OpenAI’s Valuation Skyrockets Toward $500B as Employees Offload $6B in Shares—AI Gold Rush Heats Up
Silicon Valley's favorite AI lab just hit the jackpot—again. OpenAI's internal valuation could soon touch half-a-trillion dollars as early investors and employees cash out $6 billion in shares. The move signals both staggering confidence and a classic tech-sector exit strategy.
From moonshot to money machine
What started as a non-profit research project now flirts with valuations rivaling Big Tech's old guard. The secondary share sale—one of the largest in AI history—proves even machine learning pioneers can't resist the siren song of liquidity events.
Bankers circle as paper turns to gold
Wall Street's usual suspects reportedly tripped over themselves to underwrite the deal. Because nothing fuels financial innovation like converting Silicon Valley hype into tradable securities—and collecting fees on both ends.
The AI bubble keeps inflating, but this time with better chatbots. Whether OpenAI becomes the next FAANG stock or just another case study in overexuberance remains to be seen—though at $500 billion, someone's definitely drinking the Kool-Aid.
Softbank is committed to leading a financing round
Besides the possible share purchase, SoftBank agreed to front OpenAI’s $40 billion fundraising round, which has already drawn in $8.3 billion from investors. Moreover, according to sources, the Japanese firm had already struck a $1 billion deal to buy an employee’s shares before negotiations over the secondary valuation commenced.
Representatives for Dragoneer, Thrive, and Softbank have yet to give an official statement on the secondary share sale. Nevertheless, all three firms are OpenAI backers.
The share sale is set to provide more liquidity for OpenAI’s workers at a time when tech companies are poaching for AI talent. Tech giants such as Meta have been offering hefty compensation and benefits to pull in staffers from AI firms. Several employees, including ChatGPT co-creator Shengjia Zhao, have already left this year.
For startups, employee share sales can be a great retention strategy, seeing that they can avoid going through an IPO or acquisition. Typically, sale offers extend to early investors looking to lighten their positions. However, in OpenAI’s case, only current and past employees with two or more years at the company are eligible.
If a deal is finalized, the $500 billion price tag WOULD rank OpenAI as the most valuable startup globally, surpassing SpaceX. The company estimates it could rake in nearly $13 billion in 2025, at least triple 2024’s earnings.
OpenAI introduced its new GPT-5 model
Just recently, OpenAI launched its new GPT-5 model. However, the model’s release drew criticism from analysts who found it less intuitive, leading the firm to reinstate GPT-4 for its paying customers.
SoftBank Group founder and CEO Masayoshi Son and OpenAI co-founder and CEO Sam Altman recently emphasized the rising demand for AI-driven systems.
The surge in interest is pushing AI companies to accelerate the development of advanced computing power. Speaking during a video conference at SoftBank World, industry leaders outlined strategies for weaving AI into business operations. Some participants noted that progress in AI could create more job opportunities.
They also pointed to the benefits of developing robotics, calling it a potential game-changer that could kickstart a new cycle of self-sustaining innovation. Son and Altman held an in-depth discussion on AI, where Son questioned the diminishing returns of further expansion. Altman responded that lowering the cost of AI would drive higher adoption.
He explained that if AI became ten times cheaper, demand could increase thirtyfold—or even more. The global appetite for AI is immense, the OpenAI CEO emphasized.
The exchange occurred before an audience of Japanese entrepreneurs and industry leaders, with the central theme revolving around self-propagating innovation.
Your crypto news deserves attention - KEY Difference Wire puts you on 250+ top sites