Senior Trump administration officials have held early discussions with major AI companies, including OpenAI, about the government acquiring voluntary equity stakes whose returns could fund public dividends.
The following is drawn from reporting by Notus, citing three anonymous sources familiar with the discussions:
Senior officials in the Trump administration have held early-stage discussions with major artificial intelligence companies about the possibility of the federal government acquiring equity stakes in their firms, in what would mark a striking departure from conventional technology policy and private market norms.
OpenAI chief executive Sam Altman has been the most active advocate of the concept, raising it directly with President Trump in a conversation in early 2025 and returning to the idea with senior administration figures in recent weeks. The framing, according to people familiar with the matter, centres on distributing the economic benefits of artificial intelligence more broadly across the American public rather than concentrating them among a narrow group of private owners. One mechanism under discussion would see returns from any government shareholding directed toward a dividend payment to all American households.
The discussions are described as preliminary, with details still in flux and the legal pathway far from settled. The envisaged structure would involve firms voluntarily ceding shares rather than any compulsory acquisition, though how that transfer would be structured under existing law is unclear and represents a potential obstacle to the idea ever being formalised.
The deliberations land at a sensitive moment for the industry. OpenAI and Anthropic are both preparing for initial public offerings expected to rank among the largest in market history, and both companies are navigating sustained public anxiety about artificial intelligence’s economic consequences, including its effects on employment, wealth distribution, and democratic governance. A government stake, proponents argue, could serve as a trust-building mechanism, tying the public purse to the sector’s success and ensuring that a technology built on collective human knowledge delivers returns beyond its direct investors.
Anthropic, for its part, is not part of the equity conversations, according to a person familiar with the matter.
Critics of the concept have pointed to a fundamental tension at its core. A government that holds equity in the companies it is simultaneously responsible for regulating faces a structural conflict of interest that would be difficult to manage cleanly. It also raises questions about political incentives, including whether public ownership increases the likelihood of a federal backstop if a major AI firm runs into financial difficulty.
The White House declined to comment.
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Government equity stakes in AI companies would represent an unprecedented intervention in the private technology sector, with direct implications for how OpenAI and Anthropic are valued ahead of what are expected to be among the largest IPOs in history. Any confirmed arrangement could complicate the investment thesis for public market participants by introducing a non-commercial shareholder with regulatory authority, creating a structural conflict of interest that markets would need to price. The dividend distribution concept, if formalised, could also affect how the firms manage capital allocation and profit distribution post-listing.
This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at investinglive.com.
