OpenAI adds BlackRock exec Adebayo Ogunlesi to board of directors

OpenAI adds BlackRock exec Adebayo Ogunlesi to board of directors


Bayo Ogunlesi, Chairman, Global Infrastructure Partners listens as US President Donald Trump speaks during a strategic and policy discussion with CEOs in the State Department Library in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building on April 11, 2017 in Washington, DC.

Pool | Getty Images

OpenAI said Tuesday that Adebayo Ogunlesi, a senior managing director at BlackRock, is joining the startup’s board of directors, the latest announcement in the company’s move toward a for-profit structure.

Ogunlesi is a founding partner of Global Infrastructure Partners, an infrastructure investing firm that was acquired by BlackRock last year for $12 billion. Before helping to start GIP in 2006, Ogunlesi spent 23 years at Credit Suisse.

“The rapid advancement and development of AI offers a unique opportunity to build a better future,” Ogunlesi said in OpenAI’s announcement Tuesday. “As part of this, thoughtful strategies and investment in infrastructure will be key to unlocking AI’s full potential and delivering its benefits responsibly. I’m excited to contribute to this effort and look forward to being a part of the OpenAI Board.”

For OpenAI, the addition of Ogunlesi to its board marks another step in its dramatic transformation to a for-profit company. The board has been almost entirely revamped since late 2023, when CEO Sam Altman was abruptly ousted before being quickly reinstated.

Former Salesforce co-CEO Bret Taylor, who was chairman at Twitter before its purchase by Elon Musk, became chair of OpenAI after the Altman ordeal in November 2023. Larry Summers, a former Treasury secretary, joined at the same time. Last year, the board added several new faces including Instacart CEO Fidji Simo and Dr. Sue Desmond-Hellmann, former CEO of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, now known as the Gates Foundation.

OpenAI, which was founded as a nonprofit in 2015, said in late December that it will create a public benefit corporation to oversee commercial operations, removing some of its nonprofit restrictions and allowing it to function more like a high-growth startup.

Last year, OpenAI was valued at $157 billion as it continued rolling out updated large language models and new tools after kicking off the generative artificial intelligence boom in late 2022.

The company said that by transforming into a Delaware PBC “with ordinary shares of stock,” it can pursue commercial operations while separately hiring a staff for its nonprofit arm and allowing that wing to take on charitable activities in health care, education and science, OpenAI said in December.

Musk, one of OpenAI’s co-founders is suing to try and stop OpenAI from converting into a full for-profit business.

Ogunlesi’s other board positions include BlackRock, Topgolf Callaway Brands, Kosmos Energy Holdings and Terminal Investment Ltd.

— CNBC’s Hayden Field contributed to this report.

WATCH: OpenAI releases economic blueprint

OpenAI releases economic blueprint



Source

Tesla reports 418,227 deliveries for the fourth quarter, down 16%
Technology

Tesla reports 418,227 deliveries for the fourth quarter, down 16%

A Tesla showroom is seen on Dec. 13, 2023 in Austin, Texas. Brandon Bell | Getty Images Tesla posted its fourth-quarter 2025 vehicle production and deliveries report on Friday. Shares climbed about 1% after the numbers were released. Here are the key numbers: Total Q4 deliveries: 418,227 Total Q4 production: 434,358 Total 2025 deliveries: 1.64 million Total 2025 […]

Read More
Buffett hands over the reins, the stock market’s losing streak, airline class wars and more in Morning Squawk
Technology

Buffett hands over the reins, the stock market’s losing streak, airline class wars and more in Morning Squawk

This is CNBC’s Morning Squawk newsletter. Subscribe here to receive future editions in your inbox. Happy Friday and happy 2026! I began my year at the movie theater watching an Amanda Seyfried-led movie-musical (“The Testament of Ann Lee,” not “Mamma Mia!”). Stock futures are up this morning. The market is on a four-day losing streak. Here are […]

Read More
Bernie Sanders and Ron DeSantis speak out against data center boom. It’s a bad sign for AI industry
Technology

Bernie Sanders and Ron DeSantis speak out against data center boom. It’s a bad sign for AI industry

Democratic Socialist Sen. Bernie Sanders and right-wing Gov. Ron DeSantis agree on virtually nothing. But they found common ground this year as leading skeptics of the artificial intelligence industry’s data center boom. The alignment of two national figures on the left and right signals that a political reckoning is brewing over the AI industry’s impact […]

Read More