Startups

Vontive wants to be the Palantir of real estate investing

Comment

Image Credits: Anikei / Getty Images

The U.S. residential real estate market has been booming because of the pandemic. Although the rise in home prices has shut many people out of the market, it’s been highly lucrative for those who own property. The attractive returns in this sector have lured more investors into the market, but the processes associated with buying an investment property are still costly and fairly antiquated.

Vontive, an embedded mortgage platform for investment real estate that just came out of stealth, is trying to streamline some of those processes by helping mortgage lenders upgrade their tech. The startup, founded by a former Palantir engineer and a Freddie Mac exec, is taking a data-integration-focused approach inspired by the data giant and applying it to the real estate capital markets, its co-founder and CEO Charles McKinney told TechCrunch.

McKinney first met Shreyas Vijaykumar, Vontive’s co-founder and CTO, when Palantir partnered with Freddie Mac to build technology for mortgage credit loss management during the U.S. housing crisis. The two decided to pair up to build a company that would help modernize the highly fragmented investment real estate market.

So far, their approach seems to be working. Vontive has been profitable since last year and has seen 900% year-over-year growth in its gross merchandise volume, according to McKinney.

The consumer and commercial mortgage spaces have more readily adopted technology than the investment mortgage space, McKinney said, citing the examples of Sallie Mae’s digital loan origination system and real estate fintech Blend’s mortgage application.

“When you look at the space we’re in, nobody’s really set a standard, and we think that’s largely a gap in technology. When you’re dealing with small loan amounts, you know, one- to four-unit residential properties, you really have to build in technology to take a loan application, underwrite it, generate the loan — in other words, standardize the contract — and distribute credit out to financial institutions or capital markets,” he said.

As a result, accessing capital can be a major hurdle for real estate investors, according to McKinney.

“The first problem that we’re solving is very inaccessible, very expensive debt, due to the market being fragmented. So imagine if you’re buying a house to fix it up and then turn it into a rental. As an example, imagine paying a credit card APR for a mortgage to do that, when you’re not going to default. It’s incredibly expensive,” McKinney said.

Vontive’s solution serves two different groups, McKinney explained. The first category comprises what the company calls “retail partners,” which includes entities such as banks, credit unions, property technology companies, or B2C brands. Vontive offers these groups a no-code, white-label solution that enables them to launch their own investment-property mortgage business in less than a week, he said.

Vontive co-founders Shreyas Vijaykumar and Charles McKinney
Vontive co-founders Shreyas Vijaykumar and Charles McKinney Image Credits: Vontive

McKinney shared the example of how affordable housing tech startup PadSplit used Vontive’s no-code solution to spin up its own investment mortgage offering in less than a week. PadSplit, like Vontive’s other retail partners, sought two outcomes in doing this — it wanted to increase its success rate in acquiring homes and add an additional revenue stream by offering mortgages to investors directly on its platform.

“Those retail partners can focus on customer acquisition, and we handle everything else to fulfill the mortgage,” McKinney said.

While the no-code solution helps companies reach real estate investors, the second prong of Vontive’s platform focuses on the other side of the marketplace — liquidity providers. These financial institutions have an entirely different set of needs and problems, according to McKinney. Vontive’s financial institution customers, or “capital partners,” include lenders such as Barclays and Colchis Capital, he added.

“Financial institutions historically have had very few options to allocate capital at scale, and earn yields that are positive after adjusting for inflation. Investment real estate is a trillion-dollar market, but there’s no solution for somebody like Colchis Capital or Barclays to deploy capital at scale and earn yield by financing the mortgages that we bring to real estate investors through our retail partners,” McKinney explained.

That’s where Vontive’s other core product could help, and it’s also where the company’s Palantir-inspired approach comes in. The company has built technology to automate and standardize the underwriting process by incorporating all the associated information — including contracts, ancillary documents, and risk characteristics — into a “highly structured data model” that makes lenders more efficient and saves them money.

“What that allows us to do is it allows us to supply credit-quality, favorable, yielding assets to our capital partners. And it also allows us to do that by eliminating manual intermediaries who typically manually re-underwrite every mortgage,” usually charging 2-3% of the loan amount to the lender, McKinney said.

Timing is key for real estate investors, he noted.

“When it’s a homeowner-to-homeowner transaction, everybody understands you’re getting a Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac mortgage, and it takes several weeks. But when an investor is buying a property, they’re competing with other investors, often who are going in and agreeing to pay cash, so [investors] need to be as frictionless and fast as closing with cash. So one of the things that is a huge differentiator about our technology is that we reduce the time that it takes to close a mortgage, with complete, full bank-quality underwriting from weeks to several days,” McKinney said.

Quick underwriting can raise red flags when one considers the context of the 2008 housing crisis, but McKinney allayed those concerns by citing the Vontive algorithm’s track record. The platform has closed over $600 million of mortgages to date using its algorithmic underwriting technique, and has seen a total of just three defaults, he added. That’s an impressively low rate, which McKinney attributes in part to the less-risky nature of borrowers looking to buy an investment property rather than a primary home.

Vontive has about 12 retail partners today and plans to deploy its no-code embedded mortgage solution with another five “very soon,” according to McKinney.

The startup says it has raised $135 million — $25 million of venture capital and $110 million of debt — in a Series B round to scale its business. Zigg Capital led the round, and other investors include Founders Fund, Goldcrest, XYZ Venture Capital, 8VC, Nine Four Ventures, Village Global, Godfrey Capital, and the LeFrak organization, according to the company.

It has used some of its funding to double its headcount in the last three months to 78 employees today, McKinney said. Vontive plans to focus in the next few months on scaling up its go-to-market team and building out its partner network, he added.

More TechCrunch

Featured Article

Why Apple is taking a small-model approach to generative AI

It’s a very Apple approach in the sense that it prioritizes a frictionless user experience above all.

44 mins ago
Why Apple is taking a small-model approach to generative AI

When generative AI tools started making waves in late 2022 after the launch of ChatGPT, the finance industry was one of the first to recognize these tools’ potential for speeding…

Linq raises $6.6M to use AI to make research easier for financial analysts

In addition to the federal funding, the state of New Mexico — where SolAero is based — committed to providing financing and incentives that value $25.5 million.

Biden administration looks to give Rocket Lab $24M to boost space-grade solar cell production

Some of the new Apple Intelligence features that Apple debuted at WWDC 2024 don’t even feel like AI, they just feel like smarter tools. 

Apple’s AI, Apple Intelligence, is boring and practical — that’s why it works

The TechCrunch team runs down all of the biggest news from the Apple WWDC 2024 keynote in an easy-to-skim digest.

Here’s everything Apple announced at the WWDC 2024 keynote, including Apple Intelligence, Siri makeover

Jordan Meyer and Mathew Dryhurst founded Spawning AI to create tools that help artists exert more control over how their works are used online. Their latest project, called Source.Plus, is…

Spawning wants to build more ethical AI training datasets

After leading the social media landscape, TikTok appears to be interested in challenging Google’s dominance in search. The company confirmed to TechCrunch that it’s testing the ability for users to…

TikTok comes for Google as it quietly rolls out image search capabilities in TikTok Shop

General Motors is investing $850 million into Cruise as the autonomous vehicle subsidiary slowly makes its way back to testing in Phoenix, Dallas and, as of Tuesday, Houston. GM’s CFO…

GM gives Cruise $850M lifeline as it relaunches robotaxis in Houston

These messaging features, announced at WWDC 2024, will have a significant impact on how people communicate every day.

At last, Apple’s Messages app will support RCS and scheduling texts

Welcome to TechCrunch Fintech! This week, we’re looking at Rippling’s controversial decision to ban some former employees from selling their stock, Carta’s massive valuation drop, a GenZ-focused fintech raise, and…

Rippling’s tender offer decision draws mixed — and strong — reactions

Google is finally making its Gemini Nano AI model available to Pixel 8 and 8a users after teasing it in March.

Google’s June Pixel feature drop brings Gemini Nano AI model to Pixel 8 and 8a users

At WWDC 2024, Apple introduced new options for developers to promote their apps and earn more from them in the App Store.

Apple adds win-back subscription offers and improved search suggestions to the App Store

iOS 18 will be available in the fall as a free software update.

Here are all the devices compatible with iOS 18

The acquisition comes as BeReal was struggling to grow its user base and was looking for a buyer.

BeReal is being acquired by mobile apps and games company Voodoo for €500M

Unlike Light’s older phones, the Light III sports a larger OLED display and an NFC chip to make way for future payment tools, as well as a camera.

Light introduces its latest minimalist phone, now with an OLED screen but still no addictive apps

Since April, a hacker with a history of selling stolen data has claimed a data breach of billions of records — impacting at least 300 million people — from a…

The mystery of an alleged data broker’s data breach

Diversity Spotlight is a feature on Crunchbase that lets companies add tags to their profiles to label themselves.

Crunchbase expands its diversity-tracking feature to Europe

Thanks to Apple’s newfound — and heavy — investment in generative AI tech, the company had loads to showcase on the AI front, from an upgraded Siri to AI-generated emoji.

The top AI features Apple announced at WWDC 2024

A Finnish startup called Flow Computing is making one of the wildest claims ever heard in silicon engineering: by adding its proprietary companion chip, any CPU can instantly double its…

Flow claims it can 100x any CPU’s power with its companion chip and some elbow grease

Five years ago, Day One Ventures had $11 million under management, and Bucher and her team have grown that to just over $450 million.

The VC queen of portfolio PR, Masha Bucher, has raised her largest fund yet: $150M

Particle announced it has partnered with news organization Reuters to collaborate on new business models and experiments in monetization.

AI news reader Particle adds publishing partners and $10.9M in new funding

Mistral AI has closed its much-rumored Series B funding round, raising €600 million (around $640 million) in a mix of equity and debt.

Paris-based AI startup Mistral AI raises $640M

Cognigy is helping create AI that can handle the highly repetitive, rote processes center workers face daily.

Cognigy lands cash to grow its contact center automation business

ChatGPT, OpenAI’s text-generating AI chatbot, has taken the world by storm. What started as a tool to hyper-charge productivity through writing essays and code with short text prompts has evolved…

ChatGPT: Everything you need to know about the AI-powered chatbot

Featured Article

Raspberry Pi is now a public company

Raspberry Pi priced its IPO on the London Stock Exchange on Tuesday morning at £2.80 per share, valuing it at £542 million, or $690 million at today’s exchange rate.

12 hours ago
Raspberry Pi is now a public company

Hello and welcome back to TechCrunch Space. What a week! In the same seven-day period, we watched Boeing’s Starliner launch astronauts to space for the first time, and then we…

TechCrunch Space: A week that will go down in history

Elon Musk’s posts seem to misunderstand the relationship Apple announced with OpenAI at WWDC 2024.

Elon Musk threatens to ban Apple devices from his companies over Apple’s ChatGPT integrations

“We’re looking forward to doing integrations with other models, including Google Gemini, for instance, in the future,” Federighi said during WWDC 2024.

Apple confirms plans to work with Google’s Gemini ‘in the future’

When Urvashi Barooah applied to MBA programs in 2015, she focused her applications around her dream of becoming a venture capitalist. She got rejected from every school, and was told…

How Urvashi Barooah broke into venture after everyone told her she couldn’t

Slack CEO Denise Dresser is speaking at TechCrunch Disrupt 2024.

Slack CEO Denise Dresser is coming to TechCrunch Disrupt this October