SoftBank-backed real estate brokerage Compass just slashed 15% of staff as coronavirus hits the housing market

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SoftBank-backed real estate brokerage Compass just slashed 15% of staff as coronavirus hits the housing market
Compass Founders Robert Reffkin and Ori Allon
  • SoftBank-backed real estate brokerage Compass laid off approximately 375 employees, or 15% of its staff, a source familiar with the matter confirmed to Business Insider.
  • An email to staff reviewed by Business Insider also revealed other cost cutting measures, including a 25% reduction in the executive team's salary and CEO Robert Reffkin reducing his salary to $0.
  • Compass was last valued at $6.4 billion, after a $370 million funding round in July 2019 led by SoftBank.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

SoftBank-backed real estate brokerage Compass just laid off approximately 375 employees or roughly 15% of its staff, a source familiar with the matter confirmed to Business Insider.

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An email reviewed by Business Insider from co-founder and CEO Robert Reffkin detailed a range of cost-cutting measures the company took before layoffs, including Reffkin lowering his salary to $0 and the executive team lowering their salaries by 25%.

Compass was last valued at $6.4 billion, after a $370 million funding round in July 2019 led by SoftBank. The brokerage had rapidly expanded since it was founded through a strategy of acquiring other brokerages and emphasizing its technology stack.

Coronavirus has hit the economy hard, with multiple financial institutions predicting it will cause a recession. The real estate brokerage industry is hit doubly hard by the nature of the coronavirus, which requires social distancing that makes it much harder to show, negotiate, buy and sell homes.

The email noted that Compass has also reduced its Concierge program, which provided 0% interest loans to home sellers to make improvements to their home, by 80%, has paused corporate marketing, and has "halted non-essential project."

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Laid off employees were offered severance and were allowed to keep their corporate laptops. Reffkin noted that he hoped to rehire some of the laid-off employees when the economy improves.

"I don't have a crystal ball, but I believe that in 100 days the real estate market will bounce back and our customers, company and country will be climbing its way out of a recession," Reffkin wrote.

This is a breaking story and will be updated shortly.

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