The a16z Show - Rocket Companies CEO: Here’s How to Fix the Housing Crisis
Episode Date: November 12, 2025The Empire State Building took 110 days to build—today, changing a window would take two years. Alex Rampell (a16z) and Varun Krishna (Rocket CEO) expose how asset inflation turned housing from the... American Dream into a wealth transfer machine where the median homebuyer age jumped from 30 to 38 in just fourteen years. While Silicon Valley burns billions on products people use daily but never pay for, Rocket quietly assembled a $10 billion profit engine and is now buying up the entire housing funnel—from Redfin's 50 million monthly searchers to one in six US mortgages—betting they can crack the code everyone else gave up on: turning a once-in-a-lifetime transaction into an everyday relationship. Resources:Follow Varun on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/varun-krishna-30019a22Follow Rocket on X: https://x.com/RocketOTDFollow Alex on X: https://x.com/arampell Stay Updated: If you enjoyed this episode, be sure to like, subscribe, and share with your friends!Find a16z on X: https://x.com/a16zFind a16z on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/a16zListen to the a16z Podcast on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5bC65RDvs3oxnLyqqvkUYXListen to the a16z Podcast on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/a16z-podcast/id842818711Follow our host: https://x.com/eriktorenbergPlease note that the content here is for informational purposes only; should NOT be taken as legal, business, tax, or investment advice or be used to evaluate any investment or security; and is not directed at any investors or potential investors in any a16z fund. a16z and its affiliates may maintain investments in the companies discussed. For more details please see a16z.com/disclosures. Stay Updated:Find a16z on YouTube: YouTubeFind a16z on XFind a16z on LinkedInListen to the a16z Show on SpotifyListen to the a16z Show on Apple PodcastsFollow our host: https://twitter.com/eriktorenberg Please note that the content here is for informational purposes only; should NOT be taken as legal, business, tax, or investment advice or be used to evaluate any investment or security; and is not directed at any investors or potential investors in any a16z fund. a16z and its affiliates may maintain investments in the companies discussed. For more details please see a16z.com/disclosures. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Housing in some sense for me is like that final frontier of Pintech.
Sort of the end goal for most consumers.
All of FinTech in some ways leads to a consumer carrying fundamentally about generational wealth.
And generational wealth, it comes from things like homeownership, right?
It comes from long-term appreciation.
It comes from creating something that's safe and sustainable for you, your family,
and your family's family.
And that's the American dream.
Part of the problem that all the old people have all the money.
It is like a catastrophic issue right now.
If you're getting paid in cash, you might get to the money.
a 3% salary bump every year, but the S&P 500, like, compounds at 10% a year.
The median age of homebuyers has jumped from 30 to 38 in just over a decade, and it's not
getting better.
Today, you'll hear from Bruhn Krishna, CEO of Rocket and A16Z general partner, Alex
Rampel, on why housing has become the final frontier of fintech.
We discuss how old people cornered the market through asset price inflation while young people
get paid in depreciating cash.
Why the Empire State Building was built in 110 days, but you can't change a window pane today in less than two years.
And the paradox of real estate sites with 50 million daily users that can't figure out how to make money,
what Alex calls Zillow and Chill.
Plus, how Rocket is flipping Silicon Valley's playbook.
Instead of building a toothbrush product in searching for monetization,
they're starting with a $10 billion profit engine and working backward to daily engagement
through their acquisitions of Redfin and Mr. Cooper.
Let's get into it.
it. Alex, in 2010, the median age for a home buyer was 30 years old. Now it's 38. Why did that happen?
And what can we do to change that? Well, I think part of the problem is that all the old people have
all the money. This really is a catastrophic issue right now. Because if you look back, the American
dream has been home ownership for a very long time. And the example that I'd like to point to is after
World War II, have you heard of Levittown? No. So Levittown, you know, you know, you're in a
Levitown. Okay, the Levitown, I'm sure you know of Levitown, Veron, but this was one of the first
track housing communities. So this guy, think about what Henry Ford did for the automobile.
Like, how could you buy a car before Ford? These were handmade things that were very, very expensive.
And I think it was James Levitt. It actually turned out to be somewhat of a racist, but that's
a different topic. So Leavittown was the first, I'm going to bring the Henry Ford factory to housing.
And it's actually a town in New York built, I think it was thousands of homes.
sold them to GIs that were coming back.
And like, homeownership was just, like, you had lots of land.
You had a country that was half the size that is today.
And just supply and demand.
So you didn't have, like, all the old people had all the money.
You had this, like, giant, giant population that wanted homeownership,
and you had lots of supply that was being built.
And actually new innovative techniques for building.
And that's why I like to point to Levittown.
And what has happened since is if you just look at the pyramid of who,
I kind of think about inflation as being two different things. You've got the CPI, which is this, you know, the Bureau of Labor Statistics comes up with a basket of goods and services like gas is one or bread is one or fish and eggs and butter and things like that. They get more expensive. They get cheaper. But then there's this other thing that I would call asset price inflation, which is not actually part of the CPI. Part of the CPI is rent or perhaps like the mortgage payment that effectively allows you to live in your house. But asset price inflation is very, very different.
So there's a piece that we wrote a little while ago showing that the price of housing in the Bay Area has declined passively in the past 25 years.
You'd be like, no, no, it hasn't.
It's gone up.
If you price it in Apple stock and Google stock, right?
So if you already have one asset and one asset would be stock or one asset would be like your parents left you a lot of money and they left you an old house, well, supply and demand, there's only a fixed amount of real estate.
There's only a fixed amount of Apple shares.
Like those have gone up in value relative to the U.S. dollar.
Like, these are the people that can buy.
homes today. And they are just predominantly and disproportionately older. And it is really hard for
younger people to afford their first house because they get paid in cash. Like most people, if you're
getting paid in cash, you might get a 3% salary bump every year, but like the S&P 500, like,
compounds at 10% of year. And if you're buying with a basket of assets, then obviously you're
not paying for your house with Apple shares. But if you happen to work at Apple, like houses have
gotten a lot cheaper in the Bay Area in 25 years. If you happen to work at a company where you have
ownership in anything. You're just getting paid a salary, like house prices have gotten a lot more
expensive. So there are many reasons why I would answer your question or how I could answer your
question, but I think fundamentally that's the main one. And like number one is supply and demand
is that we don't build enough homes, very, very different than like the Levitown area where it's like,
wow, we're going to be like a shitload of homes. And that really, really happened in the 1950s.
So it's supply and demand. And then it's also this kind of like asset price inflation,
which has really kind of created this tail of two cities for people that have out.
assets and people that do not.
And is asset price inflation the best explanation for how old people got all the money,
so to speak?
Yeah, yeah, basically, especially where it was, if it was much easier to build, there's asset
price inflation, but there's also, it was much easier to build 100 years ago than it is
today.
So this is not about housing, but all right, Pop, what is it?
How long did it take to build the Empire State Build?
What do you think?
A year?
What do you think we're in?
How long did it take to build the Empire State built?
Five years.
110 days from start to finish?
I assume today it could never have it.
If you wanted to change, like, a window paint,
it would probably take two years right now.
So the other thing is that it's not just
that the old people have all the money.
That's a problem.
But it was much easier to build things
when the old people didn't have all the money,
but bought a lot of these properties.
So now it's just, it's much, much harder to build
is number one.
If you could just go build 10 million homes tomorrow,
what do you think would happen
in the price of homes?
Would they go up or down?
Pretty sure they would go down.
Unless every economist is wrong about supply and demand, you know, the intersection being the equilibrium
price.
And the main bottleneck there being regulatory?
I mean, it's regulatory, but actually it's not regulatory always.
It's this term nimbiasm, not in my backyard.
So imagine that I bought a house, and I know that the old people that own the house next to
mine, they've made so much money by owning that house because they bought it in 1960.
This is actually a true story.
My first house I bought was in Palo Alto, and I bought it for, I think it was two,
$1.1 million in 2008, very perfectly time before Lehman Brothers failed. I figured I wanted
a house before like the World Hall Apart. No, that's not true. I should have bought it like three
months later because I'm down 50% of jobs. My next door neighbors, it was a retired Stanford professor.
He bought the house, I think in 1960, bigger a lot than mine, worth more than mine for like $30,000.
And if he wants that $30,000 to turn into more,
and like, that's a natural thing.
Everybody wants whatever.
If I buy something and it's not a consumable,
like I don't care about this water increasing in value.
I care about my house increasing in value.
If you build 10 million houses right next to mine,
the house is going to go down and build.
So it's nimbism.
And nimbism then becomes regulatory.
And then you have people that vote for people
that will give them what they want, which is nimbism.
So it's not just like you have evil politicians
that out of nowhere say,
we now need to take 10 years to go build something or you can't build things.
It's people as well.
Veroom, any reflections of hearing this?
What are your thoughts to how we can increase homeownership?
Yeah, I mean, I think Alex is right on the money.
The reality is there's just a lot of things that have shifted over the past 20, 30 years around housing, right?
Like, it's cultural shifts, it's higher home prices, it's higher rates.
But I read a cool stat the other day that like in the 50s, the average size of,
of a starter home was like 985 square feet.
And if you look at the size of a starter at home today,
just any guesses on what that is?
What is it?
I have no idea.
It's like almost 2,500 square feet.
Wow.
So our expectations, like culturally around what a home is have like fundamentally
changed.
But you also have these other generational dynamics too, right?
Like people today are settling down a little bit late.
later in life. And Alex talked about affordability, but, you know, some people want to buy,
but they just can't clear that affordability hurdle. And so there are other things that I think
will improve as we think about the future. Like the cost of building the home has got to come down,
right? And I think things like robotics, 3D printing, advancements in material science will help
with that. But that's a little bit further out into the future. I mean, the nice thing about
this AI revolution is it's not just that it will help us with all the traditional use cases
that you see today around like ChachyPT and what Anthropic is doing and agentic AI, etc., etc.
But it's more like applied AI in the context of like robotics and advancements in 3D printing material science.
But I think like our culture has fundamentally shifted a little bit.
The expectations around a starter home has shifted.
But then you have to attack the problem from the other way.
And that's where you need a little bit more of a pair of.
time shift in the technology space as well.
Yeah.
If you had to predict over the next five to seven years how the process of homeownership
changes the stats that we shared around homeownership, what you expect?
I think there are a couple of things that would change fundamentally.
I mean, I think you'll start to see the applications of AI be a little bit more geometric in nature.
And so it won't be that a computer is smart at the knowledge worker type jobs,
but it can handle manufacturing, building, and just more sort of process.
process in a workflow and like physical tasks, right?
Alex has a great analogy around bit problems versus Adams problems that I think
Andreessen had very famous for pioneering.
So I think you'll sort of start to see that.
And I think that will significantly change just the manufacturing environment in general.
I think the other thing that you'll also see is just today, part of the problem with the
home ownership dynamic is that the reason it takes so long is there's just a lot of work, right?
like providing your data, providing your documents.
It's a gigantic qualification process that involves these complicated terms like underwriting
and qualification, money movement, etc.
But it's like, why is it so easy to walk into a grocery store and buy a chocolate bar
with a credit card?
And yet the process of buying a home is just a slightly more complicated version of the same thing.
And so I imagine in three to five years a lot of that workflow gets like hyper-compressed.
and a consumer and their sort of financial readiness
and their qualification criteria
is just something that happens in a real time.
And so I think that's kind of exciting
because one, like, you know,
the amount of effort to know whether you qualify
for something as expensive as a home purchase
can be significantly compressed.
And then two, you know, you start to see more leapfrogs
and technology where, you know,
the process of building, manufacturing,
servicing a home kind of come down.
And I think if we get that right, you know, we can start to see,
and this is something that I think the administration is rightfully focused on,
is that like how do we get more new homes built at a faster rate, right?
And to Alex's point earlier, how do you get more inventory on the market,
which would create more price pressure?
So that even if mortgage rates are, you know, are elevated or high,
at least the cost of the home can come down.
And so I sort of see these these intersection points.
and starting to just influence the process,
hopefully for the benefit of that consumer.
Is anything you add to it?
Yeah, I mean, I think the technology thing,
I mean, that's why I was, like, kind of quickly check,
PTing to refresh my memory on Levittown.
But, I mean, this was the first planned suburb
and this, in 1947.
So this was all these returning GIs,
and it's like, we need to build housing
for all of these people that came back.
Like, what did you do?
Remember, like, the famous picture
at post-World War II, where the GI is like kind of swooping this woman down and kissing her.
It's like, what did they do after that? They got married. They bought a house. They had five kids.
And hence the baby boom. Well, they needed to live somewhere. And apparently it was a 985 square foot house.
But a lot of these were just like constructed so quickly. And actually, like, the technology wasn't bad at all.
But it was like, let's go bring the Henry Ford factory to housing. And that was Levitt and Sons, William Levitt,
And again, they did some bad stuff.
Like, they famously had something.
It's like you could not rent or sell to somebody who was not white.
So that part, obviously bad.
But the good part was we are going to build just like a shitload of homes
and we're going to do it in a smarter way.
And I mean, because if you have an assembly line for homes,
and by the way, like Lenar and others, like they do a version of this.
When they decide to go buy a giant tract of land and go develop it,
they don't just like build one house and then finish.
that and then build the next house. It's really cool
watching these communities
get built because it is, it's like,
okay, today is foundation day.
And it's like foundation, foundation, foundation. Like,
they just do all of these things. Okay, today
is framing day. Boom, boom, boom, boom.
And these things go up very, very quickly.
A lot of home building
and this, yeah, Verro and I agree with you.
Like, it's the Adams versus Bits thing. It's like, it's just
really hard to construct
things. But we do have solutions to this.
Like modular housing is not a
it's not like a pipe dream. You can do
this. There's this very cool, famous, like, Chinese, it's almost like a meme, but like this woman
that's, like, showing off her, like, you know, here's like this RV home. Look, shower, look this.
And it's pretty funny. It's got like this very popular TikTok, you know, YouTube short thing.
But you can do this. I mean, so I think you have like three main things. You need to make it as easy
as possible for people to buy the house. And it really is. It's like, I've never done this before.
I buy a house once every lifetime. What do I do? All I know is that I pay my rent every month. I know
how that works. Like, I'm scared from this process of homeownership. Where do I buy? Do I get outbid? Do I get a
mortgage? Ah, this sounds so complicated. I'm going to keep renting. And the biggest thing that people,
I mean, so many people that rent, they do want to buy. Like, this is not surprising. Would you
rather, like, the American dream is to own a house? You currently rent. Do you want to be
part of the American dream? Everybody's going to say yes. How do you make it as easy as possible?
and it's kind of making the process of buying as easy as possible.
It's making it as affordable as possible.
And then when you go under the affordability,
it's probably the financial side, which is mortgage.
And the United States is actually quite unique
in that most countries, they don't have 30-year-term mortgages
to repay your principal and interest.
Sometimes you'll have shorter duration.
But you have the financial side,
and then you have the construction side.
And, you know, I know more about the financial side
the construction side, but both of these, like, if you make it cheaper, like, guess what?
More people will want to, you're going to open up this aperture.
And the other thing that I would add, I gave a presentation about this a long time ago.
I never thought it would be popular to have, I'm going to give a presentation on, like,
homeownership and housing and all these things that are happening.
And somehow that was a popular little video that I made.
And I think there needs to be more of a, less of a binary between either rent or I own.
Like, that was it.
And a lot of these innovations that have popped up, like, what is Airbnb?
Like, you have this piece of real estate, and what do you do with it? Well, again, you can rent it or you can own it. You only have two options. No, no, no. You can rent it for a month or you can buy it and you can save money or rather help make your payments or have a second source of income or whatever because the Olympics are coming to L.A. in 2028. You have a little apartment near the stadium. Go rent it out for a month. Like, that's an innovation that has actually made homeownership more affordable. So, or, you know, we were an investor in a
a company that was helping do rent to own.
You rent, but like you're basically setting on fire
your rental payment every single month
because it does not help you in any way, shape, or form
in terms of getting ownership in a house.
What if you could get a house
that you have the right to buy later?
Which, by the way, would actually bring down housing costs as well
to a certain extent because there's a saying by Warren Buffett,
which I love, which is nobody pays to wash a rental car, right?
Like, that makes sense.
Why would you wash a car for Hertz?
Right?
You're returning it.
So if you know that you're going to buy your rental, you'll probably take better care of it.
If you take better care of it, well, the landlord doesn't have to worry about as many things, and then the cost goes down.
So, you know, there's a lot of in-betweens that I think technology and actually more importantly, entrepreneurship can help drive, but you need a regulatory environment that allows it.
Are you excited about the fractionalization experiments or these other forms of financial engineering?
Do they solve real problems?
Are they feasible?
people.
Can you define that?
Oh, people, there's some startups that have been trying to say, oh, you can, you know,
own part of, like we can just increase the amount of people that own part of a home.
Yeah, I mean, there's the blockchain stuff that doesn't really make sense to me.
I'm a big, big fan of crypto, but it's like crypto exists.
Like, if you're trading things that are purely in, that are purely digital, works great.
If you're saying, I'm going to represent something that's physical where I need to a
assert my ownership. Like, if somebody's living in my house illegally, that's called they broke into my
home. And then I call the police and I say, I live here. Eric broke in, kick him out. And like,
you can do that. But if I say, no, no, no, on the blockchain, it says that Eric, like, no,
it's like we have, like, the guys with guns enforce the laws. And they look at, like, who owns
the property based on, like, the county recorder's information. And, like, you know, should it work
that way? I don't know. That's how it works. So, like, that stuff, I'm not sure. But, but, but, but,
Yeah, I mean, we're an investor in a company called Point that allows you to sell part of your house.
And you have a lot of people that are like, you know, they're house-rich, cash poor.
And again, that's another thing that doesn't make sense.
Like, if I have $50,000 in credit card debt and a $620, FICO, but I bought a house in 1950,
and I own 100% of it, it's like, that doesn't make sense.
Like, I shouldn't have to sell my house so I can pay off my credit.
Like, why don't I sell 10% of my house?
Like, stuff like that to just take a binary.
of like I either rent or I own,
or either own all my house or none of my house.
Like, you can get a little bit more creative around the edges
by giving people more options.
I want to segue and go deeper into mortgage.
Alex, you've been investing in FinTech for a long time
and building a company in this space.
How has the space viewed the mortgage tech space?
How is sort of mortgage and fintech work together?
Well, I think what's really interesting about mortgage is,
I'll kind of tell a story by,
by background. Here's my little parable or story. I get to college. I don't have a credit card.
I went to Harvard, and there's a store called the Harvard Coop, or it's a co-op, but it's called
the Coop, and that's where you buy your textbooks and everything else. So I want a credit card,
and they're like, apply for a Harvard Coop credit card, and you get a T-shirt. I was like,
ooh, I want a T-shirt. That sounds great. So I applied for this card. I had a, I think it was
$75 credit limit, you know, a lot of credit that was extended to me. And it was a bank
called First USA, which eventually became something else, which eventually became something else,
which I think eventually became Chase. So I got my card, and they gave me a free t-shirt.
Why did they really want me as a customer? Like, they didn't want to just, like, they didn't
think I was like a supermodel and they wanted to put their t-shirt on me. Why is it that they gave me
the t-shirt that they gave me the card? Well, they were kind of betting on, we talk about this a lot.
There was KAC and there's LTV. The customer acquisition cost was a t-shirt. The lifetime value is not, like,
how much money I'm going to make for them at 18 when they only extend me $75 of credit.
The lifetime value is if I stick with that bank, eventually I'm going to make a very, very valuable
transaction.
I mean, banks make money on net interest margin.
So they take deposits, they make loans.
What kind of loan might I as an individual take out with this bank that would generate a lot
of value for them?
Probably a mortgage.
So the key inflection point for a bank or a lot of financial services companies is,
is, you know, I now have Eric or Alex or Vroon as a, as a borrower.
I'm going to make a lot of money on them.
But I kind of have to, I can't just, like, show up at the 23rd hour.
It's actually a good segue for a lot of the cool stuff that I think Rocket and Verun are pushing for
with some of the acquisitions that they've made.
But I can't just show up at the 23rd hour and say, hey, I know I've never met you before.
I've never given you a free t-shirt.
You have no financial relationship with me whatsoever.
You know, here's a mortgage.
You're like, nah, I'm going to get it from the guy that gave me a t-shirt before,
where I'm going to get it from my real estate broker.
But the lifetime value, like it's funny, in finance, LTV normally means loan to value, right?
So like the value of the house is $2 million.
I got a $1 million loan.
That's 50% loan to value.
But in most of like startup land, when we talk about LTV, we talk about lifetime value.
And the majority of lifetime value for a consumer, even an 18-year-old, is going to happen
probably 15 years later in the future when they buy a house.
That's such a valuable inflection point, or when they get a helock or like it's a financial product where you are taking a large loan responsibly.
You're going to pay it back.
But the amount of money made at that point in time is so much higher than when you're an 18 year old kid and getting a free t-shirt with your $75 limit credit card.
Veroon, what would you add to sort of this intersection of mortgage in fintech?
Yeah, there's a there's a great movie that came out like, I think it was around 15, 20 years ago.
it's called Thank You for Smoking.
I don't think I've ever seen that one.
David Sachs produced it.
There's this one line that popped into my head where she kind of scams him and get some
information out of him and he's like, why did you do this?
And she thinks for a second and she says, for the mortgage.
And that line has always stayed with me because in some ways, you know, I've been around
FinTech for a long time.
You know, is that PayPal?
Is that Groupon?
Is that into it?
And so like when people think about FinTech, they think about like,
you know, personal loans, payments, investing, taxes, money movement,
a lot of these kinds of businesses.
But like one thing I've learned just from talking to a lot of consumers is like all of
those are a means to an end.
And housing in some sense for me is like that final frontier of Pintech because it's sort
of the end goal for most consumers.
And Alex said it really well when you think about renting.
It's like renting is part of a funnel that is a continuum toward buying, right?
And so all of it to me leads to housing, right?
And housing is so important to the economy.
It's 20% of the GDP, right?
$5 trillion market.
And it's very complicated, right?
Like, it's fragmented.
It's done a lot of moving parts.
And the mortgage process itself is also really interesting, right?
You have the concept of a loan, like you have an originator that underwrites a loan and brings you to the closing table.
And then once it's closed, you have like, you have.
like the mortgage note itself and that gets sold off to the secondary market.
So to these GSEs, government sponsored exchanges like Fannie and Freddie.
And they use that to kind of free up the capital and maintain liquidity.
Then you have like the mortgage servicing rights,
which is where you have an ongoing relationship with the mortgage as a consumer
because it's typically the biggest transaction any consumer is going to make in their life
where you manage your payments, your property taxes.
and your escrow's.
And what I think is like really interesting is that like all these parts and processes have evolved to be like very desperate, right?
You have like the home search and real estate experience where you use websites like, you know, Redfin or Zillow to kind of go through that part of the journey.
Then you have the mortgage process, which is where you apply for financing and credit.
You know, you go through title, you go through appraisal and then you close.
and then you go into servicing.
And these are all like completely different parts of the equation,
which is why that LTV to KAC thing is like so important.
Like typically when you value a business or a company in Fintech
or really any consumer business,
you think about LTV to KAC and you think about,
well, what's the lifetime value of this relationship relative to the customer acquisition cost?
And the problem with housing in general is that these sort of,
if you think about it as a funnel,
they're all like disparate right like a consumer essentially flies out of one funnel and into another funnel
and so the economics are not great given how big of an industry it is and just you know how big of a
transaction it is and so that's something that really fascinated me is that like one you know all of fintech in
some ways leads to a consumer carrying fundamentally about generational wealth and generational wealth
it comes from things like home ownership, right?
It comes from long-term appreciation.
It comes from, you know, creating something that's safe and sustainable for you and your family and your family's family.
And that's the American dream.
That's what we've thought about.
But the economics of the business are incredibly disparate.
And so that's why, you know, for us, a lot of it has been around just integration, right?
It's about more vertical integration.
It's about connecting these parts of the experience because we think we can, one, build a better
experience. Two, we can create a lot more efficiency and therefore lower the cost. But then three,
just completely change the economics of the business as well and just sort of create something
that is a bit more of a new species. And so, yeah, mortgage is a really interesting business.
You know, I've been, I'm relatively new to it. I've only been, you know, two years or so,
you know, in the space and in the industry. But like, it's fascinating. I mean, it is so big
and so fundamental to the economy,
it is so important to consumers
from a long-term perspective,
and yet there's so much opportunity
to modernize it, transform it,
improve on it.
And so, yeah, these are all the things
that are exciting to me.
Let's get deeper into rocket
and both go into its history
and its future.
Maybe on the history side,
if I understand correctly,
the broker model used to dominate
and then there was a transition
to direct lending
and Rocket is one of the big beneficiaries there.
Why don't you give some of the history
of how the model evolved and the story of Rocket?
Yeah.
Rocket, first off, you know,
has been around for a long time.
You know, this company is 40 years in the making
and that's a generational thing.
You know, we've been around for a long time.
And we've grown.
You know, we are one of the largest employers in Detroit.
And, you know, we started by really transforming
the mortgage experience from the beginning.
I think we were the first.
could put mortgages on the internet. We were the first to put them on a mobile phone. We are now
the first to really embrace the AI-driven version of the mortgage experience. But, you know, a lot of
this is that it is hard to build this kind of an experience at scale. You know, the mortgage process
is complicated. I mean, you have to build sort of pricing, licensing, and hedging infrastructure that
works on a day-to-day basis. Every state, every county has different lending requirements, different regulatory
requirements and a whole suite of different types of products, right? FHA, VA, 30-year fixed,
adjustable rate mortgages. The compliance requirements change, you know, sometimes day over day,
week over week. And so it's a gigantic workflow engine that we've built over the past 40 years.
You know, we are licensed in all 50 states, 3,000 parishes. And, you know, we kind of have this
mindset of continuous innovation, continuous evolution. And, you know, we kind of, um, you know,
We're great at what we do.
It's why we have the most trusted brand to become, you know,
the largest mortgage company and lender in the industry.
But I'd also say that we are, we're very restless.
You know, we have one of our values is obsessed with finding a better way.
And that's something that drives thousands of our team members
to just do more restless things, more disruptive things,
and continue to sort of transform the space day over day, week over week, month over month.
So I have the fortunate, you know, benefit of being.
a new CEO, have been in a role for two years, the first outside CEO in the company's history.
But it's a very special company.
There's so much potential for us to do more.
And I would say that we are quickly evolving from being a mortgage company to a homeownership company.
And that means that, you know, we're not just, you know, creating innovation in the mortgage space,
but we're really transforming home ownership because that's what it's really about.
you know, it's not just about the financing aspect.
It's about the search and the real estate aspect.
It's about servicing.
It's about really making a 30-year bet on consumers
who are making 30-year bets on us.
And so our grand vision is to really evolve
to be a home ownership company.
That's why, you know, some of the decisions
that we've made around acquiring Redpin,
Mr. Cooper are fundamental to that thesis.
But we have a long legacy of building great products
and experiences for our consumers.
That's how we built a brand.
That's how we built our presence.
We have thousands of team members
that are super passionate about what they do.
And we have a very loyal team member
and talent base working for us.
We actually had a celebration.
We turned 40 this past year.
And we had a very special experience
where we built a celebration
for our long-term tenure team members.
And we had over 500 team members
who've been with the company
for over 20 years.
Wow.
And that's pretty cool.
You know, I've been in Silicon Valley for some time.
I've been in Southern California and Seattle.
And you don't have a lot of companies that have that kind of loyalty.
And that's something that we really appreciate because you guys know this, right?
Innovation happens quickly, but it takes a lot of dedication and passion to actually create something special.
You have to put a lot of time into it.
You have to sometimes spend, you know, the first two years are experimentation,
realizing what works, what doesn't work.
Then in your third year, you kind of figure out.
But in your fourth year, you figure out better product market fit.
And your fifth year, you figure out distribution.
And so what I love about Rocket is just that we have a lot of folks here who've been here a long time
that will run through walls for this company.
And that kind of loyalty of dedication, I think, is something that makes us, you know, what we are.
And it's something that we're betting on will transform us into the future as well.
Yeah.
Alex just hit 10 years at Jusen Horowitz.
And I was also similarly inspired at the company picnic.
I just seen a bunch of people who have been here.
I got a gold watch.
Yeah, that's the, if you're here for 10 years, you get a gold watch.
So I got a gold watch.
It has a nice little engraving on the back.
If I can kind of add to what you were saying for it, I mean, like, to take like a pithy take on this, a lot.
A lot of companies in Silicon Valley, it's like, okay, I use this product every day and like the company can't figure out how to make money, right?
And then you have this other type of company where it's like, I make so much money, how do I get the person to use me every day?
because it's like I just want somebody,
but it's like I want to add value every day.
And this is what I found so compelling.
Because I'm, you know, this is not part of my day job at Andreessen Horowitz.
I mean, I invest in a lot of prop tech companies,
a lot of fintech companies.
And I have kind of an extracurricular activity, which is Rocket.
And part of the reason why I find it so interesting is it's like this,
so Rocket made, I think it was $10 billion in net income in 2021.
one because guess what?
Rates go down dramatically.
People are like, I'm paying 6% for my number five percent.
I can refinance to 2.5%.
I'm going to do that.
I'm going to save a lot of money.
And Rocket was at the epicenter of that.
But you don't refinance your mortgage every day.
You don't go buy a new house every day.
These are not daily active use type products.
And meanwhile, like in Silicon Valley, you have all of these daily active use
type products.
They're like, how do we make money?
We can't figure out how to make money.
Like, we get people that use this like chat, GPT.
People use it every day.
Are they making money?
No.
They're losing a lot of money.
So it's very, very rare to find it's, what's the more unique of those two?
Is it like I have a product that people use every single day?
It's like a toothbrush.
Remember like Larry Page had a rule at Google, which is like, we will not launch new products
unless they pass the toothbrush test.
What's the toothbrush test?
You have to use it every day.
Hopefully you brush your teeth every day.
So, whereas on the other hand, you have companies where it's like they don't pass the toothbrush test.
but that's actually not a qualification for success, right?
$10 billion net income.
So how do you take, I would rather start off with this,
you know, here's a very, very valuable thing
that's a real business model, you know, perfectly run,
very, very profitable.
How do you add more products and services
that add more value to the consumer?
Yeah.
Right?
It's like you go to the dentist twice a year, like, that's it.
That's just like, is there a way to go into?
interact on a more regular basis.
And that's where things like mortgage servicing come in,
where it's like you get a bill every month.
That's an engagement.
What do you do with that?
Most people, it's actually really interesting.
There is a story that Tony Shea used to tell about Zappos,
where Zappos was one of the very, very few companies
that decided to take customer support
and try to turn it from a cost center
and actually turn it into a, well, I think he didn't call it a profit center.
I think he called it like a love center or something.
But, like, you know, really engage the consumer.
And there was a famous story from Zappos
where there was some woman and the customer support rep
at Zappos sent her flowers.
Something bad happened to her.
It's just like, you don't expect that to happen.
Normally it's like, okay, I hired McKinsey
and they said I could cut, you know,
two-thirds of my people this way and that way,
and then I could put people in this IVR,
and then I'll save $4 million a year.
And, like, that's how a lot of companies
treat their, I'm sending a bill to a customer,
or I'm doing customer support with the customer,
as opposed to looking at it as an opportunity
to upsell something,
not in like an evil way,
but it's like, hey, we have a monthly communication with you,
what is it that we should do?
And the answer can't just be,
we're going to drive down the cost to zero
and have robots do everything,
and you're going to hate us.
It's like a real interesting opportunity
if you're engaging somebody every month
to do something with them.
So it's really, it's like you start off at the profit center.
That has been solved,
And that's a really hard problem
that entrepreneurs
that come into our office every day.
It's like,
I'm going to figure that out eventually,
but right now I have a product
of people.
I've got a toothbrush,
but I have no idea
how to make money on it.
The other way of doing this,
and I think it's a really interesting,
you know,
it's a 40-year-old company.
Veroon's been there for two years.
You have, you know,
a real profit engine.
How do we turn it into a toothbrush?
Yeah.
So let's talk about how you guys
are doing that
or thinking about doing that.
You made a wave of acquisitions,
you know,
high profile,
you know,
public companies.
When you talk about
what is sort of the strategy
what you're trying to do.
Yeah, I mean, look, at the end of the day, we want to redefine the category itself fundamentally.
You know, and our thesis is very simple.
If we connect more parts of the ecosystem, we can build a better experience.
We can pass on that value to the client in the form of lower cost, lower cost, less friction.
And we can build, you know, fundamentally different economics around the business and drive growth.
And from our perspective, you know, when you think,
think about funnels, right? Mortgage in some sense is one of the world's most complicated
user funnel type products. And when I was at into a TurboTax, TurboTax is another example of a funnel
centric product. And, you know, our strategy is, is pretty simple. It's that we want to serve
clients across the entire journey of homeownership, not just the financing and mortgage aspect,
but also at the top of the funnel, the home search, the real estate aspect. And then at the
bottom end, the servicing aspect where, you know, they have a lifetime relationship. And so
we've made two acquisitions and service to that. The first one is Redfin. Redfin is the most
visited real estate brokerage site in the U.S. They have relationships with 50 million monthly
active users. And so these are consumers that use the Redfin app. They use the Redfin website.
And they search for homes every single day. What I love about Redfin is they have an amazing mobile
app. And so most of those 50 million users, they use the product daily and they use the product
on a mobile phone. So they have that really nice, rich interaction. They also have a network of
thousands of real estate agents that we now employ with the company as well as a partner
agent network as well. And so what that represents is really the start of the homeownership
experience, right? And so some people start with the mortgage and the financing. Other people
start with the house and like browsing and sort of that voyeuristic scheduling tours,
right, exploring the home. And so, so that's one part of the experience that we want to connect,
right? And so those 50 million relationships really help us build a top of funnel relationship.
The next thing that I think is also really important is that we want to connect that to financing
and then we connect that into the servicing experience as well. And the reason that's important
is because that allows us to build more relationships with clients
so that we can reserve them with products and services as well.
Because once you're in a relationship with Rocket,
and you have a great experience with home search,
real estate, mortgage,
and with servicing,
the beautiful thing about it is that you create loyalty.
And so when that client is ready for their next home ownership transaction,
it doesn't have to be a new purchase,
but it could also be a home equity loan, right?
There's trillions of dollars of home equity.
that is now trapped in a consumer's home.
And so, you know, there's a lot of equity there that you can use to generate cash flow.
To Alex's earlier point, what are they doing today?
Well, they're racking up more credit card net.
And instead, you know, it's probably better to take more equity out of your home.
And what better way to do that with the provider that you already have a relationship with, right?
And so for us, the big realization that really led to these acquisitions is that these
relationships are part of a super funnel.
They're not a singular experience.
And if we can do a good job integrating those parts of the experience,
we can create a better relationship with clients.
We can create more loyalty.
We can be sort of their lender for life.
And that's the fundamental thesis.
Now, with Mr. Cooper in Rocket,
we have 10 million clients in our servicing book.
And so those are clients that we have a lifetime relationship with.
And that's one in six mortgages in the U.S.
So it's massive scale.
It's massive distribution.
And, you know, there's another saying where, you know,
first-time founders really think about product market fit,
and second-time founders really start to focus on distribution.
And, you know, we have created a pretty amazing engine around refinance, around purchase.
But the question is, how do we now get more distribution?
And that's really the thesis behind these acquisitions,
is that we can now get more distribution.
And then the last thing I would say is, you know,
if you believe that the world is shifting into this AI world,
you know, one of the fundamental things that you need to make that successful is you need
access to more data. That data allows you to build better models. Those models give you a better
experience, but also better understanding of consumer behavior. That just allows you to build a better
experience. And so it's a pretty simple thesis, just connecting more parts of the experience that are
naturally part of the consumer journey. It's making it more seamless, right? Less points of data entry,
less waiting and wondering, faster turnpines, better rates, lower costs, better fee structures. And
just earning loyalty over the lifetime of a consumer relationship. And so, you know, these acquisitions
are direct accelerants of our core strategy. And we're excited about them. You know, it's early days,
you know, two big public company deals. The overall company is growing by approximately 60%
in terms of just the overall size of the company. We now have more national presence. You know,
we have locations in different parts of the U.S. that has ancillary benefit of us being able to
track more talent to the company as well, and to be able to build our team members in a way that
allows us to be more innovative and grow and scale. And that's kind of the core thesis.
Is it accurate to say you're trying to vertically integrate as much as possible?
Yeah, I think there's two things. Like, I think that, you know, one of the things that I've learned
when it comes to large scale M&A is you want to be very intentional about when you are integrating
and when you are accelerating.
And I'll give you two examples
because I think the way we look at Redfin and Mr. Cooper
are a little bit different
around integration versus acceleration.
And the word acceleration is really important
because I think sometimes what companies get wrong
is when they acquire a company,
they try to assimilate them too quickly
or they try to assimilate them not quickly enough
and they're not intentional about why they're doing what they're doing.
And when you think about something like Redfin,
It's like Redfin is a very successful brand and is a very successful following with a very loyal group of consumers.
And one of the things we talked about was like, hey, the Redfin brand is like super important, right?
Consumers have a lot of affinity to that brand.
It's because they build a great product.
So as we think about the integration of Redfin and Rocket, we wanted to strengthen Redfin.
We did not want to assimilate Redfin too quickly.
We wanted to preserve the brand.
We wanted to strengthen the brand.
we want it to increase the focus on traffic, on demand generation, to invest in the real
estate strategy we have because one, it helps us build that top of funnel.
But two, we don't want Redfin's brand to disintegrate.
You know, we don't want consumers to lose that affinity.
If anything, we want to make it stronger.
And so we have deliberately decided to make Redfin stronger by allowing it to operate
a little bit more autonomously.
And that's very intentional.
But when you think about Mr. Cooper, well, the biggest synergy is the integration of that kind of origination mortgage business and the servicing business because we want to bring those two things together so that we can recapture and create more relationships that kind of go between origination and servicing.
And Mr. Cooper looks a lot more like Rocket.
You know, they have an origination business.
They have a servicing business.
And so with that company, we are going to rebrand.
We are going to call it all the rocket platform.
We are going to fuse the organizations more closely together.
And so that is a much more intentional approach around integration versus acceleration.
And so we've studied what has made acquisition successful and what's made them not successful
by looking at a lot of patterns and practices.
And we want to be very intentional about that.
But to answer your question more directly, integration is our number one focus.
It's the number one focus across the company.
we have very specific goals.
We have very specific owners.
You know, we've organized around it.
We've invested in specific milestones around the synergies.
And we want to get this right.
I mean, this is a big bet that we're making across the company.
I mean, these acquisitions are billions and billions of dollars in value.
And they're very important to our strategy.
You know, Mr. Cooper is almost half the size of rocket.
You know, Redfin is, you know, about half the size of Mr. Cooper.
And so when you look at it in totality, you know, it's quite a substantial addition to
rocket that we're making. And so it is a very important priority for me, for our board, for our
leadership team. And I'm also excited, by the way, about just the talent. When you think about
the rocket leadership team, as well as the organization now, I mean, we have many of the best and
brightest in the industry. We have folks that are very steeped in mortgage and servicing and
the technologies that are around it. We've also hired, you know, we have leaders like Alex that
are now on our board that really represent the future state of the art in fintech and in tech in
general. We have a new CMO, we have a new CTO who really come from industry, not mortgage. And so
we have a very balanced leadership team. And I think these acquisitions are going to strengthen that
significantly as well. We were talking offline about the importance of companies being balanced in
their business model. What, when you explain what that means? Yeah. So I think one thing that is
interesting about companies is that especially in regulated environments or environments that are
sensitive to macroeconomic dynamics is that their business and profitability fluctuates, right?
In good times, like low rate environments, they print money.
In other times, you know, they sort of tend to struggle.
And so they float a little bit with the wind.
And one thing that I'm really excited about with our company, especially with these acquisitions,
is that we are now incredibly counterbalanced.
we can survive and thrive in any market rate or economic cycle.
And the reason for that is our origination and our servicing business counterbalance each other.
And so, for example, when rates rise, the value of our servicing portfolio continues to increase
and we earn recurring revenue on an increased servicing book.
But when rates fall, we can originate more mortgages and refinance and create new opportunities
for that same servicing book.
And so the cool thing about Rocket is it's one of the first.
of the only companies, and I would argue the only company that is super counterbalanced in the
housing industry. And it has the ability to survive, thrive, grow market share in sort of any
market or any interest rate environment. And that's something that I think is tremendously exciting
when you think about a company that is in a multi-trillion dollar industry that has single-digit
market share where there's a lot of consolidation, a lot of opportunity to really disrupt and
transform experiences with artificial intelligence, and just having these different
assets sort of put together in the same place makes us very unique.
I was going to say, so there's a concept in math.
It's called a Fourier transform.
And basically what that is, is like if you have any function, if you have a line, like every
business, their revenue and their profit should look like this.
If you look like this, everybody's happy.
If you look like this, everybody's not happy.
If you look like this, people are like probably not happy.
But actually, there's nothing wrong.
And what a Fourier transform is, is basically you can decompose any function into a bunch
of sign curves.
right so if I have a line that looks like this it actually might be composed of 50 things that look like this but to verroon's point they kind of counterbalance and a big mistake that entrepreneurs often make is like I have a business that is a sign curve let's kill it I don't like that business no no no no it's actually a great like most businesses are in some way shape or form cyclical even if you don't think of it that way like just add another sign curve that has like a slightly different period so it just counterbalances like if you
you're, and the banks actually have done, like, J.P. Morgan is the most valuable bank in the world,
and they have done this because they have a bunch of sign curves, right? It's like, should they get
rid of their investment banking business, even though in like 2022, the investment banking business
was not profitable? No. But they're going to make a lot of money sometimes. It's like a
feast or famine type thing. But let's add wealth management, because we get 50 basis points on a trillion
dollars every single year. Let's add, you know, retail. Let's have, you know,
Like they have so many different product lines.
And the reason why is because they all are like, you know, if you have a curve that looks like this and then you have the exact opposite curve, you combine this with that, and then you get a straight line.
And you want to have straight lines because they're predictable.
But your business actually under the cover is typically is not a straight line.
It's composed.
It's like a Fourier transform.
You have these overlapping sign curves in such a way where you actually do get hopefully a monotonically increasing straight line.
line. Okay, you were talking about earlier how there are kind of money printing machines and,
you know, Silicon Valley startups that have, you know, toothbrush tests but don't have a money
printing machine attached to it. You know, a rocket has been able to acquire a sort of demand
machine, you know, in Redfin and others. Why is it so hard in real estate if you own sort of
the place where people are searching every day to build the money printing machine next to it?
Well, there's so much latency. I mean, like, I think of Zillow is a good example of this. Like,
Zillow, a lot of people use Zillow.
It actually doesn't make that much money
because it's a lead generation machine for agents.
That's how they make money.
The vast majority of their revenue comes from,
like, you do a search, why are you doing a search?
You're not even doing a search with purchase intent.
Like Google makes a lot, we've talked about Google a lot
in many podcasts, right?
So Google makes lots of money,
and it's a freemian model
where it's like 99% of the time you're searching for,
like, how do I kill this annoying fly
that keeps buzzing around our pot?
And then 1% of the time it's like, I want to go buy a fly swatter.
And that's purchase intent.
And then there is a fly in our studio, Veroon.
That's what I'm referencing here.
So, you know, one percent of the time there's purchase intent.
Whereas if I'm, there are people, you know the term Netflix and chill, right?
There are people that have done this with like looking for homes.
It's like, oh, I'm going to spend all night looking at homes that I cannot afford in a weird part of the world that I'm never going to even visit.
Why do people do that?
I don't know. Like, it's fun. Like, it's kind of like this aspiration. I like looking at homes.
Oh, like, I heard that, you know, Cheryl Sandberg sold, like, let me look at that house.
Or I heard that, you know, Sharon Stone this, or I heard that, you know, Liam Neeson, that, like, you're not going to buy Liam Neeson's house.
But you're still curious, you go look at it. The purchase intent tends to be low.
So you have people, like, it's kind of, there's some search engines that are very, very tightly coupled to transaction.
and real estate is not always that way for two reasons.
Number one is that there is this entertainment value to it.
And then number two, there's just a lot of latency.
Like, I was looking at homes when I couldn't,
when I was just a little renter in Santa Clara,
having just moved here, I couldn't afford a house in Palo Alto.
And I would look at homes all the time.
And that was actually like, there was purchase intent,
but just with like years of latency, you know,
versus like Google, you don't,
that's not how you use Google.
Like, it's like I want to buy a fly swatter.
I type in Flieswater, and then I see 50 search links pop up.
I click on one of those and then I buy.
And maybe I'll buy tomorrow, but there's just much more near-term proximity to that.
So that's part of the reason why, like, you've got a DAU product,
and that does not necessarily mean you just bolt on a monetization engine
and then you get it to work, particularly where the monetization engine,
it's like that almost like undersells how hard it is to build a monetization engine.
Like, you know, mortgage, I've had to get like fingerprinted and God knows how many states.
Like, you know, we're doing this Mr. Cooper deal.
and I had to send, like, you know, ink fingerprints to the state of Virginia,
like every single bank account I've ever had.
Ah, it's just so complicated.
I mean, I wish it weren't that way.
But it turns out it's very, very complicated to add on and bolt on the monetization engine.
And it's, by the way, it's very hard to build one of these, you know, daily active use products.
But because you have a little bit more voyeurism in the field of real estate,
it's not necessarily like I have very, very near-term proximity to purchase intent.
And then, you know, like, why hasn't Zillow done this?
You know why?
I'll tell you what.
It's really, really hard.
and they're addicted to the current business model of selling leads to agents.
Yeah, I would just add that winning and housing is not for the faint of heart.
Like, I just don't expect that an early stage company in a garage is going to be able to deploy.
There's just such an activation energy that's required.
The regulations vary by state.
Products are fragmented.
The distribution is hyperlocal.
And, you know, you have the cyclicality where the volume swing with rates.
The lenders have to scale up and scale back.
You know, you have banks stepping.
after the financial crisis.
You have the secondary market
with like originators and aggregators and services.
You have a bunch of legacy processes,
manual docs, appraisals.
And then like you also just have all kinds of other things, right?
You have like employers that have to verify income.
You have banks that have to confirm your assets.
You have insurers, appraisers, title companies, and spenders.
So like everyone uses different timelines and systems.
So it's just friction and fragmentation.
And like part of it is just.
The amount of activation energy that's required to decide to do that is just not for the faint of heart,
which is one of the things that I love about what we do is that we have decided to overcome that activation energy.
And guess what?
It took us 40 years.
Right.
And so it's sort of like, you know, why is it that like credit card networks have such a dominant presence in the market, like the big ones, right?
The visas, the master cards, you know, the Amexas.
And why is it that you have a bunch of neobanks that are creating your credit cards.
cards, but they're not taking significant share. And like the simple answer is it took them a long,
long time. Like it wasn't like something that just happened where there was this virality and
network effect where suddenly these things grow. Some of the things are just the simple fact that,
you know, the easy way is the long way and the long way is the hard way. There is no sort of easy
way. And so that's something that I think gives us a little bit of a first mover advantage.
It's not something that we take for granted,
but just the amount of serious fragmentation,
the amount of disparate technology and systems,
the incentive models around the different players
are all at odds with each other.
And we look at that as a good problem
because we've overcome some of that activation energy.
Now you have technology and AI,
you have automation,
you have the ability to compress turn times,
lower fixed costs,
connect the different pieces of it,
and just build a more connected journey.
But that's like, you know, where I think it's a good problem to have,
but it's also one that, you know, we have an opportunity to do significantly more
just given we've overcome that activation in there.
That's a good note to wrap on.
Guys, thank you so much for coming on the podcast.
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