SoftBank is seeking a bridge loan of up to $40 billion to fund most of its planned investment in OpenAI, according to claims from Bloomberg.
If completed, it would be the biggest borrowing in dollars in the companyβs history. The proposed loan would run for about 12 months, and four lenders, including JPMorgan, are reportedly going to underwrite it.
The size of the borrowing shows how far Masayoshi Son is willing to go to make OpenAI the core of SoftBankβs next big trade. The company is preparing a $30 billion bet on OpenAI after already putting in more than $30 billion.
That makes the startup the main focus of Masaβs current strategy, which is a far more expensive gamble than his earlier wins in Alibaba and ByteDance.
SoftBank is still interested in building a bigger OpenAI position with debt
At the end of December, SoftBank had like 11% of OpenAI, but to keep adding to that position, the Japanese group has sold assets, including its stake in Nvidia, to raise cash.
OpenAI is now one of SoftBankβs biggest holdings, sitting next to its roughly 90% stake in chip designer Arm.
At the same time, investment activity in other parts of the portfolio has slowed, which has tied SoftBankβs stock more closely to how ChatGPT performs against rival products such as Googleβs Gemini and Anthropic PBCβs Claude. If OpenAI wins more users, more customers, and more trust, SoftBank benefits. If the field gets tighter, SoftBank takes that hit too.
This week, S&P cut SoftBankβs credit outlook. The rating agency said the companyβs growing exposure to OpenAI could weaken liquidity and hurt the quality of its assets. That warning landed right as Masa was pushing for even more funding.
Altman defends democratic control as OpenAI faces backlash over its Pentagon contract
While SoftBank was trying to raise money, Sam Altman was dealing with the politics around OpenAIβs military work. Speaking on Thursday at the Morgan Stanley Tech, Media and Telecom Conference in San Francisco, Sammy said elected officials, not tech executives, should decide the limits of how AI can be used in national defense.
The OpenAI boss said, βWe have to trust in the democratic processβ as OpenAI and Anthropic work through separate talks with the Department of Defense.
Sam also said, βThis process is messy. This process has some deep flaws, but it is better than all other systems.β He added that abandoning that process because people dislike current leaders would be bad for society.
Samβs comments came after OpenAI reached a deal with the Pentagon to use its models in classified settings. The deal followed a standoff between the agency and Anthropic, which refused to give up certain red lines tied to control over military uses of its technology.
Earlier in the week, Sam told employees in a memo that he regretted moving too fast to secure the agreement. He said it looked βopportunistic and sloppy.β
During a Tuesday all-hands meeting, he admitted the move created βvery negative PRβ because it made OpenAI look willing to let its tools be used for activities that could include collecting data on Americans. Sam told staff, βI feel terrible for subjecting you all to this.β
At the conference, Sam said the Defense Department had been βextremely understandingβ about the need to βclarifyβ parts of the contract. He also said a new law is needed to match modern technology and reduce harm.
Sam said one of the countryβs most important civil liberties is that the government should not spy on its own citizens without warrants and proper legal process, and he added that the meaning of that standard now needs to change with technology.
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