Opendoor Technologies took a beating Wednesday, closing down 11% while major indexes posted gains. The S&P 500 added 0.3% and the Nasdaq rose 0.5%, making the real estate company’s losses stand out even more.
Opendoor Technologies Inc., OPEN
The stock finished at $6.69 with a market cap of approximately $6.4 billion. This extends a painful losing streak that has erased nearly 30% of shareholder value since last Wednesday.
Real estate brokerage Redfin released data showing the housing market has essentially stopped moving. October home sales and new listings remained unchanged from September. The company described current conditions as a plateau driven by high costs and economic uncertainty.
Redfin’s assessment was blunt: while the market has been cooling for years, the past twelve months have been “especially stagnant.” For Opendoor’s business model, that’s a worst-case scenario.
Opendoor purchases homes directly from sellers, holds them briefly, then resells for a profit. At least that’s how it works when the market cooperates.
When buyers disappear, the company gets stuck with billions in housing inventory. Each passing day adds to carrying costs. Property taxes don’t stop. Maintenance bills keep coming. The company’s gross margin of just 8.01% leaves little room for error.
A paralyzed market means inventory sits longer. Revenue slows. Costs pile up. Profits evaporate.
The company posted a negative P/E ratio and continues burning cash. Despite year-to-date gains of 393%, the recent sell-off has investors questioning the turnaround story.
Interim CFO Christina Schwartz unloaded 73,951 shares on November 18. The sale netted $583,473 through a mandatory sell-to-cover program established by the compensation committee.
These transactions typically cover tax obligations on stock compensation. They’re not necessarily bearish signals. But timing matters, and selling during a sharp decline doesn’t help market sentiment.
New leadership has outlined plans to rescale operations following third-quarter earnings. The strategy involves adjusting home purchase volumes and streamlining operations.
Citi upgraded its price target based on these initiatives. The bank sees potential in management’s pivot toward profitability.
But promises don’t pay bills. Opendoor relies heavily on debt while posting losses quarter after quarter. Execution risk remains high. The 52-week trading range of $0.51 to $10.87 tells the volatility story.
Recent trading sessions have been wild. Shares initially dropped on bearish options activity before bouncing on bullish flows. That rally fizzled as housing concerns dominated.
Average daily volume runs 251 million shares. Wednesday saw lighter action at 120,000 shares as selling pressure mounted throughout the session.
The company needs the housing market to thaw. Until buyers and sellers return, Opendoor faces mounting pressure to reduce inventory at potentially unfavorable prices.
The post Opendoor (OPEN) Stock: Slides as Housing Market Slows and Insider Offloads 583K Shares appeared first on Blockonomi.


