When "Mathematically Plausible" Means Something Wild
Hedge fund manager Eric Jackson isn't known for timid predictions, and his latest call on Better Home & Finance Holding Co. (BETR) might be his boldest yet. In a Sunday post on X, Jackson laid out a scenario where the mortgage finance company could hit $12,000 per share over the next three years. That represents a 21,200% gain from current levels, which he describes as "mathematically plausible."
The thesis centers on Better's technology infrastructure, particularly its Tinman platform and Betsy AI engine, which Jackson believes could transform the company into an AI operating system for an industry with a $15 trillion addressable market.
The Palantir Comparison
Jackson draws a direct parallel between Better's approach and Palantir Technology Inc. (PLTR), calling Tinman "the data backbone of entire enterprises." According to Jackson, Tinman creates something unique by unifying three critical data structures: a consumer graph, property graph, and investor criteria graph.
This fusion connects information about borrowers, homes, and investor requirements in a way that "does not exist anywhere else in mortgage," he argues. It's the kind of comprehensive data integration that gives companies pricing power and creates switching costs for clients.
Then there's Betsy, which Jackson calls "the industry's first Agentic AI mortgage engine." The AI layer now handles 700,000 interactions each quarter and has improved lead conversion by 84%. Perhaps more impressively, it delivers a defect rate that's "19x lower than industry" standards, according to Jackson.
The Numbers Behind the Hype
Jackson points to several metrics that suggest Better is hitting an inflection point. Revenue surged 51% year-over-year, while funded volumes increased 17%. The kicker? Expenses remained flat, which is exactly the kind of operating leverage that gets growth investors excited.
The company's HELOC business has grown "10x in 24 months" and now contributes 40% of total revenue. That's a meaningful diversification from traditional mortgage origination, which tends to be highly cyclical.
Better is also replicating what Jackson sees as Palantir's design-partner phase, signing deals with major players including "a top-5 U.S. financial platform," a leading non-bank mortgage originator, and Finance of America Companies Inc. (FOA). The pipeline includes banks, servicers, fintechs, and major home-improvement lenders.
Track Record and Context
This projection comes just months after Jackson made similar aggressive calls on Opendoor Technologies Inc. (OPEN), another small-cap real estate stock. Back in late June, when Opendoor was trading near its 52-week low, Jackson predicted a 15,978% rally to $82 per share. The iBuying platform has since rallied 1,492% in less than six months, fueled by strong retail investor enthusiasm.
That kind of recent success adds credibility to Jackson's newest call, though it's worth noting that predicting one massive rally doesn't guarantee the next one will materialize.
What the Market Thinks
Shares of Better Home & Finance (BETR) closed down 2.02% on Friday at $56.25, and slipped another 0.43% in overnight trading. The stock currently has short interest of 10.58% of its public float, and scores 44.25 on the relative strength index, indicating neutral momentum with a slightly bearish tilt in the near term.
Whether Jackson's $12,000 price target proves "mathematically plausible" or wildly optimistic will depend on whether Better can execute on its technology vision and capture meaningful market share in an industry that's traditionally been slow to adopt new platforms. But with his recent Opendoor call still fresh in traders' minds, this prediction is likely to attract attention from the same retail crowd that's been piling into speculative housing plays.