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OpenAI talks to give the Trump administration a 5% equity stake, valued at $42.6 bn, amid rising regulatory pressure on US AI firms.
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has floated giving the U.S. government a 5 percent equity stake in the ChatGPT developer, a move that would translate to roughly $42.6 billion at the company’s current $852 billion valuation【3】. The proposal is part of a broader plan to let Washington hold a 5 percent slice of each leading U.S. AI developer, potentially including Anthropic, Google and Meta【1】.
| At a glance | |
|---|---|
| Company | OpenAI |
| Proposed stake | 5 percent equity |
| Valuation basis | $852 billion |
| Stake value | $42.6 billion |
| Context | Part of a government‑wide AI ownership scheme |
The FT report links the proposal to mounting pressure from the Trump administration, which has been tightening controls on frontier AI models. Anthropic recently halted its most capable models after a government order to bar foreign nationals, citing national‑security concerns, before the restrictions were lifted this week【1】. Altman argues that giving the public a “slice” of OpenAI is the best way to share upside from the AI boom【1】. The broader scheme would see a government vehicle own 5 percent of each major U.S. AI developer, though it is unclear whether firms such as Google or Meta would agree to the arrangement【1】.
If the stake materialises, the U.S. government would become a major shareholder in the world’s most valuable AI lab, potentially reshaping governance and oversight of advanced models. A $42.6 billion equity position would dwarf typical sovereign‑wealth stakes in tech firms and could give Washington direct influence over model releases, safety standards and licensing. Competitors may view the move as a signal that regulatory risk is rising, prompting them to either seek similar arrangements or double down on private funding to avoid state entanglement. The proposal also arrives as other AI firms, such as Anthropic, grapple with compliance mandates, suggesting a broader industry shift toward closer government collaboration.
The proposal underscores a turning point where AI governance may move from indirect regulation to direct ownership, raising questions about how public stakes could shape the trajectory of frontier AI development and the balance between innovation and national‑security concerns.
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AI-assisted synthesis by the TrendWatcher Editorial Desk · sourced from 3 outlets · Jul 2, 2026 · How we report
The discussions involve a 5% equity stake for the U.S. government in OpenAI.
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman and other executives proposed the idea, and President Trump has shown interest in a similar government‑run wealth fund.
The proposal may extend to other leading U.S. AI developers, such as Anthropic, Google, and Meta, though agreement from those firms is uncertain.
Anthropic suspended its most capable models after the Trump administration ordered restrictions for foreign nationals, citing national security concerns, but later cleared its Fable 5 model for wider distribution.
Growing concerns about AI’s impact on jobs and the concentration of profits have led to calls for governments and companies to address the divide between beneficiaries of the AI boom and the broader public.