Internet-Based Realtors Win Monster Settlement 337
coondoggie writes "Until today, most Internet-based real-estate brokers were considered second-class citizens, and their clients were left in the cold. But perhaps that will change with today's news that the Department of Justice has reached a proposed settlement with the National Association of Realtors that requires NAR to let Internet-based residential real estate brokers compete with traditional brokers. NAR has agreed to be bound by a 10-year settlement, under whose terms NAR will repeal its anticompetitive policies and require affiliated multiple listing services to repeal their rules that were based on these policies." Here's the whole settlement document on the DoJ's site.
Great. (Score:2, Insightful)
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News for Nerds. Nerds is a very broad term, and not everyone is going to have the same tastes in articles.
Just pass on by the ones you don't want to read.
Re:Great. (Score:5, Funny)
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Hard as it may be to believe, there are still a lot of businesses that think this "internet fad" is going away, so seeing yet another major industry be dragged into the 21st century economy is interesting to a lot of folks.
Re:Great. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Great. (Score:5, Insightful)
I appreciate the views that others have of the real estate industry that are similar to what I saw while working as the IT grunt for a small real estate company. And yes, I heard the exact phrase 'the internet is just a fad' and IT was just a waste of money. The babysitting eventually got old for me, and I came to realize that I had to leave, because the people in charge just dont 'get it'. Not in a bad way, just in a 'my grandparents still listen to music on AM radio' kinda way.
There is no other industry I have seen that is so absurdly protectionist in its business practices. And the result of that type of worldview has led some real estate companies to be literal fossilized relics of their time.
This settlement gives me great pleasure to finally see, as the roadblocks setup by MLS are some of the most frustrating I have ever encountered, from the buyers point of view.
Having seen the industry from the inside, I would never have any part of buying or selling a home through a real estate agent. If I see a house thats for sale that I want, I am patient enough to let the rediculous 'listing agreement' expire, and then buy it right from the seller directly. It is amazing how eager people will become to sell to you when they realize that waiting a few months can net them a 7% larger profit.
And what ever happened to that small real estate company, you may ask? Well Caton Commercial [willcounty...tcourt.com] spends some of its time showing up to court cases brought against them by various old employees and business partners, and sending out threatening Cease and Desist [demystify.info] letters to other old employees.
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Well, they're dropping like a rock because prices have been inflating like crazy over the past several years. Personally, I don't see any reason to believe that we're seeing the bottom of it
Why was there a housing bubble? (Score:4, Insightful)
1) Houses were seen as a lifetime investment that would not depreciate.
2) Home ownership in the US is highly subsidized by the Federal Government through the mortgage interest and property tax deductions.
3) A lot of shady operators took advantage of poorer and less well-informed people by writing them mortgages with ridiculous terms (like a late payment increases your interest rate to double digits), waiting for the borrowers to run afoul of those terms, then foreclosing on a house the family had owned for years. It's called "predatory lending [consumerlaw.org]" for a reason.
There's been lots of corruption in the "secondary" and "subprime" lending sectors, too. Borrowers were encouraged to hedge, and sometimes lie, about their qualifications because the lenders felt no risk. Lenders found they could sell almost any mortgage into the securities markets where the liabilities were sliced and diced into pieces and repackaged as equity holdings. The Federal Reserve Board also helped fuel the housing bubble by holding down key interest rates and failing to perform any real oversight of its member institutions' lending practices. Many, many people, including many supposedly well-informed financial types, simply believed real estate would continue to rise in value over the years ahead.
Whenever large numbers of people become convinced that the price of a particular item, be it tulip bulbs or homes, can never fall, you have the potential for a pricing "bubble." In this particular instance, public policies and private greed together created the over-valuation of residential property that occurred over the past decade.
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A lot of Realtors are really not trained correctly and only have a transaction based mentality ( nothing wrong with that but they forgot the long term part of the deal )
but here is my problem with internet Realtors, let's say I have house for sale, and one of these internet companies that send the people out without a realtor wants to see the house, no problem, I show the house to the best of my abil
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Actually, the seller pays the commission, but the point is the same: why pay 6% to sell your house if a internet-based real-estate agency can get you in the same listings and attract almost as much interest at half the cost?
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The funny thing about this statement, and the business that we are talking about here is this: I fired up this browser in the search of homes, condos and apartments in St. Petersburg, Fl where I'm thinking of moving for a different job. The reason this is an issue, and the reason the traditional real estate agent is so afraid is because this newfangled Internet (and this is how it intersects with nerd news) gives me the ability to check those listings from my home in Cincinn
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QuantumRiff
Re:Great. (Score:5, Interesting)
Right now it is almost impossible to purchase a house using internet based tools. Every housing market is controlled by the local realtors and they are VERY territorial. This means extra calls to look at houses if you aren't using a local realtor, extra time spent researching because tools are intentionally crippled for non-local agents, houses that aren't "keyed" properly for non-local agents (meaning even if you've done your research, then had someone call on the house, you still might not be able to get in and see it).
This makes it harder to find (and buy) a house if you aren't working with a local agent. Knowledge is power, and with current tools & rules the local agents wield a lot of power over non-local (internet) based ones.
Time will tell if this ruling bears fruit, but it is definitely good news for any nerd looking to buy a house in the future.
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That was very smooth!
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If I'm reading your explanation, it's sounds like it was a good system for local businesses. I wonder how long it will now take for corporate Walmart realtors to pop up and run the independent operations out of business? You're going to help me out here with an explanation of why using a non-local realtor is ever a GOOD idea.
BTW, I just bought a house last year and I had no issues with getting into any house I wanted within a few days.
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That's an insightful and shocking analysis.
Until last week I would've agreed with you, and helped light the torches at the next realtor lynching.
Last week I had a change of heart because I set about to buy a house. That's when I realized how valuable a good realtor really is.
It's important not to score their work along Marxist "physical labor is the only real labor" ideas. Mostly what you're paying for, as a buyer, is their expertise in assessing the value, condition, and livability of a house. Once your realtor understands what you want (and they'll spend the first six house visits figuring this out about you), they can give insights that you would otherwise have to learn the hard way.
The good ones also know what maintenance issues to look for. And of course they guide you through the buying process and give advice on negotiations. My realtor had all sorts of insights into reading between the lines of the seller's listing verbiage.
As a seller you benefit from a similar expertise, except in reverse: a good realtor can show you how to market your house's strong points.
In both cases, their expertise can add or subtract thousands from the closing price. My realtor just led me to a fantastic house for which I signed an offer letter just this past weekend. He's going to get $4500 out of the deal, and I consider that a reasonable fee for an expert consultant.
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Just wait until they discover "spam".... (Score:4, Insightful)
A boon for the Real Estate Industry (Score:3, Insightful)
The internet helps small businesses expand as fast as they can handle, and forces big business to stay competitive or lose business. This is really good for everyone. Not a perfect solution, but a good start. Now, if this would only happen for all industries...
Monster? (Score:2, Funny)
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recent advertising blitz? (Score:2)
That always struck me as an "orly?" (/duh?) statement every time I heard their ad, but now reading this I wonder if they are trying to strengthen their "name brand" (NAR) so to speak since they are losing their lock-in? Since now merely looking for a Realtor doesn't necessarily mean they will get your business.
Re:recent advertising blitz? (Score:5, Informative)
Yes, it's ridiculous.
Registered trademark (Score:4, Informative)
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Although, it's important to note that not all real estate brokers are Realtors®. Only NAR members are Realtors®
BTW-- the word 'realtor' is just a made up word. There was no such work until NAR came along.
Re:Registered trademark (Score:4, Informative)
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But Realtors are really in trouble now... (Score:2)
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And you can't call yourself a Realtor unless you actually
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many people informally but incorrectly use it to refer to anything in that generic class doesn't mean anything in that generic class should be allowed to call *itself* by that trademark.
Actually if you let your term fall into generic everyday use without defending it you can lose it. Companies that are in danger of losing a trademark because if common use often mix in their company name in all their ads.
Microsoft Office
Kleenex Brand Tissues
Ziploc Brand Zip
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BandAid brand Band-aids
Actually, it's "Band-Aid Brand Adhesive Bandages". Do you have a citation for J&J ever using "Band-Aid Brand band-aids"?
That sounds like an implicit admission your trade mark is now generic. The only reason they would need to specify "Band-Aid Brand band-aids" is if there were band-aids not of the Band-Aid brand.
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Well, okay, the site I was thinking of (TimmyBigHands, where one of the writers mentions that his spellchecker "caught" him "misspelling" it in lowercase) ended, but there's a mention of the fact at hand on the obligatory Wikipedia article [wikipedia.org].
Re:recent advertising blitz? (Score:4, Insightful)
That's exactly what they're doing. You can almost hear the "(tm)" trademark and the ALL-CAPSness in the word "REALTOR". That's because it is a trademark, and it's NAR's trademark. The generic term is "real estate broker".
Similar cases of trademark dilution have taken place in the past -- do you use a Xerox(tm) or a photocopier? Kleenex(tm) or facial tissue? Likewise, are you doing business with a REALTOR(tm) or just some random real estate broker?
All of which is, as you've surmised, bullshit. Much like used car salesmen, real estate brokers are basically weasels. Because houses aren't identical, they can't be bought and sold like stocks, bonds, or even consumer electronics, so buying a house is more like buying a used car; people have to interact, in meatspace, if for no other reason than to inspect the property, and that invites a whole food chain of people whose only interest in the process is in getting a cut of your transaction.
And as the president of the National Association of Weasels, we'd like to make sure that you do business with one of our WEASELS(tm). Only WEASELS(tm) are members of the National Association of Weasels. Would you risk your family's financial future with mere polecats, skunks, or other poor imitation? Demand professionalism! Settle for nothing less than genuine WEASEL(tm)!
The trademark has worked well for NAW^HR, but this court case is the thin edge of a very big wedge. NAW's de facto monopoly over the WLS data broken, there'll no longer be any advantage to being a Genuine Weasel. Any old weasel can work within the same set of databases, which means that NAW will be denied the fat fees that only WEASELS pay...
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What, you may ask, is the benefit of that? Basically, it comes down to your rights if an agent screws you over. If that agent is not a member of her/his $STATE Association of Realtors (and by extension, the NAR), you can file a complaint with your state's Real Estate Commissioner a
Won't change a thing (Score:3, Interesting)
Obviously this is pathetic. I happen to have three realtors on my doorstep, and they sing the same song, claiming colleagues will do the same. You cannot break this kind of cartel when grassroots will practice it regardless.
Re:Won't change a thing (Score:5, Funny)
Shit, is this a new fad like pink flamingo's and garden gnomes?
"...and they sing the same song..." Aww, a triplet, do they dance too? If I tickle the right ones tummy, does he give me the key to your house?
Now I want realtors for my porch.
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One anti-competative practice down, many to go. (Score:4, Insightful)
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Re:One anti-competative practice down, many to go. (Score:5, Informative)
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What about Realtors' conflicts of interests? (Score:5, Interesting)
I saw an item on TV where agents were saying that sellers wanted to place their houses with agents on the basis that the buyer's agent got a larger commission. Now, why would they do that if they did not think it would influence the AGENT of the buyers? If the seller can influence the buyer's agent, there is something deeply wrong.
Can someone explain to me how this obvious conflict of interest has persisted for so long?
And before anyone tells me that a realtor is necessary -- I bought a house in the US (for several hundred thousand dollars) with no agents involved on either side of the deal.
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Wake me when someone acts against real estate agents who are supposed to be representing the buyers stop getting commissions paid by the sellers. This is an obvious and massive conflict of interest.
Real estate agents exist to match buyers and sellers. Technically, you both hire one -- and it's only a potential conflict of interest if your actual agent shows you a house she also acts as the seller's agent for.
Which is why you may want to hire your own inspector and lawyer.
And before anyone tells me that a realtor is necessary -- I bought a house in the US (for several hundred thousand dollars) with no agents involved on either side of the deal.
I bought a T-Shirt without ever leaving my home. Are you saying Wal-Mart is unnecessary?
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And for this service of spending a few minutes on a computer matching their client's specificatio
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This is a very simplistic view of what the Realtor provides to the transaction, market comparisons that no automate system can match, advise about home inspections, mortgage advice, other local issues such as oil leases etc. that the average buyer an a zillow (or whatever site) search will not provide.
Yeah, because there's no such thing as the internet. Wouldn't it be great if everyone had a tool for looking up information and sharing experiences related to this kind of thing?
You also are not taking into a
Re:What about Realtors' conflicts of interests? (Score:5, Informative)
On the buyer's side, it's even worse because if the buyer pays more, the agent gets more, so there's clearly no incentive for the buyer's agent to help his client bring the price down *if* the client is buying anyway. In the end, both agents' *only* interest is to get the property sold, no matter what the price and the interests of the clients. It's as simple as that.
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So you're saying that one agent's self-interest is to push the asking price as low as possible, and the other's self-interest is to push the offered price as high as possible. That sounds like conflicting interests requiring negotiation that will wind up with a price in the middle that everyone accepts, which is exactly what you want.
Now, honest agents who are working for their client's best-interests will also wind up on opposite sides, but they'll be on the same sides as their clients, unlike the dishon
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That's not at all what he way saying... He was saying that they will both be looking to sell as quickly as possible and have no interest in getting the best deal for their clie
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Now, if you've gone through a buy or sell before you realize it's really not all that hard and start wondering wtf you need either a buyer or sellers agent. IMHO, selling is very easy. Just find a lawyer to draw up the papers and have the buyer's bank write you a bank check. Buying is a little more complicated since
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From the Trenches (Score:3, Informative)
Re:From the Trenches (Score:5, Insightful)
What exactly do realtors do? Why would I want to use a realtor to sell a home rather than listing the home myself, and what is the benefit of using a realtor to find a home rather than just looking through the listings myself?
I'm not actually planning on buying a home any time soon, but I'd like to know. Usually I prefer researching major purchasing decisions myself, rather than trusting a salesperson.
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You'll get much more traffic from potential purchasers with a realtor (ff spellcheck wants me to capitalize realtor. It also wants a space between 'spell' and 'check'). You also probably, but not definitely get someone who has a better concept of what you can reasonably get for the house. They can also show the house off to prospective buyers when you have somewhere else to be. I do know (anecdotally) though that you
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IANAR, but from what I understand, you're paying for the advertising for the most part.
No. If you have a good Realtor, you are paying to resolve conflict between the seller thinking the house is $400k, the buyer thinking it's $300k, and the seller getting all mad when offered $300k. When negotiations take place, it's the Realtors who actually keep sanity around and make the deal happen. Remember, someone is selling their home - not some xyz property. There's a lot of emotion involved. The Realtor also protects the minority. The seller has no clue who he is selling to till the closing table.
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Most counties have property records online; or another pay for service has the information cheaper than 6% of property value. I just entered "%%% foobar dr" into my county appraisal district; and listed the sale/appraisal of 57 residences on my street. No realtor required. Previous to the Internet, it was more effective to pay a realtor and their support structure to obtain this informatio
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They'll also tell you something slightly different than an appraisal: What they think someone will pay for it.
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I've never sold a house, but I have purchased one. And from what I remember there were many forms and processes: house inspections, termite inspections, title insurance, setting up an escrow account, walk throughs, and more. As a first time home buyer or seller, I imagine the deluge of paperwork can be intimidating. You might worry that you're forgetting a critical document. Perhaps it's not such a big deal if the buyer has an agent/Realtor, but if both of you are first timers and both are trying to do this
Re:From the Trenches (Score:5, Informative)
My wife is a Real Estate agent (not a broker; there's a difference) and there is a ton of work she does for her listing clients, often including spending hundreds of dollars of her own money, sometimes over a thousand, to pay for preparing the house for sale and marketing the home. I've also donated many hours of my own time ripping out old carpeting, taking down wallpaper, painting, and doing various light carpentry jobs for her clients.
Her clients also get her experience. I've seen a number of For Sale By Owner homes, and they never look as nice as my wifes listings. People just don't realize that you have to clean your home and make repairs before you try to sell it. Otherwise, it looks like run-down junk, and buyers will treat it accordingly. First impressions are everything, and you need an agent who knows what to spend money on and how much to spend, so that you get the best return on your last-minute fix-up dollar.
All of that is before the house even goes on the market. Once it's on, there are endless phone calls, viewing arrangements, and follow-ups that have to be performed; it's definitely a full-time job. Once an offer is negotiated and accepted, there's even more phone calls and work to do meeting with inspectors, dealing with lawyers, and making sure the deal doesn't fall through. It's just a steady stream of work, and if you've already got a job, you don't want to do the agent's job too.
Finally, all of the buyers know that you're not working with an agent, and since they're probably selling their home as well, they know just how much you're saving. 99% of the time they'll deduct that amount from what they would otherwise offer you, figuring that you wouldn't have gotten the money anyway, and why should you get a free ride? It can't be for your time; agents don't do anything, right?
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This is just common
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What a worthless site.
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You'd be surprised how many people don't get it, and how many people are happy to pay her 3% (the buyer's agent gets the other 3%, and both agents pay a big chunk of their 3% to their brokers and the IRS) to have her take care of hiring the cleaners and stagers to take care of cleaning up the house.
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A good agent will put in a lot more work, including fronting a lot of the preparation and marketing expenses, for a higher priced home. For example, when a house first goes on the market, there is an Open House held just for agents and brokers. Top level agents listing high-end homes will often pay a caterer hundreds of dollars for this open house, just to draw in as much attention from other agents and brokers as possible. This spreads knowledge about the house that you can't get through an online ad, and
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a) list it on MLS for 500k$
b) do it for sale by owner
c) only pay 3k$ to a buyer's agent who is doing little more than bringing a buyer to me
How do I:
a) get it on MLS, the defacto system for communicating listings to all local agents without being extorted 15k$ (3% promise to buyer agent)
b) not get blacklisted by every agent in town for offering -only- 3k$ (0.6%) to a buyer agent
How do we stop MLS from being a Multiple blackListing Service?
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2) Clean the house up and let people look. I've looked at houses and hate when some realtor is standing over me. If I have any questions, I the buyers have always been in the best position to answer.
3) This is going to be true with anything you sell. I've managed to sel
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. Provide (supposedly) an unbiased opinion on your home as to the proper selling price, what must be done before placing it on the market, what should be done to bring the highest selling price at the least cost, and showing the property for you.
Why would I want to use a realtor to sell a home rather than listing the home myself
Because real estate law is complex, varies from state to state, and without an agent (absent this ruling) you had no access to MLS services.
and w
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1. There is no national data, feed, it's thousands of regional MLS systems.
2. Though they are all very similar, they are not standard.
3. Even worse, not only do you have to be a member of the local realtor association to get access to them, you may have a lot of additional restrictions or requirements. Some make you pay 10
HUH ????? (Score:2, Interesting)
Were on-line realtors outselling people standing in the property?
Was the internet better for buyer/seller?
Did the online agent get a better commission?
I thought real estate agents were all about follow the money$$$?
Be careful, Monster might sue you for the summary! (Score:2)
tm
It must be said... (Score:4, Funny)
Texas and NAR (Score:3, Interesting)
Realtors ar eon the way out (Score:2, Interesting)
Consider, anyone in my generation (20-30 years old) who is looking for a new home. What is the very *FIRST* thing you do when you are even considering it? Do you call an agent? No. You go to the web. You look on Facebook, on Cragislist, on Google even, and yes, MLS too. but the only reason you go to MLS is because it is on the web to begin with! Consider now, if you are selling a house and aiming for this market.
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Why would you pay someone 2.5%-5% commission to list on just one of many websites, when all others are free? Why not try it with the other sites first?
You mean like eBay? So, why doesn't everyone just use CriagsList.org?
You just answered your own question.
wow (Score:2)
Terrible Writeup and Terrible Links (Score:2, Informative)
first off, here's the actual proposed final judgement that actually came out today [usdoj.gov], the actual news part of this, as the links above seem a few months old.
secondly, both the submitter and the linked article seem to have absolutely no clue as to what this settlement means. it is in no way about 'enchancing competition' or 'opening up the industry'. it merely clarifies rules that allow brokerages to limit this data.
specifically, this has to do with VOW (Virtual Office Website) data. if you don't know a
Probably won't help much (Score:4, Informative)
Monster Cable sued the online realtors, too? (Score:2)
Why so down on realtors? (Score:2)
The Realtor that helped me buy my first house was invaluable in walking me through a process I had never been through before. All the forms to fill out, what to look for when looking at the house, what the next steps are, etc. etc.
I wonder how many of the people saying "I don't need a realtor" have actually been through the home buying process. I wouldn'
Re:Outmoded Business Model? (Score:5, Funny)
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Posting in "Plain Old Text"
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Sure, housing prices fell drastically, but as the AC pointed out, "I don't think 'rock bottom' means what you think it means." By stating that housing prices are at "rock bottom" you are saying that they will not go any lower in price. But housing prices are still grotesquely overvalued in most markets and still have a long way to go down before we see any kind of bottom. And even when that bottom is hit, chances are the prices will remain stagnant for many years, which translates to a continued real declin
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