"Please also note that Point will share in any increase in property value due to remodeling changes you might make."<p>And they don't contribute to any property maintenance costs.<p>Nice. So they get to take part in full asset appreciation without having to pay to maintain the asset.
If this catches on, the biggest risk I see is that Point (and others appropriating this model) will artificially inflate home values while tremendously negating potential upside for any buyers who buy with Point.<p>A home which might ordinarily sell for 400 might now sell for 480 because sellers can expect homebuyers to Point their way into affording more home, so might as well charge more for that home.<p>I don't see this ending well for anybody long-term except for buyers and investors who buy into markets <i>before</i> Point et al. catch on.<p>What's the expression? "It's expensive to be poor," I think? This seems like a perfect example. Buyers, especially buyers with less capital to risk, trade some immediate cost for a decent loss of upside and a decent gain of downside. Except because quite a few of these less-advantaged buyers could probably have afforded to eat the cost they sold to Point, sellers realize they can charge more to still make that money back from the buyers who otherwise could've put that money to better use.<p>Good lord, the more this stews in my head, the more this entire <i>pattern</i> seems like a massive disaster waiting to happen.
This is great. So Point can identify up and coming areas of the country, make a few investments and then have a lobbying arm to do everything they can to ensure the property values increase. So instead of NIMBY we'll also have NIMIBY, Not In My Investments Back Yard.
>There are few asset classes that have outperformed super-prime real estate in the last 60 years. Consider that the median home in Palo Alto sold for less than $20,000 in 1956, versus $2.5 million today — an appreciation rate of 12,500%. Compare that to an approximate 5000% return for the S&P 500 over the same period (much higher with dividend reinvestment, but you’d need to pay taxes on said dividends, making this calculation challenging).<p>Normally when you're comparing asset classes you don't compare the average of one class to the absolute best possible case in the other. The last fifteen years have been, IMO, a bubble-fueled aberration, and places like Palo Alto are ground zero for that bubble. I'll bet the S&P 500 compares much more favorably to <i>average</i> real estate appreciation over the same time period. Also, why the 60 year time frame, as opposed to, say, 50 or 100?<p>If the idea is to put people in houses we should do what the Koreans do. They have a contract type called "jeonse", or "key money". It's kind of an intermediate between renting and owning - essentially you give the owner a large lump sum (but not enough to buy the property) for two years. You don't pay rent, and you get all your money back at the end of the contract.<p>You benefit by getting a place to live without paying rent. The owner benefits by having the use of your money for two years (which he may be using, along with his own money, to buy the place).<p>It's easier to go rent-->jeonse-->buy than rent-->buy. I'm not really sure why we don't have something like this in the US already, particularly when you can't get a decent return on your savings.
Interesting analysis. I've thought about this from a tax, interest rate, and transactional approach.<p>Although we often think of landlords and renters in an adversarial way, they might be able to work out a deal that is better for everyone than selling and transferring ownership to the new residents, especially in California.<p>Think about an an heir to a house in palo alto, a house that her parents purchased in 1970. She doesn't really want to live in it, and is deciding if she should rent it out or sell.<p>Let's also say that her parents were wise about refinancing and did so when rates were very low. Because prop 13 preserves the low taxes through inheritance, her taxes are extremely low, and would skyrocket if she sells. Furthermore, let's say interest rates have gone up, so whoever takes out the new mortgage will pay a higher rate. Alternatively, if rates are low, she can most likely refinance and pull some money out. If she's smart about this, she can remain cash flow positive and still have a large chunk of money without selling.<p>In some ways, it just doesn't make sense to sell. It might make sense, at this point, for people who own property to become permanent landlords, and for the vast majority of tenants to be renters. This might even be better for renters, since the overall cost of housing would be lower due to overall lighter taxes and interest rates.<p>Interestingly, that hasn't happened, so there is clearly a strong motivation to not be a landlord and/or to be an owner rather than a renter. The income tax break could be a big factor here as well - perhaps that exceeds the value of the property tax break?
While I think this is a good idea and people who want to buy small homes may use it the math is pretty hilarious.<p>Individuals want to be levered as much as they can to the house they buy (I don't have to mark this to market daily), the main preventive cost of the 20% down, Point doesn't reduce the capital required for that, it just makes the mortgage smaller.<p>Why would I want a lower tax interest write off, still have to put up the same amount of initial capital, pay for all maintenance etc, but only down 66% of an asset?
Shared ownership schemes are hardly new: <a href="https://www.helptobuy.gov.uk/shared-ownership/" rel="nofollow">https://www.helptobuy.gov.uk/shared-ownership/</a><p>So I'm not sure what the magic is supposed to be. Is it that they get a larger share of the capital appreciation upside than would be implied by their ownership stake? Also note that this relies on the (normally reliable) assumption that real estate will forever increase in value.
A way for investors to invest in real estate while _lowering_ the overall home ownership rate? A way for short-sighted home buyers to trade a portion of their equity for an extra bedroom and a pool? A way for corporations to reap the main benefit of owning real property while ducking almost all of the responsibility?<p>This seems both horrifying and inexorable.
I'm not an expert in finance, but isn't this simply a CDO (collateralized debt obligation) of real estate assets?? In other words Point is simply a CDO fund? The minor differences are that the home owner ("partial home owner"?) assumes the upfront "risk" with the initial down payment, and the homeowner happens to be a few degrees closer to the "owner" of the CDO??? The only innovation that I see - and really its not much at all - is that there are fewer degrees/layers between homeowner and CDO-owner (holder of the fund).
I'm seeing a lot of commentary here that doesn't seem to reflect what this is: preferred equity for infrastructure, sometimes called mezz (mezzanine), applied to the residential real estate market.<p>I think this is super interesting! This type of financing is really common in larger real estate & project financing deals: one speaks of the "capital stack", which can include senior debt, junior debt, preferred equity, and common equity.<p>I think that the reason this hasn't been done before is because of the complications of finding, diligencing and funding individual homeowners. I definitely agree with the OP that this will be an attractive investment for institutional investors, but getting dealflow from the mortgage industry will be extremely capital intensive... I would expect both a lot of direct retail marketing expenses, as well as pretty rich commissions to real estate agent networks and mortgage brokers to kick home buyers their way. Really cool idea though!!<p>As other commenters have mentioned, this can only exacerbate any housing bubble, which is true but kind of beside the point. Yes, any reduction in cost of capital will eventually inflate asset prices, but is that a reason to stop offering mortgages, car loans, etc?
There are already legal structures in place in every state in the US that define in excruciating detail the modalities of multi-owner real property. Many of these are used as vehicles to pass wealth on to heirs tax free and engage in a variety of other living arrangements (condominiums).<p>All this seems to me to be is a sophisticated company attempting to pass off as new and innovative to the unsophisticated public something that already exists.
This might be a cool concept for somebody who knows they will stay and want to rent out one place for at least 3 - 5 years.<p>Even then, I'm not so sure. Because when renting, yes, you pay a premium, but if the house needs repairs, it's not on you. If something happens, you walk away free and clear, etc. For a "lower monthly payment", you are taking on a much larger amount of risk that is Home Ownership and giving away the upside of that risk to someone else who has no obligations for maintenance/home improvements.<p>This isn't "Reinventing Home Financing", it's buying a home with somebody else who isn't responsible for most of the costs of home ownership yet gets all the benefit. If you can only put 10% down on a home and are that desperate to have a 80% LTV mortgage, sure, this would do it. But there are MANY lenders who do a conventional home mortgage with 5% down. Using Point isn't worth the savings on the Mortgage Insurance. Maybe if you bought new construction, maybe. I'd still say on new construction you're better off taking the chance and not selling the equity in your home.
Or we could eliminate the mortgage deduction, adopt Vancouver's foreign investment restrictions and abolish California's prop13 and its equivalent in other states.<p>But of course those acts actually would reduce housing prices.
Before you go through Point's laborious quote process, check this list of requirements (which should be front and center, IMO, but whatever):<p><a href="http://help.point.com/article/15-how-do-homeowners-qualify-for-point" rel="nofollow">http://help.point.com/article/15-how-do-homeowners-qualify-f...</a><p>(They want minimum 20% down, for example.)<p>Suggestion to Point: Allow potential customers to fiddle with quote parameters without redoing the entire form. And make it clear when a parameter will immediately disqualify them.
Shared ownership is common in the UK, especially in London. This looks like a way to get in via refinance. what would be interesting is a startup that provides down payment assistance.
"There’s no such thing as a free lunch, and in this case Point’s lunch comes in the form of capital appreciation..."<p>I am fascinated by the rhetorical device being deployed here. In the beginning of the sentence, the "lunch" is the money that you save through lower mortgage payments. By the end, the "lunch" is Point's profits, and the tidy transition suggests that everyone wins.
What I don't like about this is the requirement to buy back their share after a fixed term (it looks like their longest term is 10 years).<p>That makes the contract behave like a short position. If the price of my house starts to rise rapidly, I need to "cover" or risk not having the cash when the term expires.<p>It's like being long and short in my house at the same time.
> There are few asset classes that have outperformed super-prime real estate in the last 60 years. Consider that the median home in Palo Alto sold for less than $20,000 in 1956<p>That is where I stopped reading. Palo Alto 60 years ago is such a rigged example, why should I believe anything the author says?
This is a new type of financial instrument marketed to the middle class, which is just complicated enough that most buyers won't fully understand it.<p>Which means it's almost certainly trap. Fifteen years from now, we as a society may regret having allowed this.
I'd love to be able to buy call options on houses in area you're planning on moving to in the future. Maybe someday their mode could support that too?<p>I don't currently know of any way to lock in current prices for a future purchase.
Sounds like a good way to hedge against declines in your overvalued property without having to move.<p>"If you don't sell, you can buy back Point’s stake at any time during the term at the then current appraised property value."
> It’s rethinking the fundamentals of residential real estate ownership — making single-family residential real estate a liquid, tradeable asset class.<p>So it's like a REIT but the income generation is on the appreciation of the asset?
This sounds great would love a way to own part of a home and have reduced mortgage costs without exposing a huge portion of my asset portfolio to just being the home