A guaranteed 17.5% yearly return is not how venture deals usually work.
That's the headline number on OpenAI's new $10 billion joint venture with private equity. The firm is called The Deployment Company. Its job is to push OpenAI's products deep inside the firms that PE shops own.
The deal mechanics
OpenAI is putting up to $1.5 billion into the deal. The first $500 million is paid in stock at close. The firm can add another $1 billion later.
The PE side is much bigger. The group of 19 backers is putting in roughly $4 billion across the same five-year window.
The big names are TPG, Brookfield, Advent, Bain, Dragoneer, and SoftBank. A few large advisory firms are in the group too. OpenAI runs the deal.
The 17.5% locked-in yearly return is the part that stands out. It's a strong promise from OpenAI to its partners. It also tells you the firm will pay up to land big clients.
Why this looks like a Palantir play
The Deployment Company will run the way Palantir runs its business. AI builders will sit inside client firms. They'll redesign workflows and bake AI tools into the way those firms run.
The trade name for this is "forward-deployed engineering." It just means AI builders work shoulder-to-shoulder with the client's team. Palantir built a multi-billion dollar business around it.
OpenAI is going after four sectors: health care, shipping, factories, and finance. PE firms own thousands of mid-sized firms in those four buckets. By owning the rollout layer, OpenAI gets a faster path into all of them at once.
What the new firm actually sells
The Deployment Company isn't selling raw API access. That's still OpenAI's core business. This new firm sells a service.
Take a mid-sized firm. Find where AI can save the most time. Build the tools. Stay until they work.
That puts OpenAI right next to firms like Accenture and Deloitte. Those are the giants that have been making real money helping firms adopt AI. This new firm says OpenAI wants a piece of that work too. Not just the model fees beneath it.
What it means for the AI race
The deal gives PE firms a reason to push OpenAI's tools into their portfolios over a rival's. With $4 billion of skin in the game, those backers are now lined up with OpenAI on every install.
It also matches up against Anthropic. The Claude maker said it's launching its own $1.5 billion AI firm with Goldman and Blackstone the same day. Both labs are going past the model. They're chasing the running layer of the firms they want to serve.
Why the 17.5% return matters
A typical PE buyout fund targets 15% to 20% yearly returns over a 10-year fund life. But those returns are not promised. They depend on how well the underlying firms perform.
Here, OpenAI is locking in 17.5% from day one. That sets a floor that most funds can't offer.
It's also a sign of how much OpenAI wants those PE firms to play sales rep. With a set return on the table, the PE side has every reason to push Claude's rival into every firm it owns. That's a fast on-ramp.
What to Watch
OpenAI just turned its biggest customer base into its newest sales force.
