Artificial intelligence powerhouse Anthropic is reportedly preparing for a blockbuster US share sale that could value the company at $1 trillion, a figure that would cement its status as one of the most valuable private technology firms in history. The move has drawn the attention of British regulators, who are watching closely as the race to dominate the AI frontier intensifies.
Anthropic, best known for its Claude family of large language models, has become a darling of Silicon Valley investors seeking exposure to the generative AI boom. The company has raised billions from backers including Google, Salesforce, and venture capital firms, positioning itself as a safer, more ethically-aligned alternative to rivals such as OpenAI. But a $1tn valuation would represent a stunning leap from its last reported valuation of $18bn in early 2024, reflecting the breakneck pace of AI hype.
The proposed share sale, expected to take place on US exchanges, would allow Anthropic to tap into deep pools of capital while giving early investors a chance to cash out. However, the sheer scale of the valuation has raised eyebrows among analysts who question whether the company’s revenue can justify such a number. Anthropic’s annualised revenue is estimated at around $500m, meaning the valuation would exceed 2,000 times earnings — a multiple that even growth-obsessed markets may struggle to digest.
Across the Atlantic, British regulators are taking a keen interest. The Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) has already launched a review into the AI sector, scrutinising partnerships between Big Tech and startups like Anthropic. The CMA’s concern is that these deals could stifle competition and entrench market power in the hands of a few dominant players. Anthropic’s $1tn ambition, if realised, would only amplify these worries.
“We are entering a phase where a handful of AI companies could wield unprecedented economic influence,” said a source familiar with the CMA’s thinking. “A trillion-dollar valuation for an AI firm that has yet to prove it can generate sustainable profits is a red flag. The regulator will want to ensure that British consumers and businesses are not left behind in a market dominated by US giants.”
The British government has also waded into the debate, with the prime minister calling for a “pro-innovation” approach to AI regulation while cautioning against overreach. Yet the prospect of an American AI super-company valued at the size of the UK’s entire tech sector has prompted calls for more robust domestic champions.
Anthropic’s ascent is emblematic of the AI industry’s dual nature: visionary breakthroughs tempered by Black Mirror-worthy risks. The company’s commitment to “constitutional AI” — a technique that aligns models with human values — has won plaudits among ethicists. But its rapid growth raises existential questions: Who controls the algorithms that will mediate our reality? Can a single corporation be trusted with such immense power?
For now, the share sale is a statement of intent. Anthropic is betting that the world’s appetite for AI is insatiable and that its cautious, safety-first approach will win out over rivals rushing to market. British regulators, meanwhile, will be poring over the fine print, ensuring that the future of AI does not become a monopoly carved up in California.
As one Silicon Valley insider put it: “This is a Manhattan Project-level moment for tech. But we’d better make sure we don’t blow ourselves up.” The trillion-dollar question is whether Anthropic’s valuation is a sign of a golden age or a bubble waiting to burst.









