Low-Cost E&O Insurance from
OREP Working
RE Home
Library/Previous Editions
Director’s
Message
Lender
Pressure: Business as Usual?
With respect to lender pressure, many appraisers complain it’s “business as
usual”
despite
the myriad state and federal legislation recently enacted to protect their
independence, including the looming Home Valuation Code of Conduct- the
centerpiece of the Fannie-Cuomo deal, and the recently passed National
Housing Act, which also includes strong provisions to protect the integrity
of the valuation process (National
Housing Act - What Appraisers Need to Know).
The fact that there seems to be little respite from lender pressure, however, is
no reason to dismiss the major shift for the better that has occurred. Instead
of being ignored on this issue, as appraisers were for years, the problem of
lender pressure is finding legislative redress “thanks” to the sub prime
collapse and lending crunch. And there is some evidence that recently passed
laws are beginning to bite.
Change
Happens
Consider the story (Appraiser
Board Turns Table on Broker) about an appraisal board that turned
the tables on a mortgage broker who filed a complaint against an appraiser for
“not hitting a number.” (Yes, it’s true.) Without a recently passed law in that
state and a new mindset, the story would have had a much different ending. Many
newly-minted state and federal laws are on the books now and the old ones are
getting a fresh read. While not a significant event, the Board’s action against
the broker may be a hint of things to come. If you doubt change has occurred,
consider the story in the context of the refinance boom, several years ago, when
the prevailing industry opinion was that appraisers were ill-tempered speed
bumps on the road to expanding home ownership- too expensive, too slow, no more
accurate than AVMs and certainly much less objective. Remember?
Back then, nobody was listening about the dangers of reckless lending: even
fellow appraisers scoffed at those who railed against the inaccuracy of AVMs,
illegal pressure or the potentially catastrophic consequences of laissez-faire
lending. Remember? Consider whether Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac would have capitulated to New York Attorney General Cuomo in their
heyday. The AG would never have been able to demand that these (ex)
lending giants pay attention to appraiser concerns, had not the lending
shenanigans that appraisers complained about for years been revealed as a result
of the WAMU-eAppraiseIT investigation. The appraisers who complained, reported
their grievances, and held fast to their integrity were right. There will be
more struggles ahead, no doubt, but never doubt that change can happen. It just
did.
As this is the last print issue of 2008, we hope it’s not too early for the
staff of Working RE and OREP to wish you and yours happy holidays and a
prosperous New Year! If you haven’t shopped E&O lately, you owe it to yourself
to visit the E&O experts at
OREP.org!
Working
RE Home