#RE2020: Disrupt Real Estate

Bill Wendel

Real estate is the Sleeping Giant of Consumer Movement! #RE2020's mission is to cocreate a new ecosystem capable of delivering billions in consumer savings by 2020. Share #GamesREagentsPlay with app builders & consumer advocates to develop reforms as well as money-saving strategies & solutions.

  1. 10/27/2023

    RECartel Retrospective: Nader's 1st Speech to Buyer Agents 31 yrs ago

    31 years ago, Ralph Nader delivered his first speech to the New England Association of Buyer Agents. In retrospect, it was a "Coming of Age" for buyer agents and an occasion Nader used to call for a consumer movement in housing. Unfortunately, since then, buyer agency has been coopted and the affordable housing crisis generated more headlines than housing units. So, while The Boston Globe Spotlight focuses on the housing crisis we'll invite fellow real estate consumer advocates to aggregate content to take take our message directly to consumers - both homebuyers and sellers across Massachusetts. Over the next 50 days, we hope to aggregate and share content here and on social media from our peers. If we do that twice daily, that will generate 100 updates over next 50 days. Why 100? That number reflects the magnitude of potential consumer savings EVERY month across Massachusetts -- a stunning $100 million per month - from one of the massive class action lawsuits against the real estate cartel, aka #RECartel. Why 50 days? There are 50 days till the 250th Anniversary of the Boston Tea Party, and as in the past we'll use that date to talk about throwing real estate commissions overboard. This year it's not a question of whether that will happen, it's whether the proposed #MLSpinSettlement and others will deliver BILLIONS annually in consumer savings - as is the Department of Justice's goal. Our hope is to help homebuyers and sellers learn how they can get their piece of those savings, and we look forward to interviewing some of them for this series. Please contact us if you'd like to be interviewed.

    10 min
  2. 10/26/2022

    30 years after buyer agency movement co-opted, is stage set for long-overdue Consumer Movement in Housing?

    October 28th marks the 30th anniversary of Ralph Nader's first speech to buyer agents.  At the time, buyer agents were the rising stars of the real estate industry because they were committed to protecting and empowering millions of homebuyer clients, particularly first-time homebuyers.  For the same reason, they represented a threat to the traditional real estate industry which leading consumer advocates like Steve Brobeck of the Consumer Federation of America called "an informal cartel."  Nader used the occasion to criticize the real estate cartel's attempt to co-opt the buyer agency movement by papering over conflicts of interest.  He call blasted dual agents and designated agents, calling them the "language of hypocrisy."  Nonetheless, within a few years, conflicts of interests were normalized in the real estate industry as traditional brokerages competed to collect both sides of the commission.   Fast-forward to the pandemic-driven Great Real Estate Panic. Without checks and balances in the housing market, homebuyers waived contingencies and normalized overpaying for properties.  At the peak, 1 in 6 homebuyers paid $100,000 over asking price across Massachusetts.  Even before prices began to decline this Fall, 1 in 3 homebuyers already admit they overpaid and buyers remorse is running at 70% among Millennial homebuyers.   How did we get here and what can be done to protect homebuyers from another boom / bust cycle?  Listen to this retrospective and add your own thoughts about creating a Homebuyer Bill of Rights and a long-overdue Consumer Movement in Housing.  Nader called for that 30 years ago, and a recent article in The Economist suggests that coming political storms might be an opportunity to mobilize a consumer backlash against the #RECartel.   What's your take? https://bit.ly/Detonate_BillOfRights

    7 min
  3. 05/13/2022

    Terrible irony or Big Shaft? Why are 1 in 7 homebuyers paying $100K over ask when the Boston housing market is 14% overpriced?

    The housing divide is pulling Massachusetts apart, that's the headline affordable housing advocates are calling required in yesterday's Boston Globe.  But behind Kara Miller's column, The Big Idea, is a sequel to the movie, The Big Short unfolding? An epidemic of BLIND bidding wars caused a record high 1 in 7 MLS sales to soar $100,000 over asking price across Massachusetts last week, 4/30-5/6/22.   Bidding wars of any magnitude were rare in the past.  Writing 25 years ago in Behavior of HomeBuyers in Boom & Post-Boom Cycles, Nobel-prize winning economist Robert Shiller warned that just 6 to 10% of homes selling over asking price was consider an overheated market.  Ironically, nationwide, headlines are warning the grossly overheated pandemic housing market it turning. Nationwide, 1 in 5 single-family listings are already seeing price reductions before the peak of the Spring market.  If that's three months ahead of the normal pace, what will the market look like in August -- the traditional summer markdown season?  If @MoodysAnalytics's Mark Zandy already estimates Boston real estate is 14% overpriced, are Boston homebuyers making foolish decisions or getting The Big Shaft? That's a question we've asked the Attorney General's office to investigate, see complaint filed five weeks ago, 4/8/22. https://bit.ly/BidWarComplaint_MassAGO Why are 1 in 7 homebuyers paying $100K over ask when the Boston market is overpriced and #PriceCorrection2022 is predicted?  Cast your vote on the accompanying poll, and share your audio comments here or on this Twitter thread:   https://bit.ly/BidWarIrony_NPRThread

    4 min

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Real estate is the Sleeping Giant of Consumer Movement! #RE2020's mission is to cocreate a new ecosystem capable of delivering billions in consumer savings by 2020. Share #GamesREagentsPlay with app builders & consumer advocates to develop reforms as well as money-saving strategies & solutions.