Homesnap Reiterates Commitment to Broker Public Portal as FTC Approves CoStar Deal

December 18, 2020
Share this Post: 

CoStar's $250 million acquisition of portal company Homesnap was given the all-clear by the Federal Trade Commission yesterday as the commercial real estate giant continues down its path into residential real estate. The deal, which was first announced in November, sees CoStar take control of a company which works with MLSs around the country to build out public-facing property portals with their collaboration.

Following the takeover of his company, Homesnap CEO John Mazur told Inman this week that there are no plans to abandon the Broker Public Portal Project. The project which sees brokerages and MLSs collaborate to build out user-friendly local portals is something that Homesnap has been involved in for some time and, according to Mazur, is something that his new bosses at CoStar are on board with:

“[BPP] is something we’re committed to, and in the case of CoStar, it’s definitely something they love and are committed to,

Homesnap's acquisition looks set to allow CoStar to start a proxy portal war in New York where the traditional lack of a cogent MLS, among other factors, has lead to Zillow owned StreetEasy dominating the market and becoming as unpopular with local agents as Rightmove is in the UK. It has been reported that plans are afoot for Homesnap to work with the Real Estate Board of New York to build an alternative portal and take Zillow on in an increasingly competitive market in the Big Apple.

It's not all been good news for CoStar recently though, as the company still has pending business with the FTC despite this week's approval. Earlier this month the company's proposed $587 million takeover of financially floundering rental portal operator RentPath hit the rocks as the FTC sued for an alleged breach of competition law. CoStar already owns and operates Apartments.com, ApartmentFinder.com and ForRent.com with the FTC's contention being that if it were to add RentPath's portal assets Rent.com and ApartmentGuide.com the Washington based company would have a stranglehold on landlords and agents looking to advertise their properties.

December 18, 2020
Since March 2020 Edmund's job has been to read about, write about, collect data on, analyse and generally know about real estate marketplaces and the companies that run them. Before that he worked at the aggregator Mitula Group (which became Lifull Connect) for five years.

Subscribe to our mailing list to get the famous, free Friday newsletter!

News and analysis to help build better online marketplace businesses, in your inbox, every Friday

Related News

Homely Financial Results
Australian Portal Homely Records 16% More Enquiries in 2023

Australian challenger portal Homely generated over 15.5 million enquiries in the 12 months from April 2023. Homely, which competes with...

Read More
Yandex Q1 Strong Performance From Divested Assets
Yandex Q1 2024: Net Losses for Remaining Assets After Large Scale Divestments

Yandex N.V., the Dutch holding company of the marketplace giant Yandex, has released its financial results for the first quarter...

Read More
Rent.com .Au Q3 Revenus Up
Rent.com.au Q3 2024 Financial Statement: Record Quarterly Revenues of A$890,000

The rental portal operator Rent.com.au has released a report on its activities for Q3 of the Australian financial year. Highlights...

Read More
Schibsted Q1 Group Revenues Down Classifieds Revnues Up
Schibsted Revenues Down Slightly YoY in Q1 Filings

Schibsted, the Norwegian conglomerate that operates marketplaces in the Nordics, Europe and Latin America, has released its Q1 2024 numbers...

Read More