5 Sources
5 Sources
[1]
Trump's economy depends on AI for growth, a reality made clear in Saudi crown prince's US visit
WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Donald Trump is increasingly counting on the tech sector and the development of artificial intelligence to deliver on his economic agenda, a reality laid bare this week as he hosted Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. The crown prince has committed to invest $1 trillion with U.S. companies, a pledge that is largely about using Saudi Arabia's oil and natural gas reserves to pivot his nation into becoming an AI data hub. "We will work closely with friends and partners like those in this room to build the largest, most powerful, most innovative AI ecosystem in the world," Trump said at the U.S.-Saudi Investment Forum on Wednesday. Sitting in the front row of the audience at the Kennedy Center were Nvidia co-founder Jensen Huang and tech billionaire Elon Musk. Trump took credit for the new investments and stock market performance this year -- both of which have been a function of the AI buildout. For all of Trump's claims that his tariffs are generating new investments, much of that foreign capital is going to data centers for AI's computing demands or the power facilities needed to run those data centers. The president called the stock market gains "amazing," yet leading stock indices fell Tuesday over growing anxiety about whether AI companies are fueling a broader financial bubble. There are also growing political risks for Trump if the AI buildout further pushes up utility prices for American consumers or if the jobs he promises in the sector fail to materialize. The consultancy Oxford Economics released an analysis Tuesday that said AI investments offset the "extreme uncertainty" in the U.S. economy this year -- uncertainty caused in part by Trump's tariff hikes that have elevated inflation and potentially contributed to a slowdown in hiring. The firm noted that AI companies are starting to rely on debt to pay for the growth in the sector, which could suggest "a more vulnerable phase" next year for the boom. The race for investments is evidenced in Saudi Arabia's own commitments, which rose from $600 billion during Trump's visit there in May to $1 trillion when Prince Mohammed came to the White House on Tuesday. Trump said he's already pushed Prince Mohammed to increase that figure, saying he lobbied the de facto ruler of Saudi Arabia backstage before their appearance at the Kennedy Center. "While we were taking the picture, I said, 'Could you make it $1.5 trillion?'" Trump said. "So he's got something to think about." When Blackstone Group CEO Stephen Schwarzman was asked at the forum what the most important growth stories were at the summit, the billionaire investor said, "AI and, you know, power." "Those are the two things that we spend a lot of time on," he said. "At Blackstone, my company, we're the largest developer, the largest owner, of data centers in the world. And this is a really explosive area." Tareq Amin, CEO of Humain, said his Saudi-backed AI company was launched when Trump visited the Middle Eastern nation in May. His company saw the opportunity to build data centers and AI infrastructure by leveraging Saudi Arabia's energy production and U.S. technology. "Yes, it is an ambitious, crazy thing," Amin said with confidence. Musk, whose xAI company has a chatbot called Grok, predicted that AI and robots would eventually allow work to become optional for human beings, that money would become "irrelevant" and poverty would cease to exist. "AI and humanoid robots will actually eliminate poverty," said Musk, the head of Tesla and SpaceX. He added that robots would "make everyone wealthy." Nvidia's Huang, appearing on stage with Musk, did not make as bold a prediction. He said: "Everybody's jobs will be different. I think that that's for sure." Huang spoke ahead of the $4.5 trillion computer chip company announcing its quarterly earnings Wednesday. During Trump's remarks, the president asked Huang if any other country could compete with its Blackwell chip that is enabling much of the AI development.
[2]
Trump's economy depends on AI for growth, a reality made clear in Saudi crown prince's US visit
WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Donald Trump is increasingly counting on the tech sector and the development of artificial intelligence to deliver on his economic agenda, a reality laid bare this week as he hosted Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. The crown prince has committed to invest $1 trillion with U.S. companies, a pledge that is largely about using Saudi Arabia's oil and natural gas reserves to pivot his nation into becoming an AI data hub. "We will work closely with friends and partners like those in this room to build the largest, most powerful, most innovative AI ecosystem in the world," Trump said at the U.S.-Saudi Investment Forum on Wednesday. Sitting in the front row of the audience at the Kennedy Center were Nvidia co-founder Jensen Huang and tech billionaire Elon Musk. Trump took credit for the new investments and stock market performance this year -- both of which have been a function of the AI buildout. For all of Trump's claims that his tariffs are generating new investments, much of that foreign capital is going to data centers for AI's computing demands or the power facilities needed to run those data centers. The president called the stock market gains "amazing," yet leading stock indices fell Tuesday over growing anxiety about whether AI companies are fueling a broader financial bubble. There are also growing political risks for Trump if the AI buildout further pushes up utility prices for American consumers or if the jobs he promises in the sector fail to materialize. The consultancy Oxford Economics released an analysis Tuesday that said AI investments offset the "extreme uncertainty" in the U.S. economy this year -- uncertainty caused in part by Trump's tariff hikes that have elevated inflation and potentially contributed to a slowdown in hiring. The firm noted that AI companies are starting to rely on debt to pay for the growth in the sector, which could suggest "a more vulnerable phase" next year for the boom. Saudi investments are anchored in AI growth The race for investments is evidenced in Saudi Arabia's own commitments, which rose from $600 billion during Trump's visit there in May to $1 trillion when Prince Mohammed came to the White House on Tuesday. Trump said he's already pushed Prince Mohammed to increase that figure, saying he lobbied the de facto ruler of Saudi Arabia backstage before their appearance at the Kennedy Center. "While we were taking the picture, I said, 'Could you make it $1.5 trillion?'" Trump said. "So he's got something to think about." When Blackstone Group CEO Stephen Schwarzman was asked at the forum what the most important growth stories were at the summit, the billionaire investor said, "AI and, you know, power." "Those are the two things that we spend a lot of time on," he said. "At Blackstone, my company, we're the largest developer, the largest owner, of data centers in the world. And this is a really explosive area." Tareq Amin, CEO of Humain, said his Saudi-backed AI company was launched when Trump visited the Middle Eastern nation in May. His company saw the opportunity to build data centers and AI infrastructure by leveraging Saudi Arabia's energy production and U.S. technology. "Yes, it is an ambitious, crazy thing," Amin said with confidence. Musk, whose xAI company has a chatbot called Grok, predicted that AI and robots would eventually allow work to become optional for human beings, that money would become "irrelevant" and poverty would cease to exist. "AI and humanoid robots will actually eliminate poverty," said Musk, the head of Tesla and SpaceX. He added that robots would "make everyone wealthy." Nvidia's Huang, appearing on stage with Musk, did not make as bold a prediction. He said: "Everybody's jobs will be different. I think that that's for sure." Huang spoke ahead of the $4.5 trillion computer chip company announcing its quarterly earnings Wednesday. During Trump's remarks, the president asked Huang if any other country could compete with its Blackwell chip that is enabling much of the AI development. "Not yet, sir," said Huang from the front row.
[3]
Trump's Economy Depends on AI for Growth, a Reality Made Clear in Saudi Crown Prince's US Visit
WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Donald Trump is increasingly counting on the tech sector and the development of artificial intelligence to deliver on his economic agenda, a reality laid bare this week as he hosted Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. The crown prince has committed to invest $1 trillion with U.S. companies, a pledge that is largely about using Saudi Arabia's oil and natural gas reserves to pivot his nation into becoming an AI data hub. "We will work closely with friends and partners like those in this room to build the largest, most powerful, most innovative AI ecosystem in the world," Trump said at the U.S.-Saudi Investment Forum on Wednesday. Sitting in the front row of the audience at the Kennedy Center were Nvidia co-founder Jensen Huang and tech billionaire Elon Musk. Trump took credit for the new investments and stock market performance this year -- both of which have been a function of the AI buildout. For all of Trump's claims that his tariffs are generating new investments, much of that foreign capital is going to data centers for AI's computing demands or the power facilities needed to run those data centers. The president called the stock market gains "amazing," yet leading stock indices fell Tuesday over growing anxiety about whether AI companies are fueling a broader financial bubble. There are also growing political risks for Trump if the AI buildout further pushes up utility prices for American consumers or if the jobs he promises in the sector fail to materialize. The consultancy Oxford Economics released an analysis Tuesday that said AI investments offset the "extreme uncertainty" in the U.S. economy this year -- uncertainty caused in part by Trump's tariff hikes that have elevated inflation and potentially contributed to a slowdown in hiring. The firm noted that AI companies are starting to rely on debt to pay for the growth in the sector, which could suggest "a more vulnerable phase" next year for the boom. Saudi investments are anchored in AI growth The race for investments is evidenced in Saudi Arabia's own commitments, which rose from $600 billion during Trump's visit there in May to $1 trillion when Prince Mohammed came to the White House on Tuesday. Trump said he's already pushed Prince Mohammed to increase that figure, saying he lobbied the de facto ruler of Saudi Arabia backstage before their appearance at the Kennedy Center. "While we were taking the picture, I said, 'Could you make it $1.5 trillion?'" Trump said. "So he's got something to think about." When Blackstone Group CEO Stephen Schwarzman was asked at the forum what the most important growth stories were at the summit, the billionaire investor said, "AI and, you know, power." "Those are the two things that we spend a lot of time on," he said. "At Blackstone, my company, we're the largest developer, the largest owner, of data centers in the world. And this is a really explosive area." Tareq Amin, CEO of Humain, said his Saudi-backed AI company was launched when Trump visited the Middle Eastern nation in May. His company saw the opportunity to build data centers and AI infrastructure by leveraging Saudi Arabia's energy production and U.S. technology. "Yes, it is an ambitious, crazy thing," Amin said with confidence. Musk, whose xAI company has a chatbot called Grok, predicted that AI and robots would eventually allow work to become optional for human beings, that money would become "irrelevant" and poverty would cease to exist. "AI and humanoid robots will actually eliminate poverty," said Musk, the head of Tesla and SpaceX. He added that robots would "make everyone wealthy." Nvidia's Huang, appearing on stage with Musk, did not make as bold a prediction. He said: "Everybody's jobs will be different. I think that that's for sure." Huang spoke ahead of the $4.5 trillion computer chip company announcing its quarterly earnings Wednesday. During Trump's remarks, the president asked Huang if any other country could compete with its Blackwell chip that is enabling much of the AI development. "Not yet, sir," said Huang from the front row.
[4]
Trump's economy depends on AI for growth, a reality made clear in Saudi crown prince's US visit
President Donald Trump is increasingly counting on the tech sector and the development of artificial intelligence to deliver on his economic agenda, a reality laid bare this week as he hosted Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. The crown prince has committed to invest $1 trillion with U.S. companies, a pledge that is largely about using Saudi Arabia's oil and natural gas reserves to pivot his nation into becoming an AI data hub. "We will work closely with friends and partners like those in this room to build the largest, most powerful, most innovative AI ecosystem in the world," Trump said at the U.S.-Saudi Investment Forum on Wednesday. Sitting in the front row of the audience at the Kennedy Center were Nvidia co-founder Jensen Huang and tech billionaire Elon Musk. Trump took credit for the new investments and stock market performance this year - both of which have been a function of the AI buildout. For all of Trump's claims that his tariffs are generating new investments, much of that foreign capital is going to data centers for AI's computing demands or the power facilities needed to run those data centers. The president called the stock market gains "amazing," yet leading stock indices fell Tuesday over growing anxiety about whether AI companies are fueling a broader financial bubble. There are also growing political risks for Trump if the AI buildout further pushes up utility prices for American consumers or if the jobs he promises in the sector fail to materialize. The consultancy Oxford Economics released an analysis Tuesday that said AI investments offset the "extreme uncertainty" in the U.S. economy this year - uncertainty caused in part by Trump's tariff hikes that have elevated inflation and potentially contributed to a slowdown in hiring. The firm noted that AI companies are starting to rely on debt to pay for the growth in the sector, which could suggest "a more vulnerable phase" next year for the boom. Saudi investments are anchored in AI growth The race for investments is evidenced in Saudi Arabia's own commitments, which rose from $600 billion during Trump's visit there in May to $1 trillion when Prince Mohammed came to the White House on Tuesday. Trump said he's already pushed Prince Mohammed to increase that figure, saying he lobbied the de facto ruler of Saudi Arabia backstage before their appearance at the Kennedy Center. "While we were taking the picture, I said, 'Could you make it $1.5 trillion?'" Trump said. "So he's got something to think about." When Blackstone Group CEO Stephen Schwarzman was asked at the forum what the most important growth stories were at the summit, the billionaire investor said, "AI and, you know, power." "Those are the two things that we spend a lot of time on," he said. "At Blackstone, my company, we're the largest developer, the largest owner, of data centers in the world. And this is a really explosive area." Tareq Amin, CEO of Humain, said his Saudi-backed AI company was launched when Trump visited the Middle Eastern nation in May. His company saw the opportunity to build data centers and AI infrastructure by leveraging Saudi Arabia's energy production and U.S. technology. "Yes, it is an ambitious, crazy thing," Amin said with confidence. Musk, whose xAI company has a chatbot called Grok, predicted that AI and robots would eventually allow work to become optional for human beings, that money would become "irrelevant" and poverty would cease to exist. "AI and humanoid robots will actually eliminate poverty," said Musk, the head of Tesla and SpaceX. He added that robots would "make everyone wealthy." Nvidia's Huang, appearing on stage with Musk, did not make as bold a prediction. He said: "Everybody's jobs will be different. I think that that's for sure." Huang spoke ahead of the $4.5 trillion computer chip company announcing its quarterly earnings Wednesday. The company afterward reported strong earnings for its third quarter with net income climbing 65% from a year ago. During Trump's remarks, the president asked Huang if any other country could compete with its Blackwell chip that is enabling much of the AI development. "Not yet, sir," said Huang from the front row.
[5]
Trump's economy depends on AI for growth, a reality made clear in Saudi crown prince's U.S. visit
President Donald Trump is increasingly counting on the tech sector and the development of artificial intelligence to deliver on his economic agenda, a reality laid bare this week as he hosted Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. The crown prince has committed to invest US$1 trillion with U.S. companies, a pledge that is largely about using Saudi Arabia's oil and natural gas reserves to pivot his nation into becoming an AI data hub. "We will work closely with friends and partners like those in this room to build the largest, most powerful, most innovative AI ecosystem in the world," Trump said at the U.S.-Saudi Investment Forum on Wednesday. Sitting in the front row of the audience at the Kennedy Center were Nvidia co-founder Jensen Huang and tech billionaire Elon Musk. Trump took credit for the new investments and stock market performance this year -- both of which have been a function of the AI buildout. For all of Trump's claims that his tariffs are generating new investments, much of that foreign capital is going to data centers for AI's computing demands or the power facilities needed to run those data centers. The president called the stock market gains "amazing," yet leading stock indices fell Tuesday over growing anxiety about whether AI companies are fueling a broader financial bubble. There are also growing political risks for Trump if the AI buildout further pushes up utility prices for American consumers or if the jobs he promises in the sector fail to materialize. The consultancy Oxford Economics released an analysis Tuesday that said AI investments offset the "extreme uncertainty" in the U.S. economy this year -- uncertainty caused in part by Trump's tariff hikes that have elevated inflation and potentially contributed to a slowdown in hiring. The firm noted that AI companies are starting to rely on debt to pay for the growth in the sector, which could suggest "a more vulnerable phase" next year for the boom. The race for investments is evidenced in Saudi Arabia's own commitments, which rose from US$600 billion during Trump's visit there in May to US$1 trillion when Prince Mohammed came to the White House on Tuesday. Trump said he's already pushed Prince Mohammed to increase that figure, saying he lobbied the de facto ruler of Saudi Arabia backstage before their appearance at the Kennedy Center. "While we were taking the picture, I said, 'Could you make it US$1.5 trillion?'" Trump said. "So he's got something to think about." When Blackstone Group CEO Stephen Schwarzman was asked at the forum what the most important growth stories were at the summit, the billionaire investor said, "AI and, you know, power." "Those are the two things that we spend a lot of time on," he said. "At Blackstone, my company, we're the largest developer, the largest owner, of data centers in the world. And this is a really explosive area." Tareq Amin, CEO of Humain, said his Saudi-backed AI company was launched when Trump visited the Middle Eastern nation in May. His company saw the opportunity to build data centers and AI infrastructure by leveraging Saudi Arabia's energy production and U.S. technology. "Yes, it is an ambitious, crazy thing," Amin said with confidence. Musk, whose xAI company has a chatbot called Grok, predicted that AI and robots would eventually allow work to become optional for human beings, that money would become "irrelevant" and poverty would cease to exist. "AI and humanoid robots will actually eliminate poverty," said Musk, the head of Tesla and SpaceX. He added that robots would "make everyone wealthy." Nvidia's Huang, appearing on stage with Musk, did not make as bold a prediction. He said: "Everybody's jobs will be different. I think that that's for sure." Huang spoke ahead of the US$4.5 trillion computer chip company announcing its quarterly earnings Wednesday. The company afterward reported strong earnings for its third quarter with net income climbing 65 per cent from a year ago. During Trump's remarks, the president asked Huang if any other country could compete with its Blackwell chip that is enabling much of the AI development.
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President Trump's economic strategy increasingly relies on AI development, highlighted by Saudi Crown Prince's $1 trillion commitment to US companies for AI infrastructure and data centers. The partnership aims to build the world's largest AI ecosystem while raising concerns about market bubbles and utility costs.
President Donald Trump's economic agenda has become increasingly dependent on artificial intelligence development, a reality that came into sharp focus during this week's visit by Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. The crown prince committed to investing $1 trillion with U.S. companies, a massive pledge primarily focused on transforming Saudi Arabia into an AI data hub by leveraging the kingdom's oil and natural gas reserves
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Source: ET
Speaking at the U.S.-Saudi Investment Forum on Wednesday at the Kennedy Center, Trump declared his vision for collaboration: "We will work closely with friends and partners like those in this room to build the largest, most powerful, most innovative AI ecosystem in the world"
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. The event drew prominent tech leaders, with Nvidia co-founder Jensen Huang and Tesla CEO Elon Musk seated in the front row.
Source: AP
The Saudi investment represents a dramatic escalation from previous commitments. The kingdom's pledge increased from $600 billion during Trump's visit to Saudi Arabia in May to $1 trillion when Prince Mohammed arrived at the White House this week
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. Trump revealed he pushed for even more, saying he lobbied the crown prince backstage: "While we were taking the picture, I said, 'Could you make it $1.5 trillion?' So he's got something to think about."Blackstone Group CEO Stephen Schwarzman highlighted the investment focus when asked about the most important growth stories at the summit: "AI and, you know, power. Those are the two things that we spend a lot of time on. At Blackstone, my company, we're the largest developer, the largest owner, of data centers in the world. And this is a really explosive area"
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.Trump took credit for new investments and stock market performance, both largely driven by AI development. However, the strategy faces challenges as leading stock indices fell Tuesday amid growing anxiety about whether AI companies are creating a broader financial bubble
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.Oxford Economics released analysis indicating that AI investments have offset "extreme uncertainty" in the U.S. economy this year, uncertainty partly caused by Trump's tariff policies that have elevated inflation and potentially slowed hiring. The consultancy warned that AI companies are increasingly relying on debt financing, suggesting "a more vulnerable phase" could emerge next year.
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Elon Musk made bold predictions about AI's societal impact, claiming that "AI and humanoid robots will actually eliminate poverty" and make work optional for humans. "AI and humanoid robots will actually eliminate poverty," said Musk, adding that robots would "make everyone wealthy." Nvidia's Huang offered a more measured perspective, stating simply that "Everybody's jobs will be different. I think that that's for sure."
The discussion highlighted U.S. technological dominance when Trump asked Huang whether any other country could compete with Nvidia's Blackwell chip, which enables much of current AI development. Huang's response from the front row was definitive: "Not yet, sir." This exchange came as Nvidia prepared to announce quarterly earnings, later reporting strong third-quarter results with net income climbing 65% year-over-year.
Tareq Amin, CEO of Saudi-backed AI company Humain, explained how the partnership capitalizes on complementary strengths. His company, launched during Trump's May visit to Saudi Arabia, aims to build data centers and AI infrastructure by combining Saudi Arabia's energy production capabilities with U.S. technology. "Yes, it is an ambitious, crazy thing," Amin said confidently about the venture.
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14 May 2025•Business and Economy

14 May 2025•Technology

16 May 2025•Policy and Regulation

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Business and Economy

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Technology

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Policy and Regulation
