Why Would You Jeopardize Everything?

AMC email solicitation asking appraisers to perform Interior Properties Inspections for $25-$30

AMC email solicitation asking appraisers to perform “Interior Properties Inspections” for $25-$30

Let me admit to one very important fact… I am old. At least I assume I am since I am over 60. In any event, much of what I know about the cyclical nature of real estate is not based on any scholarly papers I have researched and presented, but rather it is due to the fact that in my professional career I have seen four different downturns in real estate and from that I have gained what is known as real world experience. In other words, I am old, but my memory still works.

Here are just a few indicators that I watch when trying to decipher if something in the real estate marketplace is so out of whack that it could be a sign of impending trouble.

  • Property is selling for above replacement cost even though there is plenty of available land for new, competing development.
  • There is an increased risk of some kind of global cataclysmic event which would panic the credit markets and threaten liquidity.
  • Interest rates are extremely low due to manipulation by the Federal Reserve or general global anxiety which results in a flood of capital coming into US government bonds.
  • One or more basic industries are under severe pricing and profit pressure due to change based on the evolving use of technology and the impact that has on consumer behavior.
  • The number of active real estate agents and brokers is growing and is close to what it was just before the last downturn.
  • Loan underwriting standards not directly related to consumer credit are easing – like when down payment minimums shrink or when appraisal integrity/quality is threatened.
  • It’s been close to 10 years since the last downturn since my experience tells me that institutional memory only lasts about 10 years, no matter how painful the last crisis was.
  • The US is experiencing some new kind of domestic turmoil causing anxiety and uncertainty. If nothing else, I think the Presidential election qualifies.
  • The greed factor is back and is being worn proudly as a badge of honor.

I’ll let you go down the list and decide for yourself if the real estate market is approaching another “correction” as the pundits like to say. My opinion is that there are numerous US markets exhibiting “bubble-like” symptoms and that concerns me.

Now, looking just at the issue of appraisal integrity/quality. Here is what triggered the writing of this piece. In early April, an appraiser I know and have the highest regard for, sent me a copy of an email solicitation from a national appraisal management company (AMC) asking for appraisers to perform “Interior Property Inspections” for $25-$30. I will not name the company since I believe this company is not the only one soliciting licensed real estate appraisers for this kind of work without any regard for whether this kind of assignment might be a per se violation of USPAP and/or not be covered by the appraiser’s Errors & Omissions Liability Insurance.

Once I read the solicitation I called the company in question and left a message asking someone to call me back to discuss what they were thinking when they sent this out. When nobody returned my call, I emailed the company again asking for someone to get back to me to offer their perspective on this mass solicitation. This time the company sent me the canned reply designed for an appraiser who asked for more information. The company was kind enough to send me a copy of the form they expected an appraiser to use when completing the “inspection”.

I won’t go into great detail here, but let’s just say the questions an appraiser is asked to complete about the condition of the interior and (surprise) exterior of the property read pretty much like a home inspection checklist. If you are in a state that requires home inspectors to be licensed, then doing this “inspection” may be in violation of your state’s licensing laws. In addition, the appraiser is asked to answer a battery of questions about the overall neighborhood’s condition in a way that pretty much screams “redlining” to me. For example, one question asks if there are “any negative neighborhood influences that would have an impact on Subject’s value?” This doesn’t sound like an interior inspection to me and it clearly asks the appraiser conducting the “interior inspection” to begin offering opinions on what would clearly drive a conclusion of fair market value.

This is not the first mass solicitation of appraisers by lenders or AMCs, nor will it be the last, where appraisers are asked to swallow their pride, perform a task that may not even be permissible, and work for peanuts just to make a living. This is why I believe we are entering a period where the integrity and quality of the work done by licensed real estate appraisers is being discounted by a loan underwriting system that can only survive if volume hits a high enough level to be profitable. To the lenders and AMCs pushing the use of these limited scope reports, I say “what are you thinking”? To the appraisers who accept these assignments and complete these reports, I say “why would you jeopardize everything you have worked so hard to accomplish for a few dollars”?

Does this mean the apocalypse is upon us? No, but it sure is getting closer every day and if I were a squirrel I’d be stashing nuts in every nook and cranny so I was ready for it when it arrives. After all, I am old and sometimes being old is better than being simply smart. Be smart out there and watch your backs.

Brian L. Trotrier
Latest posts by Brian L. Trotrier (see all)
Image credit flickr - Bart Everson
Brian L. Trotrier

Brian L. Trotrier

A former practicing attorney with more than 30 years experience in real estate and risk management. The Foundation of Real Estate Associates (FREA) has specialized in providing Errors & Omissions Insurance to appraisers and home inspectors since 1993. As a membership organization with over 6,000 members, FREA is one of the largest and most well respected professional associations in the country, providing E&O Insurance for appraisers and inspectors as well as educational opportunities, member benefits, and legal support.

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6 Responses

  1. Baggins - You don't own it, till you own it. Baggins - You don't own it, till you own it. says:

    Buying at the bottom of the market is somewhat of a misnomer these days.  I’m not as aged or wise as Brian but I’ve seen a few cycles already, through several industries.  Welcome to the new pump and dump economy.  It’s where well vested interests create value out of thin air, and then stick someone else with the bill.  People still look out for straw buyers but the system has evolved to be so much more complex than that.  Me, I’m saving up for the inevitable downturn and hope to strike in the lean times, however and wherever that opportunity may present. / In the context of this article, I think it’s important to remember that these quickie products are ramping up, likely because we’re approaching or already in the mania phase.  Because of the cyclical nature of pump and dump systems, there can never be enough industry workers to sustain the working requirements at the peak, so the solution is quickie service products to float the industry through until the next dip.  In real estate you should do the opposite of what the solicitors suggest.  If they say sell, you hold instead.  If they say buy, you wait instead.  When they shout despair, that’s when you move on a discount purchase opportunity.  Brian, you’ll be pleasantly disconcerted to learn that in CO, I’m seeing a lot of refinance requests where they’re repeat customers from within a brief year or two prior, FHA is the easy access avenue for cash out compared to conventional, and borrowers are jumping rates just to re engage and pull a little more cash out.  And it’s all happening in the mania phase as builders race to match the demand.  Giving additional credence to Brians concerns that quickie products are perhaps the most risky products you could choose to work with.  Exponential liability exposure is probably a relevant legal term.  I’m already swapping to reo clients if possible.  I’ve seen this before and do not appreciate non stop refinance cash out requests.

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  2. Avatar Diana N. says:

    After all these years Lenders never learn their lesson, and neither do appraisers who take these assignments. I just turned down a request for a 3.5M waterfront property w/dock,pool, tennis court, and on and on for $250.00 Yea Right, told them I wouldn’t touch it for less than$1,000. Never heard back.  But I know someone must have taken it.  So these $25-30 jobs doesn’t surprise me. I wouldn’t be surprised if the next time you renew your  E & O that the company asks if you do this kind of work. You say “yes” and they drop you like a hot potato or triple your rate.

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  3. Avatar Bryan Trenholm says:

    You are worth what you think you are worth. There are very few things that make me glad I’m old but this is one of them.

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  4. Avatar Bill Johnson says:

    If we could snap our fingers and starting next week every assignment covered in Dodd Frank would pay customary and reasonable fees, the lenders would simply click their hills the following week and introduce new assignment types that would not be covered. The forms being created by the lenders with help of the appraisal software companies are loopholes to avoid the law.

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  5. Avatar JC says:

    No way in hell I would do these. And for $25-30? What a joke!

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  6. Avatar Treasplc says:

    Appraisers practice in a fractured industry within multiple industries. However, State Boards, TAF, NAR, Banks, AMC’s are organized and appraiser are not; appraisers are the problem.

    3

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Why Would You Jeopardize Everything?

by Brian L. Trotrier time to read: 4 min
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