
On the 8th of June 2026, OpenAI announced its IPO in addition with a confidential Form S-1 submission. The company made the announcement itself to prevent any potential leaks. Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley are leading the underwriting, so a public listing could occur soon.
The company reportedly seeks an $852 billion to $1 trillion valuation which would place it among the world’s most valuable public companies.
The OpenAI IPO: Confidential S-1 and the “We Expect It to Leak” Strategy
OpenAI’s confidential S-1 follows a similar move from Anthropic and SpaceX also debuted publicly around the same time. Consequently, the three companies form a “powerhouse trio” racing to Wall Street.
Moreover, the confidential process permits OpenAI to work with regulators without private pressure so the company can adjust its financial disclosures quietly. OpenAI preemptively announced the filing, thereby turning a secret into a marketing advantage.
“We expect it to leak so we’re just announcing it,” the company declared. As a result, this timing pits OpenAI directly against its fiercest rivals in the public eye.
The Three-Way AI IPO Race and What It Means for Market Sentiment
At the moment, market valuations place Anthropic at $965 billion and OpenAI at $852 billion while SpaceX is targeting an eye-popping $1.75 trillion valuation. Together, the combined IPO pipeline exceeds $3.6 trillion.
In addition, strong performances could unlock massive capital for other AI startups but weak debuts might freeze funding across the entire sector. For this reason, each offering’s performance will heavily influence the others.
The Trillion-Dollar Valuation Ambition and the Profitability Gap
None of the three AI leaders currently generates a net profit, yet OpenAI’s revenue reached $57 billion in the most recent quarter. However, cash burn hit $37 billion and operating losses totaled $93 billion after removing non-cash charges.
Also, research and development alone consumed $86 billion. The company spent $34 billion last year and expects similar outflows this year. Profitability remains a distant goal, so investors will view these numbers as either growth investments or financial red flags.
What the OpenAI IPO Reveals About AI’s Capital Intensity and Strategic Pivot
For the first time, AI’s brutal economics will be exposed with this public filing. The company has committed $1.4 trillion over nearly a decade for data center infrastructure. Consequently, OpenAI is stopping non-core projects like Sora while introducing a cheaper ChatGPT tier and streamlining operations.
In addition, management also plans to introduce advertisements, projecting ads to become the largest revenue driver by 2030. However, going public carries clear tradeoffs as increased transparency often deters future private funding.
Why This IPO Could Reshape More Than Just OpenAI
A disappointing debut could trigger a severe supply chain shock because Nvidia, Oracle, and CoreWeave rely heavily on OpenAI’s sustained spending. The company does not forecast positive cash flow for several years.
Nevertheless, OpenAI argues that public markets offer the deepest pool of long-term capital. Ultimately, this IPO window will test whether huge AI valuations rest on strong fundamentals or merely on compelling narratives.