For years, technology companies played
at the edges of the real estate industry. Listing sites like Zillow
improved the process of searching for a house while numerous commercial
databases shed light on sales of office and apartment buildings. The
actual transaction, however, remained largely unchanged.
Recently, a new crop of well-funded startups, including the seven on the latest Forbes Fintech 50,
have been finding novel ways to get at the heart of things. From an
AI-enabled title company to a landlord that wants to help its tenants
become owners, these companies are using software to rethink the
experience of buying, selling and owning property.Reach is still limited, and the day of one-click home purchases may never come, but there’s now hope for a faster, more accessible and (maybe) less expensive home-buying experience.
—
Better.com
Headquarters: New YorkBona fides: Revenue increased fivefold in 2019 to $115 million, thanks in part to a refi boom
Founder and CEO: Vishal Garg, 41, who previously started MyRichUncle, an early online lender that shut down in 2009.
Cadre
Headquarters: New YorkBy raising money online and using advanced data analysis to source deals, Cadre has undercut the typical fees—and aggravation—that institutional and high-net-worth investors face when buying into commercial real estate partnerships. With the launch of a secondary market in 2018, it’s trying to make reselling property interests simpler, too.
Funding: $133 million from Andreessen Horowitz, Ford Foundation, Goldman Sachs and others. Latest valuation: $800 million
Bona fides: Has financed purchases of $3.1 billion worth of property from New York to San Diego in 36 deals, including $1 billion in the last year.
Cofounders: CEO Ryan Williams, 31, who started buying distressed properties around Atlanta in 2009 when he was still an undergrad at Harvard; Jared Kushner; and Joshua Kushner.
Divvy Homes
Headquarters: San FranciscoA digital take on the old rent-to-own model, Divvy buys homes that clients select and then becomes their landlord. A 2% upfront fee and a portion of monthly rent can be converted into a down payment if the tenant wants to buy later. It is currently available in six markets, including Atlanta, Cleveland and Dallas.
Funding: $66 million from GIC, Andreessen Horowitz, Caffeinated Capital and others
Latest valuation: $163 million, according to PitchBook
Bona fides: Bought 900 homes last year, and is now receiving 10,000 applications a month.
Cofounders: CEO Adena Hefets, 33, whose parents had to purchase a home with seller financing because they couldn’t qualify for a mortgage; CPO Brian Ma, 34; CTO Nick Clark, 37; senior software engineer Alex Klarfeld, 29, who made this year’s Forbes 30 Under 30 list.
Opendoor
Headquarters: San FranciscoHome sellers in 21 cities can request all-cash offers from Opendoor online, receive bids in 24 hours and close in as little as two weeks. An app launched last year enables buyers to schedule self-guided tours and make offers on any home for sale in six cities, including Dallas and Phoenix.
Funding: $1.3 billion from Khosla Ventures, SoftBank, General Atlantic and others. Latest valuation: $3.8 billion
Bona fides: Purchased 19,000 homes in 2019.
Cofounders: CEO Eric Wu, 37, who used scholarship money to buy his first rental property as a sophomore at the University of Arizona; CTO Ian Wong, 33; board member Keith Rabois, 50; J.D. Ross, 29.
Roofstock
Headquarters: Oakland, CaliforniaRoofstock is a digital marketplace that allows investors to purchase single-family rental properties in 25 states, often with tenants already in place. Roofstock One, launched in 2019, sells stakes in professionally managed homes for as little as $5,000 a share.
Funding: $133 million from Bain Capital Ventures, Lightspeed Venture Partners, SVB Capital and others. Latest valuation: $550 million
Bona fides: Investors have bought more than $2 billion worth of real estate on Roofstock.
Cofounders: CEO Gary Beasley, 54, who used to run Starwood Waypoint, one of the largest owners of single-family rental homes; chief development officer Rich Ford, 52; chairman Gregor Watson, 39.
States Title
Headquarters: San FranciscoTitle searches have traditionally held up the real estate closing process. But using online ownership data and predictive analytics, States Title can clear 80% of homes for insurance in less than a minute, instead of days, allowing for faster—and potentially cheaper—closings.
Funding: $107 million from Lennar, Fifth Wall, Foundation Capital and others
Bona fides: Revenue went from almost nothing in 2018 to $185 million last year, after it took over part of homebuilder Lennar’s title business.
Cofounder and CEO: Max Simkoff, 38, who started an HR analytics company at 25 and sold it for $42 million at 33.
Unison
Headquarters: San FranciscoFrom its online platform, Unison offers home buyers and owners in 30 states and Washington, D.C., the option of selling some of the future appreciation in their houses. In exchange for 10% of a home’s purchase price (which is used as a partial down payment), Unison and its institutional investors take 33% of the appreciation when the house is sold.
Funding: $40 million from Citi Ventures, F-Prime Capital Partners, The Royal Bank of Canada and others
Bona fides: Unison has purchased stakes in $4.4 billion worth of housing and is the leader in the fledgling “co-investing” market.
Founder and CEO: Thomas Sponholtz, 53, who managed a $28 billion residential mortgage portfolio at Barclays Global Investors.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/samanthasharf/2020/02/12/the-future-of-real-estate-fintech-50-2020/#284126fe5e6a
No comments:
Post a Comment