californiagrown
Active member
13343924:Obsessedwski said:I think you know a different breed of young professional than we do... could you introduce us? If they're able to party their faces off on work trips while still performing in the kinds of jobs that expense travel, they're doing something right!
As for forcing people out of the market, you have to realize we rent to the local [student] market for the months they're in school. Which means our rent prices still have to be competitive in order for us not to lose money from having our properties sit empty.
I think what you're talking about are companies who run their properties as vacation rentals year-round. In that case since the annual return on investment for the property is far greater, it can push up prices in the market as their revenues allow them to pay more for the cost of the living space. What we're doing is a little different, because we're gathering unused supply and matching it with the demand in a parallel market for the months where it's relevant.
The rest of the year we're simply a normal property management company that comes with extra perks for students like bi-weekly cleaning. There really shouldn't be any distortion in the market caused with our model as far as I can see - if we did cause rent increases it would end up hurting us for the 8-months of the year that we operate in the rental market. Sorry if that got a little technical, I'm an economist by training so I get a little jargon-y sometimes!
Lol at the first part. As for the second part, your company helps to push up prices in the neighborhood. The prices dont have to be overly competitive because of the totally out of wack supply to demand ratio.
You charge more for your rent than what you pay for it, correct?
How the hell does that mean you arent pushing up rental pricing?
13343933:Obsessedwski said:Yeah I see what you're saying. Not necessarily by our actions, but theoretically landlords could try to replicate our model individually.
It actually already happens in San Diego. My friend lives right next to Mission beach where it's largely a student community, and the landlords there offer 8-month leases tailored specifically to student needs so they can rent it out over the summer as short-term vacations.
That being said, there's a limited market for that. There's only so many landlords that can do that before there's no one left to sign the 8-month leases - for most demographics the standard 12-month lease is the only one that makes sense.
So definitely possible, but highly unlikely that our model will end up shifting the market like standard Airbnbs might.
How does your company make money if it doesnt charge more money than it pays the sublettor to sublease?????