With the implementation of new regulations for Federal Housing Administration appraisals around the corner, Housing Watch looks at the industry, exposing the “seedy underbelly” of scheming, wheeling and dealing, according to Housing Watch. The glut of subsequent new appraisal management companies are an “accident waiting to happen,” according to Jonathan Miller, an appraiser himself and the CEO of Miller Samuel. While appraisal management companies — those whose job it is to create a buffer between lenders and appraisers — have become increasingly key to the industry, experts say that the managers, too, can be off-base. “The use of out-of-area appraisers, who don’t know the local market or have full access to the data, frequently results in apples and oranges comparisons in the valuations,” Walt Molony, a spokesperson for the National Association of Realtors, said. “The result is many valuations coming in below the price agreed upon between the buyer and seller, by definition, a fair market price.”
Appraising appraisers
February 02, 2010 04:35PM



February 02, 2010 at 4:54 pm, Anonymous said:
sellers, buyers and their broker should sue incompetent appraisers and you won’t see anymore people for upstate of from NJ working on a coop C6 in the UWS…
February 02, 2010 at 5:15 pm, Anonymous said:
Looking for REOS in queens…. Jonnyceic1@gmail.com
Thank You
February 15, 2010 at 12:22 pm, Anonymous said:
A willing buyer and seller is only a peice to the fair market value puzzle. Appraisers are required to provie three closed sales to support market value. This is based on historical data. In addition, the appraiser must take into account when there is a declining market and what are the competing listings. All of these items, play a role in developing an appraisal. If the value of a property was solely based on an agreed upon price, then what would be the need for an appraisal?