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Deal Nears to Curb Home-Appraisal Abuse, Coumo, Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae

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The deal would establish a "home valuation protection code" to set standards on compensation and independence issues...
Wow! Lets fix prices on appraisals and how many times an appraiser can work for the lender.
 
Until the proposal is finalized and rewritten 10 times theres no need to assume it could be awful.

Everyone complains about the system and then when change rears its head everyone thinks its the worse thing ever??

Could be great for the industry.
 
Setting standards on compensation. I don't like the sound of that. I have always thought that more experience, better service, and a quality product meant obtaining a higher fee.

Maybe the government will step in and start pricing the Porsche the same as a Chevy!
 
Kick in the mills

Wow! Lets fix prices on appraisals and how many times an appraiser can work for the lender.

Limiting the number of jobs an appraisal mill can do for one particular client could be huge limiting factor with regards to appraiser influence.

..."Ya know we've been giving you X number of jobs over the last few months so we'd like you to ___________________."
 
I have always thought that more experience, better service, and a quality product meant obtaining a higher fee.

In your dreams.

Maybe the government will step in and start pricing the Porsche the same as a Chevy!

In my dreams.
 
Limiting the number of jobs an appraisal mill can do for one particular client could be huge limiting factor with regards to appraiser influence.

..."Ya know we've been giving you X number of jobs over the last few months so we'd like you to ___________________."
Yeah, you're right. It should be also applied to AMC's too that have a roster of appraisers dedicated specifically to a lender like the the Cumo affair is investigating.

Maybe the compensation standard applies a minium fee to the appraiser and a maximum fee the lender can pass on to the borrower. Naw, that would get the lenders screaming. :laugh:
 
I'm starting to figure out my taxes this year, and frankly I don't know any other profession that earns less. Price fix what??? Appraisers have always earned far less than any other part of the real estate industry. They would then have to then fix the cost of data, insurance, and gas (for appraisers only), just so we could stay in business. I don't know of any multi-millionaire appraisers out there, maybe there are some, but I don't think they made it appraising. For all the licensing, continuing education, and time spent building a reputation, having the government now step in and say your earning to much, and you can no longer do business with your existing clients, is like saying we no longer want you "the independent appraiser" around.

I have grave concerns for all the trainees who keep calling me looking for a position. I think there is a huge misconception with new appraisers starting out in this business, that there's a pot of gold somewhere getting to be certified, earning a designation, or building your own appraisal company someday... :shrug:
 
Gas - going up
Insurance - going up
Software - going up
Advertising - not going down, anyway
Age - going up
Energy - rapidly declining

Oh, yeah, dollars, declining, too!!

I like appraising, and would like to keep doing it. I just do not understand the lack of upward reward (should keeping up with inflation even be so difficult?) for creating a binding legal document that hangs over your head for years.

It just seems way wrong.

Dave...
 
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Could This Be the END?

I received an email from one of my best clients today. http://www.MortgageNewsDaily.com


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Huge Changes May be Coming for Lenders and Appraisers

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Bloomberg News reported on Wednesday that Fannie Mae is proposing to ban the use of appraisals by a lender's employees or those arranged by mortgage brokers.

The proposal was contained in what Bloomberg referred to as a "talking points" memo distributed to lenders this week and was in response to an investigation of the mortgage industry by New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo. In November the AG filed suit against First American, parent company of one of the country's largest appraisal management companies, charging them with folding under pressure from Washington Mutual, a major client, to use only those appraisers that provided property values acceptable to WaMu.

WaMu was not included in the original suit but Cuomo demanded that Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae each appoint an Independent Examiner to review mortgages and the underlying appraisals that the two GSEs have purchased with particular emphasis on those purchased from WaMu.

According to the Bloomberg article, the memo was part of an on-going effort by Fannie Mae to cooperate in the Cuomo probe.

The proposed change would mean that Fannie Mae would no longer authorize its lending partners to use appraisers employed by a wholly owned subsidiary and, while we have not seen the memo, apparently it contains reference to the eventual establishment of an appraisal clearinghouse which we assume would assign appraisers to a project.

Bloomberg quotes Jonathan Miller of a New York appraisal company Miller Samuel, Inc. as saying that about three quarters of residential mortgage appraisals are arranged through brokers who only get paid if a loan closes. Miller called the practice "laughable" because it creates a financial incentive for mortgage brokers to push appraisers toward higher valuations. Higher appraisals also mean more homeowners qualify to refinance their homes and take cash out, he said.

The appraisers themselves have long urged that appraisers be required to keep arms-length from the lenders. Many complain that honest appraisers who refuse to match the values that the lenders want soon find them selves without work and that they are frequently pressured by the loan officers who assigned them to a project to raise their values.

The proposed restrictions would apply to loans acquired after Sept. 1, according to the memo.



Has anyone else heard about this??
 
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