University of Michigan's OpenAI investment could yield $2 billion
Updated
Updated · Business Insider · May 8
University of Michigan's OpenAI investment could yield $2 billion
2 articles · Updated · Business Insider · May 8
A court exhibit in the Elon Musk-Sam Altman case shows the university invested $20 million before Microsoft's 2019 $1 billion backing.
The document says Michigan and other early investors, including Khosla Ventures and Reid Hoffman's Aphorism Foundation, rank ahead of Microsoft in OpenAI's payout order, with redemption targets rising with inflation.
The potential windfall would be notable even for Michigan's $21.2 billion endowment and highlights how rare direct university stakes in Silicon Valley startups can produce outsized returns.
Is OpenAI's path to a trillion-dollar IPO built on innovation or risky pre-IPO financial engineering?
As U-M profits from OpenAI, are Michigan towns paying the environmental price for the AI gold rush?
With its non-profit mission gone, is OpenAI prioritizing profit over its promise to safely benefit humanity?
University of Michigan’s Strategic AI Investment: From $20 Million to a $2 Billion Paper Gain
Overview
In March 2026, OpenAI secured a record $122 billion funding round, reaching an $852 billion valuation backed by major investors like Amazon, Nvidia, and SoftBank. Despite generating $2 billion monthly revenue and boasting 900 million weekly users, OpenAI remains unprofitable due to massive operational costs, fueling valuation pressures ahead of a planned IPO in late 2026 or 2027. The University of Michigan, an early investor, now holds a paper gain of about $2 billion, significantly boosting its endowment returns. Michigan’s strategic AI investments emphasize long-term value and environmental responsibility, balancing high growth potential with risks from market volatility, competition, and regulatory uncertainty.