Zillow sees slowing demand for ads in housing downturn

Published Fri, Aug 5, 2022 · 06:39 AM
    • The company, which makes most of its money by helping agents connect with homebuyers, has been riding the housing roller coaster for more than 2 years.
    • The company, which makes most of its money by helping agents connect with homebuyers, has been riding the housing roller coaster for more than 2 years. PHOTO: BLOOMBERG

    ZILLOW Group shares plummeted after the company predicted that a significant contraction in home sales would weigh on the amount of advertising it can sell to real estate agents.

    The company, which makes most of its money by helping agents connect with homebuyers, has been riding the housing roller coaster for more than 2 years, shifting from a sharp slowdown in the early days of the pandemic, to the boom that followed, and now a period of higher mortgage rates and cooling sales.

    The ongoing downturn led Zillow to project earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation of US$73 million to US$88 million in the third quarter, according to a shareholder letter on Thursday (Aug 4). That missed the US$170 million analysts were expecting, and Zillow shares fell as much as 11 per cent in trading after New York markets closed.

    Zillow wasn't the only real estate technology company to provide discouraging guidance for the third quarter. Brokerage Redfin also fell in late trading after the company forecast wider losses than analysts estimated. Opendoor Technologies projected a loss, saying the sharp slowdown in housing demand would push it to cut prices on some of its listings. Its shares rose slightly.

    "Agents saw demand go down and longer cycles for their customers to close," Zillow chief financial officer Allen Parker said on a conference call with investors. "Their natural reaction at a time like this is to reduce their advertising spend somewhat as a protection."

    Zillow, led by chief executive officer Rich Barton, has bounced between business models in a bid to wring greater profits from its massive online audience, which reached 234 million unique visitors per month in the second quarter.

    Asean Intelligence

    Get insights into businesses across South-east Asia

    Get the free report

    In 2018, the company made an audacious bet on a business called iBuying, predicting that the tech-powered spin on home-flipping would supercharge profits. Zillow's attempt to rapidly expand the effort faltered, pushing Barton to shutter the business last year in a move he said would protect the company from bigger losses in a future downturn.

    Zillow pivoted again, laying plans to build a housing "super app" to integrate tools consumers and agents use to navigate the buying or selling process. The company is adding a new component to that effort, allowing visitors to Zillow's sites and apps to request a cash offer for their homes from Opendoor.

    The arrangement lets Opendoor tap into Zillow's audience while helping Barton's company fulfil consumer demand for a service without putting capital at risk.

    "Despite the challenging housing environment that we cannot control," Barton said on the call, "we are as confident as ever in what we can control." BLOOMBERG

    Decoding Asia newsletter: your guide to navigating Asia in a new global order. Sign up here to get Decoding Asia newsletter. Delivered to your inbox. Free.

    Share with us your feedback on BT's products and services