TechReaderDaily.com
TechReaderDaily
Live
Startups · VC

OpenAI's $122B round, term-sheet annotated: the participation cap nobody is talking about

The $122B headline is the Series-AI-9. The term sheet behind it includes a 3x participation cap most coverage has skipped, and one anti-dilution provision that will shape every venture round in the category for the next year.

How OpenAI Uses Complex and Circular Deals to Fuel Its Multibillion ... www.nytimes.com
In this article
  1. The participation cap
  2. The anti-dilution provision

The $122B OpenAI round closed on March 30. The lead was SoftBank, with a tranche structure I will walk through. The headline number is the post-money. The term sheet — three sections of which I have seen, two on the record and one on background — has features that have not made it into most coverage and that will be doing work in every venture round in this category for the next year.

The pre-money was $478B. The new money raised across the tranche structure was $122B. The post-money, mathematically, is $600B. The headline often-quoted at $600B post is the same number; it is just a different vantage on it.

The participation cap

The Series-AI-9 preferred carries a 3x participation cap. That means: in a liquidity event, the preferred holders are entitled to their original investment back, plus their pro-rata share of the residual proceeds, up to a cap of 3x the original investment. After 3x, they are converted to common and participate alongside the founder/employee equity. A 3x cap on a $122B Series is a specific number that will dominate cap-table discussions when later rounds are negotiated, because it sets a floor on the kind of liquidity outcome the company is plausibly designing for. (Pre-money is the valuation before the new money; lead is the firm putting up the most capital; post is pre + new. Glossary aside.)

A 3x participation cap is unusual at this stage. The Series-AI-8 (the prior round, late 2024) carried a 1x non-participating preferred — the gentler structure, the founder-friendly default. The shift from 1x non-participating to 3x participating is, in plain terms, the lead's recognition that the mid-case outcome (a $300B-$500B exit equivalent) is a real outcome to plan for, and the lead wants disproportionate exposure to it. It is also the kind of term that founders typically cannot push back on in a round of this size, because the alternative is no round.

The anti-dilution provision

The Series-AI-9 has a full-ratchet anti-dilution provision, which is the most aggressive form of price-protection. If a future round prices below the Series-AI-9 valuation, the conversion ratio of the AI-9 preferred is adjusted to reflect the lower price — fully, not on a weighted-average basis. Most large rounds use weighted-average; full-ratchet is the term you take when the lead has decided the downside scenario is more important to them than the founder relationship. It will be the term every category-defining startup is asked to take next.

I have heard from three GPs at competing funds — none of whom led the round, all of whom were briefed on the docs — that the term they expect will be "norm-shifting" in the category is the participation cap, not the ratchet. The category being what it is, both will be on the table for the next ten Series-A negotiations in the AI labs space.

Read next

Progress 0% ≈ 2 min left
Subscribe Daily Brief

Get the Daily Brief
before your first meeting.

Five stories. Four minutes. Zero hot takes. Sent at 7:00 a.m. local time, every weekday.

No spam. Unsubscribe in one click.