Housing.com acquires Realty Business Intelligence for $2-4M

Housing.com acquires Realty Business Intelligence for $2-4M

Thursday May 28, 2015,

2 min Read

Real estate portal Housing.com has acquired city-based start-up Realty Business Intelligence for an estimated USD 2-4 million deal (Rs 12-24 crore).


yourstory_HousingApp_FeatureImage

According to industry sources, the acquisition will help the Softbank-backed firm strengthen its analytics capabilities to help consumers and investors make informed decisions about real estate purchases.

"Realty BI helps clients manage risks pertaining to collateral security and helps them make informed choices about projects. With this acquisition, Housing can offer better value proposition to its customers," sources added.

According to PTI, Housing.com did not respond to emailed queries or calls. Sources said Merisis Advisors were the advisors to the deal, but the company also declined to comment when reached.

 

Founded in 2013, Realty BI tracks real estate trends and creates collateral risk management tools through the use of technology. Its clients include banks and HFCs/NBFCs.


Related Stories :

Was Housing.com right in spending over Rs 120 crore on the lookup campaign?

Housing plans to go global, launches new logo

[Infographic] Clash of the Titans: CommonFloor vs. Housing


Previously, Housing.com had acquired Indian Real Estate Forum and reports suggested that it was looking to buy real estate analytics firm, PropEquity. Housing.com competes with the likes of CommonFloor, 99Acres and MagicBricks. Commonfloor was also in race for buying Realty BI.

Housing.com was started in 2012 by 12 fellow classmates at IIT Bombay and is seen as one of the most successful startups in the real estate space. Apart from the USD 90 million funding led by Softbank, Housing.com has investors like Helion Venture Partners, Nexus Venture Partners and Qualcomm Ventures on board.

Rahul Yadav, Housing, featured

The company was recently in news for the spat between its co-founder and CEO Rahul Yadav and investors. Yadav had reportedly called fellow board members and investors intellectually incapable of any sensible discussion in a resignation letter. Later, he apologised and withdrew his resignation.


Also read :

‘85% of my equity has vested and I’m not leaving!’ Rahul Yadav of Housing

Young, brash, and confident: YourStory’s interview with Rahul Yadav of Housing