J Grant
Elite Member
- Joined
- Dec 9, 2003
- Professional Status
- Certified Residential Appraiser
- State
- Florida
I am engaged to appraise 41 Cherry St. by the client. I do the appraisal and deliver it. The info in appraisal is the house is a 40 year old C4 quality construction of wood frame in C 4 condition, market et value opinion $200,000.
The lender decides to loan on the property. Three years later, the borrower defaults. My appraisal gets reviewed. If the appraisal was credible, my appraisal stands. The fact that borrower turned out to be deadbeat ( poor risk ) has nothing to do with the appraisal.
But, if on review, it turns out I misled on the appraisal - such as I stated CBS construction and not wood, or if I over valued it at $200,000 when it was really worth $150,000r , then my appraisal led to a risky decision by the lender.- apart from the borrower behavior. At least that is my understanding of it.
I just find the term risk management weird, since the only increased risk an appraisal (or any other valuation ) represents is if the information is faulty/misleading and led to a decision the lender might not have made about the property otherwise. Beyond that, the appraisal is just information. Their call to green light or not wrt the property. If a lender loans on many marginal quality C 4 , forty year old wood houses to 3-5% down borrowers, and a wave of defaults happen but the appraisals were fine, the risk was in the lender decision, not anything in the appraisal itself.
The lender decides to loan on the property. Three years later, the borrower defaults. My appraisal gets reviewed. If the appraisal was credible, my appraisal stands. The fact that borrower turned out to be deadbeat ( poor risk ) has nothing to do with the appraisal.
But, if on review, it turns out I misled on the appraisal - such as I stated CBS construction and not wood, or if I over valued it at $200,000 when it was really worth $150,000r , then my appraisal led to a risky decision by the lender.- apart from the borrower behavior. At least that is my understanding of it.
I just find the term risk management weird, since the only increased risk an appraisal (or any other valuation ) represents is if the information is faulty/misleading and led to a decision the lender might not have made about the property otherwise. Beyond that, the appraisal is just information. Their call to green light or not wrt the property. If a lender loans on many marginal quality C 4 , forty year old wood houses to 3-5% down borrowers, and a wave of defaults happen but the appraisals were fine, the risk was in the lender decision, not anything in the appraisal itself.