A Few Years From Now, You’ll Wish You’d Bought This Undervalued Stock

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The housing market has been sluggish for a few years now. High interest rates make it harder for many wannabe homeowners to get a mortgage, and they also raise the total price a buyer pays for a house.

However, with interest rates coming down and people tired of waiting, there’s already change taking place. That means now is the time to make your move on real estate and related stocks, many of which are still well below previous highs.

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Buyer and real estate platform Opendoor Technologies (NASDAQ: OPEN) has been dealing with sales declines and losses, and its stock is down 96% from its all-time highs. It trades at a dirt cheap price-to-sales ratio of 0.2, which is a reflection of how the market views it today.

But in five years from now, it could look a lot different, and you might regret not grabbing it at this price.

Interest rates strongly affected the real estate market, so it’s no surprise that many of them have been struggling lately. Even perennial winners, like Home Depot, which isn’t directly in real estate, have been experiencing pressure.

Opendoor, which is very much directly in real estate, has been crushed. It has taken action to become more cost-efficient and changed its algorithms to become more competitive given the market conditions. This has led to better performance, and sales got so low that it wasn’t as hard to demonstrate increases recently in comparison.

The third quarter was mixed, with some progress, but plenty more to work on. Opendoor reported $1.4 billion in revenue, 41% higher than last year. It sold 3,615 homes in the quarter, a 35% increase. It purchased 3,504 homes and closed the quarter with 6,288 homes and an inventory balance of $2.1 billion, up 64% year over year. Net loss improved from $106 million last year to $78 million this year.

Opendoor’s core business is buying, which means it buys, renovates, and sells homes. It has a digital platform and marketplace, making the process smoother and reaching millions of potential customers. But as you might imagine, it’s a capital-intensive business. When you see a figure like $1.4 billion in revenue, it sounds like a lot. But that’s because every “product” can cost hundreds of thousands of dollars, if not more.

When the business is thriving, the cash flow works. Money comes in, management uses it to buy and fix up homes, and then more money comes in. With the conditions Opendoor’s been dealing with for the past two years, houses are sitting on its books for too long, thwarting the process.

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