An Anthropic IPO Could Be Here Sooner Than We Thought!

Source The Motley Fool

Competition among Anthropic, OpenAI, and many other artificial intelligence companies is heating up and could have profound impacts on investing decisions. In this podcast, Motley Fool contributors Tyler Crowe, Matt Frankel, and Jon Quast discuss:

  • Anthropic's IPO.
  • The competitive landscape of the large language models.
  • Klarna's buy now, pay later offering looking more and more like a credit card.
  • Stocks on their radar.

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A full transcript is below.

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This podcast was recorded on Dec. 04, 2025.

Tyler Crowe: Anthropic beats OpenAI to this one major milestone. This is Motley Fool Money. Welcome to Motley Fool Money. My name is Tyler Crowe. Today, I'm joined by longtime Fool contributors, Matt Frankel and Jon Quast. Today, we're going to cover our typical smattering of topics. We're going to go looking at the buy now pay later space because of some recent news from Klarna. We're going to do our typical Thursday stocks on our radar. But first, we're going to start with news coming out of Anthropic. OpenAI's chief competitor Anthropic has recently hired lawyers and has been in contact with investment bankers about an IPO that could occur as soon as 2026. It could end up being the largest IPO ever or at least in the top 5. Now, there's been a lot of hype for AI related IPOs this past year in 2025. We've seen companies like CoreWeave go for almost $100 billion or at least what they were looking for. We've seen companies like Fermi, a lot of pre revenue companies in the AI, pick and shovel space going for massive valuations, even though they really haven't done anything yet other than put a plan on paper, and we're getting these very ambitious valuations. Matt, I have to assume that with this IPO Anthropic is looking at, they're looking for a big payout here.

Matt Frankel: Yeah, I love the word you used ambitious valuations because Anthropic, they're having success getting money in the private markets. In my opinion, they would be wanting to step it up a bit. Right now, they're valued at about $350 billion reportedly in an ongoing funding round to which Microsoft and Nvidia have already committed $15 billion. It's not like they can't raise money privately, but this is up from $183 billion valuations, almost double in a September funding round. It really shows you the magnitude of hype surrounding these big AI players. Now it's not as if Anthropic as a pre-revenue business, so it's making money. It expects to end this year with $9 billion in annual recurring revenue, management's projecting that to rise to over 20 billion next year, and they have a pretty ambitious, again, a target of 70 billion for 2028. It all depends really on the rapid growth in AI spending. My rea1ql thought is, if the IPO market's doing what it's doing and the AI market is doing what they're doing now, then 2026 is a good target, even toward the first half. If the market cools, this could be delayed significantly. It's going to depend on what they think they can get out of the market. But as it stands now, it's not surprising to see a sense of urgency develop.

Jon Quast: I want to point out that the CEO of Anthropic, he recently said some AI giants are taking reckless hundreds of billions spending risks on data centers and chips. He didn't name names, but I think that we're all knowing who he's talking about, his former employer, OpenAI. These companies are spending a ton of money, and to Matt's point, they're making revenue. They're generating revenue, but they do need money because they are burning cash. Now, Deutsche Bank has done some research and done some projections. Anthropic is expected to burn cash over the next, let's say, two, three years, but it's somewhat modest. I think that they'll be able to raise what they need. On the other hand, OpenAI is projected to burn at least 140 billion cumulatively through 2029. I don't even know if my brain can comprehend that number. These companies are looking for funds so that they can execute on their business ambitions. They're already valued at over 300 billion and over 500 billion for OpenAI. These are some of the largest private valuations in history. It's only a matter of time before they go to the public markets looking for money.

Tyler Crowe: I'm trying to start to think, eventually, you see these massive numbers being put up in the private valuation space. Granted, the private markets, whether it be venture capital, whether it be insurance companies, we're seeing companies like Brookfield Asset Management, all these alternative asset managers that have a lot more money sloshing around to make investments like this. Eventually, the private markets are going to tap out with the amount of money they can give to it. The public market almost seems inevitable for these companies, and to your point, Anthropic is perhaps getting to it early enough before there's enough doubt or skepticism when it comes to AI spending that perhaps these valuations start to wane before it's time to go public. Now, I'm not the most up-to-date, most advanced large language models in some of the things that these AI companies are doing. But it does seem based on your other media outlet, reports and tech reviews and things like that, it appears that Google's Gemini 3 is getting rave reviews, and so good that there was even a recent Wall Street Journal article that came out talking about a memo at OpenAI declaring a Code Red to basically improve ChatGPT and delaying a lot of the side projects that they were working on outside of ChatGPT is like, hey, we got to get this right because the competitions coming fast. Thinking about that idea of this space is becoming more competitive. We're talking about an Anthropic IPO and Google Gemini and all of that. With it about to be IPO, we're assuming OpenAI is going to do an IPO because they've been flirting with a Will aisle. Maybe Elon Musk's xAI goes public. I doubt that one. We have publicly traded Alphabet today with a lot of large language models and the lay of the land here today. Guys, of these artificial intelligence companies, which one as an investment interests you the most?

Jon Quast: I think you hit the nail on the head, Tyler. When it comes to the AI models themselves, if you have a lead, I don't think it lasts for very long anymore because of just how fast the space is iterating. I'm not really all that interested in the businesses that are creating the AI models themselves. I'm more interested in the companies that know what they want to do with the models as far as creating a business and monetizing it. I think that when you look at the companies that you just mentioned, Anthropic, OpenAI, xAI, and Alphabet, for me, Alphabet has the clearest roadmap of what it can do with AI. That really interests me as an investor. I would say Alphabet would be at the top of my list as far as the companies you just mentioned. But that said, xAI with all of the things that Elon Musk is pursuing, all of the companies that he has, I would say that xAI also has probably interesting ways to monetize its AI ambitions.

Matt Frankel: The easy answer is Alphabet. I've been calling it the cheapest MAG 7 stock for the past year or so. But to be fair, their AI models really didn't have that much to do with my thesis. It's really just the strength of the Google brand, what they're doing in cloud, and things like that. It wasn't their LLMs. My longer answer is, it depends what all these look like valuation wise and revenue wise and momentum wise when they go public. That has a lot to do with it. Are we talking about a profitable OpenAI that has $70 billion in revenue, or are we talking about a company that's still hemorrhaging money? For me, it really depends how the IPO process shakes out.

Tyler Crowe: Coming up next, we're going to talk about the evolution of the Buy Now, Pay Later landscape.

We are by no means a breaking news podcast. But I think there was a press release from Klarna that actually came out this morning, so it's probably the closest we've ever come to breaking news on The Motley Fool Money podcast. But we thought this would be a great jumping off point to discuss the buy now, pay later landscape because it was something that came out and was very topical and really relates to how this industry has been evolving. Now, a couple of months ago, buy now, pay later company, Klarna rolled out a membership program in Europe, talking about membership tiers and various perks that you could get to it. This morning, the company announced it was bringing more or less the exact same structure of those membership tiers to the United States. In the press release, they mentioned some of the membership program perks that they have like airport lounge access, spending perks like cash back and even a 16 gram Rose gold looking not a credit card, but a 16 gram Rose gold card. Whatever that's supposed to be called in the future. Matt, I'm trying to figure out what's going on here, because buy now pay later was supposed to be not credit cards. This sounds like credit cards. What are they doing here, and what is the point of what they're doing here?

Matt Frankel: One of the most misunderstood parts of Klarna and particularly in the space is that one, they're a bank. Number 2, they're trying to disrupt more than the buy now pay later space. Just to put some numbers out there, about 2% of payment volume in the US, overall retail is buy now pay later today. Credit and debit cards combined for about 70%, which about half and half credit and debit. The subscription products are not cheap, ie, over $500 a year for the top tier membership. But as you mentioned, they include things like airport lounge access. Another big one is travel insurance, which I currently pay over $400 for an annual travel insurance policy. They're competing with cards like the AMEX Platinum card that charges $895 a year. It might be a little more of a value than they're getting credit for. That's just one example of how they're trying to disrupt. I'm not 100% sold that the membership program is going to be a massive success, but it's an interesting approach to try to attract customers who might want some of these perks, but don't want to sign up for such a high end credit card.

Tyler Crowe: Jon, I'm maybe reiterating my old guys shouts at Claude question here, but this is what I struggle with a little bit. We're just talking about 2% of payment volume is buy now pay later. Credit cards are pretty much the dominant payment way of doing things. Top end Klarna's subscription is over $500 a year. You get credit card like perks. Other buy now pay later companies like Sezzle also have membership tiers with various Perks. It really seems to me like buy now pay later is doing their best to look more and more like credit cards. If me not the investor, but me like the consumer. What's the hook really here to get me to actually switch?

Jon Quast: What's interesting is it appears that 0% interest is what is attracting people to the buy now pay later platforms. I know that you and I were talking, we pay off our credit cards at the end of the month, so we pay 0% on our credit card, but not everyone is in that situation, 86% of users for buy now pay later, according to one Morgan Stanley report, their motivation to switching to that over credit card was the 0% APR. You have four interest free payments. You can extend it out over the entire year rather than just the month. That's one incentive. Now, I think we've all heard the stories how you can use buy now pay later for your Chipotle. I think that we would agree that probably breaking your lunch down into four payments over the course of a year, maybe not necessarily the best thing. But here's what's interesting here. This is some data from Klarna that they're sharing. When it comes to canceling your credit card, switching to buy now pay later, people who earn 100,000 or more annually, they're the ones who are making the switch more than anyone else. This is actually a higher end consumer thing that is happening, not so much at the lower tiers financing of Burrito. These are people who are making good money, and they're switching, and one of the big motivations is a 0% APR. You look at what Klarna just launched as far as its subscription services. They're not necessarily cheap, $20 a month for premium, $45 a month for the max. But comparably, we're looking at in the same ballpark as these higher end credit cards, and so maybe they're looking at the data saying, we see who is making the switch to our platform, and we're going to offer them a higher incentive for this tier of consumer, very interesting move by Klarna.

Tyler Crowe: To that end, using subscription fees is like a major revenue driver for these companies. It seems like they're taking a little bit more of the Amex's model versus the Visa and Mastercard model of just being payment processors and using that membership fee to really fund the business in that way. I want to get to this as the investment side of it, because Matt, we've talked about buy now pay later before, especially like when a firm went public. At the time, you weren't necessarily a big fan of buy now pay later as like an investable space. Does these evolvements or evolutions of the buy now pay later space changed your thesis at all?

Matt Frankel: I definitely misunderstood some of the key aspects of the buy now pay later model. I thought that and a lot of people still think this, it's an inherently risky form of lending. Jason Hall said that yesterday on our show. As soon as the economy turned sour, that we would see a big wave of defaults. Well, we got the 2022 bear market and interest rate spike. That didn't happen, so I decided to look a little closer. If you look at some of these companies, and Klarna is not alone, but I'm just going to quote their numbers. Klarna's net charge off rate is 0.44% of their loan volume per year. That's roughly one-fourth of what AMEX has, which is considered generally a top notch clientel. The key thing to keep in mind here is these are short term loans. Klarna's typical loan is two months in length. The four payment thing is usually split over a two month period. They're generally linked to the recipient's bank account, so it's really hard to default on them unless you literally don't have money in your bank account. It makes the probability of default much lower than you might expect. Klarna gets a 3% fee. Most of their loans are no interest. They get a 3% fee paid by the merchant, which is roughly what the merchant would pay to accept their credit card anyway. If you extrapolate that over a year of, say, these two month loans, you're talking about roughly an 18% yield, 0.44% net charge off rate, and low cost deposits funding the business because Klarna is a bank. It's a recipe for a pretty strong interest margin.

Jon Quast: I've been dismissive of the buy now pay later space because I'm not a user of it, and I would say that I fall into the category of not really understanding the motivation from a user perspective, but also the investment thesis. But I will say that as I've dug in a little bit deeper here with Klarna and tried to understand what they're doing, to your point, Matt, as far as the perceived riskiness of this, if your top adopters are some of your highest income people, that is actually lower risk than what a lot of people might think. Definitely something that I need to do a little bit more digging into and not be so dismissive because it does seem like there's something here for investors.

Tyler Crowe: Coming after the break stacks on our radar.

As is our Thursday tradition, we're going to do stocks on our radar. This week, Matt, why don't you kick things off here?

Matt Frankel: I'm going to talk about one of my familiar favorites. It's Kinsale Capital Group, KNSL. The reason I'm bringing this up, even though we've talked about it several times before is that it's trading at a rare discount. Kinsale has never had a down year, and it looks like 2025 is going to be its first one. I've owned the stock for a long time. It's down about 25% from its 52 week high. Despite pretty excellent results from the business still, there's a big question mark about succession, which I think is giving a lot of investors fear right now. The chief operating officer, essentially the second in command, Brian Haney, who was thought of as the heir to the Kinsale Empire, announced his retirement. When Michael Kehoe eventually steps down, who's CEO, then what? But Kinsale is a deep bench, and it's C suite. The general insurance stocks, if you look at all of them, they're down right now. It's not down for no reason. Falling interest rates, for example, are going to hurt investment income and things like that, but it's an incredible business that's trading at a rare discount.

Tyler Crowe: I'm going to go a little bit off script for my normal, I'll call them, value companies. I'm going to look at real, I'll call them a deep experimental company. This is Aeluma. Ticker is A-L-M-U. This is a company that just recently uplisted to the NASDAQ, who used to be over-the-counter company, and what it does is actually developed a breakthrough in what are called compounded semiconductors. This is basically the idea of using, we'll call it a gas layer or crystalline layer over your traditional semiconductor, and it's one of the we'll call it like a breakthrough in terms of trying to build semiconductors for the quantum computing revolution. These compounded semiconductors basically let them run on less power. They're more efficient. It allows them to do a much broader spectrum of things, especially when it comes to sensors. It's not the first time this type of technology has been implemented, but it's one of the way that Aeluma has implemented adding that layer to the semiconductor is actually one of the cheaper ways of doing it, and they've been able to get a consistency that could actually mass market this product versus being this niche specialty product.

Tyler Crowe: If we're looking at investments in the potential quantum space, quantum computing, quantum sensing, things like that, this could be one of those breakthrough moments that would make a lot of the quantum technologies that we have out there today much more affordable. Obviously, when you have that Jevons paradox of, like, once something becomes more affordable, the options for us using it get much greater. It's still, I would say, not completely without revenue, but it is basically a pre-revenue company, setting up a lot of deals with DRPA and other government agencies to test what they're doing here. But I think at the company's relatively small size, this is a really interesting opportunity people at least look at to see if this could be something that's big really down the road.

Jon Quast: For my company today, we are going just three in completely different categories of the stock market. I'm going with Badger Meter, symbol B-M-I. This is a smart water meter company. It's customers are municipalities. Those are hard customers to get, but they're pretty sticky once you have them. I think the value proposition for this company is that if there's a leak somewhere in the waterline, you're wasting money. You're wasting water. It's smart meters detect those leaks, help track it down. The idea is, hey, invest in some of Badger Meter's products and you'll save money in the long run. When you look at this company financially, it's pretty attractive, I think. Revenue is growing by double digits. Its profits are growing even faster. It has a growing software business to complement its hardware business, so that can help boost margins. There's no debt on the balance sheet, and it's paid a growing dividend for over 30 years. Most recently, it increased it by 18%. The payout ratio was still pretty low at down around 30%. To me, Badger Meter looks like a safe business. You have a chance for both growth and income if you're an investor, and it's down about 30% right now, which is one of the largest pullbacks it's had over the last decade. Badger Meter is one that I just found for myself. I just discovered it for the first time, and I think that it's worth looking into.

Tyler Crowe: That was definitely a stocks on our radar segment worthy of the Monty Python line, and now for something completely different. As always, people on the program may have interests in the stocks that they talk about, and The Motley Fool may have formal recommendations for or against, so don't buy or sell stocks based solely on what you hear. The personal finance content follows Motley Fool Editorial Standards and is not approved by advertisers. Advertisements are sponsored content and provided for informational purposes only. To see our full advertising disclosure, please check out our show nights. Thanks to our producer Dan Boyd and the rest of The Motley Fool team. For Matt, Jon, and myself, thanks for listening, and we'll chat again soon.

American Express is an advertising partner of Motley Fool Money. Jon Quast has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. Matt Frankel, CFP has positions in American Express, Brookfield Asset Management, Kinsale Capital Group, and Klarna Group. Tyler Crowe has positions in Brookfield Asset Management. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Aeluma, Alphabet, Brookfield Asset Management, Chipotle Mexican Grill, Kinsale Capital Group, Klarna Group, Mastercard, Microsoft, Nvidia, and Visa. The Motley Fool recommends the following options: long January 2026 $395 calls on Microsoft, short December 2025 $45 calls on Chipotle Mexican Grill, and short January 2026 $405 calls on Microsoft. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

Disclaimer: For information purposes only. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
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