Is This The Right Way To Cut Property Agent Numbers?
- by autobot
- May 5, 2024
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It used to be a no-brainer for me. But over the years, I’ve been forced to admit that some middlemen (and related fee collectors) are indispensable. Like when it’s raining at two in the morning and I’m pulling an all-nighter, I’m pretty grateful I can pay platform fees for someone to magically appear at my door, with fried chicken. Those are the small things. But when it comes to real estate, it’s not just about convenience is it? A messed-up transaction is nowhere near your fries or large drink not arriving; it can mean a thousands lost due to lapsed options, or just not getting the best offer. So I’m not as quick to jump on the bandwagon of capping agent commissions, with the supposition that it could lower home prices. On the one hand, I do understand how this is plaguing the new launch industry: commissions for developer sales can be much higher than the two per cent “norm” paid by home sellers. There have even been cases of new launches delivering commissions of five per cent, although this also tends to happen for the toughest-to-sell units (and perhaps when developers are facing the end of their five-year ABSD deadline). But given that these deals are between agents and developers, how sure are we that lower commissions mean lower home prices? I to be an idealist and think that, if developers pay lower commissions, we’ll all be charged less per square foot; but another part of me believes that if the agents charge less, the developers will maintain the price and just pocket more profit. It would certainly be a strong temptation on the developers’ part, given their . But who remembers when property prices were at a high too in the earlier years like 2007? My memory might be failing me a little here, but I don’t think new launch commissions were as high as they are today. The biggest problem? It’s the 5 year ABSD that developers have to sell by. With the high financial penalty of not clearing all the units (and while that has been relaxed), they have to resort to such means. It’s either lower your prices and piss off the earliest buyers, or push commissions high enough so that agents are incentivised to sell your project. Then there’s the issue of there being . In truth, real estate agents have always numbered around 30,000+ over the past few years; the industry does suffer from a high churn rate. It’s also worth noting many who have a CEA license don’t actually transact. And some are cases like this . I don’t know if capping commissions will actually decrease the number of agents though – in my experience, sales (be it insurance, property, etc.) will always draw a large initial crop of hopefuls, which then thins out fast. It’s more or less an oligopoly at this point. Developers have few options besides the “big three” property agencies; and if there’s ever an attempt to collaborate and fix higher commissions (not that I’m saying there is), we might all have an industry-wide issue. Then there’s the issue of the resale market. For starters, I would imagine one of the industry players capping commissions isn’t just the agents, but the property portals that sell listing space. This is already a huge portion of where agents’ marketing budgets go, and with fewer agents and lower commissions, they would certainly not want such a move. But we’re not here to worry about the health of portal sites: a more immediate concern is the quality of service. Consider, for instance, someone who urgently needs to sell their home, before the six-month ABSD deadline. If there’s an absolute cap on commissions – say 1.5 per cent – there’s a question of how many agents are willing to go through the expense of aggressive marketing, dropping everything to focus on this one listing, staging the unit to make videos, etc. If the remuneration doesn’t justify the effort, such buyers may find themselves on their own, or with agents who do the proverbial half-past-six job because they see low hopes of success anyway. As is, we already have agents who refuse to pick up the phone to co-broke; this will be much worse if those agents have a capped commission, and have already spent way too much refreshing a listing. I think it would go a long way for some agents to better describe the likely costs they’re looking at, in relation to their commissions. This could absolve the agent if the lower commissions show slower results (at least they don’t look like they’re doing nothing), and help sellers to temper their expectations. Follow us on Stacked for in-depth reviews of new and resale condos alike.