What’s going on here? OpenAI has been chatting up investors to snag some more billions, eyeing a valuation past the $100 billion mark. What does this mean? Venture capital firm Thrive Capital is reportedly leading the latest funding round with a planned cash injection of around $1 billion. And Microsoft is looking to get in on the action too. Although the details are yet to be hashed out, the multi-billion-dollar round is anticipated to push OpenAI’s valuation up from $86 billion to over $100 billion. And it’d be the biggest fund injection the company’s seen since Microsoft’s last investment of $10 billion in January 2023. Why should I care? For markets: The race is on. To fuel its grand ambition of creating machines that can outsmart us at most jobs, OpenAI needs to rake in some serious cash. Remember, this is tech that guzzles data, fired up by supercomputers with really hefty chips – and all of that costs money. Case in point: OpenAI dropped over $100 million on GPT-4, its most powerful model so far, and the next one looks like it’ll be even pricier. So as costs mount, investors have to ponder whether all this cash being pumped into AI will reap the rewards. And that’s not the only pressure OpenAI’s feeling: it’s got competition, with everyone from Anthropic to Google and Elon Musk’s xAI nipping at its heels. The bigger picture: The big leagues. Tech companies can reach sky-high valuations, but they’re not the only ones. On Wednesday, Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway broke into the $1 trillion club, making it the first publicly traded US company outside of the tech world to do so. Sure, lower interest rates might nibble away at the returns on Berkshire’s mountain of cash. But unlike some flashy tech names, this old-school powerhouse has cash – and solid profit – to justify its trillion-dollar status. |