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The Future Of Real Estate: Fintech 50 2021

 

 From the abyss of an economy-stopping global pandemic, the U.S. real estate market has emerged as arguably the hottest market in the world. Low-interest rates and a future of working from home, or at least more flexible office arrangements, caused many Americans to relocate to suburban areas with lower costs and a higher quality of life. The pandemic-driven shifts ignited a residential housing boom and novel financial technology played a huge role in the surging market. Among private technology companies, startups targeting the inefficiencies and headaches of the real estate market are surging in value and growing at staggering rates. The process of getting a mortgage has long been considered a tedious slog of paperwork, and there have been few innovations to introduce young Americans to homeownership since the advent of the mortgage bond. 

Well-funded startups, including the four on the latest Forbes Fintech 50 list, have stepped up to address this demand, with innovative technology that’s simplifying and opening the real estate market to a new generation. Our Fintech 50 list highlights companies like Blend Labs, with its white-label software that allows mortgages at some of America’s biggest banks to be done in just a few clicks, and Divvy Homes, a landlord that wants to help its tenants become owners. These companies are using technology to redesign the experience of buying, selling and owning property.

Overall, through the use of new technology, there has never been lower friction to buying a home and the transaction costs across the market have plummeted. The pandemic-plagued year also was an opportunity for some innovative former Fintech 50 list members to join public stock markets, including Opendoor Technologies, a so-called iBuyer of homes that went public in December 2020 and now carries a $10 billion valuation.

Here are the financial technology companies revolutionizing the real estate market that made the Forbes Fintech 50 in 2021, including a brief description of what they do, who their users are and how much they’re worth.

Blend

Blend Labs’ CEO and co-founder Nima Ghamsari. (Photographer: Alex Flynn/Bloomberg) © 2018 BLOOMBERG FINANCE LP

 Headquarters: San Francisco, CA

Cloud-based white label software speeds up the mortgage approval process at the nation’s largest lenders, including Wells Fargo and U.S. Bank. Prospective borrowers can link to online bank statements, tax returns and pay stubs. The platform processes over $4 billion in mortgages and consumer loans per day in partnership with 285 institutions.

Funding: $685 million from Coatue, Tiger Global Management and others

Latest valuation: $3.3 billion

Bona fides: Customer base accounts for more than 25% of the $2.1 trillion U.S. mortgage market by origination volume, according to HMDA data; last year it processed $1.4 trillion in loans, more than double 2019’s volume.

Cofounders: CEO Nima Ghamsari, 35; former CTO Eugene Marinelli, 33; former CFO Erin Collard, 41; Rosco Hill, 41

Cadre

Cadre’s CEO and co-founder Ryan Williams. (Photo by Noam Galai/Getty Images for TechCrunch) GETTY

Headquarters: New York City, NY

By raising money online and using advanced data analysis to source deals, the online platform enables individual and institutional investors to buy and sell stakes in commercial and multifamily real estate partnerships at lower fees. Also runs a StubHub-like secondary market enabling investors to sell otherwise illiquid holdings.

Funding: $155 million from Andreessen Horowitz, Ford Foundation, Goldman Sachs and others

Latest valuation: $800 million, according to PitchBook

Bona fides: Launched a $400 million fund this year oriented to individual investors, financial advisors and institutions.

Cofounders: CEO Ryan Williams, 33, a 30 Under 30 alum who started investing in real estate while at Harvard; brothers Joshua Kushner, 35, and Jared Kushner, 40, the son-in-law of former President Donald Trump.

Divvy Homes

Divvy Homes CEO and co-founder Adena Hefets. (Courtesy of Divvy Homes) DIVVY HOMES

Headquarters: San Francisco, CA

A digital version of the old rent-to-own model, Divvy buys homes for clients who can’t qualify for a standard mortgage and then becomes their landlord. A 1-2% upfront fee and a portion of monthly rent can be converted into a down payment if the tenant wants to buy later. By the end of three years, customers will have built up as much as 10% equity.

Funding: $175 million in equity from Tiger Global Management, Andreessen Horowitz and others

Latest valuation: $490 million, according to PitchBook

Bona fides: In 2020, expanded from 8 to 16 markets and so far this year, has closed more homes than in all of 2020 or 2019.

Cofounders: CEO Adena Hefets, 34; CTO Nicholas Clark, 38; board member Brian Ma, 35; senior software engineer Alex Klarfeld, 30, a 30 Under 30 alum

Roofstock

Roofstock’s CEO and cofounder Gary Beasley. (Courtesy of Roofstock)

Headquarters: Oakland, CA

Real estate investment marketplace that allows everyone from first-time investors to global asset managers to evaluate, purchase and own single-family rental homes. Roofstock One, launched in 2019, sells partial stakes in professionally managed homes for as little as $5,000 a share.

Funding: $153 million from SVB Capital, Canvas Ventures, Khosla Ventures and others

Latest valuation: $600 million

Bona fides: More than $3 billion in transactions have been done through the platform.

Cofounders: CEO Gary Beasley, 55; chairman Gregor Watson, 41; chief development officer Rich Ford, 53

Origination: https://www.forbes.com/sites/margheritabeale/2021/06/08/the-future-of-real-estate-fintech-50-2021/?sh=70cf9bb92c31