Overview
- Storm Duncan says he has received several credible inquiries from Anthropic employees and early investors, though he reports no completed deal and calls the swap complex.
- The offering centers on a roughly 13–14 acre ranch-style property at 114 Inez Place in Mill Valley with views of San Francisco Bay and a commute he pegs at about 20 minutes to Anthropic’s San Francisco office.
- He is offering to cover closing costs and to let the counterparty keep 20% of any gains on the transferred shares during any lockup, and he aims to move the stock privately rather than trigger a market sale.
- Duncan says he wants more exposure to AI and less to real estate, noting he bought some Anthropic shares in 2024 and that using the company’s coding tool at his firm pushed him to seek more equity.
- Demand for Anthropic stock on secondary markets has driven an implied valuation near $1 trillion and tight trading limits, while real estate and IPO experts warn that title work, transfer taxes, and private-share lockups could make such swaps rare.