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Jon Keegan

WSJ: OpenAI plans Q4 IPO in race to be the first AI startup to enter public markets

OpenAI was the first to the generative-AI market with ChatGPT, and now it hopes to be the first of its AI startup cohort to pull off an initial public offering, according to a report from The Wall Street Journal. The $500 billion startup is in a race against its $350 billion competitor Anthropic, which has also been exploring an IPO.

Per the report, OpenAI is in talks with banks to try for a fourth-quarter IPO this year, which has the potential to be one of the largest IPOs ever in a year that is expected to see many record-breaking tech companies tap into public markets to raise sizable new rounds of capital.

Ahead of a potential public listing, OpenAI is reportedly attempting to raise a massive round of private investment. The company is reportedly aiming to raise $100 billion, with Amazon potentially accounting for up to half of that target. Other investors in talks with OpenAI over the private fundraising round include Nvidia, Microsoft, and SoftBank.

Per the report, OpenAI is in talks with banks to try for a fourth-quarter IPO this year, which has the potential to be one of the largest IPOs ever in a year that is expected to see many record-breaking tech companies tap into public markets to raise sizable new rounds of capital.

Ahead of a potential public listing, OpenAI is reportedly attempting to raise a massive round of private investment. The company is reportedly aiming to raise $100 billion, with Amazon potentially accounting for up to half of that target. Other investors in talks with OpenAI over the private fundraising round include Nvidia, Microsoft, and SoftBank.

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White House said to oppose Anthropic’s plan to expand Mythos access to more companies

Anthropic is ready to invite a wider group of companies to gain access to Claude Mythos, the company’s powerful next-generation AI chatbot.

The tightly controlled model has been deemed something of a security risk by Anthropic itself, due to its ability to find thousands of software vulnerabilities and potentially be used for sophisticated cyberattacks.

About 50 companies have been given access to test the capabilities of the new model, and Anthropic wanted to expand that to 120, according to a report from The Wall Street Journal.

The Trump administration is blocking the move out of concerns that the new technology could fall into the wrong hands, per the report.

Yesterday, Bloomberg reported that Anthropic was in talks to raise money with a $900 billion valuation — higher than its archrival in the AI chatbot world, OpenAI, which was recently valued at $852 billion.

About 50 companies have been given access to test the capabilities of the new model, and Anthropic wanted to expand that to 120, according to a report from The Wall Street Journal.

The Trump administration is blocking the move out of concerns that the new technology could fall into the wrong hands, per the report.

Yesterday, Bloomberg reported that Anthropic was in talks to raise money with a $900 billion valuation — higher than its archrival in the AI chatbot world, OpenAI, which was recently valued at $852 billion.

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Alphabet, Amazon, Microsoft, and Meta plan to spend more than $700 billion on capex this year

Big Tech’s big capital spending continues to surge even higher than the companies had previously expected.

Alphabet raised its 2026 capex outlook to between $180 billion and $190 billion, up from $175 billion to $185 billion. Meta increased its 2026 forecast to $125 billion to $145 billion, up from $115 billion to $135 billion. Microsoft, meanwhile, said it’s planning on spending $190 billion this calendar year, about $55 billion more than the FactSet analyst consensus. Amazon, the lone outlier, didn’t boost its capex forecast, keeping it at a cool $200 billion.

Combined, Alphabet, Amazon, Microsoft, and Meta plan to spend more than $700 billion on capex in 2026, nearly double what they spent last year and $100 billion more than they’d expected just last quarter, as they continue to build out the AI infrastructure to support their AI futures.

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Sherwood News
Microsoft AI Tour

Microsoft’s capex outlay this year would be enough to buy every outstanding share of Disney

CFO Amy Hood said on last night’s earnings call that the company will spend $190 billion on capex in 2026.

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