New York, June 10, 2026, 10:03 EDT
- Opendoor shares recently traded near $4.69, up about 8% in morning trading.
- The newest company dashboard update showed weekly acquisition contract tracking up 31% versus the prior week.
- A June 26 Russell reconstitution remains the next technical catalyst for the stock.
Opendoor Technologies Inc. shares rose sharply Wednesday, putting the home-flipping platform back on investors’ radar after the company’s latest “Accountable” dashboard showed a 31% week-over-week increase in acquisition contract tracking. The stock recently traded at $4.69, up roughly 8% from the prior close, after opening at $4.35. accountable.opendoor.com
That dashboard is the fresh data point. It was marked “Data as of Jun 06, 2026” and “Updated yesterday,” making it the most current verified company update available around the move. Acquisition contracts matter because Opendoor is an iBuyer — a business that contracts to buy homes directly and later resells them — so rising contracts can point to future inventory and revenue if those deals close. accountable.opendoor.com
The rally was not tied to a new earnings release or a same-day SEC filing. Opendoor’s investor site still lists its May 27 Russell 3000 inclusion announcement as the latest press release, while the company’s SEC filings page shows a June 2 DEFA14A proxy filing as the latest listed filing.
The other reason traders care now is the Russell clock. Opendoor said in May it had been selected for inclusion in the Russell 3000 Index, effective after the U.S. market closes on June 26. The Russell 3000 is a broad U.S. equity benchmark; inclusion can matter because funds and managers that track Russell indexes may adjust holdings around reconstitution.
FTSE Russell’s 2026 calendar shows preliminary lists were issued and updated through June, with the newly reconstituted indexes taking effect after the close on June 26. That makes Opendoor’s move partly a fundamentals story and partly an index-flow story, rather than a simple reaction to one headline.
The dashboard also comes with limits. Opendoor says acquisition contract volume includes contracts where the company will acquire a property, including through its Cash Now, More Later program, but it does not account for contracts that later cancel. The company also says the information on the site is based on estimates, is not audited by Deloitte, and is not a substitute for GAAP financial statements.
Still, the latest update fits the turnaround narrative management laid out in May. Opendoor said first-quarter home purchases rose 45% from the prior quarter and that it signed more than 5,000 acquisition contracts in Q1, double the fourth-quarter level and the highest since 2022.
Chief Executive Kaz Nejatian framed the argument bluntly in the company’s Q1 release: “Better acquisitions, faster turns, stronger margins. The machine is working.” He also said aged inventory had been cut from half the book to one-tenth while the company scaled volume. Opendoor Technologies Inc.
The financial proof is still incomplete. Opendoor reported Q1 revenue of $720 million, down 38% from a year earlier, and a net loss of $173 million, wider than the $85 million loss a year before. Gross margin improved to 10.0% from 8.6%, but the company still posted negative adjusted EBITDA of $31 million. Adjusted EBITDA is a non-GAAP operating-profit measure that excludes items such as interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization.
The balanced risk is that the stock may be reacting faster than the business. Contracts can fall through, home resale prices can weaken, and Opendoor must fund inventory before it can turn homes into revenue. Its Q1 filing showed $999 million of cash and cash equivalents, but also $1.1 billion of asset-backed debt and $197 million of convertible notes, so execution depends on both housing demand and continued access to financing.
Mortgage rates remain the outside variable. Freddie Mac’s latest weekly survey showed the 30-year fixed mortgage rate at 6.48% as of June 4, down from 6.53% a week earlier but still high enough to keep affordability tight for many buyers. That matters for Opendoor because slower buyer demand can stretch resale times and pressure margins.
The next test is whether the latest contract momentum survives cancellations and flows into the company’s Q2 targets, including roughly 25% quarter-over-quarter revenue growth and adjusted EBITDA near breakeven. After that, the June 26 Russell reconstitution becomes the next date investors are likely to circle.