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A class action suit has resulted in new buying and selling rules aimed at making the real estate process more transparent.

BUFFALO, N.Y. — Those in the market for buying or selling a home, are facing some changes in the process due to a national settlement that called for more transparency in the real estate process.

The newest rules laid out by the National Association of Realtors are as follows:

Offers of compensation will be prohibited on Multiple Listing Services (MLSs). Offers of compensation will continue to be an option consumers can pursue off-MLS through negotiation and consultation with real estate professionals.Agents working with a buyer must enter into a written buyer agreement before the buyer can tour a home. The practice changes do not require an agency agreement or dictate any type of relationship.

Gregory Straus of 716 Realty Group says that although the written agreement is a new requirement, it’s not a foreign concept.

“Before it was optional, now it is required that when a buyer goes out and tours a home that they have buyer broker agreement which clarifies that they’re working with a realtor and that conversations had upfront and the fee that an agent can earn is also clearly identified in that contract,” said Straus. 

Real estate professionals in Western New York say that this allows for transactional transparency.

“This is improving the industry so that we have those conversations up front, what does it mean to be helping you, how much are we going to be paid, are we all transparent about that and that’s the goal of the settlement,” said Straus. 

That goal of transparency was also echoed by Vienna Laurendi, President of the Buffalo Niagara Association of Realtors.

“Honestly, this has always been in place, it’s just never been talked about out loud. So that’s where we come in with some transparency in the transaction,” said Laurendi. 

Really, it makes agents commission more negotiable for the buyer and the seller. Although the rules may sound different, it’s more of a matter of paperwork, making realtors adjust for the consumer – not the other way around. 

“The transactions are going to be a lot easier thanks to the dialogue that we are now armed and faced with,” says, Laurendi. 



This article was originally published by a www.wgrz.com . Read the Original article here. .


MetroCreative

New real estate rules for homebuyers and sellers went into effect last weekend.

The rules, which impact the way commissions work, stem from a $418 million settlement between the National Association of Realtors and home sellers earlier this year.

The federal class-action lawsuits claimed that homeowners were being forced to pay artificially inflated real estate commissions when they sold their homes.

The rules boil down to two significant changes.

First, under the new rules, homes listed on a Multiple Listing Service, or MLS, will no longer include a seller’s offer to cover the cost of a buyer’s agent’s services.

“That’s the biggest change for us in Western Pennsylvania. Now, we are not allowed to advertise the buyer’s agent’s commission in the MLS,” said Scott Cavinee, a real estate agent for SWC Realty in Uniontown.

A seller can still allow a commission split, but the agreement cannot be listed on the MLS.

Second, home buyers who want to work with an agent will have to sign an agreement up front that details exactly what commission the buyer will pay the agent – including whether it’s through a commission split with a seller’s agent – before working together or touring homes in person or virtually with their agent.

That’s not entirely new, said Beverly A. Herndon, president of the Washington-Greene Association of Realtors, as about a dozen states already required those written agreements.

“Pennsylvania has had a buyer agency agreement since 1999 – we’ve been doing it for about 25 years – so nothing in regard to that should change,” said Herndon.

Traditionally, an agent for a person selling a home would typically take a 5 or 6% commission on a home sale. It was intended to be shared with the buyer’s agent and was considered a standard, if informal, practice.

Armand Ferrara, a real estate agent with SWC Realty in Belle Vernon, noted commission has always been negotiable.

“Commission has always been negotiable,” he said. “Let’s say I’m going to list your house and I’m going to list for 6% commission, but we want to give the buyer agent a part of that commission, maybe 3%. You might say, ‘I don’t want to give the buyer agent anything and I don’t want to give you 6%. Commission is optional; that’s not new.”

Cavinee said sellers should be aware that buyers can still ask the seller to pay some, or all of the fees of their agent.

“If the only offer coming in is a buyer who asks for the seller to cover “X” percent, the seller will do it if he wants to sell that house,” said Cavinee. “It’s like saying, ‘Will you leave that living room suit?’ It’s part of the negotiations.”

If a seller doesn’t agree to pay the buyer’s agent, the buyer is responsible for it, which can impact first-time and low-income buyers who might not have a lot of cash, Cavinee said.

Herndon said it’s important to have a trusted, licensed agent to navigate the complicated process of purchasing or selling a home, which is often the biggest financial purchase a person will make.

Kim Shindle, vice president of communications for the Pennsylvania Association of Realtors, agreed.

“It’s important for home buyers or those selling their homes to understand the important role Realtors play guiding them through home buying or home selling,” she said. “They lend their knowledge about the local marketplace, where each area is different.”

Herndon said it’s too soon to tell what impact the changes will have, but said ultimately, the purpose is to provide transparency “so the consumer is fully informed as to what is required on both sides.”



This article was originally published by a www.observer-reporter.com . Read the Original article here. .


Steven Huang, president of the San Francisco Association of Realtors, said these new rules will also force realtors to educate their clients about the complicated home selling and buying process.

“A lot of times, consumers are not educated from A to Z up front,” he said. “We as real estate agents need to just thoroughly educate the consumer and let them know what our value is and then let the consumer decide what is a fair payment for that service.”

The lawsuit is just one harbinger of change for the real estate industry. A proposed state bill currently making its way through the Senate titled “Buyer-Broker Representation Agreements” would, if passed, require a buyer’s agent to enter into a contract detailing compensation rates and services the agent would provide before the agent starts touring homes with their client.

“This contract will actually have you sit down and go over why you’re being compensated, how you plan to be compensated and what kind of value you are bringing to the table for your client,” Michelle Perry, president of the Santa Clara County Association of Realtors, said. “Now we’re going to show our value even more.”

As the Federal Reserve is expected to lower interest rates next month and realtors are seeing a rise in homes being actively listed in the Bay Area, agents are preparing to see how these new rules play out.

“This is happening as the market is moving along and we’re anticipating a pretty busy fall,” said David Stark, a spokesperson for Bay East Realtors Association. “Call us in three months and then six months to see how it’s working out.”





This article was originally published by a www.kqed.org . Read the Original article here. .


CNN
 — 

On Saturday, a new set of rules governing how most real estate professionals do business in the US officially take effect — and the changes could potentially upend how Americans buy and sell homes.

The rules were agreed to by the National Association of Realtors, the powerful trade association that counts 1.5 million members, as part of a $418 million settlement into antitrust claims. The rules are designed to transform the way Realtors get paid and who pays them. It’s the largest change to the organization’s rules in at least a generation.

In a statement, Kevin Sears, NAR’s president, said that the changes “help to further empower consumers with clarity and choice when buying and selling a home.”

“I am confident in our members’ abilities to prepare for and embrace this evolution of our industry and help to guide consumers in the new landscape,” he said.

Here’s what you need to know:

Historically, buyers were not expected to pay their real estate broker directly. That’s because Realtor commission fees — to both the buyers’ agent and the sellers’ agent — were paid by a home seller.

Commissions usually total 5% or 6% of a home’s selling price, so for a $450K home, roughly the average price of a home in the US, a seller would be responsible for $27,000 in fees. Many experts have said these commissions have been baked into a home’s listing price, inflating home prices.

But beginning this week, seller’s agents will no longer be allowed to advertise commission fees to buyers’ agents on multiple listing services that Realtors use to list and find homes for sale and to facilitate transactions.

That means that a buyer’s agent can no longer use the database to search for houses based on how much they’ll get paid, a practice called “steering,” which led some agents to skip over showing homes that fit their client’s criteria solely because a seller was offering below-market commission rates, critics allege.

“By not having commission on the MLS anymore, it makes it harder to steer, because you can’t just do a search for 3% commissions,” said Tanya Monestier, a professor of law at the University at Buffalo School of Law. “You can still call everyone up and figure out what the lay of the land is, but this just makes it much harder.”

The second change affects the relationship between prospective home buyers and their real estate agents. Buyers must now sign a legally binding representation agreement with their agent before they can begin touring homes together.

These agreements are designed to inform home buyers how their agent gets paid,­ and if sellers do not agree to pay the agent’s commission, the buyer may be on the hook for that payment. They’re also designed to inform buyers that this commission is fully negotiable.

“The idea is if buyers are aware that they can negotiate commissions and that if they, in fact, do pay them, not the seller, it might create a more completive market and possibly a menu of services in the future that would be more comparable to other developed countries,” said Norm Miller, professor emeritus of real estate at the University of San Diego.

A key element to these agreements is that a buyer’s agent cannot receive more compensation than what the buyer initially signed onto, even if a seller is willing to offer more.

On its website, NAR said that these two changes have “eliminated any theoretical steering, because a broker will not make more compensation by steering a buyer to a particular listing because it has a ‘higher’ offer of compensation.”

The final approval hearing is scheduled for November 26, but a judge granted preliminary approval of NAR’s settlement in April.

Some brokerages have realized that buyers may get nervous about signing anything that commits them to a legally binding relationship with an agent before they begin touring homes. So, they created shorter-term contracts that cover a week­ or maybe even an hour for buyers to get comfortable with an agent before committing.

But, Monestier cautioned that buyers should be careful about signing any kind of legally binding contract without giving it a thorough read.

“You’re going to see all sorts of different versions of these agreements that are going to vary, state-by-state, brokerage-to-brokerage. There may end up being thousands of them out there,” she said. “It concerns me that buyers and sellers may sign something blindly and then be surprised when things are not as they think.”

Leo Pareja, the CEO of eXp Realty, one of America’s largest brokerages, told CNN that he drafted his company’s buyers’ agreements with simplicity in mind to head off potential confusion.

“It is designed to be something that a consumer could read in the driveway of a house without feeling put in an uncomfortable situation,” Pareja said. “You don’t need a law degree to read it.”

Pareja decided to make his contracts widely available so that they could be used by other firms, as well.

“We just want consumers and agents to have the least amount of friction going forward, because that’s the last thing we need right now,” he said.

Some real estate professionals have warned that the new rules could have a chilling effect on the home-buying market since more buyers may now be expected to come up with cash to pay their own agents.

But Monestier said that she believed in the long-term, the changes would help consumers.

“I would say the better thing for home buyers and sellers is if commission rates were to go down over time,” she said.

It remains unclear whether the cost of buying and selling homes in the US will immediately become cheaper for most people, though.

“I suspect somebody out there will eventually say, ‘let’s compete on price.’ If it’s a big firm, that could cause a revolution,” the University of San Diego’s Miller said. “But when would that happen? I don’t know.”

In the short-term, Miller believes mortgage rates will have a larger impact on home affordability than any particular rule change.

The rate for an average 30-year fixed mortgage recently hit 6.49%, still elevated compared to recent history but near the lowest levels in more than a year.

“That has a whole lot more effect on affordability than anything we’re talking about here,” said Miller. “If mortgage rates come down further, rule changes will just be noise in the equation, compared to that.”



This article was originally published by a www.cnn.com . Read the Original article here. .


Chicago members of the National Association of Realtors say they’re prepared for the changes that some housing experts describe as the industry’s largest shift in how homes are bought and sold.

NAR, a professional organization of real estate agents whose members are known as Realtors, will be implementing two major changes starting Saturday as part of a $418 million antitrust settlement.

The changes upend more than a decade of industry procedures and could affect how buyer agents have traditionally been paid. It could also open up more opportunities for homebuyers and sellers.

“What we’re really going through is a seismic shift,” said Matt Silver, a partner and senior broker in Corcoran Urban Real Estate.

The NAR doesn’t expect home prices or sales to fall but says the changes could make it harder for first-time homebuyers in a frenzied real estate market.

What’s the biggest change?

Offers of broker compensation no longer will be displayed on the Multiple Listing Service, a database used by licensed brokers and agents to share information about properties for sale as well as commissions.

Historically, broker commissions have been paid by sellers. Seller’s agents usually agree to split their commission with the buyer’s agent. That means homebuyers often don’t incur an extra cost when working with a real estate agent — a big relief for first-time buyers — as their agent’s commission is covered by the seller.

Commissions typically range from 5% to 6%.

Compensation offers will still be an option consumers can pursue off MLS through negotiation and consultation with real estate professionals, according to NAR, which says broker commissions have always been negotiable.

How agents are compensated is “the biggest change our industry has had to deal with in easily 100 years,” according to Laura Ellis, Baird & Warner’s chief strategy officer, executive vice president and president of residential sales, who has been with the firm since 1998.

Ellis said the change will create more conversations between real estate agents and clients, requiring agents to use different skills than they might be used to.

Laura Ellis of Baird & Warner at the company’s Gold Coast office.

Barry Brecheisen/For the Sun-Times

“We did a big push on educating our agents about the fact that most buyers thought that the process or the service to them was free because … the seller technically paid the commission,” Ellis said. “Transparency in that alone is a big difference.”

Many real estate agents have been letting clients know in advance about the changes. And trade groups have been sharing updates for months with their members ahead of Saturday’s deadline.

Why is this happening now?

The changes stem from a series of class-action lawsuits filed by homeowners, who accused the NAR of fixing broker commissions at high rates and discouraging sellers from seeking better terms. The association has 1.5 million members and broad control over access to the MLS system.

The NAR agreed to settle the lawsuit in March., ending litigation that could have resulted in a $1.8 billion verdict against the association and tripled under antitrust law.

In April, a federal judge in Missouri granted preliminary approval to the settlement. A final approval hearing is scheduled in November.

The NAR has denied any wrongdoing.

Are other changes coming?

The settlement also requires all real estate agents working with a buyer to enter a written agreement outlining compensation before touring homes.

Some Chicago real estate agents say the written agreement requires less of an adjustment for them because they already use buyer-broker agreements.

Erika Villegas, a real estate agent for more than 20 years, said she’s always used buyer-broker agreements even though her firm, Oak Park’s RE/MAX In the Village, never required them. Villegas said requiring the document industrywide will be beneficial.

“I think it’s a great opportunity for us to make sure that we are providing the best tools, best services and we [are] making it very clear and transparent of the work that we do for buyers,” Villegas said.

Illinois real estate laws will change in 2025, including the requirement for written brokerage agreements.

What this means for you and the industry

While broker compensation no longer will be displayed on the MLS, Ellis doesn’t expect a change in how brokers are compensated. She predicts buyers will ask sellers for a “closing cost credit,” which buyers then use to pay their agent. Homebuyers also can ask the seller to pay their broker — reverting to the traditional model.

Both those scenarios emphasize that the buyer commission comes from the home transaction, Ellis said.

“It doesn’t mean that [buyers] are going to have to come out of pocket with money that they never did before,” she said.

Buyers and sellers also could elect to separately pay their own broker, raising concern among some real estate agents about how the rules could affect first-time buyers.

How will first-time buyers be affected?

First-time buyers, including those from underrepresented groups, can have trouble with financing their first home and having to pay a broker’s commission could act as an extra hurdle, according to Brian Kwilosz of EXIT Realty. Kwilosz said EXIT is watching the impact the changes will have on first-time buyers.

Lutalo McGee, owner of the real estate firm Ani World, plans to stress that cooperative compensation remains an option for new buyers even if it’s negotiated differently. Ani Real Estate, under the umbrella of McGee’s Ani World, has the bulk of its sales on the South Side.

“A lot of clients, at least that I service and my brokers [service], are those that have struggled with down payments and closing costs in the past,” McGee said. “We’re going to be actively monitoring to see what the impact of these changes are going to be.”

Several real estate agents said they don’t think the changes will affect home prices. The housing market is driven by supply and demand, Silver said, and with a dearth of housing across the region, he doesn’t think home prices will go down “anytime soon.”

It’s possible buyer commission rates could drop as agents and their clients have more conversations about compensation. But Ellis predicts agents will complete more transactions after Saturday’s changes take effect.

“I think that good real estate agents will actually increase their income,” Ellis said. “We’ve got to do what’s right for the consumer and what they want and bring real, tangible value to them.”





This article was originally published by a
chicago.suntimes.com . Read the Original article here. .


First, before a seller may show a residential property or a buyer may tour a property, real estate professionals and their clients will be required to enter into a written representation agreement outlining the terms of realtors’ compensation, said Ali Whitley, president of Ohio Realtors.

Written representation agreements must include an expiration date, information on fair housing and blockbusting laws, whether the relationship is exclusive or nonexclusive, and terms of compensation, according to House Bill 466, which was recently approved in addition to the settlement agreement.

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Stephen Brobeck, a senior fellow with Consumer Federation of America, told this news outlet that the lawsuit and resulting ruling is based on the fact that for the last century, the real estate industry has effectively set commission rates.

“DOJ (the Department of Justice) has been working for 80 years to try to force the industry to create a more price-competitive market … but the real watershed was the jury decision in the combined Sitzer and Moehrl cases,” he said. “A jury found the the industry defendants guilty of price fixing and awarded the Missouri plaintiffs over $5 billion including triple damages.”

For decades, real estate agents have typically been paid a certain percentage of the sales price once the home is sold. A typical agent’s commission has been 6% of the sale price, split between the agents or companies representing the buyer and seller.

Brobeck said in the new system, it is important for people who intend to buy or sell a home to carefully select an agent ahead of time who is both honest and competent. Before deciding on an agent, the buyers and sellers should get a proposed contract document from the agent and have an opportunity to read and understand it. He said the agent should be willing to discuss the contract before the buyer or seller selects them.

“If an agent will not present a readable contract that is consumer-centric, a consumer should look for another agent,” Brobeck said. “And it’s that refusal by consumers to work with agents presenting unreadable contracts that will persuade the industry to improve them.”

Second change: Compensation

Real estate professionals will be prohibited from offering cooperative compensation on listings on multiple listing service (MLS) databases, Whitley said. That includes all listing types that appear on the MLS, including residential, commercial and rentals.

“What that means is that if the buyer’s broker is authorized by the buyer to accept commission compensation from a different party than the buyer, then they’ll need to just get that communication directly from the listing agent or the seller,” Whitley said. “What a buyer should expect moving forward is that we have a written representation agreement that will delineate what the services of their broker or agent is to them, and the fee for those services. So prior to showing any homes or to touring any homes, they will have a written representation agreement with their agent.”

Buyers and sellers can still negotiate compensation arrangements directly with real estate professionals outside of the MLS. Additionally, sellers may continue to offer buyer concessions, such as closing cost contributions on the MLS.

Whitley said the changes are meant to be transparent and provide clarity to both the sellers and buyers in the transaction.

“Instead of there being a perceived situation of a listing broker determining what will happen moving forward with a buyer’s broker, it will be very clear that it is the seller and the agent are having a conversation and determining that the seller is or is not willing to offer cooperative compensation,” she said. “And if they are willing to offer cooperative compensation, what is that amount that they are wiling to offer.”

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On the buyer’s side “it’s clarifying that the buyer’s agent provides services to the buyer … and they advocate on behalf of the buyer,” Whitley said. “And so the written representation agreement will delineate what those services are, and then also what the fee is that that broker is charging for those services. And then the buyer and the buyer’s broker will be able to negotiate from there what that commission is that will be paid and how it will be paid.”

Whitley said the compensation obligation can be satisfied through the purchase agreement, if the seller is willing to offer it.

“It also can be negotiated between buyer and seller during the time of a purchase agreement, or the buyer could say ‘I prefer to pay my own agent because they are working on my behalf … or any combination of those things can happen,” she said.

Kelly McCormick, president of Dayton Realtors, said commissions were “always negotiable.”

“Now, creating that clarity between buyers and sellers is something that the real estate industry and agents will be doing every single day,” McCormick said. “There’s always going to be a cost to sell and a cost to buy. Those costs are always provided, as far as a lender of good faith estimate, and now both buyer and seller will have potentially more clarity in how that cost impacts their purchase and their sale.”

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Austin Castro, a team leader at Coldwell Banker Heritage, said part of the impact from the changes could come as a result of people signing agreements with buyers agents up front, as opposed to down the road.

“What I think that means is when someone wants to sell their house, there was always a big interview process?” he said. “They’d call three or four different agents. They’d sit down and interview them. They’d talk about it, you know, and then they sign an agreement to sell their house with whoever they thought was best fit for the job. I think we’re going to start to see that now with with buyer’s representation.”

Castro said buyers, when choosing an agent, used to go with the first person they met, someone they met at an open house or a friend of a friend.

“Now I think it’s going to be a little bit more of a interview process for buyers representation because people are signing those agreements up front, disclosing ‘Hey, this is what my agent makes on this transaction,’ so I think that’s probably where we’re going to see a biggest change is going to be maybe buyers putting a little more thought on who they’re going to have represent them,” Castro said.

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This article was originally published by a www.daytondailynews.com . Read the Original article here. .

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