FHA SET TO
REMOVE ALL NON-CERTIFIED APPRAISERS FROM ROSTER
On
October 1, all appraisers who are currently approved to perform FHA
appraisals and licensed, but not certified, will be removed from the
FHA Appraiser Roster. HUD officials say that the Housing and
Economic Recovery Act of 2008 forced this requirement upon them.
Last October, HUD stopped taking applications by licensed, but not
certified appraisers, wishing to be placed on the FHA roster.
“This is a statutory requirement that does not provide for
grandfathering and cannot be waived by the FHA,” read an
announcement from HUD on the subject. “However, appraisers that
subsequently meet certification requirements may apply for
reinstatement to the FHA appraiser roster.”
AUCTIONS CALLED
‘FASTEST GROWING NICHE IN REAL ESTATE’
Real estate sales have been going through tough
times, but according to prominent real estate writer Ken Harney, one
facet of it is growing at a rapid pace. In a recent article he wrote
for Realty Times, Harney reported that the sales volume from real
estate auctions has increased 48% in the past five years.
The real estate auction business does well when real estate prices
are rapidly escalating and when they are declining, according to
Alan Kravets, president of Sheldon Good & Co., one of the largest
real estate auction firms in the United States. When prices are
falling, “you use auctions to cut your losses,” he said.
Deputy Executive Director Chris Longley of the National Auctioneers
Association said live auctions are used in areas where there is a
lot of distressed property “to quickly establish true market values
in environments where people aren’t really sure what the values
are.”
The National Association of Auctioneers reported that $59 billion in
real estate was sold at private live auctions in 2008 and that
number should rise in 2009.
“Consider adding auctions to your strategic game plan if you need to
sell into a down market,” Harney advised real estate investors at
the end of his article. “They’re not a panacea, but they work.”
OFFICE VACANCIES
RISE, RENTS FALL
As in the case of most commercial real estate, the
market for office space is still in a tailspin. According to
Colliers International, a leading real estate information firm,
office vacancies in the United States rose 1% to 15.45% in the
second quarter of this year.
Office rents have continued to decline and are, on the average, over
10% below what they were at the beginning of the year.
Chris Moore, director of economic research at Colliers, expects this
trend to continue for the rest of the year, as he said, “Firms have
little appetite for expansion and instead remain focused on reducing
costs and watching their bottom lines.”
FED AND TREASURY
TO EXTEND TALF
The Federal Reserve Board and the U.S. Treasury
Department have announced the extension of the Term Asset-Backed
Loan Facility (TALF). Created in the wake of last year’s financial
meltdown, this program was slated to end December 31.
“To promote the flow of credit to businesses and households and to
facilitate the financing of commercial properties, the Federal
Reserve and Treasury approved extending TALF loans against newly
listed ABS (asset-backed securities) and legacy CMBS (commercial
mortgage-backed securities) through March 31, 2010,” the Federal
Reserve reported in a press release. “Because the new CMBS deals can
take a significant amount of time to arrange, the Federal Reserve
and Treasury approved TALF lending against newly issued CMBS through
June 30, 2010. “
The Fed stated it did not expect to expand the variety of collateral
eligible for this program, but that could change in the future. In
fact, the TALF program could be extended further, according to the
press release, which said, “The Board will continue to monitor
financial conditions and will consider in the future whether unusual
and exigent circumstances warrant a further extension of the TALF to
help promote financial stability and economic growth.”
WATERGATE HOTEL
FAILS TO SELL AT AUCTION
The
famous Watergate Hotel is going through more tumultuous times these
days than it was in the 1970s when the most notorious political
scandal in history was brewing and named after it.
Actually the Washington, D.C., hotel had an inauspicious beginning.
The groundbreaking in 1963 was followed by zoning and other
controversies, which delayed its opening for several years.
The break-in of the Democratic National Committee headquarters on
its sixth floor in 1972 and the subsequent arrests lead to
resignation of President Richard Nixon and the imprisonment of many
of his key officials. That infamy gave the hotel a status that led
to it becoming a fashionable place to live. As time moved on,
however, the hotel fell into a state of disrepair and was closed two
years ago.
Monument Realty, which bought the Watergate in 2004 for the purpose
of renovating it (at a $170 million price tag) and selling it
unit-by-unit as co-ops, fell behind on its mortgage payments, and
the famous hotel went into foreclosure.
PB Capital Corp. tried to sell it at auction last month, but stopped
the proceedings when no one met the opening bid of $25 million. The
German bank is still working to sell it.
“A lot of people are going to be visiting PB Capital to see if they
can make a deal,” said Washington-area developer Robert Holland.
ASK MARTITIA
QUESTION:
Does the Home Valuation Code of Conduct allow an appraiser to talk
with the real estate agent involved in the sale of the property that
is being appraised?
MARTITIA: Yes, but the
appraiser must independently research and verify any information
given to him or her by a third party.
Martitia Mortimer, Elliott’s executive vice president, answers
appraisal questions on a regular basis in Elliott Real Estate
News.
QUOTES
“A
man can fail many times, but he isn’t a failure until he starts to
blame somebody else.”
-- John Burroughs
“The greatest felony in the news business today is to be behind, or
miss a big story. So speed and quantity substitute for the
thoroughness and quality, for accurateness and content.” -- Carl
Bernstein
“Many a small thing has been made large by the right kind of
advertising.” -- Mark Twain
“You should never have your best trousers on when you go out to
fight for freedom and truth.” -- Henrik Ibsen
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