The Wall Street Journal does a brief piece on what will likely prove to be a significant issue for many property owners down the road (getting big air): inflated appraisals. Its encouraging only because its on the front page so hopefully it will get attention from the regulators. The article [New Headache For Homeowners: Inflated Appraisals Rosy Valuations, Common In Boom, Now Haunt Sellers; It’s ‘Pay-the-Piper Time’ [WSJ]](http://online.wsj.com/article/SB115353434533614420.html) however, uses the same cast of characters in its coverage.

Here’s why the problem doesn’t get reported as extensively as it should: _There is no smoking gun._ 

Any new stories about inflated appraisals these days seem to originate from the National Community Reinvestment Coalition, a Washington-based nonprofit that supports low-income housing who last year came up with a novel solution to the appraisal problem. [I have covered the efforts of NCRC before [Soapbox]](http://soapbox.millersamuelv2.wpenginepowered.com/index.php?s=National+Community+Reinvestment+Coalition).

Why does the appraisal inflation issue get so little play in the media? Likely because most real estate mortgage industry people close to the issue downplay the problem since there has not been a quantifiable cost to be held accountable to. Here are samples of the typical mortgage industry response.

> National Association of Mortgage Brokers, says brokers shouldn’t pressure appraisers to distort value estimates. But he advises appraisers to create and enforce their own ethical standards.

Their recommended solution of self-policing is a cop-out and rarely works in any profession. The appraisal industry is one of the most fragmented of all.

This _don’t ask, don’t tell_ attitude has created the _appraiser mantra_ -  Get work.  Hit number anyway you can.  Do it Fast.  Get more work. Talk a lot about servicing the clients needs. Repeat.  If the appraiser doesn’t take this path, then they need to find other types of clients.  A whole generation of experienced appraisers have been forced out of the business.  Its the era of the appraisal factory.  Inexperienced personnel cranking out the reports is the norm of today.  Some firms have appraisers that can generate 40-50 reports per week.  Think about the time spent coordinating the appointments, travel to and from the property, inspect, visit all comps, confirm data, write up report, review, deliver, follow up on client questions and concerns, field irate calls from clients or borrowers if the appraisal is too low to make the deal, re-work report, re-send new final version…times 40 in a week?

> Lenders often play down the issue. Tim Doyle, an official of the Mortgage Bankers Association, says he sees no “broad” problem with inflated appraisals, outside of criminal rings engaged in fraudulent mortgage deals. Even though mortgage lenders typically sell loans to investors shortly after making them, the lenders have an incentive to ensure those loans are backed by property valued at least as much as the loan balance, Mr. Doyle says. Investors can force the lenders to buy back a loan if it goes into default and the appraisal was fraudulent, he says.

So the MBA is saying, if it becomes a problem, then leave the risk assessment to the buyers of the mortgages on the secondary market and then the lenders will reimburse them. However, if poor quality is so widespread, then how does this solve anything? The banking industry, at least at the upper levels, who tend to be detached from these sort of front line issues, like the way things are. [Lenders will only start to complain when poor quality begins to affect profits](http://www.rismedia.com/index.php/article/articleview/15282/1/1/) or there are other economic incentives or federal regulations for enforcement.

To summarize the players in the appraisal process who are happy or at least satisfied enough to stay with the status quo with the process:

* Banks/Mortgage Bankers – they want to keep costs down and as long as someone with an appraisal license says the value is ok, then there is nothing to worry about.
* Mortgage Brokers – they want to continue to retain control over the appraiser, after all, mortgage brokers are paid only if the transaction goes through and this is a way to ensure that continues to happen. They say that appraisers should self-police themselves.
* Appraisal Management Companies – The less quality concerns by banks there are, the more business they are able to generate, so of course they are happy with the status quo.
* Many Appraisers (Usually large firms aka ‘Appraisal Factories’) – High volume appraisal firms are happy with the way things are and have figured out that the secret to additional revenue is simply volume with no problems for their clients to deal with. Its easy to find those appraisers – just look and see if their client base is nearly 100% mortgage brokers.

The WSJ sights the seminal [October Research](http://www.octoberresearch.com/) study from 2003 which says that 55% of appraisers are pressured to change a value. Of course that is a _wildly conservative_ number if reality is factored into the process. If an appraiser refuses to change the number or bend, they simply don’t get work anymore and therefore the occurrence of the pressure goes away (if their appraisal practice doesn’t go away first).

There is virtually no appraisal oversight of appraisers on a state level (which is responsible to administer the federal law) because there is limited funds available for it and to make matters worse, many states take a portion of the revenue from licensing fees and allocate it to other purposes.

The notion that appraisal management companies (AMC) create a ‘Chinese Wall’ so the bank does not control the appraisal process _is incredibly misleading_ and disconnected from the realities of lending. AMC’s are usually only able to attract the bottom of the barrel (my apologies to the few exceptions). They are the worst element in the appraisal industry because of the low fee structure and unrealistic turnaround time requirements. They have nurtured an army of form-fillers. AMC’s are only able to competently rate this vast army of form-fillers by how quickly their turn around time is. In other words, since these appraisers generally can’t afford data services or don’t use what is available, the AMC appraisers often rely on data from the broker involved in the sale – a tainted data source in lending parlance – to generate a quick value to get more work. If they do get data from public record, they are unable or simply do not confirm details like condition, view, concessions, etc.

The person determining which appraiser gets the work, isn’t the one who has their collateral at risk – and aren’t those lending institutions the ones at risk, and aren’t they federally insured?  Licensing initiated in the early 1990’s after the S&L debacle has built an army of form-fillers who are simply rating on how fast they are.  Why? If you have a license, thats all you need to be in compliance. Speed, significant negligence and short cuts.  This system worked fine as long as the market was going up if you subscribe to the _don’t ask, don’t tell theory_.  Well, the market isn’t rising now, or at least not as dramatically.

_Conclusion_
The appraisal inflation problem is much more serious than reported yet it can’t be proven by stats since the market has kept rising, hiding the problems.  Most of the players connected to the process are generally happy.

The appraiser has no independence in the appraisal process, in any way shape or form. The entire structure of the mortgage appraisal system is seriously flawed. I find it absolutely amazing thats its been able to go on this long without some sort of regulatory concerns raised.

[Are We Damned If We Do Or Damned If We Don’t? Cause It Seems Like Deja Vu All Over Again[Soap Box]](http://soapbox.millersamuelv2.wpenginepowered.com/?p=227)


7 Comments

  1. angela July 25, 2006 at 9:57 am

    I had never even thought of this issue but now after seeing your piece, this story in the Times struck me as just what you are pointing out:

    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/07/06/garden/06brooklyn.html

    This person’s 13 ft wide money pit near
    Greenwood cemetary is “appraised” at $1.25M…

  2. BC July 25, 2006 at 12:05 pm

    For readers who think overvalued real estate is not a problem, I’ll take first place for hyperbole and highlight Japan, 1989-present. While I think that the secondary mortgage market will prevent the type of liquidity trap that ensnared Japanese lenders, it does us (all of us in the industry) no good to severely damage the MBS market.

    I think overambitious appraisals are a danger. When I was doing property reviews for a CMBS firm, I was mostly spot-checking the assets and appropriate comps. Took 1-2 days of site work to form the basis, nevermind the thought and consideration that actually went in to my evaluations. And that was just walk the property, find three comps, and study the local market. Clearly I had it wrong — I should have just filled in the forms and moved on — what do I owe the CMBS investors?

    I think you’ve identified one of the major problems, the disintermediation of the appraiser to the veracity of the value. The people who suffer from an overvalued parcel are not the ones directly involved with the appraiser. Furthermore, in most cases the overvaluation of the appraisal is not evident until several years after the initial debt is placed. Plenty of things happen in the intervening 3-5 years. If the causal relationship takes an extended time to emerge, it is much, much harder to prove the direct cause.

    Change will only come from the end users, and as homeowners are too diverse, it will be the MBS bondholders, ratings agencies, and other gatekeepers (whomever they may be) that force any type of improvement. It will be a long time coming and still not be enough.

    After the disatrous overbuilding of the late 80s, developers pushed the due diligence of risk assessment to the lenders, and expected them to exercise the necessary restraint to not fund every deal. Somewhat akin to asking the candy store owner not to let you have chocolate.

    Somehow I think we’ll be neck deep in chocolate before this is over.

  3. Stephen July 26, 2006 at 12:13 pm

    The appraisal industry is a fraud from top to bottom. It is time to realize that the current real estate appraisal industry does more harm than good and we would be better off without it.

  4. Jonathan J. Miller July 26, 2006 at 12:35 pm

    Stephen – pretty simplistic – who does the valuation then? The system has got to be fixed and its fairly simple to do. Separate the appraiser from the person on commission.

  5. PE August 5, 2006 at 12:59 am

    Jonathan- I could not agree more, I am an appraiser and I long for the day when the appraisal process is removed from the commissioned loan officer. I am finding it hard to make a living as I have earned a reputaion as an appraiser that does not “hit the number”. The small local credit unions that are lending their own money is all I have left.

  6. TheHomeAppraiser August 9, 2006 at 1:46 pm

    I would like to add failure to disclose negative attributes of the property or neighborhood to my list of gripes against bad appraisers. These guys not only “hit the number”, but never seem to mention that the subject is adjacent to a full service gas station or a car sales lot. The subject photos are ever so careful not to show a hint of commercial activity around the house. Those appraisers that practice willful and blatant omission should be strung up along side the number hitters.

    Now about smoking guns: I recently received an FHA refi order from a loan processor with the FHA case number assigned to me. I was surprised to get an order from this lender since I refused numerous attempts from the loan officer to commit to a value before accepting the assignment. However, before I could inspect the property the loan processor called and told me that the loan officer already had an appraisal done last week and they were just going to have that appraiser slap the FHA case number on the report and reissue it.

    Excuse me, but isn’t that an offense worthy of jail time? I called the borrower to get her side of the story since as far as I know I was still the assigned FHA appraiser for this case number. The borrower said that yes an appraiser, who happened to be our local “goto” gal, already did the appraisal and no she was not coming back for a re-inspection.

    So where do I find the smoking gun in this scenario? Oh and by the way, if the appraiser hit the number they wanted, then the appraisal is 20% to 40% overvalue!!!

  7. Ricardo Small August 14, 2006 at 9:21 am

    First a BIG thanks to Brian J. Davis for this blog. Second, another BIG thanks to Jonathan J. Miller for a very perceptive and comprehensive analysis of the problems in residential mortgage lending appraising.

    Mortgage brokers say, “Brokers ask, and appraisers say yes.”, as well as the quotes above about appraisers becoming self policing.

    If state regulators could become effective, I think appraisers can be self policing. However, the state boards who regulate appraisers must have a political demand for effective people to be continuously appointed.

    The demand for effective regulation of appraisers might be generated by appraisers. However, this has not happened and probably will never happen to any significant degree. So, there must be another source for that political demand. I don’t know of any present group of people who will make that demand.

    As a result, the level of corruption within the appraisal profession and the Arizona Board of Appraisal’s defacto repealing of the Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice via lack of effective enforcement are so abhorrent to me, that I am phasing out of the mortgage lending part of the appraisal field a.s.a.p. The reduction in the volume of such work, due to interest rate increases and reduced investor demand in Tucson, is very timely for the change in my practice.

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