Trader consensus on Polymarket strongly favors "No" at 93.3% implied probability for OpenAI securing a federal backstop—such as government loan guarantees or power grid support—for its massive AI infrastructure needs before July, reflecting the absence of any official announcements, regulatory filings, or legislative momentum in recent weeks. OpenAI CEO Sam Altman's public calls for national AI compute investments have highlighted escalating energy demands from large language models like GPT-4o, but Washington has prioritized private-sector solutions, with OpenAI leaning on Microsoft Azure expansions and deals like Oracle's Stargate supercomputer cluster. No bills have advanced in Congress, and White House AI policy focuses on safety over subsidies. Realistic challenges include a surprise executive order or bipartisan energy bill before month-end, though tight timelines and political gridlock make shifts unlikely.
基于Polymarket数据的AI实验性摘要 · 更新于是
$98,814 交易量
$98,814 交易量
是
$98,814 交易量
$98,814 交易量
This market will resolve to “Yes” if OpenAI or any financial lender or intermediary involved in providing debt financing to OpenAI receives a U.S. federal government backstop for any debt-transaction undertaken primarily for the benefit of OpenAI’s investments in AI infrastructure by June 30, 2026, 11:59 PM ET. Otherwise, this market will resolve to “No”.
A backstop is defined as any explicit or legally binding loan guarantee, insurance, or equivalent financial instrument through which the U.S. federal government assumes or commits to assume partial or full repayment risk on OpenAI debt.
Tax credits, depreciation benefits, or grants not tied to a specific debt transaction will not qualify.
The debt transaction which receives a government backstop must be primarily aimed at the development, building, or manufacturing of AI infrastructure.
The primary source of resolution will be information from Open AI and the United States Federal Government; however, a consensus of credible reporting may also be used.
市场开放时间: Nov 10, 2025, 4:58 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...This market will resolve to “Yes” if OpenAI or any financial lender or intermediary involved in providing debt financing to OpenAI receives a U.S. federal government backstop for any debt-transaction undertaken primarily for the benefit of OpenAI’s investments in AI infrastructure by June 30, 2026, 11:59 PM ET. Otherwise, this market will resolve to “No”.
A backstop is defined as any explicit or legally binding loan guarantee, insurance, or equivalent financial instrument through which the U.S. federal government assumes or commits to assume partial or full repayment risk on OpenAI debt.
Tax credits, depreciation benefits, or grants not tied to a specific debt transaction will not qualify.
The debt transaction which receives a government backstop must be primarily aimed at the development, building, or manufacturing of AI infrastructure.
The primary source of resolution will be information from Open AI and the United States Federal Government; however, a consensus of credible reporting may also be used.
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Trader consensus on Polymarket strongly favors "No" at 93.3% implied probability for OpenAI securing a federal backstop—such as government loan guarantees or power grid support—for its massive AI infrastructure needs before July, reflecting the absence of any official announcements, regulatory filings, or legislative momentum in recent weeks. OpenAI CEO Sam Altman's public calls for national AI compute investments have highlighted escalating energy demands from large language models like GPT-4o, but Washington has prioritized private-sector solutions, with OpenAI leaning on Microsoft Azure expansions and deals like Oracle's Stargate supercomputer cluster. No bills have advanced in Congress, and White House AI policy focuses on safety over subsidies. Realistic challenges include a surprise executive order or bipartisan energy bill before month-end, though tight timelines and political gridlock make shifts unlikely.
基于Polymarket数据的AI实验性摘要 · 更新于
警惕外部链接哦。
警惕外部链接哦。
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