Anthropic
Files to Go Public, Setting Stage for Huge I.P.O.
The
artificial intelligence company, which is racing OpenAI to the stock market,
has seen explosive growth over the last year thanks largely to technology that
can automatically write computer code.
Mike
Isaac
By Mike
Isaac
Reporting
from San Francisco
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/01/technology/anthropic-ipo.html
June 1,
2026
Anthropic,
the artificial intelligence company behind the chatbot Claude, confidentially
filed on Monday for an initial public offering, joining what could be a
once-in-a-generation, moneymaking moment on Wall Street.
With its
I.P.O. filing, Anthropic is expected to be among three high-profile companies
preparing to go public this year, along with the rocket company SpaceX and
OpenAI, which started the A.I. boom in 2022 with its ChatGPT chatbot.
Their
I.P.O.s, which would be among the biggest ever, could create a tsunami of
investment and employee wealth, and mint the world’s first trillionaire in Elon
Musk, who owns about 50 percent of SpaceX. The public offerings could also
flood the nonprofit world with new money, since Anthropic and OpenAI have both
pledged a large part of their shares to charity. SpaceX’s I.P.O. is expected
this month, and OpenAI has been preparing to file in the coming weeks.
An I.P.O.
filing also ratchets up Anthropic’s competition with OpenAI. Last week,
Anthropic officially passed OpenAI as the world’s highest-flying A.I. start-up
with $65 billion in new financing that valued it at $900 billion before the
inclusion of the new capital. OpenAI’s last valuation was $730 billion.
In a
statement, Anthropic said the filing “gives us the option to go public” after a
review of its paperwork by the Securities and Exchange Commission. The company
did not provide details about the timing or size of an I.P.O. and said the deal
would “depend on market conditions and other factors.” With the filing on
Monday, a public offering could happen as soon as this fall.
Among the
three companies racing to go public, Anthropic is the youngest and fastest
growing, thanks in large part to its A.I. tools for automatically writing
computer code. Last week, Anthropic said its revenue run rate, which is its
expected revenue for the year based on its current performance, crossed $47
billion in May. It is unclear if the company is profitable.
“The
coding focus is what makes this filing interesting,” said Shashi Bellamkonda, a
director at Info-Tech Research Group, a technology research and advisory firm.
“Anthropic didn’t try to be everything. No browser, no image generation, no
commerce layer. That discipline is now a $47 billion run rate.”
Founded
in 2021, Anthropic was started in San Francisco by Dario Amodei, its chief
executive, and a handful of other researchers who worked with him at OpenAI.
Since he started the company, Mr. Amodei has repeatedly described what he
believes is the transformative nature of so-called artificial general
intelligence, or A.G.I., an as-yet-unattained artificial intelligence that can
match the abilities of the human brain.
Anthropic
has also stressed that this technology could be dangerous to humanity. That
focus on safety has helped Anthropic maintain a positive public image, but it
has also led to tension. This year, the Pentagon banned Anthropic’s technology
from its systems because the company wanted to place some limits on what
military and intelligence officials could do with it.
More
recently, Anthropic’s relationship with the federal government has been in flux
after it released a powerful model called Mythos, which can identify and fix
security vulnerabilities in software systems. Mr. Amodei has visited the White
House as intelligence agencies grapple with how Mythos works.
Other
A.I. labs, like OpenAI and Google’s DeepMind, have built a wider array of
products, including A.I.-focused web browsers, commerce tools and image
generation apps. But Anthropic has focused mostly on building A.I. that excels
in coding software and tools for business customers.
Last
fall, that focus appeared to pay off. Anthropic produced a breakthrough model
with Claude Opus 4.5, which the company described as “a meaningful step forward
in what A.I. systems can do,” with an emphasis on software coding. Its use
soared, and Anthropic revenues skyrocketed as more business customers began
paying for the service.
“Claude’s
latest advancements have driven large-scale adoption among the world’s most
demanding organizations,” said Brad Gerstner, founder of Altimeter Capital,
which is an Anthropic investor.
There has
long been interest to own a piece of Anthropic, with investment firms such as
Menlo Ventures, Greenoaks Capital, Coatue and XN pouring money in, as well as
technology companies including Amazon, Google, Samsung, Micron and SK Hynix.
A
significant amount of the money Anthropic has raised is likely to pay for the
rising cost of computing power, known as “compute,” a scarce resource given the
increasing demand for A.I. software. Mr. Amodei has said Anthropic is seeing
“unprecedented demand” for its products, which requires it to pay for even more
compute from companies like Microsoft, Amazon and Google to keep up.
Anthropic
also faces stiff competition. OpenAI has reoriented itself to focus on coding
products with Codex, its software coding tool. Mr. Musk, who runs SpaceX,
agreed to team up with and potentially acquire Cursor, a competing software
coding-focused start-up. Larger companies, including Google and Microsoft, also
offer their own coding tools to developers.
But
SpaceX has also become a partner to Anthropic. Anthropic recently said it had
reached an agreement to use all the computing power at the rocket company’s
Colossus 1 data center in Memphis. The move gives Anthropic access to more than
220,000 A.I. chips and opens the door to working with SpaceX to create A.I.
data centers in space.
(The New
York Times sued OpenAI and Microsoft in 2023, claiming copyright infringement
of news content related to A.I. systems. The two companies have denied those
claims.)
Cade Metz
contributed reporting.


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