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FTC rules against Realtors

Started by looking2return
about 16 years ago
Posts: 182
Member since: Jan 2009
Discussion about
First come the discounts. Where does this all lead? I think it is the brokerage houses that have the most to lose. If you own one, sell now or be forever priced out...oh, that's not the way that goes. http://www.ftc.gov/opa/2009/11/realcomp.shtm FTC Rules Michigan Realtors' Group Reduced Competition, Harmed Consumers by Restricting Access to Discount Realtors' Listings on its Multiple Listing... [more]
Response by Riversider
about 16 years ago
Posts: 13572
Member since: Apr 2009

No, this is pro-competition. I may have seen hearings about this on C-SPAN, where Maxine Waters berated the FTC representative from correcting a problem that she felt wasn't one(wonder if it had anything to do with her real estate backing)..

The Federal Trade Commission ordered a National Association of Realtors' affiliate in the Detroit area to end practices that the agency found unlawfully discriminated against discount real estate brokers.

The unanimous FTC decision, announced Monday, was the latest in a long series of skirmishes over competition issues between federal antitrust regulators and the NAR, a giant trade group. Federal regulators have consistently pushed the Realtors, at both the national and local level, to abolish rules that could thwart discounters.

The FTC case was filed in October 2006 against Realcomp II Ltd., Farmington Hills, Mich., which operates a multiple-listing service, or MLS, covering southeastern Michigan, and is owned by local Realtor organizations in that area. An MLS maintains a database of homes available for sale and enforces rules for the brokers who use that information. Real estate brokers must belong to an MLS to get the information they need on listings. An MLS provides more detail than do Web sites like Realtor.com that are open to the public.

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Response by stevejhx
about 16 years ago
Posts: 12656
Member since: Feb 2008

I agree with RS. The only way, however, to block the real-estate industry's monopoly is to end the conflict-of-interest inherent to the seller's paying the entire commission. Therefore, the buyer's "agent" actually works for the seller, as the seller is paying the bill. Buyers think they're getting something for free, but they're not.

If a commission is paid, it should be split 50-50 between the buyer & seller. But any percentage-based commission is inherently anti-competitive for the buyer, as his "agent" makes more money the more the buyer pays. Ergo, no incentive to lower the price. The whole system needs to be replaced with an hourly fee.

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