Inman

Compass S-1 filing reveals $3.7B in revenue in 2020

Compass, Robert Reffkin

New York City-based real estate brokerage Compass filed its S-1 document with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission Monday that gave the general public the first look at the growing company’s financial details and business plan.

Robert Reffkin | Photo credit: Compass

“Our ambition is to provide agents everything they need to serve their clients, grow their business, and realize their entrepreneurial potential, all in one place. Simple, seamless, and integrated,” Compass CEO Robert Reffkin said, in a letter that accompanied the filing.

“We are replacing today’s complex, paper-driven home-buying and selling process with an all-digital, end-to-end platform that empowers real estate agents to deliver an exceptional experience to every buyer and seller.”

The filing, a prerequisite to Compass’ initial public offering, revealed company revenues of $3.7 billion in 2020, a huge leap from the $2.4 billion the company posted the year prior.

For comparison, Realogy, the nation’s largest real estate holding company and market share leader posted $6.7 billion in revenue in 2020. Redfin, another publicly-traded real estate brokerage posted $886.1 million.

Compass posted a large net loss of $388 million in 2019, which slowed to $270.2 million in 2020, according to the filing.

The filing also notes that Compass “may not be able to achieve profitability and we may continue to incur significant losses in the future,” pointing to a number of reasons.

Those reasons include expansion into new markets, declines in real estate transaction volume, increased competition in the industry, increased costs to retain and attract agents and changes in fee structure, among others.

Compass reported an accumulated deficit of $1.1 billion, as of December 31, 2020.

The company also revealed it reached 4 percent of U.S. market share in 2020, which represented $152 billion in residential real estate — a fourfold increase from 2018.

A large portion of the company’s filing focused on its tech ambitions for agents as a runway to future growth. Although Reffkin also said in the note he started Compass because of his mother, Ruth, a real estate agent who raised him as a single mother.

Reffkin pointed out the challenges she faced because her brokerage did not have the tools to support her.

Real estate agents, the filing notes, “are an underserved group of business owners” and Compass wants to provide them with an end-to-end platform to help boost their busniess. Current real estate technologies don’t adequately address the market, the filing notes.

“At Compass, we are agent-obsessed,” Reffkin added. “We’ve built a business completely aligned with our agents: when agents succeed, Compass succeeds.”

“Our commitment to the agent is not contingent and is not temporary; it is foundational to our vision, our strategy, and our success — and it always will be.”

The filing also revealed that Reffkin owns 2.4 percent of the company’s Class A common stock, as well as 100% of the Class C stock which holds 20x voting power. The SoftBank Vision Fund, Compass’ top investor, meanwhile owns 34.8 percent of the company’s Class A common stock.

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