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Friday, February 13, 2026

You Can Split Your Rent With 'Buy Now, Pay Later' Plans—But It Will Cost You

 

  • Leading buy now, pay later provider Affirm has launched a service that splits rent into installments.

  • While Affirm doesn’t charge interest, there is a monthly fee to facilitate the short-term loan.

  • Other firms are also offering rent-splitting services, but a new report shows that in many cases, they are more expensive than credit card fees.

Need some flexibility with your monthly rent payment? There are now options to spread your rent payments out over the month. But using a rent-now, pay-later service comes with some costs, which can balloon if renters have trouble repaying the loan.

Affirm, one of the biggest Buy Now, Pay Later (BNPL) providers, has launched a pilot program with rent reporting firm Esusu that lets people split their rent payment into two installments. There are several other firms providing similar rent now, pay later services.

However, finance charges can quickly add up on these plans, as with other BNPL options.

Beware of Monthly Service Fees

While the Affirm plan advertises that it doesn’t charge interest, it's not free to use. Consumers don't access the service directly through Affirm: Instead, it’s offered through a partnership with Esusu, a company that lets users count their rent payments toward their credit scores.

Why This Matters to the Economy

The growth of rent now, pay later services reflects how high housing costs have become unmanageable for many Americans. Turning rent into installment debt effectively raises the cost of housing, which can squeeze consumer budgets, increase household debt, and reduce spending elsewhere in the economy.

Only users of Esusu’s Plus and Premium services, which cost $35 and $50 a month, respectively, can access Affirm’s rent-splitting tools. Applicants are also subject to a credit check, meaning Affirm may deny the service even to paying Esusu subscribers. In addition, their landlords have to work with Esusu. Finally, renters must apply for the loan each month, and they can only do so for an upcoming rent payment—not for future months.

As Housing Costs Soar, These Services Are Booming

There are a number of rent now, pay later services, and many of them are more expensive than simply paying rent with a credit card.

BNPL lender Zip has partnered with the PayRent service to allow renters to split their payments into four installments over six weeks. Zip advertises an annual interest rate of 31.11%. There’s also an installment fee that can reach $7.50, a late payment fee of $7 and a $2 fee to move the payment date.

Livble, a similar service, works with a variety of property management apps to offer split-payment options, with monthly finance charges of $30 to $40.

A company called Flex also lets renters split their payments and advertises it will work with any landlord, though the renter may have to ask their landlord to sign up for the service. It costs $14.99 a month to use it, along with a 1% bill payment fee and potentially a $3 'property passthrough fee' from your landlord.

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/ap-top-extended-financial-headlines-050000938.html

Two Philadelphia Men Admit To AI-Assisted $3.5M Housing Aid Scam In Minnesota

 This will be the first of many AI scams of its kind, we predict...

Two men from Pennsylvania admitted to repeatedly flying from Philadelphia to Minneapolis to exploit Minnesota’s Housing Stabilization Services (HSS) program, stealing about $3.5 million, according to prosecutors. Authorities say they used artificial intelligence to forge records and falsely bill for services, according to Fox News.

Anthony Waddell Jefferson, 37, and Lester Brown, 53, registered businesses as HSS providers, claiming they offered housing support and transition services. In reality, officials say much of the work never happened.

Launched in 2020, HSS helps people with disabilities, seniors, and those struggling with mental health or addiction secure housing. The Justice Department has noted the program had “low barriers to entry and minimal records requirements.”

Attorney General Pam Bondi said, “Criminal fraud not only robs taxpayers — it shatters trust in our institutions… Our prosecutors will work tirelessly to unravel criminal fraud schemes.”

Fox News writes that prosecutors allege the pair billed Medicaid for services supposedly provided to about 230 clients. Both men pleaded guilty to wire fraud and face up to 20 years in prison.

Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche stated, “Minnesota will no longer be a haven for fraud under our watch,” adding that dozens of convictions have already been secured in the state.

Investigators say Jefferson and Brown promoted themselves as “The Housing Guys” at shelters and Section 8 housing sites to recruit clients. Jefferson allegedly hired relatives and associates to produce fake service notes, sometimes using invented employee names. Brown reportedly failed to keep required records. Authorities also say the men fabricated emails and used ChatGPT to generate false documentation.

Assistant Attorney General A. Tysen Duva said, “They traveled across the country for one purpose: to prey upon and steal millions in taxpayer dollars,” emphasizing that such schemes threaten federally funded programs nationwide.

https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/philly-pair-admit-35m-ai-housing-aid-scam-minnesota

Thursday, February 12, 2026

Real Estate Services Stocks Sink in Latest ‘AI Scare Trade’

 


Real estate services stocks sank on Wednesday as investors assessed the companies’ vulnerability to the newest crop of artificial intelligence applications and tools that threatens to disrupt several industries.

Shares of CBRE Group Inc. and Jones Lang LaSalle Inc. plunged 12%, and Cushman & Wakefield Ltd. dropped 14%. For CBRE and Cushman & Wakefield, the moves marked the biggest drop since 2020 in the midst of the Covid-driven market selloff.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-02-11/real-estate-services-stocks-latest-domino-in-ai-scare-trade

US Existing Home Sales Collapsed In January

 After managing a 1.4% YoY rise in 2025 (dramatically down from the 9.7% YoY rise in 2024, and 33% YoY collapse in 2023), US existing home sales were expected to drop 4.6% MoM in January (following December's outsized 5.1% MoM surge), despite a tumble in mortgage rates.

The analysts were correct on the direction but wrong on the scale as existing home sales plunged 8.4% MoM in January from a downwardly revised +4.4% MoM in December. That is the biggest MoM drop since February 2022...

Source: Bloomberg

While some suggested this could be impacted by the Winter Storms, this is based on contracts signed in November/December... and the biggest decline was in The West (which had zero weather impact)

Nevertheless, realtors gonna realtor:

“The below-normal temperatures and above-normal precipitation this January make it harder than usual to assess the underlying driver of the decrease and determine if this month’s numbers are an aberration,” NAR Chief Economist Lawrence Yun said in a statement.

That MoM plunge pulled the total SAAR down near 15 year lows...

Without an extended period of improved affordability, the recovery in the housing market is likely to be prolonged.

The NAR report showed the median selling price rose 0.9% from a year earlier to $396,800 last month.

First-time buyers represented 31% of buyers of existing homes in January, up slightly from 29% in the prior month and higher than a year ago.

The inventory of previously owned homes increased 3.4% in January from a year ago to 1.22 million.

A pickup in supply through 2025 has helped to tame price growth, though Yun said on a call with reporters that listings need to increase much more to help improve sales.

On the bright side, it appears mortgage applications are rebounding as the year started with lower rates...

Source: Bloomberg

Arguably, existing home sales have much further to go to the upside as the lagged mortgage rate has continued to decline... so what triggered this collapse?

Source: Bloomberg

Finally, circling back to where we started, NAR expects home sales to rise a stunning 14% this year, higher than most other forecasts but a figure that NAR Chief Economist Lawrence Yun said he feels “confident” in. That assumes more inventory will come on the market, mortgage rates will hover around 6% and the Fed will cut interest rates another two times, compared to policymakers’ median projection for one.

https://www.zerohedge.com/personal-finance/us-existing-home-sales-collapsed-january

Wednesday, February 11, 2026

Another illegal NYC encampment flourishes in the Bronx, with toilets emptied into the streets

 It’s a stretch of the Big Apple where laws don’t seem to exist.

Squatters living in more than a dozen trailers and RVs — and even a decommissioned ambulance — have turned a Bronx street into a filthy nightmare, with illegal generators and propane tanks lining the sidewalk and waste from chemical toilets dumped right into the street.

The unsightly scene has been an open secret for two years, according to locals.

More than a dozen RVs and campers line Bronx Boulevard in yet another illegal encampment.James Keivom
RVs at the Bronx encampment have generators and propane tanks in plain sight.James Keivom

“They pump s–t out into the streets and then they don’t move, so the street sweepers can’t even clean them up,” a lifelong Bronx resident, who asked not to be publicly identified, told The Post Wednesday. “It smells like a chemical toilet and it gets worse in the summer.

“I understand people need a place to live, but this is only getting worse,” he said.

On Tuesday, The Post revealed another illegal encampment in the shadow of Citi Field in Queens, where dozens of families were living in trailers and motorhomes.

The squatters there appeared to be running black market car service shops, by tapping into city electricity from utility poles and water from fire hydrants.

“We gave up calling the police,” local business owner Luke Huwang said. “The police don’t touch them.”

Over at the Bronx encampment, 15 trailers and RVs lined Bronx Boulevard between Duncombe Avenue and East 211th Street, some of them equipped with security cameras and nearly all with solar panels and digital antennas.

The stretch of Bronx Boulevard is lined with transients living in trailers and RVs.James Keivom

The entire stretch of roadway was marked as a no standing zone.

Jugs of gasoline and propane tanks sat outside many of the trailers, and several had generators running juice into the vehicles or nearby cars, several with out of state license plates or no plates at all.

An old ambulance sat on jack stands, with a running generator outside, near two small cars and a Chevy SUV all with New Hampshire license places — with several people inside going silent and shutting off the generator when The Post knocked to speak to them.

One man who emerged from an RV was asked if police ever came by.

“No, they don’t bother us,” he said. “We keep the place clean. There ain’t no reason to bother us. I’ve been to all 48 states for work and this is nothing.”

A decommissioned ambulance on Bronx Boulevard has transients living inside.James Keivom
One of the transient homes on Bronx Boulevard in the Bronx on Wednesday.James Keivom

A nearby gas station appeared to supply the gritty encampment, selling everything from camping equipment to knives and brass knuckles for the RV squatters.

Two blocks away, an old school bus parked on Gun Hill Road took the lawlessness one step further.

The small bus was painted with marijuana leaves and a large sign that reads, “the Green Empress” — and had a walk-up window where patrons knock when they want to buy weed.

A man inside called the cost of a $10 joint “a donation.”

https://nypost.com/2026/02/11/us-news/another-illegal-nyc-encampment-flourishes-in-the-bronx-with-toilets-emptied-into-the-streets/