FEDS raid Cortland Management over what’s called algorithmic price-fixing. Why the rent is too damn high!

Lexx Diamond

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With all the other distractions running concurrent I have yet to see this on any major NEWS outlet.
















In a far less-noticed law enforcement action, the FBI this week conducted a dawn raid of corporate landlord giant Cortland Management over what’s called algorithmic price-fixing. This corporate real estate management firm, based in Atlanta, rents out 85,000 units across thirteen states. But Cortland is allegedly part of a much bigger conspiracy orchestrated by a software and consulting firm named RealPage to increase rents nationwide by coordinating landlord pricing decisions and holding apartments off the market. How much bigger? Well, there’s a civil antitrust action in Tennessee that’s been going on since 2023, where the argument is that RealPage has been working with at least 21 large landlords and institutional investors, encompassing 70% of multi-family apartment buildings and 16 million units nationwide, to systematically push up rents. And RealPage isn’t just some software company distorting rental markets, it’s also owned by Thoma Bravo, one of the biggest private equity firms in the U.S. So yeah, this scandal matters. (RealPage is also lobbying up, which politically connected firms do…)

How does the cartel allegedly work? Well large corporate landlords, who would normally compete with one another for tenants via price or quality, have since 2016 stopped doing so. Instead, they all share “detailed real-time data regarding pricing, inventory, occupancy rates, and unit types that are or will be coming available to rent” every day with one another through RealPage’s revenue management system, which in turn sends back recommendations on pricing.

Landlords adopt RealPage recommendations on pricing 80-90% of the time, which explicitly drives up revenue by holding apartments off the market. As the architect of RealPage once explained, “f you have idiots undervaluing, it costs the whole system.” It’s not just an information-sharing and price recommendation engine. RealPage has ‘pricing advisors’ that monitor landlords and encourage them to accept suggested pricing, it works to get employees at landlord companies fired who try to move rents lower, and it even threatens to drop clients who don’t accept its high price recommendations. This one’s a very clear conspiracy. Allegedly.

Cortland is located in Atlanta, where 81% of multifamily rental unit prices are set via software. And rent in that city has exploded, up 80% since 2016. What’s odd about this price increase is that vacancy rates have been inching up, and when there’s more supply, prices should come down. But they aren’t. What seems to have happened in the period between 2015-2017 is that a bunch of landlords started using RealPage pricing recommendations. Then in 2017, RealPage bought its main rival, Lease Rent Option, giving it perfect information into the supply and demand for apartment rentals. Here’s a map of Atlanta properties using RealPage’s software.


https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch...562e-b420-47ac-b2cb-b91f80ade509_680x618.jpeg
The Department of Justice is clearly deep in an investigation of RealPage and its cartel. And this one looks criminal. It’s also fascinating that the FBI is involved. The FBI, though historically it had a big role in antitrust investigations for its first hundred years, hasn’t really done much in this area since the early 2000s. I don’t know what conclusions to draw from that. But I’ll be watching.



 
It's going up everywhere and with all these 100kers and thousanaires running around in the black community why are we complaining rent being to damn high? just pay it.

Gentrification is happening again except in reverse,they want the ghettos and the poor want that suburban life .... can't push you out but their going to price you out.
 
It means nothing if the rent price remains where it is and does not succumb to lower price discovery.
Exactly. Can the government make the management company lower prices? If so, how much? Unfortunately, a massive price correction may also drive down home prices for existing home owners.
 
Exactly. Can the government make the management company lower prices? If so, how much? Unfortunately, a massive price correction may also drive down home prices for existing home owners.

Perhaps an approach would be to reset the rent price back to 2016 levels and see where it tapers off from that point. This would be a fair and just way to address the issue. Local landlords, like everywhere else, raised the rent to compete against what they thought were actual market prices and not manipulation --their own personal greed set aside, of course. Step two: Have Cortland refund all rent that was overpaid due to algorithmic price fixing as recompense and restitution.

As for home prices, they are long-term investments and will bounce back. A temporary loss to fix a long-term serious problem.

These two could be a start.
 
Another thing they are doing is having low-ball pricing for new tenants than raising rates on existing tenants that would have to move a bunch of things.

They make it hard to switch properties using your deposit, administration fees, and hassle with getting approved as leverage.

Whatever your new tenants are paying that is the market rate. I am buying a house.

Good info @Lexx Diamond
 
No. But if they stop the collusion they will fall organically. Competition for tenants.
If the government wanted to do something, they could steal black money and actually use it for black people this time. But there’s a better chance they’ll increase the size of Congress and the Supreme Court.
 
Rents are skyrocketing not because of price collusion, but idiots in government that are failures coming up with housing policy. A lawyer President and Vice-President would logically use the DOJ to fix a market issue.

When you want to open up your checkbook, I guess I can go into detail about how to bring housing prices down.
 
With all the other distractions running concurrent I have yet to see this on any major NEWS outlet.
















In a far less-noticed law enforcement action, the FBI this week conducted a dawn raid of corporate landlord giant Cortland Management over what’s called algorithmic price-fixing. This corporate real estate management firm, based in Atlanta, rents out 85,000 units across thirteen states. But Cortland is allegedly part of a much bigger conspiracy orchestrated by a software and consulting firm named RealPage to increase rents nationwide by coordinating landlord pricing decisions and holding apartments off the market. How much bigger? Well, there’s a civil antitrust action in Tennessee that’s been going on since 2023, where the argument is that RealPage has been working with at least 21 large landlords and institutional investors, encompassing 70% of multi-family apartment buildings and 16 million units nationwide, to systematically push up rents. And RealPage isn’t just some software company distorting rental markets, it’s also owned by Thoma Bravo, one of the biggest private equity firms in the U.S. So yeah, this scandal matters. (RealPage is also lobbying up, which politically connected firms do…)

How does the cartel allegedly work? Well large corporate landlords, who would normally compete with one another for tenants via price or quality, have since 2016 stopped doing so. Instead, they all share “detailed real-time data regarding pricing, inventory, occupancy rates, and unit types that are or will be coming available to rent” every day with one another through RealPage’s revenue management system, which in turn sends back recommendations on pricing.

Landlords adopt RealPage recommendations on pricing 80-90% of the time, which explicitly drives up revenue by holding apartments off the market. As the architect of RealPage once explained, “f you have idiots undervaluing, it costs the whole system.” It’s not just an information-sharing and price recommendation engine. RealPage has ‘pricing advisors’ that monitor landlords and encourage them to accept suggested pricing, it works to get employees at landlord companies fired who try to move rents lower, and it even threatens to drop clients who don’t accept its high price recommendations. This one’s a very clear conspiracy. Allegedly.


Cortland is located in Atlanta, where 81% of multifamily rental unit prices are set via software. And rent in that city has exploded, up 80% since 2016. What’s odd about this price increase is that vacancy rates have been inching up, and when there’s more supply, prices should come down. But they aren’t. What seems to have happened in the period between 2015-2017 is that a bunch of landlords started using RealPage pricing recommendations. Then in 2017, RealPage bought its main rival, Lease Rent Option, giving it perfect information into the supply and demand for apartment rentals. Here’s a map of Atlanta properties using RealPage’s software.

https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch...562e-b420-47ac-b2cb-b91f80ade509_680x618.jpeg
The Department of Justice is clearly deep in an investigation of RealPage and its cartel. And this one looks criminal. It’s also fascinating that the FBI is involved. The FBI, though historically it had a big role in antitrust investigations for its first hundred years, hasn’t really done much in this area since the early 2000s. I don’t know what conclusions to draw from that. But I’ll be watching.




Somebody needs to do hard time for this but they wont
 
No. But if they stop the collusion they will fall organically. Competition for tenants.
I bet a bunch of landlords are over leveraged and need that higher rent to cashflow. Would a surge in rentals cause a correction in interest rates?
 
You go to the gas station as a new customers and pay $1 per gallon. While existing customer pay $5 per gallon. The gas station tells you the market rate is $5.

Other brands which offer the same deal but you have to modify your car engine to use the fuel that is priced out at $1. You also have to pay expensive administrative fee of $200, deposit of $1000 and a $50 application fee.

I remember having to pay $20 per trade for stock, now it is virtually free due to technology, yet landlords have not streamlined this process.

No wonder the rental market is fucked up,
 
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I bet a bunch of landlords are over leveraged and need that higher rent to cashflow. Would a surge in rentals cause a correction in interest rates?
No, the two are unrelated, would definitely cause home prices to fall drastically though which is what’s actually needed.
 
No, the two are unrelated, would definitely cause home prices to fall drastically though which is what’s actually needed.
Thats kind of what I figured. Housing prices are insane. Actually a good time to liquidate real estate assets.
 
I couriered in the city 2016 to 2019.

I drove the country 2022 to 2023.

I could have told you this was happening, well, I did tell people in my personal life.

Let me tell you, when you drive, you get to watch a city breathe every...fcking...day. I see how people are living out here and ninjas, a lot of people got it, but a way, whole, lot more people don't!

If we don't get out this b!tch before it burns to the ground, you've seen all the warning.

There is more surveillance than ever in history and they still play in our face because we let them.
 
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They been saying this is what was happening. Bet no one expect the Feds to get involved tho.
I knew the feds had to get involved because most state governments, especially red state governments are not going to do a thing about this.
 
You go to the gas station as a new customers and pay $1 per gallon. While existing customer pay $5 per gallon. The gas station tells you the market rate is $5.

Other brands which offer the same deal but you have to modify your car engine to use the fuel that is priced out at $1. You also have to pay expensive administrative fee of $200, deposit of $1000 and a $50 application fee.

I remember having to pay $20 per trade for stock, now it is virtually free due to technology, yet landlords have not streamlined this process.

No wonder the rental market is fucked up,

Using legislative action to deal with landlords could drop rents, and you can avoid rent control.

Rent control like this ties you into a political party. If a landlord is offering like during the pandemic four months free rent, yet telling you an existing tenant that you are paying market rate and can't get these 'discounts'.

They will have to mark down their prices on their advertising when there is an oversupply, if you renew your lease, you can get this lower price rather than paying a 10% price increase every year.
 
motion-of-apartment-for-rent-sign.jpg


Let's say a apartment complex has no vacancies and there is a waiting list, they drastically increase the rent. When you renew your lease they give you this price that is much higher based on what new tenants pay.

I can't say just give me the existing tenant price even though they're charging much higher to new tenants.But when they're offering 6 months free rent, they won't give you that when you renew your lease
 
It's going up everywhere and with all these 100kers and thousanaires running around in the black community why are we complaining rent being to damn high? just pay it.

Gentrification is happening again except in reverse,they want the ghettos and the poor want that suburban life .... can't push you out but their going to price you out.
My nigga, what?
 

Feds raid corporate landlord, escalating nationwide criminal probe of rent increases​

JUDD LEGUM
JUN 04, 2024

Over the last four years, rents have skyrocketed by an average of over 30% nationwide and are a major factor in the overall inflation rate. There are a variety of factors behind the increases, including an overall housing shortage. But the Department of Justice is investigating another potential cause: a massive criminal conspiracy among large landlords.

Last month, the FBI reportedly conducted an unannounced raid of Cortland Management, a major corporate landlord based in Atlanta. The surprise search appears to be part of a Department of Justice criminal investigation, first reported by Politico in March, into an alleged scheme among many corporate landlords to artificially increase rents through collusion.

The investigation centers around the use of RealPage, advanced property management software used by many corporate landlords. Following a 2022 exposé by ProPublica, RealPage and landlords that use the software have been named defendants in multiple class action lawsuits, as well as actions filed by the Attorneys General of Arizona and Washington, DC.

According to the lawsuit filed by the State of Arizona in February, landlords that are supposed to be in competition with each other "outsource daily pricing and ongoing revenue oversight" to RealPage. The company allegedly facilitates and encourages landlords to work cooperatively to increase rents. An e-book produced by RealPage says that the company allows corporate landlords who are “technically competitors” to "work together . . . to make us all more successful in our pricing." RealPage bragged that landlords that use its software “continually outpace the market in good times and bad.” In other words, RealPage helps landlords charge higher rates than they would in a truly competitive market. An executive for Camden Property Trust, a corporate landlord based in Houston, said deploying RealPage's software resulted in "pushing people out" with higher rents but ultimately increased revenue by $10 million.

How corporate landlords collude via algorithm

Corporate landlords that use RealPage software dominate the rental market in many metropolitan areas. In Phoenix, according to Arizona's lawsuit, "70% of multifamily apartment units listed in the Phoenix metropolitan area are owned, operated, or managed by companies that have contracted with RealPage." According to the lawsuit filed by DC, 60% of large multifamily buildings (50 units or more) set prices using RealPage's software.

RealPage's former CEO revealed that participating landlords share "occupancy rates, rents charged for each unit and each floorplan, lease terms, amenities, move-in dates, and move-out dates." After feeding in this highly-detailed information that would normally be kept proprietary, "landlords agree to outsource their pricing authority to RealPage—rather than competing with one another on price." RealPage even has a feature called "auto-pilot" that lets the software set rent prices without any human approval or intervention.

The system has resulted in large rent increases that were previously unthinkable, according to RealPage's own executives. “As a property manager, very few of us would be willing to actually raise rents double digits within a single month by doing it manually," RealPage executive Andrew Bowen said.
Arizona's lawsuit alleges that RealPage "puts significant pressure on participants to ensure they adopt RealPage’s prices." Specifically, RealPage employs "pricing advisors" who "meet with landlords to ensure that properties are implementing RealPage’s set rates." This is described by Arizona as "policing the conspiracy to make sure no one cheats by lowering prices and trying to gain market share." RealPage training materials, cited in the DC lawsuit, advise that landlords "should be compliant" with the software's pricing recommendations. The Arizona lawsuit claims that landlords "agree that if they fail to consistently implement RealPage’s set rates, their contract with RealPage will be terminated." Jeffrey Roper, who created the RealPage algorithm, explained that if "you have idiots undervaluing, it costs the whole system."

According to DC's lawsuit, this practice shows that "while RealPage sought to grow the cartel to maximize profits, it also understood the importance of universal adherence and was willing to expel an occasional cartel member to demonstrate its commitment to enforcement of the agreed-upon pricing scheme." While the RealPage software eliminates the need for competitors to meet in a smoke-filled room, Arizona asserts that it "is still illegal… for competitors to join together decision-making power to raise, depress, fix, or stabilize prices—no matter the technology used to effect a price-fixing agreement."

Why the feds are focusing on Atlanta

Why is the FBI specifically raiding a corporate landlord that uses RealPage in Atlanta? The agency is not commenting, but a class-action lawsuit revealed that landlords who use RealPage control a large number of properties in the Atlanta area. According to the plaintiffs, landlords using RealPage "account for over 53% of the multifamily rental market in the Atlanta Submarket." This is a map, included in the complaint, which shows properties using RealPage software in the Atlanta area.

The use of RealPage in the Atlanta area has coincided with a sharp increase in rental prices. Overall, rents in Atlanta are up 56% since 2016.

Where will the FBI conduct its next raid? They have plenty of choices. RealPage also controls a large share of the market in Baltimore, Charlotte, Houston, and Miami.

RealPage says this is all a big misunderstanding. After DC filed its lawsuit in November 2023, the company said its critics were incorrectly drawing "a causal connection between revenue management software like ours and increases in market-wide rents." It said the lawsuit was "wrong on both the facts and the law and we will vigorously defend against it."

Not everyone involved in the scheme is so confident. Earlier this year, two corporate landlords named in a class action lawsuit filed by tenants reached settlements with the plaintiffs. The terms were not disclosed.

https://popular.info/p/feds-raid-corporate-landlord-escalating
 
motion-of-apartment-for-rent-sign.jpg


Let's say a apartment complex has no vacancies and there is a waiting list, they drastically increase the rent. When you renew your lease they give you this price that is much higher based on what new tenants pay.

I can't say just give me the existing tenant price even though they're charging much higher to new tenants. But when they're offering 6 months free rent, they won't give you that when you renew your lease
 
Of course it was planned, rent did not raise all over the country over night by coincidence. These corporations will just be hit with a fine and no jail time.
 
all this fuckery is a result from the plandemic, that shit backfired so bad,

and end up fuckin up the whole commercial real estate industry, to the point

they tried to run GAME aka accounting fuckery on their own TEAM CORPORATIONS

its ok when you do it to "little" people.. but when you do it to CORPORATION YOUR OWN TEAM MATES

yea HEADS GOTTA ROLL...

commercial real estate is a mess, and refuses to deal with the inevitable, and that is,

all them billion dollar luxury condos and apts... going to have to be remixed into

lower and middle class housing...

they tryin hard to avoid that shit, but like in nyc billionaires row, they building all types of luxury shit,

but many of them floors are ghost towns because nobody is buying..

I do expect that to change in a couple of years tho..
 
I saw this coming and I hope they make them pay.
Could this be the precursor to the next real-estate crash ?
Zero Percent Mortgage is back baby!!!
 
I hope the FEDS run down on all them. I noticed Black Rock dropped off the list of companies on the stock market about a week or so ago.

 
Someone needs to find the majority stockholders and employees. Give them a nice ass whooping do everything possible to fuck up their lives and see where that leads to.

Too many criminals hiding behind computers. Make sure they go to the worse ass fucking jail possible.

It's time to teach you tech geeks a good lesson.
 
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