How sad the future is where owning a small percentage of a home is the new norm. If only there were startups trying to figure out a way to make complete home ownership actually attainable or somehow reduce the prices of homes.
I saw Fundrise included in this but aren't they themselves a reit model and not a fractional model the way the others are in this list? Would love to see a video like this discussing more traditional reit platforms like Fundrise, Concreit, Realty Mogul, etc. and complete property purchase platforms like Roofstock and Doorvest
Fundrise is basically offering non-traded REITs that you pay a premium for with often a worse return and liquidity. Its really the same business model as fractional. Private market REITs can be really solid (for institutional investors) but the ones focused on getting the little guy invested into them are rarely the best use of your dollars.
The stock model is a good one. Once upon a time, kings had to finance state-owned corporations or operations. Then, a class of people arose that could purchase pieces of the financing for those corporations. Suddenly, the king/govt didn't have as much control. Maybe with these shares of home "stock" being sold to commoners, we can remove the single landowner and all become shareholders, removing control from the landowners. And hopefully have enough to buy or rent our own home.
What banks give loans for Fractional Property Investment? Why not provide a contact list of banks. If not then your content is not doing the public a good services that you can do better towards.
I think your perspective is very small minded, sorry. You shared not even 1% of all that can be done through REITs. People don't just invest it because "they can't afford to buy a home."There are billionaires such as Warren Buffett who own 9% of his portfolio in fractional real estate. Maybe you just don't know enough about the topic so probably shouldn't make a whole video about it quite yet. I'd research more if I were you.
I think you’re misunderstanding the argument I’m trying to make. The startups such as Arrived, Fundrise and LoftyAI I have referred to as “fractional real estate” and separated them from traditional reits. This video is literally pro-reits. Warren does not invest through the fractional model that these startups are trying to do. He invests in traditional publicly traded Reits. Both Reits and these startups make you technically a “fractional owner” in numerous proprieties but their fee structure is different. The startup model is objectively less favourable than investing in a traditional reit, as mentioned in the video. The fact that 70% of Arrived users are renters themselves shows that they likely cannot afford a home themselves. It’s a reflection of how expensive real estate has become. These startups have marketed themselves as a way for people that cannot afford a home to feel like they are partaking in the capital appreciation of real estate. It’s fun, but investing in a traditional reit is better as far as fees, diversification and liquidity goes.
This wasnt a video about REIT’s, thats a pretty negative comment for someone who lacks listening comprehension. @raisedmedia thanks for the video, it was very helpful.
It seems like there are some real pro's to the platforms, however how do people know it's an actual house that a company like Arrive has actually purchased and not something like an NFT home? Also, if this is for real, they are only using the publics capital to eventually gain complete control over the housing market. It's kind of like how you deposit YOUR MONEY into a bank and they in turn take it and invest it for THEIR OWN INTERESTS, while throwing you a small 1-2% interest on your account (collectively) so they can dominate, increase THIER WEALTH and grow more powerful by buying everything up. Yeah, they fan everyone in so THEY get FAT and rich and YOU GET THE CRUMBS.
Right you'd think that since these companies are renting out these homes they'd have an index to rent from attached to their names as well. I went after arrived in particular because I'd heard of it and they don't have a now leasing page anywhere
How sad the future is where owning a small percentage of a home is the new norm. If only there were startups trying to figure out a way to make complete home ownership actually attainable or somehow reduce the prices of homes.
For some it seems they’d rather own a percentage of a home instead of nothing at all. Definitely a sad reflection of North American home prices
You'd need to collapse the entire world economic in order to achieve that goal.
"How sad the future is where owning a small percentage of a company is the new norm...." - you 150 years ago 😐
DAO PropTech is enabling home ownership at replacement cost based valuation.
I saw Fundrise included in this but aren't they themselves a reit model and not a fractional model the way the others are in this list?
Would love to see a video like this discussing more traditional reit platforms like Fundrise, Concreit, Realty Mogul, etc. and complete property purchase platforms like Roofstock and Doorvest
Fundrise is basically offering non-traded REITs that you pay a premium for with often a worse return and liquidity. Its really the same business model as fractional. Private market REITs can be really solid (for institutional investors) but the ones focused on getting the little guy invested into them are rarely the best use of your dollars.
4:36 is that EDP 445?! lmaooo
Haha you know it!
I want to do this with my property. I have not found a template of a agreement form to best spell out terms.
Why would you want to? There’s very few situations where it would be the best move for you if you were either a property owner or potential investor.
so I can raise $$ to complete the build out with share holders because interest rates are to high for my monthly payment. @@RaisedMedia
The stock model is a good one. Once upon a time, kings had to finance state-owned corporations or operations. Then, a class of people arose that could purchase pieces of the financing for those corporations. Suddenly, the king/govt didn't have as much control. Maybe with these shares of home "stock" being sold to commoners, we can remove the single landowner and all become shareholders, removing control from the landowners. And hopefully have enough to buy or rent our own home.
0:14 movie???
*the car scene "listen, I'm a man with a lot of properties". Part
@@jasmineb.3122 Sorry I was confused with another video I posted. The clip is from the 2014 movie "99 Homes."
@@RaisedMedia thanks so much!
What banks give loans for Fractional Property Investment? Why not provide a contact list of banks. If not then your content is not doing the public a good services that you can do better towards.
I think your perspective is very small minded, sorry. You shared not even 1% of all that can be done through REITs. People don't just invest it because "they can't afford to buy a home."There are billionaires such as Warren Buffett who own 9% of his portfolio in fractional real estate. Maybe you just don't know enough about the topic so probably shouldn't make a whole video about it quite yet. I'd research more if I were you.
I think you’re misunderstanding the argument I’m trying to make. The startups such as Arrived, Fundrise and LoftyAI I have referred to as “fractional real estate” and separated them from traditional reits. This video is literally pro-reits. Warren does not invest through the fractional model that these startups are trying to do. He invests in traditional publicly traded Reits. Both Reits and these startups make you technically a “fractional owner” in numerous proprieties but their fee structure is different. The startup model is objectively less favourable than investing in a traditional reit, as mentioned in the video. The fact that 70% of Arrived users are renters themselves shows that they likely cannot afford a home themselves. It’s a reflection of how expensive real estate has become. These startups have marketed themselves as a way for people that cannot afford a home to feel like they are partaking in the capital appreciation of real estate. It’s fun, but investing in a traditional reit is better as far as fees, diversification and liquidity goes.
This wasnt a video about REIT’s, thats a pretty negative comment for someone who lacks listening comprehension. @raisedmedia thanks for the video, it was very helpful.
It seems like there are some real pro's to the platforms, however how do people know it's an actual house that a company like Arrive has actually purchased and not something like an NFT home? Also, if this is for real, they are only using the publics capital to eventually gain complete control over the housing market. It's kind of like how you deposit YOUR MONEY into a bank and they in turn take it and invest it for THEIR OWN INTERESTS, while throwing you a small 1-2% interest on your account (collectively) so they can dominate, increase THIER WEALTH and grow more powerful by buying everything up. Yeah, they fan everyone in so THEY get FAT and rich and YOU GET THE CRUMBS.
Right you'd think that since these companies are renting out these homes they'd have an index to rent from attached to their names as well. I went after arrived in particular because I'd heard of it and they don't have a now leasing page anywhere