- Anthropic PBC is scheduling investor meetings in the coming weeks as it advances toward a potential IPO as soon as October 2026, according to Bloomberg News; Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs, and JPMorgan Chase are leading the offering and are arranging sessions between investors and Anthropic management; both Anthropic and rival OpenAI have filed confidentially for their respective listings, but OpenAI has pushed its target back to 2027 after earlier targeting a fall 2026 debut — meaning an October Anthropic IPO would give the Claude maker a significant first-mover advantage in the public markets, establishing a valuation benchmark before OpenAI’s listing and before Chinese competitor DeepSeek, which is also preparing to file as soon as this year.
- Anthropic was valued at $965 billion after a funding round in May 2026 — a figure that eclipsed OpenAI’s private valuation for the first time, reflecting the market’s view that Anthropic’s enterprise AI traction, its Constitutional AI safety framework, and its government relationships have made it a credible challenger to OpenAI’s early model leadership; the $965 billion valuation implies an IPO that could be among the largest in US history, and in the context of a 2026 IPO market that has already raised $227.5 billion — the most since 2021 — the Anthropic debut would likely be the defining listing of the year and a major benchmark for how public markets value AI model companies at scale.
- Anthropic’s IPO path carries meaningful uncertainty that distinguishes it from typical pre-IPO companies: the Trump administration briefly imposed foreign access restrictions on two of Anthropic’s top AI models (the Mythos restrictions that were subsequently lifted), and Anthropic previously sued the Defense Department after the department declared it posed a risk to the US supply chain — an extraordinary legal conflict between an AI company and a government that is simultaneously its regulator, customer, and potential security concern; the resolution of those disputes in Anthropic’s favor (restrictions lifted, suit resolved) has cleared the most immediate IPO obstacles, but the company’s regulatory relationship with Washington remains more complex and politically sensitive than virtually any prior technology IPO.
- The AI IPO wave of 2026 is rewriting capital markets history in real time: SpaceX’s June IPO was the largest in history; SK Hynix’s US listing last week was the third largest on record; and now Anthropic — alongside the anticipated eventual OpenAI and DeepSeek listings — is setting up what could be the most consequential sequence of technology IPOs in a single calendar year since the dot-com era; for public market investors who have been largely unable to access the AI model layer directly (most AI lab investment has been through private rounds), the Anthropic IPO represents the first opportunity to own a stake in a frontier AI model company through the public markets, which will likely generate extraordinary demand from funds that have been watching AI valuations compound in private markets for three years.
What Happened?
Anthropic PBC is scheduling investor meetings through its IPO banks — Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs, and JPMorgan — ahead of a potential public listing as soon as October 2026. The company was valued at $965 billion after its May funding round, briefly surpassing OpenAI’s private valuation for the first time. An October IPO would place Anthropic ahead of OpenAI (now targeting 2027) and DeepSeek (preparing to file this year) in the race to the public markets. Both Anthropic and OpenAI have already filed confidentially with the SEC for their listings.
Why It Matters?
Anthropic going public first among the frontier AI labs is a major strategic and financial event. It sets the public market valuation benchmark for the AI model layer before any competitor is listed, giving Anthropic the ability to use its stock as acquisition currency and giving public investors their first direct exposure to a frontier AI model company. The $965 billion private valuation implies a market cap that would instantly place Anthropic among the 10 largest US companies by market cap if it holds at IPO — a remarkable milestone for a company founded in 2021. The listing also tests whether public markets will sustain the valuations that private investors have been paying, with implications for OpenAI’s eventual offering.
What’s Next?
Watch for Anthropic’s public S-1 filing, which will be the first time the company discloses detailed financial information including revenue, margins, and growth rates; the private valuation of $965 billion will face intense scrutiny against whatever revenue figures Anthropic reports. Also watch the investor meeting process — the bank roadshow dynamic will reveal how institutional investors are sizing up the AI model category relative to AI infrastructure plays like Nvidia and the hyperscalers. If Anthropic prices in October, OpenAI’s 2027 timeline will also face pressure to accelerate, as a successful Anthropic debut could create investor demand that OpenAI will want to capture sooner rather than later.
Source: Bloomberg












