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AI beleggen crypto NFA Podcast technologie

Al het positieve nieuws dat je miste door de tarieven-pingpong

Vorige week was de slechtste week ooit voor tech-aandelen. De Magnificent 7, Apple, Alphabet, Meta, Nvidia, Tesla, Microsoft en Amazon, verloren samen

$1.6 biljoen aan beurswaarde. Deze week boekte de groep na bekendmaking van de dètente in de tarievenoorlog hun grootste wekelijkse winst ooit: $1.2 biljoen. Grootste gevolg van deze beurs-pingpong: nerveuze beleggers en verhoogde kans op recessie.

Het lijkt nog steeds alsof deze grafiek ondersteboven is afgebeeld; was het maar waar.

Onder de grotere tech-bedrijven is Palantir een witte raaf, met een stijging van 17% dit jaar en liefst 304% over de laatste twaalf maanden. De Nasdaq staat dit jaar op -13,4% waarbij Tesla in het oog springt met 38% verlies sinds 1 januari.

Laat op vrijdagavond sloot de Amerikaanse regering smartphones, computers, geheugenchips en andere elektronica uit van de zogenaamd “wederkerige tarieven” op China, wat tot opluchting moet hebben geleid in heel Silicon Valley.

Ooit was crypto een tegenhanger van de reguliere beurzen, maar das war einmal.

Ook crypto viel ver terug na alle stijgingen van vorig jaar, waarbij de dalingen groter worden uitgelicht in de media. Bitcoin (-11%) is veel minder volatiel geworden; de Nasdaq Composite daalde dit jaar meer (13%) maar ook dat komt zelden naar voren in analyses.

Verder kijken dan de slotkoersen

Wie goed kijkt ziet onder die oppervlakte van dag- en weekkoersen iets heel anders, maar in alle retoriek over handelstarieven hoor je daar vrijwel niets over. Daarom focus ik deze week op belangrijk nieuws dat onder de radar bleef, waarbij vooral opviel dat AI-bedrijven een topweek beleefden:

  • OpenAI haalt $40 miljard op en denkt aan overname van de “iPhone-killer met AI” van Apple-legende Jony Ive
  • Nieuwe AI-startups van voormalige OpenAI topmensen Mira Murati en Ilya Sutskever halen elk $2 miljard op
  • Stanford-rapport: AI wordt sneller, goedkoper en groener, maar worstelt nog steeds met complexe redeneringen

OpenAI scoort $40 miljard, koopt hardware startup van Apple-legende?   

Op een Spartaanse webpagina meldde OpenAI dat het in een nieuwe investeringsronde $40 miljard heeft opgehaald, op een duizelingwekkende waardering van $300 miljard. Ter vergelijking: Facebook ging ooit naar de beurs op een waardering onder de $100 miljard terwijl het miljarden winst maakte, terwijl OpenAI miljarden per jaar verliest. Niemand weet nog hoe OpenAI ooit in deze waardering gaat groeien, of zoals het altijd droogjes luidt in de Valley: ’there is no clear path to profitability.’

Het geld brandt OpenAI CEO Sam Altman blijkbaar in de zak, want het gerucht gaat dat OpenAI in gesprek is om voor $500 miljoen het bedrijf io Products over te nemen, een startup van Jony Ive, de weduwe van Steve Jobs, Laurene Powell Jobs en… Sam Altman. Een hele nieuwe vorm van vestzak-broekzak.

Details zijn schaars, maar doel van io Products schijnt te zijn om een AI-apparaat te ontwikkelen dat “minder sociaal ontwrichtend is dan de iPhone.” Het meest boeiend vind ik dat het apparaat schermloos zou moeten worden, wat direct de vraag oproept hoe de gebruiker er dan mee moet communiceren; spraakgestuurd?

Vorig jaar schreef ik uitgebreid over LoveFrom, de studio van Jony Ive in San Francisco, die lekker begon door voor $60 miljoen een theater over te nemen, waar nu blijkbaar io Products uit is voorgekomen.

ex-OpenAI topmensen halen ook miljarden op

Voormalig OpenAI CTO Mira Murati, die er ook nog een wild weekend CEO was (het waren twee fantastische dagen), wil $2 miljard ophalen op een waardering van $10 miljard dollar voor haar nieuwe bedrijf met typemachine-achtige website Thinking Machines Lab. De omschrijving van het bedrijf in het profiel op X verdient ook vermelding: “thinking, beeping, and booping.” Murati scoorde deze week door voormalig Chief Research Officer van OpenAI Bob McGrew als adviseur aan te trekken.

Murati zal met verwondering hebben gekeken naar haar ex-collega Ilya Sutskever, medeoprichter van OpenAI, die deze week een tweede miljard binnenhaalde voor zijn nieuwe AI-bedrijf SSI op een drie keer zo hoge waardering als Murati: $32 miljard. Investeerders zijn ondermeer Alphabet (Google) en Nvidia.

Bijzonder is dat SSI de nieuwe tensor processing units (TPU’s) van Alphabet zal afnemen, terwijl die juist zijn ontwikkeld als concurrent van Nvidia. Helaas lezen we er niets over op de website van SSI, die nog mistroostiger is dan die van Murati’s Thinking Machines Lab. Beide bedrijven zien de toekomst blijkbaar kleurloos in.

Het succes van Sutskever onderstreept de bijna mythische kwaliteiten die hem in tech-kringen worden toegeschreven. Ik schreef een jaar geleden dat Sutskever de reden is dat Elon Musk en Google-oprichter Larry Page hun vriendschap verbraken, toen Musk erin slaagde Sutskever te recruteren voor OpenAI.

Onderzoek bevestigt: AI wordt beter

Leestip voor iedereen die interesse heeft in AI: het 2025 AI Index Report van Stanford University. AI wordt sneller, goedkoper, groener en beter. Dat mag ook wel, gezien de tientallen miljarden die in AI worden geinvesteerd, maar toch fijn om te zien dat het ergens toe leidt. Dit zijn de belangrijkste conclusies:

  1. Benchmarkprestaties stijgen explosief. AI-modellen boeken enorme vooruitgang op waarbij sommige agents mensen zelfs overtreffen in programmeertaken.
  2. AI is overal. Van robotaxi’s in China tot Amerikaanse ziekenhuizen, AI maakt nu deel uit van het dagelijks leven.
  3. Bedrijven zetten zwaar in op AI, investeringen in de VS bereikten $109 miljard in 2024; 78% van de bedrijven gebruikt inmiddels AI, tegenover 55% een jaar eerder.
  4. VS leidt in aantal modellen, China loopt in op kwaliteit. De VS bouwt de meeste modellen, maar China haalt snel in qua prestaties en domineert in patenten en publicaties.
  5. Verantwoorde AI blijft achter. Ondanks een toename in AI-incidenten voeren maar weinig bedrijven formele veiligheidscontroles uit. Overheden houden wel meer toezicht.
  6. Wereldwijd groeit het optimisme. Landen zoals China en Indonesië omarmen AI, terwijl er in de VS en Europa meer scepsis blijft bestaan.
  7. AI wordt goedkoper en duurzamer. Het draaien van GPT-3.5-niveau AI kost nu 280 keer minder dan in 2022, dankzij betere hardware en open modellen.
  8. Overheden grijpen in. Van Canada tot Saoedi-Arabië groeit de publieke AI-investering snel, samen met een golf aan nieuwe regelgeving.
  9. Onderwijs breidt uit, maar ongelijkheid blijft. Computeronderwijs groeit vooral in Afrika en Latijns-Amerika, maar toegang en lerarenvoorbereiding verschillen sterk.
  10. Industrie domineert grensverleggende AI. 90% van de toonaangevende modellen komt uit het bedrijfsleven, al slinkt het verschil in prestaties snel.
  11. AI krijgt wetenschappelijke erkenning. Doorbraken in AI leverden twee Nobelprijzen en een Turing Award op.
  12. Redeneren blijft lastig. AI blijft zwak op logische taken, wat de betrouwbaarheid in risicovolle toepassingen beperkt.

Voor wie zich afvraagt hoe AI concreet kan worden gebruikt in een organisatie publiceerde NXTLI vrijdag een helder overzicht. Voor wie liever luistert dan leest is er nu ook een Nederlandse podcast over AI en leiderschap.

NFA Podcast afl. 11: Het positieve nieuws dat je miste terwijl de markten instortten

Aflevering 11 van de NFA Podcast, voor Nish, Frackers & alle anderen, is hier te zien of beluisteren:

Nish en ik begonnen met de achtbaanweek in crypto en techaandelen, waarbij Nish uitlegt uit hoe de meme coin-machine Pump.fun vastloopt, terwijl ik griezelverhalen deel uit eerdere crashes, waaronder de dag dat Alexander Klöpping en ik een artikel op 925 begonnen met de kop ‘CEO Broadcom ontslagen’ en eindigden met de clickbait ‘CEO bouwt seksgrot.’ Maar het was wel waar. Verder:

  • Hoe voormalige OpenAI topmensen miljarden ophalen voor hun AI-startups
  • Binance-oprichter CZ gaat Pakistan en Kirgizië adviseren over blockchainadoptie
  • Trumps pro-crypto SEC-kandidaat wordt goedgekeurd
  • De rechtszaak tussen de SEC en Ripple wordt geschikt
  • Europa en China flirten over elektrische auto’s als tegenzet tegen de Amerikaanse tarieven
  • De Britten zouden als beloning voor Trump weleens met chloorkip kunnen eindigen

De aflevering eindigt met voorspellingen: Frackers voorziet een voorzichtige marktherstel, Nish gokt op zijwaarts. Maar beiden blijven op lange termijn optimistisch.

Serie over mislukte startups

The Wall Street Journal startte een serie over startup-mislukkingen. Acht bedrijven, van Theranos tot obscure dotcoms die veel geld ophaalden, snel groeiden en spectaculair instortten. De gemene deler was dat geen van de startups een product had dat werkte. Of geen markt. Of allebei niet. In tijden van AI-hype een nuttige reminder: veel funding is geen validatie.

Citaat van de week

Filmmaker Quintin Tarantino:

“Jouw taak is niet om alles zelf te bouwen, maar om een visie te hebben. De echte magie ontstaat wanneer je getalenteerde mensen inschakelt die jouw tweedimensionale idee tot leven brengen in drie dimensies.” 

Het zou interessant zijn als de Wall Street Journal ook een serie zou maken over bedrijven die succesvol werden met het volgen van deze aanpak, in plaats van de mannetjesmakerij die we vaak zien in de technologie-wereld.

Dank voor de belangstelling, tot volgende week!

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AI invest crypto technology

The NFA Podcast is live and AI company with 1-page website is worth $20 billion

Despite the rise of competitors such as DeepSeek, OpenAI has not lost any traffic, unexpectedly growing faster than ever and leaving all competitors behind. The question is why OpenAI nevertheless needs $40 billion. We discuss this and much more in the new weekly podcast we are launching this weekend: The NFA Podcast, with co-presenter Dr. Nisheta Sachdev. The first two episodes have been online since this morning.

Also in this newsletter, we look at the final breakthrough of Palantir and the mysterious company SSI, which does not appear to have a product out, yet is valued at $20 billion.

Nish discusses the tokens PAIN and It Will Go UP, I talk about OpenAI's funding and the success of Palantir

New weekly podcast: NFA

In episode 1(viewable on YouTube here or on Spotify here), Nisheta and I introduce ourselves, talk about how we got into the tech and crypto world, and discuss the latest trends in web3 and tech, with a special focus on AI. According to Nisheta, the link between AI and crypto represents the definitive breakthrough of blockchain in the consumer market.

In episode 2(viewable on YouTube here or on Spotify here), we dive deeper into specific crypto projects such as PAIN, the token that last week raised $40 million in an instant and returned money to investors. We also discuss Palantir's extraordinary quarterly results and show footage of CEO Alex Karp, who in a jolly mood declares war on opponents of America and the West....

The name NFA was coined by Nisheta and stands for "Nish, Frackers & Anon" or "Anyone Else," because we hope to have interesting guests, but it also stands for "Not Financial Advice": we absolutely do not want to give financial advice.

Weekly, Nish and I discuss the most notable developments in crypto and tech, without trying to be pedantic or give investment advice. We share our thoughts, opinions and things we find interesting, such as interesting tokens and stocks that have come on our radar.

Whether you are a seasoned tech and crypto expert or an enthusiastic beginner, our goal with the NFA Podcast is to create a place to explore the market together and share experiences. All suggestions and feedback are welcome.

Who is Dr. Nisheta Sachdev?

Dr. Nisheta Sachdev, also known as "The Crypto Dentist," is a prominent figure in the blockchain world. Her inclusion in the "40 under 40" list underscored her breakthrough in this fast-changing world, where Nisheta stands out for her lucid analyses.

Nisheta Sachdev, blockchain by day, dentist by night - or vice versa

Nisheta came into contact with crypto in 2018 and worked full-time in the sector from 2020, when she and her sister Nikita started the soon-to-be leading crypto marketing company Luna PR in Dubai. Within the blockchain sector, Nisheta became a passionate advocate for technologies such as cryptocurrencies, NFTs, the metaverse and AI. Nish has a unique ability to articulate complex concepts simply, making her a popular and respected speaker at international conferences.

Despite her keen interest in the crypto and technology sectors, Nish recently answered a higher calling and resumed her studies in medicine, specializing in reconstructive surgery of patients who have lost parts of their jaw and face, mostly due to forms of oral cancer. For those interested in learning more about Nisheta, I recommend this recent interview with her on YouTube.

ChatGPT resurrected from never being gone

After a period of stagnation, ChatGPT has returned to strong growth, leaving competitors such as Bing, Gemini, Claude and Perplexity far behind. They are "Boom Times For ChatGPT."

By January 2025, ChatGPT reached 3.8 billion visits on desktop and mobile, more than double that of Bing and well above the rest. This marks a major turnaround after more than a year of stagnation. The upturn comes at a crucial time, when OpenAI is being challenged by DeepSeek.

DeepSeek, which rapidly gained popularity at the end of January, achieved 49 million visits in just one day, a third of ChatGPT's audience, despite the company being barely known outside China. This shows that new competitors can gain ground at lightning speed.

OpenAI benefits from ChatGPT's strong brand name. To reinforce this position, it is launching its first Super Bowl commercial today, while Google is doing the same for Gemini. If OpenAI succeeds in positioning ChatGPT as the standard for AI, it can maintain its lead even as chatbots become an everyday product worldwide.

Which competitors?

ChatGPT is way ahead of the competition. In January 2025, ChatGPT had 3.8 billion visits, compared with 1.8 billion for Microsoft Bing, 267 million for Gemini, 99.5 million for Perplexity and 76.8 million for Claude. Although these figures reflect Web traffic only, they show that OpenAI has built a huge lead. It's especially painful for Google, which just can't seem to "redirect" traffic from its search engine to Gemini.

OpenAI's quest for tens of billions

Journalist and investor M.G. Siegler, who is particularly prolific as a blogger again these days, explored why OpenAI needs $40 billion and how the relationship between OpenAI, Microsoft and Nvidia fits together in the excellent piece "The IPOpenAI."

As discussed last week, OpenAI plans to raise $40 billion, primarily to fund the massive computing power needed to train and run its AI models. Although there is a battle going on for talent in the AI sector which means staffing is also not cheap, by far the largest portion of this amount is going toward computing infrastructure such as power-hungry servers and data centers.

OpenAI in battle with Big Tech

The Big Tech companies, with Microsoft, Meta and Amazon leading the way, can invest tens of billions of dollars annually in their existing cloud infrastructures, funded from their huge profits. To compete, OpenAI must also raise tens of billions and has now ended up with SoftBank and sovereign wealth funds, mostly from the Gulf region.

To put it in perspective, according to Reuters, OpenAI expects an annual revenue of nearly $12 billion in 2025 at a loss of possibly $15 billion, at least if margins do not improve. It's going up against Meta with $200 billion in annual revenue, Microsoft with $250 billion, Alphabet with $300 billion and Amazon with even more than $500 billion in revenue this year. Even Oracle ($58 billion) and Salesforce ($38 billion) are profitable giants compared to the heavily loss-making OpenAi.

OpenAI raises more than historical IPOs

If OpenAI manages to raise $40 billion, it would be the largest amount ever raised by a company, even more than oil giant Saudi Aramco's $30 billion in 2019. By comparison, Visa raised nearly $20 billion in 2008 and Facebook $16 billion in 2012. But Facebook (now called Meta) did so at a valuation of under $100 billion, or less than a third of what OpenAI now considers itself worth.

The trend in the IPO market is that the biggest promising companies are choosing to remain private, thanks to the abundance of available capital. OpenAI's current funding round is an example of this shift, with companies raising huge sums of money without going public.

It is unlikely that OpenAI will succeed in becoming profitable any time soon, and then it will be a hell of a job next year to find parties willing to step in at a valuation of say $500 billion. It won't be possible to go much lower if SoftBank comes in now at $300 billion. How many investors will dare to explain to their shareholders next year that they are investing roughly $50 billion in OpenAI and not even getting ten percent of the shares in return?

Nvidia always wins

If SoftBank invests the $40 billion OpenAI wants, OpenAI will pay most of that money to Microsoft, on whose cloud services (Azure) it largely depends. In turn, Microsoft, with hat in hand and checkbook in its inside pocket, will be knocking on the door of Nvidia, which supplies the necessary chips and data center infrastructure.

In the AI world, it's simple: when it rains money at the top, it eventually pours down at Nvidia. SoftBank's pennies will end up, via OpenAI and Microsoft, at Nvidia..

This is precisely why I wrote last week that it makes no sense to expect Nvidia's revenue growth and profit margin to decline in the coming years; all doomsday scenarios from Wall Street notwithstanding. Microsoft is investing $85 billion in AI this year and Meta $65 billion. There are reportedly countries, not companies, that will also place such hefty orders with Nvida over several years.

The Big Tech companies have no choice but to order what Nvidia can deliver, because missing the boat in AI could mean the end of the supremacy of Microsoft, Google, Oracle, Salesforce and Amazon Web Services. But note that this is No Financial Advice!

Palantir's share price already rose 47% this year, especially striking compared to mere share price declines at Nvidia, Apple, Microsoft and Google

Winner of 2025 so far: Palantir

An exception in the software sector struggling with the rise of AI is Palantir, which I have written about many times. The data analytics company remains secretive, but it seems increasingly likely that Palantir is one of the few software companies in the world that, through the use of AI, manages to both improve its software and reduce operating costs at the same time.

Despite selling relatively little Palantir software in Europe due to privacy concerns, the stock has risen 350% in a year. This week Palantir announced impressive financial results, again leading to a hefty rise in its share price: 22% in one day.

For the fourth quarter of 2024, the company reported revenue growth of 36% over the previous year, with total sales of $827.5 million. The U.S. market contributed significantly to this, growing 52% year over year. Since 2009, the company has secured more than $2.7 billion in U.S. government contracts, and it is likely that under President Trump, the U.S. government is going to take an even much larger cut from Palantir.

Morgan Stanley raised the rating for Palantir from "underweight" to "equal weight"and adjusted the price target from $60 to $95, referring to the strong quarterly results and positive outlook for 2025. Nonetheless, concerns remain about the high valuation of the stock, which sits at a stratospheric price-to-earnings ratio nearing 600. Palantir has been part of the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq 100 since last year, so it will also have a stronger impact on the prices of index funds and ETFs.

Palantir has been led for years by quirky co-founder Alex Karp, who said confidently at the presentation of the quarterly figures that Palantir likes to help governments and goes far in doing so: 'when it's necessary to scare enemies and on occasion, kill them..'

Andreessen Horowitz invests (de)centrally

Due to the success of CEOs like Karp and before him people like Bill Gates, Steve Jobs and Elon Musk, the perception has emerged in the tech world that centrally managed companies are the most successful and best at innovating. In this excellent piece, Miles Jennings of investment firm Andreessen Horowitz argues the opposite. Yet even Andreessen Horowitz still invests the majority of its billion-dollar budget in traditional centrally organized companies, especially in the AI world.

No product, 1-page website: worth $20 billion

Safe Superintelligence, an unusual AI startup with a one-page website co-founded last year by former chief scientist and co-founder of OpenAI Ilya Sutskever, is fund raising at a valuation of at least $20 billion. Small detail: the company is not yet making revenue and apparently does not yet have a product.

Sutskever's track record and SSI's unique approach are enough reason for great interest among investors. I previously wrote about the extraordinary scientist Sutskever, who became famous in the tech world mainly because Elon Musk and Google founder Larry Page broke off their friendship over a dispute over whose company Sutskever would join.

Musk can get into an argument walking into an empty house, but his fight with Page showed that Sutskever must have special qualities. Musk said of this in Lex Fridman's podcast, "It was mainly Demis Hassabis (ex-founder DeepMind, now head of AI at Microsoft, MF) on one side and I on the other, both trying to recruit Ilya, and Ilya hesitated. In the end, he agreed to join OpenAI. That was one of the hardest recruiting battles I've ever experienced, but that was really the key to OpenAI's success."

The new funding round would quadruple SSI's valuation from the previous round less than six months ago (!), when the company was still valued at $5 billion and raised $1 billion from five investors, including Sequoia Capital, DST Global and, of course, Andreessen Horowitz. There are apparently enough investors in Silicon Valley who would rather buy a reasonable stake in SSI at a $20 billion valuation, than be fobbed off with a smurf sized share in OpenAI at a $300 billion valuation.