[quote=captcha]The contract between the buyer and the buyer’s agent says nothing about the agent compensating the buyer for failing to protect the buyer from any of the things listed above.
My experience says a buyer’s agent is more likely to send you to his buddy mortgage broker than to tell you about aimloan.com.[/quote]
captcha, that is the purpose of agents/brokers carrying E & O insurance. It is required on every brokered transaction, on each side. If you, as a seller or buyer, later sue your broker for damages inflicted upon you due to your agent’s neglect, lack of oversight and/or incompetency, for instance, their E & O policy will pay to defend the suit and/or pay your award, along with any culpable brokers, if you prevail in court. If you represent yourself, you have no one to blame but yourself.
If your buyer’s agent INSISTS you use his “buddy mortgage broker,” this is a violation of RESPA and they can be disciplined by the DRE if a complaint is filed and it is later determined that your agent took any kind of “kickback” from the successful origination of your mortgage loan after sending you to a particular mortgage broker, banker or direct lender.
captcha, you are always free, as a buyer, to use whichever lender you desire, even in purchasing new construction. It is legal to offer incentives to entice a buyer to use a certain lender but it is NOT legal to force them to use a certain lender or reject an already-accepted offer because the buyer will not use a certain lender. The buyer always has the final say in which lender they will use.