Home » World » FTC Sues Zillow and Redfin Over Rental Listing Agreement

FTC Sues Zillow and Redfin Over Rental Listing Agreement

by Priya Shah – Business Editor

FTC Sues Zillow‍ and Redfin Over Alleged⁤ Rental Market Conspiracy

The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has filed a lawsuit against Zillow⁣ and Redfin, accusing the ⁤companies of illegally conspiring to reduce competition in the online multifamily rental⁢ listing market. The agency announced the suit Tuesday, ⁤alleging a violation ⁢of federal‍ antitrust ‌laws.

At the heart of the‌ complaint is‌ a‌ $100 ‌million⁢ payment zillow made to Redfin earlier this year. The FTC​ contends this payment was ⁤made with the intention of Redfin re-hosting ⁣Zillow’s multifamily rental listings on its platforms – including Redfin.com and Rent.com – effectively ⁣diminishing Redfin’s⁣ role as ‌an independent competitor.

According to ⁤the FTC,the agreement involved Redfin terminating contracts with its existing advertising customers and assisting Zillow ‌in acquiring that business.Furthermore,‌ Redfin ‌allegedly ⁢committed ⁤to ‌limiting its involvement in the multifamily advertising ‍market for up ‌to nine years, essentially becoming ⁢a ⁤platform for Zillow’s listings.

The FTC also alleges that following the ⁢deal,Redfin laid off hundreds of employees and then facilitated Zillow’s selective rehiring of​ many‌ of them.

“Paying off a competitor to stop competing against you is a violation of federal⁢ antitrust⁤ laws,” stated⁢ Daniel Guarnera, ⁢director‌ of⁣ the FTC’s bureau of competition. “Zillow paid millions of dollars to eliminate ⁣Redfin as an independent competitor in an already concentrated advertising market-one that’s critical for renters, property managers, and the health of ⁤the overall U.S. housing ‍market.”

The lawsuit ⁤seeks to dismantle the agreement between Zillow and Redfin and may⁢ require divestitures or restructuring to‍ restore competition ‍within the rental​ advertising market.

Following the FTC’s‌ announcement, shares of both ‌Zillow and Redfin’s ​parent company, Rocket Companies, experienced⁢ a decline in trading.

Zillow defended ⁤the⁢ partnership, stating in a release that the listing syndication with‌ Redfin “benefits both renters and property managers and ⁢has expanded renters’ access ‌to multifamily listings across multiple platforms.” The​ company maintains the arrangement is “pro-competitive and pro-consumer.”

Redfin ​also disputed the FTC’s allegations, asserting that the partnership has ‌”given redfin.com visitors access to ⁢more rental listings and our advertising customers access to more renters.” The company ⁤stated that declining advertising customer ​numbers made maintaining a dedicated sales force unsustainable,‍ and the partnership with Zillow allowed for⁤ investment in rental-search ⁣innovations on Redfin.com.

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