OpenAI staff sell $6.6B of shares in tender offer

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- OpenAI coordinated a tender offer in October 2025 that allowed more than 600 current and former employees to sell $6.6 billion of shares in a single transaction.
- Employees sold shares averaging $11 million each, with about 75 hitting the $30 million cap, the maximum permitted per person under the new terms.
- The tender offer raised the per‑person sale limit from $10 million to $30 million in response to investor demand for access to OpenAI equity.
- Staff who joined after the ChatGPT launch became eligible to sell for the first time after a two‑year waiting period, prompting many to cash out.
- Some employees placed remaining shares into donor‑advised funds, enabling charitable giving while claiming tax deductions.
- Greg Brockman holds equity valued at roughly $30 billion, disclosed during court testimony.
- Sam Altman claims he holds no shares, though investors anticipate he may receive equity if he wins his legal dispute with Elon Musk over OpenAI’s restructuring.
Why it matters: The cash‑out delivers billions to hundreds of OpenAI staff, instantly turning equity into liquid wealth, while the sudden liquidity surge is cited as a driver of rising San Francisco rents and widening local class gaps, underscoring how private AI fortunes can reshape regional economies.


