OpenAI – The Elusive Trillion

OpenAI could be the dark horse of the AI industry.

  • OpenAI appears to be delaying its IPO, which will prevent an embarrassing rejection by the market but also reveals a company that I have long believed is not ready for the heat and scrutiny of the public market.
  • OpenAI’s valuation remains stubbornly stuck at $730bn while its arch-rival Anthropic has blasted through the $1tn barrier, is likely profitable and should attract strong demand when it goes public.
  • Delaying the IPO is a sign that this is not the right time for OpenAI, and I suspect that its internal systems are not yet ready to be able to report reliable quarterly earnings.
  • Furthermore, the governance of this company also remains a mess, although cleaning up the relationship with Microsoft has clarified the structure somewhat.  
  • These are all reasons to delay the IPO, but the biggest one appears to be OpenAI’s likely failure to receive a valuation in excess of $1tn, which appears to be unacceptable to Sam Altman.
  • It is also a clear sign that OpenAI’s financial performance has been eclipsed by Anthropic which I think may have broken even in Q1 2026.
  • This is a result of Anthropic commanding a premium price for its product, evidenced by the fact that when it comes to coding, no one talks about anything else and my estimate that Anthropic is earning around $20bn – $25bn per GW of compute capacity.
  • Compute that costs around $41bn per GW to build, and $1.5bn to run annually offers a return of more than 20% when it generates more than $20bn / GW in annual revenues which is why I think Anthropic is currently enjoying healthy gross margins.
  • However, Anthropic has just leased capacity from xAI at a price of $37.7bn per year per GW, meaning that it will need to double its prices to continue being profitable.
  • At this price, it makes more sense to build the capacity in-house, but that means waiting at least 2 years for compute to come online, and most of the companies think that they do not have that kind of time.
  • Everywhere one looks in the market, the token-maxing trend has given way to token rationing, as the sellers of tokens have shifted from all-you-can-eat to pay-as-you-go as scarce compute has driven prices up substantially.
  • This is where OpenAI may end up being the dark horse.
  • Anthropic was very late in securing compute, and so it is having to pay a large premium, whereas OpenAI closed its deals out to 2030 over a year ago.
  • This means that there is a good chance that OpenAI is paying Oracle and its other providers a fraction of what Anthropic has signed for, meaning that its cost base going into 2027 and 2028 could be far lower than its peers.
  • This could allow it to substantially undercut Anthropic and be profitable, leaving Anthropic unable to compete.
  • This would be the time to go for IPO and so a decision to delay to next year does make more sense than one man’s vanity.
  • This assumes that its suppliers are unable to wiggle out of their contracts and have no capacity to raise prices, and if I were Oracle or CoreWeave, I would be looking at exactly this.
  • Hence, I am warming up to the idea of OpenAI as the market increasingly dislikes it and it may have an ace up its sleeve.
  • In the meantime, the focus will now switch to Anthropic’s IPO where the numbers will need to be spectacular to justify a valuation north of $1tn.

RICHARD WINDSOR

Richard is founder, owner of research company, Radio Free Mobile. He has 16 years of experience working in sell side equity research. During his 11 year tenure at Nomura Securities, he focused on the equity coverage of the Global Technology sector.

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