REAL bought RE/MAX for one reason: survival. And agents may end up paying the bill.
I've personally been approached by RE/MAX almost every year to "roll into" their company. The pitch: raise fees on agents, sell them technology stacks, drive more profitability.
But here's the problem: RE/MAX itself is barely profitable as a parent company. And many of the local RE/MAX offices we watch have been losing money and market share every year.
The Margins Are Razor-Thin
Across the top public brokerages, average EBITDA margins hover around 1.68%. That's not a business. That's a treadmill.
A while back, brokerages started calling themselves "technology companies" to justify higher valuations. Then COVID hit. Brokerages went virtual. Agent turnover spiked to 30–40% annually. Community eroded. The big fancy offices mattered less.
Silicon Valley tactics entered real estate: stock awards, revenue share, recruiting incentives. The idea was simple — keep agents in place, diversify their income when sales slow.
The problem? Since 2022, many public brokerage stocks have been obliterated. Compass, RE/MAX, Anywhere Real Estate, eXp, REAL — all down 80–90% from their highs. Many aren't truly profitable.
The Downstream Play
Their next move? Attachment. Mortgage. Title. Insurance. Anything downstream they can monetize. But even that's hard because agents prefer local vendors they know and trust.
Take Compass. They IPO'd in 2021 at $18/share. Today it's around $8. On paper, Compass can show profits in some quarters. But after stock-based comp, amortization, and interest expense — it's negative. So they bought Anywhere Real Estate for scale, more ancillaries, more franchise fees.
What This Means for Agents
These public companies have a duty to shareholders. They will push as many fees onto agents as the market can absorb. Transaction fees. Annual fees. Quarterly fees. Monthly fees. Most agents don't even read their contracts.
The agent who wins in this environment is the one who knows their numbers, protects their margins, and chooses their platform based on profitability — not brand recognition.
The quiet agents working their database will keep winning. The loud brokerages may be the most fragile.