Appraisal Service Anywhere In The United States
The Skinny on Fannie
Mae Guidelines
By Charlie Elliott, Jr., MAI, SRA
If you are like me, you had
heard a lot about the Fannie Mae Appraisal Guidelines before you
actually knew for sure that they existed and, if so, from where they
came.
As a young and inexperienced appraiser, like most other appraisers
learning the trade, I took many courses and went to many professional
trade association meetings for years before I realized that the Fannie
Mae Appraisal Guidelines were actually directed to loan officers and not
appraisers. Most, if not all of the courses which I was required to
take, made little or no mention of the Fannie Mae Guidelines. I had been
appraising for a number of years before I actually saw a copy of them.
It seems like back then, the guidelines were only a topic of
conversation when the property or appraisal was out of compliance. The
appraiser learned of the fine points of the guidelines through trial and
error. Not to say that the appraiser was always or not even mostly
wrong, because some properties fall outside the guidelines. It was a
word of mouth sort of thing from the underwriter who was responsible for
getting the loan package right before it could be sold to Fannie Mae on
the secondary market. While I am sure that Fannie Mae made the guideline
information available to appraisers there never seemed to be any
concentrated effort to include it in appraiser coursework.
Perhaps this is because the underlying issue is the properties
compliance and not the appraisal. At times I was not even sure that the
underwriters directing the appraisers were shooting straight when they
asked for changes, which they lay at the feet of the Fannie Mae
Guidelines. Unless we considered the requested changes to be misleading,
illegal or unethical, we usually just made whatever changes requested in
order to keep the client happy.
More recently the Fannie Mae Guidelines have become more available to
anyone interested in surfing the Web and downloading a copy. They are
still directed to the lender, however, the lender has more options today
with the Desktop Originator and other tools designed to streamline the
process. Be that as it may, when the appraisal must comply with the
guidelines it must, if the loan is to be sold to Fannie Mae.
This brings up another question: should the appraiser be expected to
perform an appraisal which complies with the guidelines? The official
answer is no. The appraisal is required to follow the Uniform Standards
of Professional Appraisal Practice (USPAP). The Fannie Mae Guidelines
were designed to screen out undesirable properties, not appraisals. Some
underwriters see it as their duty to impose upon the appraiser the
responsibility of making sure that the appraisal conforms to the
guidelines. This is fine where the appraiser has not done a good job
with the appraisal. It is not fine when the property is the exact case
in point the guidelines are attempting to exclude.
Listed below are a few excerpts from the guidelines which most often
cause the appraiser and the underwriter to be at odds:
-
The appraiser should use
comparable sales that have been settled or closed within the last 12
months.
-
The appraiser must comment
on the reasons for using any comparable sales that are more than six
months old.
-
For properties that are in
established subdivisions or for units in established condominium or PUD
projects, the appraiser should use comparable sales from within the same
subdivision or project as the subject property if there are any
available.
-
For properties in new
subdivisions or for units in new condominium or PUD projects, the
appraiser must compare the subject property to other properties in its
general market area as well as properties within the subject subdivision
or project.
-
The dollar amount of the net
adjustments for each comparable sale should not exceed 15% of the sales
price of the comparable.
-
The dollar amount of the
gross adjustments for each comparable sale should not exceed 25% of the
sales price of the comparable.
-
When adjustments exceed 25%,
the appraiser must comment on the reasons for not using a more similar
comparable.
Why does Fannie Mae impose
these guidelines? The answer is simple; it wants to make sure that, if
it becomes necessary to foreclose on the property, it will be
marketable. Given this fact it further wants to make sure that the
property will support the appraised value and the underlying loan. While
the appraisal should reflect this, if it is based upon comparable sales
which for various reasons aren’t supportive, then the market may not be
as supportive as the appraiser envisioned.
The Fannie Mae Guidelines exist for the purpose of reducing the risk
associated with making the loan. If the lender and/or the appraiser
approaches the production of the appraisal as an exercise designed to
assure that the property and the appraisal conform to the guidelines at
all cost, the process is flawed. There are many properties out there
which for any number of reasons do not meet the Fannie Mae Guidelines.
Why does Fannie Mae not train appraisers to appraise to the guidelines?
Appraisers appraise many properties for many different clients some of
whom have their own guidelines that differ from Fannie Mae. Freddie Mac
and FHA are good example. Unless specifically informed, and this is
rare, the appraiser never knows that the appraisal is to support a
Fannie Mae loan. In addition, appraisers are required by law to conform
to USPAP. Fannie Mae also does not want appraisers to force a property
to conform if it is not of the quality which meets its requirements.
After all, that is the reason for the guidelines.
The guidelines are just that, guidelines. They are not rules that
absolutely must be followed come hell or high water. If they were, many
perfectly good properties could not be financed, because of some little
issue which falls outside the guidelines but is not material.
While this column was not intended to be a course in the Fannie Mae
Guidelines, perhaps it will clear up some of the myths and
misunderstandings that concern them.
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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