Anthropic’s ongoing fundraising story hit a data integrity problem. According to reporting attributed to the Financial Times, Anthropic’s annualized revenue run rate has reportedly reached $45 billion as of May 2026, a figure that conflicts directly with a separate report from the same outlet last week citing $30 billion. Both figures use the same December 2025 baseline: reported annualized revenue of approximately $9 billion. The growth trajectory is real. The specific endpoint is not.
That endpoint matters. The $50B round at a reported $900B to $1T valuation, consistent with prior FT reporting and corroborated across multiple prior reporting cycles, is being priced in part on revenue momentum. Whether that momentum puts current ARR at $30B or $45B is a 50% difference in the central data point investors are using.
The discrepancy doesn’t resolve cleanly. A genuine revenue acceleration from $30B to $45B in one week is plausible given the pace of agentic AI adoption, enterprise contracts at this scale can move run rates significantly. It’s also possible one figure reflects a forward projection and the other reflects trailing revenue. The reporting does not clarify the methodology, and independent cross-reference this cycle returned no corroborating sources.
For context: Anthropic would become the world’s most valuable private AI company at $1T, surpassing OpenAI’s March 2026 reported valuation of $852 billion. That comparison is what makes the ARR figure structurally important, private market valuations at this scale require revenue multiples that hold up under scrutiny, and a $15B spread in the denominator changes the multiple significantly.
The investor syndicate reportedly includes Dragoneer, General Catalyst, and Lightspeed, according to reporting that could not be independently corroborated this cycle. Treat those names as reported, not confirmed. The December 2025 baseline of approximately $9 billion in annualized revenue is consistent with prior reporting across multiple pipeline cycles and serves as the one anchor point in an otherwise uncertain data set.
Analysis
This is the third consecutive reporting cycle in which Anthropic's revenue figure has appeared in a single secondary-outlet report without independent verification. The pattern suggests the market is pricing a $1T round on data that no public source has confirmed to T1 standard. That gap is worth tracking as much as the figure itself.
What to watch
whether a third figure emerges from the same or different outlets before the round closes, and whether any lead investors make public statements that implicitly confirm a revenue range. In private rounds at this scale, LP updates and secondary market pricing sometimes provide ground-truth checks that press coverage misses. The round’s reported July 2026 close target gives roughly eight weeks for that clarity to emerge, or not.
TJS synthesis
The $30B versus $45B conflict is the actual story here. It exposes a structural problem in how frontier AI valuations are being reported: single-source revenue figures from secondary outlets, no standardized disclosure, and a market willing to price trillion-dollar rounds on unverified run-rate data. For investors already in the Anthropic ecosystem, including hyperscalers with reported commitments totaling $65 billion, the specific ARR figure may matter less than the directional signal. For new capital entering the round, the data gap is a due diligence problem, not a headline.