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Opendoor Stock: Down 90% From Its Peak—Can This Real Estate Disruptor Bounce Back?

Opendoor Stock: Down 90% From Its Peak—Can This Real Estate Disruptor Bounce Back?

Author:
foolstock
Published:
2025-07-30 22:07:00
22
3

Opendoor's stock has cratered 90% from its all-time high—what now? The iBuying pioneer faces brutal headwinds, but crypto-style volatility means hope (or hype) never dies.

The Bleeding Balance Sheet

Revenue streams drying up faster than a DeFi protocol after a hack. Opendoor's algorithm-driven home flips worked when rates were zero—now they're getting wrecked by the oldest rule in finance: don't fight the Fed.

Bagholders' Dilemma

Retail investors who bought the 'proptech revolution' narrative now stare at losses that'd make a Bitcoin maximalist blush. Will the company pull a Phoenix act, or is this another SPAC-turned-roadkill?

The Bottom Line

In a market where even stablecoins lose pegs, Opendoor's 90% plunge might just be a buying opportunity—or a cautionary tale about disruptors getting disrupted. Either way, it's cheaper entertainment than buying a Bored Ape.

A person points to a model of a home in front of a laptop.

Image source: Getty Images.

The last major iBuyer standing

As an instant buyer (or iBuyer), Opendoor uses its AI algorithms to make instant cash offers for homes. It fixes up those properties and relists them on its own marketplace. That streamlined business model flourished when interest rates were low and the housing market was hot.

However, the Fed's rate hikes in 2022 and 2023 ended the post-pandemic housing boom while driving up the costs of buying and renovating those properties. That's whyand's Redfin both shut down their integrated iBuying platforms in 2022.

But with Zillow and Redfin out of the picture, Opendoor is the one big major iBuyer standing. It's expected to generate more than six times as much revenue as its closest competitor,, this year. So if interest rates decline, the housing market warms up, and economies of scale kick in, its growth could accelerate again.

When will Opendoor reach an inflection point?

In 2021, Opendoor's revenue and adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization (EBITDA) skyrocketed as the pandemic eased and sales of new homes surged. Unfortunately, rising rates forced it to reduce its home purchases in 2022 and 2023. Its adjusted EBITDA margins turned red again, and it racked up more losses.

Metric

2021

2022

2023

2024

Revenue

$8 billion

$15.6 billion

$6.9 billion

$5.2 billion

Revenue growth

211%

94%

(55%)

(26%)

Homes bought

36,908

34,962

11,246

14,684

Adjusted EBITDA margin

0.7%

(1.1%)

(9%)

(2.8%)

Net loss

($662 million)

($1.4 billion)

($275 million)

($392 million)

Data source: Opendoor.

But in 2024, Opendoor bought more homes again as the Fed's three interest rate cuts stabilized the housing market. Its adjusted EBITDA margin also improved as it pruned its workforce, reduced its resale transaction costs and commissions, and streamlined its other spending.

In the first quarter of 2025, its revenue only dipped 2% year over year to $1.2 billion, and its home purchases ROSE 4% to 3,609 units. Its adjusted EBITDA margin also improved 160 basis points to negative 2.6% as it narrowed its net loss from $109 million to $85 million.

For the second quarter, it expects its revenue to decline less than 1% at the midpoint with a positive adjusted EBITDA margin of about 1%. For the full year, analysts expect its revenue to decline about 5% to $4.9 billion with an adjusted EBITDA margin of negative 0.7%. That stabilization indicates the storm clouds are finally dissipating.

Does Opendoor look undervalued relative to its growth potential?

Four catalysts could turn that stabilization into an acceleration. First, the Fed is expected to reduce its rates at least two more times this year. That could drive more sellers and buyers back to the housing market.

Second, it's partnering with more homebuilders and real estate platforms (including Zillow and Redfin) to reach more sellers.

Third, the company has been upgrading its own AI algorithms to improve the accuracy and speed of its home valuations and repair estimates.

Lastly, it's expanding Opendoor Exclusives, its new marketplace, which directly matches buyers to sellers with its AI pricing engine. That capital-light approach, which doesn't require Opendoor to buy and renovate any houses on its own, WOULD help it generate higher-margin commissions without increasing its debt.

For 2026, analysts expect revenue to rise 18% to $5.8 billion as its adjusted EBITDA margin rises to nearly break-even levels. With an enterprise value of $3.06 billion, it still looks undervalued at a multiple of less than 1 next year's sales.

Opendoor's stock already surged about 370% over the past month. A new meme stock rally, viral comments from a hedge fund manager about it becoming the "next," and speculation of a reverse stock split brought back the bulls. But if you expect its growth to accelerate again, it isn't too late to buy its volatile stock.

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