Welcome, Guest! - or

New York - N.Y. Attorney General's Appraisal Reform Draws Ire

Published on:   May 11, 2008 at 08:15 AM
Change text size Text Size  


New York - A major legal brawl is breaking out over how homes are appraised, at what cost and by whom. The outcome could directly affect the price you pay for your next piece of real estate and the amount of mortgage money you can obtain.

The fight centers on an unusual agreement reached in March among Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, their federal regulator and New York Attorney General Andrew M. Cuomo. The agreement took the form of an out-of-court settlement under which Cuomo terminated an investigation of the mortgage finance giants' appraisal practices in exchange for their adoption of a far-reaching "home valuation code of conduct" covering all loans they purchase or securitize.

The code, which is scheduled to take effect Jan. 1, would shake up the entire appraisal system. For instance:

--Mortgage brokers, who originate roughly 60 percent of all new loans, no longer would be allowed to select or pay appraisers. That could force some mortgage shoppers to pay for multiple appraisals rather than just one.

Advertisement:

--In-house appraisers at banks and mortgage firms no longer would be permitted to do appraisals for loans to be funded by their organizations.

--Lenders couldn't use appraisals generated by management companies, firms that contract with networks of appraisers nationwide, if they have a significant financial stake in the management company.


More of today's headlines

New York - VIN News has learned that Brazilian authorities have been notified to be on the lookout for [Rabbi] Elior Chen who is a fugitive from Israel, and is wanted in... Monsey NY - Brocha Dov last month celebrated the third anniversary of the kidney transplant that freed her from the grueling regime of dialysis three times a week and...

 

Total2

Read Comments (2)  —  Post Yours »

1

 May 11, 2008 at 12:35 PM Anonymous Says:

All these rules do is remove the potential for kickbacks, conflicts of interest, and fraud. Should have been done long ago.

2

 May 11, 2008 at 05:54 PM An Appraiser Says:

This should have happened long ago. The question is what took so long.

3

If you wish to post anonymously do not fill out this field.
Says:

Your email address will not be published.

Reply to #  
Says:

Important: Please read the rules before submitting your opinion.
Scroll Up
Advertisements: