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FTC working to break up Realtor monopolies. in: Subjects › Real Estate

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I saw this statement put out by the FTC this morning and thought it was pretty interesting. In a nutshell a Realtors group in Michigan discriminated against discount brokers by not including discount brokers listings on their public website and also hiding the discount brokers listings from their own brokers by default in the local MLS database.

Personally I think this is a step in the right direction, many people only use full service brokers because of the monopoly they have through MLS and the extra competition should be good for the market.


FTC said:FTC Rules Michigan Realtors' Group Reduced Competition, Harmed Consumers by Restricting Access to Discount Realtors' Listings on its Multiple Listing Service and Public Web Sites
Commission's Order Prohibits Limitations on Discount Real Estate Listings
The Federal Trade Commission today issued an Opinion finding that Realcomp II – a Michigan-based realtors’ group – violated federal law by restricting the ability of member real estate agents to offer consumers lower-priced alternatives to traditional real estate services. Realcomp refused to transmit discount real estate listings to its own and other publicly available Web sites and excluded such listings from the default searches within its own database. The Commission found that these policies restricted access to these listings and harmed competition. The FTC’s Final Order requires Realcomp to provide its members non-discriminatory access to non-traditional and lower-price listings on its Multiple Listing Service (MLS) and to stop preventing such listings from being sent to its public real estate sites.

In its Opinion announced today, the Commission found that “the practices at issue improperly limit consumers’ access to information about the availability of these lower-priced alternatives,” and . . . concluded “that [Realcomp’s] acts and practices unreasonably restrain trade in violation of Section 1 of the Sherman Act . . . and Section 5.” The Commission’s administrative decision resolves litigation arising from a complaint charging that Realcomp’s policies violate Section 5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act.

Realcomp is an MLS serving southeast Michigan. Member brokers (who compete with each other) provide information on homes for sale. Other members representing buyers can then use the database to find potential homes for their clients.

Recent years have seen significant changes to the real estate markets. Some real estate brokers have discounted their fees by offering lower commission rates, accepting flat fees, or unbundling real estate services that used to be available only as a package. These limited-service models typically are less expensive than the traditional real estate model, allow consumers to customize a package that best fits their needs, and have put pricing pressure on more expensive full-service brokers.

The Commission Opinion also noted that public access to MLS listings has increased their effectiveness. The Internet has become vital to selling homes, and a majority of buying and selling homes begins on the Internet.

These changes, the Commission wrote, “illustrate how technological dynamism and organizational innovation can place enormous pressure on traditional business models and create possibilities for ‘the new commodity, the new technology, the new source of supply, the new type of organization’ [Joseph A. Schumpeter, Capitalism, Socialism, and Democracy 84 (1942)] that can transform markets. Because [these] are powerful stimulants for economic progress, an especially important application of antitrust law is to see that incumbent service providers do not use improper means to suppress innovation-driven competition that benefits consumers.”

The Commission found that full-service real estate brokers, who make up a majority of Realcomp’s membership, saw the combination of discount brokers with the public availability of MLS listings via Internet Web sites as a serious threat to their business model. In turn, Realcomp established policies that limited the effectiveness discount brokers’ listings. Although the MLS began providing the public with information on homes available for sale by establishing a public Web site and transmitting listing information to other Web sites, such as those of the National Association of Realtors (NAR) and of its members, Realcomp provided only the more expensive, full-service listings to the publicly available Web sites. As a result, a buyer searching Realcomp’s public Web site or the NAR’s Web site, for example, would not see listings offered by discount brokers.

Further, within its proprietary database, the default search policy excluded listings of discount brokers. So, unless a broker searching the MLS’s own private database changed the default search settings, the broker would not see discount listings.

The Commission found that Realcomp’s policies narrowed consumer choice and hindered the competitive process. In reaching its decision, the Commission reversed a 2007 decision by the Administrative Law Judge dismissing the charges against Realcomp.

The Commission’s Final Order forbids Realcomp from discriminating against discount brokers in, among other things, determining what listings it transmits to public Web sites or setting its default search criteria. The Order also requires Realcomp, within 30 days of the Order becoming final, to amend its rules and regulations to conform with the Order’s provisions, and, within 90 days, to inform its members of the amendments and provide each member with a copy of the Order. Finally, it requires Realcomp to place a statement on its Web site announcing the amendments and to modify the site to include the updated rules and regulations.

The Commission vote approving the Opinion and Order was 4-0. Under the agency’s rules, ex parte communications regarding this matter are barred until the FTC has disposed of any petition for reconsideration, or until the time for filing such petitions (14 days after service) has elapsed.

Edit: Fix wall of text.

Message edited by: chimeer on 2009-11-02 16:54:21 CST

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Good to see steps in the right direction. Realtor® is one of those "professions" that we really don't need anymore, and that you see fighting to try to maintain control of their market (think music industry).


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Something unAmerican happening here. Where are the lobbyists? Maybe it's because realtors are a little short on cash... that is going to change, however.... given what FHA is doing to subsidize housing at taxpayers' risk and expense. Post bailout I don't believe anything the gov't does is on behalf of its constituents. There must be a lobby group pushing for this to happen.


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Realtor's best interest and the public's best interest, never the twain shall meet.


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veyismeer said:Post bailout I don't believe anything the gov't does is on behalf of its constituents.
It took the bailout for that to happen?


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It did take the bailouts for me to lose complete faith in our system. The lobby system undermines free markets every step of the way. We should be punished for even using the term "free markets" when referring to American capitalism. Corrupt. Corrupt. Corrupt.


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veyismeer said:It did take the bailouts for me to lose complete faith in our system. The lobby system undermines free markets every step of the way. We should be punished for even using the term "free markets" when referring to American capitalism. Corrupt. Corrupt. Corrupt. The founders knew this would happen which is why they made the federal government weak, so tyranny would be mostly relegated to the states and localities, where it could be more effectively dealt with (or at least moved away from).


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veyismeer said:It did take the bailouts for me to lose complete faith in our system. The lobby system undermines free markets every step of the way. We should be punished for even using the term "free markets" when referring to American capitalism. Corrupt. Corrupt. Corrupt.
I guess I'm just confused about why the bailout was your tipping point. It's not like there haven't been thousands of examples over the years of lobbying undermining free markets.


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Well perhaps I was naive. But I thought there was some basic fairness and transparency when it came to fundamental functioning of our government and economy. I was blindsided. I can't understand how people are not furious. Most people I know basically ignore it.


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The government is pretty transparent, everyone knows it is corrupt, hell movies even poke fun at it.

This FTC investigation should fix things nicely though.


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mewannaxbox said:The government is pretty transparent, everyone knows it is corrupt, hell movies even poke fun at it.

This FTC investigation should fix things nicely though.

Yes, because many government agencies do such a good job of fixing things nicely.


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ScrawneyWallet said:Yes, because many government agencies do such a good job of fixing things nicely.On average, companies that have been broken up by antitrust have been better investments than companies that have merged.

Also it seems that realtor commissions in the US are a couple of times higher than those in Britain.

Message edited by: larrymoencurly on 2009-11-03 02:42:23 CST
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ScrawneyWallet said:mewannaxbox said:The government is pretty transparent, everyone knows it is corrupt, hell movies even poke fun at it.

This FTC investigation should fix things nicely though.


Yes, because many government agencies do such a good job of fixing things nicely.

I am generally against government intervention in the market but some instances like this one need to have government step in and fix an obvious problem.


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The realtors group restricted information and harmed consumers, no kidding!


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I scrolled looking for the ALL RED comment from a Realtor spouting their mantra. I'm sure one will be along soon.


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larrymoencurly said:Also it seems that realtor commissions in the US are a couple of times higher than those in Britain.That's because they are working twice as hard. Instead of selling houses, they have to lobby congress to double the home buyers credit from 8k to 15k. Senator Isakson, a former realtor, tries to stick that one in almost every new legislation. I am afraid one of those time when nobody is paying attention, boom, everyone will be getting 15K for buying a house!


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scottxmso said:Realtor® is one of those "professions" that we really don't need anymore, and that you see fighting to try to maintain control of their market (think music industry).

Considering that someone like my dim-witted MIL is able to make a nice living selling houses, I have to agree with you 100%.


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Sweet, too bad the really powerful and dangerous monopolies, TBTF banks and consolidated corporate media, will never be broken up because they effectively own our government.

Message edited by: JTFH on 2009-11-03 08:39:40 CST
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tehlorax said:I scrolled looking for the ALL RED comment from a Realtor spouting their mantra. I'm sure one will be along soon.

Haha, I was doing the exact same thing!


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