"OpenAI" postpones IPO, risks markets, presses value of less than $1 trillion
OpenAI is considering postponing its listing on the stock exchange, or IPO, to 2027, although it has previously filed classified preliminary documents, or Confidential Filing, with U.S. regulators.
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Of course, the main reason is not the cancellation of the IPO plan, but the change of strategy that wants to keep the value of the company at a level of $1 trillion by avoiding IPOs during this period of volatile markets, which risk declining the value of the company in the case of "SpaceX."
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The original choice of OpenAI is to enter an IPO by 2026, can raise funds quickly, shareholders and investors can sell some shares, and can still hold on to the hot AI momentum, but the potential risk is that the market may not reach $1 trillion. If the shares open and the price falls, it will hurt the long-term OpenAI image.
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The wait until 2027 for the business to grow a little further, increase revenue and customer base, strengthen financial structure before opening statements to the public, is more likely than OpenAI's value to reach $1 trillion, according to the goal set.
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If OpenAI can successfully pass an IPO of $1 trillion, it will immediately become one of the world's most highly valued technology companies. Why is it worth $1 trillion at risk?
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This is due to factors that caused the IPO market to begin to be questioned by the "SpaceX Effect" that the early stages would have caught the attention of global investors, but after entering the market, the stock price became extremely volatile, causing investors to become cautious with AI stocks and big technology after this.
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This problem forced OpenAI to revisit its IPO entry plan after investors began to view the profitability of AI stocks, which became an inflated question of value, and AI companies also required huge amounts of data center investment and AI models.
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Another interesting point is that being a public company can put enormous pressure on it with clear, tighter regulations. Listing on the stock exchange is not only a plus, but also a constraint. If OpenAI is a public company, it must disclose financial statements quarterly, be pressured for short-term profit, be thoroughly monitored for cost and investment, be ready to communicate with shareholders at all times.
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While the AI business is still in the process of spending huge investments to build infrastructure and develop new models, the fiercer competition OpenAI needs to choose to "wait" rather than hastily raise capital, because finally, in the eyes of investors, flows are less important than company quality and real tangible profit.
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