Rightmove’s AI investment plan triggers a short-term £1m loss and investor pushback, as the property portal prioritizes AI upgrades over near-term profit growth.
Rightmove, the UK’s dominant online property portal, entered a period of sharp volatility after its shares plunged last Friday, October 7, 2025, following the company’s announcement that it will prioritize investment in Artificial Intelligence and platform upgrades over near-term profit growth.
The announcement triggered an immediate market reaction. Shares fell as much as 28% in early trading, wiping more than £1 billion from its market value before recovering to close 12.5% lower at a valuation of £4.3 billion.
Rightmove’s £60m AI Push Marks a Strategic Shift for the FTSE 100 Portal
Rightmove was founded in 2000 by four of the UK’s biggest estate agents and floated on the London Stock Exchange in 2006, becoming the country’s leading property listings portal. Previously known for highly predictable earnings and robust margins, the company now forecasts underlying operating profit growth of 3 to 5 per cent next year, compared with 4 to 9 per cent expected for 2024 and 2025.The shift is directly linked to planned investment.
The FTSE 100 firm plans to invest £60 million over the next three years, including £18 million next year, primarily in AI development and platform modernization. CEO Johan Svanstrom said the business is “already working on a wide range of exciting AI-enabled innovations for the benefit of our partners and consumers.”
Of next year’s total, £12 million will hit the profit and loss account and £6 million will be capital expenditure. The shift is expected to delay previously signaled revenue growth targets, contributing to investor disappointment.
The company has framed the spending as necessary to support upgrades to both internal systems and consumer-facing features. However, investors accustomed to high margins have questioned the decision to lower near-term profit expectations in exchange for longer-term technological advantages.
The AI Real Estate Pitch: Smarter Search, Predictive Tools, and Home Re-imagination
For years, commentators have speculated that AI could make property portals obsolete altogether. Rightmove’s response is not to defend the moat but deepen it. The company currently has 27 AI projects underway, four of them now live.
It is launching an AI-powered keyword search trained on 25 years of listings data, enabling users to search for homes using descriptors like “exposed brick,” “river view,” or “underfloor heating”, marking a shift from rigid filters to conversational discovery. It is also rolling out predictive valuation tools: Rightmove Discover and Opportunity Manager. These models identify would-be sellers before their homes hit the site, giving agents a head start in lead generation.
Rightmove Discover sends targeted communications to potential sellers on behalf of agents. Opportunity Manager prioritises leads based on user behavior signals, quietly reframing Rightmove from a passive listings board to an active lead intelligence platform.
Then there is “Style with AI”, a home staging tool that allows users to digitally remove furniture, adjust lighting, and restyle interiors, from Scandi minimalism to Art Deco, aimed at helping buyers “see themselves” in a property.
Whether consumers will embrace such re-imagining remains unclear. A conversational search bot and automated valuation nudges may also test user tolerance for being “guided” through decisions that many people still view as deeply personal.
Investor Reaction: Belief, Skepticism, and the New AI Fault Line
Analysts are divided on the outlook. RBC Capital Markets upgraded the Rightmove stock to Outperform, arguing that the business is not fundamentally in need of repair and that the current investment cycle could result in a stronger and more expansive platform if executed well. UBS, however, took the opposite view, downgrading the stock to Neutral and cutting its price target, noting that while the strategic direction may be sound, the financial benefits may not become visible until later in the decade, making it harder for investors to maintain confidence in the interim.
AJ Bell pointed to the tone of the market reaction as evidence of that hesitation. Russ Mould, Investment Director at AJ Bell, stated: “The scale of the market’s negative reaction implies real scepticism about management’s decision to put so much money into AI and platform improvements. Investors want to see how this investment translates into returns, not just promises of future growth.”
What sits beneath these responses is a broader shift in investor expectations. High-margin companies can no longer assume automatic backing for long-horizon technology spending; they must show clearer pathways to value and shorter feedback loops.
Rightmove has committed the capital, outlined the roadmap and begun rolling out the AI tools. The next phase is one of demonstration: whether these innovations meaningfully improve the experience for consumers and agents, and whether those improvements can be measured, communicated and sustained.
Read the full article here









