Sam Altman Says OpenAI Revenue Is Growing Faster Than Expected
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman is signaling confidence — and defiance. In a recent podcast appearance, Altman pushed back on critics questioning OpenAI’s massive spending and hinted that the company’s revenue growth may be far more aggressive than many expect.
Speaking on the BG2 Podcast, Altman responded to skepticism around OpenAI’s ability to support long-term financial commitments that reportedly total more than $1.4 trillion, despite widely cited annual revenue estimates near $13 billion.
“We’re Doing Well More Revenue Than That”

When asked how OpenAI could justify such large infrastructure bets, Altman pushed back on the premise. “We’re doing well more revenue than that,” he said, referring to the $13 billion figure often cited in media reports.
OpenAI has recently announced major AI infrastructure partnerships with companies like Nvidia, Broadcom, and Oracle. These deals place the company in the same capital-intensive category as AI hyperscalers such as Amazon, Google, Meta, and Microsoft — firms spending hundreds of billions annually on compute and data centers.
Growth First, Profits Later
Altman acknowledged that OpenAI will continue to post losses in the near term, largely due to soaring compute and infrastructure costs. Microsoft’s most recent earnings report included a $4 billion charge that implies OpenAI may have lost as much as $12 billion in a single quarter.
Still, Altman framed those losses as part of a calculated bet. He outlined a multi-pronged growth strategy: expanding ChatGPT, becoming a major AI cloud provider, launching consumer devices, and using AI to automate scientific discovery at scale.
A Message for the Skeptics

Altman didn’t shy away from addressing critics directly. He said one of the few appealing aspects of eventually becoming a public company would be watching short-sellers get burned. “I would love to see them get burned on that,” he said.
Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella, who also appeared on the podcast, offered strong validation, saying OpenAI has exceeded every business plan he has reviewed. Altman hinted that revenue could reach $100 billion as early as 2027 — earlier than previous projections that targeted the end of the decade.
Sources
- Fortune — Sam Altman on OpenAI revenue growth and long-term bets:
fortune.com
- The New York Times — OpenAI financial projections and infrastructure spending:
nytimes.com
- Reuters — Microsoft earnings reveal scale of OpenAI losses:
reuters.com
- BG2 Podcast — Sam Altman and Satya Nadella on OpenAI’s growth strategy:
youtube.com


