NEW YORK, January 1, 2026, 19:30 ET — Market closed
- Opendoor shares last closed down 0.17% at $5.83 on Dec. 31, with U.S. markets shut Thursday for New Year’s Day.
- Christy Schwartz became CFO effective Jan. 1, as Opendoor pushes product updates and a refreshed leadership team into 2026.
- Investors are watching next week’s macro backdrop and the timing of Opendoor’s next quarterly report for clearer direction.
Opendoor Technologies Inc (OPEN) said Christy Schwartz became chief financial officer effective Jan. 1, as U.S. markets stayed shut for the New Year’s Day holiday. “We looked everywhere,” CEO Kaz Nejatian said as the company promoted Schwartz after an external search. Opendoor also said newly hired President Lucas Matheson will oversee strategic initiatives, including exploring blockchain technology and tokenization. SEC
Opendoor shares last closed down 0.17% at $5.83 on Dec. 31, the final trading day of 2025. The stock ranged from $5.72 to just under $6.00 and about 45.8 million shares changed hands, according to market data.
The leadership handoff matters because Opendoor’s “iBuyer” model — buying homes directly and reselling them — ties up capital and depends on financing costs and home-price swings. A Dec. 15 SEC filing showed Opendoor granted Schwartz and Matheson performance restricted stock units, or PRSUs, stock awards that vest only if the shares hit targets over time, starting at an average close of $6.24, with higher hurdles at $9, $13, $17 and beyond. SEC
In a note on Wednesday, Amit Kr Ram at Zacks said Opendoor has been expanding its platform with tools such as Opendoor Checkout, which lets buyers tour a home and place an offer online. He highlighted AI-supported processes for home scoping and title and escrow, and said the company introduced USD Coin (USDC) acceptance — a dollar-pegged “stablecoin” — to speed digital payments. The note added that Zacks’ consensus estimate for Opendoor’s 2026 loss narrowed to 13 cents a share in the past week. Nasdaq
Product rollouts and executive changes have kept attention on Opendoor heading into 2026, even as investors debate whether the rebound in housing-related risk assets can last. Higher interest rates typically raise borrowing costs for homebuyers and for iBuyers that finance inventory.
Opendoor buys homes from sellers for cash offers, makes repairs and resells them, aiming to earn a spread after direct costs. The approach can shorten the time to sell, but it exposes the company to swings in home prices and the cost of financing.
The stock’s sharp swings have made it a high-beta name for traders, with moves often amplified by shifts in expectations for U.S. monetary policy and the housing cycle.
Investing.com data shows Opendoor has traded between about $0.51 and $10.87 over the past 52 weeks, underscoring the volatility investors have had to stomach. Investing
Before the next session on Friday, investors will watch whether the stock can hold recent support near the mid-$5 area and push back through $6, a level it tested repeatedly in the last session of 2025.
The next major catalyst is quarterly results. Opendoor has not confirmed its next release date, but MarketBeat estimates the company will report on Feb. 26 after the close. MarketBeat
Guidance on revenue, inventory levels and contribution margin — the profit on a home sale after direct transaction costs — will be in focus. So will liquidity and funding costs, given the balance-sheet-heavy model.
With markets reopening on Jan. 2, the stock’s next move is likely to hinge on housing data and rates, and whether Opendoor’s product push translates into steadier unit economics.


