Friday, June 3, 2011

Appraisal Institute warns against appraiser indemnification agreements


(5/26/2011)
The Appraisal Institute cautioned real estate appraisers about signing agreements imposed by some appraisal management companies (AMCs) that seek to hold residential appraisers responsible for AMCs’ actions. In a press release, the institute’s president warned that consumers could be the ultimate losers.
“Appraisers should be very careful about signing any agreement, especially one that makes them responsible for another party’s actions,” said Appraisal Institute President Joseph Magdziarz, MAI, SRA. “While there are some fine AMCs doing business today, many AMCs shift liability onto appraisers. For many professional appraisers, it’s simply not worth the risk.”
Magdziarz noted that the most qualified, competent appraisers often refuse to sign such indemnification agreements. While lenders can manage appraisal operations with internal staff, some choose to outsource these functions to third-party management companies — AMCs.
“The Appraisal Institute’s best advice for consumers is to ensure their lender hires a qualified, competent appraiser,” Magdziarz said. “For appraisers, the Appraisal Institute advises that they know and understand any agreement they sign and that they not sign any agreement they feel is unreasonable or not in their best interests. For most AMCs, providing a certificate of insurance may be a good alternative to signing an indemnification agreement.”
“To get an idea of how potentially dangerous this situation is for appraisers, one need only look to the FDIC’s recent action,” Magdziarz said in reference to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. (FDIC) complaint filed May 9 against Lender Processing Services and CoreLogic that seeks to recover roughly $283 million in losses allegedly tied to appraisals. Regardless of the merit of the FDIC’s charges, there are potential consequences that come with signing indemnification agreements and expose appraisers to unnecessary liability.
Magdziarz also noted the potential effect on consumers, who often have to rely on valuation services from some of the least qualified and least competent appraisers hired by some AMCs. He warned that such agreements drive professional appraisers further from consumer mortgage lending valuation services.

Thursday, June 2, 2011

7 Most Popular Real Estate Web Sites


Realtor.com continues to hold onto its No. 1 spot in grabbing the most online traffic among real estate Web sites, according to Experian Hitwise, a Web metrics firm. Hitwise recently released its monthly report for April, which provides a snapshot of some of the most highly visited real estate Web sites.

Here are the seven most popular real estate Web sites in April, according to Hitwise:

1. Realtor.com: 6.5 percent of the market share
2. Yahoo! Real Estate: 6.1 percent
3. Zillow: 5.52 percent
4. Trulia.com: 4.75 percent
5. AOL Real Estate: 2.91 percent
6. Rent.com: 2.41 percent
7. Homes.com: 2.18 percent

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San Diego Appraiser prevents suicide

Man prevents suicide on Coronado Bridge

By Union-Tribune
3:56 p.m., May 13, 2011

Because Bryan Knowlton’s 9 a.m. appointment in Coronado was changed to 11 a.m. Thursday, and because he always shows up early for his real estate appraisals, there was one less suicide attempt on the San Diego-Coronado Bridge.
Like the hundreds of other Coronado-bound drivers, the 42-year-old Clairemont resident noticed the car pulled to the far right side of the bridge about 10:30 a.m. He also noticed the large bottle of beer and the even bigger bottle of wine sitting on the hood. And he noticed the woman leaning over the rail.
“This isn’t right,” Knowlton told himself as he eased over to the side, ahead of the woman’s car.
The woman, in her early 30s, said her car had broken down and she was waiting for a tow truck, but Knowlton wasn’t buying it.
He offered to talk, to buy her lunch, maybe just hang out somewhere other than on the bridge. Noticing her green and orange hospital uniform, he tried to talk up nursing.
She didn’t want to talk. She did want to drink the wine as fiercely as possible, observed Knowlton.
As he heard the “whoop, whoop!” of emergency sirens threading through traffic, Knowlton saw panic spread across the woman’s face.
She bolted for the rail.
Knowlton grabbed for her and she swung the wine bottle at his head.
The bottle crashed to the ground with Knowlton and the woman right behind it.
Knowlton held onto her until the California Highway Patrol officers arrived.
Then he went to keep his appointment.
“I must have still been in shock,” he said. “Most of the (appraisal) pictures I took were kind of shaky.”