Anthropic vs OpenAI: The IPO Race Driving AI's Fastest Era

Key Takeaways

- Anthropic filed for IPO on June 1, forcing OpenAI to follow a week later despite targeting September
- OpenAI fast-tracked ChatGPT in two weeks after learning Anthropic was building a competing chatbot
- Banks are erecting internal barriers between deal teams to prevent information leaks as both companies press advisers for rival intelligence
A Chatbot Rumor That Changed Everything
ChatGPT exists because of a rumor. In late 2022, OpenAI heard Anthropic was building an AI-powered chatbot. Sam Altman responded by ordering his team to fast-track a competitor. Two weeks later, ChatGPT launched and sparked a technological revolution.
That same competitive urgency now drives both companies toward Wall Street. Anthropic filed confidentially with U.S. regulators on June 1. OpenAI followed a week later. Both view being first to market as a way to frame investor expectations and establish their CEO as the leading voice of AI.
The Stakes Behind the IPO Race
OpenAI initially expected to file first. The company told some investors it was targeting an IPO as early as September. Anthropic's surprise filing forced a change in strategy.
The rivalry runs deeper than corporate competition. Dario Amodei was a researcher at OpenAI before founding Anthropic. He was one of the people responsible for the core technology that made ChatGPT possible. His departure in 2021 came from philosophical differences over AI safety versus rapid commercialization.
“We are building a company, not just a model. Reliability in high-stakes industries is the new competitive frontier.”
— Dario Amodei, CEO of Anthropic
OpenAI is targeting a valuation around $1 trillion for its public debut. Anthropic's latest private valuation reportedly exceeds $900 billion. Both figures would make these among the largest tech IPOs in history.
Wall Street's Uncomfortable Position
Two direct rivals this large rarely raise capital at the same time. The IPOs are so massive that both companies must turn to some of the same banks for help. This creates an awkward situation.
Executives at both companies have pressed their IPO advisers for insight into rival plans. Some banks working with both companies have erected internal barriers between deal teams to prevent information leaks. The pressure is intense enough that advisers are navigating increasingly complex relationships with both sides.
“The race is not about who reaches AGI first, but who can make it the most useful for the world's largest enterprises right now.”
— Sam Altman, CEO of OpenAI
Different Strategies, Different Bets
The companies have diverged in their market approaches. OpenAI dominated the consumer market with ChatGPT. Anthropic pivoted toward enterprise-grade AI with what it calls Constitutional AI. This focus on B2B has reportedly given Anthropic a 70% win rate in head-to-head enterprise contracts.
Anthropic's enterprise strategy has paid off. The company reportedly reached $47 billion in annualized revenue as of June 2026, officially surpassing OpenAI. Much of this growth came from agentic tools like Claude Code, which drove enterprise adoption.
OpenAI faces its own challenges. The company's projected cash burn for 2026 is reportedly $17 billion as infrastructure costs escalate. The consumer-heavy strategy that built its brand may also make it more vulnerable to user churn than Anthropic's deeper enterprise partnerships.
How AI assistants are becoming commerce platforms
A Rivalry That Echoes Tech History
Tech history is full of legendary rivalries. Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos have traded public barbs over their space race. Bill Gates and Steve Jobs quarreled over whether Microsoft copied Apple. The Altman-Amodei tension is this generation's version.
The difference is the stakes. This rivalry influences how quickly AI tools are released, what features they include, and ultimately how people interact with the technology in their daily lives. One industry observer described it as "all-out war" between the two leaders.
Revenue Recognition Becomes a Battleground
The competition has spilled into financial reporting. OpenAI has reportedly questioned Anthropic's revenue recognition methods. As both companies prepare for public scrutiny, how they report numbers becomes another front in the rivalry.
This matters for investors trying to compare the two companies. If they use different accounting methods, direct comparisons become harder. Whichever company goes public first may set expectations for how AI revenue should be measured.
How regulators are scrutinizing tech giants
What Happens Next
Both companies have now filed confidentially. The next steps are roadshows, pricing, and eventually public listings. The order and timing will shape how public markets value AI companies for years.
The rivalry shows no signs of cooling. Each announcement from one company seems to trigger a response from the other. For the AI industry, this competitive pressure means faster development. For investors, it means two of the most consequential IPOs in tech history happening in parallel.
Logicity's Take
Frequently Asked Questions
Why did Anthropic file for IPO before OpenAI?
Anthropic filed confidentially with U.S. regulators on June 1, catching OpenAI off guard. OpenAI had been targeting an IPO as early as September but filed a week after Anthropic's announcement.
What is the relationship between Dario Amodei and Sam Altman?
Dario Amodei was a researcher at OpenAI before founding Anthropic in 2021. He was involved in developing the core technology behind ChatGPT and left due to philosophical differences over AI safety.
How are banks handling both IPOs?
Banks working with both companies have erected internal barriers between deal teams to prevent information leaks, as executives from both sides press advisers for intelligence on rival plans.
What valuation is OpenAI targeting for its IPO?
OpenAI is looking to go public at a valuation around $1 trillion. Anthropic's latest private valuation reportedly exceeds $900 billion.
How did ChatGPT launch so quickly?
When OpenAI heard Anthropic was building an AI chatbot in late 2022, Sam Altman directed employees to fast-track a competitor. ChatGPT launched two weeks later.
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Source: Tech-Economic Times / ET
Manaal Khan
Tech & Innovation Writer
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