OPENAI

OpenAI Price

OPENAI
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*Data last updated: 2026-04-13 16:35 (UTC+8)

As of 2026-04-13 16:35, OpenAI (OPENAI) is priced at $0, with a total market cap of --, a P/E ratio of 0,00, and a dividend yield of %0,00. Today, the stock price fluctuated between $0 and $0. The current price is %0,00 above the day's low and %0,00 below the day's high, with a trading volume of --. Over the past 52 weeks, OPENAI has traded between $0 to $0, and the current price is %0,00 away from the 52-week high.

OPENAI Key Stats

P/E Ratio0,00
Dividend Yield (TTM)%0,00
Shares Outstanding0,00

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OpenAI (OPENAI) Latest News

2026-04-13 13:01

OpenAI praised the Amazon alliance in a memo, saying that Microsoft limits its ability to reach customers

Gate News message: On April 13, OpenAI praised its alliance with Amazon in a memo, saying that Microsoft "limits its ability to reach customers." In the memo, Denise Dresser, the newly appointed Chief Revenue Officer at OpenAI, said that the alliance with Amazon is seen as a key growth driver for OpenAI's enterprise business. To date, Microsoft has not responded to requests for comment on the matter. (CNBC)

2026-04-13 06:13

VVV (Venice) up 0.47% in the past 24 hours

Gate News message. On April 13, according to Gate market data, as of the time of writing, VVV (Venice) is trading at $8.20. It is up 0.47% over the past 24 hours, with a high of $8.28 and a low of $7.72. Its current market cap is approximately $373 million. Venice is a privacy-focused artificial intelligence platform that provides services such as private conversations and image creation. The platform uses a privacy architecture to ensure the security of user data; all data is stored on the user’s device rather than on servers. Venice offers a range of advanced open-source models, including Claude and GPT, supports developers in building high-performance applications through an OpenAI-compatible API, and is also committed to eliminating any form of censorship on the platform. This information is not investment advice; investing involves risks, including risks related to market volatility.

2026-04-11 02:41

OpenAI Data Center core executive resigns, the Stargate project’s strategy faces adjustments

Gate News, April 11, multiple senior core executives responsible for OpenAI’s Stargate data center strategy have left or are expected to step down, signaling a major shift in the company’s AI infrastructure layout. The change involves at least 3 key members who helped drive the early Stargate project, including executives who played an important role during the project’s launch phase. Stargate is a ultra-large-scale AI infrastructure initiative jointly launched by OpenAI together with SoftBank, Oracle, and others, with a total investment of up to $500 billion, aiming to build a globally leading compute power network. During the project’s advancement, uncertainties have arisen multiple times, including disagreements over control between partner parties, funding and cost pressures, and the suspension of some data center projects in certain regions. This round of high-level leadership changes, combined with the earlier project delays and contraction, indicates that OpenAI is re-evaluating its aggressive path of building its own compute power, seeking a new balance among capital expenditures, partnership models, and geopolitical risks.

2026-04-11 02:16

Sam Altman Responds to Molotov Cocktail Attacks: Understanding Society’s Fear of AI, Calling for the Decentralization of Technological Power

Gate News message, April 11, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman posted in response to a Molotov cocktail attack incident, saying he underestimated the real impact of public narratives and emotions in the backdrop of AI anxiety, and sharing rare public family photos. Altman said he understands society’s fear and unease about the rapid development of AI. He said they are currently in one of the most dramatic technological changes in human history, and the associated risks are no longer limited to model alignment issues but have risen to systemic challenges at the societal level. Altman said that AI power should not be concentrated in a few institutions, and that it should be more broadly distributed through technological democratization and institutional constraints. He believes that the competition around AGI has evolved into a contest for power, and that, similar to the temptation of a power ring, it may drive extreme behavior. The solution, he said, lies in expanding technical accessibility and avoiding any single entity from controlling key capabilities. In addition, Altman acknowledged that there were mistakes in corporate governance and handling conflicts, including decision-making issues during a conflict with the board of directors, and he apologized for past conduct. He reiterated that he had previously rejected Elon Musk’s demand for control of OpenAI, saying that this choice ensured an independent development path for the company. Earlier reports: Sam Altman’s residence was attacked with a Molotov cocktail.

2026-04-11 02:01

OpenAI Releases an Announcement on a Third-Party Library Security Incident: No Evidence of User Data Leaks or System Intrusion Found

Gate News message, April 11, OpenAI released a security notice stating that it identified a security issue involving a third-party developer library, Axios. The issue is part of a broader industry security incident. OpenAI said it found no evidence indicating that user data was accessed, systems were compromised, or software was tampered with. Out of the utmost caution, OpenAI is taking steps to protect the process used to authenticate its macOS applications as legitimate OpenAI applications. The company is updating its security authentication; this requires all macOS users to update the OpenAI app to the latest version. OpenAI said this will help defend against the risk of any attempt to distribute a spoofed application pretending to be OpenAI.

Hot Posts About OpenAI (OPENAI)

MaticHoleFiller

MaticHoleFiller

2 hours ago
OpenAI Makes a Major Move Again. On March 31st, local time, OpenAI announced the completion of its latest funding round, securing commitments of $122 billion, with a post-money valuation of $852 billion, making it the highest funding ever in Silicon Valley history. This round was led by Amazon, Nvidia, and SoftBank, with Microsoft continuing to participate. SoftBank, along with a16z, D. E. Shaw Ventures, MGX, TPG, and T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc., co-led the investment. Additionally, institutions such as Ark Investment led by Cathy Wood, Blackstone, Sequoia, Temasek, Thrive Capital, and others participated broadly. Previously, OpenAI revealed that some strategic investors had committed $110 billion as the foundation for this funding round, including $50 billion from Amazon, $30 billion from Nvidia, and $30 billion from SoftBank. Moreover, OpenAI stated that it has opened participation to investors through banking channels for the first time, raising over $3 billion from individual investors. The company also announced that it will be included in several ETFs managed by Ark Investment. OpenAI further announced that it has expanded its existing revolving credit line to approximately $4.7 billion, supported by a global syndicate including JPMorgan Chase, Citibank, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Wells Fargo, Mizuho, Royal Bank of Canada, Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation, UBS, HSBC, and Santander, which had not yet drawn on the credit at the time of financing completion. Regarding partner selection, OpenAI stated that Nvidia remains the foundation of the company's AI infrastructure, with training clusters and most inference stacks continuing to run on Nvidia GPUs. "The demand for AI systems is growing faster and becoming more diverse. No single architecture can efficiently meet the entire frontier of AI. To meet this demand and maintain flexibility, we are building a broader infrastructure portfolio through multiple cloud partners, various chip platforms, and deeper cross-stack collaborative design." OpenAI further explained that the company achieves cloud infrastructure through Microsoft, Oracle, AWS, CoreWeave, and Google Cloud; silicon through Nvidia, AMD, AWS Trainium, Cerebras, and proprietary chips developed in collaboration with Broadcom; and data centers through partnerships with Oracle, SBE, and SoftBank. OpenAI straightforwardly stated: "Our 'flywheel' is simple. More computing power drives smarter models, smarter models lead to better products, and better products accelerate adoption, generate more revenue, and increase cash flow. This allows us to reinvest and serve consumers, enterprises, and developers worldwide more effectively." At the end of March, OpenAI announced it would cease using its video generation tool Sora. It is reported that OpenAI will refocus its team on developing advanced robots and AI models capable of interacting with the physical world. OpenAI's head of applications, Fidji Simo, also recently stated at an all-hands meeting that OpenAI is "actively" shifting toward high-productivity application scenarios. One key focus is enterprise applications, where Anthropic has already established a large business with its Claude model. According to some meeting notes, Simo said, "What really matters for us now is to stay focused and execute excellently." In December last year, Otterman also announced that OpenAI had entered a "red code" emergency state, urging employees to focus on core priorities, including work on ChatGPT and competing for enterprise clients with Anthropic. Meanwhile, OpenAI revealed that the company is building a unified AI super-application because "users don’t want scattered tools; they want a single system that understands intent, takes action, and operates across applications, data, and workflows." This super-application will integrate ChatGPT, Codex, browsing capabilities, and broader Agent functionalities into an agent-centered experience. It is reported that ChatGPT currently has over 900 million weekly active users and more than 50 million subscribers. Its monthly web visits and mobile sessions are four times those of all other applications combined. Search usage has nearly tripled in a year, and a pilot advertising program generated over $100 million in annual recurring revenue (ARR) within six weeks. In terms of enterprise orders, OpenAI stated that they now account for over 40% of the company's total revenue and are expected to reach parity with consumer revenue by the end of 2026. Additionally, OpenAI revealed that its API now processes over 15 billion tokens per minute, with Codex having over 2 million weekly active users, growing fivefold in the past three months, with monthly usage increasing over 70%. According to Otterman, OpenAI may go public in 2027. Previous reports suggested that OpenAI's IPO could be valued at around $1 trillion, with plans to submit a listing application to regulators as early as the second half of 2026.
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secgov_eth

secgov_eth

3 hours ago
🚨 Important 🚨 AI re-pricing is imminent. Most companies will not survive. Let me be straightforward: you're already late on AI stocks. We are not at the beginning of a new technological cycle; we are already deep in it. Gartner officially placed generative AI in the trough of disillusionment last year. By 2025, the average enterprise will spend $1.9 million on GenAI, yet less than 30% of CEOs are satisfied with the ROI. This is a significant warning sign. Nevertheless, the market still values these companies as if each one can succeed long-term. Let's do the math. The total market capitalization of AI-related publicly traded companies is about $21 to $23 trillion. To justify this valuation with a 10% annual return, they need to generate approximately $2.2 trillion in profit annually. Yet, their current combined net profit is close to $420 billion, most of which does not even come from AI. Investors are paying a fivefold premium for future profits that don't exist, based on a timeline no one can model, in an industry where unit economics have already collapsed. OpenAI may be the most important AI company today; it spends about $1.69 for every dollar it earns. It expects to lose $14 billion this year and has accumulated a loss of $1.15 trillion before turning profitable in 2029. The company is raising $100 billion at a valuation of nearly $830 billion. That’s comparable to Argentina’s GDP, yet it’s still burning cash at a WeWork-like pace. Meanwhile, large cloud service providers plan to spend between $230k and $690 billion on AI capital expenditures this year, with Amazon alone spending $200 billion. The problem is simple: data centers coming online in 2025 will have an annual depreciation cost of $40 billion, but at current utilization rates, they generate only $15 to $20 billion in revenue. This math is simply unmanageable. In a global market survey by Deutsche Bank, 57% of investors said that an AI valuation collapse is the biggest risk in 2026. One strategist bluntly stated, “The risks of an AI and tech bubble dwarf everything else.” It looks like a replay of the internet bubble era, just with different letters. In 1999, adding “.com” to a company name could instantly boost its market cap by billions. Today, mentioning “AI” during earnings calls can do the same. The sentiment is identical. Morgan Stanley estimates that since January this year, retail investors have poured about $700 billion into the stock market, five times faster than during the 2000 bubble. The dot-com bubble’s burst did not prove the internet was wrong. It proved the importance of valuation and that picking winners before expectations are reset is nearly impossible. Cisco peaked at a $555 billion market cap in 2000 but took twenty years to recover. Amazon’s stock was worth just a few cents in 2001, yet it quietly grew into a $2 trillion company. This is what I will be watching closely. When re-pricing hits, it will be brutally harsh. Companies without moats or revenue streams will be crushed. Those based on nonexistent numbers, projecting 70 times forward sales, will fall to zero. But the real upside lies in what comes after. Survivors will be those with genuine ecosystems, sticky products, cash flow beyond AI, and enough assets on their balance sheets. Think of Amazon and Google in this cycle—those supporting the entire tech stack infrastructure. When the dust settles and real monetization begins, these survivors will be worth not just trillions but potentially tens of trillions. This technology is transformative, but not as quickly or as universally as the market assumes. I am not bearish on AI. I am bearish on the certainty some people have about something still uncertain. Be patient. Let the cycle run its course as it always does. The real opportunity lies in knowing which stocks to hold when others give up. When that moment arrives, I will tell you where I plan to invest. Many will regret not following me sooner.
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ServantOfSatoshi

ServantOfSatoshi

3 hours ago
Just caught wind of something pretty significant happening in the AI space. Elon Musk's xAI just lost its final two co-founders—Manuel Kroiss and Ross Nordeen—marking a complete wipeout of the original founding team. Both exited recently, with Nordeen leaving on March 27th. This isn't just another leadership shuffle; we're talking about a total reset here. Kroiss was running the pretraining team, basically responsible for building the foundational AI models. Nordeen was Musk's right-hand operator, someone who'd been through the Tesla and Twitter restructurings. So when both of them walk at the same time, it signals something bigger is happening. Here's where it gets interesting: SpaceX just acquired xAI, and Musk recently said the company needs to be "rebuilt from the foundations up." That's not casual language—that's a deliberate signal. The restructuring is clearly intentional, not just random departures. All 11 original co-founders are now gone, which honestly is pretty rare for a high-profile startup. Industry observers are speculating this could mean a major strategic pivot. Maybe xAI shifts toward space applications—AI for autonomous spacecraft, satellite networks, that kind of thing. Or maybe it's about deeper integration across Musk's ecosystem: SpaceX, X, and AI working together in ways we haven't seen before. The fact that SpaceX is reportedly preparing for a potential IPO adds another layer of complexity. The timing is wild too. While xAI undergoes this complete leadership change, competitors like OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google DeepMind are all pushing hard on their own AI capabilities. It's a vulnerable window, but also an opportunity for Musk to completely reshape the company's direction. Historically, when Musk does this kind of thing—Tesla had multiple executive transitions, Twitter got completely restructured—it usually precedes significant strategic moves. So the question isn't really whether xAI will recover, but what it's being rebuilt into. The next few months should tell us a lot about where this is heading. The AI landscape is moving fast, and xAI's restructuring could either position them for something really ambitious or create more competitive pressure from the established players.
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