A few months after slowing home-price appreciation torpedoed Zillow Group's tech-powered flipping operation, the company's onetime rival is getting a boost from the hot U.S. housing market.
Opendoor Technologies, the largest of the so-called iBuyers, is listing homes for 17% more than it paid, according to data compiled by Mike DelPrete, a scholar-in-residence at the University of Colorado Boulder.
In one recent example, the company bought a three-bedroom, three-bathroom house south of downtown Phoenix for $458,700 on March 1, and listed it for $561,000 eight days later — a 22% increase.
It can take several months from the time Opendoor agrees on a price to buy a home to when it actually closes on the purchase. In the case of the Phoenix property, the seller accepted the company’s offer in January, a representative for the company said.
With prices surging, the lag worked in the company's favor.
"Opendoor is basically making a bet as to what the future value of that home will be," DelPrete said. "It happens that right now, the bet is cashing in a lot because the housing market is appreciating."
Opendoor, like its iBuying competitors, buys a home, makes light repairs and puts the property back on the market. To make the model work, iBuyers have to anticipate how long it will take to sell a house, and what price they can get — a complicated task made more challenging in the record-hot pandemic market.
Zillow spotlighted how hard the business can be. The company ramped up purchases in the second half of last year. But when prices rose more slowly than expected, the online real estate giant was forced to sell homes at a loss. It announced in November it was shutting down the operation, known as Zillow Offers.
Opendoor's 17% listing premium is based on 1,700 homes offered for sale on March 15. The median markup is a historic high for the company, said DelPrete, citing research from the firm YipitData. The homes it is listing now are likely to sell in the second quarter.