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OpenAI Targets IPO: The Bill for Training Models Won't Pay Itself

OpenAI can no longer pretend that pocket money from Microsoft and random investments from venture funds are enough. Rumors of preparing for an IPO in the…

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OpenAI Targets IPO: The Bill for Training Models Won't Pay Itself
Source: 3DNews AI. Collage: Hamidun News.
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OpenAI can no longer pretend that pocket money from Microsoft and random investments from venture funds are enough. Rumors of preparing for an IPO in the fourth quarter of 2026 confirm what insiders have been saying for a year: the appetite of modern neural networks is growing faster than the imagination of the boldest investors. When you're burning billions of dollars training a single model, even the most generous partners start nervously eyeing the balance sheet.

Until now, Sam Altman has virtuosically played the role of a tech messiah, navigating between the status of a nonprofit organization and the world's most expensive startup. The closed structure was a perfect shield for OpenAI. It allowed them to hide spending details, the actual cost of generating a single ChatGPT response, and most importantly, the degree of financial dependence on cloud infrastructure. But the era of cozy secrecy is coming to an end. Transitioning to public company status is not just a way to attract capital—it's a forced capitulation to reality.

Why wait until the end of 2026? The answer lies in development cycles and the need to polish financial metrics. By that time, the company must present not just another GPT update, but a full-fledged ecosystem capable of generating revenue at industrial scale. Wall Street investors, unlike visionaries from Silicon Valley, react poorly to promises of creating a digital god in some indefinite future. They need understandable multiples, growth charts, and most importantly, an answer to the question: when will this loss-making machine that converts electricity into text start generating net profit?

This move is also tied to internal changes in the company's structure. We've already seen key figures responsible for safety leaving OpenAI, and how Altman is gradually sidelining the nonprofit board of directors. The IPO will be the final chord in transforming OpenAI from a research lab into a classic corporation. For future shareholders, this is good news—profit will become the number one priority. For those who believed in AI for the benefit of humanity without regard for stock prices, it sounds like an epitaph.

Going public will be a moment of truth for the entire industry. If OpenAI successfully launches and maintains high valuation, it will legitimize the current AI boom. If the pre-IPO audit uncovers a financial hole that cannot be closed even with millions of subscriptions, the market faces a cold shower comparable to the dot-com crash. We will see a bold startup transform into a heavyweight structure, where every decision will be made with an eye toward market reaction and the opinion of analysts from the largest banks.

For ordinary users, this means inevitable commercialization. OpenAI will have to squeeze money from every request. Free versions may become even slower and more limited, and access to the most powerful models will become a privilege for big business. The race for artificial general intelligence (AGI) officially enters a phase where the stock market is the ultimate judge. The romantic period of garage research gives way to the dry lines of quarterly reports.

The bottom line: OpenAI's IPO is less about success and more about survival under conditions of capital scarcity. Can the company prove it knows how to make money as efficiently as it spends it?

ZK
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