The Joint Venture Arms Race
On Monday, Anthropic unveiled a new joint venture to push its AI models into corporate workflows, backed by a $1.5 billion war chest from Blackstone, Hellman & Friedman, and Goldman Sachs, among others. The move was timed almost comically close to OpenAI’s own venture, The Development Company, which Bloomberg reported would raise $4 billion at a $10 billion valuation from investors like TPG and Brookfield. Both initiatives follow the same blueprint: raise cash from alternative asset managers to buy preferential access to their portfolio companies. It’s a classic gatekeeping play, wrapped in the language of ‘forward deployed engineers’ — a model lifted straight from Palantir’s playbook. The message to mid sized businesses is clear: pay up or get left behind.
The Real Winners and Losers
The new capital lets both labs expand their ‘FDE’ engineering teams, embedding them directly into client operations to customize workflows. Anthropic’s announcement waxed poetic about engineers sitting down with clinicians and IT staff, but the real story is about lock in. These joint ventures create a closed loop: investors get first dibs on lucrative AI contracts, and the labs get guaranteed revenue streams to placate IPO hungry shareholders. Meanwhile, both companies are vacuum up astronomical funding rounds — OpenAI pulled in $122 billion in March at an $852 billion valuation, and Anthropic is closing in on $50 billion at a $900 billion valuation. The AI race has officially become a financial engineering contest, where the winning move is to sell access to your corporate rolodex rather than build a better model.
Source: Techcrunch