Article Archive
Home Buyers Seek Brokers
Who Will Represent Them
Agency disclosure laws propel the trend to
'buyer reps'
By Shelley Donald Coolidge
Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor
==============BOSTON==============
DIAN COPADO has bought five houses in the last
nine years. Each time she has used a buyer representative - a real estate agent who
exclusively represents the buyer.
"I would always go with a buyer
[representative] just because they are more up front," says Ms. Copado, a human
resources manager at United Parcel Service in Londonderry, N.H.
Today, more and more people rely
on buyer representatives or "buyer brokers" to help them make a more informed
decision on what is typically the biggest purchase of their life.
Traditionally, agents who
list and show property represent the seller. Because of an agents fiduciary responsibility
to the seller, the agent legally can't provide a buyer with any information about the
property-other than material facts such as price and a description of the house-that could
in any way jeopardize the seller's position. The agent, for example, can't tell a buyer he
or she thinks the asking price is too high.
"It's almost like going
into court where on party is represented by an attorney and the other party is trying to
represent himself. It just doesn't work," says Charlie Dahlheimer, president of North
American Consulting Group in St. Louis, which is the parent company of The Real Estate
Buyer's Agency Council, a network of 3,000 real estate professionals who have an interest
in buyer representation.
The trend toward using buyer reps
is being propelled by disclosure laws. Agency disclosure requires a real estate agent to
disclose to a client which party he or she represents, the buyer or the seller, before
entering into business discussions. In some states, an agent must also inform a client of
his or her options. Mr. Dahlheimer calls it "mirandizing" the buyer and seller,
or reading clients their rights. Since 1985, all but seven states have passed agency
disclosure laws.
"In the past, most Realtors
tried to walk a tin line down the middle and be fair to both parties, but the way that
agency law is evolving in our country, it's becoming apparent that that's very difficult
to do," says David Liniger, co-founder and chairman of RE/MAX international, a real
estate agency based in Englewood, Colo. RE/MAX, which has 39,000 sales associates
worldwide, has been at the forefront of buyer representation in the real estate industry.
Mr. Liniger says he anticipates that within five years, about 30 percent of real estate
transactions in the residential field will involve buyer brokers.
Analysts say using a buyer
representative offers potential home buyers several advantages, including:
- Selection
. An agent working for a buyer can save that
person time by not showing properties that are probably unsuitable-in terms of location or
design-for the buyer. (An agent representing the seller is obligated by law to show the
buyer any property listing within the buyers price range, regardless of what the agent
knows about the property.)
- Information
. Once a property is selected, a buyer's
agent can help analyze the price, condition of the property, and potential resale value.
The agent can also recommend inspections, such as for radon or lead paint. He or she can
provide information about the seller that may give the potential buyer more bargaining
power, such as how fast the seller wants to sell the house.
- Negotiation
. A buyer's agent can help the buyer
determine what price and terms to offer the seller. And the buyer's agent can help the
buyer find financing.
When Copado moved to New England
recently form Ohio, she says, "I didn't know the first thing about oil heat, oil
tanks, or septic tanks. [Her buyer's agent] also pointed out different inspections that I
should have prior to buying the house that I wouldn't have thought of because I wasn't
raised in this area," she adds.
"This is a far
more honest relationship that we are going to have with the buyers," says Lee
Lewandowski, branch manager for Norwood Realty Inc., in Londonderry, N.H., and vice
chairwoman of the Realtors Education Committee for the National Association of
Realtors. The buyer representative trend started in Hawaii and California about five years
ago, Ms. Lewandowski says. Today about 95 percent of residential transactions in those
states involve buyer brokers, she says. The trend has only now made it's way to New
England, where agents have been somewhat more reluctant to change the way they do
business.
Lewandowski says buyer
representation is beneficial to both parties, not just the buyer. The buyer's agent is
normally paid by getting a share of the seller's listing commission fee. It is up to real
estate agencies whether or not their agents will represent buyers but with so many buyers
demanding representation, and to avoid losing business, more and more agencies now have
agents that represent both buyers and sellers.
"Eventually, we will see a
real estate community where sellers are represented by their agents, and buyers are
represented by their agents," Dahlheimer says.
Back To
The Article Archive |