Appraisal Service Anywhere In The United States
Bundling or
Bumbling?
By Charlie W. Elliott, Jr., MAI, SRA
Those of you who consider
yourselves students of the financial industry perhaps have heard some of
the recent buzz about the bundling of real estate settlement services as
proposed by HUD Secretary Mel Martinez. Mr. Martinez has proposed a
“homebuyer bill of rights,” which, among other things, would permit and
encourage the bundling of settlement services at a fixed price by the
lender. This would require a change in the current Real Estate
Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA), which specifically prohibits the
bundling of services.
RESPA was established in 1974 as an attempt to keep settlement costs
down by targeting illegal, unearned fees, splits of fees, referral fees
and kickbacks. The newly proposed “homebuyer bill of rights” is designed
to remove regulatory barriers, permitting the offering of guaranteed
packages of settlement services and mortgages, thus allowing customers
more choices when shopping for mortgage loans. It is further designed to
change the way lender payments to brokers are recorded and reported to
consumers and to improve HUD’s Good Faith Estimate (GFE) settlement-cost
disclosure, making it firmer and more comparable, allowing consumers to
more easily do comparative shopping. The proposal is currently under
governmental review and open for public comment, therefore the author
considers it fair game for a little “kicking around.”
On its foundation Mr. Martinez’s proposal does have merit, and, if it
can accomplish all, or even most, of those objectives it is designed to,
it would be a refreshing change.
Promise is shown by allowing the forces in the free market to determine
the price of settlement services, which is a good start. Having made
this point, one must be careful not to allow one’s expectations to get
too high. We must also be ever mindful of the fact that “there is no
free lunch” and that “one size fits all” does not work in shoes, and it
will probably not work in the case of the real estate closing services.
In evaluating the proposal, as is the case of most proposed governmental
regulations, one is reminded of the old adage, “I am from the
government, and I am here to help you.”
It is unclear as to exactly how the bundling-of-services proposal would
work since it is still in the discussion stages, but one would assume
that all closing cost for a given loan would be quoted in one price, say
$3,500 for a $200,000 loan. Included in this fee would be all attorney
fees, recording fees, appraiser fees, overnight shipping charges, lender
points and fees and other charges. For those of us who are a little slow
at catching on, it may compare to an all-you-can-eat buffet, including
all entrees, soups, salads, desserts, drinks, taxes and tips, all in one
price.
This sounds good in theory; however, it comes with inherent challenges,
which will be difficult to overcome in many cases. For starters, in the
case of appraisals, neither houses nor appraisals are commodities, and
neither have homogeneous qualities. In order for a lender to have a
fixed price for the appraisal part of the bundle of services, it will be
necessary, in most cases, to get a price quote. This is where the
“one-size-fits-all” part enters the picture. Variables, such as
location, property description, type of appraisal, make having one
standard appraisal fee impossible. We are dealing with a situation much
like that of a contractor building a house. If having an exact price is
important, we must have a complete set of plans and specs prior to
getting a bid for the work to be preformed. Then, we must get the bid
from whoever will be performing the work. The “old swag” method will
probably not work any better here than it does in the construction
industry, and that is not nearly good enough.
The next question is: will the lender have the resources and the time to
get bids from not only appraisers, but also everyone else in the
process, particularly when the consumer is shopping with any and
everyone else in the business? Sure, some of the costs will be standard,
but others will not. The lender’s time is a precious commodity. Not only
is time an issue, but the additional responsibility assumed when a
specific price is quoted also raises its ugly head. Who pays for
mistakes, misunderstandings and other cost overruns? Well, like in the
construction industry, there must be a factor added to cover this cost.
Weren’t we trying to hold the cost down for the consumer? This is where
the part about there not being a free lunch comes into play. If we are
to believe that it is feasible to expect a lender to offer a single
package for any or all mortgages, or even for certain classes of
mortgages, it will come at a cost.
In considering the theories and mindsets involved in implementing a
successful and competitive bundling-of-services system, one would have
to assume that lenders have control over all of the vendors involved in
making a transaction happen as well as the cost of the services. This,
perhaps, comes closest to being feasible in a small market where volume
is low, properties are similar and vendors are individuals performing
the work. It will probably not work on a national scale, or even on a
regional scale, unless the bundled price is on the high side to cover
the unknown. This is a bit like insurance where everyone pays a premium
for protection received, but it is not necessarily cheap and certainly
not free.
Mr. Martinez, your efforts to improve the HUD real-estate
settlement-services system is applauded, and we do not question your
intentions. Most of us would agree that it is time to improve the
settlement-services system, which we now have, and a “homebuyer’s bill
of rights” sounds great. Furthermore, we should take this opportunity to
get it right. Please keep the process simple, use less rather than more
paperwork, favor the free market, only pass laws which that we intend to
enforce, aggressively, enforce those laws and don’t rely upon the
bundling of services to reduce costs. If you do pursue the
bundling-of-services system, please make it optional since one of your
goals is to provide consumers with more options.
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 at
charlie@elliottco.com or through the company’s Web site at
www.appraisalsanywhere.com.
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