Wall Street reacts to Microsoft and OpenAI's new deal
Wall Street reacts to Microsoft and OpenAI's new deal
Published by Global Banking and Finance Review
Posted on October 28, 2025
Published by Global Banking and Finance Review
Posted on October 28, 2025
(Reuters) - Microsoft and OpenAI on Tuesday said they had reached a deal to allow the ChatGPT maker to restructure itself into a public benefit corporation, valuing OpenAI at $500 billion and clearing the way for it to become a publicly traded company.
The Windows maker would hold a stake of about $135 billion - or 27% - in OpenAI Group PBC, which will be controlled by the OpenAI Foundation, a nonprofit.
Here are reactions from analysts and investors:
MATT BRITZMAN, SENIOR EQUITY ANALYST, HARGREAVES LANSDOWN, GREATER BRISTOL AREA, UK
"For OpenAI, the shift to a Public Benefit Corporation is essential - not only to raise much-needed capital amid its aggressive deal-making, but also to satisfy investor conditions tied to governance changes. Overall, the move provides clarity and sets the stage for both players to scale their strategies with greater confidence."
"This agreement is also a positive for Microsoft, as it removes uncertainty around revenue sharing, advanced AI milestones and product boundaries, while keeping the partnership aligned. Both companies now have the flexibility to pursue their own AI ambitions independently, which should foster innovation without eroding shared objectives."
CHRIS BEAUCHAMP, CHIEF MARKET ANALYST, IG GROUP, UNITED KINGDOM
"The timing looks right: AI is finally entering the deployment phase from pure hype. But the risks are real. Governance is messy, with the non-profit foundation retaining oversight, which could complicate decisions when profit and mission are in conflict.
"Regulatory scrutiny is inevitable given Microsoft's dominance, and the valuation assumes OpenAI will keep growing at breakneck speed. Any slowdown and this looks expensive."
ZEUS KERRAVALA, PRINCIPAL ANALYST, ZK RESEARCH, BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS
"The deal allowing OpenAI to use other cloud providers fundamentally redefines the structure of the AI industry by ending Microsoft Azure's compute exclusivity and making the AI race a multi-cloud infrastructure war. This is good for all involved. OpenAI's cloud diversification is a necessary strategic move driven by two factors: an insatiable demand for computing power and a pursuit of operational independence."
"Microsoft retains a strategic, yet more complex, relationship with its most critical AI partner, but this opens the door for it to work with more AI companies."
ADAM SARHAN, CEO, 50 PARK INVESTMENTS, NEW YORK
"The deal marks a turning point for both Microsoft and OpenAI, as the restructuring into a public benefit corporation provides OpenAI with a more stable governance structure and greater flexibility for long-term growth. Microsoft's 27% stake —valued at around $135 billion — also reinforces its strategic commitment to AI leadership."
"While this move clears most of the major regulatory and governance hurdles that surfaced earlier this year, it does not mean all challenges are behind them. OpenAI still faces ongoing scrutiny around transparency, data usage, and safety oversight. But overall, this structure should provide a clearer path forward for innovation and accountability."
GIL LURIA, HEAD OF TECHNOLOGY RESEARCH, DA DAVIDSON, PORTLAND, OREGON
"The restructuring of OpenAI and its deal with Microsoft is an important milestone for the company's move forward towards AGI. It resolves the longstanding issue of OpenAI being organized as a not-for-profit (organization) and settles the ownership rights of the technology vis-a-vis Microsoft. The new structure should provide more clarity on OpenAI's investments path, thus facilitating further fundraising."
ART HOGAN, CHIEF MARKET STRATEGIST, B RILEY WEALTH, NEW YORK
"It certainly seems to be the in-vogue thing to do. Over the course of the last several weeks, everyone's come out and said what they are going to do with OpenAI. And I think that tends to become very self-fulfilling. So when the news gets dropped, you know, whether it's Adobe or today with Microsoft, you have got the potential to become an even more important player in the AI revolution."
(Reporting by Akash Sriram, Arnav Mishra, Jaspreet Singh, Harshita Mary Varghese, Avinash P and Kanchana Chakravarthy in Bengaluru; Editing by Shinjini Ganguli)
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