Can OpenAI Keep Spending as Growth Slows?

OpenAI 能否在增长放缓的情况下继续高投入?

WSJ What’s News

2026-04-28

13 分钟
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单集简介 ...

A.M. Edition for April 28. OpenAI is failing to hit revenue and user targets as it sprints toward an IPO. Plus, WSJ climate and energy reporter Ed Ballard explains why the Trump administration is paying two more companies not to develop offshore wind projects. And as AI continues to reshape the jobs market, we look at how internships are more important than ever - and becoming harder to find. Luke Vargas hosts Sign up for the WSJ’s free What’s News newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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单集文稿 ...

  • So there's a lot of noise about AI, but time's too tight for more promises.

  • So let's talk about results.

  • At IBM, we work with our employees to integrate technology right into the systems they need.

  • Now, a global workforce of 300,000 can use AI to fill their HR questions, resolving 94% of common questions.

  • Not noise, proof of how we can help companies get smarter by putting AI where it actually pays off,

  • deep in the work that moves the business.

  • Let's create smarter business, IBM.

  • OpenAI fails to hit revenue and user targets as it sprints toward an IPO.

  • Plus, the Trump administration pays two more companies not to develop offshore wind projects.

  • And ahead of the Fed's rate decision tomorrow, we'll look at the pressure facing central bankers around the world.

  • The Bank of Japan is confronting the same problem that is bedeviling every central bank now,

  • which is that war in Iran has made a mess of their inflation forecasts.

  • It has made a mess of their growth forecasts.

  • And they're left with very few good options on how to respond.

  • It's Tuesday, April 28th.

  • I'm Luke Vargas for The Wall Street Journal.

  • And here is the AM edition of What's News, the top headlines and business stories moving your world today.

  • With just months to go before a planned IPO and its business in a slowdown,

  • OpenAI's board is probing plans to spend $600 billion on data centers and questioning CEO Sam Altman's efforts

  • to secure even more computing power.