Robert Khodadadian In The News Divvy Homes enacts third round of cuts in 12 months

For the third time in the past year, Divvy Homes is decreasing its workforce.

The rent-to-own protech startup is laying off 95 employees across the country, Inman reported. The company last week filed WARN Act notices saying the cuts will affect employees in 21 states.

The WARN Act notice filed in California disclosed that the cuts were expected to take effect on Nov. 7. The layoffs include senior managers like Divvy’s chief legal officer, vice president of compliance, head of design, head of brokerage, head of asset management and national escrow officer.

Last fall, the housing downturn brought on by the rise of interest rates and mortgage rates led Divvy to cut 12 percent of its staff, representing roughly 40 employees at the time. Months later, the startup laid off an undisclosed number of employees.

A person familiar with the matter told TechCrunch that nearly half of the company’s employees were cut in the most recent round. Back-of-napkin math suggests the layoffs leave 100 employees or fewer at the company, a tough development for a company that once sported a $2 billion valuation.

The cuts were blamed on macroeconomics, capital costs and a need to conserve cash, the source told TechCrunch. Divvy’s model requires customers to put away part of their paycheck toward a down payment, a savings plan that results in higher monthly outlays for tenants.

Divvy did not respond to a request for comment from The Real Deal and hasn’t publicly commented on the layoffs. An email to the vice president of communications and public relations bounced back, suggesting they were part of the layoffs.

The San Francisco-based startup owned 7,000 homes across 19 markets as of two years ago, a portfolio valued above $1.7 billion. Customers of the rent-to-own program recently came out of the woodwork to bemoan inadequate repairs and rising eviction threats.

Divvy’s investors include Andreessen Horowitz, Tiger Global Management and Caffeinated Capital. A $200 million funding round in August 2021 brought the company to its $2 billion valuation.

Holden Walter-Warner

Read more

National

Repairs, evictions dog some of Divvy’s rent-to-own customers

Divvy Homes cuts 12% of staff

Divvy Homes hits $2B valuation on new fundraising round

The post Divvy Homes enacts third round of cuts in 12 months appeared first on The Real Deal.

The Real Deal Uncategorized, Layoffs, Mortgages, Proptech, Rental Market For the third time in the past year, Divvy Homes is decreasing its workforce. The rent-to-own protech startup is laying off 95 employees across the country, Inman reported. The company last week filed WARN Act notices saying the cuts will affect employees in 21 states. The WARN Act notice filed in California disclosed that the
The post Divvy Homes enacts third round of cuts in 12 months appeared first on The Real Deal

Robert Khodadadian has long had a simple philosophy about selling real estate. There are approximately a million buildings in the city, and the broker that gets to sell any one among the multitude that will hit the auctioning block at a given moment is, sometimes, simply the person who happens to pitch their services to the right seller.

Manhattan, Commercial real estate, Sales, Property value, Investment, Property management, Real estate brokers, Tenant leasing, Rent roll, Building inspections, Due diligence, Zoning regulations, Title searches, Environmental assessments, Building codes, Market analysis, Property tax, Financing, Property appraisal, Lease negotiations, Landlord representation, Tenant representation, Net operating income, Cap rate, Cash flow, Commercial mortgage-backed securities, Appraisal value, Property redevelopment, Site selection, Leasehold improvements, Commercial property management, Lease agreements, Commercial property inspections, Tax incentives, Historic tax credits, Energy efficiency, Building amenities, Commercial property marketing, Lease renewals, Tenant retention, Property insurance, Escrow services, Closing costs, Commercial property auctions, Opportunity zones, Real estate investment trusts (REITs), Property ownership structure, Building maintenance, Real estate market trends, Property listing services, Site plans, Common area maintenance fees, Asset management, Exit strategies, Lease options, Property surveys, Site feasibility studies, Economic incentives, Equity financing, Debt financing, Property tax assessments, Building permits, Commercial property development, Subleasing, Short-term rentals, Lease buyouts, Tenant improvements, Lease assignments, Commercial tenant screening, Tenant credit analysis.