When anything gets funded, fat startups look healthy
NEW YORK: In 2003, Keith Rabois, a long-time Silicon Valley investor and executive, had an ambitious idea: He wanted to start a website that would instantly offer a fair price for your home.
If you accepted the offer, the site would agree to buy your house immediately, closing the deal in a matter of days. To Rabois, the plan seemed obvious: Homes are the most expensive possession many of us own, and yet they are also the most difficult to trade on - to sell in a hurry if you need to relocate or are otherwise looking for quick cash.
But tech could solve that. By analysing lots of sales data, a company could come up with an accurate price for most homes; then the startup could buy houses quickly, charge people a convenience fee and sell the homes over a longer period of time. There was just one problem: Back then, Silicon Valley was in the middle of a post-dot-com bust and nobody would fund such an expensive plan. So Rabois sat on the idea for more than a decade. Then in 2014, amid flusher times, he and several partners opened the homebuying company, called Opendoor.
Opendoor has since raised more than $300 million in equity and has also taken out more than $500 million in debt. It plans to be in 10 markets by year's end. In the process, Opendoor also has become a model for a new kind of tech upstart: Call it the fat startup.
For much of the past decade, tech investors have been enamored of software companies that could grow very quickly for little money -like Instagram, which raised less than $60 million before it was bought by Facebook for $1 billion. Even Uber, which has raised billions of dollars for expansion, has attracted investors on the promise of eventual low operational costs, as it neither owns nor actually employs its drivers.
But modern capital markets have since unlocked far grander opportunities for tech entrepreneurs. They are blessed with essentially unlimited access to money, and ideas that once seemed too expensive, too risky or just too crazy are now getting off the ground. These startups are fat -with capital, with industry-altering ambition and, to their critics, often more than a little hubris.
Consider how Elon Musk, the chief executive of Tesla and SpaceX, is building electric cars, a gigantic automated factory, solar roofs, rockets and, as a hobby, a tunneling company. Opendoor fits that mold.
The company faces rising competition, high operating costs and - because we are talking about the market that caused the global financial crisis -the possibility of an unforeseen blow-up. But if it works, Opendoor could be transformative; by making buying and selling houses as easy as buying and selling cars and change how we think of homeownership.
If you accepted the offer, the site would agree to buy your house immediately, closing the deal in a matter of days. To Rabois, the plan seemed obvious: Homes are the most expensive possession many of us own, and yet they are also the most difficult to trade on - to sell in a hurry if you need to relocate or are otherwise looking for quick cash.
But tech could solve that. By analysing lots of sales data, a company could come up with an accurate price for most homes; then the startup could buy houses quickly, charge people a convenience fee and sell the homes over a longer period of time. There was just one problem: Back then, Silicon Valley was in the middle of a post-dot-com bust and nobody would fund such an expensive plan. So Rabois sat on the idea for more than a decade. Then in 2014, amid flusher times, he and several partners opened the homebuying company, called Opendoor.
Opendoor has since raised more than $300 million in equity and has also taken out more than $500 million in debt. It plans to be in 10 markets by year's end. In the process, Opendoor also has become a model for a new kind of tech upstart: Call it the fat startup.
For much of the past decade, tech investors have been enamored of software companies that could grow very quickly for little money -like Instagram, which raised less than $60 million before it was bought by Facebook for $1 billion. Even Uber, which has raised billions of dollars for expansion, has attracted investors on the promise of eventual low operational costs, as it neither owns nor actually employs its drivers.
But modern capital markets have since unlocked far grander opportunities for tech entrepreneurs. They are blessed with essentially unlimited access to money, and ideas that once seemed too expensive, too risky or just too crazy are now getting off the ground. These startups are fat -with capital, with industry-altering ambition and, to their critics, often more than a little hubris.
Consider how Elon Musk, the chief executive of Tesla and SpaceX, is building electric cars, a gigantic automated factory, solar roofs, rockets and, as a hobby, a tunneling company. Opendoor fits that mold.
The company faces rising competition, high operating costs and - because we are talking about the market that caused the global financial crisis -the possibility of an unforeseen blow-up. But if it works, Opendoor could be transformative; by making buying and selling houses as easy as buying and selling cars and change how we think of homeownership.