WASHINGTON — It’s by far the hottest controversy in real estate this summer and it could directly affect the value of your house — probably negatively — by tens of thousands of dollars.
The issue concerns lowballed valuations and the new rules guiding appraisers in both price-depressed and rebounding markets. Consider these snapshots:
• In San Diego, Steve Doyle, division president for Brookfield Homes, is trying to close out the final 20 houses of a 120-unit single-family subdivision. Prices range from $340,000 to $350,000.
But recently there’s been a major hitch: Appraisers assigned by banks are coming in with valuations $60,000 or more below Doyle’s selling prices. The appraisers, who Doyle says are unfamiliar with local market trends, inexperienced or both, are using foreclosures and short sales of existing houses as their “comparables.”
Some of the distressed properties are in poor condition, and all of them offer fewer amenities, Doyle said.
• In Wilmington, N.C., a loan applicant with an unblemished payment record and a house in excellent condition sought to refinance into a 4 ¾ percent mortgage. She had purchased the property four years ago for $160,000 and made about $20,000 worth of improvements.
Her loan application, according to Paul Skeens, president of Colonial Mortgage Group of Waldorf, Md., was “a slam dunk. Nothing to it.” The house was worth $180,000 to $200,000, according to a local realty estimate.
But when an appraiser with little local knowledge was sent in by a bank to value the house, he chose two short-sale properties that had both closed in the mid-$140,000 range, and one inheritance sale around $155,000.
The last property was “in horrible condition,” said Skeens. “I’d call it dog meat.” The deal-paralyzing appraised value that came in for the cream-puff refi: $149,000.
• In the suburbs near Cleveland, Enzo Perfetto, manager of Enzoco Homes, builds custom houses on clients’ lots.
He said banks have begun assigning appraisers from far outside the area to value lots as part of mortgage packages on new homes. Some of the comparables they use are foreclosures, and that depresses land valuations.
A young couple who paid $75,000 for their lot recently had it valued at $30,000 by an out-of-area appraiser who only looked at online data, according to Perfetto. That discouraged the young couple from proceeding.


