Silicon Valley is holding its breath. For years, OpenAI has occupied a space somewhere between a tech company and a digital deity. But a series of leaked internal reports suggests that even the creators of ChatGPT aren’t immune to the gravity of Wall Street expectations.
On Tuesday, the AI giant found itself at the center of a storm following a Wall Street Journal report detailing missed revenue targets and a stalling user base. The ripples were felt instantly across the NASDAQ, shaving billions off the market caps of the industry’s heaviest hitters.
The Friction at the Top
Inside the house that Sam Altman built, a philosophical—and financial—rift is reportedly widening. Sarah Friar, OpenAI’s Chief Financial Officer, has allegedly hit the brakes on the company’s aggressive IPO timeline. Her concern? OpenAI might not be ready for the grueling transparency and reporting standards required of a public company.
While Altman is reportedly pushing for a debut by the end of 2025, Friar is waving a yellow flag. The core of her anxiety lies in the company’s massive infrastructure obligations. With several multi-billion-dollar computing contracts on the horizon, missing revenue targets isn’t just a PR headache—it’s a threat to the company’s ability to keep the lights on.
“This raises questions about whether OpenAI can fulfill its massive infrastructure obligations,” notes Adam Crisafulli of Vital Knowledge.
The Market Shudder
When OpenAI sneezes, the entire AI supply chain catches a cold. Following the report, shares of OpenAI’s closest partners and investors took a visible hit:
- SoftBank: ↓ 11.9%
- CoreWeave: ↓ 7.1%
- Oracle: ↓ 6.5%
- Broadcom: ↓ 4%
- Nvidia: ↓ 3%
The anxiety is simple: If OpenAI isn’t growing at the breakneck speed predicted, does Nvidia really need to ship $100 billion worth of H100s? Does Oracle need to build $300 billion worth of data centers?
By The Numbers: The $852 Billion Gamble
Despite the jitters, OpenAI remains a financial behemoth. After a staggering $122 billion funding round in March, the company sits at a post-money valuation of $852 billion.
| Metric | Target/Current | Status |
| Weekly Active Users | 1 Billion (by end of 2025) | Missed |
| Computing Spend | $600 Billion (by 2030) | Revised Down |
| Anticipated Revenue | $280 Billion+ | Projected |
| IPO Valuation | $1 Trillion+ | Targeted |
The Defense: “Firing on All Cylinders”
OpenAI isn’t taking the report lying down. Spokesperson Steve Sharpe dismissed the findings as “clickbait,” insisting that the enterprise business is “in the best place it has ever been.” According to Sharpe, the consumer strength of ChatGPT is finally translating into hard revenue, even if it hasn’t yet hit the optimistic internal milestones leaked to the press.
The Road Ahead
The tech world is now laser-focused on OpenAI’s potential IPO filing. Friar has signaled “really strong demand” from retail investors, and the company plans to reserve shares for the public—a move that could make this one of the largest stock debuts in history.
But as competition from Anthropic eats into OpenAI’s market share and the “Stargate” supercomputer projects loom large, the question remains: Can OpenAI turn its cultural dominance into a sustainable, $1 trillion business? The “move fast and break things” era is meeting the “show me the money” reality of 2026.







