MiniMax CEO Forgoes Salary Until AGI Achieved, Pledges Shares
Quick Look
- MiniMax CEO Yan will forgo his salary until the company achieves AGI, pledging 4% of his shares to employees and 1% to open-source communities.
- This follows an 80% stock plunge after a lock-up period expired.
AI-generated summary
Why It Matters
MiniMax's founder and CEO has pledged to forgo his salary until the company achieves artificial general intelligence (AGI). The firm is also raising US$2 billion for its technology goals.
MiniMax’s founder and CEO has pledged to forgo his salary until the company achieves artificial general intelligence (AGI), as the Chinese AI firm launches a US$2 billion capital raising to fund its frontier technology goals after its stock plunged 80 per cent from its peak.
“Effective today, and until the day we achieve AGI, I will no longer accept any salary from the company,” wrote the 36-year-old founder, who also serves as board chairman and chief technology officer. “I am committing all my time, energy and resources to this mission.”
AGI refers to AI that can match or exceed human cognitive abilities in all fields.
To boost morale, Yan vowed to redistribute a portion of his personal wealth, pledging to transfer personal shares equivalent to 4 per cent of the company’s total equity to reward team members who “fight alongside the firm for the long haul”.
Yan also said he would allocate another 1 per cent of the company’s total shares from his holdings to establish a dedicated fund supporting open-source developer communities.
The gestures come at a critical juncture for the Shanghai-based firm. Its shares plunged nearly 18 per cent on Thursday and skidded another 12 per cent on Friday morning, hit by a wave of selling after a six-month post-initial public offering lock-up period expired earlier this week.
What to Watch
AI outlook — possibilities, not facts
MiniMax stock price may stabilize or recover due to CEO's actions.
Possible · Short term
Open Questions
- When might AGI be achieved?
- What is the timeline for the US$2 billion capital raise?





