Viper16 said:
Houston Lee said:
Viper16 said:
Logos Stick said:
Baseball Is Life said:
MemphisAg1 said:
Baseball Is Life said:
You keep repeating this fake news. Nothing is unbundled. How has removing the commission percentage [just] from the MLS, done any of the things you mention in this post? The media has put out a bunch of BS and people here are parroting it.
If that is correct then not much will change from current state. I've read media reports stating that seller's and buyer's commissions would be unbundled. Didn't save the links.
I am telling you the truth, as this is my livelihood as an agent and corporate brokerage owner. Like most things lawyers and government touch, this just adds an additional layer to the process, but changes nothing.
Agents now have to communicate directly with the other agents, to see what they're getting paid. Some people believe this will lower pricing, but it won't. It certainly doesn't unbundle anything. It just adds more work to the process. Agents will talk directly to the selling agent, find out the no/low pay listings, remove them from the lists they send their clients. After the property sits, the sellers will make adjustments, just like now.
A good listing agent will not take any listing where the buyers' agent isn't getting at least 2%. They know this house is likely not going to move. You will get some new agent who might take it, if their broker lets them, but they won't have the book of business, nor skills, to get any traction on the property.
ok, let me make sure I'm understanding you because I must not be.
You're saying you are going to ask the buyer's agent how much they are working for when they contact you to show the house on behalf of a client? And if less than 2%, you refuse to show it..
That's right....hard to figure out if he, as the seller's agent, is working in the interests of the seller or the buyer's agent. He suggest he's working more in the buyer's agent interests than his seller's interests by establishing a minimum fee of 2%. That's OK, I just would never contract an agent like that.
What he is talking about is a listing agent. Believe it or not Listing agents decline to take listings. Sometimes the seller is unreasonable of their expectations of their home's worth. Sometimes they wont do what is needed to get the home ready for the market. Experienced listing agents know that if the seller isnt going to offer a buyers agent little or no compensation, then the home will probably sit for a long time or maybe not even sell. So, why accept the listing and spend thousands upfront in marketing without getting anything in return? As I said before, buyers are getting the worst part of this deal and they are not going to want to buy homes where they have to fork out thousands to their buyers agent vs homes where the buyers agent gets compensation from the seller.
I'm not sure you understand the people you are "preaching to" on this board. I've bought and sold about 5 homes in 73 years of life, probably not as much as the "professionals"......So, "preaching" to me and others about the value of agents doesn't really cut it. I have used friends as agents, and other's I've never really known before. Quite frankly most have come across as know-it-alls and only hold their interests ahead of their clients.
6% on the selling price of a home is crazy and unwarranted. Now, as I said in another post, if you negotiate a commission rate on based the difference between the capital gain of the original purchase price and current sell price, you might be on to something that is more palatable to all parties. Would solve a lot of anguish in the buying and selling of real estate.
Your paragraph highlighted above is a prime example of what is wrong with real estate agents. It is a smug, holier than thou example of how real estate agents see their clients....You don't own the house/property...your client does. The client invested their hard earned money in the property. Not you. They took the risks to own it. You should be thankful the client called you to sell or buy property. Not the other way around.
Oh, one other thing, I have sold property FSBO. It ain't that hard to do.....don't make it sound like it can't be done.
You weren't responding directly to me, but why is 6% unwarranted? Lets take a round number like $300K -- the listing agent gets $9K and the buyers agent gets $9K. I personally get 100% of my commissions, but most agents have to pay 30% to their broker. Their payment is now down to $6,300. Now, they put back 30 to 40% in an account for taxes. So, they have around $3,780 on what they really made off your house and months of work.
With any listing I take, I bring out my guys to get the house ready. That is a complete yard makeover (mowing, edging, trimming shrubs, adding plants, putting down mulch), pressure washing the driveway, pressure washing the fence, pressure washing the house, a deep cleaning inside and professional photography. This isn't cheap, and on your average home, I am not doing this if you handicap me on attracting a buyer.
Outside of that, I maintain an email database of every agent within a 100 miles radius. I use this database to send email blasts (which the monthly fee is crazy on) to those agents, announcing your property. That doesn't even touch on the online marketing done for each listing, or open houses, if you want those. Even in the Covid boom, I still did everything outside of open houses, to drive offers to neighborhood records. As the market slows, it's going to take even more marketing and open houses to move these houses.
We haven't even gotten into the TREC fees, board fees, continuing ed, SUPRA keys/boxes, signage, etc. These fees are absolutely ridiculous.
What we're left with, isn't near as much as you think. That isn't even considering dealing with all the agents, walk-ups, appraisers, inspectors, surveyors, title company, contracts, etc.
Like I said earlier, the real money is apartment leases. I can put up ads and attract a ton of people to each ad very easily. I gather what they want, run it in my apartment database, cross check for specials, setup tours over the phone and I am done. I don't ever have to leave the office or fill out a lease and these apartments pay on average 100% of first months rent. Some used to make you escort, but after Covid, they all basically allow you to send the client now.