Home Valuation Code of Conduct beginning May 1, 2009. In an attempt to increase the reliability of appraisals, the revised code builds on existing seller-servicer guidelines and will apply to lenders that sell single-family mortgage loans to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

One major difference in the code is that lenders will be required to order appraisals from one central clearing house, which will in turn select an appraiser. The down side of such a process is that lenders will have little to no communication with the appraiser, which means there won't be an opportunity to have a discussion or touch base with appraisers before they go out to appraise the house. The new code is intended to help assure that borrowers, home buyers and secondary mortgage market investors receive fair and independent property valuations.

In some areas, lenders have already implemented these changes, and in the next few weeks and months, more will have to begin the process.

Additional Resources:
Federal Housing Finance Agency's News Release
Federal Housing Finance Agency's Home Valuation Code of Conduct

 

Karl Peidl

 

Senior Mortgage Consultant

1-800-706-6671 ext. 4349

1-609-294-4186 (fax)

1-609-254-6687 (cell)

kpeidl@supmort.com

http://www.karlpeidlsmc.com/

Referrals are the best thank you!!!

Denise Gray
Realty World Alliance - Wichita, KS
Realtor SRES, Wichita Kansas Homes

The down side is there is always one idiot that makes it into the system and then you have to wait until enough people scream the person is an idiot before you can get rid of them.

Jan 07, 2009 07:49 AM
Karl Peidl
Moorestown, NJ
Accredited Loan Consultant

Hi Denise - Thanks for stopping by.  You are completely right.  I foresee that service will suffer.  I know that my preferred appraiser will not just do a quality job, but that he will get it done quickly.  This change will cause a loss of control over the mortgage process and quite possibly a lack of accountability on the part of some appraisers.

Jan 07, 2009 07:54 AM
Jon Zolsky, Daytona Beach, FL
Daytona Condo Realty, 386-405-4408 - Daytona Beach, FL
Buy Daytona condos for heavenly good prices

The appraisals of the peak market were so behind, that we needed a cash sale to establish the value. Then, when the market started falling,t eh appraisals started coming higher than what you could sell the property for. they are based on sales, but the values keep sliding and the appraisals are behind.

Instead of being a function of the value, they became the function of the recent sales, and these  are different things.

Making it impartial would just make it impartial. They would still be the reflection of the past, not the indication of the future and not the value of today.

Jan 07, 2009 08:04 AM
Kathleen Lordbock
Keller Williams Realty Professionals - Baxter, MN
Keller Williams Realty Professionals

Our appraisers are already on a rotational basis for selection. You get whomever is up next.

Jan 07, 2009 02:49 PM
Karl Peidl
Moorestown, NJ
Accredited Loan Consultant

Jon - Thanks for what I think is an accurate recap of what we've seen.  I understand the concept of regulation in an attempt to eliminate shadiness; however I fear all we will really see is a decline in service levels. 

Jan 08, 2009 09:23 AM
Karl Peidl
Moorestown, NJ
Accredited Loan Consultant

Kathleen - We have also already started ordering appraisals on a rotating basis, but we rotate amongst the appraisers we know and trust.  Requiring appraisals to be ordered only through a national servicer will prevent us from being able to control the quality of the individual that is brought into the process.

Jan 08, 2009 09:26 AM