Ark7 is the simplest way to invest in real estate, period. Diversify your portfolio, earn passive income, and choose your properties from our curated list in the hottest markets in the U.S. No platform fees, no management hassle, no minimum investment.
Hello, Product Hunters!
I’m Meng, Co-founder and CMO of Ark7. We are excited to launch Ark7, a real estate investment platform we have been working on for over two years, on Product Hunt!
Have you ever wanted to invest in real estate but did not have the time or money to commit to buying and managing a property? We created Ark7 to solve this dilemma. Ark7 is a real estate platform that lets you buy property shares like you buy stocks and—unlike REITs—lets you directly choose the properties you want to invest in.
🏡Our Story
When our founder, Andy Zhao, an ex-engineer for Google, first considered investing in real estate in the Bay Area, he found it required a great deal of time and money to purchase and maintain a property. After discussing these barriers of entry into real estate investment with Jim, a friend and longtime real estate agent, Andy decided he wanted to create Ark7—a company that makes investing in property as easy as buying stocks.
✔️How Our Users Benefit from Ark7
We created Ark7 to make real estate investment accessible to people who want to invest but do not have the time or funds to do so. Users can benefit from using Ark7 to invest in properties located in different cities with low-cost shares at as low as $5 without the hassle of having to manage properties. Our full-service platform gives users control over their investments including: picking properties, managing their portfolio, and viewing their income. Ark7’s investing model is especially a good way for beginners to dip their toes into real estate investing without having to risk a large amount of time or money buying and managing a property by themselves.
📈The Details On Our Process
Our team carefully vets each property we buy so we pick properties most likely to appreciate and have stable monthly rental income. Important property data such as photos of the property, the neighborhood it is located in, and legal documents are available for registered users to view. Users can also see property appreciation and any monthly dividends made from their investment on their Ark7 account. Additionally, since we offer properties in Austin and Berkeley, users can divide their investments across multiple properties. Our platform can be an easy way to diversify our users’ portfolios that is less volatile than the stock market.
Right now, we have over 800 users who are mostly engineers at the big tech firms in the west coast. We are currently looking for early-stage users to give us feedback on our product and platform.
You can sign up for free to start viewing the details on our current property offerings. If you have any questions, you can ask us here or join our community Slack: https://ark7-investment-forum.sl...
We look forward to hearing your thoughts on the platform!
@mengxu This seems like a cool idea. Can I ask a few questions on your business model? Is your strategy to generate revenue from the spread between the rental yield on the property and whatever dividend yield you pay to investors, i.e. the investor gets a slightly lower rental yield, all else equal?
Another question - if investors want to sell their shares, who do they sell to? Presumably only to other investors?
Thank you!
@richard_pickering I'm guessing you're right. Take this property on their website for instance - https://www.ark7.com/investments.... If you were to invest in this property yourself (get a mortgage, purchase, rent to tenants, and manage it yourself), the return would be higher than the 14.79% that Ark7 projects. So I guess they do all the work for you and they keep the part of the return that's higher than 14.79%.
@richard_pickering Hi Richard, thanks for your questions.
1. Ark7 income consists of two parts:
Sourcing fee: 3% of each property market cap listed on the website;
Property management fee: 8-10% market rate of monthly rental income. Currently we are not charging the property management fee as a promotion for early users but we will start charging in one year.
2. Yes, once our Reg A filings are approved, we will build a trading platform, so that investors can trade shares on the trading platform.
@richard_pickering@di_ye1 Hi Di Ye,
Ark7 income consists of two parts:
Sourcing fee: 3% of each property market cap listed on the website;
Property management fee: 8-10% market rate of monthly rental income. Currently we are not charging the property management fee as a promotion for early users but we will start charging in one year.
All the fees that we charge are listed on the website. The return for Austin-S3 you have quoted is a return yield based on an all-cash offer. The return for a mortgage purchase will be indeed higher than the return for an all-cash offer. But currently in the competitive Austin real estate market, the sellers are not accepting the buyer offer with mortgage.
@mengxu Thanks a lot for your reply! So is the sourcing fee paid when an investor buys into a property, a bit like a one-time trading commission?
Appreciate your clarification on the trading platform. I think that will be a big feature for your clients, because you cannot offer a market for real estate investment that is truly more liquid than the underlying if investors cannot sell out just as easily as they can buy in. I guess that will depend on your ability to get users on your platform and thereby grow the secondary market. In the early stages, while the number of users is low, I can see how you might have to act temporarily as a buyer of last resort in order to promote customer delight --> user growth --> larger secondary market --> more customer delight etc etc. If you can get that off the ground (and obvs manage how you are financing the property purchases themselves...), then this could be really interesting.
@wisepythagoras Hi, thanks for your comment. So one big difference between us and Fundrise is we are not crowdfunding platform, because we have purchased the property before we list on our platform instead of raising enough fund to purchase a property. When investors buy the property shares on our platform, they may start to enjoy the monthly rental income cash flow right away.
When you mentioned many have tried "this" do you mean the crowdfunding business model? or which business model do you mean? I just want to make sure I understand the question correctly.
Yeah, basically this whole investment model. I've seen a few pop up over the years and they simply disappear later on. I'm not a real estate expert, but it looks like it's a tough business. Is Ark kind of like a private reit?
@wisepythagoras The difference between Ark7 and private reit is we are not a fund, we don't have fund managers and we don't manage investors' money or portfolio. We are more like a tool for real estate trading, with which investors can manage their own real estate investment portfolio and take the market risk themselves. According to some users, we are more like robinhood for real estate.
@wisepythagoras@mengxu so would I get a 1099 DIV form or a Schedule K1 at the end of the year? Help me make sense of the structure? Would users benefit from the real estate depreciation or does Ark take that?
@wisepythagoras@jessicagottlieb Hi Jessica, you will get a Schedule K1 form. our structure is like this. We build a LLC company for each listed property on the platform. So when you are purchasing shares from our listed properties, you are becoming the shareholders of the LLC companies instead of Ark7 Inc. and will get K1 form.
You should partner with https://www.producthunt.com/post... and offer a way for groups of friends to buy a house together. Securitizing the equity of real estate is a game changer! Do you use blockchain technology for this?
@mikestaub Thanks for recommendation! We will reach out to zerodown to see if there is a way to corporate. We haven't used the blockchain technology yet, but we welcome any technology that could improve users' experience.
@mikestaub nice in theory, but have you tried to buy a house with friends? Well I did and nobody is friends with anyone anymore sadly. Better to treat it like stocks with strangers in my opinion.
@aris_alexis Thanks for sharing. I have lived with friends before and it was a great experience. As long as there can be liquidity and strong contracts, I don't see what the problem could be. Can you elaborate?
@mikestaub living with friends, flatmates and the like vs buying property with them is a totally different experience. Business with friends ends up badly frequently or changes relationships from friendship to transactional. That's a subjective view of course.
@mikestaub@aris_alexis Yes the idea originated from buying properties with friends. The biggest headache with the model is if one of friends want to quit, it's very hard to find a buyer for a portion of the property. That's why we standardize and securitize the property ownership to make the ownership trading easier.
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