I opened my email yesterday morning, saw a headline, and read it twice. Bed Bath and Beyond is buying a real estate brokerage. My first thought was probably the same as yours. “Wait, aren’t they out of business?”
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Here is the short answer. Yes and no. And the story behind it says a lot about where our business is heading, so let me break it down in plain English.
On June 17, Fathom Holdings agreed to be bought by Bed Bath and Beyond in an all-stock deal. The deal values Fathom at about $53.38 million, and Fathom shareholders get 0.2236 shares of Bed Bath and Beyond for each share they own. It is expected to close in the second half of this year, once regulators sign off and Fathom shareholders vote yes.
Now, about the name. The Bed Bath and Beyond you remember, the one with the big blue coupons, did go bankrupt and closed all its stores. What you are looking at now is a different company.
A few years back, Overstock.com bought the Bed Bath and Beyond name out of bankruptcy and later started calling itself Bed Bath and Beyond because the name was worth more than its own. It is run by Marcus Lemonis, the guy from the TV show The Profit, and it owns a bunch of brands now, including Overstock, buybuy Baby and Kirkland’s Home.
So this is not your mom’s Bed Bath and Beyond. It is a holding company wearing a famous name.
Here is what they are trying to build
Lemonis calls it Everything Home. The idea is one company that sells a consumer the house, the mortgage, the title, the insurance and then the towels and the furniture to fill it. Fathom gives them the real estate piece, the brokerage, mortgage, title and the technology. On paper, it sounds tidy. Buy it all under one roof.
And Fathom is not the first piece they have grabbed. Real estate is just the newest aisle in the store.
Now look at the deal itself, because the numbers tell a more interesting story than the headline does. Fathom is no slouch. In 2025, it pulled in about $420 million in revenue, up 25 percent from the year before, with transactions up nearly 15 percent, all built on a technology-first model that agents like.
And Bed Bath and Beyond is in the middle of its own comeback. Last quarter, it grew sales for the first time in years and ended with around $247.8 million in revenue.
Here is the honest part: This is an all-stock deal, and neither company is turning a profit yet, which is pretty common for companies still building scale. So the real bet is that the two of them together can get bigger than either one could alone.
When the news hit, Fathom’s stock jumped about 82 percent, which tells you investors liked the pairing.
The lure of an end-to-end real estate journey
Now step back, because this is the part that matters most. This deal is one more move in a much bigger trend.
For years, the biggest names in and around real estate have been chasing the same prize. They want to own the entire journey. Search the home, finance the home, insure the home, sell the home and furnish the home, all inside one company.
Portals tried it. Big brokerages tried it. Now a retailer is trying it. The goal is always the same. Own the front door, own the customer, own the data.
And that raises a fair question for all of us. When one company owns every step, where does the consumer get honest, independent advice? Convenience is nice. A one-stop checkout is nice. But the biggest financial and emotional decision most people ever make is not a cart you fill on a website. It is a life decision, full of trade-offs that no algorithm fully understands.
Which brings me to the thing none of these deals can change: the value of a real estate professional. A platform can bundle services. It can bolt a mortgage onto a title company onto an insurance product. What it cannot do is sit at the kitchen table, look a nervous first-time buyer in the eye and explain what this really means for them and their family.
It cannot read a neighborhood the way a local pro can. It cannot negotiate with heart and skill. It cannot pick up the phone at nine at night when a deal is wobbling and a client is scared. That is human work. And no merger, no app, no famous logo replaces it.
So I do not see this news as a threat. I see it as a reminder. Every time the industry races to automate and bundle the home, it ends up proving the same point. The one thing they cannot manufacture is trust. The one thing they cannot download is judgment.
The professionals who lean into relationships, expertise and genuine advocacy are not getting replaced. They are becoming more valuable, because they are the part of the process a conglomerate cannot copy.
So watch this trend. Pay attention to where the industry is heading and who is trying to own it. But do not lose a wink of sleep over a press release with a famous name on it.
The home will always be the biggest thing your clients buy. And the person who guides them through it with honesty and skill will always matter. That has not changed, and it is not going to.
Darryl Davis, CSP, is a nationally recognized real estate speaker, bestselling author and coach with more than 40 years in the industry. Learn more at darrylspeaks.com.