| Jay Reifert 2006-03-31, 10:21 pm |
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Hi Corky,
You're the first RealtorŪ(?) who seems to have some understanding
of the right, ethical, way of conducting business with buyers.
However, and this is fact, having a buyer agency agreement with
a buyer does not eliminate the procuring cause, PC, threat.
A buyer agency contract is just one factor among many, when a
PC arbitration is underway. And, if the buyer has been trapped
by a non-disclosing RealtorŪ BEFORE you meet him/her and you
still take him/her on as a client, you are apt to lose the
PC arbitration. This is part, and parcel, of the theft.
Most RealtorsŪ will not take the risk of doing all the work,
taking on all of the liability, getting paid at closing, only
to risk seeing their fee taken away by a non-disclosing
RealtorŪ claming PC after the closing has taken place.
Here's the link to the brochure again, for any who might want
to refresh their memories...
http://www.real-reform.org/pcnonebas.pdf
Jay Reifert -- Fitchburg/Madison ****** http://www.real-reform.org
http://profiles.yahoo.com/jay_reifert ** http://www.true-agent.com
http://www.madison-real-estate.com
mailto:true-agents@12345true-agent.com <-----------Remember to
remove the numbers from
the email address before
hitting send.
corky wrote:[color=darkred]
>
> The vast majority of Realtors are saps that show homes to "buyers"
> that are unscreened, unqualified and have not even seen a lender.
> After working for this "buyer", the realtor is commonly screwed when
> his client signs a contract with the first agent he sees. Most
> consumers have no loyalty to a realtor that works for nothing and
> ends up getting nothing. All realtors should pull out a contract and
> refuse to open the door
> to the property if the "buyer" does not sign it.
> I have done this and I enjoy hearing the pissing and moaning.
>
>
>
>
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