Microsoft’s Answer to OpenAI Inquiry: It Doesn’t Own a Stake
The two companies have sought to telegraph their independence, but it’s not clear regulators will buy the argument.
Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella and Sam Altman during the OpenAI DevDay event on Nov. 6, 2023.
Photographer: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images
With global regulators examining Microsoft Corp.’s $13 billion investment in OpenAI, the software giant has a simple argument it hopes will resonate with antitrust officials: It doesn’t own a traditional stake in the buzzy startup so can’t be said to control it.
When Microsoft negotiated an additional $10 billion investment in OpenAI in January, it opted for an unusual arrangement, people familiar with the matter said at the time. Rather than buy a chunk of the cutting-edge artificial intelligence lab, it cut a deal to receive almost half of OpenAI’s financial returns until the investment is repaid up to a pre-determined cap, one of the people said. The unorthodox structure was concocted because OpenAI is a capped for-profit company housed inside a non-profit organization.