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A Lender’s Appraisal Does Not Care About Your Upgrades

Thanks Tony.

Via Tony Grego with American Bank Mortgage Group - 317-714-8080:

Do you feel that pricing a home is a little like throwing darts these days? Sometimes you hit, most times you miss?

At the end of the day Realtors have a next to impossible job trying to help clients price their home. I don't think I ever met anyone that wants to lose money but most homes we price today should reflect a lower price than a few years ago. Now I'm on the mortgage side of things but I hear the same things. My house is worth XXX,XXX due to:

"I have nicer landscaping."

"I just replaced the carpets."

"I just repainted the walls."

"I just had the bathroom toilet fixed."

"I had my furnace replaced last year."

Realtors work very hard with comparables, pictures and stats to help support the price. I'm not saying that these upgrades are not important. They just don't really add value. They add eye and curb appeal to help a potential client say yes to the listing.

What goes into a Lender's Appraisal?

For Fannie Mae, Click here

For Freddie Mac, Click here

For FHA, Click here

Most homes are financed. So these appraisal standards are important when you price. Remember we are in a Lender's Market. Nothing will turn a buyer off more than working hard on a price agreement only to find out the appraisal comes in short. So to best serve our clients remember that most of the weight for your pricing strategy must be Lender comps.

 

At your service,
Tony Grego
Senior Mortgage Banker  American Bank - Indianapolis, IN Branch
www.getmyratequote.com
www.tonygrego.com to learn more about me

317-348-0280 direct line
317-536-3754 fax
"Bankers with vision, helping people with dreams!"

Steve Moore

David Massey Real Estate

1629 S Church Street

Burlington  NC   27215

mailto:Steve@RealMoore.com

3 commentsSteve Moore • February 27 2010 08:54AM

What's in Mebane

Kenyon's Meat Market

1915 South NC Hwy 119

Mebane NC  27302

Whether new to Mebane NC or a lifelong resident, you will appreciate Kenyon's Meat Market.  Conveniently located on NC Highway 119, just south of I85 exit 153, Kenyon's will take you back to a time when service meant something.  Owners Darrin and Renea Kenyon opened the Meat Market in May of 2008 with the idea of giving the community something that was missing, quality, preservative-free meat at reasonable prices.  Kenyon's has delivered on the promise and become a great addtion to the community.

Kenyon's Meat Market, Mebane NC

You will only have to walk in to know that you are in a different kind of place.

Interior Kenyon's Mebane NC

Specializing in beef, pork, and chicken, Kenyon's never adds preservatives to the meat they sell.

Kenyon's Meat Market, Mebane NCKenyon's Meat Market, Mebane NCKenyon's Meat Market, Mebane NC

Check out this sanitation grade!

Kenyon's Meat Market, Mebane NCJohn Kenyon cuts my special order, filet 4" thick.

Kenyon's Meat Market, Mebane NC

Kenyon's Meat Market, Mebane NCKenyon's Meat Market, Mebane NCYes, it is the South and we must have things like country ham, chow chow, pickled eggs, fruit preserves, and fresh products from

Maple View Farm .

 

 

Kenyon's Meat Market, Mebane NCJust for convenience, a limited selection of beer and wine is offered.

 

For your special orders call Kenyon's Meat Market at (919) 304-0715

For your real estate needs - if you want to buy or sell in Alamance County NC, call Steve Moore at 336-263-0150. 

Steve Moore

David Massey Real Estate

1629 S Church Street

Burlington  NC   27215

mailto:Steve@RealMoore.com

0 commentsSteve Moore • February 24 2010 10:15AM

The Ethical Dilemma of Strategic Walk-Aways

Via Mike Bell, Broker - Realty World MBA:

Owners that can actually make their loan payments, but choose to walk away, accounted for 1 in 4, or 25% of all foreclosures as of June 2009.   That was over six months ago, and the numbers have probably gone up since the initial studies (these data can be easily verified via a quick Google search).  Strategic default is an ethical dilemma, and the discussion is burning up cyberspace.

On one hand, there is a moral obligation to honor your contract.  If you owe more than your house is worth, one way or other you gambled on your equity and came up short.  Maybe you bought at the top of the market, or took out an equity line of credit and bought some stuff; a car or TV, or maybe even another house.  Regardless, it’s not your lender’s fault that your property value went down.  After all, if your property went up in value you wouldn’t turn around and give the bank extra, right?  If you buy gold, and it loses value, you don’t get your money back, you wait it out. If you loan money to a friend, and he loses it all, you would still expect him to pay you back, especially if he can afford it.  The value of a promise doesn’t flex due to circumstances, or whether you are the giver or the receiver.  If you can make your house payments, it’s the right thing to do. 

On the other hand, are the banks responsible for some of this mess?  Should they share the burden?  Didn’t they sort of tease us into all these high-risk loans and credit cards?  In the first few years of the Y2K decade, the FED, major lenders, and real estate professionals convinced us that everybody in America could buy a home. They made you feel foolish if you didn’t.  It was like manifest destiny, your birthright, your duty.  You could get a home loan if you had a pulse.  You could qualify just because you said so, no matter if you could actually afford one.  Lenders didn’t seem to care if you were truthful in your loan application.  Certainly they knew they were making questionable loans, gambling on equity just like us.  Aren’t the financial institutions culpable, too?  Didn’t they practically beg us into this?

The survival of our economy depends on everybody doing the right thing.  Imagine the consequences if all borrowers that owe more than their house is worth but can afford the payments choose to walk away, or if all the lenders call in all the notes on properties that won’t appraise for the full amount.  

 

Half million dollar house in Salinas, Californ...

Image via Wikipedia

So, who gets the free morality pass?  Who gets to choose what’s fair?  Is personal credibility negotiable?   Is the golden rule irrelevant?  Do we just step off when times get tough?  Is this the new American paradigm?

Not surprisingly, real estate professionals are leading the charge in advising people to walk away.   Not ironically, real estate professionals were leading the charge 4-6 years ago advising people take on these same loans.  Whatever it takes to earn a fee.  Maybe it’s time for an industry gut check.

 

 

Steve Moore

David Massey Real Estate

1629 S Church Street

Burlington  NC   27215

mailto:Steve@RealMoore.com

1 commentSteve Moore • February 04 2010 08:20AM