The arithmetic is striking. Anthropic raised $30 billion at a $380 billion valuation in February 2026. Now, roughly 90 days later, the company is reportedly fielding preemptive offers at a valuation range of $850 billion to $900 billion, a 2.4x increase in implied value within a single quarter. The round, if it proceeds, would represent approximately $50 billion in fresh capital.
Two points of discipline before reading into the number. First, Anthropic declined to comment when contacted by Reuters. Second, Bloomberg and TechCrunch, the originating sources, attribute this to unnamed people familiar with the matter. The KFGO relay of the Reuters wire confirms the framing and the Anthropic non-comment, but no official terms have been accepted or disclosed. This is a reported consideration, not a closed round.
What investors appear to be pricing: three things. Enterprise revenue acceleration, according to analyst estimates from Counterpoint Research, as reported by The Register, Anthropic held approximately 31.4% of LLM revenue in Q1 2026 compared to approximately 29% for OpenAI, though these are analyst estimates and have not been independently verified by this hub. Infrastructure monetization premium, Anthropic’s disclosed hyperscaler commitments give it a revenue floor that most AI startups lack. And anticipated IPO optionality, a $900 billion primary-round valuation creates a credible path to a public market listing that would represent one of the largest technology IPOs in history.
The comparison most useful to investors is OpenAI’s $852 billion valuation, established on secondary markets and referenced in this hub’s prior coverage. Anthropic’s reported primary-round target would surpass that figure, which matters because primary rounds typically carry more conservative pricing than secondary market speculation. If the $900 billion figure holds in a primary raise, it would represent a genuine reset of frontier lab valuation logic, not a continuation of secondary market froth.
A board meeting in May is expected to finalize the decision, per TechCrunch reporting. That’s a short timeline. The speed, preemptive offers, a May board meeting, a $50 billion target, suggests investors are competing for allocation rather than negotiating terms. That dynamic is itself a market signal: allocation pressure in a primary round at this scale implies investor consensus that the window for pre-IPO positioning is closing.
What to watch: whether Anthropic confirms, modifies, or declines the offers at the May board meeting; whether the lead investor is a strategic (hyperscaler, sovereign wealth fund) or financial (institutional PE/VC); and whether the valuation holds at $900 billion or gets negotiated down as terms are finalized. A strategic lead would carry different implications, it would likely come with compute commitments or distribution agreements that affect competitive dynamics with OpenAI and Google DeepMind.
The TJS read: Anthropic’s reported valuation trajectory, $380 billion to $900 billion in 90 days, reflects a market that is pricing enterprise AI revenue growth as durable, not cyclical. That’s a meaningful signal for enterprise buyers: if sophisticated institutional investors are accepting Anthropic’s revenue trajectory at this valuation, the company’s platform commitments are more likely to be honored long-term. The risk is that anonymous-source reporting on pre-decision rounds has historically been revised downward once formal terms are set.