Sam Altman's $65K OpenAI Salary Masks A $2.8 Billion Startup Empire

Sam Altman's $65K OpenAI Salary Masks A $2.8 Billion Startup Empire
Sam Altman's $65K OpenAI Salary Masks A $2.8 Billion Startup Empire

While Sam Altman is widely recognized as the CEO and co-founder of OpenAI, he also plays a significant role in venture capital and startup investing. Most people are unaware that Altman’s investment empire is valued at over $2.8 billion, starkly contrasting his modest salary of $65,000 at OpenAI. His family office manages this empire, which oversees his extensive and diverse portfolio.

Building An Investment Empire

According to the Wall Street Journal, Altman and his venture funds have invested in more than 400 companies. His investment empire dates back to 2012, when Altman sold Loopt and used the profits to create his first venture fund, Hydrazine.

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By 2014, he had already invested in 40 companies, and as he mentioned in a personal blog post, “Five of them are in the ‘really good’ category — a current value of ~100x or more, based on the valuation of the last round or last offer.”

He also headed Y Combinator from 2015 to 2019. The tech incubator is famous for providing seed funding to Stripe, Airbnb, and Dropbox. Altman also served as an angel and VC investor to over 100 startups, including Asana, Reddit, Instacart, and Pinterest.

Among his most exciting investments is certainly Stripe. With a valuation of $65 billion, the company is now the third-most valuable U.S. startup, trailing only SpaceX and OpenAI. Altman initially invested $15,000 for a 2% stake in the company. Although Altman’s stake has since decreased to less than 2%, it remains his most successful investment. Last year, Stripe also announced a partnership to help commercialize OpenAI’s technology.

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Altman got a loan from JPMorgan Chase to support his investment activities, using his growing collection of investments as collateral. This deal allowed him to invest large amounts of money in startups, increasing his influence and ownership in these companies. While this strategy is risky because startups can be unpredictable, it has worked well for Altman, allowing him to grow his investments and take advantage of new opportunities.

Influence And Wealth

It’s now obvious that Altman’s investments have made him much richer than his job at OpenAI ever did. His skill in building a big investment portfolio while running a major AI company stresses his unique influence in the tech world.