- Altman proposed a $500M OpenAI investment in Helion — a nuclear fusion startup where he is a major shareholder — that would have valued it at $35 billion, a 6x increase; OpenAI refused, but signed a 50-gigawatt power purchase agreement Helion now uses as a fundraising credential
- Altman also sought OpenAI backing for Stoke Space, a rocket company his family office holds shares in, without all board members knowing — pitching an acquisition to compete directly with Musk’s SpaceX
- Altman holds no direct equity in OpenAI and earns $66,000 annually; his wealth is concentrated in hundreds of startup stakes pledged as collateral on a JPMorgan credit line he uses to make further investments
- Some shareholders are quietly floating board chair Bret Taylor as a potential CEO successor; top product executive Fidji Simo is on medical leave, creating a leadership vacuum at a critical pre-IPO moment
What Happened?
A Wall Street Journal investigation reveals OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has repeatedly sought to direct company resources toward startups where he personally holds stakes. Most notably, he proposed a $500 million OpenAI investment in Helion Energy — a nuclear fusion startup where he is one of the largest shareholders — at a valuation of $35 billion, more than six times its prior worth. OpenAI staff refused, citing doubts about Helion’s technology, with some employees avoiding internal Slack discussions fearing future litigation exposure. Altman separately pursued OpenAI backing for rocket-maker Stoke Space, in which his family office holds shares, without all board members being informed. OpenAI’s conflict-of-interest policies, strengthened after Altman’s 2023 firing, have never been publicly disclosed. Altman stepped down from Helion’s board last month — but not before OpenAI signed a 50-gigawatt power purchase agreement Helion now uses to bolster its fundraising.
Why It Matters?
The governance problem is structural. Altman holds no direct OpenAI equity — a legacy of its nonprofit origins — and earns just $66,000 per year. His actual wealth is an opaque portfolio of hundreds of startups pledged as collateral on a JPMorgan credit line. This creates an incentive architecture opposite to conventional public-company governance: Altman’s financial gains depend on outside companies, some of which compete for the same resources as OpenAI. As OpenAI approaches an IPO at a reported $850 billion valuation, this misalignment is no longer just an internal governance curiosity — it is a material investor concern requiring SEC-level disclosure. Some shareholders are already privately floating board chair Bret Taylor as a potential successor, compounded by the absence of product chief Fidji Simo on medical leave.
What’s Next?
An IPO filing will require far greater financial transparency than OpenAI has ever provided — including disclosure of Altman’s external holdings and any associated conflicts. How the board’s undisclosed conflict-management policy holds up under SEC scrutiny will be one of the most closely watched governance stories of the year. If the disclosures surface problematic conflicts, the $850 billion valuation will face serious pressure before the company even begins trading. Meanwhile OpenAI is competing with Anthropic for enterprise customers while simultaneously navigating leadership uncertainty, rolled-back products, and one of the most complex pre-IPO governance structures in tech history.
Source: The Wall Street Journal












