Opendoor Reimagines the Real Estate Market with iBuying
By James Moreau | 01 Apr, 2026
From a $10 million Series A to its current $5 billion market cap, Eric Wu has built Opendoor into a comprehensive e-commerce ecosystem for housing.
Fintech real estate operator Opendoor has redefined the residential property landscape, scaling from a Silicon Valley concept to a dominant market force. The company was founded in 2014 by a powerhouse quartet: Taiwanese American serial entrepreneur Eric Wu, Chinese American data scientist Ian Wong, product specialist JD Ross, and venture capitalist and managing director of Khosla Ventures Keith Rabois.
The founders brought a unique blend of domain expertise to the venture. Wu, who bought his first home at 19 with scholarship money and eventually amassed 25 properties before graduating from the University of Arizona, previously founded Movity, which was acquired by Trulia in 2010. Wong, a Stanford-educated data scientist, provided the quantitative backbone necessary to price homes at scale.
Wu served as Opendoor’s CEO from inception until 2022 and completed a transition into an advisory role by 2024. In the new role alongside Wong, who has continued as a technical advisor, they continue to eliminate the friction of home selling through “iBuying,” a model that uses proprietary AI valuation models to provide homeowners with near-instant cash offers, bypassing the traditional months-long listing process.
Opendoor raised $10M in Series A funding from Khosla Ventures and Y Combinator in May 2014. By the end of 2016 the company had already hit unicorn status.
Chamath Palihapitiya identified Opendoor as his second SPAC, launching its IPO in December 2020 with a valuation of $4.8 billion. Since the company’s public debut, its valuation has hit all-time highs of $20 billion, albeit during the pandemic-era housing market.
Though the company experienced a 90% drop in 2022 due to rising interest rates and losses, today the market cap sits at over $5 billion, up over 350% in the past year. This success has been driven by a shift toward “Opendoor 2.0,” a capital-light, AI-driven marketplace that prioritizes unit economics over raw volume.
Looking ahead, Opendoor’s goal is to manage the entire housing ecosystem, including title, escrow, and mortgage services, to provide a seamless, click-and-buy e-commerce experience for real estate.
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