Become a fan of Slashdot on Facebook

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Businesses

Zillow Seeks to Sell 7,000 Homes for $2.8 Billion After High-Tech Home-Flipping Business Fails (bloomberg.com) 144

Zillow is looking to sell about 7,000 homes as it seeks to recover from a fumble in its high-tech home-flipping business. Bloomberg reports: The company is seeking roughly $2.8 billion for the houses, which are being pitched to institutional investors, according to people familiar with the matter. Zillow will likely sell the properties to a multitude of buyers rather than packaging them in a single transaction, said the people, who asked not to be named because the matter is private. The move to offload homes comes as Zillow seeks to recover from an operational stumble that saw it buy too many houses, with many now being listed for less than it paid. The company typically offers smaller numbers of homes to single-family landlords, but the current sales effort is much larger than normal. If successful, the sale would make a dramatic dent in Zillow's inventory. The company acquired roughly 8,000 homes in the third quarter, according to an estimate by real estate tech strategist Mike DelPrete.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Zillow Seeks to Sell 7,000 Homes for $2.8 Billion After High-Tech Home-Flipping Business Fails

Comments Filter:
  • Houses (Score:5, Informative)

    by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Tuesday November 02, 2021 @09:04PM (#61952963) Journal

    Houses should be for living, not for investing.

    • by khchung ( 462899 )

      Houses should be for living, not for investing.

      Are you a commie? /s

      Seriously though, under capitalism, everything short of your own body (and sometimes even your body) has a price tag on it. Everything that has a price tag and can be traded, is an opportunity for investment.

      "Should" have no place in a capitalist & rule of law system, you either call your lawmakers to ban trading houses, or you suck it up.

      For example, in many other countries, health care is also not for investing, and they have laws to make it so. Saying something "should" not be d

      • Seriously though, under capitalism, everything short of your own body (and sometimes even your body) has a price tag on it. Everything that has a price tag and can be traded, is an opportunity for investment.

        Especially your body. That's why you're renting it out to your employer for 8 hours a day.

      • Saying something "should" not be done without putting the law in place is just virtue signalling.

        Sounds like you think no one except a small handful politicians are allowed opinions.

    • I'm not arrogant enough to think I can pull sound economic policy out of my ass so I wont attempt to describe an implementation that someone will almost immediately find a problem with. Instead I'll just say this, houses shouldn't be the play things of speculators or investment firms. In a perfect world they would be bought and sold purely by private individuals for the purpose of residency. We are already past the ability for most people to be able to afford one out right so we include banks in the process

      • by spitzak ( 4019 )

        A vacancy tax may work for what you want.

      • by q_e_t ( 5104099 )

        I'm not arrogant enough to think I can pull sound economic policy out of my ass

        I see you don't aspire to be a politician or economist.

    • Houses should be for living, not for investing.

      You know, I HATE the "new homes built" metric. Until this year (from the 2008), a lot of areas still had 'hidden liquidity' where people basically put off plans to move because their homes were cheaper to live in than where they were going to move to. I mean real people. People who didn't do anything crazy but had a good amount of equity in their homes that they lived in for years and then in a matter of a month, they couldn't move after retirement. That was the case in my area.

      Everyone has seen the 'bu

    • You go ahead and start a house building company on that basis, let me know how that goes.

      (shrug)
      People with utopian ideals are amusing as long as they understand their comments are pragmatically valueless.

      • Well, in the area I live in, the local small-scale housing contractors that build excellent houses would do just fine since they build on-demand and don't hold inventory, and the big corporate housing contractors that build 50 identical crappy homes adjacent to each other that build in the hopes of selling would (eventually) fail. I'm not seeing a problem here.

        What I'm really confused by is why this is even a problem in some areas. The state I live in bases property taxes on whether the home is homesteade

  • Winner take all. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Ostracus ( 1354233 ) on Tuesday November 02, 2021 @09:05PM (#61952971) Journal

    The move to offload homes comes as Zillow seeks to recover from an operational stumble that saw it buy too many houses, with many now being listed for less than it paid.

    And in the process made it harder for others to get an affordable home.

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      Funnily in this case they appear to be selling some for a lower price than they paid...people could literally buy back their house for less than they sold it for.

      But I agree their business practice in general suck.

    • Harder?? Lower price means easier.
    • Controversial real estate owner Blackstone uses common trick to avoid Dutch taxes: Report [nltimes.nl] American investment house Blackstone, which has built up a Dutch housing portfolio valued at €793m since 2019, pays no tax on its real estate in the Netherlands, the Volkskrant reported.

      A related article in Dutch [at5.nl]

      The Netherlands is already on of the most densely populated countries in the world and about a month ago, about 15,000 came to Amsterdam to protest the housing shortage in September. [at5.nl]

    • by Altus ( 1034 )

      they are dumping property on the market right now at a loss, thats libel to lower home prices in the areas they bought into heavily.

  • by Hans Lehmann ( 571625 ) on Tuesday November 02, 2021 @09:56PM (#61952988)
    Just another step toward the time when no family owns their home, but just spends their entire life renting a home that's owned by a corporate real estate investment firm, for the sake of the stockholders.
    • by dohzer ( 867770 )

      'Family'? Aren't we all going to live alone?

      • VR is your friend.

      • Wait until they cut your weekly proti-cake ration by 12% and the cost to rent your e-pod apartment goes from $35,000 per week to $40,000. At least you'll have your e-girlfriend pillow to come home to!

    • Have you tried being born earlier? Also, don't be poor. Can't be a problem with capitalism, it's flawless, just flawless I tell ya!

      • I'd say capitalism did its job here. Zillow got greedy, they thought they could dominate the house-flipping market, they got burned. That's what capitalism does--it has a way of correcting excessive behavior.

        • That's what capitalism does--it has a way of correcting excessive behavior.

          Except when it comes to Goldman Sachs, J.P. Morgan, Wells Fargo, et al, and then capitalism is an evil word and must be replaced with socialist policies to protect the capitalists.
    • Zillow had no plans to rent that stuff out... Too much trouble to manage.

      They're into finance (shuffling paper), not actually DOING anything.

    • I don't follow your logic. Zillow was buying houses, fixing them up, and selling them to families or anyone who wanted them. How is that a step towards no one owning a home?

      • by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Wednesday November 03, 2021 @07:55AM (#61953835)

        By charging more than the average family can pay. Why do you think they can't sell those homes?

        • How is that Zillow's fault? They can't charge more than what people can pay. Home price is a function of supply and demand. If demand is low, even Zillow can't charge more than the market will bear. If supply is high, regular people also can and do charge more, not just Zillow.

          • Well, apparently they can charge more than what people can pay.

            The problem is, when nobody can pay, what happens is exactly what we see now.

            • Yes, I know, I'm in the mortgage business. What we see now is RECORD home sales--double the volume of 2019--and my company doesn't sell to businesses, only to individuals. Apparently people CAN afford to own homes.

  • by zamboni1138 ( 308944 ) on Tuesday November 02, 2021 @10:04PM (#61952998)

    My Visa is 4681 9037 8801 5327
    Exp 07/22
    Code is 982

    Wait, can I split between two? Just had a couple Patreon's hit.

  • is bid a couple hundred bucks on these properties, and drop out at about 100k.

  • by clambake ( 37702 ) on Tuesday November 02, 2021 @10:18PM (#61953018) Homepage

    so... can they please just relist it for the fucking original price? I still want it, and I don't care who I buy it from.

  • Serves them right (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Rick Schumann ( 4662797 ) on Tuesday November 02, 2021 @10:43PM (#61953062) Journal
    Hope they do in fact lose money on all that, maybe it'll teach them a lesson.
    • What they did was load up on inventory.

      They need to shed that now... Too much "not liquid" assets and they're now afraid the market will tank and leave them holding it.

      But, they're unlikely to lose money... Just won't be able to "mint it".

  • by bferrell ( 253291 ) on Wednesday November 03, 2021 @12:15AM (#61953229) Homepage Journal

    Buying a distressed property... Foreclosure, tax sale etc.

    What Zillow was doing was buying perfectly feasible properties to facilitate people who could buy something else to do so quickly... It's a BIG deal to be able to simply buy something new to you without the hassle of assuring you've sold what you already have.

    That later part often sinks the buy of the new property... Which is why Zillow got into it.

    It stopped the sales from blocking the buys people wanted to do, that Zillow, as real estate agent, would get paid for.

    • something tells me they were mostly getting distressed properties since they had their "AI" price them instead having human who has lived in a house look at them
      • Distressed properties would make this scheme riskier because they're more likely to have deferred maintenance. More likely they just aimed to underpay a bit. So the seller is paying a "convenience fee" to make the deal faster/easier, and the company makes a profit as long as their lowball estimate isn't catastrophically wrong. With thousands of properties, any overestimated prices should be balanced out by underestimated ones and the company makes a profit on average. This is the theory anyway, but it doesn

      • Zillow wasn't in the business of just "buying stuff on the market".
        Most people who own a house and want to buy something different have to not just sell the house they're in, it have to be coordinated like a ballet... Miss a step, and everybody falls. They were buying properties from people who needed to sell to make their next buy go through... Generally, buyers who were using Zillow as a buyers agent. If the buyer couldn't sell the house they were in Zillow would lose the commission for the purchase wer

    • I think what they were actually doing is buy 9 houses in a neighborhood for market price, then buy 1 for an inflated price. People see the inflated house, they think the neighborhood has become more expensive, now Zillow can sell the 9 houses for a higher price. The idea is that the profits from the 9 houses outweigh the losses from the 1 house. In short, speculation and market manipulation.

      • OK... citation pretty please, with sugar on top?
        What is known, is what I cited.
        What you put out is RAW waste... Take it to the water treatment plant.

        • Here's the claim. [yahoo.com] I don't know for a fact that it's correct, but it does explain their otherwise strange behavior. Zillow denies it, but of course they would deny even if they did it.

  • Is there anything at all positive about Zillow's business model? Ie something to distinguish it from the ticket scalpers or the PS5 sellers on eBay? Why do we permit this crap? It is overwhelmingly a negative for the economy - less productive money in the economy, less labour mobility, generational inequality etc etc
    • by jabuzz ( 182671 )

      I thought the Zillow business model was to purchase a property in need of lets say "upgrading", do the "upgrading" and then sell on for a profit. That is Zillow actually do actual real work which distinguishes them from a ticket scalper or PS5 sellers on eBay. To my mind at least that is a perfectly legitimate business model. At lot of people are willing to pay someone else to do all that work so they can walk into a property that requires minimal to no work done on it. That is Zillow are attempting to add

      • They are also distinguished (somewhat) by virtue of the service they provide to the seller. They bought at below market but were able to provide quick, guaranteed, cash closing. There's value in that to a subset of sellers.

        The upgrade schtick was a bit of a misdirect for marketing purposes. Sure, they'd do some basic repairs or slap on a coat of paint, but they were hardly 'flipping' in the traditional sense. This is more like ticket reseller market that joins people who want to sell tickets they procured
      • They probably projected that the labor shortage and supply chain gridlock crisis would be over by now. Or at least would be showing tangible signs of progress toward being resolved eventually.

        So in a way, this is a bad omen. How many other potentially useful projects are being abandoned these days, as people who usually get things done just give up on trying to get things done?

  • Until it is illegal, or more just as ideally, dangerous. How come we never hear about CEOs or Bankers washing ashore sans heads, mysteriously disappearing, or being brutally murdered in front of their families? Some of these characters MUST have pissed off the wrong guy at one point...

  • by FeelGood314 ( 2516288 ) on Wednesday November 03, 2021 @09:36AM (#61954089)
    You have been sold a lie. Houses can't be a good investment and be affordable. They can't continuously appreciate in value faster than inflation without becoming a huge burden on the next generation. For the majority of Americans and over 60% of Canadians their house is their largest single asset. In a sane world we would build houses at the same rate in an area as we create jobs and opportunities in that area. All things being equal, house values should drop as the house wears out. Most people should choose to rent as it gives them more mobility to pursue opportunities and also because most non-slashdot people have no idea how to maintain a house.

    Instead we have a majority who will do anything to not only maintain the value of their homes but to insure prices continue to go up. The next generation will be able to buy a house, just the fraction of their income going to mortgage payments will go up and the length of those mortgages will get longer.

    Zillow isn't the problem. They make their money by adding liquidity and transparency to the market. Real-estate agents are leaches, charging 5% of the value of the house. But the real problem with house prices is your neighbour who will always vote to keep houses scarce, to prevent new houses or increasing the number of people who can live in a given house and to keep his investment increasing in value.
  • by Turkinolith ( 7180598 ) on Wednesday November 03, 2021 @09:46AM (#61954115)
    Not only did they outbid people trying to buy homes for themselves, but now their selling them in batches to investors. Further ensuring that people who want to actually own the homes as their own will never do so and further cement the consolidation of property into the investment sphere.
  • One thing that Zillow is fixing is the real-estate realtor monopoly that causes most people to lose 6% on every real-estate transaction, often for no good reason. My house is now worth around $1,000,000 due to the crazy market around here doubling the price. That's $60,000 to the real estate agents if I decide to sell the house. That's a shit load of money. I mean, sell six houses each year and you're in the top 10% of income earners. And, no, it doesn't take a bunch of money to "market" my house. Put

    • Not that I'm defending real-estate agents, but 6% commission to your real-estate agent is typically 1.5% to list it on MLS and then they split the remainder with the purchasing agent, then you deduct business costs (advertising, office space, any additional part-time employees), self-employment taxes, franchise fees to the real-estate company, etc. My guess is that if they sell 10 $1,000,000 homes they're doing ok, but they aren't taking in $600,000/year; it's more like $225,000 minus all of the above.
    • Depends on the realtor I suppose. When we hired one she helped us get our house sold very quickly, had an offer that worked out within 12 hours. She brought a lot of experience and knowledge regarding what buyers in the proper price range would be looking for. Specifically what things would a buyer expect to be in great working order and what would be acceptable to leave for them to fix up on their own. There was a lot of stuff like that where her expertise saved us a lot of money and time. Before we talked

One person's error is another person's data.

Working...