OpenAI gears up to go public: the biggest IPO of the AI era
The maker of ChatGPT has confidentially filed to list on the stock market, after being valued at 852 billion dollars.
The company that put ChatGPT on everyone’s lips has taken the step many expected: OpenAI has confidentially filed paperwork to go public. In other words, it’s preparing to become a listed company — and not just any one. After a giant funding round that valued it at around 852 billion dollars, this could be the largest market debut of the AI era.
Why it matters
An IPO forces you to open the books. Until now, OpenAI has moved with the discretion of a private company; once listed, it’ll have to show revenue, costs and — the most sensitive part — how much it’s actually spending to train and run its models. At a moment when the market is starting to ask when all this AI turns a profit, those numbers will be picked apart to the decimal.
There’s a backstage read, too: the company has been investing in its own inference chips, trying to lean less on Nvidia’s hardware and get a tighter grip on its energy bill. A sign that the next battle isn’t only about software — it’s about infrastructure.
And for the rest of us?
For the everyday user, little changes right away. But a publicly traded OpenAI faces more public scrutiny and the pressure of quarterly results, which tends to discipline spending and speed up products that pay the bills. Worth watching. Official product information is at openai.com.
See also: AI changing its tune, from spending to showing returns.
Image: Wikimedia Commons