Hedge fund manager Eric Jackson released a report today setting out a bullish, tokenization-driven scenario for Opendoor Technologies (NASDAQ:OPEN) that, in his view, could lift the stock to $500 per share within five to seven years. Jackson framed the valuation path around a structural shift in how real estate assets are financed and traded using digital tokens tied to physical property.
Jackson noted that Opendoor has seen a recent surge in transaction activity. The company reported more than 5,000 acquisition contracts in Q1 2026, a figure Jackson described as roughly double the Q4 2025 level and about triple Q3 2025 volume. He also pointed to margin improvement: contribution margin reached 4.4 percent in Q1 2026, the highest reading since Q2 2024.
On a visit to Opendoor’s Toronto offices, Jackson met with CEO Kaz Nejatian and President Lucas Matheson. According to the report, Nejatian articulated a three-layer framework for the company’s tokenization strategy. The first layer calls for deep capital markets in each city where Opendoor operates. The second layer is title-on-chain infrastructure, which would connect digital tokens to the legal record of property ownership. The third layer is a set of tokenization-enabled business models, including fractional ownership and the separation of land and structure as distinct tokenized assets.
Operational metrics cited in the report suggest progress on inventory management and cash generation. Homes classified as aged inventory, defined as units unsold for more than 120 days, declined from 51 percent of the book in Q3 2025 to 10 percent in Q1 2026. At the same time, trailing-twelve-month operating cash flow turned positive in Q1 2026, reported at $531 million.
Jackson’s report also highlights cost control alongside rising volume. Fixed operating expenses fell to $33 million in Q1 2026 from $39 million in the prior year, even as acquisition volume nearly tripled. The company has begun product experiments in consumer finance, launching a 4.99 percent mortgage product currently in beta in Colorado, with a planned rollout to 40 states by September 2026.
The report comes as Opendoor shares have been volatile. Jackson noted the stock dropped 20 percent over the past week and was down 41 percent over the past six months, following a sharp run-up the prior year that Jackson himself helped catalyze among retail investors pursuing activist changes.
Jackson published three forward price targets with attached probabilities: $82 by the end of 2028 with a 60 percent probability, $200 by the end of 2030 with a 20 percent probability, and $500 by the end of 2033 with an 8 percent probability. His $500 outcome is tied explicitly to the successful implementation of the tokenization architecture described by management.
Summary
Eric Jackson’s report argues that Opendoor could reach $500 per share within five to seven years if the company executes a tokenization strategy that combines local capital markets, title-on-chain infrastructure, and new token-based business models. The report highlights accelerating acquisition volumes, improving contribution margins, reduced aged inventory, positive trailing operating cash flow, and lower fixed costs as evidence of operational momentum. Management is testing a mortgage product and has set ambitious rollout targets.
Key points
- Operational momentum: Over 5,000 acquisition contracts in Q1 2026, doubling Q4 2025 and tripling Q3 2025, plus a 4.4 percent contribution margin in Q1 2026.
- Balance sheet and cash flow: Trailing-twelve-month operating cash flow turned positive at $531 million in Q1 2026 while fixed operating expenses declined to $33 million year over year.
- Strategic push into tokenization and consumer finance: Management outlined a three-layer tokenization framework and is piloting a 4.99 percent mortgage in Colorado with a 40-state rollout target by September 2026.
Risks and uncertainties
- Execution risk on tokenization - The $500 projection depends on successful deployment of the title-on-chain and market infrastructure described by management, which is outlined but not guaranteed.
- Market and share-price volatility - The stock has experienced significant swings, falling 20 percent in the past week and 41 percent over six months, indicating investor sentiment can change rapidly.
- Product rollout challenges - The mortgage product is in beta in Colorado and its broader rollout to 40 states by September 2026 is a stated target that may face regulatory or operational hurdles.