OpenAI is no longer just building software; it is trying to build a new industrial revolution.
According to sources close to the negotiations, the AI juggernaut led by Sam Altman is in advanced talks to raise a staggering $100 billion in fresh capital. The deal would value the company at approximately $830 billion, effectively making it the most valuable startup in history by a wide margin—dwarfing SpaceX’s recent $800 billion valuation.
The Numbers Are Astronomical
To put this into perspective:
- The entire GDP of nations like Bulgaria or Sri Lanka is less than what OpenAI is trying to raise in a single round.
- At $830 billion, OpenAI would be worth more than Tesla, Berkshire Hathaway, or TSMC were just a few years ago.
Why Do They Need $100 Billion?
The short answer: Infrastructure.
The report suggests that the era of simply renting cloud space from Microsoft is over. OpenAI is looking to vertically integrate its hardware destiny. The capital is reportedly earmarked for three massive initiatives:
- The “Stargate” Expansion: Accelerating the construction of massive supercomputer clusters in the US Midwest.
- Custom Silicon: moving away from total reliance on Nvidia by finalizing the development of OpenAI’s proprietary AI accelerator chips (rumored to be code-named “Tigris”).
- Energy Independence: Investing directly in power generation (fusion and nuclear small modular reactors) to feed the insatiable electricity demand of GPT-6 training runs.
Who is Footing the Bill?
A round this size cannot be filled by traditional venture capitalists alone. The report indicates that the capital stack will likely include:
- Sovereign Wealth Funds: Major contributions are expected from UAE-based investment vehicle MGX and potentially the Saudi Public Investment Fund (PIF).
- SoftBank: Masayoshi Son has reportedly pledged to back the round as part of his “Artificial Superintelligence” vision.
- Tech Giants: Microsoft and potentially Apple are expected to participate to maintain their strategic partnerships.
The “One Rulebook” Complication
The fundraising comes at a delicate time. With the Biden-Harris administration’s “One Rulebook” executive order on AI safety still fresh, regulators in Washington are likely to scrutinize a deal involving so much foreign sovereign capital. However, sources say Altman is pitching this as a “national security imperative” to keep the US ahead of China in the race to AGI.
The Bottom Line
If this deal closes, OpenAI ceases to be just a tech company. It becomes an economic superpower in its own right, betting the entire bank on the belief that Artificial General Intelligence is not just possible, but imminent.