Boston Herald

Appraisal-free home sales could raise buyers’ interest

- THE NATION’S HOUSING Kenneth R. Harney

WASHINGTON — Would you welcome the option to buy a house but not have to pay hundreds of dollars for an appraisal?

Are you kidding? Sign me up, you might say. Who doesn’t want to save $500 or $700 for someone to confirm that the price you and the home seller agreed to makes sense? Appraisals are mainly for lenders, right?

If an appraisal-free home purchase sounds intriguing, you might be interested in groundbrea­king new policy changes by the two largest sources of home financing — Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Both government­chartered companies are now willing to waive their decades-old appraisal mandates for certain home purchases, provided their automated valuation models — loaded with previous appraisal and current market data — flash a green light.

You as a buyer won’t have to do a thing; the entire process will be handled between your mortgage lender and either Fannie or Freddie. Your lender will submit your loan file for underwriti­ng analysis by the companies’ proprietar­y online systems with a property value estimate but no appraisal. If an underwriti­ng model determines that there is sufficient informatio­n available on the house, you’ll get a choice: Do you want to do a traditiona­l appraisal, at your cost, or go with Fannie’s or Freddie’s in-house valuation, which will cost you nothing?

Simple as that. If you opt for no appraisal, you’ll know immediatel­y whether your contract price is acceptable for the mortgage amount you’re seeking. That’s impossible with the traditiona­l approach where you have to wait for the appraiser to bless the deal, which sometimes doesn’t happen because the appraisal comes in lower than the contract price.

Eligible properties for Fannie Mae’s version of the program include single-family homes, second homes and condos. Cooperativ­es, multi-unit and manufactur­ed homes aren’t allowed. You’ll need to have at least 20 percent equity going in — so this is not an option for people buying with skimpy down payments.

Freddie’s program is slightly more restrictiv­e. It is limited to single-family, single-unit houses that are used as the borrower’s principal residence — no second homes. Houses valued at more than $1 million are not eligible. It requires a 20 percent equity stake. Foreclosed homes are barred as well.

Not surprising­ly, opinions on the two giant companies’ departure from strict dependence on traditiona­l appraisals vary widely. Appraisers think the idea stinks.

Carl S. Schneider, an appraiser in Tulsa, Okla., said appraisers function as the lender’s and consumer’s essential “eyes and ears,” and no computer program “can replace” them. They inspect interiors, which computers cannot do. “Buyers may want to avoid the cost of an appraisal,” he added, “and that is their prerogativ­e.” But he foresees trouble ahead when investors in Fannie’s and Freddie’s mortgage bonds discover “loans were made to unscrupulo­us borrowers and the collateral is crap.”

Real estate brokers generally see the companies’ limited moves as worthwhile, particular­ly given recent frequent delays in delivery of appraisals, higher fees to buyers because of surcharges by appraisal management companies and few appraisers available — or willing — to perform home valuations in some markets.

Anthony Lamacchia, broker-owner of Lamacchia Realty in Waltham, told me he thinks appraisal-free loans are “a good thing,” provided buyers have made significan­t down payments. But he worries that if Fannie and Freddie waive appraisals at lower equity levels “it will lead to what happened in the bust.”

One of the mortgage industry’s most prominent leaders supports the companies’ new tech-driven initiative­s, but has some words of caution for homebuyers. David Stevens, president and CEO of the Mortgage Bankers Associatio­n, says automated valuations might satisfy a lender’s purposes but they “may not necessaril­y be the best assessment” of “the right price to pay for a property.”

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