Originally posted by: Vic
Originally posted by: HomeAppraiser
Originally posted by: Vic
edit: And you continue blaming the realtors (and I assume, mortgage brokers), which is disingenuous in the extreme. The buyers and sellers alone are at fault. A realtor or a broker who refuses business on the basis that the buyer is making an irrational decision is merely sending that business to his competitor.
Wow, just wow. I have seen plenty of Realtors and mortgage brokers drive the price of a home up in order to get a buyer into a home they couldn?t afford for zero down and a low monthly payment based on a teaser rate. It works like this: Listing & sales price = $200,000 but the buyer has no cash. Realtor/broker says ?Let?s raise the price to $212,000 and have the seller ?kick back? $12,000 to the buyer.? Now the buyer has enough money for closing and the seller still gets his/her full price. All they need now is an appraiser to ?play ball? and ?hit the number?! That usually involves a phone call from the Realtor or broker who says ?You?d better come it to value on this deal or a) we are not going to use you any more, b) no deal no appraisal fee c) we are going to complain to the state that you did not appraise to the sales price which is after all market value. In all likelihood the market value of the property is $195,000.
So Vic, is an
appraiser who refuses business like this on the basis that the buyer is making an irrational decision merely sending that business to his competitor?
Isn't that what you just said?
😕
And even though the property might (in your hypothetical argument and expert
opinion) be worth only $195k, who is the party who will be the most pissed-off and the most likely to file numerous complaints if you don't appraise it for $212k? That's right, the buyer you're trying to "protect." So who is ultimately at fault? That pressure doesn't start with the realtor or broker. It starts with the buyer who wants that house -- no matter what.
And sure, there's dirtbag bottom-feeders out there who go "dialing for dollars" looking for buyers to push into homes, but they're the minority doing an even smaller minority of the business. More than 80% of all real estate-related business is marketed by word-of-mouth, and that begins with a buyer looking to buy, iniating the transaction by calling up a realtor and/or a broker that they want to buy from.
You might want to look for higher quality realtors and brokers to work for. Oh, wait...