This article was shared here with the permission of Mike DelPrete for Inman Intel, a data and research arm of Inman offering deep insights and market intelligence on the business of residential real estate and proptech. Subscribe today.
Why it matters: In my recent Inman presentation, I unpacked what a Netflix vs. Blockbuster moment in real estate would look like, and how a receding tide reveals business model resiliency and clues about future growth.
Earlier this year, I suggested that “to identify the brokerage business models of the future, one simply needs to follow the agents.” (Read more: Who’s winning (and losing) the agent count race?)
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There is a clear split between the low-fee brokerage models that are attracting agents, and the legacy brokerages that are shedding agents — a trend that continues in Q2.
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The notable change is Compass, which once again grew its agent count after shedding around 400 agents during Q1 — putting the company back on the growth side of the ledger.
- The overall market was up 37 percent in Q2 compared to the previous quarter, which can be attributed to seasonal growth.
- The most notable outliers of the past quarter are Real and Compass, which both significantly outperformed the market.
- Overall brokerage revenues are depressed in 2023, and continue to follow seasonal trends.
- Compass has maintained its revenue leadership position, with eXp making significant gains over the past two years (while industry incumbent Anywhere has lost its top spot).
- The legacy brokerages had a much better Q2 (including Compass being cash flow positive), but are still unprofitable at a net-income level for the first half of the year.
- With significantly lower fixed costs and operational overhead, the low-fee brokerage models continue to have a structural advantage and are operating much more profitably than legacy brokerages in the down market.
- Incumbents would have a stagnant market share with high fixed costs and a limited ability to evolve, while disruptors would be exponentially gaining market share with an easy-to-define unfair advantage.
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The shifting market — the receding tide — is revealing these changes across the industry, leading to a bifurcation of business models with key differences in market share, growth and profitability.
Mike DelPrete is a strategic adviser and global expert in real estate tech, including Zavvie, an iBuyer offer aggregator. Connect with him on LinkedIn.