I actually drafted this piece a while ago but hadn’t posted it yet — I was waiting for the right moment. Now that I see these kinds of absurd claims being made, it fits perfectly.🤨
Sharing it here so more people can read and think rationally. Don’t let the noise distract you from Opendoor’s real strength. 💎🚀
@Kei Hayashi
📌 Noise vs Reality: Why Opendoor’s Strength Speaks Louder Than Eric’s Drama
We should all give Eric credit for one thing — he brought attention back to this stock. Without his constant posting on X, many of us might have forgotten about Opendoor. But that doesn’t mean the company itself is weak. In reality, Opendoor has always had strong potential. Years ago, I even paid professional analysts, and they recommended this company to me.
If the company had no strength, Eric never would have noticed it in the first place. The fact that it survived all these difficult years proves its resilience and value. The reason the stock was dragged down so low wasn’t because the business was failing — it was largely hedge funds and short sellers.
Let’s not forget: Opendoor already experimented with AI years ago. Back then, it turned into a gimmick that led to lawsuits costing the company more than $30 million. They settled just to stop the bleeding and move forward. That’s why Eric’s current obsession — talking about firing 90% of employees and letting AI take over — is reckless. It could easily invite lawsuits or regulatory trouble again. Do you really think someone like that could manage the company responsibly?
Think of it like a restaurant: Eric is the person who told people, “This food is great, you should try it.” And for that, we thank him. But then he turns around and says, “Fire the chef, I should be the one cooking.” That’s absurd. The chefs and managers are the ones who kept the restaurant alive through the hardest times, and their stock rewards are well-deserved after years of sacrifice and hard work.
And isn’t it funny — every time the stock approaches $5, Eric somehow finds a way to create chaos? Coincidence, or deliberate? Either way, big funds hate instability. They won’t invest billions in a company where one outsider keeps shouting for control.
Let’s also remember that Eric himself once hyped this stock with an $82 price target 🚀. If he truly believes in $82, why suddenly attack the very leadership that kept the company alive long enough for us to even be here today?
Of course, anyone can give suggestions, but trying to force a CEO change or make the company follow his personal playbook is completely wrong. Opendoor is not one man’s toy. It is a real company that survived storms thanks to leadership that never gave up.
So instead of being distracted by noise, let’s focus on the facts: Opendoor is stronger than ever, its fundamentals are improving, and with patience it will only get better. That’s the real story — not the drama. 💎🙌🚀
👉 I believe every shareholder should think with true independent judgment and see this company’s real potential. Don’t let noise distract you. Supporting this stock means supporting your own investment and supporting the company’s continued growth. With a Fed consensus in September and the economy recovering, everything will get better. Don’t forget — this stock once traded at $39. Such a valuable company almost got destroyed by unfair tactics and noise, which is deeply unjust. And now, when it’s finally recovering, some people want to steal the credit with nothing but loud words. Anyone with clear eyes can see through it — this is just common sense.
We should all give Eric credit for one thing — he brought attention back to this stock. Without his constant posting on X, many of us might have forgotten about Opendoor. But that doesn’t mean the company itself is weak. In reality, Opendoor has always had strong potential. Years ago, I even paid professional analysts, and they recommended this company to me.
If the company had no strength, Eric never would have noticed it in the first place. The fact that it survived all these difficult years proves its resilience and value. The reason the stock was dragged down so low wasn’t because the business was failing — it was largely hedge funds and short sellers.
Let’s not forget: Opendoor already experimented with AI years ago. Back then, it turned into a gimmick that led to lawsuits costing the company more than $30 million. They settled just to stop the bleeding and move forward. That’s why Eric’s current obsession — talking about firing 90% of employees and letting AI take over — is reckless. It could easily invite lawsuits or regulatory trouble again. Do you really think someone like that could manage the company responsibly?
Think of it like a restaurant: Eric is the person who told people, “This food is great, you should try it.” And for that, we thank him. But then he turns around and says, “Fire the chef, I should be the one cooking.” That’s absurd. The chefs and managers are the ones who kept the restaurant alive through the hardest times, and their stock rewards are well-deserved after years of sacrifice and hard work.
And isn’t it funny — every time the stock approaches $5, Eric somehow finds a way to create chaos? Coincidence, or deliberate? Either way, big funds hate instability. They won’t invest billions in a company where one outsider keeps shouting for control.
Let’s also remember that Eric himself once hyped this stock with an $82 price target 🚀. If he truly believes in $82, why suddenly attack the very leadership that kept the company alive long enough for us to even be here today?
Of course, anyone can give suggestions, but trying to force a CEO change or make the company follow his personal playbook is completely wrong. Opendoor is not one man’s toy. It is a real company that survived storms thanks to leadership that never gave up.
So instead of being distracted by noise, let’s focus on the facts: Opendoor is stronger than ever, its fundamentals are improving, and with patience it will only get better. That’s the real story — not the drama. 💎🙌🚀
👉 I believe every shareholder should think with true independent judgment and see this company’s real potential. Don’t let noise distract you. Supporting this stock means supporting your own investment and supporting the company’s continued growth. With a Fed consensus in September and the economy recovering, everything will get better. Don’t forget — this stock once traded at $39. Such a valuable company almost got destroyed by unfair tactics and noise, which is deeply unjust. And now, when it’s finally recovering, some people want to steal the credit with nothing but loud words. Anyone with clear eyes can see through it — this is just common sense.
⚠️Friendly reminder: This is not financial advice. Investing always carries risk — please do your own research and make your own decisions. I’m just sharing my personal thoughts, and I’m not responsible for any gains or losses.
Disclaimer: Community is offered by Moomoo Technologies Inc. and is for educational purposes only.
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The Echo : you'd do a good spokesperson for open.![undefined [undefined]](https://static.moomoo.com/nnq/emoji/static/image/default/default-black.png?imageMogr2/thumbnail/36x36)
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Eusebius Valerius : How about I sue you for defamation?
Armstrong : I would choose to support this. This is not noise. I have invested in Opendoor for over two years. They have never provided any assistance to investors. I have sent several emails to them, but they went unanswered. When the stock price fell to $0.5 and I received a delisting notice, they had to conduct a reverse stock split. Despite the Q2 earnings report exceeding expectations, marking the best earnings report since 2022, the stock price still dropped by over 30% due to the gloomy outlook forecasted by the former CEO. Not a single person from the management or the board has come forward to reassure investors. Do they have confidence? At around $0.5, the CEO sold 670,000 shares of her free stock. (This was arranged long ago) But why didn't they have the confidence to buy back their own sold shares at $0.5? To provide a little confidence to the world
? Confidence comes from Eric and his friends. The rise in stock prices is entirely attributable to Eric's efforts. To claim that the increase in stock prices is solely due to the management and board of Opendoor is truly a great joke. It’s embarrassing to even say that. I am truly astonished that there are such thick-skinned individuals in the world.
Tadahking Armstrong : likewise it make s3nse to support eric on this. that guy is just an interim and he gets 24m screw that
Xiaoya Chen OP Eusebius Valerius : 1. “That was your own public post. I only shared a screenshot with my commentary — that’s not defamation, that’s fair discussion.”
2. “Everything I shared was directly from your own words. Defamation means false information — I didn’t invent anything.”
3. “If you don’t want your words shared, maybe don’t post them publicly in the first place.”
Armstrong Xiaoya Chen OP : If you want high returns on your investment, you should choose to support Eric. You have been forwarding content about him on X, and you know how hard he works. I have invested in Open for over two years, and I am fully qualified to say this.
Helen n friends : Upsetting really
Xiaoya Chen OP Armstrong : Many people keep saying, “he’s just an interim,” as if that somehow discredits him. But that’s not true.
Shrisha Radhakrishna has been with Opendoor since 2024 as Chief Technology & Product Officer (CTPO), leading engineering, design, product, and data science. Under his leadership, Opendoor launched Cash Plus, saved millions in infrastructure costs, and accelerated product launches. That’s real execution — not noise.
In August 2025, when Carrie Wheeler stepped down, Shrisha was appointed President and Interim CEO. He wasn’t “parachuted in” — he had already proven himself inside the company.
Before joining Opendoor, he served as Chief Technology & Product Officer at LegalZoom and spent over a decade at Intuit, building key products like QuickBooks Online and QuickBooks Self-Employed. He has 20+ years of tech and product leadership experience, plus an MBA from Kellogg.
As interim CEO, he’s already pushing forward an AI transformation — integrating AI into pricing, marketing, and home valuation. Importantly, he has also listened to many good suggestions from Eric Jackson and investors, and in a short time has improved several of the AI concerns that people raised. That shows he isn’t stubborn — he’s open to feedback and willing to act on it.
This shows the company is upgrading itself, stepping into the future — not being “controlled” by anyone. The reality is clear: Opendoor is becoming stronger than ever.

That is the difference between real leadership and empty noise.
So let’s be clear: RSUs are long-term incentives tied to performance, not “free money.” If the company fails, they’re worth zero. Shrisha and the management team are the ones actually carrying responsibility.
By contrast, people shouting on social media every day carry zero responsibility if things go wrong. Without Carrie, Shrisha, and the rest of the team, the company would have collapsed during its hardest times. And now, Eric Jackson is trying to seize the results of their hard-earned work — that’s deeply unfair.
Of course, I’m not saying Eric Jackson has no credit. He did help bring many people back to notice and support this stock, and I appreciate that. But in terms of company governance and long-term growth, I believe the management will find the right leader — someone capable, technical, and open to shareholder input. That’s a much more stable path forward, and far healthier for the company.
Let’s not forget, Carrie Wheeler and her team carried this company through the toughest period. It was the endless outside noise that forced her out, not a lack of competence. But that doesn’t mean the company has no direction. On the contrary, Opendoor has already stated on its official website that it is actively searching for a new, highly capable CEO for the next stage.
Armstrong : They did not steal. On the contrary, they are exhausting various methods to assist Opendoor.
Armstrong Armstrong : The stock price fell to $0.5, and a delisting notice was received, necessitating a reverse stock split. If it weren't for Eric, a reverse stock split would certainly have taken place.
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