Motley Fool Money - OpenAI’s Strategy Shift Ahead of IPO
Episode Date: March 18, 2026OpenAI is moving away from side quests as it prepares the business and financials for an IPO. To make matters more complicated, Microsoft is upset about a deal OpenAI made with Amazon. Plus, why short... sellers are important. Travis Hoium, Lou Whiteman, and Rachel Warren discuss:- OpenAI’s strategy shift- Microsoft’s warning to Amazon- Why short sellers are important Companies discussed: SoFi (SOFI), Amazon (AMZN), Microsoft (MSFT). Host: Travis HoiumGuests: Lou Whiteman, Rachel WarrenEngineer: Bart Shannon Advertisements are sponsored content and provided for informational purposes only. The Motley Fool and its affiliates (collectively, “TMF”) do not endorse, recommend, or verify the accuracy or completeness of the statements made within advertisements. TMF is not involved in the offer, sale, or solicitation of any securities advertised herein and makes no representations regarding the suitability, or risks associated with any investment opportunity presented. Investors should conduct their own due diligence and consult with legal, tax, and financial advisors before making any investment decisions. TMF assumes no responsibility for any losses or damages arising from this advertisement. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Is OpenAI going to IPO in 2026 and have they created drama between Amazon and Microsoft?
Motley Full Money starts now.
Welcome to the Motley Fool Money with the Hidden Gems team.
I'm Travis Hoyum, joined today by Rachel Warren and Lou Whiteman.
Reports have surfaced this week that OpenAI is eliminating side projects like the browser that they kind of played around with a few months ago.
go the video app in favor of enterprise products that actually have some traction like codex.
The growth at Anthropic has to be one of the reasons, Lou, that they're thinking about this,
but they're also, you know, if you're going public in 26, which is still the rumor that by
the end of the year, they're going to be a public company.
You got to focus on what actually makes your numbers look good for public investors.
So is this the right move for them to kind of get rid of those side projects and just go, hey,
we're going to be an enterprise API company now?
I'll hedge a bit and say it is good to de-emphasize them.
Okay.
Because look, this is part of growing up.
This is part of going from just being a toy factory
to an actual business capable making money,
which is what you have to do for an IPO.
Side quests, as they call them,
they're great if you have an established product.
You know, weekend hackathons at Google come up with good stuff,
but you need the established product.
even 3M, Travis, not to like, you know, poor salt and wounds, but their famous 15% time.
Which, by the way, was more marketing than anything else.
Right, right.
As someone who worked there and it was supposed to have 15% time.
And look at how they've turned out, right?
So, you know, it does at the end of day, if you were a for-profit business to focus on the things
that will make money to justify yourself.
Web browsers, video generators, even hardware devices, which, you know, they spent a lot
of money.
I'm curious if that memo hit Johnny Eve or if he's kind of exempted from that.
But all these things are cool.
But if you were going to go public, again, especially if you're going to go public and need a ton of revenue just to pay the bills, you should focus on how you're going to make money.
Selling to enterprises is a better way to make money than, hey, we should make a new browser.
Yeah, Rachel, we did hear from Sam Altman that the Johnny Eye project, whatever hardware they're working on, is still in the works.
So it sounds like he's still very excited about it.
We don't know exactly what that looks like.
But this does seem like there's going to be at least a little bit less emphasis on chat GPT,
which is the product that we're probably most familiar with as consumers.
And they're going to be focusing on things like Codex.
So what are your thoughts there?
Yeah, it's interesting.
I think that Open AI is definitely making a pivot right now.
And I think that they are very much trying to cut their losses to double down on what's
actually going to move the needle for revenue growth and eventually profitability moving forward.
I do think there's a bit of a wake-up call from Anthropic for sure.
You know, Codex is an interesting tool.
This is really evolved into a very sophisticated, agenetic platform.
And Open AI is essentially betting that it's going to be the operating system for the modern office
and that it's one of the really key drivers they're going to need as they move towards an anticipated IPO.
So the new Codex, it's much more than a simple code writer, right?
It's basically this cloud-based command center.
So multiple AIA agents can work on complex tasks simultaneously.
And this could really turn Open AI from a research lab into more of that high-touch partner that can actually help companies rewrite their legacy systems from the ground up. And it's kind of interesting. I mean, when you compare this to alphabet, right? So you've got Google, they already have the advantage of baking AI directly into search, Gmail to Chrome. That's really that kind of default choice for the average person. Open AI is playing much more of a top-down game, right? They're betting that if they become indispensable to the global workforce, that individuals will naturally stick with them, is
their primary AI partner. They're even deploying engineers to act as consultants for big firms,
which is really interesting as well. The IPO would be interesting to watch if indeed that comes
to fruition this year. I'd probably sit on the sidelines for a bit, but I think that will be
probably one of the most anticipated IPOs if and when it does happen. Yeah, Lou, I want to know
your thoughts on the IPO, but also the other question that I've been thinking about is, have they
kind of just seated the consumer market to Google? I mean, this was the original battle, right?
GPT was supposed to disrupt Google's entire business. Sam Altman did these interviews where he
kind of called them a dinosaur directly or indirectly. And now it seems like they're going,
you know what, we've got to go to the enterprise because we don't have a sustainable business
model with consumers and going, well, I guess Google's the game that's left in town.
Well, I mean, as Rachel said, Google has a much more natural path to the consumer.
I think it was smart to start with chat GPT to kind of get the imaginations going. But again,
This is about moving from science experiment or toy to a sustainable business.
Thing is, is that even if Google gets the consumer, I think it's going to be a lot less sticky than the enterprise.
So I think that if this all ends up somewhat commoditized, you can do price wars, you can do features, you can do.
There's all sorts of way to, quote unquote, win the consumer after.
But as far as as an emerging technology to get established in the enterprise, that's a lot better path to business.
success. Speaking of AI in the enterprise, we're not done with Open AI. We're going to get to
the battle that's potentially brewing between Amazon and Microsoft over OpenAI's future spend.
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Welcome back to Motley Full Money with the Hidden Gems team.
OpenAI has also announced a major deal with Amazon to be one of their cloud providers
for some of their future services and products.
But Microsoft is supposed to be the exclusive.
supplier of quote unquote stateless APIs. So Rachel, this has actually come to the point where
Microsoft has threatened legal action. We've got some quotes from some Microsoft executives or
lawyers saying, you know what? If you want to battle our lawyers, we're happy to do that. There's
supposedly negotiations going on behind the scenes. But is this something or nothing from three of the
most valuable companies in the world battling over this future of AI in the cloud? I don't think it's
nothing. And I mean, for those of us who've been following this very kind of longstanding
relationship between Microsoft and Open AI, it's, I think it's a little bit stunning. So the core
of the dispute is this suspected sort of breach or alleged breach, right, of the exclusive
partnership terms. So Microsoft is saying we have this longstanding agreement. This requires
all access to Open AI's models to be routed exclusively through Microsoft's Azure platform.
And this is for the API. This is not necessarily for the consumer just to kind of clear that
them. Yes, correct. So there's kind of a few different ways this could go to sort of look at the
more bear case, right? So let's say Microsoft follows through on his threat to sue. We could see
litigation. Obviously, a court case would freeze plans that OpenEI has to launch frontier on
Amazon Web Services. It could potentially give Microsoft more time to build its own competing
products. I want to be clear that's the nuclear option. I don't necessarily think that's the
point it's going to get to. It would very much kind of damage the relationship between what has
historically been, you know, the kind of two most important partners in the AI world,
there's obviously the question about if there's litigation, how does that stall OpenEIs
expected 2026, rumored IPO? I think the most likely short-term outcome is some kind of a
behind-the-scenes agreement or settlement before OpenEI's new frontier platform officially
launches. I kind of would tend to think that they're going to want to avoid a messy courtroom
battle. Maybe they're going to renegotiate their contracts to give Microsoft to a piece of the pie
from any business Open AI does on Amazon's cloud, that would allow OpenEI to keep its new partners
and ensure Microsoft is compensated for losing its exclusive status. But this is really the early
innings. And I do think this is something that's important to watch as investors, but also for
any of us who are following this space really closely. Yeah, you know, it's interesting because,
you know, we talk a lot about the different strategies companies have used to try to hyperscale.
I mean, everything from Apple, which after the fact decided we'll just lean on others to the all-in players,
whether it's Open AI or Alphabet.
Microsoft has sort of always been in the middle, right?
They're spending a lot of money.
They're building up a lot of the infrastructure,
but they also have been leaning on partners.
This sort of feels like we're finding out the weakness of that, right?
Honestly, letter to law, I think Open AI probably has a pretty good case here.
If you look at it, like, look, anything that comes in directly through Open AI, yes,
we'll go to Microsoft.
but if anyone who wants to access these frontier products through someone other than Open AI,
what's just Amazon?
I don't think that violates the weird thing is, too.
It's still hosted on Microsoft infrastructure.
I'm not sure if that's a revenue gain or just a, you know, some cost.
But this is a weird relationship now.
And it's been getting weirder over the last two years in particular.
Yeah, yeah, Rachel Calder is surprised.
Like, it feels like that this particular thing, this is getting towards the end game,
but they have been moving away from each other.
I think if AI ends up commoditized, Microsoft leaning on partners and kind of just doing it that way,
I think that this will end up working out for them just with Claude and all sorts of different partners.
But in the meantime, it's kind of Microsoft needs to be a little aggressive here because they could be left holding the bag if they're not careful.
Yeah, they still have a big equity stake in open AI too.
so we talked about that IPO,
that could be a tailwind for them.
So you've got multiple angles here for Microsoft.
I can't imagine this is going to end up being a huge court battle.
Things are just moving too fast.
But, you know,
Altman, Open AI, definitely pushing the envelope.
And I guess, you know, that makes a lot of sense
when you have a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity
to be this generational company
and potentially IPO for, I don't know,
over a trillion dollars.
The stakes are very high at the very least.
When we come back, we are going to talk about the role that shorts play in the market.
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Welcome back to Motley Full Money with the Hidden Gems team.
SoFi was hit with a muddy water short report and the stock dropped about 6% quickly during trading on Tuesday.
The drop was almost eliminated by the end of trading.
And then after the market closed, we found out that CEO Anthony Noto actually bought the dip.
It was a little bit wild because the dip only lasted for an hour or two.
But Lou, he jumped on that.
I don't want to dive too much into that because there's a lot of complexities with how they're doing their accounting.
as a financial institution and all that kind of stuff.
But I do want to kind of go high level on what role short sellers have in the market
because short selling is allowed.
You can buy puts.
You can bet against stocks.
And there's actually a good reason.
So what are the reasons for short sellers playing a role in the market?
Everything needs a filter.
And everybody needs to not just hear confirmation bias.
There's always two sides of a story and it's really important to hear both sides.
Yes, there are some actor.
that are more over the top on the short side.
But heck, I could throw out some price targets on publicly traded company from bulls.
That seemed just as ridiculous to me.
So I think there is both of that.
At the end of the day, yes, shorts are often accused of you're just trying to make money on this.
Well, again, turn on a financial network and hear someone talking about a stock that they think is going to the moon.
They're probably trying to make money.
They're not just opining.
we have this terrible reaction to negativity and I get it and there's good reasons for that.
I don't personally do any shorting anymore, but I think that short sellers are a fantastic part of the market.
I read this Muddy Waters report.
I don't own SOFI.
I didn't see anything to be chicken little.
But there are some really, really interesting things that at the very least, I think a lot of SOFi bowls should,
oh, that's interesting to learn.
this is a necessary part of the market. It's just one we don't like because we are
optimists in nature and we want stocks to go up. We want businesses to do well.
Yeah, Rachel, you know, we're long-term investors at the Motley Fool, but one of the things
we always talk about too is you need to be able to make the bull case and you need to be
able to make the bear case. This is at least, you know, somebody who's writing out their
bear case taking a position in public. You know, let's look past the details of when they're
going to close that position. But, you know, that does serve some sort of value.
in the market, it seems like. Yeah, there is value there. I mean, you kind of think of shortsellers
as the skeptics or detectives in the market. A lot of times, obviously as investors, we're betting on a
company's success, but the short sellers are looking for overvalued stocks sometimes, bad
business models to bet against. And the role I actually do think of short sellers is important,
as Lou noted, for a healthy market. You know, they sort of provide that reality check. They can prevent
sometimes bubbles by ensuring prices don't just go up forever based on hype alone. And a lot of times,
when you see a shortseller published report,
they're really just presenting a public argument
for why they believe a stock is worth much less
than its current price.
Now, there are absolutely,
I think, some philosophical and tactical concerns
when it comes to short sellers.
Obviously, shorts profit directly
when others lose money.
But it's also worth noting that short reports
have been famous for uncovering massive corporate frauds
in the past before they collapsed
and hurt even more people.
So I do think that it's important as investors,
you know, whatever the stock might be
when there is a short report that comes out
If it's of a holding in your portfolio or a company on your watch list, I think it's good to take the time to read those reports, digest the information. It's certainly not the time to panic sell or liquidate your position in a company. But I do think sometimes there can be helpful, nuanced information that we can get in those reports. How management responds is really, really key to. A lot of times we'll see companies come out with really aggressive, robust responses that dispel a lot of fears in the reports. But certainly they play an important role in the market. And I think that that's something that can be valuable.
to us as long-term investors. That's so right. And Anthony Odo, if I can give you advice on SoFi,
I get why just the quick statement was, this is wrong, we're going to sue. But I always like,
and again, I don't think that SoFi is just this massive Enron or anything that I always like,
take the time, put out a press release, not just saying, these guys are trying to profit,
and not we're going to sue them. Explain why they're wrong. Because, you know, in a very Emersonian sense,
If you can question your beliefs and they come out struggle on the other side, I think that, you know, that's, that should be a positive for the bulls.
Yeah. And if you have not read any of these reports, you can go back to the mid-2010s. That's when, you know, some of these big short sellers kind of gained a lot of attention. And it was finding frauds. You know, I remember China Media Express, right? There was this story of what this company was. They actually dug deep in the SEC filings. They went to the headquarters, found all kinds of other companies that were headquartered at the same location.
wasn't a real office. There is a real detective work in some of these reports, whether they're short,
whether they're long. So that's what making markets is all about. So before you have any jerk reaction,
something to think about. Everybody has a role in this market. As always, people on the program may have
interest in the stocks they talk about and the Motley Fool may have formal recommendations for or against,
so don't buy or sell stocks based solely on what you hear. All personal finance content follows the
Motley Fool's editorial standards and is not approved by advertisers.
Advertisements are sponsored content and provide their for informational purposes only.
To see our full advertising disclosure, please check out our show notes.
For Lou Whiteman, Rachel Warren, and Bart Shannon behind the glass, I'm Travis Hoyum.
Thanks for listening to Motley Fool Money.
We'll see you here tomorrow.
