OpenAI CFO Sarah Friar has raised concerns over CEO Sam Altman’s plan to take the company public by late 2026, citing readiness and financial risks. Reports say she was excluded from key discussions as tensions surfaced. The concerns come amid heavy spending plans and projections of significant cash burn.

In a development that is rattling Silicon Valley, OpenAI's CFO Sarah Friar has privately voiced concerns about CEO Sam Altman's ambitious IPO timing and some cloud deals. The new development pulls back the curtain on a rare internal rift at the world's most closely watched AI company. Altman, in return, has excluded Friar from certain financial discussions, including a recent high-level meeting with a major investor regarding server procurement.

Altman and Friar are not on the same page

Accroding to exclusive reportage by The Information, OpenAI CFO Sarah Friar has voiced concerns over risks and challenges tied to CEO Sam Altman's plans to take the company public as early as the fourth quarter of 2026 and spend $600 billion over five years.

Friar flagged ongoing work related to procedures, compliance, and organisational readiness, indicating that the company may not be ready to list on that timeline. She has also raised concerns about financial exposure linked to OpenAI's aggressive spending, particularly its commitments to computing infrastructure. These concerns are compounded by projections that the company's cash burn could exceed $200 billion before achieving positive cash flow.

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