September 2010

ELLIOTT® PARTNERS WITH REALEC

ELLIOTT® & Company Appraisers has entered an agreement with RealEC Technologies, which will enable ELLIOTT® to integrate its product-delivery system with the most sophisticated technology currently in use by its mortgage-banking clients.

The RealEC Exchange is one of the leading electronic partner networks (EPNs) in the mortgage industry. In addition to partner connectivity, this EPN provides automatic vendor management, advanced data capture and document management services that enhance ELLIOTT’s ability to communicate and deliver services to its clients.

“Our new technology interface with RealEC allows us to be able to offer clients state-of-the-art delivery of appraisal products that interface with the most sophisticated software programs in the banking industry,” said Charlie Elliott, president of ELLIOTT® & Company Appraisers.


ANALYSTS PREDICT MORE HOME-PRICE DECLINES

In the wake of a gloomy Fannie Mae report on the current economic situation for housing, a leading housing strategist has predicted three or more years of falling home prices.

“Whether it’s the sidelined, shadow or current inventory, the issue is there’s more supply than demand,” said Oliver Chang, a housing strategist in the San Francisco office of Morgan Stanley. “Once you reach a bottom, it will take three or four years for prices to begin to rise 1 or 2 percent a year.”

This pessimistic prediction came after the Fannie Mae forecast of a 7% decline in home sales this year from 2009 and said the drop in demand following the expiration of the homebuyers’ tax credit “suggests weakening home prices in the third quarter.” Shadow inventory, the supply of homes on the market under distressed financial conditions, is also creating a downward effect on home prices.

The National Association of Realtors reported the median price of a previously owned home in July to be $182,600, about what it had been in 2003. Brokers had 4 million homes listed throughout the country that month, about a 12.5-month supply, based on the current sales pace.

“The best thing that could happen is for prices to get to a level that clears the market,“ said Joshua Shapiro, chief U.S. economist at Maria Fiorini Ramirez, an economic forecasting company in New York. “Right now, buyers know it hasn’t hit bottom, so they’re sitting on the sidelines.”


ELLIOTT® ENJOYS ANOTHER BBB COMPLAINT-FREE YEAR

ELLIOTT® & Company Appraisers recently received another certificate from the Better Business Bureau reporting that it had completed another complaint-free year (2009). The company retains an A+ rating with the BBB, which grades companies from A+ to F.

 “ELLIOTT® & Company Appraisers has been a member in good standing with us for many years,” said Kevin Hinterberger, president of the Better Business Bureau of Central North Carolina. “Since ELLIOTT® joined us in 1998, we have never received a complaint about this company.”


STRICTER REGULATIONS FAIL TO PREVENT
INCREASE IN MORTGAGE FRAUD

An investigation by The Wall Street Journal, using the research firm, CoreLogic, indicates that mortgage fraud is, once again, on the rise. Such criminal activity is not as rampant as it had been in 2006, before tighter regulations took effect, but the WSJ investigation concludes that mortgage fraud is on the upswing for the first time since the mortgage meltdown.

CoreLogic examined about 7 million home loans and reported that mortgage-fraud losses increased 17% in 2009. Such illegal activity had previously dropped by 57% since its zenith in 2006. The CoreLogic report said that $14 billion in home loans were affected by fraudulent information in their applications. This accounted for 0.7% of the 2009 mortgage loans.

Like insects that develop immunity from pesticides, these fraudsters are adapting to stricter regulations. The WSJ article reporting this investigation suggested that mortgage fraud is now more likely to take place in the form of false documents, recruited loan officers and stolen identities.

“Even though we have certain compliance measures in place, people will adapt to whatever scheme,” said Sharon Ormsby, an FBI financial crimes section chief. “It doesn’t matter if the market is going up or down.”


FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT HOMES LOSE VALUE IN CURRENT MARKET

Homes, considered to be “architectural gems,” are suffering along with the rest of the Southern California real estate market when it comes to the prices they command.

“Those days of easy money and money-is-no-object artwork kinds of prices are gone,” said Brian Linder, a real estate agent and architect on Southern California.

The Ennis House, designed by legendary architect Frank Lloyd Wright and featured in Hollywood movies, has had its listing price cut in half, from $15 million to $7.5 million, and, at this writing, has yet to be sold. Another Wright classic, the Millard House, remains on the market in Pasadena after two years, even though its price has been cut from $8 million to $5 million. Houses designed by other revered architects are currently going through a similar embarrassment.

“When the economy was in better shape, people were willing to spend a little extra for a work of art,” said James Ebert, a real estate appraiser in the Golden State. “In the recession we’re in now, that architectural, creative edge tends to dissipate and buyers become more concerned for basic shelter.”


INDUSTRY, GOVERNMENT LEADERS DISAGREE
ON FURTHER FEDERAL AID

While leaders in the housing industry appreciate government efforts to revive sagging sales by offering lucrative tax credits, many are now saying that such credits are no longer of true long-term benefit to their success.

“Almost regardless of how future demand plays out, we still believe that the tax credit had to end,” said PulteGroup CEO Richard Lugas. “We need to know the true level of demand without government stimulus distorting the market so that we can continue to properly position our business for ongoing improvement.”

Even as executives of companies that could benefit from financial aid from the government for their industry are discouraging such a move, prominent governmental leaders say their help is still needed, but perhaps in a different form

“My own view is that too little focus has been on community problems because the focus has been more targeted to housing and foreclosures,” said Eric Rosengren, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston. “Rather than treating the symptom, the high REO problem, we need to better understand how to resolve the more general problems in communities that lead to higher concentrations of REOs and exacerbate the effects of high REOs.”

Another high-ranking Fed official, Sandra Pianalto, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, expressed concern to help the industry, as she said, “A healthy housing sector is critical both to the overall economy and to a sustainable economic recovery.”


BUILDERS PULL BACK REINS ON LAND RUSH

In the June issue of this newsletter, we reported that builders were engaging in a land rush, as they snapped up unfinished lots and raw acres of land at bargain prices with the intent of building on them when the demand for housing returned. Now it appears that the builders are crying, “Whoa”, to the horses that were carrying them into the rush.

An article that appeared earlier this month in The Wall Street Journal said that builders are now asking for lower prices on their pending deals and, in some cases, walking away from them. The article, written by Dawn Wotapka, said some big-name builder even forfeited on their deposits rather than go through with the land purchases they had agreed upon.

“The market is definitely doing worse now than at the beginning of the year,” said Ken Campbell, CEO of Standard Pacific, a company that backed off its letter of intent to buy 451 finished lots in Southern California. “It’s a weaker home-sale environment than people had expected, which means land is less valuable.”

Zelman & Associates, a housing-research firm reported that 94% of the builders were looking to buy land in January, but only about 75% were doing so in July.

“The builders are looking at sales in the last three months and they’re saying. ‘Holy cow; our sales are down,’” said Richard Gollis, co-founder of the Concord Group, a real-estate consulting company. “They’re slowing down on their lot buys coming into the fall season.”


ASK MARTITIA

QUESTION:  Are appraisers required by USPAP to have E&O insurance?

MARTITIA:  No, the Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice does not require appraisers to carry errors and omissions insurance, per se. In cases, however, where taking out such insurance is mandated by law, the Competency Rule of USPAP would make it necessary for an appraiser to be E&O-insured.


Martitia Mortimer, Elliott’s executive vice president, answers appraisal questions on a regular basis in Elliott Real Estate News.


QUOTES  

“The act of putting into your mouth what the earth has grown is perhaps your most direct interaction with the earth.” – Frances Moore Lappe

“Fortune knocks at every man’s door once in a life, but, in a good many cases, the man is in a neighboring saloon and does not hear her.” – Mark Twain

“A politician’s words reveal less about what he thinks about his subject than what he thinks about his audience.”  – George Will

“The first day, a guest; the second, a burden; the third, a pest.” – Edouard Laboulaye 

“Dignity is a mask we wear to hide our ignorance.” – Elbert Hubbard



 

 
Newsletter Editor: kevin@elliottco.com   
   
3316-A Battleground Avenue
Greensboro, NC 27410
Toll Free 800-854-5889
Fax 336-854-7734

Privacy Policy | Site Map
Copyright © 2017 ELLIOTT® & Company Appraisers. All Rights Reserved.
Contact Webmaster. Maintained by Zach Barrier