19th November 2013

Feds to Reconsider Customary & Reasonable Fees – Maybe

by David Brauner, Editor http://workingre.com

Appraisers might have some good news regarding fees after all but it’s hard to tell.

Speaking at the Appraisal Summit last month, the lead enforcement attorney for the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), Anthony Romano, told appraisers that he is aware of the ongoing controversy surrounding low fees and said that his agency intends on looking at the issue more closely in early 2014.

Appraisers at the show seemed genuinely buoyed by Romano’s remarks, which seemed to support the view that the customary and reasonable fee provision of Dodd-Frank is not being properly enforced and that low fees can and do adversely affect quality. A follow up statement issued by his office, however, seemed much less clear (see below).

RESPA to the Rescue?
At the conference, Romano cited his experience as a mortgage banker to emphasize his understanding and respect for the role appraisers play in the lending process. He stressed his high regard for appraisers throughout his virtual presentation. (Romano was scheduled to speak at the Summit but an illness prevented his travel.)

Romano said lenders should not be cutting corners on appraisals. He noted that appraisals are the last defense against fraud and that consumers deserve quality when participating in what is for many, the largest financial transaction of their lives. He noted that while the agency doesn’t want consumers to pay more for appraisals, it also doesn’t want bad values.

Romano cited RESPA (Real Estate Settlement and Procedures Act) as a possible starting point for addressing low fees. He said that one suggestion is to list appraiser and AMC fees separately on closing documents, something many appraisers have long called for. The CFPB took over the administration and enforcement of RESPA in July 2011. RESPA was passed in 1974.

Romano explained that historically the “Lender Processing Fee” line item on settlement documents included items that were a lender’s expense. Today, lenders continue to collect “lender processing” fees but no longer bear the total cost of these services, which are partly handled by AMCs. Some of these costs now show up in the “Appraisal Fee” line item, which does not provide transparency to consumers- who might reasonably expect the “appraisal fee” to cover the cost of the appraisal. Part of it goes to the appraiser and part covers AMC costs.

Romano made no other substantive statements about how customary and reasonable fees might be achieved, either at the conference or in follow up questions from WRE. At the conference, he did say that whatever actions his agency takes will be phased in slowly so as not to disrupt the marketplace.

At the conference, Romano voiced what many appraisers believe, saying that if more attention had been given to appraisal independence issues it might have helped avoid the real estate collapse. He seemed to be aware of “black” and “do not use” lists but made no comment. Numerous appraisers have complained about not seeing any action to appraiser independence complaints made to the CFPB. In a follow up with WRE, Romano did not answer why this is the case. Official Line
A spokesperson for Romano issued the following statement to WRE on his behalf: “The CFPB will continue to look at fees as part of the supervision process to determine whether they are customary and reasonable as specified in Dodd-Frank. Additionally, the Bureau will continue to work within an interagency group to develop proposals to implement the Dodd-Frank Act’s amendments concerning appraisal issues. For information about the CFPB’s regulatory agenda, you can consult the Bureau’s strategic plan at http://files.consumerfinance.gov/f/strategic-plan.pdf, or see our current notices here: http://www.consumerfinance.gov/notice-and-comment/.”

The statement issued by the office also said that Romano’s remarks at the conference were his own opinions and do not necessarily represent the views or plans of the CFPB. About the Author
David Brauner is Editor of Working RE magazine and Senior Broker at OREP.org, a leading provider of E&O Insurance for appraisers, inspectors and other real estate professionals in 49 states. He has covered the appraisal profession for over 20 years. He can be contacted at dbrauner@orep.org or (888) 347-5273. Calif. Insurance Lic. #0C89873.

We’re always listening: Send your story submission/idea to the Editor: dbrauner@orep.org.

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23rd October 2013

Man Predicting Housing Bubble Awarded Nobel Prize, expressed concerns about the potential for a new housing bubble.

Man Predicting Housing Bubble Awarded Nobel Prize – Repost from Appraiser News Online

Yale University professor Robert Shiller, along with University of Chicago professors Eugene Fama and Lars Peter Hansen, was awarded the Nobel Prize for economics on Oct. 14; Shiller for developing new methods of studying asset market trends with a focus on housing, HousingWire reported.

The Standard & Poor’s Case-Shiller Home Price Indices have become the benchmark by which U.S. single-family home price trajectory is measured.

…continue reading the rest of this post: Man Predicting Housing Bubble Awarded Nobel Prize, expressed concerns about the potential for a new housing bubble.

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23rd October 2013

GSEs Still Finding Problems with Home Appraisals

Re-posted from Appraisal Institute

Three years after the creation of a database seeking to standardize the home appraisal process, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac continue to see major issues in numerous appraisals submitted by mortgage lenders, American Banker reported Sept. 12.

Fannie Mae conducted a sampling of appraisals and determined that 17.6 percent contained contradictory information, typically pertaining to the condition or quality of the property, Robert Murphy, the GSE’s director of collateral and single-family risk policy, told a Phoenix conference of risk managers. He added that those two factors are the most important in determining a property’s value.

…continue reading the rest of this post: GSEs Still Finding Problems with Home Appraisals

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23rd October 2013

Residential UAD Review – The Right Way

Where: San Diego, CA
When: October 25, 2013

Click Here to Register / Seats are limited, so please sign up in the next 48 hours.

YOUR INSTRUCTOR: As a veteran field appraiser and reviewer, Bruce Ford will share the latest UAD changes that will affect your everyday work.

This class is vital to all appraisers using the UAD format, in today’s market. Bruce is a 21 year veteran, FHA Approved appraiser and is a Certified Residential Appraiser in CA. and NV. His prior bank experience was as Staff Appraiser and Reviewer for World Savings and Wachovia. His most recent position was as Senior Review Appraiser for AXIS Appraisal Management Solutions, Inc., located in San Rafael, CA.

DOORS open at Half hour before REGISTRATION

Attendance for entire 4 hrs. is mandatory in order to receive BREA / OREA credit

Have questions about “Residential UAD Review – The Right Way” – 4 hr. CE Class in Petaluma, CA?

Contact Bruce at NorCal Quality Appraisal / mailto:uadclasspetaluma@yahoo.com

…continue reading the rest of this post: Residential UAD Review – The Right Way

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9th October 2013

Government Shutdown to Impact Thousands of Mortgages

Government Shutdown to Impact Thousands of Mortgages

Now that the shutdown of the U.S. government has entered its second week, it’s expected to slow down mortgage approvals, which could negatively impact housing and economic recovery, Bloomberg reported Oct. 7.

After failing to pass a budget before the end of the fiscal year, Congress forced a partial government shutdown Oct. 2, the first in 17 years. The shutdown resulted in the furlough of around 800,000 government employees.

…continue reading the rest of this post: Government Shutdown to Impact Thousands of Mortgages

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8th October 2013

Does Satan worship lower a Las Vegas mansion’s value?

The mansion’s owner gets an answer from real estate appraiser Randall Bell, who has carved out a singular niche determining the worth of stigmatized properties.
By Andrew Khouri
Reporting from Las Vegas

October 8, 2013

They came to the Las Vegas mansion in waves, chasing tales of ghosts and murder. Some came to gawk or snap photos in front of its black metal gate. Others came to worship Satan. Thrill seekers broke in and drew pentagrams and carved upside-down crosses throughout the house.

…continue reading the rest of this post: Does Satan worship lower a Las Vegas mansion’s value?

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1st October 2013

LRES Announces Results of Internal Vendor Partner Survey

LRES Announces Results of Internal Vendor Partner Survey
Illustrates strong working relationships with appraisers

Repost from: http://www.fortmilltimes.com/2013/09/30/2992686/lres-announces-results-of-internal.html

ORANGE COUNTY, Calif. —

LRES, a national provider of commercial and residential valuations and asset management for the mortgage, banking, credit union and real estate industries, announced the successful completion of an internal survey of its appraiser panel to measure the temperature of the company’s relationship with its panel and to determine its appraisers’ most pressing concerns. By assessing comments among its appraiser network, LRES was able to evaluate its vendor partners’ overall experience working with LRES.

…continue reading the rest of this post: LRES Announces Results of Internal Vendor Partner Survey

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26th September 2013

JP Morgan Execs Stay Out of Jail But Settlement Talks of $13 Billion

In JPMorgan Case, a Missed Opportunity to Charge Its Executives
By JESSE EISINGER, ProPublica

Both the Securities and Exchange Commission and JPMorgan Chase won great public relations victories last week. But the public lost — and in ways that go far beyond this one spat.

By cracking down on the bank for its faulty internal controls in the $6 billion London Whale trading loss, the S.E.C. can claim to be the ferocious regulator we have all been waiting for. JPMorgan and its chief executive, Jamie Dimon, got the best coverage they could have hoped for under the circumstances: the sense that the bank is beleaguered, surrounded by regulators, but at least it could put the trading loss behind it.

Yes, the S.E.C. wrung an admission of wrongdoing out of the bank, and the regulators scored a large settlement. It’s an improvement for a regulator to display the ferocity of a mealworm, rather than a banana slug, but let’s hold the celebrations until it reaches at least the level of a garter snake.
After all, Mr. Dimon had already made a great display of admitting that he and the bank’s senior ranks had messed up — well, at least as soon as it was clear that bluster wasn’t getting them anywhere.

The admission was nice, but the S.E.C. did not charge any top executives with misleading disclosure. Why not? …continue reading the rest of this post: JP Morgan Execs Stay Out of Jail But Settlement Talks of $13 Billion

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25th September 2013

Fannie Mae Overpaid Servicers by $89 Million

Fannie Mae Overpaid Servicers by $89 Million
Reposted from Appraiser News Online

Fannie Mae overpaid servicers by about $89 million in 2012 due to errors made by a third-party vendor incorrectly processing servicer reimbursement claims, National Mortgage News reported Sept. 18.

The Office of the Inspector General for the Federal Housing Finance Agency reported the problem, noting that Fannie not only overpaid servicers but also incorrectly denied $27 million in reimbursements last year.

However, the FHFA conducted its own review of the issue and claimed that the errors were “substantially less” than what the IG’s report suggested, although the agency failed to report the amount they said was overpaid, National Mortgage News reported.

The FHFA contracted with third-party vendor, Accenture, to review the reimbursement claims by servicers and then decide whether or not to pay, curtail or deny those claims. The IG’s report indicated that Accenture reviewed about 1.3 million claims last year and approved $2.9 billion worth of reimbursements.

Before 2011, Fannie conducted its own reimbursement reviews; now 80 percent undergo manual review by Accenture.

The IG’s report indicated that errors largely were due to inconsistent application of guidelines, incomplete reviews or large volumes of claims.

“Although these overpayments may not equate directly to financial harm against Fannie Mae, they represent a fundamental problem that undermines the reliability and integrity of Fannie Mae’s servicer reimbursement operations,” the IG report concluded, National Mortgage News reported.

The report suggested that Fannie minimize processing errors by creating a red flag system, and it also advised the firm to quantify and aggregate overpayments and to determine the root cause of those overpayments. The IG also said the firm should then publish the results.

The FHFA said it would implement most of the IG’s recommendations but noted that it would not publish the results of a review of overpayments.

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11th September 2013

HARP Refinancings Dip during Second Quarter

Refinancings were down slightly in the second quarter, as borrowers shied away from rising interest rates, the Federal Housing Finance Agency reported Sept. 3.

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac had 279,933 mortgages refinanced through the Home Affordable Refinance Program in the second quarter of 2013; 294,300 mortgages were refinanced during the first quarter.

With mortgage interest rates rising sharply in June to 4.07 percent, compared to 3.57 percent in March, refinancings became less attractive to borrowers. HARP has resulted in 2.65 million refinancings since the program’s inception in April 2009.

Of the HARP refinancings in the second quarter, 19 percent had loan-to-value ratios of more than 125 percent. Figures through June showed that 18 percent of HARP refinances for underwater borrowers were shorter-term, 15- to 20-year mortgages, which build equity faster than 30-year mortgages.

HARP continued to account for a substantial portion of total refinance volume in certain states. Through the second quarter, HARP refinances represented 59 percent of total refinances in Nevada and 50 percent of total refinances in Florida, more than double the 21 percent of total refinances nationwide over the same period.

Underwater borrowers accounted for a large portion of HARP refinances in several states, representing more than 61 percent of HARP volume in Arizona, Nevada and Florida.

See the FHFA’s second quarter report.

Reposted from Appraiser News Online

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