TruJa
Junior Member
- Joined
- Feb 5, 2019
- Professional Status
- Certified Residential Appraiser
- State
- Idaho
I'm just thinking about things since there has been more time to do so lately, and had a few questions related to the future of appraising and the industry, and was hoping someone smarter than me might have some insight...
In the future, what is to prevent mortgage origination from being based off of principles generally more similar to standard 5/6 appraising than how we've done it in the past? Isn't that sort of the online systems that Freddie and Fannie have created with our data? It seems to me that the biggest exception is that mass appraising is supposed to be (to some extent) testable and accountable, whereas currently the AVMs are a black box, and the data can be really, really bad. However, if they can be audited and they are constantly calibrating their model with real sales, and it works well enough for most properties, then what is really the difference, and why couldn't the powers-that-be go to this type of model? It seems that you could have a handful of large "appraisal" companies (or GSEs) which maintain a constantly evolving database of verified sales, and which only need an appraiser to gather and certify data, and the bulk of appraising would be computerized.
This would leave Standard 1/2 appraising to complex properties or special uses but generally not run of the mill mortgage origination.
I probably have 20 years or so before retirement, so do you think I should move on to something different, or do you think this is just a cyclical ebb and that loan origination work will still be needed in a significant manner in the future?
In the future, what is to prevent mortgage origination from being based off of principles generally more similar to standard 5/6 appraising than how we've done it in the past? Isn't that sort of the online systems that Freddie and Fannie have created with our data? It seems to me that the biggest exception is that mass appraising is supposed to be (to some extent) testable and accountable, whereas currently the AVMs are a black box, and the data can be really, really bad. However, if they can be audited and they are constantly calibrating their model with real sales, and it works well enough for most properties, then what is really the difference, and why couldn't the powers-that-be go to this type of model? It seems that you could have a handful of large "appraisal" companies (or GSEs) which maintain a constantly evolving database of verified sales, and which only need an appraiser to gather and certify data, and the bulk of appraising would be computerized.
This would leave Standard 1/2 appraising to complex properties or special uses but generally not run of the mill mortgage origination.
I probably have 20 years or so before retirement, so do you think I should move on to something different, or do you think this is just a cyclical ebb and that loan origination work will still be needed in a significant manner in the future?