1/ Do Real Estate Brokers Add Value When Listing Services are Unbundled? (Bernheim, Meer)
"In an open-access listing service used by all sellers, when listings are not tied to brokers, a seller's use of a broker reduces final sale price by 5.9-7.7%."
2/ "Our market has a single open-access listing service used by essentially all sellers, regardless of whether they employ brokers. The market consists of roughly 800 houses and condominiums located in a collection of largely contiguous neighborhoods on Stanford University land.
3/ "Because ownership is limited to Stanford faculty and some senior staff, the MLS plays no role. (The listing service is free.) Brokers charge standard commissions (historically 5-6%).
"This allows us to identify effects of brokerage services when separated from MLS listings."
4/ "There is fluidity between on-campus and off-campus housing. A substantial fraction of faculty members choose to live off-campus, and prices on campus have historically tracked off-campus prices. Stanford housing is more properly viewed as a neighborhood than as a market."
5/ Column 1: "The use of a broker is correlated with observed characteristics that enhance a home’s value (e.g. larger homes are more likely to sell through brokers). Since brokers earn more from more valuable homes, this may reflect targeted efforts to obtain valuable listings."
6/ "With home fixed effects (column 4), broker coefficient implies a price impact of -5.9%.
"The year-propensity interaction term coefficients rise over time, so column 4's broker coefficient may be biased upward.
"The coefficient in column 5 implies a price impact of -7.5%."
7/ "We see no basis in out results for an inference that those who use brokers are significantly less aggressive or effective negotiators than those who do not and hence no grounds for concern that that the estimates of broker effects in Table 2 are biased downward."
8/ "The size of the estimated effects on initial asking price and sale price are roughly comparable. Though the estimates are not precise, they suggest that much of the effect of brokers on selling prices may reflect encouraging sellers to set lower initial asking prices."
9/ "Using a broker is associated with a probability of sale slightly (substantially) higher during the first (second) month.
"To the extent a broker reduces time-to-sale, the effect appears to involves quick sales.
"Including home fixed effects yields ambiguous results."
10/ "The effects of interest may differ across some brokers. In particular, both the selling price and the initial asking price tended to be noticeably higher when one particular broker handled transactions, and those differences were economically and statistically significant.
11/ "In specifications analogous to equation (2) in Tables 2 & 3, the estimated impact on selling price for that broker is 0.0856 (s.e. 0.0374), and the impact on list price is 0.0509 (s.e. 0.0390). Otherwise, broker effects on both asking & selling prices were fairly uniform."
12/ Conclusion: "We have examined the effects of real estate brokerage services provided to sellers when MLS listings are not relevant. Because a seller presumably benefits from an MLS listing, including MLS listings (as other studies have done) may obscure the agency costs."
2/ "As a result of an information advantage relative to clients, expert agents may mislead clients by exaggerating the costs or difficulty of a solution, providing unneeded services, or otherwise distorting information to maximize the expert’s own payoff.
3/ "A listing agent has strong incentives to sell a house quickly, even at a lower price, and thus may encourage clients to accept sub-optimally low offers too quickly.
"Typically, the agent receives only 1.5% of each marginal dollar of the price for which the house sells.
2/ "FSBOMadison.com actively extinguishes any listing from its website that ends up on the MLS.
"Real estate agents are occasionally involved in FSBO sales when they represent the buyer and one of the parties agrees to pay a buying agent commission, typically 3%."
3/ Table 1: "A row represents where a property was initially listed. The columns represent the eventual outcome (where/how it sold).
"Out of properties that sell, 95% sell through the initial listing platform. The remaining 5% are almost completely switches from FSBO to MLS."
1/ Real Estate Agent Remarks: Help or Hype? (Haag, Rutherford, Thomson)
"Negative MLS comments are associated with lower sales prices (hedonic model). However, some positive comments (new paint, good location) are also associated with lower sales prices." researchgate.net/publication/51…
2/ "For each listing on a MLS, a section is provided for agents to furnish additional information that is not included elsewhere in the MLS listing. Examples of these remarks include ‘Well Maintained Home,’ ‘Ready to Sell’ and ‘Foundation Problems.‘
3/ "The sample data consists of 58,386 residential transactions sold & closed through the Metroplex MLS in Tarrant County, TX (Jan 1994 to Dec 1997).
"The dummy variable for MLS area forty-five and for months January through March 1994 are used as the control variables."
"There does not seem to be one major organ within the body or process within the brain that isn’t optimally enhanced by sleep (and detrimentally impaired when we don’t get enough)." (p. 6)
1/ Incentives and Performance in Real Estate Brokerage (Munneke, Yavas)
"We predict that the selling price & time it takes to sell through a full-commission (RE/MAX) agent are the same as for a traditional agent. This is supported by empirical results."
2/ "Full-commission brokerage firms allow agents to retain 100% of commission revenue (minus a 5% franchise fee). In exchange, agents pay a fixed amount each month for desk costs.
"They should therefore have incentives to expend a greater effort than agents of traditional firms.
3/ "Does a full-commission agent generate greater commission revenue by selling a listing faster and at a higher price? Or do these agents not generate a faster selling time or a higher price, but simply spend additional hours that lead to a greater number of listings or sales?
1/ Impact of Agent Experience on the Real Estate Transaction (Waller, Jubran)
"Properties listed by veteran agents sell for 2% more than those of less experienced counterparts, do so 32% faster, and with greater probability of a successful transaction."
2/ "Work schedule flexibility and the potential for high income attracts opportunists who may not have made a solid commitment to real estate as a career.
"We define agents who acquired licenses and did not renew at two years (held for >10 years) as rookies (veterans)."
3/ "Properties listed by inexperienced (veteran) agents sell for 10% less (1.8% more) and endure longer marketing durations (sell 32% faster) than those listed by other agents."