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Anthropic Just Launched A $1.5 Billion AI Services Firm With Goldman And Blackstone

Published May 5, 2026
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Summary:
  • Anthropic, Blackstone, Hellman & Friedman, and Goldman Sachs are forming a roughly $1.5 billion AI services firm.
  • Anthropic, Blackstone, and Hellman & Friedman are each investing about $300 million. Goldman Sachs is putting in around $150 million.
  • The firm will embed Anthropic engineers inside mid-sized firms to build custom Claude tools.

Anthropic just made the same move OpenAI did. Different cast of partners. Different target customer.

The Claude maker is teaming up with Blackstone, Hellman & Friedman, and Goldman Sachs. Together they'll launch a roughly $1.5 billion AI services firm.

The pitch is to embed Anthropic builders inside mid-sized firms. That can mean a regional health system, a community bank, or a mid-size factory.

Who is putting in the money

Anthropic, Blackstone, and Hellman & Friedman are each writing checks for around $300 million. Goldman Sachs is in for about $150 million.

The deal is also backed by other big names. Those include General Atlantic, Leonard Green, Apollo, GIC, and Sequoia.

That's a heavy roster of PE and growth firms. It also tells you who the new firm's first clients are likely to be.

Why mid-sized firms are the target

Anthropic CFO Krishna Rao said demand for Claude is outpacing what any single rollout model can handle. The firm already partners with Accenture, Deloitte, and PwC for the world's biggest firms. The new firm goes downstream from that.

A community bank or a regional clinic doesn't have its own AI lab. But it does have the same work that takes up most of its day. In healthcare, that's writing notes, medical coding, prior approvals, and audits.

The new firm will send AI builders from Anthropic into those firms. They'll build Claude tools that fit existing workflows.

A quick example of what the work looks like

Anthropic shared one example. A multi-site network of doctor practices.

Doctors spend hours each day on notes, coding, and audit work. The firm's builders would sit with the doctors and IT staff. They'd build Claude tools that fit into the same software the staff already uses.

The aim is to give doctors more time with patients and less time on a screen. The same playbook would run inside a community bank or a regional factory. Just different tasks, same model.

A few weeks of work could replace months of paid hours from a Big Four firm.

The bigger story

This is a direct shot at the consulting trade. Accenture and the Big Four have built large AI practices in the last two years. Big-firm AI rollouts are now a fast-growing line of business.

Anthropic just teamed up with two of the biggest pools of cash in finance to fight for that work. It also matches up against OpenAI's $10 billion AI rollout firm. That deal was announced the same day.

Both AI labs are going past the model. They're chasing the running layer of the firms they want to serve.

Why this is bad news for legacy consulting

The Big Four built their AI practices around a familiar model. Send in junior staff. Write a deck. Run a pilot. Charge by the hour.

The new Anthropic firm flips that on its head. AI builders go in. They build the tool. They only stay until it works.

The work is faster, leaner, and tied to the lab that makes the model. For mid-sized firms that can't afford a Big Four bill, this could be the first real choice they've had.

Worth Noting

The race for enterprise AI just stopped being about the model.

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