Tuesday, May 27, 2008 - Page updated at 03:41 PM
E-mail article
Print view Share:
Digg
Newsvine
Settlement reached for online real estate agents
Associated Press Writer
Presidential Election 2008
The Justice Department gave a boost Tuesday to online real estate brokers - and potentially their clients - by forcing new industry policies that give Internet-based agents access to home listings they were previously denied.
The tentative settlement, which still requires court approval, could save consumers thousands of dollars when buying a home.
Online real estate agents often charge discounted commission fees and let buyers review listings at their own pace.
For years, however, Internet-based brokers have complained that the National Association of Realtors wanted to let real estate agents exclude some of their listings from their online competitors, many of whom offer discounted prices. More than 800 multiple listing services nationwide are affiliated with the Realtors group.
In a September 2005 lawsuit, government lawyers said such policies discriminated against online brokers. The settlement, filed in U.S. District Court in Chicago, opens the MLS databases to online and traditional residential property agents.
"It really does free brokers generally to engage in whatever they feel is the most efficient and effective way to compete," Deputy Assistant Attorney General Deborah A. Garza of the Justice Department's antitrust division told reporters.
She said the settlement "should lower the cost of the transaction for buying a house."
In 2006, for example, consumers saved up to 1 percent on the price of a home by using an online broker, Garza said. That year, the median home price amounted to over $225,000, with median commissions of over $11,000.
Real estate agents earned $93 billion in commissions in 2006, she said.
In a report last year, the Justice Department and Federal Trade Commission found limits on discount brokers' access to Web listings of properties for sale prevented consumers from getting the cost savings and other benefits online competition has brought other industries.
The report found that more consumers use the Web when house hunting than rely on "For Sale" yard signs.
Even so, online brokers who were locked out of the MLS databases were unable to compete with real estate agents, government attorneys said. In at least one case, in Emporia, Kan., an Internet-based agent was forced out of business after the local MLS denied his access to any property listings in the local market.
![]()
Glenn Kelman, chief executive of Redfin, an online real estate brokerage based in Seattle that operates in 20 large metropolitan areas, said the settlement came as a relief for executives at the company, which bills itself as a lower-cost alternative to traditional real estate agents.
However, Kelman said he was concerned about a piece of the settlement that lets sellers' agents block Internet users from making comments on listings. Such comments, common on retail Web sites such as Amazon.com, are "just part of how today's consumers make decisions," Kelman said.
That part of the deal, however is a "a small price to pay to get an agreement and to get this behind us," said Patrick Lashinsky, chief executive of Emeryville, Calif.-based online broker ZipRealty Inc.
Tuesday's settlement will not take effect until late summer at the earliest, or 60 days after it wins court approval. It would be in place for 10 years.
It neither imposes a fine on the National Association of Realtors, nor does it force the group to acknowledge any liability.
The group represents 1.2 million real estate agents and other members in more than 250,000 active office locations and branches nationwide.
In a statement, Realtors president Richard F. Gaylord said the Chicago-based association is "focused on what matters most to consumers - re-energizing the housing market."
"Competition is alive and well in the real estate industry," Gaylord said. "In fact, the competitive nature of our industry is even more apparent in times of market turmoil like those we are currently experiencing."
---
AP Business Writer Alan Zibel contributed to this report.
On the Net:
National Association of Realtors: http://www.realtor.com
Justice Department Antitrust Division: http://www.usdoj.gov/atr/index.html
Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company
UPDATE - 03:15 PM
Bailout becomes buy-in as feds move into banking
McCain proposes $52.5 billion economic plan
McCain, Obama address voters' economic fears
UPDATE - 04:38 PM
Chief justice channels his inner Raymond Chandler
Poll: Obama leads in Mich., Wis., Minn., Colo.

Best Northwest Employers
Vote for your favorite Northwest employers in the 2008 NWjobs People's Picks contest. Vote now.
- Carnation couple charged in "worst case" child abuse of teen daughter
- Carnation girl, 14, found starved to 48 pounds
- Amazon pays off its historic debt early
- Boeing engineers union weighs strike plan
- Palin fiance sets record straight | Campaign Notebook
- Palin: Mortgage plan not a handout, but a hand up
- 5 students from Afghanistan missing from UW
- Boeing, striking Machinists hit impasse in new talks
- Former Sonics guard Gary Payton works to bring NBA back to Seattle
- King County to lay off up to 255 workers
- Sarah Palin and the mean wink | Leonard Pitts Jr. / Syndicated columnist
- Carnation couple charged in "worst case" child abuse of teen daughter
- Pediatricians double vitamin D recommendations
- Boeing engineers union weighs strike plan
- Carnation girl, 14, found starved to 48 pounds
- A formula for lifting Washington out of its math mess | Guest columnist
- Chico Hot Springs: Soaking up a quintessentially Montana experience
- Washington's Initiative 1000 is modeled on Oregon's Death with Dignity Act
- WSU provost to return as professor — at $245,000 per year
- 5 students from Afghanistan missing from UW
