Property

Final price fixing defendants get $1.5m fine

Property Brokers Limited and its director have been ordered to pay penalties of $1.5 million, for their part in a Manawatu price fixing scandal, by the High Court.

Monday, April 10th 2017

The company and its director, Tim Mordaunt, are the final defendants to appear in court in the proceedings, which stemmed from price fixing charges against 13 real estate agencies around the country filed by the Commission in late 2015.

The charges, which followed a long investigation, were for three separate alleged price fixing and anti-competitive agreements among national real estate agencies, Hamilton real estate agencies and Manawatu real estate agencies.

In the Manawatu case, the Commission alleged that Property Brokers, Manawatu 1994 and Unique Realty breached the Commerce Act by agreeing that they would each pass on to vendors the full cost of advertising a property on Trade Me.

Proceedings were also filed against Mordaunt for his role in facilitating the agreement.

In his ruling released Monday, Justice Murray Gilbert said the penalty needed to reflect the nature and seriousness of this type of misconduct.

“Price-fixing agreements fundamentally undermine the proper functioning of competitive markets and have the potential to substantially erode the benefits the public is entitled to expect from them.

“Such agreements are antithetical to the purpose of the Commerce Act which is to promote competition in markets for the long-term benefit of consumers within New Zealand.

“For these reasons, participation in price-fixing agreements is regarded as serious misconduct and must be met with a penalty that is sufficient to deter other market participants from engaging in this type of conduct.”

Property Brokers and Mordaunt reached settlements with the Commission after admitting that their conduct breached the prohibition on price fixing in the Commerce Act.

They have been ordered to pay penalties of $1.45 million and $50,000 respectively.

Commission chairman Mark Berry said the agreement between the Manawatu agencies left vendors with only two options - pay extra to advertise on Trade Me themselves or don’t advertise on the site at all.

“It is vital that businesses compete with their rivals and make their own decisions on how to respond to issues that impact on a whole industry, including whether to pass on costs increases to consumers.

“The penalties awarded in this case send a clear message that such collusion is taken seriously as it can cause significant harm to consumers.”

Unique Realty and Manawatu 1994 were earlier fined $1.25 million each for their roles in the Manawatu agreement.

The Commission has also come to settlements with Hamilton-based Success Realty and Bayleys at the national level.

The court-imposed penalties now total $7.1 million.

Read more:

ComCom charges real estate agencies after Trade Me row 

Comments

No comments yet

Most Read

SBS FirstHome Combo 4.39
Unity First Home Buyer special 4.69
Co-operative Bank - First Home Special 4.89
TSB Special 4.99
ANZ Special 4.99
ASB Bank 4.99
Kiwibank Special 4.99
Westpac Special 4.99
AIA - Go Home Loans 4.99
ICBC 4.99
Co-operative Bank - Owner Occ 4.99
Nelson Building Society 4.97
Kainga Ora 4.99
ICBC 4.99
Co-operative Bank - Owner Occ 4.99
Wairarapa Building Society 4.99
Unity 4.99
TSB Special 4.99
ANZ Special 4.99
ASB Bank 4.99
Westpac Special 4.99
AIA - Go Home Loans 4.99
Westpac Special 5.39
ICBC 5.49
BNZ - Classic 5.59
Co-operative Bank - Owner Occ 5.69
ASB Bank 5.69
SBS Bank Special 5.69
AIA - Go Home Loans 5.69
BNZ - Std 5.79
Kainga Ora 5.79
TSB Special 5.89
Kiwibank Special 5.89
SBS FirstHome Combo 4.19
AIA - Back My Build 4.44
CFML 321 Loans 5.25
Co-operative Bank - Standard 6.20
Co-operative Bank - Owner Occ 6.20
Heartland Bank - Online 6.25
Kiwibank Special 6.50
Kiwibank - Offset 6.50
Kiwibank 6.50
Unity 6.64
TSB Special 6.64

More Stories

Four decades of 6-7% yearly house price growth ending

Friday, March 21st 2025

Four decades of 6-7% yearly house price growth ending

New Zealander’s reliance on property capital gains in the mid-single digits is at an end.

[TMM Podcast] Yelsa serves up “marine reserve” of property buyers

Friday, January 31st 2025

[TMM Podcast] Yelsa serves up “marine reserve” of property buyers

It’s been years in the making and former real estate agent Mike Harvey is now coming to market with his platform matching buyers and sellers, an offering he says will be a gamechanger for the industry.

Leaving last year's stumbling housing market behind

Friday, January 17th 2025

Leaving last year's stumbling housing market behind

As interest rates ease and job losses climb, New Zealand’s housing market faces a mixed year of modest growth, with conflicting forces shaping the outlook for homebuyers and investors.

Don’t bet on house prices rising faster than incomes

Wednesday, January 15th 2025

Don’t bet on house prices rising faster than incomes

Former Reserve Bank Governor and National Party leader Don Brash says there are grounds for believing that house prices may finally have ended the three-decade period when they rose significantly faster than incomes.