OpenAI expects to 3X revenue in 2025 but Chinese AI firms are heating up

OpenAI expects to more than triple its revenue this year to $12.7 billion, despite fast-growing competition from the likes of Chinaโ€™s DeepSeek and other competitors making rapid progress.

The ChatGPT creators also expect its revenue target for 2025 to more than double to $29.4 billion by 2026, Bloomberg reported on March 26, citing a person familiar with the matter.

The 2025 estimate is a little higher than the $11.6 billion revenue target that OpenAI was reportedly eyeing for 2025, The New York Times reported last September.

Bloomberg noted that the bulk of ChatGPTโ€™s revenue has come from its paid AI software subscription offerings for consumers and businesses.

OpenAI reportedly hit 1 million paid users for the corporate versions of ChatGPT last September, while the company more recently added a $200 monthly ChatGPT Pro option.

The Sam Altman-led firm does not expect to be cash-flow positive until 2029, when it expects its revenue to top $125 billion, the person told Bloomberg.

OpenAI is reportedly close to finalizing a $40 billion funding round led by SoftBank Group at a valuation of up to $300 billion, Bloomberg reported on March 26. The firm is also looking to convert its nonprofit business model into a for-profit venture.

Competition heats up between US and Chinese AI players

While the release of DeepSeekโ€™s ChatGPT-competitor โ€œR-1โ€ model sent shockwaves through the AI industry in late January, it sparked a wave of several other high-quality, low-cost AI solutions from other Chinese tech firms, Bloomberg reported on March 26.

Baidu Inc. launched its โ€œErnie X1โ€ model to compete with DeepSeekโ€™s R-1 model in China, while Alibaba Group launched its new open-source AI model for cost-effective AI agents on March 26.

Source: David Sacks

Tencent Holdings also unveiled an AI chatbot of its own under subsidiary firm Ant Group Co, while DeepSeek released its latest model โ€” DeepSeek-V3-0324 โ€” on March 24.

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While it remains to be seen how these Chinese models truly stack up against OpenAIโ€™s products, the newer and often cheaper options are putting more pressure on the business models of leading US companies, Balaji Srinivasan, a tech investor and former general partner at tech-focused venture capital firm Andreessen โ€œa16zโ€ Horowitz said in a March 22 X post.

โ€œChina is trying to do to AI what they always do: study, copy, optimize, and then bankrupt everyone with low prices and enormous scale.โ€

Lee Kai-fu, CEO of Chinese startup 01.AI told Reuters on March 25 that DeepSeekโ€™s efforts have positioned Chinese AI firms only three months behind their US counterparts after previously being around six to nine months behind.

Source: The Short Bear

Meanwhile, OpenAIโ€™s CEO Sam Altman said on Feb. 12 that his firm is looking to ship GPT-4.5 and GPT-5 in the coming weeks or months.

Plus and Pro subscribers will be able to run GPT-5 at a โ€œhigher level of intelligenceโ€ which will incorporate voice, canvas, search, deep research features and more, he said in OpenAIโ€™s technical roadmap update.

Among OpenAIโ€™s competitors in the US market are Anthropic, DeepMind, xAI and Googleโ€™s Gemini.

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