Contrary to fueling hype, public offerings from companies like OpenAI would introduce real financial data into the market. This transparency could ground the "AI bubble" conversation in actual performance metrics, clarifying the significant information gap that currently exists for investors.
According to Apollo's co-president, increasing questions around the off-balance-sheet debt used by AI labs to finance GPUs will pressure them to go public sooner than anticipated. An IPO would provide access to more traditional and transparent capital markets, such as convertible debt and public equity, to fund their massive infrastructure needs.
OpenAI's potential IPO appears driven not just by ambition but by the need to service immense outstanding obligations to data infrastructure partners. This financial pressure conflicts with CEO Sam Altman's stated disinterest in leading a public company.
OpenAI's CFO hinted at needing government guarantees for its massive data center build-out, sparking fears of an AI bubble and a "too big to fail" scenario. This reveals the immense financial risk and growing economic dependence the U.S. is developing on a few key AI labs.
In a market downturn, public AI companies face mark-to-market stock pressure and employee anxiety. As a private player whose public partners' valuations depend on it, OpenAI could be insulated from this volatility, giving it a stability advantage.
Current AI spending appears bubble-like, but it's not propping up unprofitable operations. Inference is already profitable. The immense cash burn is a deliberate, forward-looking investment in developing future, more powerful models, not a sign of a failing business model. This re-frames the financial risk.
The current market is unique in that a handful of private AI companies like OpenAI have an outsized, direct impact on the valuations of many public companies. This makes it essential for public market investors to deeply understand private market developments to make informed decisions.
The current AI hype is fueled by massive corporate spending on LLMs and chips. The entire bubble is at risk of unwinding when a critical mass of these companies reports that they are not achieving the promised ROI, causing a rapid pullback in investment.
The company is discussing an IPO while reportedly facing $1.4 trillion in financial obligations and losing $20 billion this year on just $13 billion in revenue. This unprecedented cash burn and debt-to-revenue ratio creates a financial picture that seems untenable for a public offering without a radical, unproven shift in its business model.
Companies like SpaceX and OpenAI command massive private valuations partly because access to their shares is scarce. An IPO removes this barrier, making the stock universally available. This loss of scarcity value can lead to a valuation decline, a pattern seen in other assets like crypto when they became easily accessible via ETFs.
An experienced CFO communicating erratically at OpenAI is a symptom of a larger problem. The private market bubble allows companies to become critical to the economy without ever facing the discipline and transparency required of public entities, creating systemic risk.