Monday, May 11, 2009

Borrowing Money Isn’t Getting Easier.

By Joel Persinger
YourRealEstateDude.com

While it has become obvious that many people have an almost religious reverence for our current president, his attempts to rescue the mortgage industry have brought about anything but a heavenly result. He has thrown hundreds of billions of dollars of taxpayer money at the problem, only to find that the problem is far from going away. The only thing that went away was the taxpayer’s money and he can’t really account for where the money went.

There are very few things that government does well. Spending your money wisely and accounting for where your money went are not among them. Not only does your government really have no idea where your money went, the “solution” you paid for did not end up solving anything. Loans are just as difficult to get after the so called “Stimulus” as they were before, if not more so.

To add insult to injury, the right hand of government seems to be working against the left hand. For every program or law the government creates with the idea of getting the money to flow, another government program or law springs up designed to clog up the financial plumbing all over again. Take HVCC for example. HVCC is the Home Valuation Code of Conduct. It was revised as of May first of this year to included sweeping changes to the way that appraisals of residential property are ordered and performed.

Under the new law, appraisals can no longer be ordered directly by your loan officer. Instead, the loan officer must contact a third party organization that will manage and control the process. Regulation requires that all communication between the appraiser and your loan officer must be carried out through the third party. Your loan officer and your appraiser may no longer communicate with each other directly.

The purpose behind the law is to reduce the amount of corruption in the appraisal process. The idea is to keep the appraiser and the loan officer from conspiring to slip bad loans through the system. But, in actual fact the law creates more problems than it solves. Here are some examples: Your loan officer can no longer select experienced appraisers and weed out the inexperienced ones. Neither can your loan officer speak to the appraiser to get a detailed explanation of any issues that have affected the appraised value. Additionally, the third party organization will derive its fee by taking as much as half of the appraiser’s fee! That means that appraisers will have to do twice the work to make the same amount of money. Quality decreases as work loads increase. So, expect the quality of appraisals to suffer and to see more inexperienced appraisers than ever before. Last, but certainly not least, is the fact that adding this additional layer of management increases the amount of time it takes to get the job done. So, the time it takes to close any given escrow will increase. If you put your house in escrow today, don’t count on closing escrow for at least 60 to 90 days, if you’re lucky.

The HVCC issue is just one of many examples of the government throwing monkey wrenches in the works with one hand while trying to grease the machinery to get it working faster with the other. It’s a counter productive approach to “stimulus.” When added to the fact that banks have continued to tighten their lending rules to make borrowing more difficult in spite of having received a ton of taxpayer money, it becomes clear that the only things the “stimulus” packages have stimulated are greed and controversy. Still, one thing remains uncontroversial. If you’re looking for a home loan in this market, you’d better put your sneakers on and get ready to jump through hoops. It will be more work than you think and will take more time.

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