What’s going on here? The US president signed a deal that’ll bring at least $600 billion of Saudi Arabian investment into the States, with AI initiatives – the trend of the moment – underpinning the agreement. What does this mean? Saudi Arabia's pledging to invest at least $600 billion, and officials say it could rise to $1 trillion. That includes a promise to buy hundreds of thousands of chips from US chipmaker Nvidia over the next five years. The tech will help spur on Saudi Arabia’s recently announced AI initiative “Humain”, focused on building out data centers and other AI infrastructure. Amazon and AMD are getting involved too, striking separate multi-billion-dollar deals. As part of the agreement, the US government (obviously) scrapped restrictions on exporting advanced chips to Saudi Arabia – and it extended that to the United Arab Emirates too. That means more customers for US firms. Investors sent Nvidia’s shares up 5%, AMD’s 4%, and Amazon’s 1% after the news. Why should I care? For markets: We are so back. The tech-heavy Nasdaq has pulled off one of the fastest rebounds ever, climbing more than 20% in just over a month. Remember, investors dropped riskier assets – not least their expensive tech stocks – when tariffs were first ramped up. But those investors are one-eighty-ing their one-eighties now, reacting to shrinking levies and an increase in dealmaking. That’s despite the US still being at risk of falling into a recession – a prospect that would usually push them into defense mode. The bigger picture: AI’s here, there, and everywhere. AI isn’t just a handheld therapist or digital coworker anymore. Just look at Humain – or OpenAI’s Stargate project in the US. Countries and companies alike are launching billion-dollar initiatives focused on the tech, leading to deals with governments all over the world. Clearly, Nvidia’s CEO wants to be involved in as many of those partnerships as possible, traveling alongside the US president to Saudi Arabia. |