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OpenAI could lose $14 billion in 2026, becoming bankrupt by 2027

OpenAI is arguably one of the most sought-after AI research labs, primarily because of ChatGPT. Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella argues that the firm had a 2-year lead to develop ChatGPT uncontested, which uniquely positioned the company to succeed in the ever-evolving landscape.

Everything might look good on paper, but OpenAI is reportedly burning through vast amounts of cash to keep up with sophisticated AI advances while simultaneously attempting to maintain a healthy lead over its competitors.


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As it happens, cash flow continues to be a pain in OpenAI’s neck, with multiple reports suggesting that the company might be biting a little more than it can chew in terms of its spending on AI development. The reports suggest that the ChatGPT maker could make a $14 billion loss in 2026, primarily driven by infrastructure expansion, model training, research hiring, and compute costs (via artificialintelligenceee on IG).

Late last year, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman expressed his frustrations over the AI bubble talk, dismissing concerns about the firm’s exorbitant spending on sophisticated projects to keep up with the AI hype.

While OpenAI reportedly generates up to $13 billion in revenue annually from ChatGPT and LLM access fees, the firm spends up to $1.4 billion on computing. It’s unclear whether the injection of ads into ChatGPT’s user experience will help bridge this gap.

However, Sam Altman claims OpenAI’s revenue is “growing steeply,” further highlighting that the company expects the demand across its consumer and enterprise businesses, including ChatGPT and future hardware developments, to see a surge in demand.

Perhaps more interestingly, Sam Altman indicated that he expects OpenAI’s revenue to exponentially surge to $100 billion by 2027. But a report from Tom’s Hardware seemingly disputes Altman’s claims, suggesting that OpenAI could completely run out of cash by mid-2027.

A separate report from last year suggested that the AI firm is projected to make an $8 billion loss in 2025, which could potentially rise to $40 billion by 2028. Sebastian Mallaby, an economist at the Council on Foreign Relations, says that even if OpenAI changes its strategy and even caters to some of its financial woes using “its overvalued shares,” it won’t be able to wiggle out of this difficult situation easily.

To that end, OpenAI might need another round of funding, raising funds from its investors to keep its operations afloat. At the same time, it also needs to establish a clear path to profitability in the elusive landscape to secure funding as investor interest begins to wane.

Will OpenAI be able to keep the lights on without establishing a clear profitability path? Share your thoughts in the comments and cast your vote in the poll!

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