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HUD
No. 03-120
Michael Fluharty
(202) 708-0685
www.hud.gov/news
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For
Release
Wednesday
October 29, 2003 |
HUD/FHA IMPLEMENTS "APPRAISER WATCH" MONITORING SYSTEM TO CURB PREDATORY LENDING
System Tracks Historical Performance of Appraisers
WASHINGTON - The
Department of Housing and Urban Development's on-going efforts to curb predatory
lending received a boost last week when Appraiser Watch, its risk-based appraiser
monitoring system, became fully operational.
"The
Bush Administration is committed to helping more Americans buy homes - and keeping
the homes they've bought," HUD Secretary Mel Martinez said. "Appraiser
Watch is another tool that we're using to help more Americans to own their own
homes by obtaining mortgages they can afford."
With Appraiser
Watch, HUD's Federal Housing Administration will be better able to identify
appraisers who either knowingly or unintentionally place homeowners at risk
for losing their homes to foreclosure because of inflated valuations. Rising
foreclosure rates also could jeopardize the FHA mortgage insurance fund, which
is used by the government to reimburse lenders when homeowners are unable to
make payments on government-guaranteed mortgages.
The new
system, which relies on historical risk factors to help identify appraisers
whose work will be reviewed by FHA staff, was first proposed in the Federal
Register as a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking in July 2002. Based on industry
comments to the initial proposal and internal testing, FHA has determined that
Appraiser Watch should be a tool that identifies questionably performing appraisers,
rather than one that automatically triggers their sanction and removal.
Included
among the risk factors are an appraiser's association with mortgages with high
default rates, and a high volume of appraisals on mortgage programs more likely
to have high default rates, such as rehabilitation loans, loans for multi-unit
and real estate-owned properties.
Under a former
appraiser monitoring system, FHA field reviewed more than 30,000 appraisals from
October 1997 through September 2001. These reviews eventually led to 30 appraisers
- or .001 percent - being removed from the FHA Appraiser Roster for poor performance.
By contrast,
as a result of using Appraiser Watch from October 2001 through September 2002,
FHA identified some 1,900 appraisals for field review, and 97 appraisers were
removed.
Appraiser
Watch is the latest of several HUD initiatives designed to protect homebuyers
from predatory lenders and practices. These practices include unaffordable repayment
terms and other conditions that can result in a loss of equity, increased debt,
default and even foreclosure. Other protective initiatives include:
- Neighborhood
Watch Early Warning system is a web-based software that identifies high rates
of default and claims in specific zip codes, and the lenders associated those
defaults.
- Credit
Watch Termination, identifies poorly performing mortgage lenders, advises
marginal performers that they must improve to remain an approved lender, and
terminates a lender's ability (at the branch level) from originating FHA-insured
mortgages if it fails to improve. HUD may bar lenders from issuing FHA-insured
mortgages if their default and claims rates on loans made within the last
24 months in a geographical area are 200 percent of the average rate for that
area, and if their rate exceeds the national default and claim rate.
- HUD's
latest round of housing counseling grants, which when soon awarded will provide
some $2.7 million to agencies combating predatory lending.
HUD is
the nation's housing agency committed to increasing homeownership, particularly
among minorities, creating affordable housing opportunities for low-income Americans,
supporting the homeless, elderly, people with disabilities and people living
with AIDS. The Department also promotes economic and community development as
well as enforces the nation's fair housing laws. More information about HUD
and its programs is available on the Internet at www.hud.gov
or espanol.hud.gov.
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Note
to Editors: Additional information regarding predatory lending is available
on HUD's website at www.hud.gov/offices/hsg/pred/predlend.cfm
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