Saturday, January 28, 2012

Ken Harney Shines a Light on AMC Appraisal Fee Splits

Along with all the appraisal related mandates in the Dodd-Frank Act is the primary reason for the legislation; creation of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.


The CFPB and the individual recent appointed to head the agency have been in the news quite a bit recently. Without offering any opinion about the agency, the appointments, and the politics, it is important to be aware of the CFPB's massive rule making authority. 


This week, Ken Harney writes about the CFPB reviewing ways to bring more clarity and better disclosure to fees associated with Real Estate Transactions. The focus of the story is the failure to inform borrowers of the fact a significant part of the fee may be paid to an affiliate or subsidiary of the lender. The CFPB is considering rules to require disclosure of the portion of the appraisal fee retained by Appraisal Management Companies.

Ken writes:

One of the fees being scrutinized might surprise you: appraisal charges. Why do they need clarifying? Doesn’t just about everybody who applies for a mortgage, whether it’s to buy a house or refinance, have to pay $450 to $600 — sometimes more — to find out what the property is worth?
and
Say you’re charged $550. There is no hint that the appraiser may be getting $250, with the rest going to the management company and the lender. The CFPB is considering whether to shed light on this by mandating two disclosures: what the appraiser is paid and what the management company is taking.
Frank Gregoire, a past chairman of the Florida Real Estate Appraisal Board, which oversees and regulates the industry in that state, says that while appraiser independence is important, banks and their affiliated management firms are raising the costs of appraisals to consumers without improving services.
Defenders of management firms, such as Donald E. Kelly, executive director of the Real Estate Valuation Advocacy Association, strongly disagree. Kelly says management firms perform the “back office” functions — including reviews and quality control — “that in the past were done by lender staff and employees.” In other words, they earn the money they get. And there’s no pressing need for consumers to see additional disclosures. They just need to know the bottom line.


Read the article HERE.
On the floor, next to my desk, is a stack of appraisal reports. Borrowers, lenders, real estate agents, and other appraisers sent them my way as examples of shoddy work and lack of quality control by AMCs. How do appraisal reports pass through a quality control check when the appraiser cites ZILLOW or TRULIA as the source of his date of sale, time, or market conditions adjustment, and that it is based on data from a zip code, not a market area? >
Wondering.

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Florida Realtors Mid-Winter Meetings - January 11 - 15, 2012

Florida Realtors meet in Orlando this week. There is an Appraisal Council meeting on Friday, January 13, 2012 at 1:00-2:30pm in the Captain room at the Buena Vista Palace. The agenda includes quite a bit of interesting topics for discussion.

If you are a Florida Realtor - Appraiser, it would be great to have you attend. You may register onsite. There is no registration fee for Realtor - Appraisers.

Sunday, January 8, 2012

AMC Indemnification: Bill Introduced to Limit Use in Florida

Over the past six months, Appraiser Active has posted several times about the use of indemnification clauses in Appraisal Management Company agreements with their panel appraisers. NAR has called for a ban on such agreements, particularly those that indemnify and hold harmless the AMC against any suit, threat, or claim on any work product or service provided as part of the contract agreement.

The 2012 Florida Senate and House have stepped up to the plate with the introduction of SB 1252 and H 887. The bills are virtually identical. Both include this language: (proposed amended/added text is underlined)

475.6245 Discipline of appraisal management companies.—


(1) The board may deny an application for registration of an appraisal management company; may investigate the actions of any appraisal management company registered under this part; may  reprimand or impose an administrative fine not to exceed $5,000 for each count or separate offense against any such appraisal management company; and may revoke or suspend, for a period not to exceed 10 years, the registration of any such appraisal management company, or place any such appraisal management company on probation, if the board finds that the appraisal management company or any person listed in s. 475.6235(2)(f):


(v) Has required or attempted to require an appraiser to sign any indemnification agreement that would require the appraiser to hold harmless the appraisal management company or its owners, agents, employees, or independent contractors from any liability, damage, loss, or claim arising from the services performed by the appraisal management company or its owners, agents, employees, or independent contractors and not the services performed by the appraiser.

It's a start. Next on the list of things to do is propose some amendments to pare the size of the FREAB back down to 7 members, and limit the guaranteed AMC representation down to 1 member.

In the meantime, let Senator Dennis Jones and Representative Clay Ingram know you of your appreciation and support.

Happy New Year. Stay tuned.