Archive for August 2009

Video: Is East Baton Rouge Really Doing As Well As Reported In Terms Of Foreclosures?
http://www.batonrougerealestateappraisal.com/ – Video: Is East Baton Rouge Really Doing As Well As Reported In Terms Of Foreclosures? Watch This Video And You Be The Judge! Please Take A Moment To Comment About This Video Below.

Greater Baton Rouge Real Estate Question: Is It Wise To Invest $60,000 For A Pool and Landscaping For A $250,000 Home?
http://www.batonrougerealestateappraisal.com/ – Greater Baton Rouge Real Estate Question: Is It Wise To Invest $60,000 For A Pool and Landscaping On A $250,000 Home?
As a home appraiser, I often see this type of scenario: Homeowner wants that swimming pool in the backyard with a lot of nice landscaping. That’s human nature to want nice features with your home, an outlet to help alleviate the monotony and stress of daily living after a hard days work, especially since many of the residential developments today aren’t designed for quality of life amenities, such as with walking and biking paths and trails. However, with a home value of $250,000, a $60,000 investment could bring your cost basis to $310,000 in a $250,000 neighborhood or 24% more than the average home in your subdivision. Would that be wise? Not exactly. Read more below.
There’s 2 answers to the above question: Is It Wise To Invest $60,000 For A Pool and Landscaping On A $250,000 Home?
1.) If money is no object to you and you plan on living and enjoying that home for the rest of your life (not moving), then make that investment because a $50,000 IG Pool is rarely a wise investment. One exception could be a pool installation in a high-end development in the $500K to $1,000,000 range. But the question is for the $250K range. Realize that the market (buyers) don’t pay dollar-for-dollar for such improvements as IG Pools or Landscaping. My 18 years experience as a home appraiser has shown me consistently that the market pays between 15% to 33% of the original cost of these improvements, depending on how nice they are and prevalence of such neighborhood amenities. If you live in a 300 home subdivision and only 5 homes have pools, then the likelihood of your return is much lower. If you live in an older neighborhood where pools were once the amenity to own but are now being filled in with dirt, then that should help one make their decision. It seems that the new the home and neighborhood and the newer the Pool, the more value it adds. So, if you want to spend $50,000 on an upscale gunite pool and only get back maybe $7,500 when you sell, then make that investment knowing this about the market’s reaction to such an amenity and investment.

The Red Circles Represent IG Pools Installed – A High Prevalence Of IG Pools. Before Installing An IG Pool, Research To Find Out The Prevalence Of IG Pools In Your Neighborhood. It’s likely that the more pools, the more a buyer would be willing to pay for such an amenity.
2.) If your investment dollars are counted carefully and you don’t plan on living in that home for more than 3 to 10 years, then such an investment would probably not be wise.
In conclusion, a $60,000 investment on the outside of your home is rarely going to reward you with a dollar-for-dollar reward paid by the buyer at the time of sale. It’s a major over-improvement that “might” return 1/4th to 1/3rd of your original investment. It’s best to find out this answer from an appraiser than a pool salesperson…..Enough Said!

$50,000 Gunite In-Ground Swimming Pool

$10,000 In Newer Landscaping
So, You Might Ask, Where’s The Best Place To Invest Money In My Home For The Best Reward? Stay Tuned To Find Out More. Here’s A Hint: Place Little Reliance On Those Cost-Reward Guides That Tell You If You Invest $15,000 Adding A New Bathroom, Your Reward Will Be $30,000. Those Guides Are Written By The Same Industry That Wants To Add That New Bathroom To Your Home, not from the appraiser that exactly examines the market to determine the true value of such an improvement.
Author’s Bio:
Bill Cobb, CREA, is Greater Baton Rouge’s favorite and most reputable home appraiser frequently called upon by banks, homeowners, and savvy real estate investors to assess property values. A home appraiser with 18 years experience, Bill Cobb brings a wealth of knowledge to the table as a home appraiser.
Bill’s company, Accurate Valuations Home Appraisal Group, serves Greater Baton Rouge (East Baton Rouge Parish, West Baton Rouge Parish, Western Livingston Parish and Northern Ascension Parish).
Contact Bill Cobb and Accurate Valuations Home Appraisal Group for your next home appraisal:
Office: 225-293-1500, Cell: 225-953-0638
Fax: 1-866-663-6065
Staff Email: fastvalue2@cox.net

Greater Baton Rouge Hurricane Disaster Services Inspections Bill Cobb 225-953-0638
http://www.batonrougerealestateappraisers.net/ – Greater Baton Rouge Hurricane Disaster Services Inspections Bill Cobb 225-953-0638 or 225-293-1500



Listen To Greater Baton Rouge Real Estate Today National Of Association Of Realtor Saturday Radio Shows and Archives
http://www.batonrougerealestateappraisers.net/ – Listen To Greater Baton Rouge Real Estate Today National Of Association Of Realtor Saturday Radio Shows and Archives

A Simple Fix For Greater Baton Rouge HVCC Compliance?
http://www.realestateappraisertips.info/ – Dave Towne: A Simple Fix for the HVCC

A Simple Fix for the HVCC
Unintended consequences of the HVCC agreement has come close to decimating the appraisal industry, and many in mortgage lending. The fix is simple, and easily implemented by Cuomo, FannieMae and FreddieMac and the other regulators. I can be done in just a few weeks.
The simple fix is to require a personally signed (digital signature permitted) appraisal order form which contains a mandated certification and compliance statement approved by FannieMae, FreddieMac and Cuomo, with the license number of the signer, which states the individual (not the ‘company’) who ordered the appraisal has not influenced the appraiser in any way to compromise the appraiser’s independence in the reporting of the Opinion of Market Value.
The new order form’s certification and compliance statement should be similar to items in the USPAP Ethics Rule, Management Section (Pg. U-8).
This new order form should be required no matter who places the appraisal order, and who ultimately funds the mortgage loan, or insures the loan. It should not be limited to only FannieMae/FreddieMac use, as the HVCC is now. The order form should also clearly state that a ‘reconsideration of value’ is not permitted once the original signed appraisal report is submitted.
By putting individuals who order appraisals on the same legal playing field as appraisers, the direct placement of appraisals by Mortgage Brokers, Loan Officers, Real Estate Agents and others can be re-implemented. Using a signed order form, with an approved certification and compliance statement, means that former industry business relationships can be re-established. Secondary ‘middlemen’ will not be needed.
Appraiser decimation has occurred due to 5% of the HVCC that is not based on existing appraisal independence policies codified in requirements of FHFA, OCC, FannieMae, FreddieMac, HUD/FHA, FRS, NCUA, FDIC, and OTS. Appraiser decimation is reaching epidemic proportions. The 5% has caused a major disruption in what was a reasonably efficient appraisal ordering process prior to May 1, 2009. As a result of this disruption, many competent, highly skilled and experienced appraisers are leaving the industry. These are the people we need to keep gainfully employed to provide accurate appraisals. And many mortgage lending people have been unfairly impacted.
Some will say this can’t work. Well, the HVCC is not working reliably either. It has caused more negative impacts than the problem it was intended to solve. 95% of the HVCC is based on existing regulations and policies. So it can’t be ‘postponed’ as some are suggesting. It can’t be ended in its entirety due to the aforementioned agency guidelines that apply to all segments of the mortgage lending business. But we can’t restore the former ‘status quo’ either when the appraiser was subject to influence. So what’s left is to modify the 5% that is causing the most problem by using a signed order form that says the appraiser is hired to value a property without any interference by members of the ‘production’ side of the business.
This can work if enough appraisers, mortgage brokers, loan officers and others begin to work together to solve a serious problem. You can help by forwarding this suggestion to everyone in the industry, congressional representatives, regulatory agencies and even Mr. Cuomo.
Dave Towne
Certified Residential RE Appraiser
WA State

Yes, I have Dave’s permission to publish the entire article. Bill Cobb, Appraiser.



