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Real Estate News and Advice |
November 21, 2008 |
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NAR Releases New Buyer-Seller Survey
by Blanche Evans
The final typos are being edited out from the hard copy edition of the National Association of Realtors® 2005 Buyer and Seller survey. Not surprisingly, the survey has found that technology is transforming how Americans buy and sell homes in unexpected ways, including how they work with real estate agents and brokers. Critics of the real estate industry have repeatedly said that the Internet should have made the real estate agent less important to the transaction and have gone so far as to say it should have empowered for-sale-by-owner sellers. The NAR's survey offers evidence that not only are more buyers and sellers using the Internet, they're also using real estate agents in greater numbers. Nine out of 10 home buyers use a real estate agent in the search process, but use of the Internet to search for a home has risen dramatically over time, increasing from only 2 percent of buyers in 1995 to 77 percent in 2005; it was 74 percent in 2004. The next largest source of information for buyers is a yard sign, mentioned by 71 percent of buyers. When asked where they first learned about the home purchased, 24 percent of buyers identified the Internet, up strongly from 15 percent in 2004 and only 2 percent in 1997. Although most buyers use an agent to complete the transaction, 36 first learn about the home they buy from a real estate agent and 15 percent from yard signs; five other categories were 7 percent or less. The 2005 National Association of Realtors® Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers, based on more than 7,800 responses to a questionnaire mailed to a large national sample of consumers located through county deed records, is the latest in a series of surveys evaluating demographics, marketing and other characteristics of home buyers and sellers. NAR President Thomas M. Stevens from Vienna, Va., said the findings underscore the complexity of the home-buying process. "Buyers who use the Internet in searching for a home are more likely to use a real estate agent than non-Internet users, and consumers rely on professionals to provide context, negotiate the transaction and help with the paperwork," said Stevens, senior vice president of NRT Inc. He clearly bristles at accusations lobbed by journalists and third-party competitors to the real estate industry that Realtors haven't made enough use of the Internet to produce positive change for consumers. "The real estate industry today bears little resemblance to the way we did business 10 years ago," he says. "It is hard to find another industry that has adopted technology so readily to its customers. Realtors® have invested a lot of time and money in building information technology, and because of these efforts, more consumers than ever are using the Internet in their home search." The survey shows 81 percent of buyers who use the Internet to search for a home purchase through a real estate agent, while 63 percent of non-Internet users buy through an agent; non-Internet users are more likely to purchase directly from a builder or an owner they knew in advance of the transaction. Some of the most interesting data surrounds for-sale-by-owners. By definition, these are homeowners who do not hire real estate agents to market their properties, and choose to market the properties themselves. Some properties do not ever reach the open market, and are sold by agreement to family, friends, or other contacts before they need to be marketed. The NAR has found a clear downtrend in FSBOs since that market share experienced a cyclical peak of 18 percent in 1997. Only 13 percent of sellers conducted transactions without the assistance of a real estate professional in 2005, and 39 percent of those FSBO transactions were "closely held" between parties who knew each other in advance, up from 32 percent in 2004. The FSBO market share was at 14 percent in both 2003 and 2004. NAR began tracking the FSBO market in 1981; the record was 20 percent in 1987. "In reality, the term 'FSBO' is a misnomer when used to broadly describe homes sold directly by owners," explains Stevens. "Since two out of five of these transactions are between related parties, and those properties are not placed on the open market, we believe that 'unrepresented sellers' would be a much more accurate term to describe this segment," Stevens said. The median home price for sellers who use an agent is 16.0 percent higher than a home sold directly by an owner; $230,000 vs. $198,200; there were no significant differences between the types of homes sold. "While many unrepresented sellers are motivated to save on paying a commission, we think the price difference speaks for itself," Stevens said. "Owners without professional assistance also have problems in understanding and completing paperwork, prepping the home for sale, getting the right price and selling within the time planned." Survey data don't explain the price difference, but Stevens offered some context. "Agents know best how to prepare a home and maximize value, agents provide broader exposure to the market and are more likely to generate multiple bids, and the portion of sales that are between private parties are likely to be at a lower price than those on the open market." "The housing market today contrasts sharply with predictions a decade ago that the Internet would 'disintermediate' real estate agents, including speculation that NAR membership would fall in half. In reality, it's grown dramatically -- selling real estate is not like selling a book or buying an airline ticket," he said. Published: January 18, 2006 Use of this article without permission is a violation of federal copyright laws. Related Articles:
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