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NAR should put its money where its mouth is

I’ve hesitated to post this since I’m not sure how it will go over with other real estate agents (or my boss!). But, why not?

When you buy a home, you’re most likely going to take out a mortgage loan to finance it. The rate on that loan will vary, based on your credit score, amount you put down, where you live, and what type of home you are buying (condo, single-family, resale or new home).

A “point” is equal to 1% of your loan amount. If your loan is $300,000, you would pay $3,000 to bring down the interest rate on your loan. It’s not one-for-one – paying one percent of your loan in points won’t bring your mortgage loan rate down 1%, but it will still have a positive effect on your loan rate, and therefore, your monthly payment.

Last week, the National Association of Realtors came out with a suggestion that the federal government pay borrowers’ points in order to bring down the interest rates on their home purchases.

It suggests using federal funds from the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP – $700 billion fund) to pay points at the individual homebuyer level.

So, a loan that would usually be at market rate (say, 5 – 5.5% right now) would drop to a predetermined rate; NAR suggests 4.5%.

The idea is, lowering borrowing costs would encourage more people to buy homes, reducing inventory, generating spending, and helping to repair the economy. Problem solved.

I’ve got an even better idea.

Your typical real estate agent makes 5-6% in commission on a home sale. (This amount is split, 50-50, between buyer’s agent and seller’s agent, and the agents’ companies get a big chunk of this, but ignore that for now).

What the National Association of Realtors should do is ask each of its one million members to kick in 1 percentage point from their commissions toward lower loan rates for every one of their clients.

Certainly, Realtors could make this decision on their own, but it would be much more successful if the suggestion came from the top down.

What do you think?

Read other posts about: mortgage loans, the real estate industry, us and world economy

11 Responses to “NAR should put its money where its mouth is” »»

  1. Comment by Paul | 12/20/08 at 12:31 pm

    Come on, John…..so in a market where it is tougher than ever to complete a transaction, realtors who are skilled enough to get deals closed should make less??

  2. Comment by Peter5 | 12/20/08 at 12:50 pm

    John, I think the U.S. Govt. should bailout real estate companies that are going under, what do you think of that.

  3. Comment by John Ford | 12/20/08 at 1:14 pm

    John, that reads like something a newspaper reporter would write, not a real estate broker.

  4. Comment by Jay Levitt | 12/20/08 at 5:34 pm

    I think I’d be happier if they kicked in 1 percentage point from their commissions, instead of 1% of their commissions.

  5. Comment by John Keith | 12/20/08 at 5:49 pm

    Jay, I was having trouble writing what I meant … but that’s what I mean!

    I’m changing the post to make it more clear.

  6. Comment by bostonrealestate | 12/20/08 at 8:40 pm

    Hey Jon here’s a better idea – why don’t you just cover it for all our clients. And what are you doing posting about comission fees.

    Why don’t you offer up your wallet before you offer the rest of ours.

    Thanks

  7. Comment by Best Idea Yet | 12/21/08 at 5:50 pm

    Seems to me the problem is one of fundamentals: income is too low to support the prices (at least nationally).

    Here in Boston, if we lose a few thousand white collar jobs earning $125, 150K+, I suspect it will have a significant impact. Unemployment is up to 5.9%; how high will it go, and how much will the six figure wage earners be affected?

    I suspect homes are still slighly overvalued in the BH, SE, NE, Charlestown, BB neighborhoods, and job losses among the high wage earners will start forcing the situation.

  8. Comment by Best Idea Yet | 12/21/08 at 5:53 pm

    BTW, I meant to add that the best “fix” at this point is to let real estate valuations return to “normal” levels and to approve mortgages based on income, assets, and creditworthiness, rather than race, gender, or ethnic origin. Sure, it will frustrate some politicians, but I prefer not to repeat this painful experience.

  9. Comment by Scott | 12/22/08 at 11:10 am

    First, I’m a loan officer, not a real estate agent, so I may be off on some of my assumptions. As such, I’m going to defer to your numbers (Agents are really splitting 5-6%, not 3-4%?)

    Anyhow, at 5-6% – a 1% contribution to getting a lower interest rate, EVEN IF IT WERE LEGAL (it’s not) – would be slightly less than a 20% drop in income for the real estate agent. Considering many agents in crowded markets like Boston struggle to get by on $35,000 to $45,000 a year, a loss of $7,000 – $9,000 in income is pretty significant. Let’s see what they’d get in return…

    Currently the BEST buy-down rate being offered by a reputable bank is 50 basis points per 1%. Most places are around 35 – 40 bpp per 1%. That means, on a $300,000 loan, a $3,000 (1%) would drop the rate from 5.5% to 5%.

    In other words, the payment from $1,703.37 to $1610.46

    That’s less than $100 a month savings for about 10 homeowners for every struggling real estate agent making less than the homeowners you are considering subsidizing.

    If $100 a month is what is forcing people into bad situations, maybe they should reconsider signing a $300,000 loan…

  10. Comment by John Keith | 12/22/08 at 11:24 am

    Hi.

    Scott, good point about the loan assistance being illegal. You could make the commissions “rebates” and the buyers can decide what to do with it.

    NAR estimated that half a million (500,000) buyers would take advantage of a subsidized loan rate, if it went as low as 4.5%. I don’t know how they came up with that number.

    By the way, NAR is suggesting other incentives. One iinvolves the $7,500 tax credit that was passed by Congress this year. NAR is suggesting that the credit be forgiven, in effect giving homeowners $7,500 in cash.

    NAR also wants to forbid banks from entering into the real estate business. They’ve been pushing that for years.

  11. Comment by Boston renter | 12/22/08 at 11:42 am

    Wow bostonrealestate, way to show the customers that all you care about is getting the last dollar of your commission. Seems to me that a productive agent would rather make the sale and get 2.5% rather than not make the sale and get 3.0% why doesn’t it look like that to you? Because you are not making any sales? With that attitude I would not be surprised.

    Thanks John for another interesting post.

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