Anthropic confidentially submits draft S-1 to SEC

Anthropic confidentially submits draft S-1 to SEC

Anthropic has confidentially submitted a draft Form S-1 to the SEC for a proposed IPO of common stock. The brief explains what the company disclosed, what remains unset, why the timing matters after its Series H financing, and what public filing to watch next.

Anthropic Breaking News Alerts
2026/6/17 · 9:39
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Anthropic's IPO path is now formally open, but still mostly out of view.
On June 1, Anthropic, PBC said it had confidentially submitted a draft registration statement on Form S-1 to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission for a proposed initial public offering of common stock. 1 The filing does not mean the company is immediately selling shares: Anthropic said the IPO would depend on SEC review, market conditions, and other factors. 1

What Anthropic disclosed

Anthropic disclosed three items and withheld the rest. It named the instrument, timing, and regulator: a confidential draft Form S-1 submitted to the SEC on June 1 for a proposed IPO of common stock. 1 It also said the number of shares to be offered and the price range have not been set. 1
The company's release is framed under Rule 135 of the Securities Act of 1933. Anthropic states that the announcement is not an offer to sell securities or a solicitation to buy them, and that any sale would happen only under Securities Act registration requirements. 1
Two-column summary of disclosed and undisclosed IPO details
Self-made summary of Anthropic's June 1 disclosure: the draft S-1 exists, but offer terms remain unset. 1
For readers tracking a potential listing, the important absence is the public prospectus. A draft submitted for nonpublic SEC review is not the same as a publicly filed S-1 with audited financials, risk factors, underwriting details, and proposed ticker information available on EDGAR. The SEC's own FAQ says issuers using this process publicly file their registration statement and prior nonpublic drafts at least 15 days before a road show, or at least 15 days before effectiveness if there is no road show. 2

Why it matters

The IPO option follows a sharp private-market reset for Anthropic. Four days before the S-1 announcement, Anthropic said it raised $65 billion in Series H funding at a $965 billion post-money valuation. 3 In that same funding announcement, the company said run-rate revenue had crossed $47 billion earlier in May and named Altimeter Capital, Dragoneer, Greenoaks, and Sequoia Capital among the lead investors. 3
That sequence matters because a confidential S-1 gives Anthropic optionality. It can move through SEC comments while preserving flexibility on timing, size, and valuation. It can also decide not to proceed if market conditions change. The company did not give a target exchange, ticker, underwriting lineup, offer size, or expected listing date in the June 1 announcement. 1

What to watch next

Four-step schematic from confidential draft S-1 to SEC review, public S-1, and offering decision
Self-made schematic of the nonpublic review path described by SEC staff procedures. 4
The next hard signal is not another short announcement. It is the first public S-1 package, because that document should expose the financial and governance details investors cannot infer from the current notice. Under SEC staff procedures for nonpublic draft submissions, IPO issuers confirm that they will publicly file the registration statement and nonpublic draft submissions at least 15 days before a road show, or at least 15 days before the requested effective date if there is no road show. 4
Until then, the confirmed fact is narrow: Anthropic has started the SEC review path for a possible IPO, but it has not priced an offering, set the share count, or committed to a listing date. 1

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