Anthropic warns: these platforms are not authorised to sell its shares
The company has identified eight secondary platforms offering unauthorised access to its shares and urges investors to exercise caution.
On 12 May 2026, Anthropic took an unusual step for a private company: publicly warning its own potential investors. According to TechCrunch, the company issued a formal notice naming eight platforms offering access to purchase or sale of its shares without authorisation to do so.
The platforms named are Open Doors Partners, Unicorns Exchange, Pachamama Capital, Lionheart Ventures, Hiive, Forge Global, Sydecar and Upmarket. For a company of this profile to explicitly call out intermediaries by name is unusual, and that alone warrants attention.
What's actually happening
The secondary market for private company shares has grown considerably in recent years, driven by retail and institutional investor interest in high-profile companies ahead of their potential public offerings. Platforms like Forge Global or Hiive are established players in this space, which suggests that Anthropic's warning is not aimed at obscure actors, but rather at intermediaries with a track record in the sector.
From Anthropic's perspective, the problem is that these platforms operate without its consent or oversight. This carries several risks: that the prices offered do not reflect actual internal valuations, that transactions lack proper legal safeguards, or simply that buyers acquire shareholdings whose legitimacy or corporate structure is not properly documented.
Anthropics is not publicly listed and therefore any transaction of its shares on secondary markets depends on current shareholders—employees, venture capital funds, earlier investors—deciding to sell their stake. The company does not directly control those transactions, but it can establish contractual restrictions and, as it has now done, publicly alert when platforms operate in grey areas.
Why this matters beyond this specific case
This move has several possible interpretations. The first, and most immediate, is investor protection: someone buying Anthropic shares through an unauthorised platform assumes legal and financial risks that may be difficult to quantify. The second interpretation is corporate: Anthropic wants to control its shareholder narrative ahead of any IPO process or significant funding round. A messy cap table, with stakes distributed through unsupervised vehicles, greatly complicates those processes.
There is also a third, more structural interpretation. Investor appetite for private AI companies—and Anthropic is among the highest-valued in the sector—has created an intermediation ecosystem that moves faster than regulation. This is not a problem unique to Anthropic: other high-value private companies have faced similar situations. But few have opted for such a direct warning with specific names attached.
Who this notice affects
The notice is relevant to three distinct groups. First, individual investors or family offices who have seen opportunities to buy Anthropic shares announced on one of these platforms and are evaluating whether to enter. Anthropic's implicit recommendation is clear: do not do so without verifying authorisation. Second, Anthropic's own employees or early shareholders who may be considering liquidating part of their stake through these channels: the company reminds them that contractual restrictions apply. Third, the secondary market intermediation sector in general, which receives a reminder that private companies can and want to exercise control over how their stakes are traded.
Forge Global and Hiive in particular are platforms with real transaction volumes and established reputation, which suggests that Anthropic is not responding to minor fraud, but setting limits on practices that, while widespread, it considers to exceed what is permitted under its shareholder agreements.
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From our perspective, we interpret this as a signal that Anthropic is actively managing its pre-IPO phase with greater care than is typically seen in the sector. The move is defensive, but also preventive: ordering the cap table before disorder becomes harder to reverse.
Sources
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