Tag Archives: Airbnb

Airbnb CEO Brian Chesky ‘guarantees’ many bosses calling people back to the office ‘are going away to the Hamptons for the summer’ – Fortune

  1. Airbnb CEO Brian Chesky ‘guarantees’ many bosses calling people back to the office ‘are going away to the Hamptons for the summer’ Fortune
  2. Airbnb CEO Brian Chesky, who lets employees work from anywhere, says many CEOs calling workers back to the office are ‘going away to the Hamptons for the summer’ Yahoo Finance
  3. Consumers appear more focused than ever on affordability right now, says Airbnb CEO CNBC Television
  4. Airbnb CEO Wants AI To Serve as a Better, Cheaper Hotel Front Desk Hospitality Net
  5. Why Airbnb’s CEO Is Bullish on the Road Ahead Bloomberg Television
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Airbnb launches first hosting platform for apartment tenants

Airbnb is partnering with several major landlords and management companies to list designated apartment buildings where renters are allowed to offer short-term sublets on the site.

The company said Wednesday that a new page on its website will list so-called Airbnb-friendly buildings, which will give tenants the option to host their apartments just as homeowners can.

Typically, rental buildings prohibit tenants from subletting for short stays.

To start, Airbnb is showcasing 175 apartment buildings in more than 25 major markets, including Los Angeles, San Francisco, Atlanta, Dallas, Houston, Denver, Seattle and Phoenix. Some cities, such as New York City and Washington, D.C., are not available due to local restrictions on short-term rentals.

The platform will help tenants host their rentals, and help the buildings attract tenants who may want to host. How much tenants could earn will vary.

“It depends on the building, depends on the location, there are a lot of different assumptions,” Nathan Blecharczyk, co-founder of Airbnb.

Given how much apartment rents have climbed over the past few years, along with home prices and other rising prices, tenants are increasingly looking for ways to supplement their incomes to make their monthly payments. Rents are starting to ease, but are still up 10% from a year ago, according to Apartment List.

Last year, rents rose more than 15% from the year before.

The new page on Airbnb’s website will also offer a calculator to show how much money the tenant can potentially make per month. The calculation changes depending on the number of bedrooms and the number of nights each building allows, as well as the potential asking rents, given the building’s amenities.

Apartment buildings can also charge the primary tenant a fee of up to 20% of the price of each Airbnb use. For those buildings that have been in test mode so far, Airbnb said tenants have hosted an average of nine nights per month with an average income of $900 per month.

All hosts in the participating buildings must be the primary resident, and the buildings can restrict how many nights per month the apartment can be sublet. That’s generally between 80 and 120 nights per year. The restrictions, which can be enforced since the transactions all take place on the portal, are intended to prevent investors from taking part and subletting the apartments full-time.

The apartment building owner or management company also have the right to review the listings before they go live and deactivate a listing if it does not comply with the building’s standards. They can also mandate a government ID from all potential subletters.

Equity Residential and UDR, which are apartment real estate investment trusts, or REITs, and Greystar, the largest apartment management company in the U.S.,  are among the major names offering apartments with hosting privileges on the new Airbnb platform.

“We believe this platform will provide the right tools for both owners and residents to effectively manage short-term rental activity without impacting overall housing supply,” a Greystar representative said.  “We are collaborating with Airbnb on this innovative approach to participate in the 21st century sharing economy in a thoughtful way.”  

CNBC producer Lisa Rizzolo contributed to this story.

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3 Americans found dead at Airbnb in Mexico on trip to celebrate Day of the Dead, officials and family say

Three Americans were found dead at an Airbnb in Mexico City for a trip to celebrate the Day of the Dead, authorities and family said Wednesday.

Kandace Florence, 28, of Virginia Beach, was staying with high school friend Jordan Marshall, 28, also of Virginia Beach, along with Marshall’s friend Courtez Hall, relatives told NBC News and affiliate WAVY of Portsmouth, Virginia.

Investigators believe the trio died from carbon monoxide poisoning, Mexico City prosecutors said.

Marshall was a 12th-grade English teacher at Rosenwald Collegiate High School in New Orleans and loved to travel, his mother Jennifer Marshall said.

“In his short 28 years, we can draw comfort from the fact he did travel and he did live a very, very full life,” she said Wednesday.

The trio had been in the city to mark Día de los Muertos, a celebration traditionally held on Nov. 1 and 2 to honor the dead, their relatives have said.

Florence told her boyfriend by phone Oct. 30 that she wasn’t feeling well, WAVY reported. At some point, the call dropped and Florence’s boyfriend was unable to reach her again, so he contacted the Airbnb host and asked if they could check on the group, the outlet reported.

When authorities arrived, they found all three of the Airbnb guests dead, WAVY reported. An official cause of death is under investigation.

The Mexico City attorney general’s office did not immediately respond to a request for an update on the investigation.

The State Department confirmed the deaths of three Americans in Mexico.

Jordan Marshall, 28, left, and Kandace Florence, 28.Courtesy Marshall family

“We are closely monitoring local authorities’ investigation into the cause of death. We stand ready to provide all appropriate consular assistance,” the department said in a statement.

Airbnb said it has suspended the listing involved and canceled upcoming reservations as the company investigates. It said it has been in touch with the Airbnb host and is providing support. The company said it was also in touch with the U.S. Embassy.

“Our priority right now is supporting those impacted as the authorities investigate what happened, and we stand ready to assist with their inquiries however we can,” the statement said.

Florence’s mother, Freida Florence, told WAVY her daughter had started a candle business called “Glo Through It” in 2020, with each of the candles featuring an affirmation.

“She was a dreamer, dreamer meaning she wanted to make a difference in the lives of other people,” she said.

Jennifer Marshall said she had normal worries about her son’s love of travel but never did anything to discourage it.

“Of course you worry as a parent. But he usually traveled with groups of friends and we would tell him there’s safety in numbers, stay together, stay vigilant,” his mother said.

“But we never tried to deter our son from living his best life and experiencing other cultures. He loved history, he loved to learn about the cuisine and culture and the people of other places. So I never wanted him to live in fear and not to experience life because of things that could happen.”

Ceola Hall, Courtez Hall’s mother, told NBC affiliate WDSU of New Orleans that her son was a teacher at the city’s KIPP Morial School.

Describing her son as a “joyous child,” she said: “He loved me, he loved his family. He loved to make everyone laugh.”

Reuters contributed.

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Airbnb rolls out ‘anti-party technology’ to help enforce its global ban

The new system analyzes a variety of factors, according to a company announcement Tuesday, including previous reviews, how long a user has been on the platform, the length of the stay and whether the rental is occurring on a weekend or weekday.

The goal, Airbnb said, is to “help identify potentially high-risk reservations” and prevent those users from completing a booking. Those who are unable to book homes as a result of the anti-party tech will have the option to reserve a hotel room or a private room (rather than an entire property where a host is less likely to be present) through the platform, Airbnb said.

Airbnb made its ban on all parties and events permanent in June, about two years after announcing a temporary prohibition. Initially, the company said the ban was to mitigate the spread of Covid-19 through social distancing efforts, as well as a response to pandemic bar and club closures pushing many Airbnb users to party in rented homes. But eventually, the company said, the move “developed into a bedrock community policy.”
Over the years, Airbnb has had to confront headlines about violent incidents taking place during parties at rental properties. In April, for instance, two teens were killed and several people were injured at a party thrown in an Airbnb-rented property in Pittsburgh.

Airbnb said there was a 44% year-over-year decline in the rate of party reports in June, which it attributed to the policy change.

Airbnb has been testing similar technology to address the issue in Australia since 2021, with a 35% decline in unauthorized parties following the rollout, according to the company. Airbnb said the pilot in Australia was so effective that it is now becoming permanent in the country and the company is “hoping for similar success” in North America.

After announcing a temporary ban on parties in 2020, Airbnb implemented a similar system focused on users under the age of 25 who were booking rentals locally and did not have positive reviews. The company described its newer anti-party technology as “more robust and sophisticated.”

“We anticipate that this new system will help prevent more bad actors on our platform,” the company said, “while having less of a blunt impact on guests who are not trying to throw a party.”

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The Tech We Had No Idea Would Become So Critical

Photo: Gizmodo

Upgrading the stock stereo system to a multi-disc system with DVD capabilities and a pop-up screen was one of the few ways the benefits of chips and electronics in cars were immediately obvious to the average consumer in 2002, when most in-vehicle electronics, like that those controlled anti-lock braking systems, were hidden away.

Two decades later, as is evident with companies like Sony, Apple, and even Dyson trying to break into the automotive industry, cars are becoming more and more like rolling electronic gadgets. The electrification of the motor car brought with it incredibly elaborate infotainment systems relying on giant touchscreens and even voice recognition. Meanwhile other electronic upgrades, such as cameras and sensors keeping tabs on everything else on the road, have facilitated features that will autonomously keep a vehicle in its lane, automatically break for obstacles, and even identify and obey speed limit signage (YMMV).

Cars that drive themselves without any human intervention are allegedly just around the corner, and in a few years the vehicle in your driveway will have more in common with your smartphone than the Model T. As with a smartphone, consumers eventually won’t really care what’s under the hood, as long as a car gets them from point A to point B and thoroughly distracts them during the ride.

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PayPal surges, Airbnb falls and more: Wednesday’s 5 things to know

Here are the key events taking place on Wednesday that could impact trading.

PAYPAL: Shares were surging more than 10% in premarket trading. The online payments company has entered an information sharing agreement with activist investor Elliott Investment Management to evaluate capital return alternatives.

PayPal also appointed Blake Jorgensen as chief financial officer. Additionally, chief product officer Mark Britto will retire at year-end. A search is underway for his successor.

HOUSEHOLD CREDIT CARD DEBT SURGES IN SECOND QUARTER, HIGHEST JUMP IN OVER 20 YEARS

PayPal reported net revenues of $6.8 billion, up 9% year over year in the second quarter and a net loss of $341 million, or 29 cents per diluted share. Last year, the company recorded net income of $1.18 billion, or $1.00 per diluted share.

PayPal Holdings shares are trading higher ahead of Wednesday’s session. (REUTERS/Amir Cohen/File Photo / Reuters Photos)

AIRBNB: Shares of the vacation rental company were more than 7% lower in premarket trading after the company issued a weaker-than-expected outlook that overshadowed otherwise strong results. The company reported revenue of $2.1 billion in the second quarter, up 58% year-over-year and 73% higher than Q2 2019. The number was in line with Wall Street estimates. Airbnb expects third-quarter revenue of $2.78 billion to $2.88 billion, higher than analysts’ estimates of $2.77 billion, according to Refinitiv IBES. The company also announced it will repurchase up to $2 billion of its shares.

AIRBNB SEES 30% MORE NIGHTS BOOKED FOR THE SUMMER TRAVEL COMPARED TO PRE-PANDEMIC

A CVS Pharmacy sign is shown in Mount Lebanon, Pa. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar / AP Newsroom)

EARNINGS: Another busy day coming up for earnings, with a big focus on health care. CVS Health, AmerisourceBergen, Moderna, and Regeneron Pharmaceuticals report ahead of the opening bell. Some big insurance companies will report in the afternoon, including Met Life and Allstate. Also watch for hotel and casino play MGM Resorts, online auctioneer Ebay, and household products maker Clorox to name a few. 

Close-up on a woman working at a restaurant as a waitress and holding a notepad (iStock / iStock)

NYC RESTAURANTS STRUGGLING TO RISE TO PRE-PANDEMIC PROFIT

ECONOMIC DATA: The Institute for Supply Management releases its non-manufacturing PMI for July. This important gauge of services sector activity is expected to slip for a fourth straight month to 53.5, the lowest since May 2020. Recall that any reading above 50 indicates an expanding services sector. Also, the Commerce Department is expected to say manufacturing orders jumped 1.1% in June, trailing May’s 1.6% increase.

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INVENTORY REPORT: The Energy Information Administration will release its inventory report for last week. Crude stockpiles are expected to fall by more than 600,000 barrels, following a much steeper-than-expected decline of 4.523 million barrels the previous week. Watch for a build of just over one million barrels in distillate supplies (heating oil, diesel fuel), and a draw of more than 1.6 million barrels in gasoline inventories. 

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PayPal, Airbnb, Match Group, Caesars and more

A sign is posted outside of the PayPal headquarters in San Jose, California.

Justin Sullivan | Getty Images

Check out the companies making headlines in extended trading.

Match Group — Shares of the dating app operator tumbled as much as 23% after the company reported revenue of $795 million for the second quarter, compared with FactSet estimates of $803.9 million. Match also issued weak guidance around adjusted operating income and revenue for the current quarter.

Solaredge Technologies – The solar-power stock tanked nearly 13% in after-hours trading following disappointing quarterly results. Solaredge reported an EPS of 95 cents, below analysts’ expectation of 88 cents per share, according to FactSet. Revenue also came in shy of estimates.

PayPal — The payments giant’s shares soared 11% after hours following stronger-than-expected second-quarter results and an increase in its forecast. PayPal also revealed it has entered into an information-sharing agreement with Elliott Management.

SoFi — Shares climbed more than 7% after the personal finance company reported a beat on the top and bottom lines. “While the political, fiscal, and economic landscapes continue to shift around us, we have maintained strong and consistent momentum in our business,” SoFi CEO Anthony Noto said in a statement.

Airbnb — Shares of Airbnb fell about 10% in extended trading after the vacation home rental company posted weaker-than-expected revenue for the second quarter. The company also reported more than 103 million booked nights and experiences, the largest quarterly number ever for the company but short of StreetAccount estimates of 106.4 million.

Advanced Micro Devices — AMD’s shares fell nearly 5% despite reporting strong quarterly earnings and revenue, after the chipmaker issued a weaker-than-anticipated third-quarter forecast. The chipmaker said it expected $6.7 billion in revenue during the current quarter, plus or minus $200 million. Analysts expected $6.83 billion.

Caesars Entertainment — The casino company lost about 2% after it reported a quarterly loss of 57 cents per share, which was 74 cents lower than analysts had expected. It also reported a Caesars Digital loss of $69 million, compared with $2 million for the comparable prior-year period.

Robinhood — Robinhood slid about 2% after reporting it will cut its headcount by some 23%, after previously laying off 9% in April, and posting a decline in monthly active users and assets under custody for the second quarter. The investing app operator released its results a day ahead of schedule.

Starbucks — The coffee chain saw shares edge higher by more than 2% after it reported better-than-expected quarterly results, despite lockdowns in China weighing on its performance. Within the U.S., however, net sales rose 9% to $8.15 billion and same-store sales grew 3%.

— CNBC’s Sarah Min and Yun Li contributed reporting.

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Airbnb apologizes for Mississippi ‘slave cabin’ listed as luxury getaway after viral TikTok video

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The Airbnb listing in Mississippi seemingly had everything a traveler could ask for in a bed-and-breakfast accommodation: a suite with exquisite antique furnishings, soft linens, a brand-new bathroom and access to Netflix on the smart TV.

But there was something else about the Panther Burn Cottage that the luxury listing proudly advertised: The property was an “1830s slave cabin” that housed enslaved people at a plantation in Greenville, Miss.

Airbnb has faced backlash in the days since a TikTok video about the listing from Wynton Yates, an entertainment and civil rights attorney in New Orleans, went viral.

“The history of slavery in this country is constantly denied,” Yates said in the Friday video, “and now it’s being mocked by being turned into a luxurious vacation spot.” Yates, who is Black, added, “This is not okay in the least bit.”

Now, Airbnb has apologized and noted Monday that it is “removing listings that are known to include former slave quarters in the United States.”

“Properties that formerly housed the enslaved have no place on Airbnb,” Airbnb spokesman Ben Breit said in a statement. “We apologize for any trauma or grief created by the presence of this listing, and others like it, and that we did not act sooner to address this issue.”

Brad Hauser, who took over ownership of the Greenville property last month, said in a statement to The Washington Post that even though the building had been a doctor’s office and not a quarters for enslaved people, it was “the previous owner’s decision to market the building as the place where slaves once slept.” Hauser, who is White, said he “strongly opposed” the previous owner’s decision and vowed to provide guests with a “historically accurate portrayal” of life at the Belmont Plantation.

“I am not interested in making money off slavery,” said Hauser, 52, who apologized for the listing “insulting African Americans whose ancestors were slaves.”

It’s unclear how many Airbnb listings feature properties in the United States that once housed some of the millions of enslaved Black people. Several properties in Georgia and Louisiana that were billed as quarters for enslaved people have since been removed from Airbnb’s site, according to Mic.

‘These are our ancestors’: Descendants of enslaved people are shifting plantation tourism

Yates, 34, told The Post on Tuesday that he was first made aware of the Greenville listing in a group text message. Yates said his brother’s friend was looking for rental properties in Greenville, about 100 miles northwest of Columbia, S.C., and found that the Panther Burn Cottage was the only listing available.

So when Yates’s brother shared the listing in the family group text Friday, the New Orleans attorney was floored by it and had the same thought: “This is crazy.”

“To see weddings on plantations and events on plantations and suburbs and subdivisions named after plantations and plantation owners is something I’ve been grossed out by every day of my life. But this was a new level of disrespect for what slavery was,” Yates said. “To see the space where enslaved peoples lived being renovated into a luxurious space and rented out just took my breath away.”

Screenshots of the listing show the cabin is next to a 9,000-square-foot mansion that has nine bedrooms and eight bathrooms. Built in 1857, the luxury structure is “the last remaining antebellum mansion standing” in the Mississippi Delta, according to the listing.

Then, the listing references the history surrounding the much smaller cottage.

“This particular structure, the Panther Burn Cabin, is an 1830s slave cabin from the extant Panther Burn Plantation to the south of Belmont,” the listing reads. “It has also been used as a tenant sharecroppers cabin and a medical office for local farmers and their families to visit the plantation doctor.”

The previous owner noted in the listing that the cabin was moved to the Belmont Plantation in 2017 and “meticulously restored,” while keeping some of the cypress boards used in the original built in the 1830s. The Panther Burn Cottage was advertised on the Airbnb listing as “the last surviving structure from the fabled Panther Burn Plantation.”

Despite the history of enslaved people living in the cabin, Yates pointed out in his TikTok video how it didn’t deter guests who stayed there from leaving glowing reviews of the “memorable” listing. Hauser, through a representative, said the reviews are for an unrelated property in Arkansas and not the Greenville listing.

“Enjoyed everything about our stay,” one woman commented in July 2021.

“We stayed in the cabin and it was historic but elegant,” another wrote last October.

“What a delightful place to step into history, Southern hospitality, and stay a night or two!” one guest said in March.

The contrast between the Panther Burn Cottage housing about 80 enslaved Black people in the 1800s and White people today using it as a cute, luxury vacation spot is “mind-blowing,” Yates said.

“It was built by enslaved people and lived in by enslaved people where they died from being overworked, infectious diseases, hunger and heartbreak. They died in those spaces,” Yates told The Post. “It wasn’t a comfortable situation.”

After Yates’s TikTok video on the “slave cabin” was viewed more than 2.6 million times, Airbnb said it was not only removing all listings promoted as former quarters for enslaved people but also “working with experts to develop new policies that address other properties associated with slavery.”

Hauser told The Post that when he initially inquired about the building behind Belmont, the previous owner told him it was not a cabin for enslaved people and was not being advertised as such. He said he was “misled” about the cabin, and noted how Airbnb and Booking.com had suspended advertising contracts with the Belmont “pending further investigation.”

“I intend to do all I can to right a terrible wrong and, hopefully, regain advertising on Airbnb so The Belmont can contribute to the most urgent demand for truth telling about the history of the not only the South but the entire nation,” Hauser said in a statement.

Yates said he doesn’t know whether Airbnb’s apology will amount to situations like the Panther Burn Cottage being avoided in the future. When asked what he would tell property owners with buildings that once housed enslaved Black people, Yates had a clear message: “Stop romanticizing the experience of slavery.”

“Because that’s exactly what this is,” he said. “This is profiting off of slavery.”

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Stocks Open Mixed Ahead of Fed Meeting

U.S. stock indexes were mixed at the opening Tuesday as investors geared up for the Federal Reserve’s policy decision this week and evaluated a batch of earnings.

The S&P 500 rose 0.3% in early trading. The benchmark stocks gauge rose 0.6% Monday, its third gain in four trading days. The technology-focused Nasdaq Composite added 0.4% while the Dow Jones Industrial Average was about flat.

Those moves belied a tense mood among investors expecting the central bank to accelerate its tightening of monetary policy this week, the latest step in inflation-fighting efforts that have already raised borrowing costs throughout the economy this year, scrambling stock and bond markets.

Traders are reacting to a slew of big companies’ latest reports and financial forecasts. Pfizer fell 0.7% after forecasting lower revenue than predicted by analysts. Investment firm KKR rose about 2% after swinging to a loss.

Estee Lauder

lost 4.4% after the company lowered its revenue and earnings outlook.

Elliott Investment Management disclosed a roughly 6% stake in Western Digital, pushing shares of the data-storage company up 12%.

Rockwell Automation

said quarterly earnings tumbled, sending shares down 14%.

The yield on 10-year Treasury notes topped 3% for a second straight day before slipping back to 2.928%, compared with 2.995% Monday. Yields, which move inversely to bond prices and are a reference for borrowing costs throughout the economy, have shot to their highest levels since 2018 in anticipation of higher interest rates.

They have also dragged up government borrowing costs globally. The yield on 10-year German government bonds, the benchmark in Europe, surpassed 1% Tuesday for the first time since 2015, before slipping back to 0.935%.

Overseas stock markets wavered. The Stoxx Europe 600 gained about 0.3%, led by shares of banks and oil-and-gas companies on a busy day for earnings in the region.

BP shares rose 3.1% after the oil producer reported underlying profit of $6.2 billion, when stripping out a pretax accounting charge related to its decision to exit its Russia holdings.

BNP Paribas

posted a jump in earnings, sending shares of the French lender 4.3% higher.

Sweden’s OMX Stockholm All-Share steadied, edging up 0.1%. On Monday, the market was among the worst affected by a flash crash in European shares sparked by an erroneous sale by

Citigroup.

Mainland Chinese markets were closed for a public holiday. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng edged up 0.1%.

All eyes are on the Federal Reserve’s next steps.



Photo:

BRENDAN MCDERMID/REUTERS

All eyes are on the Fed’s next steps as the central bank tries to tap the brakes on the fastest pace of inflation in decades. Rising rates have combined with coronavirus shutdowns in China and the war in Ukraine to send jitters through stock markets this year.

Rate-setting officials will gather Tuesday for a two-day policy meeting. At its conclusion Wednesday, the Fed is expected to raise interest rates by a half percentage point, the first such increase in 22 years and following on from a quarter-point rise in March.

Investors will also seek details from Chairman

Jerome Powell

on the central bank’s plans to reduce its bondholdings. Officials have recently indicated that they will allow $95 billion in securities to mature every month, unwinding another form of stimulus lavished on markets during the pandemic.

“It appears that the war in Ukraine hasn’t derailed the Fed in the slightest,” said

Gregory Perdon,

co-chief investment officer at

Arbuthnot Latham.

Financial conditions have already tightened significantly, Mr. Perdon added, pointing to a strengthening dollar, the increase in Treasury yields and rising mortgage rates.

Earnings season continues apace.

Airbnb,

ABNB -4.98%

Starbucks,

Lyft

and

American International Group

are on the block after markets close.

Broadly positive corporate reports have failed to steady the market in recent weeks. Earnings growth is in line with historical norms at about 11% annually, according to Deutsche Bank analysts, while margins have remained near record levels despite rising input prices.

In commodities, Brent-crude futures prices slipped 1% to $106.55 a barrel. Traders are awaiting a meeting of ministers from OPEC members and their allies including Russia on Thursday, and monitoring shutdowns in China that are curbing fuel demand.

A European Union proposal to ban Russian crude oil by the end of the year is due to be circulated to member states Tuesday.

Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell has indicated that the central bank is likely to raise interest rates by a half percentage point at its meeting. Photo: Samuel Corum/Getty Images

Write to Joe Wallace at joe.wallace@wsj.com and Matt Grossman at matt.grossman@wsj.com.

Copyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

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Shooting at Airbnb party in Pittsburgh leaves 2 dead, 9 injured

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PITTSBURGH — A shooting early Sunday at a house party in Pittsburgh left two people dead and at least eight injured, city officials said.

Police said they responded just after 12:30 a.m. to an Airbnb in Pittsburgh’s East Allegheny neighborhood, where about 200 people had been attending a party.

More than 90 rounds were fired inside the house, prompting some partygoers to jump out of windows, Pittsburgh Police Chief Scott E. Schubert said at a news conference Sunday afternoon. Police said the shooting was from a property on Suismon Street and Madison Avenue that had been rented via Airbnb.

“It was a very chaotic scene. You had people who were fleeing — you know, just trying to get out of there,” Schubert said.

Many of the partygoers were underage, and one of the victims was as young as 14 years old, Schubert said. Police believe there was more than one shooter and do not yet have anyone in custody, he added. He asked anyone with information about the shooting to contact law enforcement.

A video from the party, verified by The Washington Post, showed partygoers packed inside the home when a man began shouting, “He got a gun! … We gotta go! We gotta go!”

With little to no light, people tried to wedge their way through the standing-room-only crowd. Midway through the video, the sound of gunfire can be heard, and the shouts turned into screams as panicked partygoers searched for an exit.

On Sunday, Schubert said there was an “altercation” at the party and that shortly afterward gunshots were fired both inside and outside the house, “potentially back and forth.”

Airbnb bans ‘party houses’ after deadly Halloween shooting in rental

Two boys under age 18 were killed in the shooting, police said, and officers and emergency workers took some victims to hospitals, while others arrived on their own. Police said other injuries included broken bones and cuts sustained by people who tried to flee the scene.

A spokesman for the Allegheny Health Network confirmed Sunday that seven victims had been taken to Allegheny General Hospital with gunshot wounds and other injuries. He did not provide names or details about their conditions.

Two other victims were taken to a University of Pittsburgh Medical Center facility, a UPMC representative said.

Police initially said in a statement that there were 11 victims, including the two who died, but Schubert said later on Sunday that there were 10. Several young people fled the area on foot and in vehicles.

“This goes back to having too many guns — too many illegal guns on the streets,” Schubert said. “This is our priority and we’re not going to sleep until we get who did this. This shouldn’t have happened and we’re sick about it, and we’re going to do everything we can to get those responsible for it.”

Two cans of Mike’s Hard Lemonade and one Air Jordan sneaker lying in the street near the house were the only signs of the party in what is typically a quiet working-class neighborhood of mostly brick rowhouses.

The rest of the scene appeared grim: Broken glass littered the sidewalks near the home, and three of its windows — two to the side and one in the back — were completely shot out. The front door to the house was open, with two imprints on it that suggested it had been kicked in. Bullet holes could still be seen in vehicles nearby.

“There were like a million people” at the party, said a female neighbor who did not want to be identified because police told her not to discuss her surveillance footage with anyone else.

She said underage people poured into the party all night and that several neighbors called police about loud music around 9 p.m. Saturday.

Asked why the party hadn’t been broken up earlier, Schubert said he was not aware of noise complaints to police before the shooting and said he would look into those calls.

Once the shooting started, the neighbor said, she saw people run out of the house and later saw bloodstains on cars parked nearby. One bullet went through her front window and into her living room; the house next door also had a bullet hole in the window, she said.

“Right now I am trying to stay calm,” she said.

Officials are processing evidence at eight crime scenes, and detectives are interviewing witnesses and reviewing video footage, police said.

Another neighbor, Mitchell Wilston, 30, said that before the shooting broke out, a line of people had been waiting to go inside the house. “People were all lined up like it was a club,” he said.

Wilston said he and his wife left their home around 9 p.m. and that he called the police because “everyone looked like they were 15.”

By the time he came back home, the shooting had already taken place and there was blood smeared over his car. Surveillance footage from Wilston’s security camera showed police were at the party house as early as 11 p.m. Saturday.

Wilston said that he believed the house had been used for bachelor and bachelorette parties before Saturday, but that the biggest problem neighbors had with the Airbnb before the weekend was simply pizza boxes left on the curb.

Airbnb in a statement said it has a strict ban on parties at its listings and confirmed that the gathering in Pittsburgh was an “unauthorized party, thrown without the knowledge or consent of the host.”

The company pointed out that the host had stipulated on the listing page that there were no parties allowed, that there was a noise curfew between 10 p.m. and 7 a.m., and that any evidence of parties would result in a $500 fee.

“We share the Pittsburgh community’s outrage regarding this tragic gun violence,” Airbnb spokesman Ben Breit said. “Our hearts go out to all who were impacted — including loved ones of those who lost their lives, injured victims and neighbors.”

Breit said the guest who had made the booking had been issued a lifetime ban from Airbnb and that the company is “considering all legal options to hold this person accountable.”

Wang reported from Washington. Timsit reported from London. JM Reiger and Elyse Samuels contributed reporting from Washington.

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