You bet.
Why do broke Dairy Queens charge extra for napkins? It’s because they’re broke. Whatever bullshit they tell you – they’re broke.
To accept DelPrete’s argument, you would have to insist that iBuyers are optimizing a marketing cost – to their long-term disadvantage – before they optimize their resale pricing. Hundreds of iBuyer employees have read me on their pricing errors, but they have learned nothing. They are now convinced they have gotten good enough to cheat their marketing partners, when they have not yet even been tested by the market.
Here’s the truth: The iBuyers are financial disasters in the best real estate market ever known to man: Suburbia after the riots. They are temporarily able to divest their inventory, but this is caused by the buyer frenzy, not by any new marketing skills acquired by the iBuyers. They suck at resale marketing, as will become obvious, yet again, when the market turns.
The iBuyers are inept at real estate investing and marketing. That’s why they have to cheat buyer’s agents. Stealing from the defenseless is all they’ve got…
Ryan says:
Here in Atlanta, Opendoor currently has 50 active listings and 56 more under contract. A cursory check of their listings shows anywhere from 1.5% to 2.75% commission paid to the Selling Broker. The last time I check this, about 30 days ago, every one of their listings was paying 1.5%.
If you look through the tax records of their listings and what they paid and then look to see how they “updated” them, it would be impossible for them to turn a profit. Even with reduced commissions and even with only modest updates before reselling.
When prices drop or even flatten (eventually they will), they will not be able to iBuy. At best, they will further split the FSBO/MLS only market with the others who play that game.
October 25, 2020 — 5:25 am
Greg Swann says:
Underpants Gnomes. It all makes perfect sense, except for Step 2.
I’m writing later today about a particular OpenDoor listing, to illuminate why they do so poorly.
October 25, 2020 — 6:35 am