Running one of the most valuable private companies in the world apparently isn't stressful enough. Sam Altman, CEO of OpenAI, just made it clear he has exactly zero enthusiasm for the next chapter everyone keeps asking about: taking the company public.
Speaking on the "Big Technology Podcast," Altman was refreshingly blunt about his feelings. "Am I excited to be a public company CEO? 0%. Am I excited for OpenAI to be a public company? In some ways, I am, and in some ways I think it'd be really annoying," he said.
That's about as diplomatic as you can be while essentially saying "this sounds like a nightmare." But here's the thing—Altman does see some upside to going public. He acknowledged that "I do think it's cool that public markets get to participate in value creation." Translation: retail investors deserve a piece of the action, even if it means he has to suffer through analyst calls.
The IPO Everyone's Watching
Whether Altman likes it or not, the wheels are already turning. Sarah Friar, OpenAI's CFO, is reportedly eyeing a 2027 listing with a potential IPO filing in late 2026, according to Reuters. The numbers being floated around are staggering. The Wall Street Journal reported last week that preliminary discussions suggest a valuation of $830 billion, while a more optimistic Reuters estimate from October put the figure at up to $1 trillion.
Altman himself stayed tight-lipped about fundraising specifics and valuation details during the interview, which is probably the smart play when your company might be worth more than most countries' GDP.
Why This Actually Matters
OpenAI started life as a non-profit back in 2015, but underwent a complicated restructuring last October that turned it into a more traditional for-profit company. That shift was necessary groundwork for what comes next.
An IPO would unlock the billions of dollars OpenAI needs to stay competitive in the brutally expensive AI race. Training cutting-edge models isn't cheap, and neither is the talent or computing power required to build them. Going public would provide access to deep capital markets and let everyday investors participate in the company's growth.
Altman's mixed feelings capture the core tension perfectly: OpenAI needs the money and credibility that comes with being public, but the CEO role at a public company comes with pressures and annoyances that private company leaders don't face. Quarterly earnings calls, activist investors, and constant scrutiny aren't exactly selling points.




