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Last modified: Tuesday, August 19, 2008 10:30 AM PDT
Appraiser mandate proves to be a failure
By MITCH WEISS Associated Press
CHARLOTTE, N.C. — As soaring home prices set the stage for America’s great housing meltdown, a critical step in making sure those home sales were a fair deal — the real estate appraisal — was undermined from within.
After the nation’s last major banking disaster, Congress set up a system to catch rogue appraisers. Their game: inflating the value of homes at the direction of equally unscrupulous real estate agents and mortgage brokers, whose commissions are determined by the size of the deals.
But a six-month Associated Press investigation found that the system is crippled by both the bumbling of its policemen and their inability to effectively punish those caught committing fraud.
And despite ample evidence appraisers are pressured into inflating home values — sometimes to prices in support of loans that are more than buyers can afford — the federal regulators charged with protecting consumers have thus far made a conscious choice not to act.
‘‘The system is completely broken,’’ Marc Weinberg, the former acting director at the federal agency charged with monitoring the appraisal industry, told the AP before he retired earlier this year. ‘‘It’s amazing that the system ever worked at all.’’
The AP conducted dozens of interviews and reviewed thousands of state and federal documents, and found:
— Since 2005, at the height of the housing boom, more than two dozen states and U.S. territories have violated federal rules by failing to investigate and resolve complaints about appraisers within a year. Some complaints sat uninvestigated for as long as four years. As a result, hundreds of appraisers accused of wrongdoing remained in business.
— The only tool federal regulators have to force states into compliance is so draconian — it would effectively halt all mortgage lending in a state — that it has never been used.
— Both state appraisal boards and the federal agency changed with overseeing them are chronically understaffed, many with only one full-time investigator to handle the hundreds of complaints that arrive each year. Some don’t even have an investigator.
‘‘The appraisal reforms of the late 1980s were good reforms,’’ said Susan Wachter, a real estate professor at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School of Business. ‘‘But they were not sufficient to prevent what we have seen ... because regulation without teeth is not regulation.’’
To be sure, there are many causes of the housing crisis — lenders who allowed people with spotty credit to buy homes with little or no money down, mortgage brokers who focused on selling loans without regard to the borrowers’ ability to repay, investment bankers who bought and sold risky mortgage-backed securities. A few of the worst offenders have been put behind bars. |