Josh Tesolin, the former star Ray White real estate agent who banked more than $9 million in commissions last financial year, has been slapped with a decade-long ban from the industry.
The penalty, which also include fines totalling $33,000, is one of the harshest imposed by the industry regulator in recent years. It comes on the back of a three-year investigation that unearthed findings that he engaged in sustained unlawful, improper and dishonest conduct on more than 100 property transactions.
Ray White initially stood by its star agent, but a few weeks later announced the mutual termination of its franchise agreement with Tesolin and his Quakers Hill office in Sydney’s north-west.
The next day Tesolin relaunched his real estate business under the NGU banner, which is part of the Brisbane-based NGU agency run by his friend and now business associate Emil Juresic.
Josh Tesolin has been suspended from the real estate industry for 10 years. CREDIT: SAM MOOY
Fair Trading has not only banned Tesolin from the industry until 2036, but also disqualified his private real estate company, Tesolin Consulting Pty Ltd, from operating in the industry for 10 years. Tesolin was also fined $11,000, and the consulting company issued a $22,000 punishment.
The bans are to take immediate effect, although Tesolin and Tesolin Consulting have the right to seek a review of the disciplinary decisions.
“Real estate agents are trusted with some of the most significant financial decisions and transactions people make,” Fair Trading Minister Anoulack Chanthivong said.
“When an agent deliberately misleads consumers, falsifies records and undermines regulatory oversight, we must take strong action – and that’s exactly what NSW Fair Trading has done.
“This outcome sends a clear signal to others contemplating similar conduct: that it will not be tolerated, and you will be caught.”
There was no response from Tesolin ahead of publication, but he has previously rejected suggestions that he has breached any of the relevant property laws.
Tesolin publicly responded to the controversy in a podcast last week with his preferred auctioneer Adrian Bo, saying, “I very much look at it glass half full. I’ve got a beautiful family. I’ve got lots of money, lots of good friends. I’ve got a great legal team as well.
Nine months ago, Josh Tesolin was Sydney’s top-earning real estate agent. CREDIT: NICK MOIR
“I don’t feel hatred. Even journalists that write erroneous articles … I feel bad for them … they need Jesus.”
Tesolin was initially suspended by Fair Trading last August amid allegations of dummy bidding, underquoting, high-pressure sales tactics and producing false documents to Fair Trading.
Since then, Tesolin has already pivoted his real estate career ambitions, launching a coaching business called Peak Mentoring aimed at training a new generation of agents in his tricks of the trade.
His Bentley Bentayga was sold last year after being advertised for $260,000, and the family home in Bella Vista has been rented. Two of Tesolin’s 11 investment properties have been sold.
Fair Trading’s disciplinary action on Tesolin comes following an investigation by The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age, Bidding Blind, into what has been revealed to be industrial-scale underquoting across Sydney and Melbourne’s auction markets.
As part of the 18-month investigation, data showed that almost half of all property sales at auction in Sydney sold above the guide by more than 10 per cent, leaving buyers wasting time and money chasing properties they could not afford.
The state government last month introduced new rules that would penalise agents with three times their sales commission for offering misleading price guides, and mandate price guides on all advertising and a statement of information offered to buyers.