Schakowsky, Garcia, Jayapal, Bush Call on DOJ and FTC to Investigate RealPage for Anticompetitive Practices
RealPage’s price-setting software uses nonpublic information to recommend rent rates to its clients, a practice that may be contributing to the rental affordability crisis in the United States and could rise to the level of coordinated pricing among competitors.
WASHINGTON – Today, Congresswoman Jan Schakowsky (IL-09), a Senior Chief Deputy Whip and Chair of the Consumer Protection and Commerce Subcommittee of the Energy and Commerce Committee, Congressman Jesús "Chuy'' García (IL-04), Congresswoman Pramila Jayapal (WA-07), and Congresswoman Cori Bush (MO-01) led a letter to the Federal Trade Commission and the Department of Justice urging the agencies to investigate potential anticompetitive and illegal practices by RealPage Inc., a multinational company that provides a proprietary rent-setting software for landlords and estate owners. RealPage clients control over 40% of all rental units in the country.
"RealPage clients regularly charge above-market rental rates, and 90 percent of property managers and landlords follow the price increases recommended by the software. This revelation, coupled with the high concentration of rental property ownership in cities across the country, suggest that RealPage and its clients' use of YieldStar could be contributing to skyrocketing rents across the United States," said the lawmakers.
A recent investigation by ProPublica found that RealPage's YieldStar software uses an algorithm to analyze data gathered from clients - including nonpublic information - and suggest prices for open units to its clients. Landlords' sharing of nonpublic data with RealPage for use in its algorithm could rise to the level of coordinated pricing among competitors and may be contributing to soaring rental costs across the country.
"Our constituents cannot afford to have anticompetitive—and potentially per se illegal—practices drive up prices for essential goods and services at a time when a full-time, minimum-wage salary does not provide a worker enough money to rent a two-bedroom apartment in any city across this country," continued the lawmakers.
Corporate landlords continue to rake in record profits, while everyday Americans continue to suffer.
"The rental affordability crisis in the United States is increasingly dire for Americans," concluded the lawmakers. "The Federal Trade Commission and the Department of Justice have a responsibility to ensure anticompetitive practices are not contributing to already exorbitant rent costs for everyday people."
Members who joined the letter include Representatives Jamaal Bowman (NY-16), Yvette Clark (NY-09), David Cicilline (RI-01), Danny Davis (IL-07), Madeleine Dean (PA-04), Dwight Evans (PA-03), Raúl Grijalva (AZ-03), Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-AL), Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (NY-14), Katie Porter (CA-45), Mary Gay Scanlon (PA-05), Mark Takano (CA-35), and Frederica Wilson (FL-24).
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