- OpenAI has completed a $122 billion funding round at an $852 billion valuation, with Amazon committing $50B, Nvidia $30B, and SoftBank $30B as the largest backers
- The deal dwarfs any previous startup funding round, IPO, or major acquisition in history, making it the largest single financing transaction ever recorded
- OpenAI is generating $2 billion in monthly revenue, with enterprise sales at 40% of revenue and expected to hit 50% by year-end; the company’s ad pilot hit $100M in annualized revenue after just six weeks
- The company confirmed plans for a unified “SuperApp” desktop platform combining its chatbot, coding tool, and browser — while discontinuing the Sora AI video generator
What Happened?
OpenAI has finalized a record-breaking $122 billion financing round that values the ChatGPT maker at $852 billion — the largest funding raise in corporate history. The bulk of the capital came from three major tech heavyweights: Amazon invested $50 billion (with $35 billion contingent on an IPO or achieving artificial general intelligence), while Nvidia and SoftBank each contributed $30 billion. Additional investors include Andreessen Horowitz, Abu Dhabi’s MGX, D.E. Shaw Ventures, TPG, and T. Rowe Price. In a first for the company, OpenAI raised more than $3 billion directly from individual investors through bank channels and announced it will be included in several Ark Invest ETFs, giving retail investors broader exposure to the firm.
Why It Matters?
The sheer scale of this deal signals how seriously the world’s largest companies view AI as transformative — not just for individual industries but for entire economies. OpenAI’s $852 billion valuation eclipses the market caps of most publicly traded companies globally and far outpaces prior startup fundraises by rivals Anthropic and xAI. The company is generating $2 billion in monthly revenue with enterprise sales accelerating rapidly. CFO Sarah Friar described the deal as something that “blows out of the water even the largest IPO that’s ever been done.” Amazon’s partnership also includes a cloud agreement with a revenue-sharing component, deepening the interdependence between the world’s biggest cloud provider and the leading AI lab — a tie-up that raises systemic questions about what happens if AI expectations fail to materialize.
What’s Next?
OpenAI is expected to pursue an IPO as soon as this year, with Friar describing the company as needing to be “public-company capable.” The company has committed to spending more than $1.4 trillion on physical infrastructure and is streamlining its product portfolio — discontinuing Sora while developing a unified “SuperApp” that combines its chatbot, coding tools, and browser. CEO Sam Altman also signaled a reorganization of security and safety teams to better integrate that work into the development process. OpenAI’s advertising pilot, launched earlier this year, has already generated $100 million in annualized revenue after just six weeks, suggesting a meaningful new revenue stream alongside its subscription model.
Source: Bloomberg










