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by notaustinpowers
967 days ago
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This could change the process to this: 1) Seller gives a portion of their home price to their Agent as a commission (let's say 3%). The seller only paid 3% in commissions. 2) The Buyer negotiated a commission with their Agent (let's say $10,000). Which the buyer pays out-of-pocket, or has paid out of their financing for the home. This allows the Seller's Agent to maintain their duty to maximizing the value of their client's home by reducing the commission the seller pays. While also ensuring the Seller's Agent doesn't bend to the Buyer's Agent's wishes for a higher commission to secure a deal. This also allows the Buyer's Agent to maintain their duty to their client by negotiating their commission up-front, regardless of the price of the property. They could negotiate a percentage with their client, but that percentage is the Buyer's responsibility, not the seller. It gives the Buyer more power in the commission paid to their Agent. TLDR: Seller's had more power in pricing and commission payments to Agent's on both sides of the transaction, skewing home values higher to offset their (commonly) 6% commission payments. This segments the Seller's commission to just their Agent, and the Buyer's commission to just the buyer. |
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I'm rather suspicious of the US system that creates a place for two agents getting 3% each for little gain (and a lot of scope for collusion against the buyer and/or seller!)
The New Zealand system has its flaws. The major problem is that vendor real estate agents are financially incentivised to turn over sales as quickly as possible and so smart agents do not represent their vendors properly. I've seen lots of house sales where an offer is made and the agent recommends the seller take it. An early sale costs the agent much less time and they make way more money per year. New Zealanders are generally too trusting, so we get screwed over by people that take advantage of that.