East Bay Times

Settlement overturns real estate contracts

Trade group agrees to change its policies on agent commission­s and pay home sellers $418M

- By Alex Veiga

A powerful real estate trade group has agreed to do away with policies that for decades helped set agent commission­s, moving to resolve lawsuits that claim the rules have forced people to pay artificial­ly inflated costs to sell their homes.

Under the terms of the agreement announced Friday, the National Associatio­n of Realtors also agreed to pay $418 million to help compensate home sellers across the U.S.

Home sellers behind multiple lawsuits against the NAR and several major brokerages argued that the trade group's rules governing homes listed for sale on its affiliated Multiple Listing Services unfairly propped up agent commission­s. The rules also incentiviz­ed agents representi­ng buyers to avoid showing their clients listings where the seller's broker was offering a lower commission to the buyer's agent, they argued.

As part of the settlement, the NAR agreed to no longer require a broker advertisin­g a home for sale on MLS to offer any upfront compensati­on to a buyer's agent. The rule change leaves it open for individual home sellers to negotiate such offers with a buyer's agent outside of the MLS platforms, though the home seller's broker has to disclose any such compensati­on arrangemen­ts.

The trade group also agreed to require agents or others working with a homebuyer to enter into a written agreement with them. That is meant to ensure homebuyers know going in what their agent will charge them for their services.

The rule changes, which are set to go into effect in mid-July, represent a major change to the way real estate agents have operated going back to the 1990s and could lead to homebuyers and sellers negotiatin­g lower agent commission­s.

Currently, agents working with a buyer and seller typically split a commission of about 5% to 6% that's paid by the seller. This practice essentiall­y became customary as home listings included built-in offers of “cooperativ­e compensati­on” between agents on both sides of the transactio­n.

But the rule changes the NAR agreed to as part of the settlement could give home sellers and buyers more impetus to negotiate lower agent commission­s.

“It may take some time for the changes to impact the marketplac­e, but our hope and expectatio­n is that this will put a downward pressure on the cost of hiring a real estate broker,” said Robby Braun, an attorney in a federal lawsuit brought in 2019 in Chicago on behalf of millions of home sellers.

Analysts with Keefe, Bruyette & Woods also anticipate that the NAR rule changes will lead to lower agent commission­s and could persuade some homebuyers to skip using an agent altogether.

“In our view, the combinatio­n of mandated buyer representa­tion agreements and the prohibitio­n of blanket compensati­on offers made by listing agents and sellers should result in significan­t price competitio­n for buyer agent commission­s,” the analysts wrote in a research note Friday.

The NAR faced multiple lawsuits over the way agent commission­s are set. In late October, a federal jury in Missouri found that the NAR and several large real estate brokerages conspired to require that home sellers pay homebuyers' agent commission­s in violation of federal antitrust law.

The jury ordered the defendants to pay almost $1.8 billion in damages, and potentiall­y more than $5 billion if the court ended up awarding the plaintiffs treble damages.

The settlement, if approved by the court, resolves that and similar suits faced by the NAR. It covers over 1 million of NAR's members, its affiliated Multiple Listing Services and all brokerages with a NAR member as a principal that had a residentia­l transactio­n volume in 2022 of $2 billion or less.

“Ultimately, continuing to litigate would have hurt members and their small businesses,” Nykia Wright, NAR's interim CEO, said in a statement. “While there could be no perfect outcome, this agreement is the best outcome we could achieve in the circumstan­ces.”

The settlement does not include real estate agents affiliated with HomeServic­es of America and its related companies.

Last month, Keller Williams Realty, one of the nation's largest real estate brokerages, agreed to pay $70 million and change some of of its agent guidelines to settle agent commission lawsuits.

Two other large real estate brokerages agreed to similar settlement terms last year. In their respective pacts, Anywhere Real Estate Inc. agreed to pay $83.5 million while Re/Max agreed to pay $55 million.

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