NASDAQ:OPEN Opendoor Technologies Q1 2025 Earnings Report $9.94 -0.27 (-2.64%) Closing price 09/18/2025 04:00 PM EasternExtended Trading$10.01 +0.07 (+0.65%) As of 09/18/2025 07:59 PM Eastern Extended trading is trading that happens on electronic markets outside of regular trading hours. This is a fair market value extended hours price provided by Polygon.io. Learn more. ProfileEarnings HistoryForecast Opendoor Technologies EPS ResultsActual EPS-$0.09Consensus EPS -$0.12Beat/MissBeat by +$0.03One Year Ago EPSN/AOpendoor Technologies Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$1.15 billionExpected Revenue$1.06 billionBeat/MissBeat by +$93.97 millionYoY Revenue GrowthN/AOpendoor Technologies Announcement DetailsQuarterQ1 2025Date5/6/2025TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateTuesday, May 6, 2025Conference Call Time5:00PM ETUpcoming EarningsOpendoor Technologies' Q3 2025 earnings is scheduled for Thursday, November 6, 2025, with a conference call scheduled at 5:00 PM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Conference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfilePowered by Opendoor Technologies Q1 2025 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrMay 6, 2025 ShareLink copied to clipboard.Key Takeaways The U.S. housing market remains under pressure with mortgage rates above 7%, clearance rates down nearly 25% year-over-year, and seller delistings up over 30% as buyers and sellers stay on the sidelines. In Q1, Opendoor generated $1.2 billion in revenue, grew acquisitions by 4%, and narrowed its adjusted EBITDA loss to $30 million from $50 million a year ago, reflecting improved operational execution. Management expects significant progress in Q2, guiding to $1.45–1.525 billion in revenue and a return to positive quarterly adjusted EBITDA for the first time in three years. A pilot agent partnership program in 11 markets is designed to boost conversion and drive more asset-light listing revenue by referring Opendoor leads to local agents early in the process. Opendoor lowered fixed operating expenses by 33% year-over-year in Q1, including a significant reduction in marketing spend, as part of a broader push to achieve sustained cost efficiencies. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallOpendoor Technologies Q1 202500:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xTranscript SectionsPresentationParticipantsPresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Good day, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Opendoor Technologies First Quarter twenty twenty five Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. After the speakers' presentation, there will be a question and answer session. Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. Operator00:00:26I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, Kimberly Newhouse, Investor Relations. Please go ahead. Kimberly NiehausFinance & Strategy, IR at Opendoor00:00:35Thank you, and good afternoon. Details of our results and additional management commentary are available in our earnings release and shareholder letter, which can be found on the Investor Relations section of our website at investor.opendoor.com. Please note that this call will be simultaneously webcast on the Investor Relations section of the company's corporate website. Before we start, I would like to remind you that the following discussion contains forward looking statements within the meaning of the federal securities laws. All statements other than statements of historical fact are statements that could be deemed forward looking, including but not limited to statements regarding Opendoor's financial condition, anticipated financial performance, business strategy and plans, market opportunity and expansion, and management objectives for future operations. Kimberly NiehausFinance & Strategy, IR at Opendoor00:01:15These statements are neither promises nor guarantees, and undue reliance should not be placed on them. Such forward looking statements involve risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results to differ materially from those discussed here. Additional information that could cause actual results to differ from forward looking statements can be found in the Risk Factors section of the Opendoor's most recent annual report on Form 10 ks for the year ended 12/31/2024, as updated by our periodic reports filed after that 10 ks. Any forward looking statements made on this conference call, including responses to your questions, are based on management's reasonable current expectations and assumptions as of today, and Open Door assumes no obligation to update or revise them, whether as a result of new information, future events, or otherwise, except as required by law. The following discussion contains references to certain non GAAP financial measures. Kimberly NiehausFinance & Strategy, IR at Opendoor00:02:01The company believes these non GAAP financial measures are useful to investors as supplemental operational measurements to evaluate the company's financial performance. For a reconciliation of each of these non GAAP financial measures to the most directly comparable GAAP metric, please see our website at investor.opendoor.com. I will now turn the call over to Carrie Wheeler, Chief Executive Officer of Opendoor. Carrie WheelerChair & CEO at Opendoor00:02:23Thanks, everyone, for joining us today. At Opendoor, we remain relentlessly focused on our mission to reinvent residential real estate in The US, making it simpler, more convenient and more customer centric. The strategy we're executing against is designed to take full advantage of the strengths we've built over the past decade and to position us for long term success. We continue to operate in an extremely challenging macroeconomic environment, with heightened uncertainty on the back of shifting economic policies and the evolving tariff landscape. Home sellers and buyers are taking a pause. Carrie WheelerChair & CEO at Opendoor00:02:56Mortgage rates are back up over 7%, clearance rates are down nearly 25% year over year, and delistings are up over 30% as sellers continue to exit the market. Despite these headwinds, our focus hasn't changed. We're here to give customers certainty, convenience and choice, especially when they need it most. We enter 2025 with a clear plan to drive towards profitability while strengthening our product experience and leadership position. Our progress is reflected in our first quarter results, where acquisition volumes, revenue, contribution profit and adjusted EBITDA demonstrate strong execution amidst a challenging macro backdrop. Carrie WheelerChair & CEO at Opendoor00:03:35And while we're focused on driving profitability, we're also investing in our future. Over the past decade, we've built a trusted category defining platform that gives sellers a certainty of a cash offer. Now, we're evolving into a platform where every seller can explore all their selling options, whether that's through cash offer or listing with an agent. We are expanding how we go to market, leveraging our unique platform and relationships. Today, a meaningful percentage of our acquisitions come to us through an agent who is bringing their customer to Opendoor and requesting a cash offer. Carrie WheelerChair & CEO at Opendoor00:04:09For many listing agents, having a cash offer as part of a complete set of selling solutions is considered table stakes. And we built the platform that allows them to provide a certain and seamless path of fulfilling a cash offer on behalf of their client. We are taking our existing vibrant partnership with agents and flipping the script, so to speak, by sending open door customer referrals to embedded agent partners. Those agents are able to talk through the options that a customer has to sell from an open door cash offer to a full listing. In doing so, they're meeting that customer where they are, and they're able to put all options in context relative to that particular seller's needs. Carrie WheelerChair & CEO at Opendoor00:04:45We are piloting this experience in select markets and are encouraged by the early indicators we're seeing. Customers are receptive to having a local expert explain their options. Agents benefit from high intense seller referrals from our marketing engine and are able to bring all options to the table and assessing the smartest move for the customer. An Opendoor has the opportunity to improve conversion, whether it is higher conversion for cash offers or our participation in the listing, which in turn generates asset light revenue for us. Moreover, we're able to deliver final underwritten offers faster by allowing agents to do an in home assessment in their first meeting by leveraging our platform. Carrie WheelerChair & CEO at Opendoor00:05:23There will continue to be customers who come to Opendoor directly and want the self serve experience that we have pioneered. But we expect many customers will benefit from having an advisor help them navigate the selling process. We will see how our pilot evolves, but we believe that this channel will allow us to serve more sellers, monetize a greater portion of our funnel, and leverage our platform to drive more asset light business. In addition to how we've expanded the consumer experience, we are continuing to operate the business with four core priorities. First, we're maintaining our pricing discipline. Carrie WheelerChair & CEO at Opendoor00:05:55We're monitoring macro conditions closely given an uncertain market and heightened volatility and against that backdrop have been proactively increasing our spreads. Well, does impact acquisition growth. We believe it's the right trade off to protect contribution margin. Second, we are working on improving conversion. In addition to the channel expansion I just spoke about, we are making enhancements to our pricing models, including refining how we allocate spreads and improving price segmentation with the goal of enhancing our conversion performance. Carrie WheelerChair & CEO at Opendoor00:06:25In Q1, we continue to add new features to our algorithms like school district quality and active competition. Third, we're allocating our marketing investment to better align with seasonal housing dynamics and spreads. As we shared last quarter, we believe this shift in our advertising strategy drives greater spend efficiency. Consistent with our strategy, we expect our marketing spend in Q2 to be meaningfully lower than in Q1. We'll continue to deploy dollars with a focus on efficiency and impact. Carrie WheelerChair & CEO at Opendoor00:06:54And finally, we are highly focused on delivering our product as efficiently as possible. We're building a leaner, more agile organization. Fixed operating expenses in Q1 were $19,000,000 lower or down 33% versus a year ago. These cost efficiencies paired with our margin improvements should position us to reduce adjusted net losses in 2025 as compared to last year. We have built a powerful platform and now we're working to unlock even more value for customers and agents all while keeping our sites firmly on profitability. Carrie WheelerChair & CEO at Opendoor00:07:27We look forward to sharing more as we progress throughout the year. And with that, I will turn it over to Celine for the financial overview. Selim FreihaCFO at Opendoor00:07:35Thank you, Carrie. At the beginning of the year, we shared our commitment to drive towards profitable, sustainable growth. Our first quarter results reflect progress towards that objective. We delivered $1,200,000,000 of revenue in the first quarter, roughly in line with the same quarter in 2024, representing 2,946 homes sold. On the acquisition side, we purchased 3,609 homes in the first quarter, up 4% versus the same quarter last year. Selim FreihaCFO at Opendoor00:08:03Growth in acquisitions was enabled by enhancements to our product flow and improvements to our pricing models, which drove better conversion despite higher spreads. Contribution profit was 54,000,000 in the first quarter versus 57,000,000 in q one twenty four or a contribution margin of 4.7%. Adjusted EBITDA loss was 30,000,000 in the first quarter, down significantly from a loss of $50,000,000 in Q1 twenty four. This improvement in adjusted EBITDA was primarily driven by reductions in adjusted operating expenses, which were $84,000,000 in the first quarter, down from $107,000,000 in Q1 twenty twenty four. We continue to be focused on operating with greater efficiency and strong cost discipline. Selim FreihaCFO at Opendoor00:08:48Turning to our balance sheet, we ended the quarter with 7,080 homes, representing 2,400,000,000.0 in net inventory, up 24% from the prior year. We also had 1,000,000,000 in total capital, primarily comprised of 559,000,000 in unrestricted cash and 350,000,000 of equity invested in homes, net of inventory valuation adjustments. At quarter end, we had 7,900,000,000.0 in non recourse asset backed borrowing capacity, of which total committed borrowing capacity was 2,300,000,000.0. In the first quarter, we renewed three revolving credit facilities and one term debt facility at consistent or improved credit spreads, while both of our mezzanine facilities were extended through at least 2027. The successful extension of these credit facilities reflects the continued confidence and support of our capital partners. Selim FreihaCFO at Opendoor00:09:40Looking forward, as Carrie mentioned, the housing market has further deteriorated since the beginning of the year. Persistently high mortgage rates continue to suppress buyer demand and we are seeing more sellers pull out of their contracts than we normally would expect, which speaks to the uncertainty that sellers have at this moment. Our outlook assumes that these headwinds will continue to impact our performance in the near term. Our outlook for the second quarter of twenty twenty five includes the following. Revenue is expected to be between 1.45 and 1,525,000,000.000. Selim FreihaCFO at Opendoor00:10:13Contribution profit between 65 and 75,000,000, which implies a contribution margin of 4.5 to 4.9%. Adjusted EBITDA between 10 and 20,000,000, representing a $20,000,000 year over year improvement at the midpoint of our guidance, marking a return to positive quarterly adjusted EBITDA for the first time in three years. Adjusted operating expenses of approximately 55,000,000 and non cash stock based compensation expense between 13 and 15,000,000, which represents a decline of over 50% year over year. Looking a bit deeper at our operating expense guidance, we are assuming a significant sequential step down in marketing spend, given typical seasonal dynamics and spreads. Additionally, our operating expense includes timing adjustments related to changes in inventory levels. Selim FreihaCFO at Opendoor00:11:04In q two, we expect resales to outpace acquisitions, which will reduce our inventory balance and result in a favorable adjustment to operating expenses on a quarter over quarter basis. Finally, we expect home acquisitions of approximately 1,700 in the second quarter. Our acquisition outlook is informed by two key factors, higher spread levels and lower marketing spend. With respect to spreads, we expect to continue to operate at these elevated levels with the intent of focusing on margin improvement, and the reduction in marketing spend will further impact acquisitions. Given our focus on efficiency and current market dynamics, we believe this is a prudent approach to managing our business at this time. Selim FreihaCFO at Opendoor00:11:45This slowdown in acquisitions is expected to put pressure on our top line in the back half of the year, with revenue expected to decline on a year over year basis in the third and fourth quarters all else equal. However, our goal is to deliver year over year contribution margin improvements in those quarters through continued operating efficiencies and wider spreads. And our ongoing cost discipline should result in an improvement in adjusted net losses in 2025 as compared to last year. Finally, the current macro volatility makes it challenging to predict how buyers and sellers will react or how market conditions will unfold. Given the consumer hesitation we're seeing, we feel a more cautious approach is warranted. Selim FreihaCFO at Opendoor00:12:26That said, we are closely monitoring market signals and we are prepared to react to more favorable conditions. With that, I will ask the operator to open the line for questions. Operator00:12:36Thank you. Our first question comes from the line of Day Li with JPMorgan. Your line is now open. Dae LeeVP - Equity Research at JP Morgan00:12:57Great. Thanks for taking the questions. I have two. So first, so name on your comment about slowing down acquisition growth to about 1,700 in 2Q. Is that kind of the right level to think about as you look into the back half of the year? Dae LeeVP - Equity Research at JP Morgan00:13:15Or is there some element of rebalancing the inventory to current housing market levels? And if there's something that you're doing across all markets or just some markets, so curious if there are any markets that are working better for you right now? And then secondly, how should we think about contribution margins of these newer homes that you're acquiring given the higher spreads? Is it going to be towards the medium to high end of that 5% to 7% target that you guys normally have? Thanks. Selim FreihaCFO at Opendoor00:13:44Thanks for the questions, Day. On the acquisition pace, what I would say is all else equal, given that we are in a generally uncertain environment with respect to the outlook on the housing market, we would expect the normal seasonal pattern to look like a sort of a barbell similar to our marketing approach, where we are going to acquire more homes in Q1 and Q4 and fewer homes in Q2 and Q3. So on a sequential basis, going forward, we would expect a sequential decline from Q1 to Q2, relatively flat acquisitions from Q2 to Q3 and then a ramp up again in Q4. And based on what we see today and our expectation, again, with what we do know, we would expect a similar pattern for the second half of the year. With respect to contribution margins in Q2 and sort of the newer cohorts, I would first say that our expectation of contribution margin between 4.54.9% would be 4.7% at the midpoint, fairly consistent with Q1 and down roughly a point and a half versus the prior year. Selim FreihaCFO at Opendoor00:14:55And simply put, this is a mix issue. The decline is really driven by older inventory at relatively lower margins, making up a larger share of homes sold in Q2, given the slower acquisition pace of new homes in Q2 that we're seeing. Setting that aside, we do see cohorts that we are acquiring in more recent times performing very well from a contribution margin perspective in the early resale days, but it's not enough to offset the prior year mix impact that I referenced. Dae LeeVP - Equity Research at JP Morgan00:15:33Got it. Thank you. Operator00:15:35Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Yigal Aronian with Citigroup. Your line is now open. Ygal ArounianDirector - Internet Equity Research at Citi00:15:43Hey guys, thanks for taking the question. First, just to follow-up on that point on the older homes or maybe for Carrie also. Is that how you view the overall health of that book of inventory? How much wiggle room, I guess, is there in the valuation of those homes if we might continue to get continuing softness in the housing market and we see home prices start to fall. I think we're starting to see that in some geography geographies, particularly in the South. Ygal ArounianDirector - Internet Equity Research at Citi00:16:23So have you factored that in or how do you think about that? Then I have a follow-up. Selim FreihaCFO at Opendoor00:16:28Yeah. Our thanks for the question, Yigal. Generally, what we see when we acquire cohorts is sort of a natural degradation. So the homes that sell sort of earlier tend to have higher margins and the longer we hold homes, obviously the margins do decay. And that's a pretty typical pattern we've seen historically. Selim FreihaCFO at Opendoor00:16:56I think the difference is now the homes that we're acquiring more recently are starting at a higher absolute contribution margin level and will decay from there. But that gives us some confidence on sort of year over year expected year over year improvements in contribution margin in the second half. With respect to sort of the valuation expectation that is factored into our outlook. It's factored into how we set spreads. And obviously pricing is a lever that we can use, but there's no incremental or additional pressure that we see, because we do look out sort of on the resale environment and make an assumption on where we think homes will resell at relative to the current carrying costs that we have on the books. Ygal ArounianDirector - Internet Equity Research at Citi00:17:45Okay. Ygal ArounianDirector - Internet Equity Research at Citi00:17:49And then I want to spend a little bit of time on the expansion of the agent partnership. So this feels maybe like a little bit more of a shift in the asset light model than the products we've talked about in the past. So firstly, I just kinda wanna understand a little bit more what this product is, how different it is. Are you can you continue to operate? What's with the Opendoor and marketplace? Ygal ArounianDirector - Internet Equity Research at Citi00:18:18Has it become part of this? You've had relationships with other brokerages. Is this shift where you're working directly with the agents versus the brokerages? And then in terms of mix, what is it today? Because you talk about moving more in this direction and some people will continue to come direct, but it sounds like this might be the, at least your goal for it to be the kind of predominant channel. Ygal ArounianDirector - Internet Equity Research at Citi00:18:45And then what's so what's the overall mix that you intend to get to as well? And I know there was a bunch of questions in that, but just trying to understand how this plays out. Thanks. Carrie WheelerChair & CEO at Opendoor00:18:56I'll try and hit all those. And if I don't, you don't, just feel free to come back at me at the end. If you step back for a second, I think it's important to appreciate that today, a meaningful percentage of our business already comes from agents. Have agents coming to us every day who want to bring a cash offer to their client because they want to give their client choice. And they understand the value prop of our cash offer. Carrie WheelerChair & CEO at Opendoor00:19:18And they're expert at converting it because that client is looking for convenience, certainty, and speed. So those are agents coming to us today, and we understand that motion very, very well. We know who those power listing agents are across the 50 markets we're working in. We're kind of flipping the script now. Instead of agents coming to us with their customer, we are going in 11 markets we're piloting. Carrie WheelerChair & CEO at Opendoor00:19:38We are providing them our customer referrals, and we're doing it earlier in the customer engagement. We think that trusted agent partner then learns more about the seller's needs. They can provide more local expertise. And they're also completing an in home assessment on our behalf. It's a way to improve conversion, speed delivery, more trust, aiding decision making. Carrie WheelerChair & CEO at Opendoor00:19:57And ultimately, to your point, we believe this is a distribution channel and a partnership that will allow us to drive more asset light revenue. To your question on mix, I don't know yet. I I do think there's a segment of customers that will very much want that direct to consumer self-service interaction that we pioneered. People will still come to us and want a cash offer and be very happy to do that on a one to one basis. There are other customer types that we believe will benefit from having that additional agent relationship and advice. Carrie WheelerChair & CEO at Opendoor00:20:30And we're going to be able to, I think, time to figure out how we direct customers in the most optimal way. So it's early, I'd say. As I said, we're piloting, but in a meaningful number of markets. And over time, that will continue to evolve. Ygal ArounianDirector - Internet Equity Research at Citi00:20:44Okay, thanks. I guess the only thing that you missed, Carrie, just for clarification on lists with Opendoor and Marketplace, are those going to continue to operate? Are they going to be separate products? Are you rolling it into this agent partnership thing as one thing Carrie WheelerChair & CEO at Opendoor00:21:01I think about new partnership as a channel strategy, go to market strategy, and then it may end up with a listing. So for us, List with Opendoor, think about that as an end of funnel referral program, really. A customer comes to us for a cash offer. They go through the offer process, and we refer them at the end towards a partner agent to explore listing, oftentimes with our backstop cash offer as something for them to think about as they test the market. Carrie WheelerChair & CEO at Opendoor00:21:32So those two things are not mutually exclusive. We'll continue to have a list of Opendoor product across direct to consumer channels, and we will be powering more and more agents with the benefit of our marketing engine and our referrals. And that may happen with a listing. It may happen with cash offer. That's okay. Carrie WheelerChair & CEO at Opendoor00:21:50With respect to Marketplace, what I would say is we're currently today in Dallas, Charlotte, Raleigh, and we're holding there for now. Not a material contributor to revenue or earnings for us today. Given the pause and the pullback we're seeing in the housing market right now, we are going to evaluate the best path forward for marketplace. I really believe that sitting here today, our new expanded partnership channel is a much more immediate path to allow us to serve more customers, monetize more of that funnel that we have and generate that incremental asset light revenue we're looking for. And that's where we're going put more and more of our energy and resources into, most likely. Ygal ArounianDirector - Internet Equity Research at Citi00:22:30Okay. Really helpful. Thank you. Carrie WheelerChair & CEO at Opendoor00:22:32Thanks. Operator00:22:34Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Nicholas Jones with Citizens JMP Securities. Your line is now open. Luke MeindlEquity Research Associate at JMP Securities LLC00:22:42Hi, this is Luke on for Nick. Thanks for taking our question. Can you just speak on further cost savings opportunities? You've made nice progress over the past few quarters improving the cost structure. How much more room do you think you have there to gain additional efficiencies, you know, particularly if macro worsens? Thanks. Selim FreihaCFO at Opendoor00:23:02Yeah. I'll take that, Luke. Thanks for the question. Look, we are still focused optimizing our cost structure to drive durable cost savings beyond the progress we've already made. As a reminder, reflected in our Q1 results is a year over year fixed cost reduction of nearly $20,000,000 or roughly 33%, and our Q2 guidance implies a similar reduction. Selim FreihaCFO at Opendoor00:23:22These are durable cost savings that are here to stay. Beyond these, we continue to look at various aspects of our business and our operations to drive more efficiency as we go forward, including infrastructure, including how we go to market and including the overall fixed cost base. At this point, don't know that we would expect similar reductions beyond this, but we do think that there is more efficiency opportunity as we move forward. And to your question on what does this look like in a slower market, we have rightsized the business for a slower market. That has been the dynamic in which we've been operating for the last year plus. Selim FreihaCFO at Opendoor00:24:11And as we look forward, the outlook will also inform how we think about the fixed cost base going forward. And we do think that there are still opportunities ahead of us. Luke MeindlEquity Research Associate at JMP Securities LLC00:24:25Great. Very helpful. Thank you. Operator00:24:28Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Ryan Tomasello with KBW. Your line is now open. Ryan TomaselloManaging Director at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods (KBW)00:24:39Hi, everyone. Thanks for taking the questions. Following up on the expense topic, can you just clarify how much of the $29,000,000 quarter over quarter reduction implied in the OpEx guidance is driven by lower marketing expenses that are more seasonal and intentional based on the pullback you're implying on acquisitions? And how much is more of like a structural reduction? Selim FreihaCFO at Opendoor00:25:08Yes, I would say that the majority of the reduction is in marketing. And the step down in marketing spend is driven by the typical seasonal dynamics that we've discussed before and the spread levels at which we're operating right now. Additionally, our operating expense includes timing adjustments related to changes in inventory levels. In Q2, we expect resales to outpace acquisitions, and that will reduce our inventory balance and result in a favorable adjustment to operating expenses on a quarter over quarter basis. Between the two of those things, I would say those are the material contributors to the quarter over quarter variance. Selim FreihaCFO at Opendoor00:25:48There will be some amount of further fixed cost reduction, but I would say that's less material in the face of the marketing move. Ryan TomaselloManaging Director at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods (KBW)00:25:58Okay. I appreciate that. And then on the agent partnership program, can you just elaborate on what the economics are of this new arrangement where you'll be bringing the agent in early in the process? Is that just simply a referral fee, a success fee? Just trying to understand what that what those contribution contribution margin look like on these types of partnership acquisitions. Carrie WheelerChair & CEO at Opendoor00:26:22Sure. I'd say, I mean, we're still piloting. But at a high level, we believe that this partnership channel will allow us to drive better conversion and getting a better chance of getting that customer to a selling outcome that we participate in and generates that asset light revenue for us. So on a listing, we would earn a share of that commission. On a cash offer, we earn the margin we earn today on that cash offer minus any referral fee that we would plan to pay to that agent. Carrie WheelerChair & CEO at Opendoor00:26:50And our hypothesis is that the incremental conversion benefits are likely to outweigh the cost of that additional referral fee. Ryan TomaselloManaging Director at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods (KBW)00:26:59Got it. Thanks for the color, Clarke, Carrie. Carrie WheelerChair & CEO at Opendoor00:27:01Yeah. Thanks, Ryan. Operator00:27:03Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Benjamin Black with Deutsche Bank. Your line is now open. Benjamin BlackCo-Head Internet Equity Research at Deutsche Bank00:27:10Great. Thanks for the question. Benjamin BlackCo-Head Internet Equity Research at Deutsche Bank00:27:12Just a quick follow-up on the agent partnership. I mean, you spoke about the test markets. What signal are you looking for that would potentially drive a broader rollout of the partnership? And then also curious to hear if you have all the infrastructure, so to speak, scale up partnership or is there some go to market investments that are required going forward? Thank you. Carrie WheelerChair & CEO at Opendoor00:27:39Yeah. I'll do this in reverse order, maybe. Like, you think about what we've built, we have built a brand, the marketing engine, this huge funnel of high-tech sellers, all the pricing capabilities and the transaction platform. And this is just a way for us to leverage all those capabilities via another go to market channel. So we have all those things built today. Carrie WheelerChair & CEO at Opendoor00:27:59We're just leveraging them vis a vis our agent partnership relationships with people, many of whom we're interacting with already every day, as they fulfill our cash offer. So I think it's actually a pretty seamless move. We've built things like creating a platform to do assessments that we do or sometimes agents do on our behalf. So we are very set up, and we've been working on that for a while to be able to expand it. So that's one. Carrie WheelerChair & CEO at Opendoor00:28:22To your first part of your question, which is what are we looking for in terms of signal, ultimately, we'll be looking for conversion, whether that's incremental conversion, neutral better to a cash offer, and also incremental conversion to a listing outcome that we participate in. Benjamin BlackCo-Head Internet Equity Research at Deutsche Bank00:28:42Great. Thank you. Thanks so much. Carrie WheelerChair & CEO at Opendoor00:28:44Thanks. Operator00:28:45Thank you. This concludes today's question and answer session. Thank you all for your participation on today's call. This does conclude the call. You may now disconnect.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesCarrie WheelerChair & CEOAnalystsKimberly NiehausFinance & Strategy, IR at OpendoorSelim FreihaCFO at OpendoorDae LeeVP - Equity Research at JP MorganYgal ArounianDirector - Internet Equity Research at CitiLuke MeindlEquity Research Associate at JMP Securities LLCRyan TomaselloManaging Director at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods (KBW)Benjamin BlackCo-Head Internet Equity Research at Deutsche BankPowered by Earnings DocumentsPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) Opendoor Technologies Earnings HeadlinesOpendoor Technologies (OPEN) Soars to New High on Rate Cut, US ExpansionSeptember 18 at 11:11 AM | insidermonkey.comOpendoor Is Expanding Its iBuying Program Nationally. Lock in Profits Now and SellSeptember 18 at 9:47 AM | 247wallst.com2013 Bitcoin miner reveals his trading system (free)While everyone else is gambling on meme coins or chasing the next "100x moonshot," our members are systematically extracting profits from the $4 billion that changes hands in crypto every single day. | Crypto Swap Profits (Ad)Opendoor Technologies Inc.: Opendoor Announces Inducement Grants for Newly Appointed Chief Executive Officer Under Nasdaq Listing Rule 5635(c)(4)September 18 at 7:12 AM | finanznachrichten.deOpendoor Names New CEO, Goes Into "Founder Mode." Can the Stock's Meteoric Run Keep Going?September 18 at 3:51 AM | fool.comOpendoor Just Gave Investors A Way Out, And They Should Take ItSeptember 18 at 2:12 AM | seekingalpha.comSee More Opendoor Technologies Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Opendoor Technologies? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Opendoor Technologies and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Opendoor TechnologiesOpendoor Technologies (NASDAQ:OPEN), Inc. is a technology-driven real estate platform that streamlines the process of buying and selling homes. Founded in 2014 and headquartered in San Francisco, Opendoor leverages data analytics and proprietary algorithms to provide consumers with near-instant cash offers for their houses. By acting as both buyer and seller—in a model known as “iBuying”—the company aims to reduce the friction and unpredictability traditionally associated with residential real estate transactions. The core of Opendoor’s service offering centers on its online marketplace, where homeowners can request an offer in as little as 24 hours, close on a flexible timeline, and move forward without the need for showings or open houses. On the buyer side, Opendoor provides access to a rotating inventory of homes that have been inspected, repaired, and in many cases professionally staged. The company also offers add-on services, including title and escrow coordination, home inspections, and optional mortgage financing through its in-house lending arm, Opendoor Mortgage. Since its initial rollout in select U.S. markets, Opendoor has expanded to serve dozens of metropolitan areas across the country, with operations extending from the West Coast through the Sun Belt and into the Northeast. The company was co-founded by Eric Wu, Keith Rabois and others, and has undergone leadership transitions aimed at scaling its technology platform and broadening its national footprint. As a public company trading on NASDAQ under the ticker OPEN, Opendoor continues to invest in machine learning, data science and customer-facing tools to enhance transparency and speed in real estate transactions.View Opendoor Technologies ProfileRead more More Earnings Resources from MarketBeat Earnings Tools Today's Earnings Tomorrow's Earnings Next Week's Earnings Upcoming Earnings Calls Earnings Newsletter Earnings Call Transcripts Earnings Beats & Misses Corporate Guidance Earnings Screener Earnings By Country U.S. Earnings Reports Canadian Earnings Reports U.K. Earnings Reports Latest Articles Wall Street Eyes +30% Upside in Synopsys After Huge Earnings FallRH Stock Slides After Mixed Earnings and Tariff ConcernsCelsius Stock Surges After Blowout Earnings and Pepsi DealWhy DocuSign Could Be a SaaS Value Play After Q2 EarningsWhy Broadcom's Q3 Earnings Were a Huge Win for AVGO BullsAffirm Crushes Earnings Expectations, Turns Bears into BelieversAmbarella's Earnings Prove Its Edge AI Strategy Is a Winner Upcoming Earnings Micron Technology (9/23/2025)AutoZone (9/23/2025)Cintas (9/24/2025)Costco Wholesale (9/25/2025)Accenture (9/25/2025)NIKE (9/30/2025)PepsiCo (10/9/2025)BlackRock (10/10/2025)Fastenal (10/13/2025)Citigroup (10/14/2025) Get 30 Days of MarketBeat All Access for Free Sign up for MarketBeat All Access to gain access to MarketBeat's full suite of research tools. Start Your 30-Day Trial MarketBeat All Access Features Best-in-Class Portfolio Monitoring Get personalized stock ideas. Compare portfolio to indices. Check stock news, ratings, SEC filings, and more. Stock Ideas and Recommendations See daily stock ideas from top analysts. Receive short-term trading ideas from MarketBeat. Identify trending stocks on social media. Advanced Stock Screeners and Research Tools Use our seven stock screeners to find suitable stocks. Stay informed with MarketBeat's real-time news. Export data to Excel for personal analysis. Sign in to your free account to enjoy these benefits In-depth profiles and analysis for 20,000 public companies. Real-time analyst ratings, insider transactions, earnings data, and more. Our daily ratings and market update email newsletter. Sign in to your free account to enjoy all that MarketBeat has to offer. Sign In Create Account Your Email Address: Email Address Required Your Password: Password Required Log In or Sign in with Facebook Sign in with Google Forgot your password? Your Email Address: Please enter your email address. Please enter a valid email address Choose a Password: Please enter your password. Your password must be at least 8 characters long and contain at least 1 number, 1 letter, and 1 special character. Create My Account (Free) or Sign in with Facebook Sign in with Google By creating a free account, you agree to our terms of service. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
PresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Good day, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Opendoor Technologies First Quarter twenty twenty five Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. After the speakers' presentation, there will be a question and answer session. Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. Operator00:00:26I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, Kimberly Newhouse, Investor Relations. Please go ahead. Kimberly NiehausFinance & Strategy, IR at Opendoor00:00:35Thank you, and good afternoon. Details of our results and additional management commentary are available in our earnings release and shareholder letter, which can be found on the Investor Relations section of our website at investor.opendoor.com. Please note that this call will be simultaneously webcast on the Investor Relations section of the company's corporate website. Before we start, I would like to remind you that the following discussion contains forward looking statements within the meaning of the federal securities laws. All statements other than statements of historical fact are statements that could be deemed forward looking, including but not limited to statements regarding Opendoor's financial condition, anticipated financial performance, business strategy and plans, market opportunity and expansion, and management objectives for future operations. Kimberly NiehausFinance & Strategy, IR at Opendoor00:01:15These statements are neither promises nor guarantees, and undue reliance should not be placed on them. Such forward looking statements involve risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results to differ materially from those discussed here. Additional information that could cause actual results to differ from forward looking statements can be found in the Risk Factors section of the Opendoor's most recent annual report on Form 10 ks for the year ended 12/31/2024, as updated by our periodic reports filed after that 10 ks. Any forward looking statements made on this conference call, including responses to your questions, are based on management's reasonable current expectations and assumptions as of today, and Open Door assumes no obligation to update or revise them, whether as a result of new information, future events, or otherwise, except as required by law. The following discussion contains references to certain non GAAP financial measures. Kimberly NiehausFinance & Strategy, IR at Opendoor00:02:01The company believes these non GAAP financial measures are useful to investors as supplemental operational measurements to evaluate the company's financial performance. For a reconciliation of each of these non GAAP financial measures to the most directly comparable GAAP metric, please see our website at investor.opendoor.com. I will now turn the call over to Carrie Wheeler, Chief Executive Officer of Opendoor. Carrie WheelerChair & CEO at Opendoor00:02:23Thanks, everyone, for joining us today. At Opendoor, we remain relentlessly focused on our mission to reinvent residential real estate in The US, making it simpler, more convenient and more customer centric. The strategy we're executing against is designed to take full advantage of the strengths we've built over the past decade and to position us for long term success. We continue to operate in an extremely challenging macroeconomic environment, with heightened uncertainty on the back of shifting economic policies and the evolving tariff landscape. Home sellers and buyers are taking a pause. Carrie WheelerChair & CEO at Opendoor00:02:56Mortgage rates are back up over 7%, clearance rates are down nearly 25% year over year, and delistings are up over 30% as sellers continue to exit the market. Despite these headwinds, our focus hasn't changed. We're here to give customers certainty, convenience and choice, especially when they need it most. We enter 2025 with a clear plan to drive towards profitability while strengthening our product experience and leadership position. Our progress is reflected in our first quarter results, where acquisition volumes, revenue, contribution profit and adjusted EBITDA demonstrate strong execution amidst a challenging macro backdrop. Carrie WheelerChair & CEO at Opendoor00:03:35And while we're focused on driving profitability, we're also investing in our future. Over the past decade, we've built a trusted category defining platform that gives sellers a certainty of a cash offer. Now, we're evolving into a platform where every seller can explore all their selling options, whether that's through cash offer or listing with an agent. We are expanding how we go to market, leveraging our unique platform and relationships. Today, a meaningful percentage of our acquisitions come to us through an agent who is bringing their customer to Opendoor and requesting a cash offer. Carrie WheelerChair & CEO at Opendoor00:04:09For many listing agents, having a cash offer as part of a complete set of selling solutions is considered table stakes. And we built the platform that allows them to provide a certain and seamless path of fulfilling a cash offer on behalf of their client. We are taking our existing vibrant partnership with agents and flipping the script, so to speak, by sending open door customer referrals to embedded agent partners. Those agents are able to talk through the options that a customer has to sell from an open door cash offer to a full listing. In doing so, they're meeting that customer where they are, and they're able to put all options in context relative to that particular seller's needs. Carrie WheelerChair & CEO at Opendoor00:04:45We are piloting this experience in select markets and are encouraged by the early indicators we're seeing. Customers are receptive to having a local expert explain their options. Agents benefit from high intense seller referrals from our marketing engine and are able to bring all options to the table and assessing the smartest move for the customer. An Opendoor has the opportunity to improve conversion, whether it is higher conversion for cash offers or our participation in the listing, which in turn generates asset light revenue for us. Moreover, we're able to deliver final underwritten offers faster by allowing agents to do an in home assessment in their first meeting by leveraging our platform. Carrie WheelerChair & CEO at Opendoor00:05:23There will continue to be customers who come to Opendoor directly and want the self serve experience that we have pioneered. But we expect many customers will benefit from having an advisor help them navigate the selling process. We will see how our pilot evolves, but we believe that this channel will allow us to serve more sellers, monetize a greater portion of our funnel, and leverage our platform to drive more asset light business. In addition to how we've expanded the consumer experience, we are continuing to operate the business with four core priorities. First, we're maintaining our pricing discipline. Carrie WheelerChair & CEO at Opendoor00:05:55We're monitoring macro conditions closely given an uncertain market and heightened volatility and against that backdrop have been proactively increasing our spreads. Well, does impact acquisition growth. We believe it's the right trade off to protect contribution margin. Second, we are working on improving conversion. In addition to the channel expansion I just spoke about, we are making enhancements to our pricing models, including refining how we allocate spreads and improving price segmentation with the goal of enhancing our conversion performance. Carrie WheelerChair & CEO at Opendoor00:06:25In Q1, we continue to add new features to our algorithms like school district quality and active competition. Third, we're allocating our marketing investment to better align with seasonal housing dynamics and spreads. As we shared last quarter, we believe this shift in our advertising strategy drives greater spend efficiency. Consistent with our strategy, we expect our marketing spend in Q2 to be meaningfully lower than in Q1. We'll continue to deploy dollars with a focus on efficiency and impact. Carrie WheelerChair & CEO at Opendoor00:06:54And finally, we are highly focused on delivering our product as efficiently as possible. We're building a leaner, more agile organization. Fixed operating expenses in Q1 were $19,000,000 lower or down 33% versus a year ago. These cost efficiencies paired with our margin improvements should position us to reduce adjusted net losses in 2025 as compared to last year. We have built a powerful platform and now we're working to unlock even more value for customers and agents all while keeping our sites firmly on profitability. Carrie WheelerChair & CEO at Opendoor00:07:27We look forward to sharing more as we progress throughout the year. And with that, I will turn it over to Celine for the financial overview. Selim FreihaCFO at Opendoor00:07:35Thank you, Carrie. At the beginning of the year, we shared our commitment to drive towards profitable, sustainable growth. Our first quarter results reflect progress towards that objective. We delivered $1,200,000,000 of revenue in the first quarter, roughly in line with the same quarter in 2024, representing 2,946 homes sold. On the acquisition side, we purchased 3,609 homes in the first quarter, up 4% versus the same quarter last year. Selim FreihaCFO at Opendoor00:08:03Growth in acquisitions was enabled by enhancements to our product flow and improvements to our pricing models, which drove better conversion despite higher spreads. Contribution profit was 54,000,000 in the first quarter versus 57,000,000 in q one twenty four or a contribution margin of 4.7%. Adjusted EBITDA loss was 30,000,000 in the first quarter, down significantly from a loss of $50,000,000 in Q1 twenty four. This improvement in adjusted EBITDA was primarily driven by reductions in adjusted operating expenses, which were $84,000,000 in the first quarter, down from $107,000,000 in Q1 twenty twenty four. We continue to be focused on operating with greater efficiency and strong cost discipline. Selim FreihaCFO at Opendoor00:08:48Turning to our balance sheet, we ended the quarter with 7,080 homes, representing 2,400,000,000.0 in net inventory, up 24% from the prior year. We also had 1,000,000,000 in total capital, primarily comprised of 559,000,000 in unrestricted cash and 350,000,000 of equity invested in homes, net of inventory valuation adjustments. At quarter end, we had 7,900,000,000.0 in non recourse asset backed borrowing capacity, of which total committed borrowing capacity was 2,300,000,000.0. In the first quarter, we renewed three revolving credit facilities and one term debt facility at consistent or improved credit spreads, while both of our mezzanine facilities were extended through at least 2027. The successful extension of these credit facilities reflects the continued confidence and support of our capital partners. Selim FreihaCFO at Opendoor00:09:40Looking forward, as Carrie mentioned, the housing market has further deteriorated since the beginning of the year. Persistently high mortgage rates continue to suppress buyer demand and we are seeing more sellers pull out of their contracts than we normally would expect, which speaks to the uncertainty that sellers have at this moment. Our outlook assumes that these headwinds will continue to impact our performance in the near term. Our outlook for the second quarter of twenty twenty five includes the following. Revenue is expected to be between 1.45 and 1,525,000,000.000. Selim FreihaCFO at Opendoor00:10:13Contribution profit between 65 and 75,000,000, which implies a contribution margin of 4.5 to 4.9%. Adjusted EBITDA between 10 and 20,000,000, representing a $20,000,000 year over year improvement at the midpoint of our guidance, marking a return to positive quarterly adjusted EBITDA for the first time in three years. Adjusted operating expenses of approximately 55,000,000 and non cash stock based compensation expense between 13 and 15,000,000, which represents a decline of over 50% year over year. Looking a bit deeper at our operating expense guidance, we are assuming a significant sequential step down in marketing spend, given typical seasonal dynamics and spreads. Additionally, our operating expense includes timing adjustments related to changes in inventory levels. Selim FreihaCFO at Opendoor00:11:04In q two, we expect resales to outpace acquisitions, which will reduce our inventory balance and result in a favorable adjustment to operating expenses on a quarter over quarter basis. Finally, we expect home acquisitions of approximately 1,700 in the second quarter. Our acquisition outlook is informed by two key factors, higher spread levels and lower marketing spend. With respect to spreads, we expect to continue to operate at these elevated levels with the intent of focusing on margin improvement, and the reduction in marketing spend will further impact acquisitions. Given our focus on efficiency and current market dynamics, we believe this is a prudent approach to managing our business at this time. Selim FreihaCFO at Opendoor00:11:45This slowdown in acquisitions is expected to put pressure on our top line in the back half of the year, with revenue expected to decline on a year over year basis in the third and fourth quarters all else equal. However, our goal is to deliver year over year contribution margin improvements in those quarters through continued operating efficiencies and wider spreads. And our ongoing cost discipline should result in an improvement in adjusted net losses in 2025 as compared to last year. Finally, the current macro volatility makes it challenging to predict how buyers and sellers will react or how market conditions will unfold. Given the consumer hesitation we're seeing, we feel a more cautious approach is warranted. Selim FreihaCFO at Opendoor00:12:26That said, we are closely monitoring market signals and we are prepared to react to more favorable conditions. With that, I will ask the operator to open the line for questions. Operator00:12:36Thank you. Our first question comes from the line of Day Li with JPMorgan. Your line is now open. Dae LeeVP - Equity Research at JP Morgan00:12:57Great. Thanks for taking the questions. I have two. So first, so name on your comment about slowing down acquisition growth to about 1,700 in 2Q. Is that kind of the right level to think about as you look into the back half of the year? Dae LeeVP - Equity Research at JP Morgan00:13:15Or is there some element of rebalancing the inventory to current housing market levels? And if there's something that you're doing across all markets or just some markets, so curious if there are any markets that are working better for you right now? And then secondly, how should we think about contribution margins of these newer homes that you're acquiring given the higher spreads? Is it going to be towards the medium to high end of that 5% to 7% target that you guys normally have? Thanks. Selim FreihaCFO at Opendoor00:13:44Thanks for the questions, Day. On the acquisition pace, what I would say is all else equal, given that we are in a generally uncertain environment with respect to the outlook on the housing market, we would expect the normal seasonal pattern to look like a sort of a barbell similar to our marketing approach, where we are going to acquire more homes in Q1 and Q4 and fewer homes in Q2 and Q3. So on a sequential basis, going forward, we would expect a sequential decline from Q1 to Q2, relatively flat acquisitions from Q2 to Q3 and then a ramp up again in Q4. And based on what we see today and our expectation, again, with what we do know, we would expect a similar pattern for the second half of the year. With respect to contribution margins in Q2 and sort of the newer cohorts, I would first say that our expectation of contribution margin between 4.54.9% would be 4.7% at the midpoint, fairly consistent with Q1 and down roughly a point and a half versus the prior year. Selim FreihaCFO at Opendoor00:14:55And simply put, this is a mix issue. The decline is really driven by older inventory at relatively lower margins, making up a larger share of homes sold in Q2, given the slower acquisition pace of new homes in Q2 that we're seeing. Setting that aside, we do see cohorts that we are acquiring in more recent times performing very well from a contribution margin perspective in the early resale days, but it's not enough to offset the prior year mix impact that I referenced. Dae LeeVP - Equity Research at JP Morgan00:15:33Got it. Thank you. Operator00:15:35Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Yigal Aronian with Citigroup. Your line is now open. Ygal ArounianDirector - Internet Equity Research at Citi00:15:43Hey guys, thanks for taking the question. First, just to follow-up on that point on the older homes or maybe for Carrie also. Is that how you view the overall health of that book of inventory? How much wiggle room, I guess, is there in the valuation of those homes if we might continue to get continuing softness in the housing market and we see home prices start to fall. I think we're starting to see that in some geography geographies, particularly in the South. Ygal ArounianDirector - Internet Equity Research at Citi00:16:23So have you factored that in or how do you think about that? Then I have a follow-up. Selim FreihaCFO at Opendoor00:16:28Yeah. Our thanks for the question, Yigal. Generally, what we see when we acquire cohorts is sort of a natural degradation. So the homes that sell sort of earlier tend to have higher margins and the longer we hold homes, obviously the margins do decay. And that's a pretty typical pattern we've seen historically. Selim FreihaCFO at Opendoor00:16:56I think the difference is now the homes that we're acquiring more recently are starting at a higher absolute contribution margin level and will decay from there. But that gives us some confidence on sort of year over year expected year over year improvements in contribution margin in the second half. With respect to sort of the valuation expectation that is factored into our outlook. It's factored into how we set spreads. And obviously pricing is a lever that we can use, but there's no incremental or additional pressure that we see, because we do look out sort of on the resale environment and make an assumption on where we think homes will resell at relative to the current carrying costs that we have on the books. Ygal ArounianDirector - Internet Equity Research at Citi00:17:45Okay. Ygal ArounianDirector - Internet Equity Research at Citi00:17:49And then I want to spend a little bit of time on the expansion of the agent partnership. So this feels maybe like a little bit more of a shift in the asset light model than the products we've talked about in the past. So firstly, I just kinda wanna understand a little bit more what this product is, how different it is. Are you can you continue to operate? What's with the Opendoor and marketplace? Ygal ArounianDirector - Internet Equity Research at Citi00:18:18Has it become part of this? You've had relationships with other brokerages. Is this shift where you're working directly with the agents versus the brokerages? And then in terms of mix, what is it today? Because you talk about moving more in this direction and some people will continue to come direct, but it sounds like this might be the, at least your goal for it to be the kind of predominant channel. Ygal ArounianDirector - Internet Equity Research at Citi00:18:45And then what's so what's the overall mix that you intend to get to as well? And I know there was a bunch of questions in that, but just trying to understand how this plays out. Thanks. Carrie WheelerChair & CEO at Opendoor00:18:56I'll try and hit all those. And if I don't, you don't, just feel free to come back at me at the end. If you step back for a second, I think it's important to appreciate that today, a meaningful percentage of our business already comes from agents. Have agents coming to us every day who want to bring a cash offer to their client because they want to give their client choice. And they understand the value prop of our cash offer. Carrie WheelerChair & CEO at Opendoor00:19:18And they're expert at converting it because that client is looking for convenience, certainty, and speed. So those are agents coming to us today, and we understand that motion very, very well. We know who those power listing agents are across the 50 markets we're working in. We're kind of flipping the script now. Instead of agents coming to us with their customer, we are going in 11 markets we're piloting. Carrie WheelerChair & CEO at Opendoor00:19:38We are providing them our customer referrals, and we're doing it earlier in the customer engagement. We think that trusted agent partner then learns more about the seller's needs. They can provide more local expertise. And they're also completing an in home assessment on our behalf. It's a way to improve conversion, speed delivery, more trust, aiding decision making. Carrie WheelerChair & CEO at Opendoor00:19:57And ultimately, to your point, we believe this is a distribution channel and a partnership that will allow us to drive more asset light revenue. To your question on mix, I don't know yet. I I do think there's a segment of customers that will very much want that direct to consumer self-service interaction that we pioneered. People will still come to us and want a cash offer and be very happy to do that on a one to one basis. There are other customer types that we believe will benefit from having that additional agent relationship and advice. Carrie WheelerChair & CEO at Opendoor00:20:30And we're going to be able to, I think, time to figure out how we direct customers in the most optimal way. So it's early, I'd say. As I said, we're piloting, but in a meaningful number of markets. And over time, that will continue to evolve. Ygal ArounianDirector - Internet Equity Research at Citi00:20:44Okay, thanks. I guess the only thing that you missed, Carrie, just for clarification on lists with Opendoor and Marketplace, are those going to continue to operate? Are they going to be separate products? Are you rolling it into this agent partnership thing as one thing Carrie WheelerChair & CEO at Opendoor00:21:01I think about new partnership as a channel strategy, go to market strategy, and then it may end up with a listing. So for us, List with Opendoor, think about that as an end of funnel referral program, really. A customer comes to us for a cash offer. They go through the offer process, and we refer them at the end towards a partner agent to explore listing, oftentimes with our backstop cash offer as something for them to think about as they test the market. Carrie WheelerChair & CEO at Opendoor00:21:32So those two things are not mutually exclusive. We'll continue to have a list of Opendoor product across direct to consumer channels, and we will be powering more and more agents with the benefit of our marketing engine and our referrals. And that may happen with a listing. It may happen with cash offer. That's okay. Carrie WheelerChair & CEO at Opendoor00:21:50With respect to Marketplace, what I would say is we're currently today in Dallas, Charlotte, Raleigh, and we're holding there for now. Not a material contributor to revenue or earnings for us today. Given the pause and the pullback we're seeing in the housing market right now, we are going to evaluate the best path forward for marketplace. I really believe that sitting here today, our new expanded partnership channel is a much more immediate path to allow us to serve more customers, monetize more of that funnel that we have and generate that incremental asset light revenue we're looking for. And that's where we're going put more and more of our energy and resources into, most likely. Ygal ArounianDirector - Internet Equity Research at Citi00:22:30Okay. Really helpful. Thank you. Carrie WheelerChair & CEO at Opendoor00:22:32Thanks. Operator00:22:34Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Nicholas Jones with Citizens JMP Securities. Your line is now open. Luke MeindlEquity Research Associate at JMP Securities LLC00:22:42Hi, this is Luke on for Nick. Thanks for taking our question. Can you just speak on further cost savings opportunities? You've made nice progress over the past few quarters improving the cost structure. How much more room do you think you have there to gain additional efficiencies, you know, particularly if macro worsens? Thanks. Selim FreihaCFO at Opendoor00:23:02Yeah. I'll take that, Luke. Thanks for the question. Look, we are still focused optimizing our cost structure to drive durable cost savings beyond the progress we've already made. As a reminder, reflected in our Q1 results is a year over year fixed cost reduction of nearly $20,000,000 or roughly 33%, and our Q2 guidance implies a similar reduction. Selim FreihaCFO at Opendoor00:23:22These are durable cost savings that are here to stay. Beyond these, we continue to look at various aspects of our business and our operations to drive more efficiency as we go forward, including infrastructure, including how we go to market and including the overall fixed cost base. At this point, don't know that we would expect similar reductions beyond this, but we do think that there is more efficiency opportunity as we move forward. And to your question on what does this look like in a slower market, we have rightsized the business for a slower market. That has been the dynamic in which we've been operating for the last year plus. Selim FreihaCFO at Opendoor00:24:11And as we look forward, the outlook will also inform how we think about the fixed cost base going forward. And we do think that there are still opportunities ahead of us. Luke MeindlEquity Research Associate at JMP Securities LLC00:24:25Great. Very helpful. Thank you. Operator00:24:28Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Ryan Tomasello with KBW. Your line is now open. Ryan TomaselloManaging Director at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods (KBW)00:24:39Hi, everyone. Thanks for taking the questions. Following up on the expense topic, can you just clarify how much of the $29,000,000 quarter over quarter reduction implied in the OpEx guidance is driven by lower marketing expenses that are more seasonal and intentional based on the pullback you're implying on acquisitions? And how much is more of like a structural reduction? Selim FreihaCFO at Opendoor00:25:08Yes, I would say that the majority of the reduction is in marketing. And the step down in marketing spend is driven by the typical seasonal dynamics that we've discussed before and the spread levels at which we're operating right now. Additionally, our operating expense includes timing adjustments related to changes in inventory levels. In Q2, we expect resales to outpace acquisitions, and that will reduce our inventory balance and result in a favorable adjustment to operating expenses on a quarter over quarter basis. Between the two of those things, I would say those are the material contributors to the quarter over quarter variance. Selim FreihaCFO at Opendoor00:25:48There will be some amount of further fixed cost reduction, but I would say that's less material in the face of the marketing move. Ryan TomaselloManaging Director at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods (KBW)00:25:58Okay. I appreciate that. And then on the agent partnership program, can you just elaborate on what the economics are of this new arrangement where you'll be bringing the agent in early in the process? Is that just simply a referral fee, a success fee? Just trying to understand what that what those contribution contribution margin look like on these types of partnership acquisitions. Carrie WheelerChair & CEO at Opendoor00:26:22Sure. I'd say, I mean, we're still piloting. But at a high level, we believe that this partnership channel will allow us to drive better conversion and getting a better chance of getting that customer to a selling outcome that we participate in and generates that asset light revenue for us. So on a listing, we would earn a share of that commission. On a cash offer, we earn the margin we earn today on that cash offer minus any referral fee that we would plan to pay to that agent. Carrie WheelerChair & CEO at Opendoor00:26:50And our hypothesis is that the incremental conversion benefits are likely to outweigh the cost of that additional referral fee. Ryan TomaselloManaging Director at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods (KBW)00:26:59Got it. Thanks for the color, Clarke, Carrie. Carrie WheelerChair & CEO at Opendoor00:27:01Yeah. Thanks, Ryan. Operator00:27:03Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Benjamin Black with Deutsche Bank. Your line is now open. Benjamin BlackCo-Head Internet Equity Research at Deutsche Bank00:27:10Great. Thanks for the question. Benjamin BlackCo-Head Internet Equity Research at Deutsche Bank00:27:12Just a quick follow-up on the agent partnership. I mean, you spoke about the test markets. What signal are you looking for that would potentially drive a broader rollout of the partnership? And then also curious to hear if you have all the infrastructure, so to speak, scale up partnership or is there some go to market investments that are required going forward? Thank you. Carrie WheelerChair & CEO at Opendoor00:27:39Yeah. I'll do this in reverse order, maybe. Like, you think about what we've built, we have built a brand, the marketing engine, this huge funnel of high-tech sellers, all the pricing capabilities and the transaction platform. And this is just a way for us to leverage all those capabilities via another go to market channel. So we have all those things built today. Carrie WheelerChair & CEO at Opendoor00:27:59We're just leveraging them vis a vis our agent partnership relationships with people, many of whom we're interacting with already every day, as they fulfill our cash offer. So I think it's actually a pretty seamless move. We've built things like creating a platform to do assessments that we do or sometimes agents do on our behalf. So we are very set up, and we've been working on that for a while to be able to expand it. So that's one. Carrie WheelerChair & CEO at Opendoor00:28:22To your first part of your question, which is what are we looking for in terms of signal, ultimately, we'll be looking for conversion, whether that's incremental conversion, neutral better to a cash offer, and also incremental conversion to a listing outcome that we participate in. Benjamin BlackCo-Head Internet Equity Research at Deutsche Bank00:28:42Great. Thank you. Thanks so much. Carrie WheelerChair & CEO at Opendoor00:28:44Thanks. Operator00:28:45Thank you. This concludes today's question and answer session. Thank you all for your participation on today's call. This does conclude the call. You may now disconnect.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesCarrie WheelerChair & CEOAnalystsKimberly NiehausFinance & Strategy, IR at OpendoorSelim FreihaCFO at OpendoorDae LeeVP - Equity Research at JP MorganYgal ArounianDirector - Internet Equity Research at CitiLuke MeindlEquity Research Associate at JMP Securities LLCRyan TomaselloManaging Director at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods (KBW)Benjamin BlackCo-Head Internet Equity Research at Deutsche BankPowered by