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Homes.com CEO Andy Florance has blasted the announcement by Zillow (NASDAQ: Z, ZG) that it would not list homes that are not listed on the MLS within 24 hours of public marketing.

In a letter to real estate agents, Florance called Zillow’s action “an incredible move of audacity and a pure power play of epic proportion” that usurps industry standards set by the National Association of Realtors (NAR) with an “anti-consumer and anti-agent” policy.

“Delayed IDX syndication is allowed under NAR rules,” said Florance. “But Zillow is asserting that they, not NAR, not your brokerage, not you the listing agent—and not even the homeowner whose house it is and is paying the commission—should decide how a listing is marketed. This isn’t about protecting consumers. It’s about protecting Zillow’s ability to profit from your listings by selling your leads to competing agents.”

Florance added, “Whether or not you support the Clear Cooperation Policy, it is never acceptable for a real estate portal to threaten agents this way. Real estate portals must remain neutral. Whether you’re a buyer’s agent, a listing agent, or both, we support all agents and believe you deserve better.  And we believe every real estate professional deserves to be treated with fairness and respect—never bullied by a tech platform looking to control an industry.”

Florance predicted consumers will ultimately force Zillow to reverse course.

“Even if just a few agents hold back from listing on Zillow, buyers will quickly follow suit—and stop searching there,” he said, encouraging real estate professionals to consider federal intervention in the matter. “If you feel that Zillow’s heavy-handed attempt to use their market power to force agents like you to list on Zillow within 24 hours is anticompetitive, you can let the DOJ know by clicking United States Department of Justice Antitrust Division.”

Homes.com is a division of CoStar Group (NASDAQ: CSGP).