Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
Mobile-first fractional real estate with secondary market trading; buy and sell property shares like stocks; monthly rental income; each property is a separate LLC. Based in New York.
Landa is a New York-based real estate investment app that enables investors to buy and trade fractional shares in single-family rental properties through a mobile-first interface. Landa differentiates from other fractional real estate platforms through its trading functionality — investors can buy and sell property shares on Landa's secondary market at any time, providing liquidity more similar to a stock-trading experience than traditional private real estate investments. Each property on the platform is a separate LLC, and investors receive monthly distributions from rental income proportional to their shares. Landa curates properties across multiple U.S. markets, handling acquisitions, property management, and financial reporting. The company targets a new generation of investors comfortable with mobile-first financial apps who want real estate exposure with the same liquidity and accessibility as stock market investing. Founded in 2020, Landa raised over $33M from investors including MetaProp, The Torch and Menlo Ventures. It competes with Arrived Homes, Fundrise, and RealtyMogul in the retail fractional real estate market.
Home Depot (NYSE: HD) reported $159.5B revenue FY2025 (+4.48%); 51% home improvement market share; #1 worldwide; 36.9% major appliances dollar share in Q2 2025;
The Home Depot is the world's largest home improvement retailer, founded in 1978 in Atlanta by Bernie Marcus and Arthur Blank, built on the revolutionary concept of a warehouse-format store that offered professional-grade products to DIY homeowners at contractor prices. The company's core competitive technology is its buying power and supply chain: purchasing at the scale of over 2,300 stores allows it to offer the broadest in-category selection — power tools, lumber, plumbing, electrical, flooring, appliances, garden — at prices and availability that regional hardware chains cannot match.\n\nThe Home Depot serves both DIY consumers and professional contractors (Pro customers), with the Pro segment representing a disproportionate share of revenue and growing faster than the consumer segment. The company has invested heavily in its Pro ecosystem — dedicated Pro desks, job site delivery, bulk pricing, and a Pro digital platform — as contractors increasingly use The Home Depot as a primary supply chain partner. Its major appliances business holds 36.9% dollar share as of Q2 2025, making it the dominant US appliance retailer ahead of Best Buy and Lowe's.\n\nThe Home Depot generated $159.5B in revenue in FY2025, a 4.48% increase, while holding a 51% share of the US home improvement market — a dominant position in a category large enough to make it one of the world's highest-revenue retailers. The company's 2024 acquisition of SRS Distribution for $18.3B deepened its professional roofing and exterior supply capabilities. As housing renovation spending remains elevated and the Pro contractor base grows, The Home Depot's combination of scale, supplier relationships, and Pro-focused investments continue to extend its lead over Lowe's and specialty retailers.
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