The AI Daily Brief: Artificial Intelligence News and Analysis - The State of AI - Mid-2025
Episode Date: July 6, 2025At the midpoint of 2025, private markets dominate AI growth, reasoning models spark rapid adoption, and consumer AI reaches unprecedented penetration. NLW analyzes recent reports from Coatue and Menlo..., highlighting accelerated IPOs, surging AI coding revenues, shifting public market leaders, and emerging consumer behaviors reshaping the future AI landscape.Coatue Report: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1Srl8Y4pBoKtNVYZBxmfj2TEMYM5tp1mE/viewMenlo: https://menlovc.com/perspective/2025-the-state-of-consumer-ai/Get Ad Free AI Daily Brief: https://patreon.com/AIDailyBriefBrought to you by:KPMG – Go to https://kpmg.com/ai to learn more about how KPMG can help you drive value with our AI solutions.Blitzy.com - Go to https://blitzy.com/ to build enterprise software in days, not months AGNTCY - The AGNTCY is an open-source collective dedicated to building the Internet of Agents, enabling AI agents to communicate and collaborate seamlessly across frameworks. Join a community of engineers focused on high-quality multi-agent software and support the initiative at agntcy.org Vanta - Simplify compliance - https://vanta.com/nlwPlumb - The automation platform for AI experts and consultants https://useplumb.com/The Agent Readiness Audit from Superintelligent - Go to https://besuper.ai/ to request your company's agent readiness score.The AI Daily Brief helps you understand the most important news and discussions in AI. Subscribe to the podcast version of The AI Daily Brief wherever you listen: https://pod.link/1680633614Subscribe to the newsletter: https://aidailybrief.beehiiv.com/Join our Discord: https://bit.ly/aibreakdownInterested in sponsoring the show? nlw@breakdown.network
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Today on the AI Daily Brief, the state of AI mid-20205.
The AI Daily Brief is a daily podcast and video about the most important news and discussions in AI.
Welcome back, friends, quick announcements, as always.
First of all, thank you to today's sponsors, KPMG, Blitzy and Super Intelligent.
To get an ad-free version of the show, go to patreon.com slash AI Daily Brief.
And to discuss our show a little bit, it is a weekend, which means a long read slash big ideas episode.
And today we are combining a couple of recent presentations to get a sense of where we are at this halfway point of the year.
We're also, it's worth noting, halfway through the first half of the century, we are officially closer to 2050 than we are to the year 2000.
And there have been two big presentations recently that provide really interesting context to digging into exactly where we are with AI.
The first is this massive Mary Meeker style presentation from investing giant Kowatu.
Obviously, that's the one that's going to be a much more macro look. And then Menlo also released
their state of consumer AI 2025. So the order we're going to take this in is private market
trends first, public market trends second, and state of consumer AI last. The TLDR on the story of
private markets is that they are all about AI. Now, this was a trend last year, but AI is over
50% of funding that's happened so far in 2025. Maybe a more significant part of the story,
is the likelihood that private funding increases as exits actually rebound. You can see here from
this chart, and by the way, this is a good moment to remind you that if you are a listener primarily,
this is one that might be worth watching, given the highly visual nature of some of these charts
and slides. But if you look at this chart from a peak of exits in the height of the Zerb COVID
era in 2021, we have been in an exit desert for the last few years, and that has caused some serious
liquidity issues when it comes to funding and capitalization. Now, however, we are seeing the very
beginnings of the return of an IPO window. We're seeing more M&A activity. And we are also, although
it's not really reflected yet in this charts, starting to see the return of D-SPACs as a path
to going public as well. This is good news for investors because these companies are growing
incredibly quickly. The example that Kowatu gives is Anthropic. It took that company around 21 months
to go from zero to a billion in annualized revenue.
Then it took three months to go from $1 billion to $2 billion,
two months to go from $2 billion to $3 billion,
and actually this slide is out of date
because it only took an additional month
to go from $3 billion to $4 billion.
Now, this is, of course, an extremely notable example
because of the rise of AI coding and coding assistance
that are so driven by Anthropics Claude models,
but still these companies are getting big, incredibly fast.
And the reality is that the better that these exits do, for example, a generally positive
core weave IPO and some significant growth in M&A functions, the more capital is going to be
unlocked.
All of which is to say, everything continues to point in the direction of more capital for more
AI spend across a variety of different themes.
And for now, at least, the action remains in private markets.
The total market cap of the top 10 public AI companies grew just 10% between June of last
year and June of this year, from 18 to 20 trillion, where the market cap of the top of
of the top 10 private AI companies grew 130% from $283 billion to $658 billion.
They sum up, in AI, the action is in the private markets.
10 billion of funding has become the norm for new model startups.
Time to 10 million of revenue has accelerated from 10 years to 12 months.
We are in a bonanza.
Now, they do specifically call out the coding use case as one true inflection point.
They show that there has been 1.3 billion of net new revenue generated in just a single
year around vibe coding and AI co-pilot tools, and that trend just seems to be accelerating.
Now, across both private and public markets, acceleration seems to be a big theme.
Kowatu is calling this the age of reasoning, and basically point out how in a number of different
dimensions, token consumption has gone way up since the release of the reasoning models in Q4
of last year. In public markets, they point to Microsoft as an example of this phenomenon,
where in their April 30th earnings call, Sotche and Nadella said, we processed over 100 trillion tokens this
quarter, up 5x year over year, including a record 50 trillion tokens last month alone.
Another example of this massive growth post-reasoning models is the share of U.S. businesses
with paid subscriptions to AI according to ramp estimates, which jumped from a little over 25%
in Q4 of last year, all the way up to 42% in Q1 of this year.
They called it a positive inflection as reasoning models emerge.
Chad ChiBT saw a similar explosion of growth after the launch of deep research, their reasoning
model, and their latest image generation model.
Ultimately, as much as there have been a few scares in AI, which they identify as the AI ROI scare
from July of last year, you'll remember the Goldman Sachs report that I talk about all the time,
the Deep Seek scare in January of this year, and what they call the Microsoft Cappex scare
of February of this year, the reality they argue is that this is an AI super cycle.
And one thing that they're not sure of is how the super cycle is going to reshape who's at
the top of the market. They spend a lot of time wondering if the Magnificent Seven's reign is coming
to an end.
four of the MAG7 are negative year to date, and they wonder if some of these companies at least
will give way to new AI leaders. They group AI stocks into three categories, AI power, AI software,
and AI semis. Semis have grown by 12 percent, with examples being broadcom and TSM,
who are being driven by token growth's new inflection in computer demand, AI software like Palantir,
Oracle, and Snowflake, who are being driven by AI agents taking off with the new reasoning models,
and AI power like G. Vernova, Constellation, and Vistra, which is up 18% on the year,
and who are being driven by electricity shortages and long-term deals with hyperscalers.
Compare those 12, 17, and 18% year-to-day performances to the overall negative 1% performance
for the Mag 7.
What could hurt the party?
They identify three risks, the market being too expensive, tariffs leading to the end of
U.S. exceptionalism, and ballooning deficits.
However, they point out that there is a difference between a crisis and a correction, and that
right now there are a lot of tailwinds. Two examples they point to are the end of the AI diffusion
rule, moving from tight export restrictions on chips to broader access for allies, indicated by
250 billion to one trillion in AI-related investment commitments from the Gulf states, and the energy
and nuclear renaissance, as they call it, from no new builds and policy paralysis to major
build-up of capacity. The broad shift they see is from autos today to semiconductors tomorrow,
from oil today to electricity tomorrow, from manufacturing factories to AI factories, and from
being a global leader of the industrial revolution to a global leader of the AI revolution.
Ultimately, they believe that we could see a virtuous flywheel set off by AI.
AI-led productivity gains turn into lower unit labor costs, turn into lower inflation,
lower interest rates, higher GDP growth, and that leads to higher tax receipts, lower debt
to GDP ratio, ultimately circulating in a productivity deficit cycle that could redefine the
economy in a positive way. The big impacts from AI on the economy they see is AI's
productivity gains, translating into higher GDP growth, increased revenues from incremental GDP,
turning into faster growing revenues from capital gains, with a key output of all of this being a
better debt-to-GDP ratio. Ultimately, this is a very optimistic look at how AI is going to
impact not only public markets, but government receipts. And if you want to dig in it all,
especially around one controversial, at least very highly discussable piece of the story,
their last slide is called the Kauatu Fantastic 40, and it's their list of companies that they
anticipate being at the top of the public market charts in the year 2030. The only notable one is
OpenAI at a $1.6 trillion market cap as the ninth biggest company in the world. My guess is that
Sam Altman is certainly going for something a little bit bigger than that. And don't even talk to
Elon about his placement of XAI down at the 35th rank. Today's episode is brought to you by
KPMG. In today's fiercely competitive market, unlocking AI's potential could help give you a competitive
edge, foster growth, and drive new value. But here's the key. You don't need an AI strategy.
You need to embed AI into your overall business strategy to truly power it up. KPMG can show you
how to integrate AI and AI agents into your business strategy in a way that truly works and is
built on trusted AI principles and platforms. Check out real stories from KPMG to hear how
AI is driving success with its clients at www.kpmg.comg.com.us slash AI. Again, that's www.com
This episode is brought to you by Blitzy.
If you're a technology leader, here's something that probably sounds familiar.
Your organization's competitive edge is buried in legacy code that desperately needs modernization,
but the resources required feel out of reach.
That was the case for a global investment analysis firm.
They needed to migrate 70,000 lines of complex MATLAB financial algorithms to Python,
algorithms that drive investment decisions for trillions in assets.
Their estimate?
months of high-cost specialized engineering work. Instead, they partnered with Blitzy.
Blitzy's autonomous AI preserved mathematical precision and generated over 80% of the new codebase,
completing the migration with just five days of engineering time. They cut the timeline by 95%
and saved 880 engineering hours. If your organization is facing similar modernization challenges,
visit blitzy.com to schedule a consultation and discover how AI power development can
transform your technical capabilities.
Today's episode is brought to you by Vanta.
In today's business landscape, businesses can't just claim security, they have to prove it.
Achieving compliance with a framework like SOC2, ISO-27-01, HIPAA, GDPR, and more,
is how businesses can demonstrate strong security practices.
The problem is that navigating security and compliance is time-consuming and complicated.
It can take months of work and use up valuable time and resources.
Vanta makes it easy and faster by automating compliance across 35-plus frameworks.
It gets you audit ready in weeks instead of months and saves you up to 85% of associated costs.
In fact, a recent IDC White Paper found that Vanta customers achieve $535,000 per year in benefits,
and the platform pays for itself in just three months.
The proof is in the numbers.
More than 10,000 global companies trust Vanta.
For a limited time, listeners get $1,000 off at vanta.com slash NLW.
That's VANTA.com for $1,000 off.
Now, the other report that I wanted to talk about a little bit was this Menlo state of consumer
AI report.
Nothing in here is shocking, but it is confirmation of just how insanely fast everything is moving.
61% of American adults have used AI in the past six months, and 20% use it every day.
They write, this is no longer experimentation, its habit formation at an unprecedented scale.
Now, the report comes from a study of 5,000 U.S. adults, and beyond that,
Big Banner Headline statistic also shows some really interesting things about, for example,
who's using AI. Menlo writes, while Gen Z leads overall AI adoption as expected, millennials emerge as
power users reporting more daily usage. At the same time, though, nearly half of baby boomers
have used AI in the past six months, with 11% still using it daily. Those who work use AI more.
75% of employed adults use AI as compared to 52% of unemployed adults, and the higher income you are,
the more you use it as well. Fifty-three percent of households earning under 50,000 use AI, as compared to
74% of households earning 100,000 or more. Eighty-five percent of students 18 and older reported
using AI, and 15% of students are liars. One of the unexpected findings about users they had
was that parents are power users. While 54% of non-parents have used AI, 79% of parents have.
29% report using AI every day, which is almost twice the rate of non-parents. And 35% percent,
4% of them are using it to manage child care. This resonates because one of the most common gateway
experiences that I've seen over the last two years is parents who do something with AI vis-a-vis
their kids. They tell stories with chat GPT and choose your own adventure style, or they have their
kids make images with them on mid-journey, or they create specialized coloring books that have their
kids' images and favorite characters together. These really capture the wonder and joy and
capital F fun of AI in a way that some of the work cases don't, and then translate to people
experimenting with other more practical use cases in other parts of their life as well.
When it comes to which tools they use, there are really two parts of the story. Convenience and
first mover advantage. ChatGBTGBT has name recognition, representing 28% of the total
general AI assistant usage among adults, and then after that, it's all about what's in your
face and what you're already using. Gemini had 23%, Meta had 18%, Alexa.
XA had 18%, and even awful Siri had 16%.
And what are people using AI for?
I will caveat that this is maybe the least consistent question
if you look across all AI studies.
Harvard reported a bunch of use cases that look totally different
from some other use case reports.
So you have to take all of these with a big grain of salt.
However, the top 10 most common ways that people use AI in everyday life
were writing emails, researching topics of interests,
managing to-do lists,
writing support, meal planning, managing expenses, taking and organizing notes, creating images,
researching purchases, and researching health questions. All of those had between 14% and 19% of
U.S. adults using them for that purpose. Now, while in general, AI saw the highest penetration
where it fit into activities that people were already doing, the biggest example of where AI is
opening up behavior that wasn't there before seems to be in vibe coding. They found 47% of
respondent applying AI to coding for work or school, and 41% using it for personal projects.
Menlo concludes, much like photo editing or slide design before it, AI-assisted coding is becoming
foundational digital literacy. Now, if this is all about the people who have adopted AI,
what about the 39% of Americans who aren't using it? The most common answer is the simplest.
80% say that they prefer people over AI. 71% say they're worried about data privacy,
63% just don't see a need.
58% don't trust AI information.
48% said they don't know how to use AI.
40% said that they think it's biased,
which is another version of not trusting it.
And 27% said that they lack access to tools.
So what do they think happens next?
Their first prediction is a second wave
moving from generalized to specialized tools.
Basically now that nearly two-thirds of Americans are using AI,
but it's mostly still in the realm of chat GPT
and generalized assistance like that,
there may be room now for more specialized tools.
that expand and get into specific use case opportunities. Like enterprises, they anticipate we move from
assistance to full automation and agenic workflows. They think that we're likely to see some multiplayer modes
that integrate social experiences with AI. Menlo is guessing that voice AI is going to be a much bigger
part of the ecosystem and that physical AI will enter the home. Just like the experimentation we're
seeing in the enterprise, revenue models are likely to diversify beyond subscriptions as well.
To me, this report, I think, is extremely confirming of what many our expectations would be,
but in some ways with even higher numbers than you might expect.
It wasn't very long ago that we were talking about how AI was the fastest growing technology ever
because it had only taken it two years to go from zero to 40% penetration of U.S. households.
We've grown another 50% then all the way up to over 60% penetration,
and there are no signs that this is slowing down.
So, friends, that is going to do it for our mid-year recap of where we are.
with AI. Hope you enjoy this episode. And until next time, peace.
