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Luke Kawa

Opendoor acquires HomeBuyer.com in bid to boost home flipping and mortgage opportunities

Opendoor Technologies has acquired mortgage services platform HomeBuyer.com, according to a post on X from Chief Growth Officer Morgan Brown. Brown did not disclose financial terms of the deal in the post.

There’s an element of an acqui-hire here, too, as HomeBuyer.com founder Dan Green will serve as director of mortgage growth for Opendoor.

HomeBuyer.com offers tools for potential homebuyers to assess their financing options, and mortgages are a logical avenue for Opendoor to pursue as the online real estate company looks to transform the homebuying and selling process in the US. At the very least, streamlining the financing process for potential buyers under its own roof should help Opendoor’s quest to pursue higher volumes of homes flipping.

Shares of Opendoor are little changed in premarket trading.

Many Opendoor bulls, including EMJ Capital’s Eric Jackson, have pointed to Opendoor’s potential to bolster its presence in mortgage, title, and other housing services as part of their optimistic view on the stock. In November along with the release of Q3 earnings, CEO Kaz Nejatian announced a new partnership with Roam pertaining to assumable mortgages.

Opendoor certainly hasn’t been idle during the holiday season. Earlier this week, the CEO touted an explosion in the company’s homebuying footprint to include all of the lower 48 US states, and management also announced that Coinbase Canada CEO Lucas Matheson was coming in to serve as its president.

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Space stocks rip during a topsy-turvy day for the equity market

Satellite-services-from-space stocks surged Thursday after reports that Amazon is in talks to buy Globalstar, which provides voice and connectivity services from its satellite network. It also can’t hurt that the general mood around space is ebullient, following the successful launch of Artemis II on Thursday.

Planet Labs and ViaSat also soared on the news.

The gains for EchoStar — seen as a backdoor play at pre-IPO SpaceX exposure — and Rocket Lab were more muted, perhaps because a deep-pocketed competitor like Jeff Bezos getting serious about space services could complicate the plans of the two largest commercial space launch companies.

Rocket Lab and SpaceX see launch services as key to their aspirations of being major providers of voice and data services from low-Earth orbit satellites.

Tesla CEO Elon Musk’s SpaceX is the dominant provider of such services, and the early rumors on the company’s planned IPO — expected to be the largest ever — suggest the market is very excited about the prospects for the industry.

Elsewhere in the space stock world, Intuitive Machines — a maker of space infrastructure that provides services to NASA for lunar missions — also rose.

The gains for EchoStar — seen as a backdoor play at pre-IPO SpaceX exposure — and Rocket Lab were more muted, perhaps because a deep-pocketed competitor like Jeff Bezos getting serious about space services could complicate the plans of the two largest commercial space launch companies.

Rocket Lab and SpaceX see launch services as key to their aspirations of being major providers of voice and data services from low-Earth orbit satellites.

Tesla CEO Elon Musk’s SpaceX is the dominant provider of such services, and the early rumors on the company’s planned IPO — expected to be the largest ever — suggest the market is very excited about the prospects for the industry.

Elsewhere in the space stock world, Intuitive Machines — a maker of space infrastructure that provides services to NASA for lunar missions — also rose.

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Tesla delivered 358,023 vehicles in Q1, short of expectations

Ahead of its first-quarter earnings later this month, Tesla on Thursday announced that it delivered 358,023 vehicles in the quarter.

Analysts polled by FactSet had expected 380,500 vehicle deliveries in the first quarter this year, while Tesla last month released its own company-compiled Wall Street consensus estimate — something it began in the fourth quarter of 2025 — of 365,645 vehicles.

Shares extended losses in premarket trading on Thursday, falling more than 4%.

The figure is still up from the same quarter last year, when Tesla delivered fewer than 337,000 vehicles amid intensifying competition in China and flailing public perception over CEO Elon Musk’s involvement with the Trump administration.

As of 3 p.m. ET on Wednesday, event contract odds held a slightly less optimistic view than the broader analyst community, but a sunnier view than the figure Tesla put forward. 52% of traders predicted Tesla’s Q1 deliveries would come in at more than 360,000, 40% thought the figure would be higher than 370,000, and 15% estimated it would be higher than 380,000.

(Event contracts are offered through Robinhood Derivatives, LLC — probabilities referenced or sourced from KalshiEx LLC or ForecastEx LLC.)

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Globalstar surges after FT reports that Amazon is in talks to buy the satellite group

Globalstar is up 11% in premarket trading on Thursday on reports that Amazon is in talks to buy the satellite company, in a push to take on Elon Musks SpaceX. The two companies are currently negotiating the details of a potential deal after lengthy talks, the Financial Times reported, citing people familiar with the matter.

Amazon has ambitions to compete with SpaceX to provide satellite-based internet access anywhere on the planet — a market thats dominated by Starlink at the moment and a key pillar of the eye-watering $1 trillion valuation that SpaceX is seeking in its IPO, which it has just confidentially filed for.

Indeed, Amazon has been signing deals with airlines and doubling down on investing in its internet constellation lately, with plans to increase its ~200 satellites in orbit to about 700 by the middle of 2026 — still a fraction compared to SpaceX’s mega constellation, which has some 10,000 active satellites.

But Amazon’s not the only Big Tech giant with an interest in Globalstar. Back in 2024, Apple invested $1.5 billion for a 20% stake in the company, necessitating a negotiation between Apple and Amazon for the latest deal talks to proceed, per the FT. SpaceX also reportedly had early talks with Globalstar, Bloomberg reported last October.

Globalstars stock has been up ~230% in the past year, pushing its value to some $8.8 billion as of yesterday’s close.

Amazon has ambitions to compete with SpaceX to provide satellite-based internet access anywhere on the planet — a market thats dominated by Starlink at the moment and a key pillar of the eye-watering $1 trillion valuation that SpaceX is seeking in its IPO, which it has just confidentially filed for.

Indeed, Amazon has been signing deals with airlines and doubling down on investing in its internet constellation lately, with plans to increase its ~200 satellites in orbit to about 700 by the middle of 2026 — still a fraction compared to SpaceX’s mega constellation, which has some 10,000 active satellites.

But Amazon’s not the only Big Tech giant with an interest in Globalstar. Back in 2024, Apple invested $1.5 billion for a 20% stake in the company, necessitating a negotiation between Apple and Amazon for the latest deal talks to proceed, per the FT. SpaceX also reportedly had early talks with Globalstar, Bloomberg reported last October.

Globalstars stock has been up ~230% in the past year, pushing its value to some $8.8 billion as of yesterday’s close.

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