That would represent an eye-popping bump-up from its current valuation of $300-billion, with the sale underscoring both OpenAI’s rapid gains in users and revenue as well as the intense competition among artificial intelligence firms to secure talented workers.
The transaction, which would come before a potential IPO, would allow current and former employees to sell several billion dollars worth of shares, said the source, who requested anonymity because the talks are private.
Bolstered by its flagship product ChatGPT, OpenAI doubled its revenue in the first seven months of the year, reaching an annualised run rate of $12-billion, and is on track to reach $20-billion by year-end, the source added.
Microsoft-backed OpenAI has about 700 million weekly active users for its ChatGPT products, a surge from about 400 million in February.
The share sale talks come on the heels of OpenAI’s primary funding round announced earlier this year, which aims to raise $40-billion, led by Japan’s SoftBank Group.
SoftBank has until the end of the year to fund its $22.5-billion portion of the round, but the remainder has been subscribed at a valuation of $300-billion, the source said.
Tech giants are competing aggressively for AI talent with lucrative compensation packages. Meta is notably investing billions in Scale AI to poach its 28-year-old CEO, Alexandr Wang, so that he can lead its new super intelligence unit.
IPO
Unlisted firms such as ByteDance, Databricks and Ramp have also used private share sales to help update a company’s valuation and reward long-term employees.
Existing investors in OpenAI, including Thrive Capital, are in discussions to participate in the employee share sale, the source said. Thrive Capital declined to comment.
Read: ChatGPT’s mental health costs are adding up
OpenAI is working on a significant corporate restructuring that would move away from its current capped-profit model and open the door for an initial public offering in the future. Chief financial officer Sarah Friar said in May, however, that an IPO would only come when the company and markets were ready. — Krystal Hu in New York and Shivani Tanna, (c) 2025 Reuters
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