There’s always something to howl about.

True reform in the real estate industry will not result from undermining buyer representation

I’ve been sitting on a post from Jeff Corbett, The X-Broker, for a few days. Jeff Argues that Realty.bots will eliminate buyer’s agents. This actually ties in with recent announcements that major brokerages will be feeding listings to Realty.bots like Trulia.com and Google base. I get the idea Jeff thinks these are good things. I think he’s mistaken.

Start here: Jessica Swesey at InmanBlog asked:

If the DOJ wins and NAR is forced to retract policies, what is the likely chain of events to follow? Who wins and who loses?

My reply:

If the DOJ tries to play pirate with the current system, the big brokerages may go all in-house, which they could easily do already. Then there will be no small brokerages.

Jeff objects to this, but it’s not an unreasonable proposition.

Note, for example, the the overwhelming majority of listings in Tucson are held by one brokerage — Long Realty. Who gains more from the cooperative system imposed by the TARMLS system — Long or all the little brokerages competing against it? If Long pulled out of TARMLS, what would happen happen to those smaller players?

In Phoenix, the market is dominated by Realty Executives and by RE/Max, Keller Williams, Coldwell-Banker and Century 21 Franchises. If they pulled out of ARMLS, either in isolation or by forming a new big-boys-only MLS system, brokerages like mine would be wiped out overnight.

Too much of this debate is beside the point. Pundits simultaneously attribute too much and too little importance to the MLS. From a professional’s point of view, Realty.bots are not comparable to MLS systems, and they probably never will be. They are good for window-shopping by consumers, not for searching by professionals. But wresting control of the MLS away from brokers, somehow forcing them to produce content against their own interests, will not change anything that matters in the practice of residential real estate representation. The reason for this is simple: What is wrong in residential real estate representation has nothing to do with the MLS itself.

We’ll come back to that. First: Buyers buy from the selection that is available to them. This is true of everything that gets bought. I wrote about this in November. The MLS is not a universal inventory, and there will never be a universal inventory. However, if major brokers were to pull out of the MLS, it might not hurt them at all. They would sell their own in-house listings, occasionally reaching one-off co-op agreements on houses listed with other brokerages or with by-owner sellers. This is how things worked in the United States until the mid-1950s, when brokers worked out the idea of a manageable MLS system. The net effect for the consumer would be just like shopping at Lowe’s instead of Home Depot: This is what is available to us here.

This doesn’t seem likely to me, but it’s far from impossible. In the neighborhood I live in, mega-producer Bobby Leib could pull out of the MLS all on his own and still sell every one of his avidly-sought listings for top-dollar. The people most benefitted by the MLS system are the small brokerages, not the big ones.

But at the same time, big brokerages jumping on the Realty.bot bandwagon is not evidence of their endorsement of Realty.bot ideals. To the contrary, the Realty.bots provide brokers — large and small — with excellent opportunities to double-dip their own listings, and, failing that, to use those listings as bait to snag buyers for other listings, their own or those listed by other brokerages.

Do you understand this? The Realty.bots are not “freeing” buyers, they are the Judas Goats leading them into the worst kind of representation arrangements. Whatever brokers may say about the equity of dual agency, it remains that the seller will have had 90% of the broker’s beneficial advice before the buyer even appears on the scene. The buyer may consent to dual representation, but there is no way the buyer can achieve equal representation in that circumstance.

Glenn Kelman from Redfin.com phoned me Friday evening. He was mad at me, and he wanted to try to iron out our differences. I don’t know that we made any headway, but I’ll give him credit for initiative. While we were on the phone, I asked him what he thought would be the single most important reform to be made in the real estate industry today. He said it would be liberating the MLS system, so that anyone could do what they want with the data.

This is not even close, from my point of view. The most significant defect in the way that we conduct the real estate business in the United States today is that buyers do not have true representation. We’ve made enormous strides from the days of sub-agency, but as long as they do not pay for their own representation — with the buyer’s agent’s compensation coming from the listing agent’s sales commission instead — buyers will continue to be less than ideally vigilant about guarding their own interests, and sellers will continue to have the upper hand.

This is not even that difficult a problem to solve. It amounts to lenders agreeing to accept a slightly different arrangement of numbers on the HUD-1. Instead of allowing up to 7% sales commission, paid by the seller, they would allow up to 3.5% commission paid by the seller to the listing agent and up to 3.5% paid by the buyer to the buyer’s agent. (Want to know the reason for the ubiquity of the “6% commission”? The lenders allow it.) Other reforms could flow from this. Sellers could stop trying to bribe everyone on two legs, and buyers could learn to negotiate commissions, just as sellers have. Without the co-broke, MLS systems could blossom into true advertising media.

But: None of these benefits will come about by undermining buyer representation. Despite their good intentions, the Realty.bots and the angry young men are likelier to make things worse for buyers, not better.

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