MARCH  2011

ELLIOTT’S® NEW REVUPRO SYSTEM OFFERS
INDEPENDENTLY CERTIFIED APPRAISAL REVIEWS

RevuProELLIOTT® & Company Appraisers has developed a suite of independently certified products, designed to offer lenders objective, unbiased, professional appraisal reviews. RevuPro consists of quality control reports that meet or exceed all governmental regulatory-compliance mandates.

RevuPro is a multi-phase, appraisal-review system, run by experts in the appraisal industry. It is designed to cascade from the most basic to the most comprehensive, permitting the lender to reduce administrative overhead.

“By using RevuPro, the lender only needs to purchase the necessary review services, while employing the best professionals in the appraisal industry,” said Carlyle Holt, vice president and general manager of ELLIOTT®. “This insures the client quality control in an economical manner.”

RevuPro offers a comprehensive risk management system, which would complement the lenders’ efforts to insure high-quality appraisals from their appraisal sources, and reduce risks inherent in the mortgage-lending business. It further offers a firewall between the lender’s loan officers, administration personnel, underwriting staff and servicing department. Therefore, it insures the lender an independent review process, which would not otherwise be possible within an organization, while permitting the use of lender-selected appraisers.


HOME PRICES EXPECTED TO DROP ANOTHER 2% THIS YEAR

Reports by Reuters and Zelman & Associates, an investment analysis firm, included predictions that home prices in the United States would decline another 2% or more in 2011.

Reuters conducted its study on the subject by surveying 26 prominent economists before releasing its prediction of a 2.3% decline in home prices this year. Eighteen of the responding economists said they expected the foreclosure rate to slow down a bit this year.

“One of the big question marks that people are not paying enough attention to is not just the number of foreclosures, but the speed of foreclosures,” said Standard & Poor’s Chief Economist David Wyss in his response to Reuters.

In its report, entitled “The Art of Measuring Home Prices: Deflation Continues, Expect More Pressure in 2011,” Zelman cited the high percentage of distressed transactions and forecasted a 2011 average-home-price drop of 2%.
 


STEVENS MOVING FROM FHA TO MBA

Mortgage Bankers AssociationDavid Stevens, who has served as commissioner of the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) since July 2009, has announced his resignation effective March 31. The Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA), shortly thereafter, announced that Stevens would take over as its new president on June 1.

“David Stevens is uniquely qualified to lead the association in its next chapter,” said Michael Berman, chairman of the MBA. “Most recently he has had a tremendous impact at FHA, as that program faced its own unprecedented challenges.”

When Stevens arrived at FHA, it was losing money rapidly from loan defaults and some speculated that it would be subject to another government bailout. With the demise of many forms of creative financing, the FHA did significantly increase its market share and it raised mortgage-insurance fees to borrowers in an effort to build up its reserve supply.

“We’ve accomplished a lot; it’s been extraordinarily hard work,” Stevens told the Wall Street Journal upon his resignation announcement, adding that it was a “great time for me to transition back to the private sector.”
 


FORBES REPORTS ORLANDO AS ‘EMPTIEST CITY IN AMERICA’

A recent report from Forbes, called “America’s Emptiest Cities,” listed Orlando at the top of this dubious category. According to the report, a whopping 23.6% of rental units in the central Florida city were unoccupied in the fourth quarter of last year. The accompanying article, written by Daniel Fisher for Forbes, blamed the high figure on a building boom in apartments there, right before the recession hit. Orlando’s vacancy rate for single-family homes was 4.3% in 2010’s fourth quarter.

The study only included the top 75 metropolitan areas of the United States. At least one of them, Dayton, Ohio, had a higher apartment vacancy rate than Orlando, but the Midwestern city had a lower single-family-home vacancy rate.

Rounding out the top six on the list are (2) Las Vegas, apartment vacancy rate 13.5%, home vacancy rate 5.5%; (3) Memphis, Tenn., apartment vacancy rate 16.1%, home vacancy rate 4.7%; (4) Riverside- San Bernardino, Calif., apartment vacancy 10.4%, home vacancy 6.4%; (5) Dayton, Ohio, apartment vacancy 26.4%, home vacancy 3.3%; and (6) Phoenix, apartment vacancy 15.5%, home vacancy 3.4%.
 


ASK MARTITIA

QUESTION:  It is common knowledge that intentionally inflating a property’s value on a real estate appraisal report is a violation of USPAP. Is intentionally deflating a property’s value a USPAP violation also?

MARTITIA:  Yes. The Ethics Rule of the Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice requires that appraisers “be independent, impartial and objective” and that they “perform assignments without bias.” If an appraiser intentionally deflates his or her opinion of value of a property on an appraisal report, that appraiser would be in violation of the Conduct section of the Ethics Rule.

Martitia Mortimer, Elliott’s executive vice president, answers appraisal questions on a regular basis in Elliott Evaluation News.


QUOTES  


“Man invented language to satisfy his deep need to complain.” – Lily Tomlin

“The accomplice to the crime of corruption is frequently our own indifference.” – Bess Myerson

“I can usually judge a fellow by what he laughs at.” – Wilson Mizner

“Today’s greatest labor-saving device is tomorrow.” – Woodrow Wilson

“Setting goals for your game is an art. The trick is in setting them at the right level, neither too low nor too high.”
                                                                                                                                                              – Greg Norman
 



 

 
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