If any of you has Airbnb chips you might want to reconsider your purchase. These guys charge on top of the real price quite a lot. And as you can see the hack is pretty easy.
Assumes that the listing isn't exclusive (most are) and that ppl are stupid enough to use a single image. Try harder.
Something doesn't jive... On Airbnb the tax is $86, while on the other it's $202. It should be cheaper than Airbnb because the place is advertised for $400 less, which to me means the other site is paying the $86 or so tax and pocketing the difference as their fee ($106 while Airbnb is $306). The cleaning fee is the same for both. Airbnb includes insurance coverage if anything happens while it's not clear on the other site. It's most probable the property owners figured they would pay Airbnb a $400 finders fee so they discounted their place by that much through the other rental website. If and when Airbnb finds out, they will delist the property.
When places are dual listed they will change the photos so that web crawlers can’t find duplicates. this is especially true in jurisdictions with taxes on Airbnb rentals like London.
Even the CTO is getting rid of the bags https://uk.investing.com/news/insid...cto-sells-78090-in-company-stock-93CH-3731527
He is probably not allowed to sell more at a time. But this is the reason, almost 14% down in the last six months. The stock never went higher than its initial offer. Quite a surprise for a company that claims to make an amazing revenue every quarter.
Barcelona will ban short term rentals in 2028. Other cities that have banned or regulated short-term rentals include: New York City: It's been illegal to rent out an apartment as a short-term let since September 2023. Berlin: Banned Airbnbs and short-term rentals in 2014, and brought them back under tight restrictions in 2018. Santa Monica: Short-term rentals are either banned or highly restricted.
I don’t think so. Article says it was pre-arranged which tells me it might be a 10b5-1 or whatever it’s called. executives will file to sell stock over a period of time on a pre-determined interval. Typical reason is to monetize their stock based compensation (estate planning, etc)