Special offer

HVCC CALL TO ACTION

By
Real Estate Appraiser with Appraiser, Ken Rossman Cert General RZ3504

Trouble Viewing? Click here.
Click here to Forward to a Friend.


June 9, 2009

HVCC CALL TO ACTION

To:      All Mortgage Brokers, Real Estate Agents, Appraisers, Lenders, Home Builders, Title Agents, and Consumers
From:  Marc Savitt, President- National Association of Mortgage Brokers

After more than a year of exhaustive negotiations with Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Director of FHFA (GSE Regulator) James Lockhart, and NY Attorney General Andrew Cuomo, NAMB believes the time has come for your individual voice to be heard.

In order for this "Call to Action" to be effective, we ask that you fully participate, encourage others to join the action and continue calling and emailing everyday, until advised to stop by NAMB. This will NOT be a one day action!

We have received hundreds of e-mails through the hvcc@namb.org e-mail address outlining specific cases where the HVCC has created delays and additional costs to consumers. NAMB has categorized and compiled a report of the examples received, which was sent to FHFA Director James Lockhart. Please use your own examples in your conversations with legislators, regulators, or their staff. Also, please visit the NAMB HVCC Resource Center for additional information and documents on the HVCC.

Who will you be contacting?

NY Attorney General Andrew Cuomo's Office: (212) 416-8000, Internet Complaint
Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA): (866) 796-5595, director@fhfa.gov
Fannie Mae: (202) 752-7000, headquarters@fanniemae.com
Freddie Mac: (703) 903-2000, Internet Complaint
Senators, Representatives and Governors: Click here for contact information.
Also, please contact your local TV and Newspaper outlets.

Below are talking points and background information to assist in your conversations. Please remember we are all professionals and should conduct ourselves accordingly in any communication with the above parties. For the most successful and influential calls, it is important to concisely quantify how the HVCC is affecting your consumer and your business.

Talking Points:

1)         NAMB conservatively estimates (breakdown below) that the HVCC is costing consumers over 2.8 BILLION dollars a year in extra fees, created by long delays (extended lock-in fees) and higher appraisal costs.

2)         Unregulated Appraisal Management Companies (AMCs), who have been the subject of several misconduct investigations, are the centerpiece of the HVCC. The original Cuomo investigation involved a federally chartered bank and an AMC.

3)         AMCs are driving honest appraisers and mortgage brokers from business, eliminating competition, increasing costs to consumers and reducing state revenue. The HVCC is causing significant delays in real estate transactions, hurting real estate agents, title companies and other third parties reliant on turnaround time.

4)         HVCC does nothing to reduce fraud, as it legitimizes the same failed model, which was the subject of Attorney General Cuomo's investigation.

5)         No Portability! Consumers are "trapped" with a specific lender. If a better deal becomes available with a different lender, the consumer is forced to pay for another appraisal.

Background:

I.     Lack of Portability
    A.  Lenders are not allowing borrowers to transfer appraisals, regardless of the reason.
    B.   Forces the borrower to pay for another appraisal and wait for a new appraiser to be assigned and complete it, increasing the total cost and time needed for obtaining a home. Delays in turnaround times also cause the borrower to miss rate lock deadlines and possibly face penalties charged by the lender.
    C.   In a poll conducted by NAMB, 75.8% of respondents said that 0% of their appraisals are portable since the enactment of the HVCC. 

II.    Lack of Quality
    A.  AMCs are assigning appraisers from a different municipality, county, or even state to appraise the target house, therefore unfamiliar with the neighborhood and unable to produce an accurate appraisal.      
        i.    Because of this, the HVCC is forcing appraisers to be in direct violation of the Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice (USPAP) for jurisdictional competence.
    B.   Because AMCs pay appraisers such low fees, those assigned appraisers willing to do the work are often inexperienced and fail to adequately appraise the home. 

III.   Increased Cost of Appraisals
    A.  The minimum increase we have seen in direct consumer cost is $150 per appraisal.  That, coupled with the drastically increased appraisal turnaround times that impose extended lock periods at an average expense of $561.95 per loan, is now costing consumers an estimated additional $711.95 per transaction.
    B.   $150.00 - minimum increase per appraisal
$561.95 - average loan amount of $224,778 at .25% for extended lock period
$711.95 - average total increase per transaction
x 3,870,552* - 2007 HMDA report of residential real estate loans originated
$2,755,639,496 - $2.8BILLION in increased fees to consumers! 

IV.   Articles Illustrating the Effects of the HVCC
    A.  The Appraisal Bubble - The Center for Public Integrity
    B.   The Cure is Worse than the Disease - Appraisal Press
    C.   Appraisals Roil Real Estate Deals - The Wall Street Journal
        i.     Feel free to forward these articles and/or reference

Sara Goodwin
Estimation Nation Corporation - Portland, OR
Portland, Oregon Appraiser

"Lack of Portability A. Lenders are not allowing borrowers to transfer appraisals, regardless of the reason. B. Forces the borrower to pay for another appraisal and wait for a new appraiser to be assigned and complete it, increasing the total cost and time needed for obtaining a home. Delays in turnaround times also cause the borrower to miss rate lock deadlines and possibly face penalties charged by the lender. C. In a poll conducted by NAMB, 75.8% of respondents said that 0% of their appraisals are portable since the enactment of the HVCC. "

Although I've only heard concerns from one borrower on this matter, I know there will be more out there over time.  And the lender they are going thru is one that will simply drop a loan if there aren't decent comps in the area.

Jun 10, 2009 03:02 AM
David Mescon
DAVID B. MESCON REAL ESTATE APPRAISER AND CONSULTANT - Kailua-Kona, HI

What if...

AMCs were federally licensed and regulated - and -

No lending institution of any kind could have any financial interest in an AMC - and -

No lending institution could refuse to accept an appraisal from any licensed AMC (without cause) -

What would happen???

I think the laws of supply and demand would kick in.  AMCs would have to compete.  Their fees would become reasonable.  Many of the problems created by the HVCC would go away by themselves.  We would still be protected from most undue influences, and, if these "regulations" had some teeth in the right places, at least some improper practices by some of the more "ethically challenged" amongst us might cease.  Just a thought.

Jun 10, 2009 09:12 AM
Tom Horn
Thomas Horn, Real Estate Appraiser - Alabaster, AL
Appraising The American Dream

Good ideas David.

Sep 08, 2009 10:11 AM