NEW YORK, March 18, 2026, 6:30 PM EDT
Opendoor Technologies Inc. dropped 5.0% to $5.28 on Wednesday, with investors pulling back from housing stocks tied to interest rates after the Federal Reserve left its benchmark unchanged. Broader markets also slipped: the S&P 500 down 1.36%, Nasdaq off 1.46%. Reuters
This drop hits Opendoor hard—the company buys homes online straight from sellers, flips them to new buyers. But when borrowing’s expensive and it takes longer to resell, that setup feels the squeeze fast. Reuters
The Fed stuck to its script. Rates stayed put at 3.50%-3.75%, with 2026 inflation now seen at 2.7%. One cut is still the outlook for this year. As for the energy jolt, Chair Jerome Powell admitted, “nobody knows” how sharply it might hit the economy. Reuters
Before the decision, housing numbers painted a mixed picture. Pending home sales ticked up 1.8% in February to 72.1, but mortgage rates had already headed higher—climbing to 6.11% last week after sitting at 5.98% before the latest Middle East conflict. “Headwinds” may be ahead for spring, said Hannah Jones at Realtor.com. ING’s James Knightley put it bluntly: the market is “not doing very much.” Reuters
Homebuilders aren’t exactly upbeat. The NAHB/Wells Fargo housing market index inched to 38 for March—still stuck under 50 for the 23rd month running. “Many buyers remain on the fence,” NAHB Chairman Bill Owens said. Chief economist Robert Dietz flagged oil and uncertainty as “headwinds going forward.” Reuters
But Opendoor’s latest numbers point to a rebound. The company on Feb. 19 posted fourth-quarter revenue of $736 million, with gross profit landing at $57 million and 1,706 homes bought in the period. CEO Kaz Nejatian said the results reflected Opendoor “executing on that plan” to reach breakeven adjusted net income by end-2026. SEC
Opendoor wasn’t alone under pressure. Offerpad Solutions slid 5.7% Wednesday.
The bigger worry goes beyond just the macro backdrop. Opendoor’s latest annual filing spells out that holders of its 7.00% convertible notes due 2030 have the option to convert through March 31, 2026. Paying out in cash would strain liquidity, while settling in shares would dilute current holders. SEC