- OpenAI discussed spinning out its robotics and consumer hardware divisions to let them raise outside capital and operate more independently.
- The plan was rejected for now, partly because the units might still need to remain consolidated on OpenAI’s balance sheet.
- The discussion reflects OpenAI’s broader shift toward focusing on revenue-generating products, including its planned AI “superapp” for developers and enterprise users.
- Investors may increasingly push for clearer separation between OpenAI’s core business and long-term experimental bets ahead of an IPO.
What Happened?
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman discussed spinning out the company’s robotics and consumer hardware divisions late last year, according to a Wall Street Journal report. The idea was to give these businesses more independence and allow them to raise external capital without weighing down OpenAI’s core operations. The proposal was ultimately rejected, partly because OpenAI concluded the new entities might still have to remain consolidated on its balance sheet.
The discussions come as OpenAI prepares for a possible IPO and faces pressure to prioritize products that can meaningfully grow revenue. The company is now focusing more heavily on a new AI “superapp” aimed at coders and enterprise users, while also pulling back resources from less central products such as Sora to support its core business.
Why It Matters?
The report highlights a major investor question around OpenAI: how much capital should go toward the core AI business versus long-term bets like hardware and robotics. Spinning out these divisions could make OpenAI easier to evaluate by separating revenue-generating products from speculative projects that may require years of investment before producing returns.
An Alphabet-style structure could also improve transparency. Alphabet separates Google’s core businesses from “Other Bets” like Waymo and Verily, helping investors understand where profits are being generated and where losses are being absorbed. For OpenAI, a similar structure could make the IPO story cleaner by showing whether the core AI platform can stand on its own financially while still preserving upside from robotics and hardware.
What’s Next?
OpenAI may revisit the spinout idea in the future, especially if investor scrutiny increases ahead of an IPO. The company’s consumer hardware division, built around its $6.5 billion stock acquisition of Jony Ive’s io, is not expected to ship a device before the end of February 2027, making it a longer-duration bet rather than a near-term revenue driver.
The key thing to watch is whether OpenAI can balance ambition with financial discipline. Robotics and hardware could become major strategic assets over time, but for public-market investors, the near-term focus will likely remain on enterprise adoption, developer usage, revenue growth, compute costs, and how clearly OpenAI can separate its core business from its experimental moonshots.











