OpenAI Valued at $500B, Leaving SpaceX Behind

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OpenAI is in talks for a share sale that would reportedly value the company at $500 billion, a significant milestone that would see it eclipse Elon Musk’s SpaceX, currently valued at $350 billion. The transaction, involving the sale of shares held by employees, would increase the company’s valuation by two-thirds from its existing $300 billion. This major financial move is being led by investors such as Thrive Capital and signifies the immense capital and confidence flowing into the AI sector.

The share sale comes amid a fierce battle for talent in the AI industry. Mark Zuckerberg’s Meta has been aggressively poaching staff to build a new AI “superintelligence” unit, offering substantial bonuses. OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, while stating that Meta has not taken his “best people,” is likely using the share sale as a powerful retention tool. By allowing employees to sell some of their equity, the company can motivate staff and keep them from jumping ship. This is a crucial strategy as the AI industry heats up, with rival Anthropic also in talks for a massive fundraising round that could value it at $170 billion.

The high cost of training increasingly sophisticated AI models is a major driver of these fundraising efforts. OpenAI’s recent announcements, including hints about the upcoming GPT-5 model and the release of two new open-source models, highlight the immense resources required for R&D. The launch of the open models is a direct challenge to Meta and China’s DeepSeek, which have also made their models available to the public. However, OpenAI’s core business remains its closed, subscription-based models, which generate the revenue needed to fund its ambitious projects.

The company’s strategic vision extends beyond software. OpenAI’s recent $6.4 billion acquisition of io, a startup founded by Sir Jony Ive, marks its entry into the hardware space. CEO Sam Altman has a grand plan to build 100 million AI “companions” to be integrated into daily life. Although the new device isn’t expected to enter mass production until 2027, this initiative demonstrates OpenAI’s long-term goal of becoming a comprehensive AI company. The company is also in the process of transitioning to a for-profit structure, a move that has been met with legal challenges from co-founder Elon Musk, who alleges a deviation from the company’s original mission.

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