TechCrunch’s follow-up reporting said investors were asked to submit allocations within 48 hours and that the round was estimated to close within about two weeks, though final terms could still change .
Reuters/The Star reported, citing Bloomberg, that Anthropic raised $30 billion in February at a $380 billion valuation . A new round at $850 billion to $900 billion or more would more than double that figure in a short period
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That is the central valuation story: investors would be treating Anthropic less like a typical software company and more like scarce exposure to a frontier AI platform. Reports have connected the possible raise to strong demand and rising compute needs, and EnterpriseAI/Economic Times described it as one of the largest AI fundraises to date .
But a private valuation is not the same as an IPO valuation. Private rounds reflect negotiated demand from a limited investor set. A public listing would bring broader scrutiny of revenue durability, margins, customer concentration, infrastructure costs and the path from model demand to profitable growth.
The demand signal is unusually clear across the reports. TechCrunch said Anthropic received multiple preemptive offers for around $50 billion at an $850 billion to $900 billion valuation . Its next report said allocation requests were due within 48 hours and that strong investor interest could push the final valuation above the roughly $900 billion target
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If accurate, that suggests investors are competing for private exposure before any public listing. It also suggests Anthropic may have leverage: when investors are willing to make preemptive offers at this scale, the company can potentially choose between raising now, waiting for a better market window, or using private capital to reduce IPO pressure.
The caution is just as important. Allocation requests, early talks and preemptive offers are not the same as a signed financing. Reuters/The Star reported that no offers had been accepted at the time of Bloomberg’s report, and Anthropic declined to comment .
The reported size makes more sense if the round is viewed as infrastructure financing, not normal startup runway. EnterpriseAI/Economic Times linked the potential financing to rising compute needs, while reporting that Anthropic was targeting roughly $50 billion at about a $900 billion valuation .
A round of that size could give Anthropic time and flexibility. It could fund expansion while the company remains private, or it could serve as a bridge that sets a valuation benchmark before an IPO. Either path has trade-offs: more private capital can reduce immediate IPO urgency, but a near-$900 billion price tag would also raise expectations for the eventual public-market story.
The IPO angle is real in the reporting, but still unsettled. TNW, summarizing Bloomberg, said a board decision on whether to proceed with the financing was expected in May and mentioned a potential IPO as early as October 2026 . EnterpriseAI/Economic Times described the potential round as likely to be Anthropic’s final private financing before a planned IPO later in the year
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Those are not the same as an official filing or confirmed timetable. The more precise read is that the round could preserve optionality. If it closes, Anthropic could enter any IPO process with a powerful demand signal and a high private valuation reference point. It could also stay private longer with capital that resembles public-market scale.
The downside is the bar. A company that raises near $900 billion privately would face intense questions whenever it goes public: how fast revenue is growing, how much it costs to serve and train models, whether enterprise demand is durable, and whether the economics can support the valuation.
The bottom line: the reported $50 billion round is best read as a serious but unconfirmed signal. Private investors may be willing to value Anthropic like a near-trillion-dollar AI platform, but the financing still needs to close — and any IPO would face a separate public-market test .
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