OpenAI disavows Robinhood’s ‘OpenAI tokens,’ says demo inventory was not authorised and has no fairness backing

OpenAI mentioned on July 2 that digital tokens buying and selling underneath its identify on Robinhood’s new blockchain platform don’t symbolize OpenAI fairness and had been listed with out the corporate’s consent.
In an announcement posted on X, the synthetic intelligence developer wrote:
“These ‘OpenAI tokens’ should not OpenAI fairness. We didn’t accomplice with Robinhood, weren’t concerned on this, and don’t endorse it. Any switch of OpenAI fairness requires our approval—we didn’t approve any switch.”
The corporate requested buyers to “watch out,” highlighting that any fairness motion within the non-public agency have to be authorised by its board.
Tokenized-stock pilot spurs confusion
OpenAI’s remark follows Robinhood’s June 30 occasion in Cannes, France, the place CEO Vlad Tenev demonstrated a tokenized inventory commerce for an “OpenAI” place on the dealer’s forthcoming layer-2 blockchain.
Robinhood mentioned the community, constructed with Arbitrum expertise, will let eligible European customers commerce greater than 200 US equities and exchange-traded funds 24/7 with no commissions or spreads. The shares might be transformed into on-chain tokens for switch and settlement.
The presentation helped push Robinhood’s class-A shares up about 11% to a document $92, extending a month-long rally of roughly 34%.
Market chatter quickly started treating the demo asset as de facto OpenAI fairness, regardless of the corporate remaining privately held.
Push for tokenized shares
Robinhood’s initiative arrives amid a broader marketing campaign to shift typical equities onto public blockchains.
In late June, Dinari received broker-dealer registration for a subsidiary, positioning it to distribute its tokenized “dShares” to US brokerages after finishing SEC onboarding.
The agency already points blockchain-recorded shares to non-US customers on Coinbase’s Base community and states that it’ll settle future trades on a public chain whereas routing orders by way of registered market facilities.
Kraken has in the meantime launched a 24/7 platform for tokenized US shares, and Coinbase has requested clearance from the SEC to roll out an identical service.
Proponents contend that placing equities on-chain trims clearing charges, shrinks settlement occasions to close real-time, and allows steady buying and selling.