Joint Venture Agreements Between Brokerages and Wells Fargo
In an e-mail to all Long & Foster agents and managers, Wesley Foster Jr. chastised his workers for funding mortgages through other lenders - instead of using Long & Foster's affiliate, "Prosperity Mortgage."
The e-mail sparked criticism, with some Long & Foster agents, consumer activists and others raising concerns about whether Long & Foster is trying to profit at the expense of their clients' interests.
Foster said he wrote the memo to make agents understand that each time they use Prosperity, they're helping Long & Foster.
HUD/RESPA rules state it is illegal "if the agents or office managers receive kickbacks or fees for doing nothing more than referring services."
However - this is not the first such joint venture revenue or profit sharing agreement that I have heard of between Wells Fargo and a brokerage - so apparently - such corporate agreements give a loophole - so that such revenue or profit sharing is legal.
RESPA may want to tighten up on their rules a bit...
This is another piece of evidence that many Real Estate companies pressure their home-buying customers to use an in-house lender or lender that is co-located at the company's office.
Stephen Brobeck, executive director of the Consumer Federation of Americas stated: "It will not serve the interests of their customer and may even erode the credibility of their agents."
One Long & Foster agent said that they found the e-mail "troubling" because it implies that agents should strive to make the company more prosperous, even if it means undermining a client's interests.
I noted previously in a blog post - that a large local Real Estate brokerage here in Chicago has penned the same type of joint venture agreement with the same company - Wells Fargo. So - Wells Fargo appears to be penning such agreements with major Real Estate companies across the USA - to help pad the brokerage's bottom line - in exchange for their agents pushing business to Wells Fargo.
Is sending your clients to a specific lender such as Wells Fargo - looking out for their best interests in a fidicuary manner?
A fidicuary means that you are looking out for someone's best interests. If you are looking out for their financial best interests - wouldn't you help them shop for the best loan rates and fees - and not steer them towards a lender because it will make your broker's company more profitable?
The brokerage company's financial interests are being placed ahead of the client's interests. That is not being a true fiduciary. The Wells Fargo loan may or may not be the best for the client. How would you know unless you compared? You wouldn't!
Real estate firms promote these arrangements as one-stop shopping - telling their buyer client "it is convenient" "just use Joe here in our office" (who either pays the office rent or their company has one of these joint venture agreements with the brokerage - which exploits a loophole in existing RESPA rules - to put money in the brokerage's pocket.
I wonder how many brokerages have retaliated against agents who didn't make referrals to the in-house or joint venture lender?
Do agents get an extra year end spiff - which isn't formally tied to the in-house referrals - but still based on the number of in-house referrals? I don't know.... I'm just asking the question...
Labels: brokerage, buyer, fidicuary, financial interest, home, joint venture, lender, loan, long and foster, real estate, respa, wells fargo


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