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Question the Illusion - Part I

A Homebuyer's Guide to Understanding Real Estate

By Donald J. Welsh, Ed.D.
Illustrations by John Bennetts

Advice, Advice, Advice!

How can you miss a GREAT DEAL?

The minute someone knows you are interested in purchasing a home, you begin to get advice. Your parents may have more advice than you are interested in hearing. There is a friend ready to recommend the best development in the city and an agent that won't let you down. Brokers advertise: We take care of our buyers, we offer unlimited services, and we can help you find the right home. What the brokers are really doing is advising why you should buy their listing.

Employees transferred to a new community get advice from the personnel manager, relocation staff, secretaries, a new manager and their agent. With so many people trying to help, how can you miss that good deal?

Most people giving advice have good intentions. However, they don't realize their advice can cause problems. Others giving advice receive personal gain when they influence you to use a certain agent.

Real estate transactions promote professionalism, fairness and good ethics leading you to believe that when you work with an agent your needs and interests are paramount. When the agent is promoting special features of a home, you perceive this as good advice, however the agent is often merely using a proven sales technique leading you to buy the home.

You do need advice. However the advice should come from a knowledgeable source. Devoting a majority of my career in educational roles, I know how important education is to expanding public awareness and to bring about change. My experience in the real estate industry has revealed that many homebuyers don't understand what is really happening because they seem to have a blind trust of the agent who appears to be working for them. The information presented in this document is intended to make you a more knowledgeable consumer. It's your choice to use the information, take control of the buying process and to pocket the savings when you buy right.

Who Protects the Homebuyer?

An investigation of state real estate commissions reveals that the commissions are generally responsible for the examination, licensing and regulation of persons and firms who engage in real estate business. Does this mean the commissions protect buyers? In a practical and legal matter, no!

If real estate commissions don't protect buyers, surely brokers and agents must have a responsibility to protect the buyers they are work with. Wrong!

A study conducted by the Fair Trade Commission in the 80's revealed that more than 75% of homebuyers who were working with an agent thought that the agent was working for them, when in fact the agent was representing the seller. When the agent is representing the seller there is no legal responsibility to protect the buyer. As a result of this study, most states now have a disclosure law requiring agents to inform buyers that they represent the seller. Even with this disclosure requirement, the Consumer Federation of America, in a 1990 survey, found that 30% of the consumers don't understand that the broker and agents usually work for the seller.

Why has there been such a mystery as to who the agents and brokers represent? It's simply a matter of economics; the brokers want the greatest income potential with the least legal liability. Furthermore, large companies with financial resource to advertise also have a strong influence on the media. This influence tends to restrict the publishing of information, which would inform buyers of options to use a buyer agent.

This mystery of representation and illusion in the industry was expected to change when the Edina Realty class action suit was settled. In the Edina case, Edina Realty a major broker in the Minneapolis metro area was charged with illegally representing both buyers and sellers in the same home transactions. Kelly and Wilson, attorneys for the plaintiff contend that Edina did not make adequate disclosures in an estimated 5,000 to 6,000 transactions involving an estimated $200 million in commissions.

Information revealed in the case demonstrated that agents fraudulently told buyers and sellers what each wanted to hear. In a situation where a prospective buyer was interviewing an agent for buyer representation and the buyer asked: "How do you continue to protect your sellers needs that you are supposed to be representing when you represent a buyer?" The buyer was told "We just make the seller think we are representing them." In a similar case with an agent being interviewed by a seller before listing their home, the agent was asked: "How do you represent buyers needs when you have a responsibility to represent our needs?" The seller was told "We just make them think we are representing them."

Even after a settlement of $36,000,000 to the plaintiff the fear of lawsuits has not change the behavior of many real estate agents and the mystery of who is really being represented continues to exist. What has happened is a move by The National Association of Realtors and state real estate associations to lobby for new legislation. The goal of the associations as demonstrated by the legislation has been to give brokers the opportunity to serve both buyers and sellers when purchasing homes listed by the company and to reduce the brokers liability for action of their agents. New agency designations now found across the country such as: designated agent, facilitator, and transaction broker allow agents in traditional brokerages to offer buyer agency and then switch to these other statuses when showing company listings. Even though it is legal to provide buyer agency this way there still will be illusions as to who is being represented, as many agents have not changed their behavior. In addition some brokers are failing to provide the proper training to teach their agents how to represent buyers.

The best way to overcome the illusion is to secure a buyer agency service from a broker that is an exclusive buyer broker. These brokers do not list homes and therefore have no responsibility to sellers other than to treat them "fair". For a referral to such brokers, you may call (800) 359-2276.

How Buyers Get Caught in the Illusion

Mary Doyle has been searching newspaper ads and homebuyer guides with pictures of advertised homes. She identified three homes in a good school district and decided to call the listing agent.

Mary gives little thought to the agent's statement, "I represent the seller" because she realizes the listing agent is working for the seller. After looking at the home, she knows her husband would not like it.

 

The agent is friendly and appears to be trustworthy so Mary agrees to look at the homes. Knowing that the other homes are not the agent's listings, she assumes that he will be working for her. After looking at several other homes, Mary and Tom find the home that fits their needs.

Is there an illusion?

Has the agent been deceptive?

Did the agent make a proper disclosure as to who he represents?

Before we follow Mary and Tom through the home negotiation, let's look at other illusions.

In the following scene, Jack and Judy have stopped at an open house. The tour of the house elevates Judy's interest in the home. She approaches the agent to ask several questions about the home and neighborhood. The agent, assessing Judy's emotions, asks…

Judy and Jack volunteer all information that the agent requested. They told her about their professional jobs, salary history, and savings and investment income. At this point, Judy and Jack feel the agent is service oriented, helping them determine the amount of loan they can qualify for.

Is this service or a deceptive practice to learn about their finances?

The preceding scenarios happen with buyers looking for homes in their own communities. When employees are transferred they may face other types of illusions. In the following scene, John has just received a big promotion and is on the phone visiting with the company's relocation manager.

John has a secure feeling about this agent because he thinks the relocation manager has a responsibility to make his transfer a smooth one.

While relocation managers and their staff have a perceived responsibility, this is often slighted when there are incentives to refer business to agents, even though they represent the sellers. In organizations where the relocation department tries to arrange for the service of a buyer agent, frequently the employee's new manager will promote an agent who is with a company that lists houses for sale and most frequently represents the seller. This promotion by a manager is a real conflict of interest because he is using the power of his position to refer business to someone who generally provides an incentive for the referrals. When moving from once city to another, the real estate agent that lists your home often participates in another illusion. Let's look in on the Smiths who have just listed their home with Tony Brown.

Continue reading in Part II >>>

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