This is the second installment of my interview
with Bill Rayburn, CEO of FNC, Inc. The first
installment appeared last month. Bill is one of
our industry’s true technological pioneers.
Bill, could
you talk to us a bit about any of your products or
systems that connect mortgage lenders to
appraisers? I know from first-hand knowledge that
you offer a system called AppraisalPort. Could you
tell me more about it and some of the success that
you have had with it?
FNC pioneered
collateral information management with our
flagship product CMS – the Collateral Management
System. By applying a datacentric model to the
traditional collateral-related services involved
in mortgage origination, and using the Internet to
connect lenders and service providers, the CMS
changed how the industry does business. CMS
automates settlement service ordering, delivery,
tracking, quality control and risk analysis. And
CMS has been designed to make the most and best
use of data. So all the information that comes in
during loan origination – relating to the borrower
and the property securing the loan – can be
collected, reported on and analyzed.
AppraisalPort
serves as a secure interface between 13,000 plus
appraisers and approximately 30 large lenders and
vendor management companies using FNC’s CMS.
AppraisalPort facilitates automated ordering,
tracking and messaging, and delivery of completed
reports from the appraisers straight into our
clients’ management systems.
We’ve had
tremendous success with AppraisalPort. We’ve had
clients who’ve saved hundreds of thousands of
dollars in shipping fees through the automated
ordering. We’ve had clients who’ve been able to
consolidate, say, 40 appraisal centers down to
four. We’ve saved appraisers the pain and
inefficiency of phone and fax tag, and allowed
them to do their work at all hours from any place
with Internet connectivity.
If an appraiser
delivers his or her report through AppraisalPort
in our AI Ready format, then the data that comes
in to the lender or management company from the
appraiser automatically populates the correct form
– so that saves even more time because the
recipient doesn’t have to do any data entry. The
data is all there.
A lot has been said about the importance
of connectivity between mortgage companies and
their vendors, particularly appraisers. Do you
have any thoughts on the direction this
connectivity will take in the future and the
relative importance of it to both parties?
I think
connectivity between mortgage originators and
their service providers is simply going to be a
given as we move forward. The lender is focused on
speed, efficiency and access to data to mitigate
risk and aid in relationship management. The
vendors who can, and are willing to, deliver
services and expertise in a way that integrates
with the lender’s own management system are going
to be the vendors of choice.
A lot has also been said about automated
valuation products. Some are of the opinion that
such products may even replace appraisers in the
future. What information and opinion could you
provide on this subject?
AVMs are more
accurate and more popular in the market today.
They’re a valuable tool. But I don’t foresee them
replacing appraisers. A statistical model is never
going to out-do a good, honest, professional
appraiser. AVMs are always going to beat out the
appraiser on speed, and where we see lenders using
them is where they can get a fast turnaround and
there isn’t a whole lot of risk involved or where
the AVMs can be used to pre-qualify the loan.
Right now as the market is taking a downturn,
lenders are going to less apt to trust AVMs to
provide accurate data.
There’s a big
move in the industry now to work to standardize
principles and requirements for AVMs. For AVMs to
improve, there needs to be greater consistency in
their management and usage. Right now is an
excellent time for appraisers to be involved in
the formulation of those standard principles and
requirements different industry participants are
working to develop.
Appraisers can
choose to ignore AVMs, complain about them or
embrace them as an additional product they can
offer, but no matter what appraisers do, AVMs
aren’t going to go away. There are some fantastic
opportunities out there for appraisers to
influence the future in regards to AVMs, as well
as to use them in appraiser-enabled, or
appraiser-assisted, AVMs for desktop valuation.
Does FNC have any new products coming out
in the near future that you are at liberty to
disclose? If so, tell us about them.
FNC is working on
a product called Digital Loan File (DLF) that
addresses mortgage lenders’ shift to a paperless
loan file. Brokers and correspondents using DLF
will be able to easily create files for new
applications and submit them electronically to
their lender clients, which will save them money
and time. The lender can configure a document
matrix that defines what documents that product or
loan type requires, and then multiple parties can
access that file at one time to work on that
loan.
DLF will allow
any kind of electrically originated document to
become part of the file – fax, email or otherwise
– and will allow the lender to dictate who can
access the file and who can perform specific
actions. Anyone with access to do so can add
comments to the file or a document in the file. So
DLF is an audit trail, a disaster recovery
mechanism and a means to more efficient paperless
processing.
As the CEO of a major corporation, I
realize that you walk a fine line between
providing an honest and positive outlook for your
company. Would you care to offer a candid opinion
of where FNC will be in five years and whether the
type business you are in will change very much
during that time?
At FNC, our goal
is to reward risk-taking and entrepreneurship. As
a result, over the next several years, we will
enter new markets that allow us to leverage our
existing solutions. These markets include
international expansion in financial services, as
well as entering the insurance and health care
fields.
At FNC, our goal
is to reward risk-taking and entrepreneurship. As
a result, over the next several years, we will
enter new markets that allow us to leverage our
existing solutions. These markets include
international expansion in financial services, as
well as entering the insurance and health care
fields.
Well, that takes care of all of the
specific questions I have. Are there other issues,
comments or opinions you would like to address or
offer concerning how FNC connects appraisers and
lenders?
FNC’s goal in
collateral information management is to provide
tools that make collateral valuation and
underwriting efficient for all parties: lenders
and appraisers and other settlement service
providers alike. FNC’s AppraisalPort and the use
of the AI Ready format in conjunction with
AppraisalPort help level the playing field. They
bring the same efficiencies to one-man shops as
they do large companies.
AppraisalPort and
AI Ready drive huge productivity gains for
lenders, who are able to use AppraisalPort with
FNC’s CMS collateral information management system
to automate appraisal ordering, receipt and
review.
We appreciate the
support of the thousands of appraisers and other
settlement services providers and lender clients
who use FNC’s systems and ports. We will continue
to work hard to earn their business in the future.