As I said before, we take no "cut" from the borrower fee. I never see the borrower fee. The appraiser charges me. I charge the lender. I have no relationship with the borrower (expect in very rare cases like PMI removal). What I charge the lender is based on my agreement with that lender and has nothing to do with what the fee the lender passes along to the borrower.You are a broken record, putting the blame back on the appraiser.
How about this, get your fee from the lender for management, stop taking a cut of the borrower paid fee, restore fees back on res lending side. There, I am putting the blame back where it belongs. While appraisers can be faulted for lowering their fees, why are they even being pressured to do so? The AMC as middleman is why. Lenders virtualy never shopped by fees prior to AMC takeover of large volume, as long as what an appraiser charged for an appraisal was within the range of what borrowers were paying. And that is still the case for lenders not using an AMC.
Sounds like more (free) work put upon appraisers.
Despite what many think, there is no rule or regulation requiring AMC use. What the rules do require is separation, and many lenders have decided that the easiest way to show compliance with the requirement is to use an AMC.
What the proliferation of AMCs did was expose the market data related to appraisal fees. While local lenders delay with a handful of appraisers, AMCs deal with thousands. That goes them a LOT of data about appraiser fees, and they use that data (just like appraisers use MLS data) to see what the "comps" say about market level fees. If appraisers want higher fees, all that has to happen is for the appraisers in an area to raise their fees. The problem is that there are a lot of appraisers who only know how to market for business based on fees.
Fees are very high in the COW states right now, but few are complaining about that now. Lenders know it is just the market rate. AMCs have just raised their lender fees. Appraisers love 4 digit fees. The complaints in those states is about turn times more than fees.
JG lives in one of the states with a huge supply of appraisers, yet seems to think that that huge supply should have no effect on her fees. That is no more realistic that a builder in 2009 thinking that he/she should still be able to sell houses at the "old" prices despite the fact that the housing market was flooded with inventory. Supply and demand just does not work that way.
That depends, I think.
This forum is like the kids who live in Lake Woebegone; they all are above average (I include myself).
My fees are higher than many. For a fact, my turn-times are longer than most. Yet, even with those high fees and longer turn times, I get residential mortgage appraisal business.
If low fees mean crappy appraisals, then scrutinizing quality will benefit every appraiser who believes that their work is better than average. Because along with the belief that low fees means crappy appraisals is the belief that those who do crappy appraisals cannot do good quality work (or, cannot do them at the same volume level they churn out crappy appraisals; on this I agree).
Screening out the crappy appraisals/appraisals will result in those who remain (average or better) having the pie to divide. All of a sudden my higher fees become more competitive because the $250 crappy appraisals (if quality is related to fee) will be screened out. I also said that the pendulum always swings a bit too far, so there is a risk of some lenders over-reacting. But, I believe the system will find its balance.
However, I also believe that there are plenty of appraisers who do good work and who are willing to charge, say, $325- $350 for a job I wouldn't touch for less than $500. If they can do the job and it meets the requirements at $325, they deserve it. And, that profile probably does fit a lot of appraisers on this forum: They do good work and compete with the $250 crappy appraisers. Those guys are gone, then they'll get the work at $325 - $350. If they think they can raise their fees some more, that's great (their increases makes my fees more competitive). But my guess is that many of these appraisers have the technological skills and processes-in-place to improve their efficiency and be competitive on price at $325 - $350 while making their minimum profit margins. It won't be long before they are considered the next level of bottom feeders who are complaining now.
So, will the increased scrutiny create more work for some? I have no doubts. More work for those who think they are above average? I have my doubts.
What illegal tactics are you alleging? Comparing prices is not illegal. In fact, it is the norm. As I have said many times before, appraisers make a living by analyzing comparable market data - but many do not want that done with the services they provide.Well, you said it with your own words. Pooling of labor in the fashion AMCs do is not typical in the US, nor is it consistent with a traditional free-market system, where a consumer would typically not have access to each and every possible provider. You may say this is all fair in love and war, but again I would argue this did not arise from free-market forces, rather was a result of government intervention into an established free-market. While not exactly the same story of how things came to be, your defense is not unlike Standard Oil claiming consumers could just stop using oil if they didn't like the prices. This is not about selling televisions, this is about home-ownership and the financing that makes that work for the benefit of all.
I don't hate AMCs for being who they are. But to claim they are free-market participants when the truth is they came to power through government intervention and use tactics to pool labor that are outlawed on the retail side, is disingenuous.
As I said before, we take no "cut" from the borrower fee. I never see the borrower fee. The appraiser charges me. I charge the lender. I have no relationship with the borrower (expect in very rare cases like PMI removal). What I charge the lender is based on my agreement with that lender and has nothing to do with what the fee the lender passes along to the borrower.
You want your appraisal business to be free from the forces of competition. You want to be able to charge whatever you want, and you can. What you cannot do, however, is force a buyer of your service to not compare your rate with the going market rate. If you don't want to compete, then don't. Simple as that. There was a reason that I built my own firm around non-lender work![]()