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OpenAI's confidential IPO filing is a strategic move to provide "optionality" and combat talent drain to rival Anthropic. By allowing employees to sell shares at the last private valuation, they offer liquidity and counter the appeal of Anthropic's potential earlier public debut, framing the IPO as a flexible future step rather than an immediate plan.
The first AI lab to IPO gains a significant strategic advantage. A successful IPO could absorb available investor capital and momentum, making a competitor's subsequent offering more difficult. Conversely, a failed IPO could pop the "AI bubble" and close the window for everyone, making timing a high-stakes gamble.
The rush for OpenAI and Anthropic to go public is a strategic weapon, not just a financial necessity. The first AI leader to IPO can define market expectations for growth and valuation, putting immense pressure on the second company, which may have to compete against an already-established narrative.
Anthropic filing to go public before OpenAI creates a "narrative nightmare" for its rival. Public investors will directly compare the two, and with Anthropic's faster growth, potential profitability, and soaring valuation, OpenAI risks being perceived as the less attractive investment if it goes second.
In a powerful signal of internal optimism, Anthropic's employee stock tender offer failed to reach its full allocation. Mirroring a similar trend at OpenAI, employees are holding onto their shares—even those valued at a $380B valuation—reflecting a strong belief that the company's value will skyrocket leading up to an IPO.
Anthropic's rumored plan to go public before OpenAI is a strategic threat. If Anthropic IPOs first with a clearer path to profitability, it could absorb significant investor demand for AI stocks, putting OpenAI in a weaker position and forcing it to accelerate its own, less-prepared public debut.
The urgency around OpenAI's IPO is reportedly a strategic move by Sam Altman to access vast public capital for the escalating compute arms race. This suggests private markets are reaching their funding limits for AI giants. The IPO is therefore less a traditional exit and more a critical financing tool to outspend competitors like Anthropic.
OpenAI and Anthropic are filing for IPOs not to rush to market, but to create the option to go public when conditions are most favorable. This strategic move allows them to retain private company flexibility while being prepared for a public offering, reframing the common "IPO race" narrative.
Despite massive operating losses, OpenAI is likely accelerating its IPO to get to market before Anthropic. This allows OpenAI to set the investment narrative and valuation benchmark, rather than reacting to a potentially faster-growing competitor's story.
Anthropic's S-1 filing, coupled with IPO rumors for SpaceX and OpenAI, indicates a strategic rush among tech's most valuable private firms to access public funds. This is likely driven by the immense capital required for AI development and a desire to capture investor enthusiasm first.
Andrej Karpathy asserts that the liquidity of employee stock options is the "dominant first order term" driving talent behavior at frontier AI labs. Poor liquidity, as allegedly seen at Anthropic, reduces employee churn as it makes it harder for talent to leave and fund new ventures.