March 18, 2007
Dialing for appraisals
Last month, a survey of the national appraisal industry conducted by October Research Corp. reported that 90 percent of appraisers feel pressure to inflate the value of homes to meet expectations — be it a purchase price or an estimated value for a refinance.
Of course, this isn’t the first time evidence of appraiser pressure has been aired. Just four years ago, during the boom, a similar study found that a full 55 percent of appraisers had had lenders, brokers or owners attempt to inflate their values. In 2005, Jonathan Miller, appraiser and bubble blogger, launched Soapbox to "vent" about the "pressure myself, my firm and my profession was under to make the number ‘or else.’"
"It seemed that no one really cared about ethics or the risk placed on [the] banking system," he wrote recently. "Appraisers were fast becoming the enablers to fraud and a whole lot of ‘gray areas’ that I wanted no part of."
In a boom market, meeting the expected price was not as hard to do. Everyone was making lots of money and less anxious about each individual deal going through. But now that sales volumes are down, re-fi fever has cooled and some markets have softened, mortgage brokers and even lenders try to set their target value in advance of hiring their appraiser. This leaves the appraiser caught between a house and a hard place.
"Internet-based mortgage companies call all the time," says Curt Thor of Real Estate Appraisals Association of Northern California and a Marin appraiser with North Bay Real Estate Appraisals for over 20 years. "They’re fishing for appraisers. They tell me what the number is and ask me if I can match it."
Thor says he typically won’t even look at such offers because if he can’t match the number once he visits that house, he knows he’ll find himself battling with mortgage brokers over being paid for his time. Once when this happened, he filed a complaint about the broker with the Department of Real Estate and copied the broker’s boss. "I got a check very quickly," he told me.







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