- Former chess prodigy A.J. Steigman is the top
residential real estate broker in Atlanta. - He created a
software that scans large data sets to find undervalued homes.
A.J. Steigman sold more houses in Atlanta last year than any other broker — despite the fact that he lives in Florida and has no full-time staff.
He's able to sell residential properties from thousands of miles away thanks to a $20,000 computer and a proprietary software system called "Steignet" that he launched at the University of Pennsylvania in 2018.
The system's
But you won't find any mom and pop homebuyers on Steigman's client roster. Instead, he works with investors that flip the homes or rent them out for profit.
Steigman declined to name his clients, but told Insider they include hedge funds, high-net worth family offices, and billion-dollar-plus
"While record-high home prices are problematic for individual homebuyers, they're one reason why investor demand is stronger than ever," Redfin economist Sheharyar Bokhari $4 in response to the growing trend. "Investors buying up a record share of for-sale homes is one factor making this market difficult for regular homebuyers."
That's because big investors can often afford to put down all-cash offers, whereas regular homebuyers rely on mortgages and financing. As far as the seller and listing agent is concerned, cash buyers are a lot less complicated to deal with.
Last year, Steigman sold 300 properties in Atlanta for a total of $86 million, according to the Atlanta Realtors Association. He said this is just a "fraction" of his total closings (including Florida sales), which he estimates to be around $130 million.
The high-tech broker credits his success in the
"I would analyze my games with the computers at the time, and always try to spot all the different moves and sequences," Steigman, who is now 36, told Insider. "So I take that very scientific and quantitative approach to real estate."
Those pattern recognition skills are how Steigman predicted residential real estate would become a scalable investment early on, he told Insider. While other firms focused on manpower, Steigman said he doubled down on the data.
"Just like a chess supercomputer can obliterate 50 Grandmasters, if you build a very powerful system you don't need to have a large headcount to be able to do it," he added.
Until recently, the largest player in algorithmic real estate was Zillow's iBuying arm, $4 The company poured millions into developing advanced algorithms to value homes, purchase properties, and quickly flip them for profit.
Zillow CEO Rich Barton said on an earnings call that the iBuying models couldn't handle the unpredictability of the pandemic-era
Steigman said there's not one key characteristic that differentiates his algorithms from competitors,' comparing the process of designing the software to Elon Musk building a rocket.
"It's not like the fuel is the secret sauce," he told Insider. "It's all of the iterations that are constantly being perfected."
In Atlanta, nearly one-third of homes that sold in the fourth quarter of 2021 were bought by investors, according to Redfin data. That's the highest percentage of any state in the US. Meanwhile, out-of-town buyers with bigger budgets than local residents are $4, fueling fears of a housing bubble.
As homeownership becomes increasingly $4, some people fear that Wall Street's move into residential real estate has priced ordinary folks out of the market. But while the presence of investor homebuyers has become more prominent in cities like Atlanta and Charlotte, consumers still greatly outnumber investors, as Vox has previously $4.
"To be honest with you, consumers are the largest proportion of the market," Steigman told Insider, adding that corporations are strictly limited by the types of properties they can buy. "They will squash all of the institutions combined."