Greg was the first to post the news, courtesy of the Nashville Tennesean:
Gov. Phil Bredesen has signed a bill reinstating a ban on cash rebates for home sales and other real estate transactions, despite opposition from consumer advocates and federal antitrust officials.
The good news is somewhere there’s a lawyer or two who will make some money when this new law is challenged in court. And it will be. Make no mistake.
Regardless of whether the law stands, it’s a Pyrrhic victory at best. Victory over those dastardly companies with alternate business models will come with a steep price in public relations.
I’m not a purveyor of the rebate model but I’m also not an opponent. I’m confident enough in the service I provide that I don’t feel I need to pay my clients to work with me. And so I do not and have not viewed real estate models based on a rebate as a threat.
Even if they were, however, the solution isn’t legislation. If the whims of the market are such that such a model were to become dominant, I would have the choice either to adapt or change careers. So be it. By working to ban the rebate model, all the good folks at the Tennessee Association of REALTORS has done is give that particular more credence and legitimacy than it may deserve.
Rebate models only are profitable when business is performed in bulk because of the considerable overhead involved in real estate. Rare is the month where another check is not being sent somewhere to cover board dues, MLS access, website access, marketing or whatever else may arise.
We’re not in a market where bulk exists. Even if we were, if the best response TAR can come up with is to attempt to eliminate its competition through legislation, the group clearly is in dire straits.
Survive or fail on the service you provide. Don’t make yourselves look foolish asking for government protection of your business.
More reading:
DOJ + Protectionism = More Bad Publicity for Realtors
Obviously, those politicians were urged by NAR's political pact money to influence their decision. Would you vote against a huge contributor? Of course not.
There is absolutely no sound argument to disallow cash rebates directly to the buyer or seller. Competition was stifled in TN and consumers will pay the price.