AVONDALE, Ariz., June 14, 2016 -- Recent actions by the staff of state and local REALTOR® organizations are leaving members of the National Association of Exclusive Buyer Agents (NAEBA), nearly all of whom are also members of their local REALTOR® organizations, concerned about consumer protection in real estate. Like many trade organizations, the National Association of REALTORS'® goal is to improve business for its members. Its mission is even "to help its members become more profitable and successful," but on several occasions this year, the state and local REALTOR® organizations appear to be putting those profits above ethical and fair dealings with home buyers and sellers.
In Florida, numerous NAEBA members contacted staff of the Florida REALTORS® asking for a change to the existing Exclusive Buyer Brokerage Agreement. One letter stated, "The purpose of my letter is to ask FAR to include the Single Agency Disclosure with all the fiduciary duties required by Florida Statutes 475.278 to the existing FAR Exclusive Buyer Broker Agreement. This would remove any possibility of misrepresentation to the consumer buying public and meet the requirement made by the Statute for written disclosure by Single Agents offering 'exclusive' buyer broker services." NAEBA President Dawn Rae also submitted a letter which can be read in its entirety at www.NAEBA.org/LettertoFAR. The only response received was a phone call from Donna Ryan, Senior Counsel and Manager of Member Legal Communications for the Florida REALTORS®, to the members who sent letters stating she had made a recommendation for changes. She would not respond to NAEBA or the NAEBA President (who is a member of Florida REALTORS®) at all nor would she give any response in writing. In the nearly six months since the request was made, the change has not been made nor even discussed further.
In California, there is a case, Horiike v. Coldwell Banker, being considered by the California Supreme Court concerning dual agency. Per California law, dual agency occurs when one real estate brokerage is representing both the buyer and the seller in the same transaction. The plaintiff is alleging that the listing agent had a fiduciary duty to him even though he was the buyer because he was a client of the listing agent's firm. The appellate court agreed. Dual agency is fraught with conflict of interest, leaving neither the buyer nor the seller with true, full representation as NAEBA pointed out in its Amicus Curiae brief submitted to the California Supreme Court (read it in its entirety at www.naeba.org/amicus). Many real estate agents practice dual agency, however, because it is quite lucrative. Instead of splitting the commission, the agent or brokerage keeps all of it. In keeping with the mission of making its members more profitable regardless of consumer protection, an April, 2016 article from Bob Hunt, Director of the California Association of REALTORS®, even states that "Dual Agency Can Be a Good Thing."
In Massachusetts and Colorado, state organizations are now allowing REALTORS® to falsely advertise their services. For years, the accepted definition of Exclusive Buyer Representation has been, "The practice of representing only buyers and never sellers in a transaction. The company never lists a seller's property and thus never has a seller as a client." This definition has been published in numerous publications from the National Association of REALTORS® including Agency: Choices, Challenges & Opportunities (see p. 25 of the document found at http://naeba.org/NARAgencyChoicesChallenges), the Real Estate Buyer Agency Council (REBAC), and other organizations. Consumers doing a search of the term on the Internet will find numerous references to that same definition and will rightly assume that someone advertising as an Exclusive Buyer Agent would meet that definition, yet when Exclusive Buyer Agents in those states complained about an agent in their market who was advertising Exclusive Buyer Representation even though they worked in a company that represents sellers, the REALTOR organizations told the agents that since there is no copyright on the term, the other agents can use it. That is going to lead to even more confusion for a consumer who thinks he is working with one type of agent based on definitions even published by the REALTOR® organizations, but ends up working with another. In fact, a consumer working with one of these "Exclusive Buyer Agents" could even be asked to consent to dual agency.
According to NAEBA President Dawn Rae, "Given this current climate of confusion, it is even more important that home buyers remember 'caveat emptor,' let the buyer beware. Choosing a REALTOR® isn't enough. Buying a home is one of the largest financial investments a person will make. Buyers should interview agents to ensure that the agent will remain on their side and truly represent them throughout the transaction... regardless of which home they buy."
About NAEBA
The National Association of Exclusive Buyer Agents (NAEBA), created in 1995, is an organization of companies dedicated to representing only buyers of real estate. NAEBA member brokerages do not list homes for sale and never represent sellers. This restriction to one side of the real estate transaction avoids conflicts and ensures that the interest of the homebuyer is protected at all times from house-hunting and negotiation to inspection, financing and closing.
CONTACT: Kimberly Kahl, CAE
NAEBA Executive Director
[email protected]
623-932-0098/888-623-2299
www.naeba.org


Bank of America Identifies Top Asia-Pacific Semiconductor Stocks Poised for AI-Driven Growth
Anthropic's Mythos AI Model Sparks Emergency Cybersecurity Meeting With Top U.S. Bank CEOs
OpenAI Addresses Security Vulnerability in macOS App Certification Process
NIO ES9 SUV Launch Sends HK Shares Down 7% Despite Bold Pricing Strategy
SanDisk Joins Nasdaq-100, Replacing Atlassian on April 20
MATCH Act: How New U.S. Chip Legislation Could Freeze China's Semiconductor Ambitions
Pony.ai, Uber, and Verne Launch Europe's First Commercial Robotaxi Service in Zagreb
Chalco Stock Surges as Q1 2025 Profit Forecast Jumps Up to 58%
U.S. Automakers Push Back Against EU Rules Blocking American Trucks from European Market
China's AI Stocks Surge as Zhipu and MiniMax Hit Record Highs
San Francisco Suspect Arrested After Molotov Cocktail Attack on OpenAI CEO Sam Altman's Home
TSMC Posts Strong Q1 2025 Revenue, Riding AI Chip Demand Wave
Bendigo and Adelaide Bank Posts Strong Q3 Earnings, Announces AI-Driven Job Cuts
Goldman Sachs, ANZ Cut Oil Forecasts Amid U.S.-Iran Ceasefire Hopes
Anthropic Fights Pentagon Blacklisting in Dual Federal Court Battles
FedEx Pilots and Union Reach Tentative Agreement on 40% Pay Increase
Tokyo Electric Power Attracts Major Investors Amid Billion-Dollar Restructuring Push 



