J Grant
Elite Member
- Joined
- Dec 9, 2003
- Professional Status
- Certified Residential Appraiser
- State
- Florida
Agree; the data they use to justify their decisions is stacked against appraisals-Anyone that thinks the % of waivers will decrease in the coming years is fooling themselves.
Waivers are being used frequently, especially the low LTV loans. Soon they'll point at the low rate of default on those and they'll start moving the goalposts and will be granting waivers on the higher LTV loans. What they won't acknowledge is the fact that low LTV borrowers have always had very low default rates; having skin in the game works wonders.
They'll grant waivers to marginally qualified borrowers for mortgages with high LTV based on AVM's. What can possibly go wrong?
Anything to keep the real estate and mortgage train on the tracks. If it derails, the US economy crashes, again.
With waivers granted on loans of conforming nice properties and to solid credit and higher LTV equity borrowers, it leaves appraisers to do the weird, worse condition /problem properties and for more marginal borrowers wrt income , credit and an LTV less equity - naturally the default and delinquency is higher on those loans, and then they will point to appraisals being "higher risk"