| Appraisal Service Anywhere In The United States  
 
          
            
              
                
                  
                    
                      
                        
                          
							
								Are 
								Appraisals Commodities?By Charlie Elliott
 In the business world today 
								there are so many new and unusual buzzwords and 
								terms batted around that we sometimes wonder 
								about their origin or roots. We hear “tech this” 
								and “tech that,” “synergy,” “value-added,” “at 
								the end of the day,” “paradigm,” “win-win” and 
								the list could go on and on. Some of the phrases 
								seem so far fetched that we oftentimes wonder if 
								someone just made them up in an attempt to show 
								off or to convince us that they are smarter than 
								we are. These terms sometimes make little sense 
								but, in all fairness, sometimes they make a 
								whole lot of sense. 
 At times when I get to the point where I begin 
								to use one of these terms myself, I begin to 
								wonder if they impress people or if people take 
								you for some type of weirdo. We have all heard 
								the saying, “Figures don’t lie, but liars 
								figure.” Could that be the case here with our 
								fancy terms? Do some use them just to impress 
								and do others actually need them to fulfill 
								their communication responsibilities?
 
 The lending and appraisal professions also have 
								their share of terms like these. Most of us find 
								ourselves tempted to use them once we figure out 
								what they mean and are able to use them in a 
								sentence. I remember going to a seminar once 
								when I first heard the term “non-prime” loan for 
								the first time. It seemed to be politically 
								correct enough, if not too much that way. It was 
								somewhat like that of “undocumented immigrant,” 
								if you know what I mean. I had just gotten used 
								to using the term “sub-prime,” which also had 
								taken me a while to get adjusted to, and I 
								suppose I thought I was ready for the next 
								level.
 
 Another term that I have been exposed to 
								recently, which I had never thought of in the 
								context for which it has become recently known 
								is the word, “commodity.” We are not talking 
								about soybeans or pork bellies, but products 
								that have become so standardized in their 
								preparation and delivery that each unit of the 
								product is thought of as the same no matter who 
								or what company produced and marketed it. This 
								is somewhat like that of a generic drug that a 
								major pharmaceutical firm no longer has a patent 
								on, and that other drug companies produce under 
								their own name. It still may be called 
								“aspirin,” for example, but a lot of other 
								companies sell it and everyone knows what it 
								does or is suppose to do.
 
 Most appraisal products have become 
								standardized, thanks to Fannie Mae and Freddie 
								Mac. In the past they have purchased the bulk of 
								all loans on the secondary market, so they have 
								called the shots on appraisal formats. An 
								example on the standard complete appraisal, 
								Fannie has developed it and has identified it as 
								a FNMA 1004. Freddie Mac has also endorsed this 
								same form and has identified it as the FHLMC 70. 
								The bottom of the form, as it is reproduced by 
								most software providers, lists the Fannie Mae 
								designation on the left and the Freddie Mac 
								designation on the right. While there are many 
								other appraisal forms, this has become the most 
								popular in the industry for single unit interior 
								inspection appraisals. Given that so many 
								appraisals are ordered on this form, it has in 
								the minds of some assumed the status of a 
								“commodity.” When appraisal clients purchase it, 
								all they want to know is what it will cost and 
								when it is available to them.
 
 Like soybeans and pork bellies, one FNMA 1004 
								looks, feels and works like all of the others 
								and, therefore, it has assumed the position of a 
								commodity, right? Wrong. There are many reasons 
								that an appraisal is not a commodity. The main 
								reason is that the source material, the home, 
								which is the subject of the appraisal, is always 
								different. It is different in size, appearance, 
								age, design and condition, not to mention the 
								location. It is different in that all homes 
								require different amounts of time to appraise. 
								They are all appraised by different appraisers 
								with different levels of expertise and by 
								different professional objectives.
 
 Even after all of the above discussion, there 
								will be the appraisal purchaser, who thinks that 
								all appraisals should be prepared in the same 
								time period, that they all should cost the same 
								and that all appraisers have the same expertise.
 
 The appraisal profession is just that, a 
								profession. Do all doctors, lawyers and 
								accountants charge the same prices and deliver 
								the same product in the same period of time? 
								Most do not, and I suggest that the appraiser 
								does not and should not be expected to. We have 
								a broad cross section of appraisers in this 
								country, and most are good at what they do. Some 
								specialize in appraising houses only in a 
								certain county, some cover large numbers of 
								counties, some do only commercial appraisals and 
								others have clients that send them a lot of 
								foreclosure work and, therefore, they tend to 
								lean toward foreclosures. Some appraisers tend 
								to do their best work on higher-priced, 
								upper-end, custom homes, while others prefer to 
								appraise homes in the cookie-cutter 
								neighborhoods.
 
 Occasionally, I get the questions like, “We have 
								a need for appraisals nationwide; what does your 
								company charge for appraising a house?”
 
 If it were that simple we could consider the 
								appraisal a commodity. Obviously it is not. Our 
								company has a variety of appraisers available 
								nationwide. In order to survive we must charge 
								different fees, offer different turn times and 
								provide different types of reports for different 
								properties. Each property is different and each 
								lender has different needs, so each appraisal is 
								different. Those of us who offer the best 
								service do a custom job for each order. While it 
								is our job to attempt to offer as much 
								consistency to the process as possible, 
								appraisals are not commodities and should not be 
								viewed as such.
 
										Charlie W. Elliott Jr., MAI, SRA, is President of 
        ELLIOTT® & Company Appraisers, a national real estate appraisal company. 
        He can be reached at (800) 854-5889 or
        charlie@elliottco.com or 
        through the company’s Web site at
        www.appraisalsanywhere.com.
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