This article was written and published in Spanish and has been translated into English via Google Translate. Click here to read the original article.
The Housers real estate crowdfunding platform is not going through its best vital moment. About a year ago, the former CEO and Co-Founder, Antonio Brusola, left Housers for alleged unpaid bills of several million euros. This caused the company to launch a capital increase. Now the company has sent its investors a letter against Brusola and its breach with the current 'Pact of partners'. And he encourages them to buy Brusola's participation.
According to the letter, Brusola has breached the current 'Pact of partners' in the following points:
For all this, Housers says in the letter that Antonio Brusola is an unwanted shareholder.
The consequences of the current corporate situation are the following:
Therefore, the Company is asking its shareholders to indicate whether they would like to buy Brusola's shares.
Housers' way of working is peculiar: the top executives of Housers identify alleged business' opportunities' - which they themselves select and promote on their website - and offer it to possible 'investors' (students, recent graduates, retirees, companies, etc) that can invest from 50 euros to finance one of these projects in exchange for a certain profitability based on 1) the income that those properties can generate and 2) in the surplus value that can be obtained in the future by its sale.
The administrators of Housers decide everything, from which projects are those that are financed to what reforms are undertaken to put it in the rental market and which companies will carry out the necessary works to put the houses in a rental status. They also set the price at which they will go to market, they take care of the selection of the tenant and, when the time comes, when and at what amount the property will be sold.
Antonio Brusola, created at the time several limited liability companies that support projects or 'opportunities' - as defined by Housers - that are published on the web. In this case, the S.L. they are the ones that acquire the real estate, be it a flat or a commercial establishment and the investors at the moment of investing their money become partners of the company.
Meanwhile, the real owners, the individuals who risk their money, have no capacity to decide anything because, according to Housers in the legal terms published on its website, "the investor will not have access to the management of the company in which he invests" .
This article was written and published in Spanish and has been translated into English via Google Translate. Click here to read the original article.
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