July 4, 2026, (Inside AI) — OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has proposed donating 5% of the company's equity to a US sovereign wealth fund, a move aimed at giving the public a direct stake in the artificial intelligence boom. The proposal, first reported by CNBC in June and later confirmed by President Donald Trump, seeks to "secure good relations with the administration and ... address political blowback," according to sources familiar with the discussions.
The plan would require other leading AI companies to contribute similar stakes, creating a shared pool of assets that could distribute returns to American citizens. However, the talks remain preliminary, with no formal structure agreed upon. Any implementation would likely need congressional approval, a hurdle that could stall or reshape the initiative.
Altman has been refining this vision for months. In April, OpenAI released a policy paper outlining a public wealth fund that invests directly in AI firms and channels profits to individuals. The paper stated that fund returns could be distributed directly to citizens, letting more people share in AI-driven growth regardless of their starting wealth or capital access. This latest equity donation idea marks a shift from broad investment to a direct ownership model.
The Political Calculus Behind OpenAI's Overture
The proposal emerges amid intensifying political pressure. In June, Senator Bernie Sanders introduced a bill to levy a one-time 50% tax on AI company stock, with collected shares funneled into a public wealth fund. The bill targets all "systemically important" AI firms but has not advanced to committee. Altman's equity donation can be seen as a preemptive counteroffer: a voluntary, industry-led model versus a punitive tax.
President Trump has publicly entertained the idea of giving pieces of AI companies to the American public, framing it as making citizens partners with the companies. Yet the administration's stance remains fluid. A sovereign wealth fund would require legislative action, and past proposals for such a fund—like the 2024 American Prosperity Fund bill—have stalled. The political viability hinges on bipartisan support, which is far from guaranteed in an election year.
Critics argue that a 5% stake is symbolic, given OpenAI's complex capped-profit structure. The company's valuation, reportedly near $300 billion, means a 5% donation would be worth roughly $15 billion—significant but small relative to the trillions in projected AI economic gains. Moreover, OpenAI's conversion to a for-profit entity is still in flux, raising questions about when and how equity could be transferred.
Who Really Benefits? The Equity vs. Tax Debate
The Sanders bill and Altman's proposal represent two philosophies. Sanders' 50% tax would immediately redistribute a massive slice of AI wealth, potentially funding universal dividends or social programs. Altman's model relies on voluntary corporate action and market growth, with returns trickling down over time. Neither addresses the concentration of power in a few AI labs, a concern raised by antitrust advocates.
Historical parallels are instructive. Alaska's Permanent Fund, seeded by oil revenues, has paid annual dividends to residents since 1982. But AI is not a natural resource; it is a fast-evolving technology with global spillovers. A US AI fund would need to navigate intellectual property, international competition, and the risk of politicized investment decisions.
OpenAI has not commented on the record, but Altman's outreach suggests a strategic pivot. By offering equity, the company may seek to blunt calls for heavier regulation or taxation while positioning itself as a public-minded pioneer. Whether other AI giants like Google, Microsoft, or Anthropic would follow suit remains unclear. Their participation would be essential for a fund to have meaningful scale.
For now, the proposal is a trial balloon in a broader conversation about AI's societal contract. As AI systems automate more tasks, the question of who owns the gains will only grow louder. Altman's equity idea may be the opening bid in a negotiation that will define the next decade of tech policy.