Been seeing a lot about Zillow lately...

Nov 8, 2021 1:57 AM

Poestis

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2836

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42

Saw this on the walk home from a free concert celebrating my city's anniversary.

Shame on them. Inflation from stupidity while ripping the hopes and dreams away from probably first time home buyers.

I'm starting to think that the rich are scumbags.

4 years ago | Likes 29 Dislikes 5

God damn pieces of shit.

4 years ago | Likes 44 Dislikes 6

A robot? Is this AI trying to kill us?

4 years ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 0

I didn't know you could rent corpses this is awesome!

4 years ago | Likes 25 Dislikes 0

1st photo has r/wallstreetbets all over it

4 years ago | Likes 4 Dislikes 1

Businesses need to be barred from buying any residential property period. Commercial only.

4 years ago | Likes 10 Dislikes 1

Hey, I've seen this one before.

4 years ago | Likes 10 Dislikes 0

What do you mean? It's a new episode!

4 years ago | Likes 10 Dislikes 0

And again the workforce to fix the problems the feds can’t deal with because another party pays their silence

4 years ago | Likes 4 Dislikes 1

It almost sounds like a federal investigation…

4 years ago | Likes 11 Dislikes 1

Corporations should not be allowed to own residential property.

4 years ago | Likes 16 Dislikes 1

or should be taxed exponentially higher than primary residences

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 0

But they're people too

4 years ago | Likes 4 Dislikes 1

This is literally what is happening with my wife and I. Prices have gone up by Abt. 80-100k in 1 years time and we are being priced out.

4 years ago | Likes 18 Dislikes 0

Free market Bitches and Bastards! We do what we want. We are corporations. You did not stop us before, you can't stop us now!

4 years ago | Likes 5 Dislikes 2

How does a bot buy a home?

4 years ago | Likes 3 Dislikes 0

Sees listing or a house that is in an area it decides is going up in value, tells a human to make a offer of $x

4 years ago | Likes 3 Dislikes 0

I’ve resigned myself to living in a rental my entire life. Its all just downhill

4 years ago | Likes 4 Dislikes 0

If it's all downhill then start looking for a van - those are hard to find because they're needed for Amazon deliveries, and cheap housing.

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 0

I’ll just steal one from work.. which also happens to be Amazon

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 0

There you go! It's the American way.

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 0

Problem is zillow hired newbs to buy homes. Not a robot. Buying up everything they can. Now they are stuck with homes they can't

4 years ago | Likes 3 Dislikes 0

Remodel and flip in time which the new hires paid market price for. To offset increasing losses, the houses are being wholesale off.

4 years ago | Likes 3 Dislikes 0

Most things comes down to straight incompetence. This is one of them.

4 years ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 0

Its like we’re just going to have new housing crashes in every generation that always spur laws that are retroactive but not future oriented

4 years ago | Likes 3 Dislikes 0

Is anybody checking to see if this entire thing was orchestrated by Blackrock? It is what they do.

4 years ago | Likes 6 Dislikes 1

I am one of those First timers. Family makes less than $100k a year, we’re priced out of northwestern Washington state

4 years ago | Likes 5 Dislikes 0

Oh man, I’m from WA and we have been wanting to move back there, but watching housing for the last several years has been so discouraging

4 years ago | Likes 3 Dislikes 0

Stay away. 2 bedroom 800sqf houses are going for $350 to $400k.

4 years ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 0

I hate to say it, but I live in a really expensive city and my first reaction was “oh, that’s not as bad as I thought.” And I hate that.

4 years ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 0

it's not just zillow.. a lot of companies will buy houses outright with cash and sell for higher.. I know someone who sold theirs to a

4 years ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 0

company knowing they'd get the money with no hoops

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 0

house next to ours sold for $160,000 above value- across the street: $60,000 above asking. Had nothing to do with Zillow though. Just sayin'

4 years ago | Likes 21 Dislikes 0

That’s because Zillow is inflating housing costs. The natural result is that if THEY are getting more for their houses, YOU can too. 1/

4 years ago | Likes 13 Dislikes 1

Normally, markets are not too conserved with the actions of singular companies, but once you get large enough and close enough to monopoly 2

4 years ago | Likes 5 Dislikes 0

Power, you can start moving the market. In this case though, they’re more likely an oligopoly with few other major competitors.

4 years ago | Likes 5 Dislikes 0

Stimulus checks. large families received tens of thousands of dollars = down payment + super low interest rates = skyrocketing demand.

4 years ago | Likes 3 Dislikes 0

Published by Statista Research Department, May 4, 2021 In 2020, there were 6.5 million homes sold in the U.S. and this figure was 1/

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 1

projected to increase to 7.1 million by 2021.... Zillow bought and sold around 12,000 homes in the past year. That comes out to 0.18%... 2/

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 1

Z controls 1/10 of a percent of the market. they are not inflating the market. Stop spreading unsubstantiated propaganda.

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 1

Thank you. People here hate facts.

4 years ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 1

Thank god they didn't buy GME or there would be a fucking congressional investigation.

4 years ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 0

Zillow takes The fall, property management companies take the benefit , turns out property management companies owned Zillow all along.

4 years ago | Likes 30 Dislikes 1

Zillow has their own property management service. This comment makes no sense.

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 0

"Take off his mask Shaggy - let's see who was behind all of this!"

4 years ago | Likes 5 Dislikes 0

Just in time to put a bunch of half-fixed, shitty houses on the rental market for Section 8 vouchers.

4 years ago | Likes 29 Dislikes 3

Section 8 has an inspection process

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 0

Sold my house for crap money, new owners didn't replace the roof that was supposed to be so critically bad. It's a Sec. 8 rental now.

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 0

It’s easy to find fault with the government, but Sec 8 has minimum standards and while imperfect, it’s better than no standards

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 0

I'm not finding fault with the government. I'm finding fault with house flippers who decimate established neighborhoods by creating 1/

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 0

revolving-door rentals that do nothing to enhance existing neighborhoods, and taking housing stock away from 2/

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 0

Our corporate overlords got bored with $2200 a month tiny 1 bedroom apartments and now want $3600 for tiny 2 bedroom houses.

4 years ago | Likes 114 Dislikes 8

Yupp, and forcing cities to ban short term rentals outright.

4 years ago | Likes 126 Dislikes 7

Fuck that, just regulate out the shit ppl. I travel plenty for work, why shouldn't I be able to rent out my place while I'm away?

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 0

Honest question, why are short term rentals a bad thing?

4 years ago | Likes 8 Dislikes 0

It wasn’t a problem when individuals were doing it, it is now that corporations are making massive purchases and destroying communities.

4 years ago | Likes 4 Dislikes 1

Also, people often act like assholes in short term rentals, and that creates a lot of problems for people who live there.

4 years ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 0

Unlicensed hotels run through AirBnB are 1) hurting lots of people, the licensing and regulation exists for a reason. and 2) drives up rents

4 years ago | Likes 22 Dislikes 1

If you live in a neighborhood, especially one with a lot of kids, it changes the character of the community — a constant flow of randos

4 years ago | Likes 4 Dislikes 0

It means the houses in town aren't actually being lived in, so the rent/prices go up, the locals are displaced and forced to move away.

4 years ago | Likes 3 Dislikes 0

I don’t think they are, the issue is that rental companies are buying up huge amounts of some towns, one bigger issue is that there is-

4 years ago | Likes 9 Dislikes 2

They're terrible for tourist communities. There's nowhere to rent. Why rent longterm to locals when you can make a month's rent in just >

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 0

a few days renting to tourists? Drives monthly rent up waaay high for anybody left that's actuality renting long term to locals, too.

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 0

Can be, on the other hand, I used to live on a street with one other neighbor because they were all second houses.

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 0

-an off season usually, then the local businesses just die.

4 years ago | Likes 5 Dislikes 0

I like to mention whenever this comes up how I had two clients in a week who had been approached by Zillow, asked how much they want, and >

4 years ago | Likes 8 Dislikes 1

> offered $100K over that. They're destroying the housing market.

4 years ago | Likes 8 Dislikes 2

*helping. the markets being fucked by other things too. and quite a few of them equally unnatural to said market as the zillow shit

4 years ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 4

Yeah, fair, but they're all borne from the same screwjob of rich ppl taking advantage of desperate ppl, shorting in the crash, buying high >

4 years ago | Likes 4 Dislikes 0

< now to skew comps in certain neighborhoods ... There are myriad causes, but Zillow is pretty bad.

4 years ago | Likes 3 Dislikes 0

Lol Zillows incompetence cost them $422M in losses and 50% drop in stock price. They're not the evil geniuses you think they are.

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 2

Who called them geniuses? You don't be have to be a genius to fuck something up. Their incompetence has had consequential impacts.>

4 years ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 0

It's a free market. It will correct itself. As it's doing now.

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 4

< I gather you really don't understand the impact of Zillow on the market at large, regardless to their share in it. Whether it be >

4 years ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 0

< the Zestimate, the poaching of Realtors from other brokerages, inflating the market in certain neighborhoods, shifting owner occupied >

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 0

it's okay because that's capitalism. thank god the government doesn't regulate the market to protect people from these things!

4 years ago | Likes 359 Dislikes 22

The government/ politicians somehow get their slice of the corrupt pie. So I’m sure no legislation is forthcoming any time soon.

4 years ago | Likes 11 Dislikes 2

What are you, some type of Commie Antifa???

4 years ago | Likes 57 Dislikes 4

I think (hope) they're being facetious.

4 years ago | Likes 10 Dislikes 6

Your mom is being facetious

4 years ago | Likes 3 Dislikes 0

They are, as was the first response

4 years ago | Likes 10 Dislikes 0

what? fascism?! IN MY COMMENTS?!

4 years ago | Likes 5 Dislikes 0

How does that work? Buy at a high price, sell at a low price?

4 years ago | Likes 15 Dislikes 1

They'll make it up in volume!

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 0

Zillow lost money on the houses. The capture of the housing supply is the issue here since the capital companies can play the long game

4 years ago | Likes 14 Dislikes 0

Except Z obviously can not play the long game, bc they failed and are ended this part of their business.

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 0

use smaller words pls

4 years ago | Likes 5 Dislikes 0

heartless rich people lose money short term to buy all the houses to gain money long term renting them to desperate people

4 years ago | Likes 5 Dislikes 0

4 years ago | Likes 15 Dislikes 0

so why are they selling

4 years ago | Likes 4 Dislikes 0

Zillow was trying to make money flipping the houses. Black Rock and the rest of the PE guys are buying and not selling. For them it’s just >

4 years ago | Likes 5 Dislikes 0

I went on zillow the other day, they are UNLOADING shit tons of homes.

4 years ago | Likes 253 Dislikes 2

They're buying up inexpensive homes from the market crash and selling them for 3 - 5x what they're worth.

4 years ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 16

That was 10 years ago and IIRC, Zillow didn't start buying until 2018. That 3-5x times is also wrong.

4 years ago | Likes 16 Dislikes 2

Found the Zillow employee.

4 years ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 20

not sure if i'm imagining things or just never noticed it before, but the default sort now shows all "owned by Zillow" first?

4 years ago | Likes 4 Dislikes 0

This is basically the corporate version of people spending all their money to hoard toilet paper and then desperately trying to return it.

4 years ago | Likes 32 Dislikes 0

It’s mental to buy at high prices. Some people might get a bargain now at least.

4 years ago | Likes 6 Dislikes 1

Just curious but are they selling them at a discount or are they still trying to sell them way high? I've been thinking of buying but 1/2

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 0

2/2 obviously with the housing market being what it is right now I've been holding off

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 0

Yeah - it's actually kind of a big deal how much they fucked up. Were darn close to risking their entire business.

4 years ago | Likes 28 Dislikes 0

it's okay, they're laying off 25% of their staff

4 years ago | Likes 4 Dislikes 0

I’m in Coachella, ca. And Redfin is here friggin things up. House went up by 200%

4 years ago | Likes 8 Dislikes 0

How do you get Zillow to show homes they own but haven't fixed? The only filter on the site for them is move in ready

4 years ago | Likes 5 Dislikes 0

is any of this illegal? and don't fucking dogpile on me, I am just asking a question

4 years ago | Likes 1700 Dislikes 26

Get them!

4 years ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 2

Gotta love how this dudes original comment is widely upvotes but all follow ups are downvoted. He wants to understand, ya dicks.

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 1

Don't think it would matter even if it was its a rich corporation they get away with murder

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 0

I am going to quote this incessantly over the holidays, thank you.

4 years ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 1

I mean laws don't actually matter to corporations..

4 years ago | Likes 3 Dislikes 1

Z did not "artificially inflate the market". They took a loss on homes bc they're incompetent, not evil genius overlords. JFC people.

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 1

We need vacancy taxes/fines on residential homes owned by corporations. Make them high enough that corps have to fill the homes so it’s 1/

4 years ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 0

not worth letting homes sit vacant, thereby controlling the market. Make the fine half the worth of the house. Every year it’s vacant. 2/2

4 years ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 0

Yeah just the vandalism part tho =/

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 0

You are ok OP, we are not robots here. It is after all, good to ask questions

4 years ago | Likes 7 Dislikes 2

Wow. I give a reasonable answer, with real information but no knee-jerk, emotional reaction and am downvoted to hell. 'Should've known...

4 years ago | Likes 4 Dislikes 6

DOGPILE ON THE PERVERT wait no you want us to do that, don't you

4 years ago | Likes 6 Dislikes 2

Rule of thumb: if it fucks regular folks, it’s legal. If it inconveniences the wealthy, super-illegal.

4 years ago | Likes 3 Dislikes 0

iBuyers is just a part of a long line of people buying up homes who have no business buying homes (ref: rich Chinese buyers in CAN/US).

4 years ago | Likes 13 Dislikes 2

it's legally ambiguous, which is what parasitic, greedy, and evil companies rely on when they want to do their morally bankrupt things

4 years ago | Likes 3 Dislikes 0

not if you bribe the right people

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 2

I think the system is designed for this. At least tweaked to allow it. This is capitalism in its full glory

4 years ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 1

No this is Patrick

4 years ago | Likes 39 Dislikes 5

Is this the Crusty Crab?

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 0

It's legal enough that nobody without millions to spend on lawyers is gonna be able to challenge them on it. That's the important part.

4 years ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 0

It's likely a new enough concept (scale wise) that existing laws don't cover it.

4 years ago | Likes 160 Dislikes 2

Untrue. This type.of.practice has been around for thousands of years. There is no federal restriction but some states/cities may restrict it

4 years ago | Likes 25 Dislikes 0

Operative being scale. This isn't like a corp buying land around its building.

4 years ago | Likes 7 Dislikes 0

Real estate speculation has been happening for over a century in the US, its were all of Trumps money came from his dad did it.

4 years ago | Likes 4 Dislikes 0

LA realtor here! Totally legal. If they’re offering cash (they did), no need for inspections either *Zillow shoots foot*

4 years ago | Likes 7 Dislikes 0

No. Welcome to your shithole of a country

4 years ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 0

In America, corporations and big businesses can do what they want. Any hint of regulation is shouted down and called libtard communism.

4 years ago | Likes 27 Dislikes 3

U fuckin pos. How dare u ask such a question? You idiot ass, dumber than a rock, fool. Oh, no dogpile. I guess, yeah? Maybe no? Idk

4 years ago | Likes 19 Dislikes 40

Dude.....decaf maybe

4 years ago | Likes 7 Dislikes 2

Ya gotta remember the /s !

4 years ago | Likes 7 Dislikes 0

I know! So much hate. Like i posted a video of someone punting a poodle off a balcony or something

4 years ago | Likes 5 Dislikes 2

Not being a smarty pants but what’s a dog pile? Thank you.

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 0

Jumping on one person after something happens, normally with 'merican football, but can also be used as "please don't bombard me after-"

4 years ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 0

- I asked something that might be obvious to others"

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 0

Seller can sell to Zillow through its site and cut out the middle man, so the sellers knew and agreed. Zillow then repaired then resold 1/

4 years ago | Likes 6 Dislikes 1

them for a profit. But supply chain throttled and costs of repair went up. Also, they aren't selling fast enough. Having empty houses 2/

4 years ago | Likes 6 Dislikes 1

means losing money. Last wk, they left the house buying business after a pre-tax loss of $422 million. Now they have to off-load houses. 3/3

4 years ago | Likes 7 Dislikes 1

Pretty sure it’s not. They made an investment genuinely thinking it would work out, and it didn’t. Selfish, not illegal.

4 years ago | Likes 7 Dislikes 0

^ this. Most of the other commenters have no clue what Zillow is doing. Zillow is actually losing money on all these priorities.

4 years ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 0

Most laws and legislation are reactionary, when there is a new process, some 80 year old senator isn't exactly on the cutting edge.

4 years ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 1

It’s probably legal, but it will kick people in the ass when house appraisers won’t appraise the house high enough to hit the asking price.

4 years ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 0

Which is likely why they’re selling off to equity firms and/or just renting.

4 years ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 0

It's perfect legal. There are no laws for business to do this.

4 years ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 0

This is exactly like scalpers

4 years ago | Likes 19 Dislikes 2

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[deleted]

4 years ago (deleted Nov 8, 2021 6:06 AM) | Likes 0 Dislikes 0

It isn't Zillow lost money, its investors lost money. It was a bad business decision, and Zillow didn't buy that many houses relatively.

4 years ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 0

I like how you have to say don't dogpile me 2ith this community.

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 1

Illegal? Not strictly, no. Unethical as hell? YES.

4 years ago | Likes 3 Dislikes 1

What makes it unethical?

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 0

The artificial inflation of the market, and then mass-transfer of property which forces buyers out of the buying market, and into a long /1

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 0

/2 term rental market that they did not choose to be in. Not to mention the sweetheart deals with rental companies instead of selling to

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 0

/3 the open market. THAT is unethical: I would be interested to see if there were investigations about this, it seems far too convenient.

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 0

DOGPIIIIIIILEE!! I fucking love dogs!

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 1

Please don't consider this dog-piling, but you need to reconsider your stance. Illegal and immoral aren't mutually exclusive and visa versa.

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 0

The most honest answer i can give you is that its a situation with enough grey that it comes down to whose lawyers are better

4 years ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 0

4 years ago | Likes 16 Dislikes 1

Don't think so, you would need to own a good portion of an area to influence the market in a tangible manner.

4 years ago | Likes 3 Dislikes 0

Zillow is just a recognized name, other companies do similar things.

4 years ago | Likes 3 Dislikes 0

It’s not. There was an “agreement” with the MLS & Zillow, for Z not to scalp MLS. The MLS is what your high school friend turned realtor use

4 years ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 0

You had to be a licensed realtor/broker to use. Now Zillow is replacing realtors/brokers with automated systems doing a superior job.

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 0

The MLS is the database containing rentals/house etc, that realtors get info from (this house selling) Zillow uses a robot to access

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 0

The agreement was that they didn’t use their platform as a replacement for realtors, they now have. More efficient, less middle men, etc

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 0

But this dumb algorithm running robot wanted to win, so Zillow paid $$$ than everyone. Now they’re nearly bankrupt with decaying asst

4 years ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 0

No, none of it is illegal. It should be though.

4 years ago | Likes 96 Dislikes 3

which part should be illegal?

4 years ago | Likes 8 Dislikes 21

1/This is essentially speculation of a limited commodity. I would call it a pump and dump scheme but seeing as they are losing a lot on

4 years ago | Likes 3 Dislikes 0

This they either didn’t intend that outcome or they are really bad at it. Either way the laws covering other assets don’t cover real estate

4 years ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 0

they're really bad at it, but the point is that we should not allow multibillion dollar corporations to vaccum up all the housing then rent

4 years ago | Likes 4 Dislikes 0

Corporations should not be allowed to own single family homes and MDUs should have to be fully local management corps.

4 years ago | Likes 14 Dislikes 0

Massive investment firms should be prohibited from the residential markets. They made terrible landlords anyway. Nothing good heard

4 years ago | Likes 7 Dislikes 0

the part where corporations should be allowed to buy up large amount of single family homes.

4 years ago | Likes 41 Dislikes 3

I don't see anything wrong with a company buying homes, fixing them up and then reselling them for a profit.

4 years ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 11

How do you feel about zillow raising homeprices nationwide then saying "oops" and selling them at a huge loss to REITs?

4 years ago | Likes 5 Dislikes 0

"where corporations *ARE* allowed ..." is how that should read, sorry

4 years ago | Likes 8 Dislikes 0

all corporations? only single family homes? what if they want to buy the land for redevelopment?

4 years ago | Likes 8 Dislikes 12

Yes

4 years ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 0

Obviously I'm not pushing to outlaw home builders.

4 years ago | Likes 5 Dislikes 0

the free market is not an end unto itself. It's a tool for making society better. When it fails at that job, we must step in and regulate it

4 years ago | Likes 16 Dislikes 1

That's we're regulations come in.

4 years ago | Likes 20 Dislikes 1

Corporations buying anything to purposely bankrupt to sell properties to a third party cheaply to rent, they HAVE to be avoiding taxes

4 years ago | Likes 5 Dislikes 0

Zillow was buying properties to flip, lost 306 million dollars last quarter, decided to cut their losses and get out of the business

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 0

I feel like no CEO would ok a robot doing this and this was a scheme to get those properties to a third company for bankrupt cheap

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 0

Just an educated guess, I would assume it’s not unless they own so much they start to venture into violating antitrust laws.

4 years ago | Likes 515 Dislikes 4

Even anti-trust laws still aren’t enforced until it affects consumer prices too much

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 0

Do we still have those?

4 years ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 0

Thousands of properties across the entire U.S. isn't even close to venturing into antitrust territory. Even if we did enforce those (1/2)

4 years ago | Likes 7 Dislikes 0

"even if we enforced those laws" this is an unfortunate state. Laws are not enforced against corporations or individuals with cash

4 years ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 0

The truth is some of the enforcing agencies are so underfunded they can't afford to go after corps with giant checkbooks for lawyers.

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 0

laws. It's enough to fuck the market seriously, but you'd be extremely hard pressed to call it a monopoly. (2/2)

4 years ago | Likes 7 Dislikes 0

These aren't covered by anti trust laws, had they been this would have been challenged. But it's happening all over the country, and each

4 years ago | Likes 30 Dislikes 0

>implying the US has enforced anti trust laws past 1999.

4 years ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 1

Its only against the law if the poores do it... /s

4 years ago | Likes 3 Dislikes 0

state has it's own real estate laws. Not a thing is going to happen to anyone other than homeowners and potential homeowners. Just like

4 years ago | Likes 25 Dislikes 0

last time. Not claiming to be an expert, but I did mortgage modifications during the crash and I was a realtor for years.

4 years ago | Likes 22 Dislikes 0

We’re going to have another crash aren’t we?

4 years ago | Likes 8 Dislikes 0

Even if it was in anti trust territory it's not like we enforce those laws anyway.

4 years ago | Likes 162 Dislikes 0

They get enforced all the time, but sadly selectively. The last couple major chip manufacturing vendor mergers I'm aware of got shot down

4 years ago | Likes 5 Dislikes 0

(TEL+AMAT, KLA+Lam)

4 years ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 0

But thinks like Disney/Fox were let through. Allowing Disney to have a 30-40% market share of the US box office prior to Covid.

4 years ago | Likes 8 Dislikes 0

The laws are pretty much only enforced on mid and low class.

4 years ago | Likes 39 Dislikes 0

Like tax fraud

4 years ago | Likes 16 Dislikes 0

It's why the apes bullying hedgefunds are the ones investigated for insider trading instead of hedgefunds shorting a stock beyond 100%.

4 years ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 0

JIMMY! GET THE DOGS! YEAH, THE WHOLE PILE!

4 years ago | Likes 3 Dislikes 0

Destination:

4 years ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 0

No. None of it is illegal.

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 0

It’s completely legal. There is no legislation outlawing corporate entities from purchasing residential property what’s even more insane 1/2

4 years ago | Likes 83 Dislikes 1

Pretty sure this is well disproven and just sad, the usa owns most in australia with england second anyway but i want computers to take over

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 2

Is that there’s no legislation prohibiting FOREIGN corporations from purchasing residential properties. China and India are buying homes

4 years ago | Likes 63 Dislikes 1

So in my town half the properties you buy are owned by Chinese shell companies cashing in on this insanely overinflated market

4 years ago | Likes 45 Dislikes 0

Canada finally stepped up and introduced a law prohibiting foreign ownership of households because the aren’t corrupt up there

4 years ago | Likes 40 Dislikes 1

It doesn't prohibit it, there are just stipulations. Still plenty of shady shit going on here too :(

4 years ago | Likes 11 Dislikes 0

"as. Still plenty of messed up shit in Canada.

4 years ago | Likes 22 Dislikes 0

Sad, but true, that you can't even ask basic questions anymore.

4 years ago | Likes 4 Dislikes 16

It's top comment with two downvotes and was when you made this comment. It is empirically not true that you can't ask questions, dipshit.

4 years ago | Likes 10 Dislikes 1

Ease back there. You are being a dick.

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 8

You're reinforcing a bullshit victimhood narrative that is clearly false.

4 years ago | Likes 5 Dislikes 0

zYpu called me a dipshit after making a fairly harmless statement you disagree with. That is being a dick. Stop being one.

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 4

yeah, but the only reason it is top comment is because I yelled at people not to be dicks

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 6

That's a specious argument. In fact, considering how ducks react to admonishment, that wouldn't do shit.

4 years ago | Likes 3 Dislikes 0

No. It is not illegal. Not even realistically immoral. Obviously stupid, given the financial outcome of the venture. And destructive 1/

4 years ago | Likes 4 Dislikes 25

to the overall market for housing. The market will probably correct causing more people pain, and probably a few to gain. Depends on 2/

4 years ago | Likes 3 Dislikes 10

how large their impact on prices were in any given location. It does suck for a lot of people though. (Past RE licensee, 15 years 3/

4 years ago | Likes 3 Dislikes 5

tracking and consulting on the housing market in an major USA metropolitan area.) Different actors have different impacts in different 4/

4 years ago | Likes 4 Dislikes 5

cycles. It's an interesting thing to watch and track, but I cannot say it is always pleasant to do so.

4 years ago | Likes 4 Dislikes 4

Your morals are shit then!

4 years ago | Likes 7 Dislikes 0

Noone who knows me would agree with you. I am, however, prone to flights of reality.

4 years ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 5

You think it morally acceptable to fraudulently inflate the prices of homes to sell them to major corporations making average home buyers ⤵

4 years ago | Likes 7 Dislikes 0

'Lot to unpack here... 1st. I never said the actions or motives were moral, only that they were not immoral. In fact Ireferred to them 1/?

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 3

Unable to compete for holes that should be in their price range before this manipulation? Make it make sense for me please?

4 years ago | Likes 4 Dislikes 0

Buying up houses in an effort to control the market for housing during an eviction crisis caused by the shit response to covid is immoral

4 years ago | Likes 17 Dislikes 2

They were doing that before the eviction crisis. As were any number of other greedy corporations... offerup etc. Besides... the eviction >

4 years ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 8

crisis didn't really heat up until the moratoriums were lifted recently. Also, evictions are of renters, not owners. Some investor-owners

4 years ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 6

may have been prompted to sell under the circumstances, but you'd probably find that's not the majority of the houses purchased by Zillow. >

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 4

Oh, they were trying to artificially manipulate prices beforehand? That makes it perfectly moral that they ramped up taking advantage /s

4 years ago | Likes 9 Dislikes 1

'Not sure where you get that. Many companies, and individual investors had started these programs before COVID was even an issue. It >

4 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 4