Friday, July 3, 2026 - OpenAI, the creator of ChatGPT, is reportedly discussing handing the Trump administration a 5% stake in the company amid growing government scrutiny of artificial intelligence firms. The proposal would involve other US AI companies giving the government similar stakes, the Financial Times reported Thursday, July 2, citing two people familiar with what were described as “early conversations.”
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has argued that the arrangement would
allow the public to share in the financial upside of AI, the FT reported.
A 5% share in OpenAI would be worth about $42.6 billion,
based on a funding round in March that valued the company at $852 billion.
Sharing the wealth generated by AI with the public could help to address some
of the pushback against the technology, which threatens jobs in many industries
and has potentially wide-ranging implications for national security.
Last month, US President Donald Trump told reporters that he
planned to meet with top AI executives to discuss giving the public a stake in
their companies. He said the White House was weighing various options for
partnerships with AI firms that would allow the government to benefit from the
industry’s growth.
OpenAI and rival Anthropic, the creator of Claude AI, have
both had the release of upcoming models held up by government scrutiny.
Anthropic said Tuesday that the US government had lifted export controls on its
most advanced models following negotiations between the company and officials.
Meanwhile, the White House requested that OpenAI limit the release of its
upcoming GPT 5.6 model to a small number of government-approved partners
because of its advanced capabilities, a source familiar with the situation told
CNN in June.
Both OpenAI and Anthropic are preparing for stock market
listings, which would allow the public to buy shares in the companies and also
lift the veil on their finances. Under the latest proposals discussed with
officials, Altman and other OpenAI executives have suggested that America’s
leading AI companies allot 5% of their equity to a vehicle similar to the
Alaska Permanent Fund, a sovereign fund that invests the state’s oil wealth
into stocks and pays dividends to the state government, according to the FT.
Any deal might require an act of Congress to implement, the
FT reported, citing people familiar with the talks. It is unclear whether other
AI companies are supportive of the proposals. In April, OpenAI argued for a
“public wealth fund,” which “provides every citizen – including those not
invested in financial markets with a stake in AI-driven economic growth.”
Trump has made American leadership in AI and other advanced
technologies a priority of his administration. In August, the US government
took a 10% stake in chipmaker Intel, an investment worth $8.9 billion.

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