Share this @internewscast.com

The NAR — whose chief executive, Bob Goldberg, stepped down Thursday — has already promised to appeal Tuesday’s decision. Two brokerages were also found liable alongside the trade group, while several other defendants had already settled the claims.

“NAR rules prioritize consumers, support market-driven pricing and promote business competition,” the group said in a statement Wednesday. “This matter is not close to being final.”

The ongoing legal wrangling leaves consumers in a holding pattern.

A long-held industry standard has been seriously challenged, and the ultimate damages awarded could even be tripled, to over $5 billion, under antitrust law. But for now, the practice remains intact at a time of historically challenging conditions for buyers and sellers alike.

“Nothing changes today,” Bess Freedman, the CEO of the luxury brokerage Brown Harris Stevens, said of the ruling. Her firm, a member of the NAR, wasn’t involved in the litigation — whose outcome she said won’t tackle the real pain point for consumers, which comes from historically pricey mortgages.

Popular 30-year fixed mortgage rates are hovering at decadeslong highs of around 8%, and the supply of homes remains far below normal, not enough to meet demand. A U.S. homebuyer’s dollar now goes about half as far as it did in late 2020.

The legal uncertainty is just another reason homeowners may be inclined to wait to list their homes.

For years, millions of homebuyers locked in rates below 5%, amounting to golden handcuffs that are now keeping many of them in properties they’d otherwise sell. And for new buyers, the low supply of homes for sale is pushing prices too high for their budgets. With Wall Street largely expecting the Federal Reserve to keep interest rates elevated for some time to come, there’s little sign that mortgage rates are falling any time soon.

For homebuyers, paying 6% commissions on what are most likely the largest purchases they’ll ever make is significant.

“I kind of freaked out,” Tali Strom said about realizing the extra fees she’d have to pay for selling her home. Strom, who works at a Jewish American nonprofit group, is in contract to sell her house in Chappaqua, New York, for nearly $1.2 million, with a closing date set for Dec. 7.

She acknowledged she has a great relationship with her broker and said she was happy with the services she’d received.

“I want to give her every dollar,” Strom said, but she voiced frustration that her agent would have to hand chunks of it over to her brokerage and, subsequently, to the buyer’s agent. “I am critical over the fees I pay her company. I don’t feel the amount of time and energy the company put in was worth that.”

A generation ago, the buyer’s agent had all the information — comparable neighborhood sales prices, tax histories, school district placement and particulars of the home — and was supposed to act as a comprehensive counselor.

Strom said she was familiar with that model firsthand. “My mom was a Realtor growing up. She would get a phone call, the Realtor would do that work,” she said.

But she pointed out it’s so much easier now for house hunters to scroll listings online and go through the buying process largely by themselves.

“It’s a text message now,” she said. “The technology has changed.”

Share this @internewscast.com
You May Also Like

The Mountain city where thousands are selling their million-dollar homes amid ‘cloud of uncertainty’

Colorado Springs, once one of the most sought-after housing markets in the…

Congress members pay an unofficial visit to Syria as U.S. mulls sanctions relief

DAMASCUS, Syria — Two Republican members of the U.S. Congress were in…

DEI rollbacks hit campus support systems for students of color

WASHINGTON (AP) — Campus mentors. Move-in events. Scholarships. Diversity offices that made…

Fyre Festival 2 artist reveals secrets of Billy McFarland’s botched event plans and how he’s left them hanging

The infamous Fyre Festival tried its luck for a second time before…

A South Carolina college could close after 179 years if it can't find $6 million by Tuesday

GAFFNEY, S.C. (WSPA) — A South Carolina university could soon close its…

rewrite this title Universal Epic Universe is the theme park resort's biggest bang yet in Florida

ORLANDO, Fla. – From Harry Potter to Super Mario Bros. to Frankenstein’s…

The real life ‘Below Deck’ – shocking demands of rich ‘yachties’ and sentence that got a crew member fired

In order to sail the seven seas with the ultra-wealthy, crew members…

PEW POLL: Majority of Americans Have Negative View On Israel; Republican Support Drops 10%

Last Updated on April 16, 2025 A recent Pew Survey shows that…

Pete Hegseth suffers yet another major blow as Pentagon is sent into ‘chaos’ over Signal chat fallout

The Pentagon is reeling as Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth faces growing instability…

public advocate’s plan to address mental health crisis with more bureaucratic ‘panels’ is ‘neglectful’

Mayor Eric Adams ripped far-left Public Advocate Jumaane Williams for proposing the…

Dana Carvey thought his ‘SNL’ Joe Biden impersonation was finished after disastrous debate

Dana Carvey knew his stint on “Saturday Night Live” would be cut…

US Supreme Court deportation ruling: SCOTUS blocks, for now, new deportations by Donald Trump admin. under Alien Enemies Act

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Saturday blocked, for now, the deportations…