Skip to content
Tech News
← Back to articles

Anthropic teams with Goldman, Blackstone and others on $1.5 billion AI venture targeting PE-owned firms

read original get AI Investment Strategy Book → more articles
Why This Matters

This partnership signifies a strategic push by Anthropic to accelerate enterprise AI adoption, especially within private equity-owned firms, addressing the critical talent shortage in AI implementation. It highlights the increasing importance of integrated AI solutions in transforming business operations and maintaining competitive advantage in the tech industry.

Key Takeaways

Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei looks on after a meeting with French President Emmanuel Macron during the AI Impact Summit in New Delhi on February 19, 2026.

Anthropic said Monday it is partnering with private equity giants Goldman Sachs and Blackstone to launch a $1.5 billion firm aimed at speeding the adoption of artificial intelligence across hundreds of companies.

The new entity, formed alongside the San Francisco-based PE firm Hellman & Friedman and backed by a group of asset managers including Apollo and General Atlantic, will deploy Anthropic's Claude AI model directly inside businesses, starting with companies owned by the investment firms.

Executives say the effort is designed to tackle a growing bottleneck in the AI boom: The scarcity of experts capable of implementing the technology inside real-world operations.

"There's a big shortage of people who know how to apply these tools into businesses and then transform them," Marc Nachmann, Goldman's global head of asset and wealth management, told CNBC in an interview.

The move marks Anthropic's latest effort to deepen its lead in the enterprise AI market as competition intensifies with rivals including OpenAI. By pairing the latest Claude models with a built-in network of investor-owned companies, Anthropic is positioning itself to gain an edge in middle-market adoption of the technology.

It's a key battleground as both Anthropic and OpenAI prepare for massive IPOs as early as this year.

Rather than acting as a traditional consulting firm, the venture — which hasn't yet been named — will embed engineers inside companies to redesign workflows and integrate AI into core processes, Nachmann said.

"Having the model alone doesn't change your workflows or how you operate," he said. "You need people who can combine the technology with what's actually happening in the business and implement those changes."

The Wall Street Journal earlier reported the $1.5 billion commitment of the firms involved.

... continue reading