Tranona
Well-Known Member
What exactly is this nebulous "market"?
As you clearly have stated, "the cost/time of a viewing let alone a sale ----hence why they use a broker".
So that cost 'is' being factored into the selling price!
All your contradictory ramblings are demonstrating that you have little idea how markets work. Suggest you do a basic course on markets and then you might understand how prices are determined and the role of intermediaries in creating and sustaining markets.
Look around you and try and identify any significant market where transactions are direct from principal to principal. Intermediaries exist in different forms - dealers, auctioneers, agents, brokers call them what you will they create spaces where buyers and sellers meet and facilitate the flow of information that enable those buyers and sellers to arrive at a price for the transaction. In most cases the cost of the intermediary is borne by the seller as it is his cost of entering the market, but equally some costs are met by the buyers in some markets. Think auctions, where the auctioneer takes a cut from both the seller and the buyer - his reward for creating the basis for the transactions. When you then see commissions of 15% from the seller and 10% from the buyer you realise how efficient the yacht market is. Even more so when you consider that you also have the option to piggy back on the structured market and buy or sell direct. However, this method does not suit everybody, nor does it guarantee the best deal for both parties and I would suggest that without the structured market to provide a framework, the "direct" market would collapse.
It may well be that the structured market will change with the growth of communications based market spaces, but exposure of your offering to a wide number of potential buyers is only part of the transaction process and there will still be a role for somebody to carry out all the other processes required to complete a complex and high value transaction successfully. You can see this already with some intermediaries deconstructing the process and offering the service for discrete activities as stand alone items. However, there will always be transaction costs in some form or other, so suggesting prices for buyers will automatically fall without an intermediary just does not stack up.