New Appraisal Code Causes Chaos

By Marcie Geffner, Bankrate.com

The new "code of conduct" that was supposed to protect lenders and borrowers from faulty appraisals has caused higher costs, delays and considerable chaos in home sales and loan refinances.

Mortgage brokers, appraisers and real estate agents are up in arms over the new rules, which dictate how lenders select an appraiser when they originate certain home loans. Few borrowers care much, if at all, about how appraisers are hired or paid, but those borrowers whose loans have been delayed or derailed due to the new rules may take a very keen interest, indeed.

At the center of the controversy is the Home Valuation Code of Conduct, or HVCC, which outlines appraisal-related practices lenders must follow with respect to so-called conventional or conforming loans that they want to sell to Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac. The practices are intended to reduce the incidence of appraisal fraud and prevent inappropriate pressure being placed on appraisers to inflate home valuations. The code, which became effective May 1, does not apply to "FHA loans," which are insured by the Federal Housing Administration, or "VA loans," which are guaranteed by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. (Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have both posted FAQs about the code.)

New rules protect borrowers from inflated appraisals
David Feldman, president of First American eAppraiseIT, an appraisal software and management company in Irvine, Calif., says the code is "very good for borrowers" because the new practices will help to ensure that home valuations will be "less inappropriately influenced."

"(Homebuyers) don't want to pay too much, and they want to pay the right price," he says. "For refinances, if you were hoping for a 'higher value,' prior to the code, if there was any pressure, you might have gotten it or not. Now that will be lessened, so it protects borrowers from themselves."

That may prove beneficial, yet the code also has created other unintended consequences in these areas:

Accuracy. The accuracy and credibility of an appraisal should be the borrowers' chief concern. Appraisal management companies, or AMCs, which now perform more than half of the appraisals nationwide, contract with tens of thousands of appraisers but typically assign jobs only to several thousand, who complete their work "quickly and with good quality and good service," Feldman says.

John Stafford, a loan officer with Reliant Mortgage in Dallas, takes exception to such claims. He says there are two types of appraisers: the "slap-dash" kind, who base their valuations on the first comparable sales they can find, and the more competent kind, who "work very hard to get the absolute best value, but fair value within the regulations as they are."

Borrowers should be concerned, Stafford says, because "a lackadaisical effort on an appraisal can easily create a value that is 10 percent lower than it should be." An artificially low value can kill a home purchase transaction if the appraisal doesn't support the sales price or derail a loan refinance if the appraisal results in a higher loan-to-value ratio and, consequently, a less attractive interest rate.

Timeliness. The timeliness of an appraisal is also a prime concern for borrowers because they typically need to meet the time frame of a purchase-contract contingency or interest rate lock.

Rob Carter, a Realtor with ZipRealty in Washington, D.C., believes the code has introduced much more uncertainty into the appraisal process.

"We are all used to knowing when the appraisal is going to get done and what the outcome is going to be," he says. "It's a little frustrating when you don't know."

Next: "Should borrowers pay more so appraisers can make more ...?" >

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Source: BankRate
gr8gizmo's picture
Let's not forget to reveal to the readers that the only thing that the existence of this small number of so-called Appraisal Management Companies accomplishes is that a highly-corruptible and influential company is now essentially and literally placed between the banks (mortgage lenders) and the appraisers, whereas, before, the appraisers would get their appraisals assigned directly from the Mortgage Lenders, based upon the quality of their work. An appraiser now MUST get their Fanny/Freddy appraisals (which is a vast majority of their work) from one of the very small number of AMCs. This new "code" essentially completely guts an established appraiser's business. Whereas, previously a good appraiser built his business by doing good work for the lenders that trusted them to do their good work, now they have to basically stand in line for the few appraisals that exist, especially today. AND the AMC takes HALF OF THE APPRAISER'S FEE for basically doing nothing. AGain, they take 50% of the appraisal fee, which is the same amount that it was previously. What will no doubt result is that established, veteran appraiser won't be able to make a living any longer, working for only half of the fee that they earn by doing the appraisal, and many will probably get out of the business, leaving the serious business of real estate appraisal to neophytes and youngsters who can afford to work for what works out to close to minimum wage. A sad state of affairs.
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