OpenAI responded publicly on Tuesday to a report alleging the company had fallen short of internal goals for user acquisition and revenue, and that those shortfalls had prompted leadership concerns about financing upcoming data-center spending.
On the social platform X, OpenAI pushed back, pointing to what it portrayed as clear performance signals: "breakout Codex growth, enterprise offerings on every cloud, the only consumer app that matters, a compute strategy built to accelerate, and the best researchers in the world." The company also provided a statement to Bloomberg saying its business is "firing on all cylinders" and that its enterprise and advertising business lines are growing.
The Wall Street Journal article cited in the report said Chief Financial Officer Sarah Friar had expressed worry to company leaders over the ability to afford future computing contracts if revenue growth does not pick up. The report also described board directors taking a closer look at the firm's data-center arrangements in recent months and questioning Chief Executive Sam Altman’s efforts to secure additional computing power amid what the report described as a business slowdown.
OpenAI’s public comments framed the situation in product and business terms, listing multiple indicators of momentum across developer tools, cloud portability, consumer reach and research capability. The company’s reference to enterprise offerings on multiple clouds and a compute strategy positioned as "built to accelerate" point to a focus on both commercial channels and infrastructure planning.
Comments attributed to the CFO and descriptions of board inquiries in the report underscore the narrow, finance-oriented concerns at the center of the story: specifically, the capacity to fund ongoing compute and data-center commitments if revenue gains do not materialize at a faster pace.
The competing narratives in play are straightforward: one side conveys internal financial caution tied to capital-intensive infrastructure commitments; the other emphasizes product traction and expanding business lines as evidence of healthy performance. The company’s public statements are categorical in rejecting the notion that its operations are impaired, while the report highlighted explicit worries from financial leadership and governance review of data-center deals.
Context noted in reporting: The report named the CFO and said board members had reviewed data-center contracts more closely, and OpenAI countered with a list of product and commercial indicators and a Bloomberg statement on business growth.