Big tech optimizes screens.
Opendoor is building infrastructure.
People often laugh at the idea of comparing Opendoor to big tech companies. That reaction usually comes from looking at today’s surface — not tomorrow’s structure.
If Opendoor reaches a point where selling a home is one click, buying a home is another, and the entire transaction completes in days instead of months, the comparison stops sounding ridiculous very quickly.
Real estate is one of the largest, most consistent markets on the planet. People move, upgrade, downsize, and relocate every single day — regardless of cycles, sentiment, or headlines.
A platform that removes friction from buying and selling homes isn’t just improving user experience. It’s compressing time, reducing cost, and reshaping how a trillion-dollar market actually functions.
As Kaz Nejatian has discussed, the long-term vision goes even further — connecting real estate with tokenization.
When homes can be tokenized, ownership no longer has to mean buying an entire property at once. Capital becomes more flexible, more liquid, and more accessible — without changing the fundamental, never-ending demand for housing.
At that point, Opendoor isn’t “just a real estate company.”
It becomes infrastructure — sitting at the intersection of housing, finance, and technology.
Big tech dominates attention.
Platforms that restructure how massive asset classes move dominate value.
In a market this large, this essential, and this inefficient, dismissing that potential says more about the observer than the opportunity itself.
#StructuralChange #NotJustTech #FutureOfRealEstate #ThinkInDecades #OPEN $open
⚠️ This post is for inspiration and discussion only — not financial advice.
Every investor should think independently and make choices with patience & conviction. 💎🚀