- OpenAI CFO Sarah Friar said the company may raise additional capital after its record $122 billion private round, with public markets flagged as a possible future avenue given their “significantly bigger” size vs. private markets.
- ChatGPT now has more than 900 million weekly active users; Codex, OpenAI’s software engineering product, has surpassed 4 million users — with enterprise demand described as “run ragged.”
- Compute remains the defining bottleneck: Friar said there is “not a lot of compute in 2026” and that securing it is a “huge competitive advantage” — future fundraising will hinge on the gap between what OpenAI needs and what it can afford.
- On the fraying Apple partnership, Friar said OpenAI wants to make the relationship work but declined to comment on possible litigation.
What Happened?
OpenAI CFO Sarah Friar told Bloomberg TV that the company may raise additional capital even after completing what she called the largest private fundraising round in history — a $122 billion round that valued the company at $852 billion. Friar said the company has “a lot of optionality” but that future raises will depend on demand growth, revenue trajectory, cash flow, and — critically — the gap between the computing power OpenAI needs and what it can currently afford. She also flagged public markets as an attractive long-term avenue for fundraising, noting they are “significantly bigger” than private capital pools. On the demand side: ChatGPT has 900 million weekly active users, Codex has 4 million users, and OpenAI’s enterprise sales team is “run ragged” by corporate customers seeking AI transformation.
Why It Matters?
Friar’s comments crystallize the central paradox of the AI boom: demand is accelerating faster than compute infrastructure can be built. OpenAI’s $122 billion raise — the largest in private market history — buys time but not permanence; Friar is already signaling that it may not be enough. The compute scarcity she describes (“there’s not a lot of compute in 2026”) is the same structural bottleneck driving the semiconductor supercycle, the hedge fund AI hardware trade, and the $670 billion in hyperscaler capex commitments for the year. For OpenAI specifically, losing the Apple partnership — which had put ChatGPT on hundreds of millions of devices — would be a significant distribution setback at exactly the moment the company is trying to capitalize on peak demand.
What’s Next?
Watch for signals on IPO timing — Friar’s mention of public markets as “significantly bigger” than private markets reads as a trial balloon. An OpenAI IPO would be one of the most consequential public offerings in technology history and would set a valuation benchmark for the entire AI sector. In the near term, the Apple situation is the most urgent overhang: if the partnership fractures into litigation, it would remove a major distribution channel and create reputational noise during OpenAI’s most critical commercial expansion phase. The compute crunch, meanwhile, makes every quarter of delayed infrastructure a competitive risk as Anthropic, Google, and xAI race to close the gap.
Source: Bloomberg












