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by kazinator 670 days ago
The thing is, that if, say, 10,000 landlords had to vie for 1,000 renters, no application would help them set high prices. Nobody would stick to its recommendations, while would-be renters are not calling. They would say, screw that, and set a low price to try to attract the renter away from the next landlord.

Price fixing can only exist in an oligopoly (which becomes a virtual monpoly by getting together and fixing). There are too many landlords to comprise an oligopoly. If some of then plug into an app, that doesn't make them into an oligopoly.

This is all just scapegoating for deeper problems in the actual housing market. Rents are mainly high because of supply and demand.

Actually another thing is that landlords trying to set the highest possible price are being counterproductive. High rents tend to attract undesirable tenants. What you want as a landlord is not to extract the highest rent, but to find a great tenant. A great tenant isn't the one who can pay the top dollar. It's one who doesn't cause trouble or damage, and doesn't go into arrears on their rent. (Plus other attributes, like not complaining about every minor thing.)

How I know this is that over 30 years ago, I did IT work and materials preparation work for a real estate guru who taught seminars. He was a one man operation and hired me part time. In banging up the course materials, I picked up a thing or two.

Here is an article I just found about this topic:

https://www.landlordtalking.com/tips/tenant-screening/landlo...