The Bob
Senior Member
- Joined
- Jan 20, 2002
- Professional Status
- Certified Residential Appraiser
- State
- Virginia
Sorry, it's behind a firewall. Basically goes over everything we already know.
The path to homeownership is lined with middlemen. Real-estate agents, mortgage brokers, attorneys — all help push a deal through and then claim a fee when the ink dries. Most buyers are aware of these parties, but one group mostly flies under the radar.
Read in Business Insider: https://apple.news/Ao85FUtlpRNKp9TmH_OI7dA
EDIT: Found the whole story online.....I had to break it up since I can only 1000 characters at a time
The path to homeownership is lined with middlemen . Real-estate agents, mortgage brokers, attorneys — all help push a deal through and then claim a fee when the ink dries. Most buyers are aware of these parties, but one group mostly flies under the radar. Their fees are often hidden, lumped in with other charges or buried in paperwork. If you bought a home in the past decade or so, there's a decent chance you unknowingly paid hundreds of dollars for their services.
These are appraisal management companies, little-known players that have flourished in the aftermath of the 2008 housing crash . The job of an AMC is fairly straightforward: When someone wants to get a mortgage for a house, the lender will order an appraisal of the property to determine how much it's worth (and, by extension, how much they're willing to lend). But the bank or credit union typically won't hire an appraiser directly; they'll enlist an AMC to manage the process. The lender pays an agreed-upon sum to the AMC, which uses a chunk of that money to pay the appraiser and keeps the rest.
The AMC is basically a transaction coordinator that matches the bank with an appraiser, ensuring independence so that lenders don't pressure appraisers to contort their valuations. In many instances, however, the AMC's haul from an appraisal can match or exceed the amount paid to the person actually determining the value of the home. Most buyers will never realize this, since the AMC and appraisers' costs are often lumped together under an innocuous title like "appraisal fee" on closing paperwork. Appraiser groups complain that AMCs don't even solve the problem they're supposed to address — the middlemen, they say, are incentivized to find the cheapest appraiser so they can pocket more money, resulting in shoddy appraisals and a bad look for the industry. All those fees from millions of home transactions each year add up: Data on the industry is scarce, but an analysis of public filings from one of the country's largest AMCs suggests these companies charged consumers about $12 billion in a recent five-year span.
Some consumer advocates consider opaque appraisal fees to be one of the most egregious examples of hidden costs in homebuying . As buyers face a rise in closing costs — the pesky fees, like title insurance , that pile up at the end of a transaction and usually total thousands of dollars — AMCs are attracting more scrutiny. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, as part of its crusade against junk fees, announced over the summer that it would look into various mortgage costs as well as "the growing power that appraisal management companies can wield over individual appraisal professionals."
The appraisal is a notorious pain point in the home-sale process: A low valuation can sink a deal, since the buyer may have to pick up the difference between their mortgage amount and the sum they've offered to the seller. Both buyers and homeowners are known to gripe about appraisals they see as faulty, delayed, or needlessly expensive, but few are aware of appraisal management companies' hand in the process. AMCs are unlikely to go away anytime soon, but people familiar with appraisals tell me consumers should at least know exactly what they're paying for — and have the chance to push back.
The path to homeownership is lined with middlemen. Real-estate agents, mortgage brokers, attorneys — all help push a deal through and then claim a fee when the ink dries. Most buyers are aware of these parties, but one group mostly flies under the radar.
Read in Business Insider: https://apple.news/Ao85FUtlpRNKp9TmH_OI7dA
EDIT: Found the whole story online.....I had to break it up since I can only 1000 characters at a time
The path to homeownership is lined with middlemen . Real-estate agents, mortgage brokers, attorneys — all help push a deal through and then claim a fee when the ink dries. Most buyers are aware of these parties, but one group mostly flies under the radar. Their fees are often hidden, lumped in with other charges or buried in paperwork. If you bought a home in the past decade or so, there's a decent chance you unknowingly paid hundreds of dollars for their services.
These are appraisal management companies, little-known players that have flourished in the aftermath of the 2008 housing crash . The job of an AMC is fairly straightforward: When someone wants to get a mortgage for a house, the lender will order an appraisal of the property to determine how much it's worth (and, by extension, how much they're willing to lend). But the bank or credit union typically won't hire an appraiser directly; they'll enlist an AMC to manage the process. The lender pays an agreed-upon sum to the AMC, which uses a chunk of that money to pay the appraiser and keeps the rest.
The AMC is basically a transaction coordinator that matches the bank with an appraiser, ensuring independence so that lenders don't pressure appraisers to contort their valuations. In many instances, however, the AMC's haul from an appraisal can match or exceed the amount paid to the person actually determining the value of the home. Most buyers will never realize this, since the AMC and appraisers' costs are often lumped together under an innocuous title like "appraisal fee" on closing paperwork. Appraiser groups complain that AMCs don't even solve the problem they're supposed to address — the middlemen, they say, are incentivized to find the cheapest appraiser so they can pocket more money, resulting in shoddy appraisals and a bad look for the industry. All those fees from millions of home transactions each year add up: Data on the industry is scarce, but an analysis of public filings from one of the country's largest AMCs suggests these companies charged consumers about $12 billion in a recent five-year span.
Some consumer advocates consider opaque appraisal fees to be one of the most egregious examples of hidden costs in homebuying . As buyers face a rise in closing costs — the pesky fees, like title insurance , that pile up at the end of a transaction and usually total thousands of dollars — AMCs are attracting more scrutiny. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, as part of its crusade against junk fees, announced over the summer that it would look into various mortgage costs as well as "the growing power that appraisal management companies can wield over individual appraisal professionals."
The appraisal is a notorious pain point in the home-sale process: A low valuation can sink a deal, since the buyer may have to pick up the difference between their mortgage amount and the sum they've offered to the seller. Both buyers and homeowners are known to gripe about appraisals they see as faulty, delayed, or needlessly expensive, but few are aware of appraisal management companies' hand in the process. AMCs are unlikely to go away anytime soon, but people familiar with appraisals tell me consumers should at least know exactly what they're paying for — and have the chance to push back.
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