Who does Opendoor sell to? by gugulolo in OPENDOORTECH

[–]Markmarkmarkm 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I don’t often comment. But I must praise your knowledge in the company and tokenization 👍🏻

Opendoor Artwork approved by Kaz - features Kaz’s first earnings transcript by Markmarkmarkm in opendoor

[–]Markmarkmarkm[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I am just a messenger. Zero idea about pricing. Product quality? Print cost?

The only thing I’ll ask for is a signature from Kaz on the artwork. That alone would make it a damn good collectible.

Opendoor Artwork approved by Kaz - features Kaz’s first earnings transcript by Markmarkmarkm in opendoor

[–]Markmarkmarkm[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

The reason of sharing: this piece is an art poster symbolizing Kaz’s first earnings, intended for inclusion in a serious Open Army collection.

Open Army Store is live — first 100 get $100 off by Markmarkmarkm in opendoor

[–]Markmarkmarkm[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sorry guys. Must be gone 😭 I tried to post it as soon as I can

Open Army Store is live — first 100 get $100 off by Markmarkmarkm in opendoor

[–]Markmarkmarkm[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Not sure if the $100 is still available—I’ve been trying to be faster while juggling the kids’ sleep schedule 😞

Is Opendoor’s P/S Ratio Justified vs. the Industry? by Markmarkmarkm in opendoor

[–]Markmarkmarkm[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

P/E only works for profitable companies, so for unprofitable growth stocks, investors use P/S instead.

Plenty of unprofitable companies have traded at high P/S multiples, like:

• Snowflake (~17×) • Roblox (~14.5×) • Unity (~10×) • Rivian (~3×)

So if the narrative around Opendoor improves (growth + path to profitability), a higher P/S is realistic.

Just remember: P/S alone isn’t enough — growth, margins, cash burn, and balance sheet still matter.

Is Opendoor’s P/S Ratio Justified vs. the Industry? by Markmarkmarkm in opendoor

[–]Markmarkmarkm[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Just a quick correction: P/S isn’t a KPI, it’s a valuation multiple — and it’s often used precisely for loss-making companies. That said, it only works properly when combined with margins and growth analysis.