Tuesday, May 19, 2009

NEW APPRAISAL RULES COME WITH COSTS

New Appraisal Rules Come With Costs
By Kenneth R. HarneySaturday, May 16, 2009
How about this scenario the next time you refinance or apply for a new mortgage: The real estate appraisal that used to cost you $325 now costs $450, even though the appraiser doing the work is getting only $175 or $200.
Plus, your appraisal-related charges may now be subject to add-on fees that you have never heard of -- $50 to $100 extra in "no show" penalties if you get stuck in traffic and miss your appointment with the appraiser. Or an extra $50 to $150 if the property is worth more than $500,000.
On top of all this, your mortgage loan officer requires you to pay for the appraisal upfront with a credit or debit card, rather than including the fee with the usual lender origination costs at settlement. In some cases, your card may be charged more than the anticipated cost of the appraisal -- leaving debit-card holders in a potential overdraft situation.
Worse yet, the person conducting your appraisal may be new to the field -- willing to work for a cut rate -- and may not be as familiar with local value trends and pricing adjustments as an appraiser with more experience. If your mortgage application is denied by one lender, you could be forced to pay for a second full appraisal because the new lender may not accept the first one.
That scenario is now reality, according to critics of the new appraisal rules imposed nationwide on May 1 by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Advocates of the rules vigorously deny that the new system is flawed and say any increase in appraisal costs should be manageable for most consumers.
The rules, which go by the name Home Valuation Code of Conduct, are intended to improve the accuracy of appraisals by eliminating pressure on appraisers from loan officers. The code pushes most large lenders to use third-party "appraisal management companies" that contract with networks of independent appraisers around the country who have no direct contact with retail loan officers or mortgage brokers.
Mortgage brokers -- who formerly chose appraisers and kept a competitive eye on appraisal fees -- claim that Fannie's and Freddie's rules are adding 20 percent to 30 percent to consumers' appraisal costs. Jeffrey T. Hawk, vice president of Maryland Mutual Mortgage in Forest Hill, Md., north of Baltimore, said a standard appraisal that previously went for $325 jumped to $400 or more May 1 when he began using management company appraisers.
Some applicants also are balking at handing over credit card information upfront when they're not completely sure what the charge will be. "I lost three clients the first week" because of the credit card requirement, Hawk said.
Buddy McCombs, senior vice president of EverBank, a Jacksonville, Fla., lender that buys loans originated by Hawk's firm and now contracts with management companies for appraisals, conceded "there's probably a little increased cost" with the new system, "but I don't think it's devastating."
"What's terrible is what's happening to [long-established] appraisers who won't work for the low fees," said James Facchini of American Pacific Appraisal in Sacramento. "On May 1, I lost almost my entire customer base" -- mortgage brokers who now can't pick up a phone and order an appraisal from him.
Instead Facchini and other appraisers either have to sign up with management companies or find other employment. What "really bothers me is that the consumer has no idea what's going on," Facchini said. After he signed up with one management company, he said, two borrowers commented to him after he finished his appraisal, "Wow, you really charge a lot."
They were each being hit with $550 appraisal fees, while he was getting just $250 through the management company. As he sees it, that leaves $300 of "slush" somewhere in the process -- some going to the management company, but the rest probably "flowing to the lender for doing absolutely nothing."
Rich Kuegler, a vice president at MDA Lending Solutions, a national appraisal management company, said payments to firms such as his are compensation for creating, managing and reviewing a network of thousands of appraisers -- MDA has 9,000 under contract across the country -- and for the "processing and administrative" costs that have been taken off the backs of brokers and lenders.
As to appraisers' complaints about fees, Kuegler said, "we offer the ability to have a steady stream of work, training and support." In other words, appraisers can expect to make up in volume what they're sacrificing per assignment. (Kuegler has also invented a 36 hour day, never knew that Lincoln freed the slaves, and his business plan is modeled after southern plantations)

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