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OpenAI will reserve portion of IPO shares for retail investors, CFO tells CNBC

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OpenAI plans to reserve IPO shares for retail investors, after strong demand in funding rounds. The firm may seek a ~$1T valuation, signaling a major shift in investor access.

(Reuters) - OpenAI plans to reserve a portion of its shares from an initial public offering for individual investors, CFO Sarah Friar ​told CNBC on Wednesday, as the ChatGPT maker gears ‌up for a highly anticipated U.S. stock market listing.

The AI startup is laying the groundwork for an IPO that could value it at up ​to $1 trillion and may file with securities regulators as ​soon as the second half of 2026, Reuters reported last ⁠year.

Friar told CNBC that the AI startup started testing the ​waters with retail in its latest funding round and saw "really strong ​demand" from individuals. While she did not comment on the IPO timeline, she said it's "good hygiene" for a company of OpenAI's size to "look and feel ​and act ... like a public company."

OpenAI raised over $3 billion from ​individual investors in its latest funding round. It closed the round with $122 billion ‌in ⁠committed capital at a post-money valuation of $852 billion.

The company initially targeted $1 billion from individual investors via private placements through banks such as JP Morgan, Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs, but ended up ​securing three times ​that amount ⁠in the largest private placement those banks have ever done, Friar told CNBC.

Large institutional investors have ​historically been the primary recipients of IPO allocations, with ​retail ⁠investors typically receiving only 5% to 10% of shares in public offerings.

However, billionaire Elon Musk is planning to allocate as much as 30% ⁠of SpaceX's ​IPO to individual investors - at least ​three times the usual retail slice. SpaceX confidentially filed for a U.S. market debut earlier this ​month.

 

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