To me the cure is to get rid of appraisers who allow their mechanics to be interfered with. We all know... or are supposed to know... the ethical and technical 'rules' for appraisals.
Reforming Real Estate Appraisal Standards: A Framework for Accountability
The Core Problem
Real estate appraisals face a fundamental credibility challenge. Appraisal reports must withstand scrutiny from multiple stakeholders—bankers, lenders, homeowners, courts, and society at large—yet current standards allow too much subjectivity in valuation methodologies. This creates systematic risks in property valuation that can undermine market confidence and financial stability.
The Solution Framework
Establish rigorous, standardized appraisal constraints that prevent significant under- or over-valuation while preserving professional judgment for communicating value conclusions. These standards should function like guardrails: flexible enough to accommodate legitimate variation, strict enough to prevent arbitrary valuations.
Key Reform Areas
Mathematical Rigor in Adjustments
Current Problem: Appraisers can make subjective adjustments without sufficient mathematical justification.
Solution: Require all adjustments to be calculated as quantifiable differences between subject and comparable properties. Component values must reconcile to net sale prices of comparables, creating mathematical accountability in the valuation process.
Quality Control and Review Standards
Current Problem: Review processes are inconsistent and can introduce additional subjectivity rather than improving accuracy.
Solution: Implement standardized review protocols with clear criteria for acceptable variance. Reviewers should enhance quality through systematic verification, not introduce new arbitrary judgments.
Inspection and Measurement Standards
Current Problem: Inspection standards like ANSI/BOMA Z65 contain gaps and inconsistencies, particularly regarding above/below grade classifications and hillside properties.
Solution: Develop comprehensive inspection protocols with:
- Clear logic for all measurement decisions
- Consistent treatment of challenging property types
- Required explanations for non-standard classifications
- Standardized documentation requirements
Regulatory Structure Reform
Current Problem: Multiple agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, VA, FHA) impose overlapping and sometimes conflicting requirements that compromise appraisal integrity.
Proposed Structure:
- Core Appraisal Standards: Universal requirements focused solely on accurate value estimation
- Agency-Specific Addenda: Additional information requirements separate from the appraisal itself
- Separate Fee Structure: GSE requirements carry additional fees, distinct from appraisal costs
- Standardized Formats: Preference for Excel-based templates with defined requirements (similar to AI forms like 100.07)
Governance and Independence
Key Principles:
- Remove GSE authority over appraisal methodology and format
- Establish clear quality assurance guidelines that prevent regulatory overreach
- Create balanced workload requirements that don't compromise thoroughness
- Implement anti-retaliation protections for appraisers
Implementation Recommendations
- Phase-in Period: Implement reforms gradually to allow market adaptation
- Training Requirements: Mandate education on new mathematical standards and inspection protocols
- Technology Integration: Leverage standardized digital formats for consistency and efficiency
- Ongoing Refinement: Establish mechanisms for continuous improvement based on market feedback
Expected Outcomes
This framework would create:
- Greater Accuracy: Mathematical constraints reduce arbitrary valuations
- Enhanced Credibility: Standardized processes increase stakeholder confidence
- Improved Efficiency: Clear requirements reduce back-and-forth in review processes
- Market Stability: Consistent standards support more reliable property valuations
The goal is not to eliminate professional judgment but to channel it through rigorous, transparent methodologies that serve the broader interests of market participants and society.
.... enough for now