Inman

Home warranties touted as marketing tool for listings

Screen shot from ahs.com showing detail of landing page for real estate agents.

American Home Shield is offering three new home warranty “real estate plans” that cover major home appliances and system components during and after a home sale that the company is marketing to sellers and listing agents.

Qualified sellers can buy the redesigned seller coverage package for up to six months while their home is on the market to avoid unexpected expenses, differentiate properties from other listings, and help take care of preclosing issues related to home inspections, the company said.

“Our research already shows that homes with an American Home Shield home warranty sell faster and at a higher price point than those without a home warranty,” said Laird Hamberlin, vice president of sales for American Home Shield, in a statement. “We believe our new real estate plans will be even more attractive to homebuyers, sellers and real estate professionals, and help us support responsible homeownership by delivering even greater value to our customers and the market as a whole.”

The real estate plans cover repairs and replacements for mismatched systems, undetectable pre-existing conditions, improper installations, lack of maintenance, and rust and corrosion.

Memphis, Tennessee-based American Home Shield relies heavily on real estate brokers and agents to generate new home warranty business.

In its most recent annual report to investors, parent company ServiceMaster said 18 percent of warranties written by American Home Shield last year were “derived from sales made in conjunction with existing-home resale transactions,” and 13 percent were direct-to-consumer sales. The rest were renewals of existing contracts.


American Home Shield promotional video pitching the benefits of its products to real estate agents.

In recent years, American Home Shield has settled two lawsuits alleging that the company paid illegal kickbacks to real estate brokers to market its home warranties. In a 2012 settlement, the company agreed pay up to $26 million to settle allegations that payments it made to real estate brokers violated the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA).

American Home Shield has admitted no wrongdoing in the settlements, and has been careful to protect real estate brokers and agents from liability. The company said that the 2012 settlement confirmed that its revised broker compensation practices, ProConnect, complied with RESPA.

American Home Shield’s operating revenue grew by 2.7 percent in 2013, to $740 million. Adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) were up 21 percent, to $171 million.

The company attributed most of the increase in adjusted earnings to “higher operating revenue, lower claims costs, including a favorable adjustment to reserves for prior year contract claims, and lower provisions for certain legal matters.”

In March, American Home Shield announced that it had obtained approval from regulators to acquire HSA Home Warranty, and would “leverage the power” of both brands to accelerate growth in strategic markets by “increasing awareness about the value that home warranties provide.”

Regional providers are American Home Shield’s biggest competition. At the national level, its largest competitor is First American Home Buyers Protection Corp., a subsidiary of title insurer First American Financial Corp.