The $1 billion acquisition of rent-to-own startup Divvy Homes, which was announced Wednesday, is expected to leave some shareholders without a payout, according to sources familiar with the deal.
had promised it would reinvent the rent-to-own model and make it more consumer friendly. High interest rates and mortgage rates thwarted those plans. By Matthew Goldstein Divvy Homes, a Silicon ...
Divvy Homes是一家成立于2017年的美国“先租后买”房屋贷款平台。该公司与想要成为房主但无法获得融资的人合作,允许租房者选择他们有朝一日想要 ...
Divvy operated a rent-to-own model in which it worked with ... just six months after a $110 million Series C. Maymont Homes, the Brookfield unit that is buying Divvy, operates in over 40 markets ...
A digital version of the old rent-to-own model, Divvy buys homes for clients who can’t qualify for a standard mortgage and then becomes their landlord. A 1-2% upfront fee and a portion of ...
Divvy operated a rent-to-own model in which it worked with ... just six months after a $110 million Series C. Maymont Homes, the Brookfield unit that is buying Divvy, operates in over 40 markets ...
Helping renters achieve the American dream of homeownership wasn’t quite as profitable as the creators of Divvy Homes hoped. Now, the startup rent-to-own landlord with a portfolio of single ...
Divvy operated a rent-to-own model in which it worked with renters who wanted to become homeowners ... The Series D round was announced just six months after a $110 million Series C. Maymont Homes, ...