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What is the next step for NAR?

Updates on the DOJ investigation, iBuying, commissions and more

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[Editor’s note: As of November 2022, we no longer use Slack, and we’re happy to share that we’ve moved to Circle for our new community platform. We will be continuing Q&As, live discussions and more in this new community platform. If you’re a member and not a part of our Circle community yet, you can click the link at the end of the article to join.]

In this Q&A, Senior Real Estate Reporter Matthew Blake gives HW+ members the inside scoop on what happened at NAR‘s annual conference. Blake breaks down his biggest takeaways from the conference as well as what realtors should expect from the NAR agenda next year. The Q&A was hosted in the HW+ Slack channel, which is exclusively available to members. To get access to the next Q&A, you can join HW+ here.

The following Q&A has been lightly edited for length and clarity.

HousingWire: To begin, what was the biggest news from the conference?

Matthew Blake: Of course! My biggest concern in 2021 was that home prices would take off in an unhealthy way, even after what happened in 2020. Since I didn’t believe in the Forbearance Crash Bro premise, this was the number one concern.

I think the biggest news was that NAR’s board passed three of the four planks that were part of the consent decree they hammered out with the U.S. Justice Department back in November 2020, and that DOJ withdrew from in July these were all regarding buyer’s agents being more transparent on how much they get paid (The one, arguably smaller, plank that did not make it through regarded lockbox access for non-MLS participants).

I think there were some questions at the conference: were these passed to appease DOJ? or because this is what NAR’s 1.5 m agent members want? I guess NAR would partly respond to that by saying they represent agents and consumers.

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