TL;DR: OpenAI confidentially filed its S-1 with the SEC on June 8, 2026 — exactly one week after rival Anthropic filed its own IPO paperwork. Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley are leading the offering, with early price talk suggesting a target valuation of up to $1 trillion. The filing reveals $25 billion in annualized revenue, $14 billion in projected 2026 losses, and a profitability horizon that stretches to roughly 2030. Combined with Anthropic’s $965 billion target, the two AI IPOs could inject nearly $2 trillion of market value into the public markets — making this the single most consequential moment for the AI agent economy since ChatGPT launched.
(Source: Reuters — OpenAI files confidentially for IPO)
The Numbers That Define the Offering
OpenAI’s S-1 contains numbers that are staggering by any standard — and deeply sobering when you look past the topline.
The company reported $25 billion in annualized revenue, driven by Codex enterprise adoption, API usage, and ChatGPT’s consumer subscription tiers. Codex alone has crossed 5 million weekly active users, with non-developer adoption growing three times faster than engineers — a signal that AI agents are breaking out of the developer niche and into mainstream knowledge work.
But the P&L tells a different story. OpenAI projects $14 billion in losses for 2026, meaning the company loses roughly $1.22 for every dollar it earns. The culprit is compute: training frontier models and serving inference at scale requires infrastructure spending that dwarfs even the revenue line. The filing projects a path to profitability around 2030 — four years from now and, in AI time, an eternity.
Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley have been tapped to lead the offering, putting the two most prestigious investment banks in the world behind what could become the largest tech IPO in history.
The Timing: One Week After Anthropic
The June 8 filing landed exactly seven days after Anthropic dropped its own S-1 on June 1, setting up a side-by-side comparison that Wall Street is already dissecting.
Anthropic’s filing revealed $8.5 billion in annualized revenue — roughly one-third of OpenAI’s — but with significantly lower losses, reflecting a more capital-efficient approach and a narrower product portfolio. Anthropic’s target valuation of $965 billion puts it within striking distance of OpenAI’s $1 trillion ceiling, despite the revenue gap, because investors are pricing in trajectory as much as current scale.
The one-two punch of both filings means the public markets are about to absorb roughly $2 trillion in AI company value in a matter of months. For context, that’s more than the entire market capitalization of Meta at the start of 2024.
Market Share Under Pressure
For all its revenue scale, OpenAI is losing ground. The S-1’s risk factors acknowledge intensifying competition from Anthropic and Google in enterprise AI, where Claude and Gemini have been winning deals on reliability, safety guarantees, and pricing. OpenAI’s once-commanding lead in the developer ecosystem is being eroded by Anthropic’s aggressive enterprise push and Google’s distribution advantage through Workspace and Cloud.
The confidential filing itself is a strategic move — OpenAI can revise its numbers and messaging before the public roadshow begins, buying time to frame the narrative around growth rather than losses. But the $14 billion loss figure is already circulating among institutional investors, and the question isn’t whether OpenAI can grow — it’s whether it can grow fast enough to justify a trillion-dollar price tag before the compute bill comes due.
What a $2 Trillion AI IPO Wave Means for the Agent Economy
The combined Anthropic-OpenAI IPO value — roughly $2 trillion — signals that the AI agent economy is graduating from venture-funded experiment to publicly traded reality. For builders in the agent ecosystem, the implications are immediate:
- Infrastructure becomes investable. When the two largest AI labs are publicly traded, every company in their supply chain — model routers, evaluation platforms, agent orchestration layers — becomes a potential acquisition target or public company in its own right.
- Revenue expectations reset. OpenAI’s $1.22 loss per dollar earned sets a benchmark that every AI startup will be measured against. The days of growth-at-all-costs are giving way to unit economics scrutiny.
- The agent economy gets a valuation anchor. With two public comparables, private AI companies now have a reference point for their own valuations. The ripple effects will touch everything from seed rounds to late-stage secondaries.
The confidential filing window means the full S-1 won’t be public for several more weeks. But the numbers already leaking out — $25 billion in revenue, $14 billion in losses, a trillion-dollar target — are enough to frame the debate. The largest AI company in the world is about to ask the public markets to bet on a future where the losses stop before the cash runs out.
(Primary source: Reuters — OpenAI files confidentially for IPO)
FAQ
Q: When will OpenAI’s full S-1 be made public?
A: The confidential filing means the full S-1 won’t be public for several weeks. The SEC review process typically takes 30–45 days before a public filing is released and the roadshow begins.
Q: How does OpenAI’s $1 trillion target compare to current public tech companies?
A: At $1 trillion, OpenAI would be valued higher than Meta was at the start of 2024. It would be the largest tech IPO in history by a significant margin.
Q: Is OpenAI profitable?
A: No. The S-1 projects $14 billion in losses for 2026 — roughly $1.22 lost for every dollar earned. The company projects a path to profitability around 2030.
Q: Why did OpenAI file confidentially instead of publicly?
A: Confidential filing lets OpenAI revise its numbers and messaging before the public roadshow begins. It’s a strategic move to frame the narrative around growth rather than the $14 billion loss figure while the SEC reviews the filing.
Q: Who are the underwriters?
A: Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley are leading the offering, putting the two most prestigious investment banks behind the deal.
Further Reading
- The Agent Report — Anthropic IPO: Confidential S-1 Filing
- The Agent Report — Forbes AI 50 2026: Agent Infrastructure Dominates
- Reuters — OpenAI files confidentially for IPO
- SEC — EDGAR Filing Search
— The Agent Report