The AI Daily Brief: Artificial Intelligence News and Analysis - Does xAI's $6B Raise for Grok Make Sense?
Episode Date: April 26, 2024Explore the strategic reasoning behind X AI's massive $6 billion fundraising effort in this episode of AI Breakdown. As Elon Musk's company gears up to develop Grok, this financing positions X AI at a... colossal $24 billion valuation post-funding. ** Join NLW's May Cohort on Superintelligent. Use code nlwmay for 25% off your first month and to join the special learning group. https://besuper.ai/ ** Consensus 2024 is happening May 29-31 in Austin, Texas. This year marks the tenth annual Consensus, making it the largest and longest-running event dedicated to all sides of crypto, blockchain and Web3. Use code AIBREAKDOWN to get 15% off your pass at https://go.coindesk.com/43SWugo ** ABOUT THE AI BREAKDOWN The AI Breakdown helps you understand the most important news and discussions in AI. Subscribe to The AI Breakdown newsletter: https://theaibreakdown.beehiiv.com/subscribe Subscribe to The AI Breakdown on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@TheAIBreakdown Join the community: bit.ly/aibreakdown Learn more: http://breakdown.network/
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Today on the AI Breakdown is the $6 billion XAI investment deal crazy?
Before that on the brief, how Wall Street is thinking about the value of AI right now.
The AI breakdown is a daily podcast and video about the most important news and discussions in AI.
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Welcome back to the AI Breakdown Brief, all the AI headline news you need in around five minutes.
And we have a very Wall Street-slash-Begtech-centric AI Breakdown Brief today.
we have one big tech stock that has cratered on AI plans, one tech stock that is soaring around AI,
and one big tech stock that's doing pretty well, although how much it's AI versus other things,
isn't exactly clear. Let's start with a stock that's doing well, which is Microsoft.
In reporting their last quarter earnings, Microsoft beat Wall Street estimates.
Analysts had been projecting $60.80 billion of revenue and earnings per share of $2.82,
reaching $61.9 billion in revenue and $2.94 earnings per share.
that is a 17% jump in revenue.
I'll told the company's shares increased by more than 4%,
increasing the company's market value by $128 billion.
Now, right at the center of the story of why they were doing so well,
was, of course, Genitive AI, said Brett Iverson, Microsoft's Vice President of Investor Relations,
we're continuing to see customer demand grow quite a bit,
and so we're making sure to scale our available capacity in line with that.
Now, of course, where this comes home to roost is in Microsoft's cloud business.
That's the division through which they're offering these AI capabilities,
and if you look across the last year, you see that Microsoft's Azure has flipped and grown ahead of Google Cloud
and is also significantly outpacing AWS. Revenue from Microsoft's Cloud Unit rose to 26.7 billion,
which once again passed Wall Street analyst bets. Azure revenue overall grew 31%. And Microsoft forecast
that its growth for the next quarter would be 30 to 31%, with revenue of 28.4 to 28.7 billion,
which would put it ahead of the 28.5% Wall Street growth target. One of the things that has been
really notable about AI as a new technology, is that because it is being used inside of these
cloud businesses as a way to attract buyers to these cloud services, it actually has an outlet
that Wall Street can understand in dollars and cents terms right now. In other words,
Wall Street doesn't have to be super forward-looking. It can understand the value of investing in
AI right here in this moment. And indeed, what we saw around metastock suggests once again that
Wall Street is not the same as venture capital. They are not imagining what might be in five or
10 years, but instead they are looking very much at the here and now. Meta also reported last
quarter's numbers. First quarter profit more than doubled year over year, and revenue was up
27%. So why then did Meta's stock fall by as much as 15%, wiping somewhere between 180 and
$200 billion off its market cap? Well, it seems like it was all about its projected AI investments.
Meta increased its predictions for what it would spend on AI investments by $5 billion this year.
Previous guidance had suggested that Meta's full year capital expenditures would be in the range
of 30 to 37 billion, and now that's moved up to 35 to 40 billion. Said one analyst,
the language around spending plans has become bolder once more, and this could be what's
spooking markets. For all meta's bold AI plans, it can't afford to take its eye off the nucleus
of the business, its core advertising activities. Meta's resources are vast but not infinite,
and its digital advertising market share needs defending at all costs. Now, it wasn't just that
meta was talking about its big investment in AI. Zuckerberg was also preparing investors for the
reality that he saw, saying that they would be increasing spending, quote, meaningfully before we
make much revenue from some of these products. He did also note that the company has a, quote,
strong track record of monetizing new services effectively, but ultimately, as we've seen over and
over again, Zuckerberg is going to do what Zuckerberg is going to do. Wall Street and everyone else
be damned. Then there's Google. Google is up nearly 11% as I record this, after reporting a 15%
rise from a year before, which was more than 13.5% rise the previous quarter. Now for this,
the increase in the stock price seemed not to be really about AI. Instead, Google made a dividend
and a buyback announcement, and that seemed to be more of what was encouraging this jump. Indeed,
as the Wall Street Journal writes, investors are closely watching for signs of whether and how
the tech giants are reaping new business from investments in AI programs that can generate
text and images. Google, in particular, has faced persistent questions about its ability to defend
its business model, which relies heavily on search ads as more people turn to chatbots for answers.
Google has offered few specifics about how AI is affecting its sales and profits.
multiple analysts asked CEO Sundar Pichai on a call Thursday for more details on how AI is improving
Google's financials. Pichai said Thursday that the company is encouraged by an increase in search
usage among people trying its new AI tools, but he otherwise provided little in the way of metrics
on the technology's business impact. The role that these big tech companies are playing
in an emerging technology movement like AI is really different than what we've seen before.
The normal pattern is that some new types of startups create some new types of usage patterns,
which eventually get acquired into big companies or become the big companies themselves,
but the sheer capital needs in the AI space is making this a little bit different.
There are other factors beyond capital as well.
For example, I think large enterprises, because so much of the value of AI lives inside how
it interacts with their data, are more inclined to trust companies that they're already
working with rather than new startups.
Still, part of the reason that I spend so much time on the ebb and flow and the fortunes
of these companies is the way that they treat AI will have a big impact on how the rest
the world does. For now, though, that is going to do it for today's AI breakdown brief.
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Welcome back to the AI breakdown.
We kick off today with the news that Elon Musk's XAI is close to closing on $6 billion.
Now, Elon for his part has been very circumspect about this fundraise.
Rumors of it started months ago, but he denied them, said that they were not actively raising.
However, the reality of the situation has been fairly open.
And for a long time, it appeared that the number was around $3 billion.
Over the last couple weeks, that seems to have doubled to a $6 billion raise on an $18 billion pre-money valuation.
meaning that after the raise, the company would be valued at $24 billion.
The information is putting a little more meat on this bone, citing two sources who are
close to the deal.
The additional information that they give us include some of the folks who are investing.
Sequoia Capital is one of the investors participating in this round, which is notable because,
as we've seen over and over again, a lot of the capital that has flown into the foundation
model space has not been from traditional VC, but from big tech companies.
The reason being, of course, that traditional venture funds don't have the ability to
do two, three, four, five, six billion dollars. However, for Elon and XAI, they obviously can't
turn to a Microsoft or a Google when they're trying to beat Microsoft and Google, so it'll be
interesting to see what exactly the full composition of this round ends up being. As the information
points out, if this really does come together the way that it looks like it will, it will represent
one of the largest single funding rounds among these foundation models, probably just behind
the OpenAI Microsoft investment. Certainly Elon Musk has not been cagey about the fact that they
need more resources to compete. So far, GROC has released 1.5, and Elon has said that GROC 2 is coming,
which is currently being trained on 20,000 Nvidia H-100s. However, earlier this month on a Twitter
spaces, Elon suggested that the company needs 100,000 GPUs to train GROC 3. So for what it's worth,
this is a deal that I've been asked my opinion on a number of different times, especially from investors
who are outside of the AI space. And so what I want to do today is kind of go through the logic
that I've given, although to be clear there's no financial advice here. It's just a way of
looking at this. The TLDR on what I've said is that there are a very, very small number of companies
that are legitimate competitors for the generalized foundation model space. And if that is a space
that you want investment exposure to during these private days, you kind of got to pay what is
going to cost to play. So who are those companies? Well, of course, there's Open AI. At this point,
OpenAI is valued in the $100 billion range. And the most recent rounds have only been tender
offers of employee shares limiting how much is actually available. Point being that,
while it's not impossible that there will be future raises that investors can participate in,
OpenAI is not the easiest company to get equity in right now, and even if you do, it's at a fairly
significant premium. Anthropic has been raising left and right. In 2023, they raised $7.3 billion,
which includes the $4 billion Amazon commitment, which was actually just finished earlier this
year in 2024. One of the interesting things about that story was just how these astronomical sums
have an impact of crowding out smaller investors. And by smaller investors, I'm not talking about
in normal Silicon Valley terms. Back in February, the Times wrote, even after raising billions from
Amazon and Google, Anthropic knew it would eventually need more money. Generative AI startups are
constantly updating, refining and expanding their technology to make their product accurate,
up-to-date, and more powerful. And that requires enormous amounts of expensive computational power.
Finding new investors was easy for Anthropic, but many of those were interested wanted to invest
10 million to 25 million, while the company aimed for a much larger sum. Basically, if you're trying
to raise a billion dollars, do you want one or two companies who can do the entire amount,
or do you want 100 investors putting in $10 million each? From a sheer logistical and administrative
perspective, obviously the fewer investors, the better. Now, when push came to shove, the way to
accomplish what Anthropic was looking for, while also allowing smaller investors in, was to
roll up all those smaller investors into a special purpose vehicle that was led by a single firm,
in this case, Menlo Ventures. Anyway, again, the point of this for our story is that barging your
way into that deal was also not trivial. Beyond Open AI and Anthropic, who are the other realistic
contenders in this space? Well, of course, there is Google with Gemini, but for exposure to that
business, you just have to buy public stock at this point. Same goes with Meta and Lama. And
Metta and Lama are throwing an entirely different wrench into this, which I'll come to in just a
moment. One more credible competitor, which honestly kind of looks like a steal given everything that
we've talked about so far, is France's mistral, which has exploded onto the scene over the last
nine months or so. In December, the company raised at a $2 billion valuation, and earlier this
month it was reported that they were seeking funding at a $5 billion valuation. So that brings us
back to Musk and OpenAI. So one part of the logic to participate in this deal is simply the fact
that many people are looking for exposure into this space, and it's one of a very small handful of
options. I will note at this point that there are a number of other really interesting global
competitors in places like China that are not primarily English-based LLMs, but obviously
from a U.S. investor standpoint, which is going to inherently be the bias of this show,
given that I'm sitting in New York, these represent a fairly big portion of the going options
in many ways. Now, let's come back and talk about Lama 3 for a minute, because I think that the
emergence of Lama 3 actually works in Musk's favor when it comes to demand for and the price
of XAI. One of the big things that we've talked about on this show over the last couple of weeks
is the extent to which how close Lama 3 is getting to GPT 4 is changing the way that developers
think about access to models. Basically, I think that.
people are starting to wonder, will state-of-the-art models just simply become a commodity? Or perhaps
more acutely, will Zuckerberg be willing to spend enough to force them to become a commodity by giving
away Lama 4, Lama 5, etc? The answer increasingly appears to be maybe, which I think creates a real
challenge for the Anthropics and Open AIs of the world, who potentially are going to have a harder
and harder time with their enterprise models when they're competing with lower cost open source
options. Now, that's not to count them out at all. There's a million other dynamics which
could still matter, and there are futures in state-of-the-art, which could still create massive
differentiation, which continues to command a premium on price. But in a world where there is
more commoditization, let's say, of highly advanced models, it sort of makes companies that have
an existing distribution platform, a business model that these AIs plug into, look even better
by comparison. An example of this is the new meta-a-I that sits at the top of Instagram,
WhatsApp, and Messenger. When Lama 3 came out, they didn't just release it as a standalone chatbot. They
embedded it directly in their three very popular messaging apps in a way that totally synced it up
with search. It's early days, but I think dramatically more people are going to use it based on those
product decisions and actually have a positive experience with it. Which brings us back to XAI.
So if reason one to participate in this type of round is simply the lack of availability and the
scarcity of rounds like this, another reason might be a bet on the integration with Twitter slash
X. Even if GROC isn't state of the art in anything else, the fact that it is embedded
in this larger network, that despite all the hemming and hawing about Musk's leadership,
is still one of the very small handful of very important social networks in the U.S. and around the
world that creates more of an opportunity for GROC to add value to consumers and potentially
plug into existing business models than perhaps the standalones like OpenAI and Anthropic.
Now, of course, we don't know how any of this is going to play out.
We don't know how much the distance between state-of-the-art and open-source alternatives will
matter. My point is simply that as big and eye-popping as these numbers seem,
they're a lot less crazy than you might think once you really dig in.
For now, though, that is going to do it for today's AI breakdown.
Until next time, peace.
