Fundrise

Fundrise

Financial Services

Washington, District of Columbia 31,623 followers

With Fundrise, you can invest in high-end private market assets like real estate, private credit, and venture capital.

About us

For almost a century, regulatory barriers made it difficult for individuals to invest in private markets, giving billion-dollar institutions preferred access. The result has been that most investors have been limited to public markets and excluded from private investments—ranging from real estate to venture capital. Technology is finally disrupting this status quo.1 Enter: Fundrise, America’s largest direct-to-consumer private markets manager. We built our technology platform to bridge the barrier. Software allows us to achieve the scale of institutions without the bureaucracy. Combining our technology and investment expertise, we are pioneering a new model to build you a better portfolio.

Website
https://fundrise.com/
Industry
Financial Services
Company size
201-500 employees
Headquarters
Washington, District of Columbia
Type
Privately Held
Founded
2010
Specialties
Online Investing, Real Estate, Commercial Real Estate, Investment, Investment Management, Real Estate Investment, Online Capital Sourcing, Capital Sourcing, Financial Services, Technology, Private Market, Investing, Alternative Investing, Financial Technology, Fintech, Startup, venture capital, and private credit

Locations

  • Primary

    11 Dupont Circle NW

    9th Floor

    Washington, District of Columbia 20036, US

    Get directions

Employees at Fundrise

Updates

  • Fundrise reposted this

    View profile for Benjamin Miller, graphic

    CEO of Fundrise

    Bloomberg News TV: Fundrise CEO on Retail Investing In Private Markets https://lnkd.in/eYhEwKh7 Bloomberg: “Startup Fundrise gives everyday people access to commercial real estate equity and states it's America’s largest direct-to-consumer private markets manager. Co-Founder and CEO Ben Miller discusses the state of commercial real estate and the role of AI. He joins Abigail Doolittle and Sonali Basak on "Bloomberg Markets." (Source: Bloomberg) Big thank you to Abigail Doolittle.

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  • View organization page for Fundrise, graphic

    31,623 followers

    [This is an excerpt from our end-of-year letter to investors, published Dec. 30, 2023. Link below.] It’s the big things that matter. We live in a world that demands a constant stream of new and interesting content to digest. Financial news sites like CNBC or Bloomberg update articles multiple times a day with theories and predictions about why things are moving in one direction or the other. And, as a result, we are prone to over-extrapolating a lot of the noise caused by “little things” that eventually just fade away into the background. Ultimately, it’s the few big things (more obvious often than we’d like to admit) that really matter. The past several years have seemingly been a steady stream of one random unprecedented event after the next, when in actuality they are the logical and sequential consequences brought about by the pandemic — it was the big thing. The onset of covid led to a global shutdown. The shutdown broke supply chains along with decades-old patterns and systems that had become ossified within both society and the economy. The response to the shutdown was unprecedented government stimulus, vast amounts of newly printed money, and a 0% interest rate monetary policy. This simultaneous shrinking of supply with a rapid expansion of demand led to inflation, which in turn led to the first significant rate hiking cycle in nearly 50 years. And rising interest rates led to a fall in asset values because, as we’ve now stated ad nauseam, prices move down when interest rates go up. As the system continues to work through the domino effect of unwinding the past several years, we still expect tighter monetary policy to result in an inevitable dampening of the broader economy, including slower growth, rising unemployment, and potentially a significant decline in stocks. The irony is that in some sense regardless of the reason rates come down—either because the Fed was right about a soft landing or we are correct about a recession—it’s strongly positive for real estate values and, in our expectation, the Fundrise portfolio (again, remember that in the near term lower interest rates boost real estate values). Read the full letter: https://lnkd.in/eJyUum-N

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Funding

Fundrise 9 total rounds

Last Round

Corporate round
See more info on crunchbase