RealPage worked with some of the nation’s largest landlords to raise rents, says lawsuit.
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Maybe a high tax rate on vacant units that makes it almost always worth it to lease at a below market rate rather than leave many apartments vacant too often or for too long?This app certainly doesn’t help, but housing becoming a speculative asset to put money in and not a roof over your head is what caused this.
Break the big conglomerates and ban things like hotel houses and that will also help a lot.
Frankly, I'd go even further with single-family homes and make it ruinously expensive to own a house you don't live in. Eliminate the so-called passive-income aspect of home ownership and you get rid of landlords sitting on properties for years and letting them slowly decay until they can't squeeze any more money out of them. It'd be a lot easier for folks who just need a place to live if the market wasn't artificially inflated to suit the whims of capital.
I'll admit I don't have as neat a solution for apartments, and I think there should probably be some sort of rental market, but at the end of the day I think we, as a society, are going to have to start treating housing more like a right than a privilege before any of this gets meaningfully sorted out.
Personally, I like doubling your property taxes for every home you own that you don’t live in 8 months out of the year.
In the case of apartment buildings/complexes, the entire building counts as a single unit for the doubling, but C-level execs (or the appropriate parallel) living in a building 8+ months reduce the unit count by 1 to a minimum of 1.
Own six apartment complexes in Detroit and live in a house in Ann Arbor?
Your home = property taxes x1
Apt 1 = x2
Apt 2 = x4
Apt 3 = x8
Etc
Sounds good, except we own a condo we "lease" to my mother-in-law. Her rent is about ten percent of what we pay, because that is what she can afford.
My parents have a similar situation where they rent a house to my step sister for their mortgage payment.
My fantasy legislation is open to some amendments re: family members, charity, and the like.
Uh... when was Lindsey Graham ever the Senate Majority Leader?More of a matter of what Lindsey Graham said about why he kept blocking popular legislation in the Senate when he was Majority Leader.When someone’s idea or need to enrich themselves screws everyone else over in a major way. Yes, it’s LSC.Interesting. When does a 'business idea' become an 'illegal racket'? Is this another sign of 'late stage capitalism'?
"Because I can."
That's not an acceptable answer for doing anything that fucks over people.
Yeah... and not surprising, the airlines were recently sued for collusion for their ticket fares.Airlines and other large businesses often do this sort of price signaling. Southwest will raise (or, less frequently, lower) the price on a given route and wait to see if their competitors match the change in price. If they do, then the new price becomes the new price.I won't deny there are some industries like that, but I used to work for a company selling a commodity with only a few big vendors, and we tried pushing through price increases combined with a press release announcing the increase to the market. Instead of following our lead, our competitors dropped prices slightly, and we ended up losing 80% of our volume for the quarter. Didn't get it back until we reversed course and dropped prices below where we'd been before the announced price increase. And we had something like 30% market share before the announcement.In a whole lot of industries, there is a sort of "soft cartel" anyhow. I mean, I do hope they bust this app and the landlords using it, but. . .
In most industries, there is at the minimum, all participants tracking the pricing of "the market" and raising prices accordingly.
There are times when our prices and competitors prices all went up at the same time, but it was usually when someone's plant was down for whatever reason (repairs, normal upkeep, the olympics shuttering plants in china, etc.). Supply/demand economics do still work most of the time.
Strange how the free market always steers towards turning people into serfs. Wonder why that is.
This one is interesting. I did a business exercise a few years ago where we had to figure out if gas stations posting their prices on the signs should count as collusion since their competitors can look and then adjust prices, and if that helps them raise prices and unofficially fix them as a group. This software reminds me of the same thing in that it's just a shortcut to looking at a bunch of price sheets.
Examining competitor's pricing is not collusion, it's an important feature of properly functioning capitalism. Simply put, if you don't know what a competitor is charging, it's difficult to undercut his price. While it's absolutely true that this knowledge can be used to artificially keep prices high, in a competitive market, it almost always has the opposite effect.
The problem with the software isn't that the prices of competitors are identified, it's the encouragement to keep units off the market. That discourages competition.
You'd be wrong.This app certainly doesn’t help, but housing becoming a speculative asset to put money in and not a roof over your head is what caused this.
Break the big conglomerates and ban things like hotel houses and that will also help a lot.
That would be a great start. I would like to add, ban foreign ownership of local real estate, especially not owner occupied at least 51% of the year.
Other countries do that, for good reasons.
On one hand, I would really support that to avoid homes being built specifically for wealthy foreign investors (this is a big issue in NYC) as piggybanks. On the other hand, given the animosity towards foreigners from one of the two major parties, I suspect this would end up targeting foreigners working on visas while leaving a big loophole for the billionaire investor class.
This one is interesting. I did a business exercise a few years ago where we had to figure out if gas stations posting their prices on the signs should count as collusion since their competitors can look and then adjust prices, and if that helps them raise prices and unofficially fix them as a group. This software reminds me of the same thing in that it's just a shortcut to looking at a bunch of price sheets.
I don't think it's so similar. In the gas station situation, the buyer and the seller have access to the same information, not in the apartment renting situation.
It is true. There are investment groups trying to purchase all the housing stock. What a disaster things are becoming. I'm glad I already have a house. If the housing stock is built up and more empty houses exist one assumes eventually things will get back to a more normal market.Next go after the airbnb and the home flippers. If you look at realstate listing, you literally see flippers taking 150k houses, apply fake wood floor and coat of paint then flipping it for 300k.
Stop buying 300K houses that sold for 150K a few months earlier?
Because it's the only house left after the comerical landlords brought everything? I can either pay a landlord a ridiculous price or own a home after paying a ridiculous price.
Interesting. When does a 'business idea' become an 'illegal racket'? Is this another sign of 'late stage capitalism'?
Just one more bad idea in an AOR that you have no expertise in...Hmm what about capping rental prices at 30% of the combined income of the units renters. If you want to charge more, find higher income renters or allow more people on the lease per unit.
I can see this lawsuit having standing based on how many regular people it's screwed over.
This one will definitely end up going to the California Supreme Court. I doubt that it becomes a federal case though; if all of the landlords' properties are in Sacramento (as implied in the article), then interstate commerce isn't involved.
Per the complaint, the suit was filed in federal court. One of the plaintiffs lives in Washington and most of the named defendants are incorporated and headquartered in other states so interstate commerce is definitely involved.
Not necessarily. If I live in DC but sell watermelons in Texas and the watermelons are grown in Texas, then it isn't interstate commerce. And I expect that the plaintiff's lawyers will use an argument fairly close to that in a motion to have the case dismissed.
Hmm what about capping rental prices at 30% of the combined income of the units renters. If you want to charge more, find higher income renters or allow more people on the lease per unit.
This one is interesting. I did a business exercise a few years ago where we had to figure out if gas stations posting their prices on the signs should count as collusion since their competitors can look and then adjust prices, and if that helps them raise prices and unofficially fix them as a group. This software reminds me of the same thing in that it's just a shortcut to looking at a bunch of price sheets.
This one is interesting. I did a business exercise a few years ago where we had to figure out if gas stations posting their prices on the signs should count as collusion since their competitors can look and then adjust prices, and if that helps them raise prices and unofficially fix them as a group. This software reminds me of the same thing in that it's just a shortcut to looking at a bunch of price sheets.
Oh boy, just wait until you hear that Gas Stations have been using this exact same kind of software for a looooooong time (PriceAdvantage/Kalibrate). No need to even look out the window or adjust the prices yourself!
Yes... rental property owners working together to crank up rent to an amount where people feel even more squeezed and/or live from paycheque to paycheque is such a non-problem that we should ignore.Oh no.
Anyway...![]()
That's not the take I was going for, I was trying to show disdain for their business model by expressing how unsurprised I am that this is happening.
I don't just live paycheck to paycheck, but day to day as I work for tips.
But, sure, be a judgemental dick and assume you know anything about me.
This one is interesting. I did a business exercise a few years ago where we had to figure out if gas stations posting their prices on the signs should count as collusion since their competitors can look and then adjust prices, and if that helps them raise prices and unofficially fix them as a group. This software reminds me of the same thing in that it's just a shortcut to looking at a bunch of price sheets.
I don't think it's so similar. In the gas station situation, the buyer and the seller have access to the same information, not in the apartment renting situation.
The key difference is the private data. "The software considers actual rents paid to those rivals—not just what they are advertising, the company told ProPublica."
I'm a cynic when it comes to class-action lawsuits. The lawyers become a third party seeking the maximize their own earning. And maybe their clients will do well also.
This one is interesting. I did a business exercise a few years ago where we had to figure out if gas stations posting their prices on the signs should count as collusion since their competitors can look and then adjust prices, and if that helps them raise prices and unofficially fix them as a group. This software reminds me of the same thing in that it's just a shortcut to looking at a bunch of price sheets.
I'm a cynic when it comes to class-action lawsuits. The lawyers become a third party seeking the maximize their own earning. And maybe their clients will do well also.
In a whole lot of industries, there is a sort of "soft cartel" anyhow. I mean, I do hope they bust this app and the landlords using it, but. . .
In most industries, there is at the minimum, all participants tracking the pricing of "the market" and raising prices accordingly.
I mean yeah and that's fine for commodities and luxury goods. Setting price at the maximum that the market will bear isn't a problem for widgets and doodads and fancy purses. Housing is a need though which makes price fixing more of a hostage situation.
This app certainly doesn’t help, but housing becoming a speculative asset to put money in and not a roof over your head is what caused this.
Break the big conglomerates and ban things like hotel houses and that will also help a lot.
Frankly, I'd go even further with single-family homes and make it ruinously expensive to own a house you don't live in. Eliminate the so-called passive-income aspect of home ownership and you get rid of landlords sitting on properties for years and letting them slowly decay until they can't squeeze any more money out of them. It'd be a lot easier for folks who just need a place to live if the market wasn't artificially inflated to suit the whims of capital.
I'll admit I don't have as neat a solution for apartments, and I think there should probably be some sort of rental market, but at the end of the day I think we, as a society, are going to have to start treating housing more like a right than a privilege before any of this gets meaningfully sorted out.
Personally, I like doubling your property taxes for every home you own that you don’t live in 8 months out of the year.
In the case of apartment buildings/complexes, the entire building counts as a single unit for the doubling, but C-level execs (or the appropriate parallel) living in a building 8+ months reduce the unit count by 1 to a minimum of 1.
Own six apartment complexes in Detroit and live in a house in Ann Arbor?
Your home = property taxes x1
Apt 1 = x2
Apt 2 = x4
Apt 3 = x8
Etc
Sounds good, except we own a condo we "lease" to my mother-in-law. Her rent is about ten percent of what we pay, because that is what she can afford.
My understanding is that the service doesn't actually offer "price comparison," but instead processes all that data behind-the-scenes and just offers the user a "recommended" price, which they "strongly urged" users not to deviate from.Not saying they didnt do this, but this kind of comparison software could also be used to undercut your competitors. Just having the software wont be enough proof for court. It will have to be shown that they did use it to cartel and not compete.
Such agents sometimes hesitated to push rents higher. Roper said they were often peers of the people they were renting to. “We said there’s way too much empathy going on here,” he said. “This is one of the reasons we wanted to get pricing off-site.”
Not saying they didnt do this, but this kind of comparison software could also be used to undercut your competitors. Just having the software wont be enough proof for court. It will have to be shown that they did use it to cartel and not compete.
Hmm what about capping rental prices at 30% of the combined income of the units renters. If you want to charge more, find higher income renters or allow more people on the lease per unit.
This one will definitely end up going to the California Supreme Court. I doubt that it becomes a federal case though; if all of the landlords' properties are in Sacramento (as implied in the article), then interstate commerce isn't involved.
Per the complaint, the suit was filed in federal court. One of the plaintiffs lives in Washington and most of the named defendants are incorporated and headquartered in other states so interstate commerce is definitely involved.
Not necessarily. If I live in DC but sell watermelons in Texas and the watermelons are grown in Texas, then it isn't interstate commerce. And I expect that the plaintiff's lawyers will use an argument fairly close to that in a motion to have the case dismissed.
Yeah I don't think you realize how much the courts have stretched the interstate clause over the decades.
A farmers growing wheat for personal consumption that would never be sold to anyone even in state was ruled to fall under interstate commerce clause because the wheat he didn't sell would have an impact on wheat prices.
Production quotas under the Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1938 were constitutionally applied to agricultural production that was consumed purely intrastate because its effect upon interstate commerce placed it within the power of Congress to regulate under the Commerce Clause.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wickard_v._Filburn
What you stated may have been the original intent but hasn't been true for 80+ years now. Personally I am not really sure the ICC should be that broad but it is water under the bridge now.
Things are pretty ugly in my town. With borrowing rates being so low, a couple of large investment groups from Denver borrowed a shit ton of money and basically bought up everything up here. From what I've seen, rents are up over 40% in the last 18 months, and there's nothing anybody can do because it's the same people that own everything. I wonder if something like this software gave them the idea that they could walk into the market here and clean up or if they just had the business plan or creating a monopoly.
And the only way to fight them is have the economy tank, people go homeless, and those stupid investment groups go upsidedown.
Freakin 2008 all over again.
Or just fix our fucked up zoning codes across the country so that there's a lot of new housing supply. These investment groups getting into housing put it right in their prospectuses that they think housing is a good investment because they expect the crisis-level undersupply of new housing to continue indefinitely.
Something like 90% of the occupied land in their US is zones exclusively for single family homes. Including for instance places right next to light rail stations here in the Los Angeles area. It's ILLEGAL to build more than a SFH on most of this land, SB9 in California notwithstanding. So yeah no duh finance is interested and landlords are able to collude on ratcheting up rents, that's what happens when you create crisis-level scarcity of a necessary good.
This also feeds into the climate crisis. Santa Monica has a daytime population of 250k and a mightier population of 90k (the latter is about the same as it was in 1970). Most of this is because we took in a ton of new jobs while barely building any housing. It's not a coincidence that even by Los Angeles standards, Santa Monica is notorious for extremely bad traffic, although I'll say that traffic is really only on streets headed to the freeways, it's rarely ever that bad driving around locally. Which is another strong hint about what's creating the traffic.
Not to rip on Santa Monica, but last time I was there traversing the sidewalks was a pain in the butt because of the rental bikes dropped willy-nilly wherever people decided to abandon them.
The properties in question may all be in Sacramento, but I'm pretty sure I used to rent from Greystar in College Station, TexasThis one will definitely end up going to the California Supreme Court. I doubt that it becomes a federal case though; if all of the landlords' properties are in Sacramento (as implied in the article), then interstate commerce isn't involved.
IMHO, it is collusion and should be against the law. Whether or not it will be found to be collusion and against the law is a toss-up at this point, given the quality of some of the judges on the bench.
The properties in question may all be in Sacramento, but I'm pretty sure I used to rent from Greystar in College Station, TexasThis one will definitely end up going to the California Supreme Court. I doubt that it becomes a federal case though; if all of the landlords' properties are in Sacramento (as implied in the article), then interstate commerce isn't involved.
IMHO, it is collusion and should be against the law. Whether or not it will be found to be collusion and against the law is a toss-up at this point, given the quality of some of the judges on the bench.
And the interstate commerce clause had been interpreted ludicrously since like the '40s. There was a farmer who overproduced something or other, with the intent of feeding the extra to his cattle. The govt dropped a hammer on him because had he not done so, he would have had to engage in interstate commerce to provide that feed.