Compass’s acquisition of Anywhere Real Estate creates a national brokerage powerhouse — but industry veteran Steve Murray says the deal’s biggest effects will be in scale, services and back-office consolidation.
Murray — senior advisor for HousingWire and founder of RealTrends and RTC Consulting —estimates the combined Compass-Anywhere operation will handle roughly a million transaction sides annually.
“It seems to me that with transaction sides, Compass and Anywhere Advisors, the brokerage-owned companies, were doing about a half a million transactions,” he said. “I looked at the second quarter report for Anywhere, and annualized their franchises in the U.S.
“That may add another half a million transactions in the U.S. I’m being generous. So, the way I look at it is the combination of these two companies, they’ll do a million, maybe 1.1 million transaction sides.”
Murray places transaction-side market share for the combined company in the low- to mid- teens — about 13% to 15% of U.S. existing-home transaction sides, based on RealTrends Verified ranking data and public earnings reports.
He notes, however, that because Compass and Anywhere concentrate in higher-priced coastal and metropolitan markets, the combined firm’s share of total dollar volume is materially larger.
“If you look at the volume numbers, then the combination of companies is in the mid-20s in terms of total volume,” Murray said.
Compensation models and team structures — little immediate change
Murray says evidence doesn’t support a wholesale change in compensation models simply because of scale.
“The competition among (the largest brokerages) for agents, even in markets where any one of them had a strong market share, hasn’t affected that particular company’s ability to have a higher retained gross margin in their relationship with agents. It just doesn’t work. There’s no impact and there never has been,” he said.
In short — size alone, does not automatically translate into tighter control over splits or team pay. Agent decisions, Murray said, remain driven by a mix of concrete benefits and personal fit with a brokerage.
Smaller brokerages — nimbleness remains a defense
Murray cautions that the impact on small- and mid-sized brokerages will depend on those firms’ ability to roll with the punches.
“Small and medium brokers can more easily tailor their offerings to attract and recruit agents than larger firms can,” he said. “Small to medium firms can be privately owned. They can be nimble. They can be flexible. But of course, that’s not an advantage unless you’re both nimble and flexible.”
Recruiting and retention ultimately come down to local leadership and execution — branch managers, training and the willingness to invest time and resources, Murray added.
One operational distinction Murray highlights is Compass’s centralized emphasis on recruitment.
“The last I was told, (Compass) has over 100 full-time people, and all they do is focus on recruiting,” he said. “You can see the difference in the first six months of this year. Compass reported over 10% organic growth, that’s both recruiting and retaining agents, and hopefully increasing their productivity versus acquisitions.”
Title, mortgage and back-office synergies
Beyond agent counts and market share, Murray flags potentially large upside from services integration — title, escrow and mortgage — particularly in markets where the combined company’s share could top 20% or more.
“They have the ability to build title in most of those markets, or escrow in southern California and Arizona,” Murray said. “Title insurance can be a very profitable business, and they will be able to leverage that market share if they have the right people. That will be a potentially huge upside for this combination.”
He adds that local title and mortgage providers — in Chicago for example — will likely consider whether to strike arrangements with the combined brokerage given the volume opportunities.
At the same time, Murray expects meaningful cost savings from consolidating duplicate back-office functions.
“There’s a whole lot of duplicate costs in the back offices of Compass and Anywhere that, presumably, over time, they’ll be able to run it more efficiently than two of them separately,” he said.
Smaller brokerages with strong local leadership, flexible offerings and attention to recruiting and training remain competitive options for agents — even as the combined Compass-Anywhere reshapes parts of the market infrastructure.
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By: Jonathan Delozier
Title: Expert speaks on Compass-Anywhere market share, consolidation
Sourced From: www.housingwire.com/articles/expert-speaks-on-compass-anywhere-market-share-consolidation/
Published Date: Wed, 24 Sep 2025 19:50:23 +0000