Short-Term Rental Sector Could Be Headed for Its Own Dotcom Bubble Burst: HomeAway Co-Founder – Skift

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The co-founder of HomeAway has likened the current spate of special purpose acquisition companies or SPACs to the build-up seen just before the dot com bubble burst in 2001.

Since the pandemic, hundreds of so-called “blank check companies” have been formed and there’s appetite for travel companies, in particular in the short-term rental space. But “the SPAC game has gotten crowded,” Carl Shepherd said.

Accor this week was also reported to be the latest company to dive into merger market.

“A lot in the pipeline will probably pull back,” he added, speaking at the Skift Live Short-Term Rental and Outdoor Summit. “There’s hundreds of billions tied up chasing unicorns. They’re called that for a reason. With that much money chasing so few opportunities, you realize it might not be the best time.”

Carl Shepherd talking at Skift Live. Picture: Skift

Carl Shepherd talking at Skift Live. Picture: Skift

The investor was talking moments after Sonder’s founder Francis Davidson spoke about his company’s plans, following its deal with Gores’ SPAC that valued the company at $2.2 billion.

Shepherd said that for Sonder, “the right things happened at the beginning of the year” for the urban-focused brand.

“It’s standing alone in the market, and its business model is as well positioned to succeed as it’s ever been,” he added. “But there’s never been a two billion-valued corporate travel company. I’m interested to see how Francis takes it forward. The valuation’s very rich, it almost feels like I’m back in 2001 before the first dotcom bust, when pets.com got valued at billions of dollars.”

Shepherd has a vantage point, having formed his own SPAC, Moose Pond Acquisition Corp, with RetailMeNot founder Cotter Cunningham.

It’s No Longer Alternative

Speaking during the “Acquisitions and Investments in Short-Term Rentals: Predictions for 2021” panel, he also noted that during the pandemic, short-term rental accommodation should no longer be classified as “alternative accommodation” because it became the preferred accommodation — “and hotels had better figure that out.”

He also called on vacation-friendly destinations, such as Florida and San Diego, to ease their regulatory burdens on homeowners wanting to rent out their properties. “Litigate that and establish we can do it, then you can have cities begin to regulate it more appropriately,” he warned.

Online travel agencies operating in the vacation rental space also needed to “stop looking the other way” on this, he added, otherwise growth will be stifled.

Yet despite the rapid growth in the short-term rental sector over the past year, Shepherd said he was reluctant to pinpoint trends until 2022 was behind us.

“When there’s not a pandemic, how many parents really do want to spend two weeks with three kids in a RV? I think we’ll find that out,” he said.

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