Real Estate Advice
Appraise This! Dangers of Equity
Loans
Dear Pat,
We recently had a real estate agent over for a market analysis of our
home and she told us our house was worth between $170-180,000. This
came as a shock, since we used up a big home equity loan last year
based on an appraisal of $190,000. Now it seems we have no equity left
in our house to use for a down payment on a new home. This agent was
highly recommended, but should we get another opinion?
---Crestfallen
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Dear Crestfallen,
By all means get another opinion of the value of your home, but don’t
be surprised if you’re disappointed again. It’s a small consolation,
I’m sure, but you’re not alone. Recently I’ve run into several
homeowners who are in the same predicament. With the banks giving out
money the way they used to hand out toasters, too many people are
living in zero-equity homes. You’d expect that these days of
double-digit appreciation would prevent this from occurring, but the
fast appreciating market is actually partially responsible: banks
eagerly lend up to 100%, even 125% of value in anticipation of future
appreciation.
Does this mean that we’ve reached the end of our “bull market” in
rising real estate values? No—not yet, if this Spring’s prices are any
indication. But every home sale is a unique case, and too many
individual factors create “value” to justify an equity loan based on a
blanket appreciation rate expectation. This is where the bank
appraisers are utilized to determine actual present-day value to
protect the lender’s interests and, indirectly, the borrower’s. If the
homeowner elects to borrow beyond the home’s actual value—and the bank
is willing—there should be no one to complain when there is no equity
available later that year, or even the next year.
Where does that leave you,
Crestfallen? You didn’t borrow more than your appraised value last
year—so what happened? Unfortunately, you borrowed more than the
actual value, thanks to a poor appraisal. Let us examine, for a
minute, the plight of the modern-day appraiser: overworked, crushed
beneath
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record numbers of re-fi’s and new sales, flung hither
and yon with no single neighborhood to call her own, often reliant
(whether she cares to admit it or not) on a purchase agreement to
guide her on her search for value. This appraiser can make a mistake,
especially when the market has not “spoken” as in a sold situation.
Appraisers don’t get to see as many on-market houses as Realtors do,
nor do they always have a clear knowledge of extenuating circumstances
which may have affected the sale price of a comparable property.
That’s why the good ones often call upon us for additional
information.
I don’t mean to bash appraisers here—most do their jobs with great
skill and care, especially given the workload of recent years—but the
wise homeowner will take advantage of the free market opinions offered
by Realtors. Use all the tools available, and be realistic when you
borrow.
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PPat
Rosaves is a full-time real estate
professional living in the Seward -
Longfellow area. She has more than 27
years experience in helping people with
their real estate needs. Questions may be
sent to her at River Realty, 2543 38th
Avenue South, Mpls, MN 55406. Or call her
at 612-724-1314 or email her at
pat@riverrealty.net
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