$2.995 million listings in San Francisco and a reported $4.8 million Marin property are explicitly inviting OpenAI or Anthropic stock as payment, turning AI equity into a real-estate marketing hook.
Agents say the pitch targets buyers whose wealth is tied up in illiquid pre-IPO shares, reflecting how concentrated AI paper wealth is starting to shape competition and local housing demand.
Private-stock swaps still face major hurdles: company transfer restrictions, possible board approval, and immediate tax and valuation issues mean such offers remain rare and hard to close.
The broader signal is not widespread stock-for-home transactions but a compensation-and-liquidity story, with Bay Area housing models increasingly influenced by AI paper wealth before cash liquidity events.