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Unintended consequence of reviews

Credit and title are issues of fact. An appraisal is an opinion. I'm sure you've heard the colloquialism that compares opinions to various (rather odorous) body parts.
An appraisal is not just a personal opinion. It is a professionally developed opinion that has to meet certain standards.

Sadly, the low fees, overly tight turn times, lack of a true firewall, and dropping the college and then the JR college on the residential side, among other developments, have been eroding the reliability on the residential side.
 
An appraisal is not just a personal opinion. It is a professionally developed opinion that has to meet certain standards.
All opinions are personal - even the professionally developed ones.
 
All opinions are personal - even the professionally developed ones.
A professionally developed opinion has to meet standards and challenges and should be credibly supported, regardless of whether the opinion is also personal.

I may start an assignment with a personal opinion about X aspect , but it is often reversed by the time I am finished.
 
An appraisal is not just a personal opinion. It is a professionally developed opinion that has to meet certain standards.

Sadly, the low fees, overly tight turn times, lack of a true firewall, and dropping the college and then the JR college on the residential side, among other developments, have been eroding the reliability on the residential side.
Has to? Don't you really mean, "is supposed to"??
The reason that "appraiser shopping" exists is simple - it works (in a lot of cases). No?
 
Has to? Don't you really mean, "is supposed to"??
The reason that "appraiser shopping" exists is simple - it works (in a lot of cases). No?
I thought appraiser shopping is banned now in lending, except in egregious cases of a truly faulty first appraisal?
Are you saying it is still happening in large numbers?

If it works, it is because the system is a massive fail -- something we have been attesting to on the forum. If individual appraisers do it, they are responsible for their part, but if they show a pattern of inflated values, why are they still being hired? It indicates to me that the AMCs are useless in their role as a firewall, since they are volume market players who select appraisers for assignments.
 
Or by allowing appraisers to provide a range of value with confidence intervals. Problem with that is that most appraisers I know don't know what a confidence interval is.

And those that do, don't really know real estate statistics. So I say. When I go out and run statistics on communities in Northern California, I do not see the normal probability statistics that the appraisers who profess to know statistics are always talking about. I see endless "chunks" of neighborhoods and market areas that have their own isolated characteristics. Parametric statistics are not well-suited for these areas. Non-parametric statistics provide the best models: Non-parametric MARS (R/earth or Minitab), ranking methods, constraint logic programming (CLP), neural networks for photos, .....

But, this is talking to a stone wall. I am not going to say it, no purpose. You what I want to say .... But it serves no purpose.
 
If it works, it is because the system is a massive fail -- something we have been attesting to on the forum.
It works not because the system is a fail, but because appraisals are opinions.
 
It works not because the system is a fail, but because appraisals are opinions.
If one appraisal opinion is higher and poorly supported, and another appraisal opinion is lower and well supported, and a lender rejects teh well-supported "lower" opinion of an appraiser shop till they find a higher opinion, then it is due to the system being corrupted.
 
If one appraisal opinion is higher and poorly supported...
How could it be poorly supported if, as you assert, it "has to" follow standards? :shrug:
 
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