iBuyers Pull Back In Housing Slowdown

iBuyers Pull Back In Housing Slowdown

iBuyers Pull Back In Housing Slowdown Bankrate Caret RightMain Menu Mortgage Mortgages Financing a home purchase Refinancing your existing loan Finding the right lender Additional Resources Elevate your Bankrate experience Get insider access to our best financial tools and content Caret RightMain Menu Bank Banking Compare Accounts Use calculators Get advice Bank reviews Elevate your Bankrate experience Get insider access to our best financial tools and content Caret RightMain Menu Credit Card Credit cards Compare by category Compare by credit needed Compare by issuer Get advice Looking for the perfect credit card? Narrow your search with CardMatch Caret RightMain Menu Loan Loans Personal Loans Student Loans Auto Loans Loan calculators Elevate your Bankrate experience Get insider access to our best financial tools and content Caret RightMain Menu Invest Investing Best of Brokerages and robo-advisors Learn the basics Additional resources Elevate your Bankrate experience Get insider access to our best financial tools and content Caret RightMain Menu Home Equity Home equity Get the best rates Lender reviews Use calculators Knowledge base Elevate your Bankrate experience Get insider access to our best financial tools and content Caret RightMain Menu Loan Home Improvement Real estate Selling a home Buying a home Finding the right agent Additional resources Elevate your Bankrate experience Get insider access to our best financial tools and content Caret RightMain Menu Insurance Insurance Car insurance Homeowners insurance Other insurance Company reviews Elevate your Bankrate experience Get insider access to our best financial tools and content Caret RightMain Menu Retirement Retirement Retirement plans & accounts Learn the basics Retirement calculators Additional resources Elevate your Bankrate experience Get insider access to our best financial tools and content Advertiser Disclosure

Advertiser Disclosure

We are an independent, advertising-supported comparison service. Our goal is to help you make smarter financial decisions by providing you with interactive tools and financial calculators, publishing original and objective content, by enabling you to conduct research and compare information for free - so that you can make financial decisions with confidence.
Bankrate has partnerships with issuers including, but not limited to, American Express, Bank of America, Capital One, Chase, Citi and Discover.

How We Make Money

The offers that appear on this site are from companies that compensate us. This compensation may impact how and where products appear on this site, including, for example, the order in which they may appear within the listing categories. But this compensation does not influence the information we publish, or the reviews that you see on this site. We do not include the universe of companies or financial offers that may be available to you. SHARE:

On This Page

Opendoor November 09, 2022 Jeff Ostrowski covers mortgages and the housing market. Before joining Bankrate in 2020, he wrote about real estate and the economy for the Palm Beach Post and the South Florida Business Journal. Suzanne De Vita is the mortgage editor for Bankrate, focusing on mortgage and real estate topics for homebuyers, homeowners, investors and renters. Bankrate logo

The Bankrate promise

At Bankrate we strive to help you make smarter financial decisions. While we adhere to strict editorial integrity, this post may contain references to products from our partners. Here's an explanation for how we make money. Bankrate logo

The Bankrate promise

Founded in 1976, Bankrate has a long track record of helping people make smart financial choices. We’ve maintained this reputation for over four decades by demystifying the financial decision-making process and giving people confidence in which actions to take next. Bankrate follows a strict , so you can trust that we’re putting your interests first. All of our content is authored by and edited by , who ensure everything we publish is objective, accurate and trustworthy. Buying or selling a home is one of the biggest financial decisions an individual will ever make. Our real estate reporters and editors focus on educating consumers about this life-changing transaction and how to navigate the complex and ever-changing housing market. From finding an agent to closing and beyond, our goal is to help you feel confident that you're making the best, and smartest, real estate deal possible. Bankrate logo

Editorial integrity

Bankrate follows a strict , so you can trust that we’re putting your interests first. Our award-winning editors and reporters create honest and accurate content to help you make the right financial decisions.

Key Principles

We value your trust. Our mission is to provide readers with accurate and unbiased information, and we have editorial standards in place to ensure that happens. Our editors and reporters thoroughly fact-check editorial content to ensure the information you’re reading is accurate. We maintain a firewall between our advertisers and our editorial team. Our editorial team does not receive direct compensation from our advertisers.

Editorial Independence

Bankrate’s editorial team writes on behalf of YOU – the reader. Our goal is to give you the best advice to help you make smart personal finance decisions. We follow strict guidelines to ensure that our editorial content is not influenced by advertisers. Our editorial team receives no direct compensation from advertisers, and our content is thoroughly fact-checked to ensure accuracy. So, whether you’re reading an article or a review, you can trust that you’re getting credible and dependable information. Bankrate logo

How we make money

You have money questions. Bankrate has answers. Our experts have been helping you master your money for over four decades. We continually strive to provide consumers with the expert advice and tools needed to succeed throughout life’s financial journey. Bankrate follows a strict , so you can trust that our content is honest and accurate. Our award-winning editors and reporters create honest and accurate content to help you make the right financial decisions. The content created by our editorial staff is objective, factual, and not influenced by our advertisers. We’re transparent about how we are able to bring quality content, competitive rates, and useful tools to you by explaining how we make money. Bankrate.com is an independent, advertising-supported publisher and comparison service. We are compensated in exchange for placement of sponsored products and, services, or by you clicking on certain links posted on our site. Therefore, this compensation may impact how, where and in what order products appear within listing categories. Other factors, such as our own proprietary website rules and whether a product is offered in your area or at your self-selected credit score range can also impact how and where products appear on this site. While we strive to provide a wide range offers, Bankrate does not include information about every financial or credit product or service. The housing slowdown is raising new questions about the future of , those deep-pocketed companies that had been snapping up homes primarily in Sun Belt markets. After hitting pause at the beginning of the pandemic, the upstarts ramped up homebuying as home values shattered one record after another. Now, though, and even retreating, and iBuyers, or instant buyers, have sharply pulled back on their purchases in recent months. In the latest news to roil the sector, the No. 3 player, , said November 9 that it had closed its home-flipping business. While the other two major iBuyers, Opendoor and Offerpad, continue to operate, their offers aren’t as generous as they were earlier this year. For home sellers, that means the options for a quick-and-easy sale are narrowing. “They were buying houses like crazy in the first half of the year,” says Stefan Peterson, co-founder of Zavvie, a real estate technology company that works with real estate brokers to help sellers compare offers from iBuyers. “Then in July, they really put the brakes on. They’re just not making a lot of offers. The market’s risky right now. It’s unpredictable, and they’re responding in an appropriate way.”

How iBuying works

iBuyers are a newer breed of real estate player. Opendoor and Offerpad position themselves to homeowners as a fast, painless way to sell. Homeowners avoid the hassle of painting and staging their homes, and need not clean up and clear out for showings. The iBuyer makes a , and the seller can pick a closing date. The iBuyer then spruces up the home and quickly puts it on the market for sale. For all the headlines and hype surrounding iBuying, the concept remains small. iBuyers account for less than 1 percent of all U.S. home sales, according to the . To entice homeowners to sell to them in a hot market, iBuyers dangled aggressive offers. In the second quarter of 2022, iBuyers offered homeowners an average of 105 percent of the value of their properties, says Peterson. Fast forward to the third quarter, and the typical offer fell to 98 percent — meaning sellers were accepting a slight discount for the convenience of not needing to market their homes.

Why iBuyers are pulling back

In the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic, the U.S. housing market caught fire. plunged below 3 percent, and home prices soared amid strong demand and tight supply. The market is finally cooling, however. Sales of existing homes have fallen for seven months in a row, according to the National Association of Realtors, and home price growth is dropping at a record pace. Meanwhile, mortgage rates rose at their fastest pace in decades. Opendoor, the largest of the iBuyers, said it reduced home-buying activity by 45 percent in the third quarter of 2022 compared to a year earlier. The company laid off 18 percent of its workers in early November. “Navigating a once-in-40-years market transition has required us to operate with urgency and discipline to manage risk and overall inventory health,” Opendoor CEO Eric Wu said in a Nov. 3 statement. In other words, iBuyers are concerned about buying homes now that will lose value in a few months. Offerpad said its pace of buying slowed 33 percent in the third quarter of 2022 compared to a year earlier. “We continue to navigate through this period of market dislocation by appropriately managing down our inventory levels and strategically acquiring homes that reflect current conditions,” Offerpad Chief Financial Officer Mike Burnett said Nov. 2. Before the Nov. 9 news that it was pulling the plug entirely, RedfinNow had slowed its pace of buying while the housing market shakes out. “We’re now selling homes much more quickly than we are buying them,” Redfin CEO Glenn Kelman said in the company’s second-quarter earnings call. “In July, we put more than four homes under contract to sell for every one we put under contract to buy.” Of course, turmoil is nothing new for the iBuying sector. Last year, Zillow roiled the market by pulling the plug on its iBuying program, known as Zillow Offers. The company said it had lost $1 billion on iBuying. Zavvie’s Peterson doesn’t expect the other iBuyers to shut down their businesses. After all, the entire model was invented as a way to remove some of the uncertainty from the selling process — and uncertainty abounds in today’s shifting real estate market. “A lot of consumers really like the idea of selling their house to an iBuyer and skipping the open-market process,” says Peterson.

Power buyers emerge

While Zillow has pulled out of iBuying altogether, it is testing a variation on the theme, known as “Zillow-backed offers.” For a fee, Zillow will stand in as a cash buyer on behalf of buyers who need financing. As of early October, the pilot program was available to buyers in Raleigh and Denver purchasing properties priced at up to $750,000. From the date of the closing, buyers have 90 days to secure their financing, but if it falls through, Zillow will step in to buy the home. The buyer will then have another 90 days to repurchase the home. If the buyer is still unable to land a mortgage after the second 90-day period, Zillow will resell the home. In this way, Zillow is entering the new space of “power buyers” — companies that stand in as cash buyers on behalf of consumers who need financing but want their offers to stand out. Knock, Orchard, Accept.inc, Homeward and Ribbon are among those that make cash offers on behalf of buyers who are creditworthy, but don’t have $500,000 available, for example, to wire to sellers.

Should you sell to an iBuyer

In today’s market, iBuyers offer the safety of a certain sale. However, their offers are growing less generous as the market shifts. Should you sell to one of these companies? Here are some factors to consider: Where you live and the age of your home matters. iBuyers aren’t an option for all sellers. The companies haven’t been active in such cities as New York, Chicago and Boston — they’ve focused on Sun Belt metro areas like Atlanta, Charlotte, Phoenix and San Antonio. iBuyers also tend to avoid older homes, properties that need extensive renovations and unique homes that are difficult to value. They’re mainly looking for newer, suburban homes. Compare offers from multiple iBuyers. In many markets, Opendoor and Offerpad compete for your business. If that’s the case, ask both for bids. And in some markets, real estate brokers and investors have created their own small-scale iBuying operations. Talk to a real estate agent. Get a proposal from a traditional agent. How much might your home sell for, and what would a Realtor charge in ? Although you’ll skip the commission with an iBuyer, iBuyers do charge a service fee, typically around 5 percent. Your agent’s commission might or might not be comparable to this fee, so it pays to compare your all-in costs. SHARE: Jeff Ostrowski covers mortgages and the housing market. Before joining Bankrate in 2020, he wrote about real estate and the economy for the Palm Beach Post and the South Florida Business Journal. Suzanne De Vita is the mortgage editor for Bankrate, focusing on mortgage and real estate topics for homebuyers, homeowners, investors and renters.

Related Articles

Share:
0 comments

Comments (0)

Leave a Comment

Minimum 10 characters required

* All fields are required. Comments are moderated before appearing.

No comments yet. Be the first to comment!