National banks and mortgage lenders are incorporating image recognition into their appraisal review process, as the leading government-sponsored enterprises (GSEs) recently announced they will use image recognition to detect incorrect quality and condition ratings. Restb.ai offers mortgage originators and AMCs a GSE-complaint image validation solution with its computer vision technology, Restb.ai announced in a press release.
GSEs require appraisal reports to include interior and exterior photos of subject properties. However, the release stated, they only require one exterior front photo for each comparable.
Recently, Fannie Mae analyzed more than a million appraisals using image recognition technology to compare appraisal reports to interior photos of comparables for comparing condition ratings. The differences in ratings were so significant that Fannie Mae is now using image recognition to detect condition errors.
Recently, Fannie Mae noted image recognition technology was able to identify appraisal defects with 98 percent accuracy and significantly increase its efficiency, noting the new technology found “many defects that were previously impossible” for it to detect, adding that “incorrect condition ratings can lead to missing or faulty adjustments to comparable sales, resulting in unsupported, inaccurate appraisals.”
“When the GSEs talk, lenders and appraisers listen – and act,” Tony Pistilli, general manager, Valuations for Restb.ai, said in the release. “Image recognition is now a must-have. If Fannie Mae is doing it, appraisal providers and lenders need to be doing it too.”
The significant shift by the secondary market to evaluate internal photos for quality and condition has resulted in rejecting appraisals when comparables are used without the appropriate adjustments.
“Lenders and AMCs can immediately benefit by reducing the number of appraisal corrections, mitigating loan repurchase risk, and improving appraisal turn times and increasing appraisal quality by adopting our computer vision solution,” Restb.ai Chief Product Officer Nathan Brannen said. “Computer vision can be a trusted source for quality and condition ratings, identifying property damage, home features not mentioned in the appraisal, and most importantly, protect the lender and appraisal provider by validating information in the appraisal.”