Disclosing Material Facts and Defects

Imagine standing before a massive suspension bridge you are about to purchase. To the untrained eye, the cables gleam, the deck is swept clean, and the engineering appears flawless. Yet, deep within the primary load-bearing anchors, water intrusion has oxidized the steel to a perilous degree. In a perfectly transparent market, the price of this bridge instantly adjusts downward to reflect the cost of imminent, catastrophic failure. In reality, markets suffer from severe information asymmetry: the current owner knows the steel is failing, while the buyer sees only fresh paint. Real estate transactions are entirely predicated on correcting this asymmetry. The legal framework of disclosure exists not merely to protect consumers, but to ensure that the fundamental mechanics of market valuation function correctly. If buyers cannot trust the physical reality of the asset they are purchasing, the entire economic apparatus of real estate collapses.

Information asymmetry occurs when one party in a transaction possesses material knowledge that the other lacks, skewing the balance of power and market valuation.
Information asymmetry occurs when one party in a transaction possesses material knowledge that the other lacks, skewing the balance of power and market valuation.
Source: Information asymmetry by Belbury, CC BY 4.0.
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