pwshub.com

OpenAI board mulls equity stake for Sam Altman that could be a massive payday

OpenAI is in the process of transitioning from a nonprofit business to a for-profit one—and Sam Altman, the company’s CEO and one of its eight original founders, might end up getting a huge payday as a result.

Sources told Bloomberg that OpenAI could grant Altman a 7% equity stake in the company, which could potentially lead to a $10 billion infusion of wealth for the 39-year-old CEO. Altman’s net worth is currently somewhere in the ballpark between $1 and $2 billion, based on the latest calculations by Forbes and the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, which do not factor in his work with OpenAI.

“The board has had discussions about whether it would be beneficial to the company and our mission to have Sam be compensated with equity, but no specific figures have been discussed nor have any decisions been made,” Bret Taylor, chairman of OpenAI, said in a statement to Fortune.

One person who has not taken kindly to Altman’s bid to transition the corporate structure of the company behind ChatGPT is one of OpenAI’s original founders, Elon Musk. In a series of X posts this week, the 53-year-old Tesla CEO and world’s richest man called Altman “Little Finger,” a reference to the skilled manipulator who plotted against political rivals in HBO’s hit show Game of Thrones, and also criticized OpenAI’s current direction, saying, “You can’t just convert a nonprofit into a for-profit. That is illegal.”

Much of Altman’s current wealth stems from his extensive investment portfolio: He has holdings in over 400 companies valued at over $2.8 billion, according to Business Insider. He also owns about $90 million worth of real estate, made north of $43 million from selling the location-based social network Loopt back in 2012, and made money—and inroads among Silicon Valley’s elite—during his time as Y Combinator president between 2014 and 2019. Altman reportedly told employees on Thursday that reports about a potential equity stake worth billions were "just not true," according to CNBC.

But while Altman may be enjoying the rocket ship that is OpenAI, his startup’s transition to a for-profit B corporation has led to significant turnover as senior executives continue heading for the exit. Just this week, three crucial executives—chief technology officer Mira Murati, chief research officer Bob McGrew, and research VP Barret Zoph—all decided to leave the company. Earlier this year, OpenAI also lost two of its cofounders, former president Greg Brockman and former chief scientist Ilya Sutskever.

Speaking Thursday in Turin, Italy, Altman insisted the executive departures were completely unrelated to the company’s restructuring plans.

“I saw some stuff that this was related to a restructure, that’s totally not true,” Altman said, per Bloomberg. “This is just about people being ready for new chapters in their lives.”

OpenAI is currently looking to raise $6.5 billion at an eye-watering valuation of $150 billion, Bloomberg previously reported, which would vault its market cap over companies like Ford, Target, and American Express. Recently, the company’s efforts have been focused on exciting investors while allaying concerns about the future of artificial intelligence. The company on Thursday unveiled a new AI model, internally called Strawberry, that can perform human-like reasoning tasks to carry out multi-step actions, which is particularly helpful for math and coding. It also recently unveiled a new logo redesign to employees, although staffers were reportedly taken aback by the design, saying it looked ominous, sources told Fortune’s Kali Hays.

Altman, meanwhile, has led the company’s outward-facing efforts to get the general public feeling more comfortable about AI. The 39-year-old CEO was recently interviewed by Oprah Winfrey for an ABC prime-time special; she pressed him about AI’s potential dangers and the public trust, asking how Altman felt about being described as “the most powerful and perhaps most dangerous man on the planet.” Altman told Winfrey he probably has “a conversation with someone in the government every few days,” assuring her he is in constant communication with officials and world leaders given AI’s growing importance in global politics and economics.

September 27, 204: This article has been updated to include Sam Altman's denial that he is getting an equity stake in OpenAI.

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com

Source: finance.yahoo.com

Related stories
1 month ago - John Schulman, a member of OpenAI’s founding team who played a key role in its product development efforts, is leaving for rival Anthropic PBC. Schulman announced his resignation today in a post on X. His departure reduces the number of...
1 month ago - (Bloomberg) -- Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond President Thomas Barkin said the US economy is in good shape, though it’s unclear whether the labor market is getting back to normal rates of hiring or more seriously deteriorating.Most Read...
1 month ago - (Bloomberg) -- Bitcoin is under pressure from a bout of risk aversion in global markets that saddled the largest digital asset with its heftiest weekly loss since the collapse of the FTX exchange in 2022.Most Read from BloombergSinger...
1 month ago - (Bloomberg) -- Taiwan’s benchmark stock index plunged by a record, as tech-heavy gauges in Asia took the brunt of a selloff triggered by fear of a deeper US economic slowdown.Most Read from BloombergSinger Akon’s Multibillion-Dollar...
1 month ago - (Bloomberg) -- The shares of Apple Inc.’s suppliers slumped after Berkshire Hathaway Inc. nearly halved its stake in the iPhone maker. The decline came amid a broad market selloff Monday.Most Read from BloombergSinger Akon’s...
Other stories
18 minutes ago - A recent call on The Ramsey Show posted to TikTok highlighted how fast even a solid income can vanish under the pressure of debt and overspending. Alyssa, a mental health therapist, called in to discuss her family's financial struggles...
18 minutes ago - Costco CEO Ron Vachris said in Thursday's earnings call that the company now pays its workers an average of just over $30 per hour.
19 minutes ago - Seven days after hitting the market, the T-REX 2X Long MSTR Daily Target ETF (MSTU) has become one of the most successful new exchange-traded funds (ETFs) on the market after attracting over $72 million.
48 minutes ago - As the global competition for artificial intelligence intensifies, data privacy is becoming a critical consideration in choosing the right network infrastructure. Companies must weigh the benefits of rapid AI model development offered by...
1 hour ago - Ireland’s privacy regulator today fined Meta Platforms Inc. €91 million over a cybersecurity flaw in its internal systems that came to light five years ago. The Data Protection Commission, or DPC, also issued the company a reprimand over...