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Culture War Roundup for the week of March 25, 2024

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I have been waiting for a post on the NAR settlement and it has never come. The NAR was forced to pay out a large settlement due to lawsuits and change how buyers agents are compensated.

https://www.nbcnews.com/business/real-estate/national-association-realtors-settlement-changes-rcna143634

The standard way homes are bought and sold in a market is at a 5 or 6% commission which is then split 50-50 between the buyers and sellers agents. I believe the big change now is on the mls websites buyers commissions were expected to be listed. You are no longer required to lists and discriminate buyers concessions and some technical details I am not 100% certain on. But barriers to trade and non-standard arrangements will be easier.

I have had friends buy properties before un represented but it is frowned upon. In those cases they would make their offer and basically say I have no agent so reduce your price 3% and rework your sellers contract so your sellers agent gets 3% like he would if I had an agent. The old system made this harder since most people just like to follow the way. Which I believe led a lot of people to just hirer a buyers agent probably a friend and let them get paid.

Culture war isn’t our general culture war but you can find plenty on twitter saying things like “turn out everyone hated us” realistically though we just didn’t like real estate transactions costing us 6% (plus more in many areas with transfer taxes).

There are a lot of interesting economics to discuss on this issue. Another area is a lot of realtors don’t transact all that much. A couple deals a year. My guess is this deal makes it much harder for the casual real estate agent if commissions fall. You won’t be able to buy/sell for your friends network. Another issue with being oversupplied with realtors is many spend more time finding clients than working with clients. Trades in general with commodity products but high margins for various reasons would tend to a model of a high amount of resources being spent on client acquisition.

Another area if the new world in real estate occurs is the housing market would change significantly if commission fall meaningfully. Lower transaction costs means people can move more frequently. If your home costs $1 million and $60k commissions are happening then you are paying that $60k somehow even if it’s indirectly. It would also seem to help flips significantly. If real estate transaction were saying $0 then I would think nearly every property would be a flip as some people would have true expertise in rehabbing/remodeling. Our current 6-10% transaction costs makes it very expensive for a 6 month guy to do it. They can only step in for properties heavily degraded where no true owner (with no expertise) would be interested. This is one reason I thought the various ibuyer companies would fail because adding more fees makes it uneconomical.

Can somebody steelman a buyers agent for me? They are paid as a percentage of the total cost of the sale, so aren't they incentivized to negotiate against their purported clients?

Agents always seem to have weird incentives. Reputation of course matters more than anything for more business.

The converse to a % would be an hourly wage for giving advice and finishing processes (like a Lawyer) but that system would encourage buyers agents to not close deals and instead have deals fail but keep the billable hours up.

Reputation to get more clients is the only thing that works to align client/agent incentives since every incentive system I see for agents in one-off deals would have misaligned incentives.

If I had to steelman buyers agents it’s probably something like they need to exists and most buyers have a need for the specific service to varying extents. The exact compensation structure is hard to perfectly align incentives.

Even if I am buying the simplest of real estate purchases say a condo in a 300 unit property and looking at a few similar sized buildings it would still take me hundreds of hours to figure out costs/benefit trade offs while a buyers agent who specializes in large condo buildings in a neighborhood should have built up a strong feel for relative value in those buildings. Maybe it takes 200 hours to gain pricing knowledge of condos in a neighborhood but if they have 20 clients/year for multiple years they spread that fundamental research time down to sub <10 hrs per client.

If I had to steelman buyers agents it’s probably something like they need to exists

Why do they need to exist in the age of the internet? It’s way less overhead to hit up Zillow for leads than it is to coordinate with an agent. You’d still have an appraiser, inspector, title insurance and a bank guarding the interest of the buyer. Earnest money protects the seller. If you need coordination, a one time fee is most appropriate. Residential real estate agents pattern match to cars salesmen who are strictly negative value. They artificially inflate the cost of automobiles via unwanted human interaction and likewise exist due to cartels.

As for pricing, Zillow or the equivalent will tell you the price and estimated price since the last sale of every property in your city from a birds eye view, often with photos from the previous sale. In my metro, there is no way the average buyers agent adds 30k of value - maybe a couple of grand is reasonable. On the sellers side, a one time fee also makes more sense to do staging, photos, and listings.

I got no disagreement that most deals can probably work on a bare bones style agent.

I was more steel-manning why they should exists versus why they should exists at a 3% commission.

A very small percentage of buyers agents likely do deserve 3%. There are unique projects that require far more expertise. If some platform rolled up buyers agents, paid them a salary, and charged 1% buyers fees I feel like that business model can work. To date that model has not work perhaps due to restrictions etc from the old ways.