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BofA extends first $520 million loan to OpenAI ahead of IPO, source says

By Thomson Reuters Jul 8, 2026 | 11:57 AM

July 8 (Reuters) – Bank of America has extended a $520 million credit line to OpenAI, its first loan to the AI company that is preparing for an initial public offering, ​a person familiar with the matter told Reuters on ‌Wednesday.

The loan makes BofA one of OpenAI’s largest lenders and bolsters its credentials as a market leader in AI-related capital markets financing, the source said, requesting anonymity to discuss confidential information.

BofA has helped raise nearly $500 billion in capital ‌for ​AI-related companies since 2025, accounting for 60% ⁠of such fundraising across ⁠investment-grade debt, leveraged finance and equity capital markets, according to internal data seen by Reuters.

The second-largest American lender is also eyeing advisory roles on the planned IPOs of OpenAI and Anthropic, ​according to a second source familiar with the matter.

The move follows its role in SpaceX’s blockbuster IPO, where it was ⁠a joint bookrunner and led the U.S. ⁠retail distribution effort. The rockets-to-AI company led by ​Elon Musk debuted in June at a valuation of more than $2 trillion ​after pulling off the world’s largest IPO.

OpenAI confidentially filed ‌for a U.S. IPO last month. Reuters has reported that the ChatGPT maker, a key player in the AI race, is targeting a valuation of more than $1 trillion in a listing that could ⁠come as soon as this year.

Mega IPOs are typically very lucrative for Wall Street banks, generating hundreds of millions of dollars in fees ⁠while opening the door ‌to years of follow-on business.

OpenAI did not ⁠immediately respond to Reuters’ request for comment. The ​news of ‌BofA handing the company a credit line was ​first reported ⁠by Bloomberg earlier on Wednesday.

The AI company was founded in 2015 as a research-focused nonprofit, but created a for-profit arm four years later to help fund the soaring costs of developing AI systems.

(Reporting by Saeed Azhar in New York and Manya Saini in Bengaluru; Editing ​by Diti Pujara)