Some States Now Limit
Price Rebates to Buyers
From The
Wall Street Journal Online
From The
Wall Street Journal Editorial Page
Why are Governors and state legislatures enacting regulations
to make buying and selling homes as expensive as possible?
We ask this question because in recent weeks three normally level-headed
Republican Governors -- Matt Blunt of Missouri, Rick Perry of
Texas and Bob Riley of Alabama -- have signed into law legislation
that protects Realtors from discount competitors.
About a dozen other states have also buckled to the National
Association of Realtors lobby. They've effectively become partners
in what looks suspiciously like a price-fixing scheme, whereby
discounters are prevented by law from charging fees below the
industry norm of 5% to 6% of the home sales price. The financial
victims of this cartel are middle-income home buyers and sellers
who are required to pay brokerage fees that can easily be several
thousand dollars above a competitive market price.
Real estate brokers are under increasing price pressure from
Web-based home-buying services and other discount brokers. With
state lawmakers so often bellyaching about the decline in "affordable
housing," one would expect politicians to salute these low-fee
entrants to the market.
Instead, state legislatures and real estate commissions -- which
happen to be populated by Realtors -- are enacting laws that make
price competition illegal and thus treat Realtors as if they are
members of a closed shop union.
The Realtors argue with a straight face that their political
efforts are somehow in the interests of the home-buying public.
Maybe we're missing something here, but in almost every other
consumer industry -- booksellers, retailers, home appliances,
insurance, banking, stock brokers -- the introduction of Internet
and discount sellers has been a phenomenal financial benefit to
customers. Discount airlines have cut airfares by 60% or more,
to the economic benefit of everyone with the exception of the
incumbent competitors.
Economists call this process of squeezing out transaction costs
"disintermediation." If any industry is ripe for this,
it is the $70 billion-a-year real estate brokerage market. Yes,
fees have fallen modestly to about 5.1% on average in recent years.
But a new study by the Brookings Institution and American Enterprise
Institute concludes that in an unimpeded free market, fees should
be dropping much faster -- particularly amid a real estate boom
that has doubled home values over the past decade. Many, if not
most, of the services that Realtors provide don't vary with the
sales price, so the percentage fee should fall as home price rises.
The problem is that state lawmakers are squashing such competition
through two types of laws. First, they make it illegal for brokers
to provide rebates on their commissions, which is an overt impediment
to price competition. So, for example, LendingTree.com is prevented
under these laws in about 10 states from continuing its popular
practice of providing several thousand dollars of rebates and
coupons at Home Depot to homeowners who use its real estate services.
Discount real estate agents would also be prohibited under many
of these laws from advertising their lower prices in newspapers.
The second legal device used to restrain trade are "minimum
service requirements," which prevent real estate brokers
from providing limited services to home sellers for a negotiated
fee. These rules outlaw the increasingly popular choice of home
sellers who contract with an agent to list their homes for a flat
fee of typically around $500, but then handle all the other aspects
of the home sale themselves in order to save $5,000 to $10,000
in additional fees.
More than a dozen states (see nearby list) have enacted these
requirements, which are analogous to telling McDonald's that it
can sell french fries only if the customer also buys a hamburger
and Coke. We'll also note the supreme irony that states and the
federal government sued Microsoft for illegally "bundling"
its software, whereas in the real estate market the states are
requiring bundling. In either software or real estate, the choice
should be up to the individual sellers.
In some states, real estate agents collude to boycott homes that
are being sold by agents who provide commission discounts. This
practice is a clear breach of the fiduciary duty of the agent
to find the best home at the lowest price for clients. Instead,
the brokers are in effect finding homes for their clients that
will afford them the highest fee structure. To our knowledge,
neither the National Association of Realtors nor the state real
estate commissions have ever sanctioned a real estate agent for
this breach of ethics.
How large is the restraint of trade rents in this industry? One
back-of-the-envelope way to quantify the costs to consumers is
to compare the 5.1% standard fee in the U.S. to the industry average
in other countries, which is estimated at about 3.6%. This means
Americans are paying about $20 billion a year more for real estate
services -- or about $3,000 on an average priced home -- than
are home buyers in other nations.
In its own internal documents, the Realtors association acknowledges
that the purpose of its state lobbying is to keep competition
out and fees high. In an April 22 memo to its state affiliates,
the national office urged members to keep agitating for "state
laws that are designed to replace competition with regulation."
The memo added that "Realtors have the right to lobby for
legislative and regulatory action -- even if the effect of such
action would be anti-competitive."
In response to a recent U.S. Justice Department complaint against
a Kentucky Real Estate Commission policy that prohibited brokerage
rebates and "other inducements to attract customers,"
the Realtors also acknowledged that these laws are intended to
keep prices as high as possible.
The brokers admitted that the policy "inhibits free trade"
but defended the regulation by arguing that it was necessary to
"avoid a bidding war" and to protect against a "lessening
of profits." And this was their defense. The Kentucky Real
Estate Commission reversed itself, though the brokers no doubt
will now scurry off to the state legislature to get a new law
enacted.
* * *
The Realtors have the First Amendment right to lobby for such
anti-consumer legislation. But let's please dispense with their
pretense that these laws are intended to "assure that the
market for the sale of real estate functions efficiently and in
the interests of buyers and sellers."
We have nothing against real estate agents or their trade. In
fact, we think the Justice Department is wrong in its recent antitrust
complaint demanding that the National Association of Realtors
allow online sellers access to its Multiple Listing Service. The
listing service is a privately owned data base, not a public utility,
and the Realtors should have the right to share it with whomever
they wish.
However, with their lobbying for state-imposed restraints of
trade, the Realtors are the ones doing financial damage to millions
of home buyers and sellers. We don't know who is more at fault
here: the Realtors who maintain that such protectionism benefits
consumers, or the pliant state lawmakers who actually believe
them.
-- This editorial was originally published in The Wall Street
Journal on Aug. 12, 2005.