OpenAI is negotiating a potential commitment of up to $1.5 billion to a new joint venture backed by private equity firms that is intended to speed the integration of artificial intelligence tools across corporate portfolios, according to people familiar with the discussions.
Under the terms being discussed, OpenAI would make an initial equity investment of $500 million into the venture. That capital would form part of a larger financing round that could set the venture's implied valuation at roughly $10 billion; the funding round is expected to conclude in early May, the people said.
Beyond the upfront $500 million, OpenAI would retain an option to inject an additional $1 billion at a later date. The final exercise of that option and the timing of any further investment were not described in detail by the sources.
Other investors lining up to support the new entity are expected to contribute about $4 billion in aggregate. Named participants in that pool include TPG, Bain Capital and Advent International, each of which is anticipated to supply capital to the joint venture.
The initiative, currently referred to inside the parties as "DeployCo," will concentrate on embedding AI tools into companies owned by private equity sponsors. Its commercial model is expected to center on helping portfolio companies integrate and deploy AI capabilities more effectively, creating revenue streams tied to that implementation work.
The plan as described focuses on practical adoption rather than on developing standalone consumer-facing products: DeployCo's stated objective is to drive enterprise-level deployment of AI across PE-owned businesses and to monetize those deployment services.
Key structural elements remain conditional as the financing round is still being negotiated. The timetable points to an early-May close for the round that would establish the venture's valuation and initial capital commitments, while OpenAI's larger optional investment would occur only if and when the company chooses to exercise that right.
Data and facts in this report are derived from people familiar with the transaction discussions.