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Zillow and RedFin Cater to Do-It-Yourself Homebuyers

Zillow_logoIn many urban markets, new tools aimed at homebuyers are about to alter the purchasing paradigm. These tools, which make it much easier to scour home listings, determine market value, and make legally binding purchase offers, are slowly diminishing the role of the real estate agent, especiallyRedfin_logo on the buy side (sellers still need access to the multiple listings). Already, 24 percent of recent homebuyers first learned of the home they eventually bought through their own Internet research (see Note 1 below).

What does this have to do with online finance? Plenty. With 77 percent of home buyers already using the Internet in their home search (see Note 1, below), the online real estate venues will begin to play a much larger role in the process. Financial institutions that get their name in front of homebuyers early in the process have a much higher likelihood of being chosen as the mortgage lender. And with buyers less likely to contact a real estate agent early in the process, traditional agent referrals will become less of a factor in the mortgage-purchase decision.

The Latest Homebuying Resources

Zillow_searchresults_3

Zillow <zillow.com>, the Seattle-based company launched Feb. 8 to much fanfare (so much that it crashed the site) including favorable articles in Walt Mossberg’s Wednesday WSJ column, Seattle Times business section, The New York Times, and many others. Zillow, started by former Expedia founder and CEO, Rich Barton, allows users to research comparable housing market values, both current and historic. Similar services have been around for almost a decade, but none match Zillow’s depth of information and ease of use (click on screenshot right for a closeup). Note: Zillow is using an advertising business model. Currently, it displays Google AdSense ads on the right, banner ads across the top, and other ads scattered throughout the site. Real estate brokers and lenders are expected to be major advertisers. ZipRealty, a buyer’s agent that rebates 20 percent of the commission, is a major sponsor at launch. Other similar services: HouseValues.com, HomeSmartReports.com, and HomePriceCheck.com (from LendingTree).

Redfin_searchresults_1

Redfin <redfin.com> another Seattle-based startup, provides not only home-value data, but also overlays home-for-sale listings and recent sales on a satellite image of the neighborhood (click on inset for closeup; red boxes are homes currently for sale, blue-green indicates a recent sale). And with a business model that includes pocketing 1/3 of the home-sale commission, while rebating 2/3 to the buyer, it offers a potentially disruptive business model to the real estate industry which generated more than $60 billion in commissions in 2005 (reference: Seattle Times, Feb. 5, 2006). Although the site covers only the Seattle metro area at this time (which generated $1 billion in commissions in 2005), its primarily California-bred executive team is planning a San Francisco area launch later this year.

Action Items

  1. Keep abreast of homebuying venues in your market areas. Consider advertising or sponsorship opportunities to drive new buyers to your financing options.
  2. Improve the visibility and benefits of your mortgage preapproval program. Look at what Third Federal has done with its Mortgage Passport, a lifetime mortgage preapproval service (NetBanker Jan. 23, 2006).
  3. Develop a robust real estate marketplace for your website. Use your impartiality as a drawing card, e.g., "Looking for a home? Check out yourbank.com’s Real Estate center, where we show you how to find ALL the homes in the market, not just the ones your agent wants you to see."
  4. For those not currently receiving referrals from real estate agents, consider adopting the Redfin discount real estate agent model, helping buyers earn large commission rebates. You could even take it one step further, allowing the rebate (which could be as high as 3 percent of the purchase price) to pay for all or part of the down payment at closing.

    Run this scenario by your legal department: The bank refers customers to a flat-fee real estate attorney who handles the purchase offer and subsequent negotiations for a pre-set fee; let’s call it $500 (see Note 1). The remainder of the buying agent’s commission is used as down payment for a mortgage from your bank. On a $400,000 home, that potentially makes more than $10,000 available for the down payment.

Big Caution: Anyone helping cut real estate agents out of their full commissions will be extremely unpopular, and will face backlash from the local real estate industry. This strategy (#4) works only for financial institutions with relatively few ties to the existing homebuying power structure.

— JB

Notes:
1. According to a survey sponsored by the National Association of Realtors, of U.S. consumers purchasing homes between Aug. 2004 and July 2005, 77 percent used the Internet to search for a home (up from 74 percent 2004, 71 percent in 2003, 41 percent in 2001, and 2 percent in 1995). More importantly, the buyer first learned of the home they eventually purchased online in 24 percent of the cases vs. 36 percent who learned about it from a real estate agent and 15 percent from yard signs (also 25 percent learned from five other categories). In 2004, 15 percent heard about their eventual home online vs. 11 percent in 2003 and just 2 percent in 1997. The survey also revealed that 7 percent of home buyers found their agent online.

2. According to a January 3, 2006, article in the New York Times, Madison, WI, attorney Jason A. Greller charges a flat $600 to help a home buyer or seller with a home sale, handling about 200 a transactions per year, pocketing $120,000. His volume is high due to the strong for-sale-by-owner market in Madison, with the website FISBOmadison garnering 20 percent of the market. Incidentally, this article was the ninth-most-read article at the New York Times website in January.

3. Feb. 8 New York Times article on Zillow and Redfin, with the best quote of the decade from Redfin CEO Glenn Kelman: "We are like the penguins on the edge of an iceberg when no one wants to jump in first. Redfin is going in first. Maybe that isn’t such a good analogy. The first penguin in usually gets eaten by sharks or something."