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Investing.com -- Opendoor Technologies Inc (NASDAQ:OPEN) shares jumped 9% Friday after Chief Executive Carrie Wheeler announced her resignation, capping weeks of escalating tension with a vocal cohort of retail investors. The move comes weeks into a sharp bout of volatility driven by surging retail enthusiasm and calls for more visionary leadership to match the company’s AI ambitions.
Shrisha Radhakrishna, previously Chief Technology & Product Officer, has been appointed interim head of the real estate platform as the company contemplates a broader leadership overhaul. Board member Eric Feder of LenX was named lead independent director, with executive search firm Spencer Stuart guiding the CEO selection process already underway.
While Wheeler had recently attempted to re-engage shareholders, reviving a dormant social media presence and agreeing to her first public interview in years with popular entrepreneur and recent Opendoor investor Anthony Pompliano, she became a focal point of criticism from investors demanding bolder execution. The energy of that movement coalesced around EMJ Capital founder Eric Jackson, who led an online campaign that framed the company’s moment as one of unprecedented upside, if paired with the right leadership.
In comments made to Investing.com Friday, Jackson called the resignation "wonderful news for shareholders," adding that he "fully supports" the move.
“But if standing between a 50¢ stock and an $82 one is what it takes — and shareholders want it — I’ll saddle up again for OPEN,” Jackson originally wrote on X, calling for execution over financial engineering and sparking the initial surge in investor enthusiasm. He also urged the board to abandon short-term restructuring plans and embrace a long-term AI-driven transformation, contributing to the cancellation of a reverse-stock split once planned to satisfy Nasdaq’s minimum bid price requirement.
Despite signs of life on the engagement front, Wheeler seemingly failed to impress in time. “I’m out on Carrie Wheeler. Next man or woman up,” Jackson said two weeks ago, highlighting growing disappointment with Wheeler’s perceived lack of energy and participation.
Wheeler’s resignation appears to be a direct response to that pressure, underscoring a shift in leverage to retail activists who have turned Opendoor into what some are calling the first retail-led campaign to reshape a public company. Despite her six-year tenure as CFO and then CEO, recent criticism concentrated on her leadership style, with investors calling for a more energetic figure reminiscent of Palantir’s Alex Karp to define and defend a disruptive narrative.
Opendoor investor Randian Capital highlighted that sentiment following the company’s earnings call, which left many shareholders frustrated. “In a market that is increasingly dominated by retail investors, public company CEO’s must be able to passionately articulate their visions for the future. Opendoor needs a CEO with the vision and charisma to execute on what we see as the largest AI opportunity hiding in plain sight.” Randian added: “Someone in the mold of Alex Karp has the opportunity for the next great American comeback story.”
In response to Friday’s departure, Randian told Investing.com, "We thank Carrie for her service. The company needs a jolt of founder energy to restore its culture and vision. This event shows that retail is just as important a constituency as institutional investors." The fund further advocated for Opendoor co-founders Keith Rabois and Eric Wu to join the Board of Directors, a view widely supported by Opendoor’s investor community.
Rabois, managing director at Khosla Ventures, has been an outspoken critic of Wheeler, "She is utterly incompetent... Tech companies should never be led by CFOs," he wrote last month. To fix Opendoor, Rabois recently proposed replacing most G&A with AI, innovating buyer adoption with universally assumable mortgages, unlocking seller supply with a unique value proposition, eliminating agent partnerships to prioritize winning, implementing a "Buy It Now" feature for all listings, and removing RSUs for executives.
New Lead Independent Director Feder, in the company’s formal announcement, emphasized Opendoor’s strong position to leverage its extensive data and unique assets in the AI-driven market, highlighting ongoing advancements in products like Cash Plus and Key Connections, while Radhakrishna underscored the company’s commitment to not only refining existing offerings but also developing a platform to redefine residential real estate transactions.
In the past three months amid the ongoing push, Opendoor shares have climbed more than 350%, buoyed largely by a grassroots investor base that sees significant promise in the iBuyer’s data infrastructure and differentiated business model.
As Radhakrishna steps into the interim role, the company now stands at the intersection of investor momentum and activist scrutiny, where the next CEO will be expected to deliver more than operational discipline. The moment calls for a compelling vision that can bridge short-term execution with long-term value creation.