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David Brauner Insurance Services/ OREP/Working
RE Magazine
David
Brauner Calif. Insurance License: 0C89873
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HVCC Moratorium
A bill
that would impose an 18-month moratorium on the HVCC (H.R.
3044) was forwarded
to the U.S. House of Representatives in June by
Representatives Travis Childers, D-Miss.,
and Gary Miller, R-Calif., in reaction to complaints from appraiser
constituents. This bill is in the first step in the
legislative process, according to Govtrack.us.
To weigh in visit
Govtrack.us/congress/findyourreps.xpd to find your state
representative and how to contact him or her.
Survey Results
>> Number of years appraising
·
Less than 5: 3%
·
5 to 10: 24%
·
10 or longer: 73%
>> Was/is the lack of appraiser independence (lender pressure)
a serious issue in your practice?
·
Yes: 38%
·
No: 62%
>> Are you in favor of having mortgage brokers removed
from the process?
·
Yes: 42%
·
No: 58%
Quality, Pressure, Fairness
>> In your experience with AMCs,
appraiser selection is based solely on obtaining the lowest fee?
·
Always: 51%
·
Often: 37%
·
Sometimes: 10%
·
Never: 2%
>> In your experience working with AMCs, service, quality and
other factors play a part in appraiser selection.
·
Always: 5%
·
Often: 14%
·
Sometimes: 43%
·
Never: 38%
>> Are the personnel at the AMCs you work with
knowledgeable and competent?
·
Always: 2%
·
Often: 14%
·
Sometimes: 60%
·
Never: 24%
Fees
>> Are the fees offered by the AMCs
you work with unrealistic given the nature and scope of the
assignment?
·
Always: 47%
·
Often: 37%
·
Sometimes: 14%
·
Never: 2%
>> Do you turn down AMC work because of inadequate
fees?
·
Always: 22%
·
Often: 45%
·
Sometimes: 29%
·
Never: 4%
>> Do ‘low fees’ (from AMCs) effect the quality
or completeness of the finished report compared with higher fee
appraisals?
·
Always: 15%
·
Often: 18%
·
Sometimes: 26%
·
Never: 41%
Pressure
>> With the AMCs
you work with, do you experience pressure for value?
·
Always: 3%
·
Often: 11%
·
Sometimes: 40%
·
Never: 46%
>> Do the AMCs
you work with provide an adequate ‘firewall’ between you and the
loan originator?
·
Always: 33%
·
Often: 34%
·
Sometimes: 26%
·
Never: 7%
>> With the AMCs
you work with, are you asked to re-examine reports with the
intention of trying to ‘make the deal work’?
·
Always: 3%
·
Often: 12%
·
Sometimes: 41%
·
Never: 44%
Turn Times
>> With the AMCs you work with, do you experience
pressure for turn around times that is unrealistic given the nature
and scope of the assignment?
·
Always: 35%
·
Often: 42%
·
Sometimes: 19%
·
Never: 4%
>> Does the time pressure (from AMCs)
result in a product that is less reliable for the end user, compared
to a report where adequate time had been allowed?
·
Always: 15%
·
Often: 23%
·
Sometimes: 32%
·
Never: 30%
Dying Profession?
According to comments posted at the blog and
survey, many appraisers doubt the profession can continue to attract
competent professionals given the low fees, considerable expenses
and licensing/training requirements. Many say they see greener
pastures elsewhere.
As reported, 52% of survey takers say they don’t expect to be
appraising fulltime five years from now but interestingly, 72%
answer “yes” when asked if they are “generally satisfied with
appraising.”
>> Are you making plans to leave the appraisal
profession?
·
Yes: 45%
·
No: 55%
Many express doubts about whether the trainee system for bringing
new appraisers into the profession is sustainable: how can you split
a half fee in half again? So far, 72% of survey takers say they
would not consider taking on trainees in the future.
Other Issues
>> Is being able to be certain that your clients are receiving
an unaltered version or ‘true copy’ of the appraisal reports you
send them an important issue to you?
·
Yes: 92%
·
No: 8%
>> Is the data mining of your reports an
important issue to you?
·
Yes: 91%
·
No: 9%
>> Is being ‘forced’ to submit your work
through a third party entity and pay a fee to maintain a client
relationship, an important issue to you?
·
Yes: 92%
·
No: 8%
>>
Are you able to charge a higher fee for the new (1004 MC) form?
·
Yes: 34%
·
No: 66%
Surviving by AMC Shopping
It seems shopping for the “good” AMCs may be a
survival strategy appraisers are adopting. Seventy-two percent (72%)
of survey takers report that they are satisfied working with
appraiser management companies (AMCs) at least some of the
time. (Twenty-eight percent (28%) respond “never” satisfied).
Does this mean that those who are surviving are picking and choosing
the AMCs they work with and firing the others, just like they did
with mortgage brokers?
Fixing the Problem
Many appraisers say they intend to take back
control of their profession and their businesses by working only
with the AMCs that treat them fairly and by avoiding the ones that
don't.
So far, these are the remedies most mentioned by bloggers and survey
takers: appraisers must band together, put their differences aside
and speak with one voice to put their interests forward. Many
appraisers suggest a short, national boycott to demonstrate their
importance to the system. Some say a fixed fee structure is
necessary and/or a cap on the percentage of the appraisal fee AMCs
may keep. One theme expressed over and over is that no one can make
anyone work for low fees. The only way to fix this problem is to
just say “no.”
About the
Author
David Brauner is
Editor of Working RE magazine and Senior Broker at OREP, a leading
provider of E&O Insurance for appraisers, inspectors and other real
estate professionals in 49 states (OREP.org). He has covered the
appraisal profession for over 16 years. He can be contacted at
dbrauner@orep.org or (888) 347-5273. Calif. Insurance Lic. #0C89873.
Survey Questions -
Click to take the survey now!
1. Do you work with appraisal management companies (AMCs)?
2. Do you turn down AMC work because of inadequate fees?
3. Do you turn down AMC work because of issues other than fees?
4. Do you have trouble getting paid by the AMCs you work with?
5. Overall, are you satisfied with the AMCs you do work with?
6. With the AMCs you work with, are you asked to re-examine reports
with the intention of trying to “make the deal work”?
7. Do you find that the “appraisal fee” listed in closing documents
is more than the fee you receive?
8. With the AMCs you work with, do you experience pressure for turn
around times that are unrealistic given the nature and scope of the
assignment?
9. Does the time pressure affect the quality or completeness of the
finished report?
10. Does the time pressure result in a product that is less reliable
for the end user, compared to a report where adequate time had been
allowed?
11. With the AMCs you work with, do you experience pressure for
value?
12. Do the AMCs you work with provide an adequate “firewall” between
you and the loan originator?
13. Are the fees offered by the AMCs you work with unrealistic given
the nature and scope of the assignment?
14. Do you spend less time on “low fee” appraisals from AMCs
compared with higher fee assignments?
15. Do “low fees” effect the quality or completeness of the finished
report compared with higher fee appraisals?
16. Do "low fee" appraisals result in a product that is less
reliable for the end user compared to a report where adequate fees
had been paid?
17. Do reports for your AMC clients and non-AMC clients look
basically the same in terms of quality and content?
18. Are the personnel at the AMCs you work with are knowledgeable
and competent?
19. In your experience with AMCs, appraiser selection is based
solely on obtaining the lowest fee.
20. In your experience working with AMCs, service, quality and other
factors play a part in appraiser selection.
21. Would you say that working with AMCs is worth the “trade offs”?
(For example, earning lower fees in exchange for no pressure for
value, a steady flow of work, no time/resources spent on collection,
etc.)
22. Do you consider the AMC model to be a legitimate business model?
23. Number of years appraising:
24. Are you generally satisfied with appraising?
25. Are you making plans to leave the appraisal profession?
26. Do you expect to be appraising full time 5 years from now?
27. Are you satisfied overall with the level of compensation you
earn, given the requirements and costs associated with being an
appraiser?
28. Are you in favor of the HVCC as written?
29. Are you in favor of having Mortgage Brokers removed from the
process?
30. Was/is the lack of appraiser independence (lender pressure) a
serious issue in your practice?
31. Are you in favor of the increased licensing and education
requirements imposed by the Appraiser Qualifications Board?
32. Are you in favor of FHA’s decision requiring their appraisers to
be State Certified?
33. Do you use AVMs in your practice?
34. Are you in favor of Fannie’s new 1004MC form?
35. Do you include in your reports much of the information now
required by the 1004MC?
36. Does the new 1004MC form take longer to complete?
37. Are you able to charge a higher fee for the new form?
38. Have you adopted any of the available technical solutions
(third-party spreadsheet programs, database programs, etc.) to
automate the statistical analysis for the 1004MC?
39. Is identity security with respect to your appraisal reports an
important issue to you?
40. Is being able to be certain that your clients are receiving an
unaltered version or “true copy” of the appraisal reports you send
them an important issue to you?
41. Is the data mining of your reports an important issue to you?
42. Is being able to copyright or register ownership of the
intellectual property contained in your appraisal reports an
important issue to you?
43. Is being “forced” to submit your work through a third party
entity and pay a fee, to maintain a client relationship, an
important issue to you?
44. Do you have trainee appraisers?
45. Would you consider taking on trainees in the future?
46. Would more favorable state/federal regulations make you more
inclined to take on trainees?
47. Do you carry E&O insurance?
48. Did we leave a good question out?
If so, let us know below or email it to subsciption@workingre.com
and we’ll have a look. If you have more to say on any of these
topics, please visit out blog - www.orep.org/wordpress-2.7/wordpress/
New: Comment on this
story at Working RE’s
Appraiser Talkback
blog.
Join
over 3,000 others and take the
HVCC
Appraiser Talkback Survey.
If you have questions, please email
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