Cutting the Commissions

NEWSWEEK MAGAZINE ARTICLE July 18, 2005
Reprinted by Northern California Home (
NCaHome.com)




Cutting the Commissions
Most real-estate agents still want a 6 percent cut. But a few clever brokers have figured out how to sell homes cheaper, by setting up Web offices.

Newsweek
July 18 issue - Will the Internet finally smash the real-estate cartel? Home prices have risen 40 percent in the past five years, yet most real-estate brokers still quote sales commissions at about 6 percent (some negotiate, if asked). The industry is using its political clout to hold down price-cutting. But consumers could win, now that prices are on the Web.

Brokers do business through the computerized Multiple Listing Service (MLS), where firms list the houses they have for sale. They work hard for their customers and know their neighborhoods. The trouble is, they trade with each other politely, at the cartel price. So a few clever (impolite!) brokers figured out how to sell homes cheaper by setting up Internet offices and letting you peep at MLS listings on your own. (These listings also go onto Realtor.com, but with less information.) A thousand flowers are starting to bloom:
Discount real-estate firms. If you're selling your house, a discounter can save you a ton of money. These brokers offer all the usual services and expertise. But instead of charging you 6 percent of the sales price, they take 4 percent or even 3 percent. That's a saving of $7,000 to $10,500 on a $350,000 house—a no-brainer, I'd say.

***You can find discounters almost everywhere. Just enter the name of your city or county into a Web search engine, along with "real-estate broker," then "low commission," "3% commission" or "discount."
FSBO sites (pronounced "fiz-bo")—"for sale by owner." People selling their own homes account for roughly 15 to 20 percent of sales. You'll find pots of free how-to information on FSBO Web sites. For a fee, you can buy a FOR SALE sign, an 800-number service for taking calls and a listing on the FSBO's site, with pictures of your home. You can even buy a listing on the MLS, so shoppers everywhere can find you. But buyers have to call you directly. If you want a broker to bring you customers, you'll have to offer a commission.

The FSBO sites offer different services at varying prices. A package at ForSaleByOwner.com includes personal telephone consulting to guide you through the sale. Owners.com is affiliated with Cendant (Century 21, Coldwell Banker). If your house doesn't sell and you decide to switch to certain of its brokers, you'll get a $1,000 rebate on the commission. Owner.com (not affiliated with Owners.com) lists other FSBO sites.

Fee for service. These brokers offer a menu of services, each at its own price. If you're selling your own house, you might want help with paperwork after you've found a buyer, or you might want the broker to show your house, or you might want an MLS listing. You buy only the service you want. Two such franchises: HelpUSell.com and Assist2Sell.com.

Referrals and rebates. These sites link home shoppers with real-estate brokers. If you buy, the broker pays the site for the referral, which in turn rebates part of that money to you. At Realestate.com, the rebate ranges from $100 to $2,250, depending on the price of the house, and comes in the form of a Home Depot or American Express gift card.

Bidding sites. At HomeGain.com, you describe the property you want to sell or buy and ask brokers for proposals (including commission charges). A new site, HungryAgents.com, encourages brokers to bid aggressively for your business.

Unfortunately, some of you aren't allowed to use all these money-saving services. Your state's self-interested real-estate brokers are driving them out. Six states (Florida, Illinois, Iowa, Oklahoma, Texas and Utah) now curtail companies that offer discounts, according to Inman Real Estate News. Other states have stopped FSBO sites from helping you market your home through the MLS. A dozen state real-estate commissions are trying to regulate discounters out of existence. Kentucky bans rebates entirely—but, in a strike for consumers—it's being sued by the U.S. Department of Justice for restricting price competition. The National Association of Realtors was planning to set new MLS rules to let traditional brokers keep their listings off the discounters' sites. The Justice Department stopped that, too.

The higher-priced brokers will keep up the fight for their cartel, but the discounters have the wind at their backs, says Stephen Murray, editor of the industry newsletter Real Trends. Today they're just 2 percent of the market, but could grow to 12 percent by 2010. Hey, this is America—we're supposed to support price competition. That means brokers, too.

Reporter Associate: Temma Ehrenfeld
© 2005 Newsweek, Inc.




Northern California Home. Full service residential real estate brokerage, but charging only 1.5 percent commission.NCaHome is a full service residential real estate brokerage charging only 1.5% commission. Professional real estate services for California buyers and sellers. Visit us today at www.NCaHome.com or call (707) 693-0200.

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NCaHome Discount Realtor Services

Discount Realtor Services from NCaHome

Do you use E-Trade, ScotTrade, or Ameritrade to trade stocks?

Do you use Travelocity, Priceline or Expedia to purchase airline tickets?

Do you use Quotesmith, QuickQuote or SelectQuote to purchase insurance?

Do you use Amazon or E-Bay to shop?

Then why not consider using a discount real estate broker like NCaHome, who is a full service Realtor for 1.5%---half the price of other Realtors. Real estate commissions are negotiable in California---did any other Realtor tell you that? In fact, by law, a Realtor must disclose that fact in writing to his clients when taking a listing....yet other Realtors rarely if ever call someone's attention to that fact...

Using a discount broker does not mean that you have to sacrifice experience and professionalism for price--at NCaHome, our credentials, experience, education and expertise are superior to the competition. We invite you to match our credentials to anyone in Northern California.

Worried that your broker does not know your neighborhood? The old "farm" system meant that brokers controlled territorial fiefdoms, called "farms", that represented neighborhoods saturated by their postcards, flyers, etc. But that was before the advent of the internet---thee internet has exploded the old myth of the "farm"

--Complete data regarding neighborhooods (down to minute details) is available online.

--MLS listings are available to realtors through the MLS, and to the public through secondary/IDX sites.

--Over 90% of all homes are now sold through the MLS and secondary online resources.

--Buyers can now search online, and a good internet presence is more powerful than a neighborhood "farm" presence, because it means more effective exposure and marketing.

Large brokerages tend to denigrate the new boutique discounters---because they can not match their commission discounts due to large overhead and fixed costs.

So...do you want to save money, without sacrificing quality? Consider NCaHome---a full service Realtor charging only 1.5% (not 3%) in real estate commissions.




Northern California Home. Full service residential real estate brokerage, but charging only 1.5 percent commission.NCaHome is a full service residential real estate brokerage charging only 1.5% commission. Professional real estate services for California buyers and sellers. Visit us today at www.NCaHome.com or call (707) 693-0200.

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Northern California Home (NCaHome) is a full-service Realtor charging only 1.5% commission.  NCaHome is licensed by the California Department of Real Estate, and is a member of the National Association of Realtors and the California Association of Realtors.  NCaHome offers home sellers fixed fee real estate listings from $3699 through its discount real estate services on 1Listing.com. NCaHome lists homes for sale throughout 18 counties in California. Home buyers can search the public Multiple Listing Service (MLS) sites for homes for sale. NCaHome features: (1) a Home Loan Center, where buyers can qualify for a home loan; (2) a Relocation Center, where buyers can get moving, packing and relocation information; (3) Investor resources, including IRS section 1031 tax deferred exchange information, foreclosure and REO information, etc. NCaHome’s website contains pages of free local real estate information, including ratings and statistics for California neighborhoods and cities, and California elementary schools, middle schools and high schools. NcaHome has free real estate forms, real estate outlines, outlines, real estate checklists, real estate articles, guides, real estate library, buyer guides, seller guides, mls search services, real estate news, real estate blog, and advice for home buyers and sellers.

CA DRE License No. 01144375
All information provided is deemed reliable but is not guaranteed
and should be independently verified. Properties are subject to prior sale.

NCaHome is an Equal Housing Real Estate Brokerage, and does not discriminate based on race, sex, sexual orientation, age, disability, or any other protected class.
Equal Housing Real Estate Brokerage


NCaHome
PO Box 72626, Davis, CA 95616
Phone: (707) 693-0200 Fax: (707) 693-0700
E-mail: Info@NCaHome.com