As the artificial intelligence race enters its most capital-intensive phase, the world’s most valuable startup is experiencing a rare moment of public turbulence. On April 6, 2026, reports emerged detailing a growing rift within OpenAI’s leadership that could derail CEO Sam Altman’s ambitious goal of a late-2026 Initial Public Offering. At the heart of the friction is a fundamental disagreement between Altman and Chief Financial Officer Sarah Friar over whether the company’s “financial plumbing” can support its stratospheric ambitions.
While Altman is reportedly pushing for a listing as early as the fourth quarter of 2026, Friar has privately cautioned that the organization is nowhere near “public-market ready.” The tension highlights a classic Silicon Valley struggle: the visionary founder’s desire for velocity versus the CFO’s mandate for fiscal and organizational sobriety.
One of the most telling signs of internal friction is the unusual reporting structure within Menlo Park. Since August 2025, Sarah Friar has reportedly not been reporting directly to Sam Altman. Instead, she reports to Fidji Simo, the head of OpenAI’s application business. In the world of “Big Tech,” it is almost unheard of for a CFO of a multi-billion dollar entity to be insulated from the CEO in this manner.
Insiders suggest this distance has led to Friar being excluded from critical financial discussions. In one “conspicuous and embarrassing” instance, Altman reportedly held a high-level meeting with a major investor regarding server procurement without Friar in the room despite her being the primary architect of the company’s capital strategy. While the duo recently issued a joint statement claiming they are “completely aligned,” the optics suggest a leadership team operating in silos.
The $600 Billion “Compute Debt”
The primary source of Friar’s hesitation is the sheer scale of OpenAI’s financial commitments. To stay ahead of the “intelligence curve,” OpenAI has entered into massive server leasing contracts with Microsoft, Oracle, and Amazon. These commitments are estimated to exceed $600 billion over the next five years.
Friar’s concern is not just the volume of debt, but the quality of the revenue supporting it. While OpenAI recently closed a record-breaking $122 billion funding round (valuing the company at $852 billion), the CFO has flagged that much of this capital comes from the very suppliers Amazon and NVIDIA that OpenAI is paying for hardware. This “circular” financial arrangement adds a layer of systemic risk that public market investors might find unpalatable.
Revenue Realities and the “Anthropic Shadow”
Despite generating roughly $2 billion in monthly revenue, OpenAI’s growth rate is reportedly starting to flatten. Friar has raised questions about whether this slowing momentum can sustain a cash burn rate projected to surpass $200 billion before the company reaches a break-even point.
Altman’s urgency, however, is driven by the ticking clock of competition. Rival Anthropic is rumored to be eyeing its own IPO in October 2026 and has been successfully eroding OpenAI’s market share in the enterprise sector. Altman believes that being the first “pure-play” AGI company to hit the public markets is essential for securing the permanent capital needed to win the AI arms race. For Altman, the IPO is a weapon; for Friar, it is a finish line that hasn’t been properly prepared.
The Unfinished “Paperwork” of AGI
Beyond the balance sheet, there is the matter of organizational readiness. Friar has reportedly told colleagues that OpenAI lacks the internal compliance systems and “SOX-readiness” (Sarbanes-Oxley compliance) required for a company of its scale.
Transitioning from a research-heavy “capped-profit” entity to a public corporation requires a level of transparency that OpenAI has historically avoided. The company has yet to disclose key metrics like Net Revenue Retention (NRR) for its enterprise customers, a standard requirement for public SaaS and AI firms. Until these systems are built, Friar argues, an IPO would be a “procedural nightmare” that could invite immediate regulatory scrutiny.
Sam Altman recently noted that an IPO is the “most likely path” for OpenAI given its immense capital needs. However, the path to the Nasdaq is currently blocked by internal “red flags.” As the company retains heavyweight law firms like Cooley and Wachtell Lipton, the world is watching to see if the CFO and CEO can reconcile their visions.
If Altman wins the argument, we may see a Q4 2026 listing that breaks every record in history but if Friar’s warnings are ignored, that listing could be built on a foundation of “compute debt” that even a trillion-dollar valuation might struggle to support.




