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OpenAI Will Reserve Some of Its IPO Shares for Regular Investors

Published Apr 9, 2026
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A smartphone displaying a financial chart and "30% Retail Offering" sits on a white table next to a cup of black coffee.
Summary:
  • OpenAI CFO Sarah Friar confirmed the company will "for sure" hold roughly 30% of IPO shares for retail investors when it goes public.
  • The AI company raised over $3 billion from individual investors in its latest round and was valued at $852 billion after a record-breaking $122 billion raise.
  • An IPO filing could come as soon as late 2026, potentially valuing OpenAI at up to $1 trillion.

Most mega-billion dollar IPOs work the same way. Big institutions grab the shares, and regular investors get leftovers - if they get anything at all. OpenAI wants to change that.

The company's CFO Sarah Friar said OpenAI will "for sure" reserve some of its IPO shares for retail buyers.

Why OpenAI Wants Regular Investors

Friar's reasoning is straightforward: "It has to be that everyone partakes, that it isn't just that a very small group, and everyone else gets left behind."

The company tested the waters by opening its latest funding round to individuals and saw "really strong demand" - more than $3 billion from retail investors alone.

That round valued OpenAI at $852 billion after raising a record-breaking $122 billion. An IPO could push the valuation to $1 trillion - one of the most valuable public offerings in history.

Think of it this way: OpenAI is building AI that affects everyone's life. Friar's argument is that everyone should have a chance to own a piece of it.

The IPO Timeline

OpenAI expects to file with securities regulators as soon as the second half of 2026. If they follow through on the retail allocation, it would set a precedent for how mega-cap tech companies go public.

Most IPOs reserve single-digit percentages for individual investors. A big retail allocation would be a major shift.

What to Watch

The actual IPO pricing and allocation will tell us whether this promise holds up. Wall Street firms that underwrite IPOs have historically pushed for larger institutional allocations because big buyers are easier to manage.

If OpenAI sticks to retail first, it could reshape IPO conventions.

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