MW Opendoor's stock soars again as leadership changes hailed as 'incredible outcome' for shareholders
By James Rogers
Opendoor's stock heads toward a more than 3-year high, as investors cheer the new CEO and the return of two co-founders to the board
Opendoor Technologies has announced the appointment of Shopify COO Kaz Nejatian as its new CEO.
Shares of Opendoor Technologies Inc. soared toward a three-year high in premarket trading Thursday, as investors cheered the announcement of a new chief executive and the return of two co-founders to the company's board.
Opendoor (OPEN), the e-commerce platform for residential real-estate transactions, said late Wednesday that Shopify Inc. (SHOP) Chief Operating Officer Kaz Nejatian has been appointed CEO.
The San Francisco-based company also announced that co-founders Keith Rabois and Eric Wu will be returning to its board, with Rabois taking on the role of chairman.
Also adding to investor enthusiasm, Wu and venture-capital firm Khosla Ventures will invest $40 million in Opendoor, which the company will use to invest in its business.
The stock was up 36.2% in premarket trading, putting it on track to open around the highest prices seen since June 2022.
Noted Opendoor bull Eric Jackson, founder of EMJ Capital, welcomed the news, which he described as "an INCREDIBLE OUTCOME for all shareholders."
Jackson had been vocal in calling for leadership change at the company, which announced last month that Chief Executive Carrie Wheeler, who also chaired Opendoor's board, was stepping down from her roles.
The fund manager has also been pushing for Rabois to return to the Opendoor board. "There is NO ONE as smart as Keith in tech," he wrote on X in a separate post. "And he is our Chairman."
Jackson added that Rabois "gives a damn" about the company and will never stop working until it achieves its full potential. "As shareholders, we couldn't be in better hands. The FOUNDER DNA is now officially back at OPEN - directly in its veins!"
Heavily shorted Opendoor has seen a frenzy of activity in recent weeks, sending the stock skyrocketing. The frenzy even sparked comparisons with prior meme-stock explosions, while also lifting shares of Kohl's Corp. $(KSS)$ and Krispy Crème Inc. $(DNUT)$.
Jackson, however, has scorned the suggestion that Opendoor is a meme stock, describing it instead as a "cult stock." A high-profile figure, the EMJ Capital founder has been rallying retail support around what has been dubbed the "OPEN army."
The stock has run up 266.3% in 2025 through Wednesday - and 874.4% in the last three months. Meanwhile, more than a quarter of Opendoor's public float has been shorted, or used to bet on prices falling.
Opendoor said recently that it is throwing its weight behind artificial intelligence, much to the delight of Jackson and other investors.
In its statement announcing the CEO appointment, Opendoor described Nejatian as an "AI-native" executive. "He is a decisive leader who has driven product innovation at scale, ruthlessly reduced [general and administrative] expenses to drive profitability and deeply understands the potential for AI to radically reshape a company's entire operations," Rabois said in the statement. Rabois also described Opendoor as "an AI-first company."
However, Erik Gordon, clinical professor at the University of Michigan's Ross School of Business, recently told MarketWatch he is skeptical about Opendoor's AI push.
-James Rogers
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September 11, 2025 07:43 ET (11:43 GMT)
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