 Hi, Tim Plaehn here. Silver has become one of the best investments for both growth AND income. I've just found one tiny fund that is now delivering up to 20% in annualized cash distributions…. And could deliver $1,170 every month for you. However that's not all…. The share price has jumped 68% in just 5 months. This is one of the rarest combinations I've seen in 20 years of analyzing investments. Click here to see how this works. But hurry: the next monthly payout hits soon. To your income, Tim Plaehn Lead Income Strategist P.S. This isn't physical silver. It's a simple ETF that trades like any stock. Buy once, collect monthly income.
Monday's Exclusive Content Opendoor Pops After Earnings, But the Big Question Hasn't ChangedReported by Chris Markoch. Published: 2/22/2026. 
Key Points- Opendoor beat revenue expectations but posted a larger-than-expected loss, highlighting ongoing profitability challenges.
- The company’s “Opendoor 2.0” strategy focuses on faster inventory turns, AI-driven pricing, and breakeven adjusted net income by 2026.
- Institutional sentiment and sector rotation will likely determine whether OPEN stock can sustain momentum.
- Special Report: An AI just scored 357 stocks. Here's what it found. (From TradingTips)

Stock analysis is frequently peppered with sports metaphors, and with good reason; they fit. That's the case with Opendoor Technologies Inc. (NASDAQ: OPEN). The company reported its Q4 2025 earnings after the market closed, and the results were mixed — yet investors pushed OPEN stock up 14% in after-hours trading. Is this investing's biggest secret?
LeBron James... Michael Phelps... Ted Williams... what connects these sporting legends to the likes of massive companies like Nvidia... Coca-Cola... Geico? And how could that connection help you transform the way you invest? Find out here. Why did Buffett really step down? The theme of the earnings report (branded as an Open House) was: Opendoor 2.0 Does What It Said It Would Do — delivering acquisition growth, faster inventory turns, and stronger cohorts. It outlined the company's progress on a four-step plan to transform the business with an eye toward three goals: - To reach breakeven Adjusted Net Income by the end of 2026 on a 12-month go-forward basis
- To drive positive unit economics while increasing transaction velocity
- To transition to direct-to-consumer relationships and expand its product suite
The report was encouraging, but progress is a relative term. This remains an unprofitable company with relatively modest revenue. In that vein, this report feels like surviving the first quarter of a four-quarter game: you can't win the game in the first quarter, but you can lose it. Opendoor hasn't lost — but what does winning look like? Mixed Earnings Won't Move the Needle MuchOn the top line, Opendoor reported revenue of $736 million, beating expectations of $591.75 million. However, adjusted earnings per share (EPS) came in worse than expected: a loss of $1.26 versus an expected loss of $0.08. Both revenue and EPS were also sharply lower on a year-over-year (YOY) basis. As a one-off data point that's not devastating — the company made a C-suite change and needs time for a turnaround — but bulls will note the YOY revenue miss was less severe than feared. Call that a point for Opendoor. The Business Model Has a Proven Achilles HeelOpendoor went public in 2020, during the meme-stock craze, and the timing proved to be a double-edged sword. The iBuyer was supposed to reshape how homes are bought and sold. The company's core value proposition is liquidity and convenience: make instant cash offers to homeowners who want to sell quickly without listing, showings, or uncertain timelines, then resell swiftly—the speed of resale drives growth. That engine has always been powered by algorithmic pricing models that decide what to pay sellers, how to price for resale, and which markets to target. While they may not have used AI originally, they are using it now as part of the turnaround strategy to improve efficiency. The problem is the same as with any model: the output is only as good as the historical data it's trained on. If market conditions shift faster than the model adapts, the company can be left holding depreciating inventory. That happened in 2022. Rising interest rates and a rapidly cooling housing market caught the company off guard, leaving inventory bought at much higher prices and forcing massive losses; the stock fell from over $12 at the start of the year to under $1 by year-end. The refrain from retail investors is often "this time it's different." That's a dangerous line of thinking. Interest rates would have to fall significantly to "unfreeze" the housing market, and recent Fed minutes suggest that's unlikely. The takeaway for investors is caution. AI can help, but it's only as effective as the underlying market. Opendoor went public in an unprecedented housing bull market; it survived the downturn, but what does a new equilibrium look like? That's why they keep playing the game. And Opendoor's earnings have allowed it to stay in play. How Should Retail Investors View OPEN Stock?To help answer that question, note that the gains of over 200% in the last 12 months were aided by strong institutional buying in the third and fourth quarters of last year. However, that buying seemed to wane as the year ended. Short interest rose, indicating that larger investors viewed the stock as overextended. That remained the case into 2026, and OPEN was down just over 20% before the earnings report. The takeaway is that OPEN will likely need renewed institutional interest to sustain further gains. But with evidence of broader sector rotation away from tech stocks, there may be less appetite for a company that delivered a good but not great report. Opendoor is a speculative investment and a company still trying to prove its business model at scale. There's time on the clock, but investors will need patience and conviction.
|
0 التعليقات:
إرسال تعليق