According to Jim Cramer of CNBC, it's a little too early to have an opinion on how Zillow's home-flipping endeavor will work under new management.
The online real estate marketplace expects core business revenue to grow 56% within the next five years, but their cash-burning plan to buy and sell homes could take just as long to realize $20 billion in annualized revenue.
Cramer thinks that’s too long to wait and see if the program will work.
“I liked the old Zillow, even if it was slowing down a bit, as it was a lot less risky,” the “Mad Money” host said. “I’m not yet sold on the new Zillow, even with a much better class of CEO.”
Barton returned to Zillow as CEO after Co-Founder Spencer Rascoff stepped down in February after 10 years in the role. Zillow announced the home-flipping concept nearly a year ago and the stock has taken a number of tumbles since.
The company wants to buy 5,000 homes a month, which could be an expensive endeavor, Cramer said. Zillow, which has dominated its industry, faces further pressures because its core business is not growing as fast as it once did, he added.
Cramer thinks the pivot to investing in houses was ill-advised, citing British investment bank Barclays’ downgrade of the stock from hold to sell last month. On Monday, the American investment bank Cowen upgraded the security from market perform to outperform, throwing its faith behind the new leadership. But Cramer said it will be a wait-and-see gamble.
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