OpenAI has reached a valuation of $500 billion after a secondary stock sale that allowed current and former employees to sell $6.6 billion worth of shares to a consortium of global investors. The transaction has positioned the San Francisco-based company as potentially the world’s most valuable startup, overtaking Elon Musk’s SpaceX and TikTok’s parent company ByteDance. Investors participating in the deal included Thrive Capital, Dragoneer Investment Group, T. Rowe Price, Japanese tech giant SoftBank, and United Arab Emirates–based MGX, according to a source familiar with the deal. The sale underscores the extraordinary expectations attached to generative AI technology and reflects OpenAI’s rapid rise since its founding as a nonprofit research lab in 2015.
The valuation comes despite OpenAI not yet being a profitable enterprise, prompting debate around whether such high levels of investor confidence signal sustainable growth or hint at an AI bubble. Critics point to the massive sums being funneled into research and development by OpenAI and its competitors, warning that investor expectations may outpace real-world adoption. OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has addressed these concerns, noting that the company anticipates both setbacks and breakthroughs as AI technology matures. During a recent visit to a large-scale data center project in Abilene, Texas, Altman emphasized that while the sector will experience periods of overinvestment and underinvestment, the long-term trajectory of AI is expected to deliver significant economic and social benefits.
In recent weeks, OpenAI has expanded its portfolio with two new ventures, including a partnership with Etsy and Shopify to enable online shopping through ChatGPT, as well as the launch of a social media app, Sora, that allows users to create and share AI-generated videos. These moves illustrate how OpenAI is working to broaden the commercial applications of its AI models while also responding to competitive pressure from tech giants like Meta Platforms, which has made significant investments in AI talent and infrastructure. The company’s ability to balance innovation with sustainable revenue models remains a central challenge as it competes for talent and capital.
At the corporate level, OpenAI operates under a hybrid structure in which its for-profit arm, now valued at $500 billion, is governed by the nonprofit board. This arrangement has drawn attention from regulators in California and Delaware, who oversee nonprofits incorporated in their jurisdictions. The scrutiny has intensified as OpenAI finalizes major partnerships with companies including Oracle, SoftBank, and Nvidia, while simultaneously adjusting its long-standing relationship with Microsoft. In September, OpenAI disclosed a tentative agreement with Microsoft regarding its nonprofit’s future stake in the for-profit entity but released limited details. Additionally, OpenAI recently opened applications for $50 million in nonprofit grants aimed at funding projects that promote public understanding of AI and support community-driven applications of the technology. The deadline for applications is October 8, highlighting the company’s effort to align its commercial growth with broader societal contributions.
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