OpenAI founder Sam Altman’s sprawling network of investments

Altman has invested in hundreds of start-ups, adding to his massive influence in Silicon Valley

December 23, 2023 at 6:00 a.m. EST
Sam Altman, chief executive of OpenAI, at the Hope Global Forums annual meeting in Atlanta on Dec. 11. (Washington Post illustration; Dustin Chambers/Bloomberg/Getty Images)
4 min
Sam Altman is best known as the chief executive of OpenAI — the pioneering artificial intelligence company that has turned him into one of Silicon Valley’s most powerful people. But before that, Altman was known as one of the tech industry’s most prolific angel investors, making dozens of investments in a range of companies focused on extending life to building fusion reactors.
Now, his sprawling web of investments in start-ups is facing fresh scrutiny, as some of them do business with OpenAI or could benefit from preferential access to OpenAI’s technology.
Since 2010, Altman has personally invested in 125 companies, according to venture capital research firm PitchBook. Other entities that he’s associated with, including an investment firm he founded with his brothers called Hydrazine Capital, have invested in two dozen more. This year alone, as OpenAI grew rapidly under his leadership, he made more than 20 investments. From 2011 to 2019, Altman was also an investor at Y Combinator, Silicon Valley’s most prominent start-up incubator, where he served as lead partner on another 280 deals, giving him influence among dozens of the most promising start-ups in tech.
Here are a few of the most notable investments in Altman’s empire.
The divertor of Trenta, Helion Energy’s sixth fusion generator prototype. (Business Wire/AP)

Helion Energy

Nuclear fusion has been a science-fiction fantasy for decades. Unlike regular nuclear reactors, which generate power by splitting atoms, fusion reactors do the same by smashing two atoms together. A recent breakthrough from U.S. government scientists has ignited excitement that clean and cheap fusion energy may actually be possible. Despite those recent advances, many scientists and engineers are still skeptical that fusion will work any time soon. Several start-ups are trying to do it anyway, including Helion Energy. Altman invested in the Everett, Wash.-based company as a partner at Y Combinator in 2014. Then in 2021, he invested $375 million in the company, according to venture capital data firm CB Insights, his largest personal investment ever.
In May, just months after investing billions of dollars in OpenAI, Microsoft signed a deal to be the first company to buy electricity from Helion, which it expects to begin producing in 2028.

Boom Aviation

Remember the Concorde jet? Boom Aviation is one of a small group of companies trying to bring back supersonic commercial travel more than 20 years after the Concorde made its last flight. Altman first invested in Boom as a private investor in 2016. Then, as a partner at Y Combinator in 2019, Altman invested in the company again. Boom has signed tentative purchase agreements for its still-under-development Overture jet with United and American Airlines and it plans to have the jets carrying passengers by 2029.

Retro Biosciences

The biotechnology company wants to slow aging by developing techniques to remove damaged cells and treating older cells to make them act as if they were young again. Altman invested $180 million in the company in 2022. Along with Helion, the two huge investments accounted for “all my liquid net worth,” Altman told MIT Technology Review earlier this year. Despite the huge cash infusion, the company is still very early-stage, announcing its presence to the world in 2022 when Altman made his investment.
Imran Chaudhri speaks at BoF VOICES 2022 at Soho Farmhouse on Nov. 30, 2022, in Chipping Norton, England. (John Phillips/Getty Images)

Humane

Former Apple employees and married couple Imran Chaudhri and Bethany Bongiorno believe they’ve invented a new hardware device for the age of AI. Humane’s Ai Pin is worn on the chest and can be controlled by voice commands and hand movements. A laser display can be projected onto the user’s hand, obviating the need for a screen. Altman has contributed to three of Humane’s funding rounds, from 2020 to 2023. At the same time, he’s invested in another similar hardware company, called Rewind AI.

Cruise

The self-driving car company went through Y Combinator when Altman worked there, and he made a personal investment in 2015. The next year, General Motors acquired the start-up. Cruise is now one of the most prominent self-driving car companies, and it was the first to provide a driverless ride-hailing service in San Francisco. But the company is now in crisis. In October, a human driver hit a pedestrian, flinging her into the path of a Cruise car, which then rolled over the person and dragged her for 20 feet. California authorities accused Cruise of trying to cover up the details of the accident. The company lost its permits to operate in California and pulled its entire self-driving fleet off public roads. In November, chief executive Kyle Vogt stepped down.
Gerrit De Vynck is a tech reporter for The Washington Post. He writes about Google, artificial intelligence and the algorithms that increasingly shape society. He previously covered tech for seven years at Bloomberg News. Twitter
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I wish wp would create an Altman filter and AI filter. Yes, I choose not to read about them but even the headlines drain my soul.
What’s the point of having a nonprofit if you’re making all this money. Sounds like something Hunter Biden should invest in
These are moonshot projects. (Cruise already cratered as have many of these self-driving efforts).

Aside from Boom (where theoretically all the engineering exists already but the economics are questionable), the others would be a big leap forward if it succeeds. But, I just don't see how any of the others would require anything less than a decade if ever.

I think the U.S. needs to invest more in things with a shorter time window but more predictable outcome (that we know needs tending to and are needed by most people). Yes, keep some in the moonshot category but focus needs to be in the here and now as a long list of neglected needs have accumulated for a generation.

(There's been a lot chatter on AI but until it proves itself in the real world, it's conjecture what the impact will be. The Internet 1.0 was great. Internet 2.0 not so much).
Invested, gambled, speculated whose money? Follow the money is the real story.
It appears Altman has a very diversified portfolio in startups, but it doesn’t seem any of these mentioned here are smart investments. Maybe some of the unmentioned investments look better.
Factually true statement: I have invested in over 500 companies with a combined market value over $39 trillion. Does that make me worthy of a similar article such as this one? Anyone who has bought in to a S&P 500 mutual fund can claim the same "investments" in so many companies.
It's his relative stake in each of the companies which translate to his influence to the future of our country.
The article is vague about the source and amount of "his" investments. Sounds more like he is using others people's money, not his own. There is one mention of a "personal" investment with a dollar figure, but given the fluff of the entire article I have doubts about the source of "his" investment.
Altman's money? Or, is it investors' money that he uses to fund other projects? OpenAI raised $1 billion -- is that money staying at OpenAI?

The background of this guy does not show any massive payday but maybe I am missing how or when he cashed out from a previous venture.
When he builds a lair inside a fake volcano and captures James Bond then I may do more than skim. Yawn.
Hats off and better days ahead Heir Sam Altman. May you dream even bigger if it's good for mankind. Just one question. Why the venture into self driving cars when there are several others following that road?
I've got $2, can I invest in Start-Ups, too?
No only accredited investors can invest in these at this stage. I'm sure they'll be space for you when they do an IPO pump and dump. Regulations are for your own good lol.
While Altman has the money and access to make these investment, it's not clear about his acumen. But like most VC's, most will fail or become zombies, and he only needs one or two to succeed.
High states gambling. It’s what VC firms do.
Sprawling. Massive. These are such silly adjectives to use in an article. Come on guys. Bezos is going to put this paper up for sale as soon as the election is over. Don't ruin your reputation yet.
Any credible estimate of his new worth? No all angel investments pan out so maybe he still doesn't have Zuckerberg money as leverage?
The article isvery thin on details about Altman using his "own" money versus using other people's money.
The sky is falling, a rich guy is investing in companies. Ahhhhh!
If you read news only for shock value, not for information, you're subscribing to the wrong paper.
Change "read" to "write" in your reply.
Biden hates innovation and technology, and loves small-minded, fearful bureaucracies.
focus please - nothing to do with Biden
Thank you , Vivek , for your post.
Scraping the bottom of the FOX Barrel or you have actual examples of Biden fighting against innovation?
Fox barrel?
Duhhhrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr
Cute but you know exactly what I meant!! Your response tells me I was spot on!!!
BS from the peanut gallery.
Thanks for making adding to my ignore so easy!!!!
Ladies and Gents, Eloon 2.0.
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