“We thought then, as we do now, that the Firm’s anemic efficiency may be ascribed totally to the misallocation of billions of {dollars} into Houses.com, overseen by a feckless board of administrators that has failed to guard shareholders from Mr. Florance’s quixotic quest whereas rewarding him with exorbitant pay packages,” Third Level wrote in its letter. “Like an elementary faculty baby who wins a prize even for ending final, Mr. Florance’s bonuses are maybe the most expensive ‘Participation Award’ our agency has witnessed.”
In an emailed assertion from a CoStar spokesperson, “Over the previous yr, CoStar Group has performed in depth engagement with stockholders to tell our up to date strategic imaginative and prescient and capital allocation priorities – which have been unanimously authorized by the board and Capital Allocation Committee together with members nominated by Third Level and D.E. Shaw. We enter 2026 with appreciable momentum and a transparent plan to proceed constructing our core platforms whereas scaling Houses.com, which is a vital part to our complete digital actual property platform and subsequent chapter of worthwhile development.”
CoStar should take into account “strategic options for Houses.com”
Third Level additionally wrote that CoStar should rapidly change the vast majority of the board with “extra certified administrators,” refocus on the agency’s core industrial actual property enterprise and that the reconstituted board wants to think about “strategic options for Homes.com” and CoStar’s different residential actual property companies.
“The place such options don’t exist, it ought to promptly get rid of the losses which have burdened consolidated EBITDA,” the letter states.
There may be some trade hypothesis that this may occasionally imply that CoStar will finally resolve to promote Houses.com, with some believing a big brokerage or a three way partnership arrange by massive regional impartial companies or MLSs could attempt to purchase the portal.
Over the previous yr, Third Level stated it has had “quite a few conversations” with CoStar Group administration and that it despatched a to date unanswered letter to CoStar in December “expressing continued dismay on the lack of progress.”
“Actually, so little progress has been made that we’re satisfied the Firm by no means supposed to do any of the issues we mentioned after we entered into the settlement,” the traders wrote.
Dissatisfied with the outcomes from these talks and the modifications made final yr, Third Level stated it’s now taking “concrete actions” to guard its funding and “be certain that [CoStar] is ruled and managed in a way that may create long-term, sustainable worth for all shareholders.”
“Since most board members seem incapable of imposing self-discipline on Mr. Florance’s empire-building gambit, we intend to introduce shareholders to a slate of extremely skilled new administrators to be voted onto the board to reverse the downward spiral that has turn out to be synonymous with this CEO and his supine enablers,” the letter states.
Letter says resi actual property technique was “ill-conceived”
Additionally within the letter, Loeb and Third Level argue that CoStar’s residential actual property technique was “ill-conceived” and “deeply flawed.” Of their view, the traders say there have been many structural issues stopping CoStar from succeeding with its residential technique, particularly the “deeply entrenched” opponents within the house and its “significant differentiation in its provide of properties as a result of presence of MLS’s freely syndicated listings.”
The traders additionally argue that CoStar’s administration “grossly misallocated capital” of their try to construct out the residential actual property enterprise and that his [Florance’s] spending has “produced a horrendous return on capital.”
“Regardless of a cumulative funding of roughly $3 billion over 5 years, the U.S. residential market companies have generated negligible returns, with roughly $60 million of income in 2024 and $80 million in anticipated income in 2025,” the letter states.
The traders additionally declare that they’re “not fooled” by CoStar’s “continued excuses” about missed monetary targets.
“CoStar’s [residential] fiasco is a textbook case of throwing good cash after unhealthy and ought to be studied at our main enterprise faculties as a cautionary story of administration hubris coupled with non-existent oversight,” Third Level wrote.
The letter additionally argues that CoStar’s enterprise into residential actual property has resulted within the agency’s “closely depressed” incomes energy and “woefully” underperforming inventory. Third Level additionally claims that CoStar’s present board has enabled this to occur by failing to train oversight over Florance and “rewarding his poor efficiency with outrageous compensation packages.”
Nonetheless stay assured about industrial enterprise
Regardless of their displeasure with the place CoStar at the moment stands, the traders stated that they continue to be “assured within the worth of CoStar’s world-class core industrial actual property enterprise franchise.” They really feel that absent the “distraction” from CoStar’s residential enterprise, the industrial enterprise might “compound income within the teenagers and earnings energy per share above 20% for a few years to return.”
Of their view, leaning into CoStar’s industrial enterprise could lead on it to assist a extra environment friendly steadiness sheet.
Earlier this month, CoStar offered traders with an update on monetary and company governance initiatives for 2026, a lot of which they stated was the results of a “sturdy overview” of the corporate by the Capital Allocation Committee. Whereas the replace painted a reasonably rosy image for the agency as an entire in 2026, with estimated 18% year-over-year income development to between $3.78 and $3.82 billion and a web revenue of $175 million to $215 million for the yr, issues didn’t look fairly as sturdy for CoStar’s Houses.com.
Though Houses.com has recorded a 337% increase in subscribers since Q1 2024, in keeping with CoStar, the agency stated it doesn’t count on Houses.com to realize constructive adjusted EBITDA till 2030.
