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Best Home Appraiser in AP/Baton Rouge Area
Posted on 8/26/10 at 12:54 pm
Posted on 8/26/10 at 12:54 pm
Does anyone have any recommendations?
Posted on 8/26/10 at 12:57 pm to The Darrow Kid
Shankopotmous is an appraiser in that area I believe
Posted on 8/26/10 at 2:14 pm to I Love Bama
Picou Appraisers 927-2155 Very good very quick turnaround.
Posted on 8/26/10 at 2:16 pm to redfish99
Kelly Johnson been doin it a long time................
He aint a newbie..
He aint a newbie..
Posted on 8/26/10 at 2:17 pm to Drop4Loss
first i ask you why ?
the reason is all appraisals that go to a mortgage company or bank have to be ordered thru HVCC company.
the reason is all appraisals that go to a mortgage company or bank have to be ordered thru HVCC company.
Posted on 8/26/10 at 2:27 pm to hawkeye007
quote:
the reason is all appraisals that go to a mortgage company or bank have to be ordered thru HVCC company.
Dat be absolutely false.
Banks and mortg cos order at will from their own lists. Not brokers tho....
Posted on 8/26/10 at 2:29 pm to hawkeye007
quote:
first i ask you why ? the reason is all appraisals that go to a mortgage company or bank have to be ordered thru HVCC company.
I've done plenty of appraisals of people who just want to know what their property is worth. Estates, divorces, etc.
Posted on 8/26/10 at 2:30 pm to I Love Bama
Drop: read his question. He is neither a bank or mortgage lender.
Posted on 8/26/10 at 2:34 pm to hawkeye007
Home Valuation Code of Conduct (HVCC) rules go into effect on May 1, 2009
Freelance reporter Marcie Geffner for Bankrate.com had a story picked up by the Seattle Times' titled "New appraisal rules may hurt home buyers" with respect to the Home Valuation Code of Conduct (HVCC) which goes into effect on May 1, 2009. The rule which takes effect on all Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae loans is highly controversial in the real estate industry.
The appraisal industry could see an increase in the number of national Appraisal Management Companies at the expense of the independent appraisal company. The concern that many in the real estate industry have towards the HVCC is the potential ramification that a national appraisal management company will not understand a local real estate market. The lack of local appraisers in a particular real estate market could further depress home prices because the fear is that a national appraisal management company would create a home valuation process that is determined by Freddie Mac or Fannie Mae not by what the true value of the immovable property actually is.
As to how this relates to the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA), many appraisal management companies are owned by lenders or other settlement service providers. Lenders & title insurance underwriters can own appraisal management companies so long they disclose their ownership relationship within twenty four (24 hours) of the referral and their use is not required. Many are under the impression that lenders or other settlement service providers are forbidden from owning their own appraisal management company but that is inaccurate as this practice is completely legal under RESPA.
The full impact of the HVCC remains to be seen but the entire issue could be moot once the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation's "Interagency Appraisal Evaluation Guidelines" go into effect. The IAEG might trump the HVCC.
Consumers and state & federal regulators need to watch very carefully to see what impact the new HVCC rules will have on the real estate home buying and refinancing process. If the national appraisal management companies misinterpret home values then this will not only have a serious impact on the home buying process but it also could seriously jeopardize taxing bodies who rely on property values to run government.
Freelance reporter Marcie Geffner for Bankrate.com had a story picked up by the Seattle Times' titled "New appraisal rules may hurt home buyers" with respect to the Home Valuation Code of Conduct (HVCC) which goes into effect on May 1, 2009. The rule which takes effect on all Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae loans is highly controversial in the real estate industry.
The appraisal industry could see an increase in the number of national Appraisal Management Companies at the expense of the independent appraisal company. The concern that many in the real estate industry have towards the HVCC is the potential ramification that a national appraisal management company will not understand a local real estate market. The lack of local appraisers in a particular real estate market could further depress home prices because the fear is that a national appraisal management company would create a home valuation process that is determined by Freddie Mac or Fannie Mae not by what the true value of the immovable property actually is.
As to how this relates to the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA), many appraisal management companies are owned by lenders or other settlement service providers. Lenders & title insurance underwriters can own appraisal management companies so long they disclose their ownership relationship within twenty four (24 hours) of the referral and their use is not required. Many are under the impression that lenders or other settlement service providers are forbidden from owning their own appraisal management company but that is inaccurate as this practice is completely legal under RESPA.
The full impact of the HVCC remains to be seen but the entire issue could be moot once the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation's "Interagency Appraisal Evaluation Guidelines" go into effect. The IAEG might trump the HVCC.
Consumers and state & federal regulators need to watch very carefully to see what impact the new HVCC rules will have on the real estate home buying and refinancing process. If the national appraisal management companies misinterpret home values then this will not only have a serious impact on the home buying process but it also could seriously jeopardize taxing bodies who rely on property values to run government.
Posted on 8/26/10 at 2:40 pm to The Darrow Kid
What distinguishes a "good" appraiser from a "bad" appraiser?
I'm not even being flip here. I seriously think it would be rather difficult to determine, and I'd like to see what someone may think as the relevant criteria here.
I'm not even being flip here. I seriously think it would be rather difficult to determine, and I'd like to see what someone may think as the relevant criteria here.
Posted on 8/26/10 at 2:49 pm to Y.A. Tittle
To be honest with you residential appraising for the most part isn't rocket science. Most people with a few years of experience can do a good job. If you want "the best" then you want a residential guy with a SRA designation. They usually have more experience and education than the rest.
Posted on 8/26/10 at 3:01 pm to I Love Bama
I think the problem is that it's someone’s opinion of value. Last year I was given a copy of two appraisal reports on the same subject property (Divorce). One came in at $165,000 and the other came in at $151,000. After having both reports reviewed both were in compliance with USPAP and failed to contain errors.
Each appraiser used different comparables that he felt were of like kind and quality to the subject property. All were located within one mile of the subject property and all sold within 6 months of the appraisal date. Both appraisers made suitable adjustments, which gave their report credibility.
Posted on 8/26/10 at 3:05 pm to DieSmilen
Were the reports in the same week or 6 months apart?
Posted on 8/26/10 at 3:16 pm to I Love Bama
They were within 2 weeks of being issued. Husband randomly picked a name out of the phone book and wife was referred to her appraiser by a realtor.
Posted on 8/26/10 at 3:30 pm to DieSmilen
quote:
Husband randomly picked a name out of the phone book
There's your problem.
Just out of curiosity what did the appraisers charge?
This post was edited on 8/26/10 at 3:33 pm
Posted on 8/26/10 at 3:35 pm to I Love Bama
Well both reports were in compliance with state laws (USPAP). I am not sure of costs, the reports I normally see don't have the Transmital Page with the price on it.
Posted on 8/26/10 at 5:13 pm to The Darrow Kid
Margaret Musso.
period.
period.
Posted on 8/27/10 at 8:13 am to prplhze2000
quote:
Margaret Musso.
period
OMFG
Posted on 8/27/10 at 10:02 am to The Darrow Kid
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