WSJ What’s News - Is There Already Too Much AI Computing Power?
Episode Date: July 2, 2026A.M. Edition for July 2. A report that Meta plans to enter the cloud business to sell excess AI computing power has dragged down an array of tech stocks in the U.S. and Asia. Plus, WSJ advertising edi...tor Suzanne Vranica and reporter Mark Maurer unpack how AI is reshaping the marketing and consulting industries. And Russia strikes back against Ukraine with one of its largest missile barrages since the start of the war. Luke Vargas hosts. Sign up for the WSJ’s free What’s News newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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AI stocks sell off worldwide ahead of U.S. jobs data.
Plus, we'll catch up with our advertising editor to hear about the technological tumult facing the industry and its workforce.
You have the creative agencies thinking they're going to be disintermediated.
Now you have the buying agencies that are all sitting around saying, oh my God, you know, programmatic ad buying, we thought that was a hurdle.
Now we're thinking machines are going to talk to machines and do all this work.
And Russia strikes back against Ukraine with one of a very good.
its largest missile barrages since the start of the war. It's Thursday, July 2nd. I'm Luke Fargus
for the Wall Street Journal, and here is the AM edition of What's News, the top headlines and business
stories moving your world today. U.S. stock futures are in the red as we near the end of a
shortened trading week and ahead of a closely watched June jobs report due out at 8.30 a.m. Eastern.
Investors are bracing for potentially strong hiring numbers that could raise the odds that the Fed
may need to raise interest rates in the short term. Meanwhile, yesterday's tech stock slump carried
over to Asia overnight, triggering a pullback in the NECA and leading regulators in Korea to once
again step in to calm trading during another sell-off in the country's chip stocks. Korea's
benchmark Kaspi index closed the day down almost 8%, while the tech-heavy KOSDAQ, where trading
was briefly halted, ended the session off around 7%.
One trigger of the pullback, both in Korea and among some AI-focused cloud providers in the
U.S., was a report that META planned to enter the cloud business to sell excess AI computing power.
That caused meta stock to jump off hours, but reporter Sherry Queen in Singapore told me
that it raised alarm elsewhere.
So there have been a lot of fears about AI overspending by the Mac 7.
and when these companies will produce a return on that investment.
The AI rightly is really built on the belief that there is infinite demand and sustained supply shortage.
This latest meta report just really raises the question that,
what if hyperscalers are building more compute than they can use profitably?
One analyst just told me that hyper-scalers now may be preparing for a world
where they have to monetize access capacity
rather than just keep building and keep spending at any price.
Another reason what has driven the heavy tech losses
is because AI trade positioning is getting really crowded.
Investors are pouring money into the exact same stocks,
the Mac 7, the hyper-skillers, the Asian semiconductor companies.
And these concerns are especially amplified in North Asian markets,
particularly South Korea.
Just on the compute situation here, Sherry,
it almost sounds like there's like a secondhand market opening up
for a product that previously people or corporations
were only buying new at tag, shall we say.
Yeah, I think your analogy of a secondhand market is correct.
So at first people were really bullish on the AI computing demand
and with the AI infrastructure builders in Asia
couldn't catch up with demand, they think we have to be more and more.
And now the metanus just shows that maybe that's not the truth.
Will the hyperscalers still face supply constraints in the short term?
They may not last forever.
And the AI infrastructure builders need to prepare for that.
And investors are just a step ahead.
They are trying to hedge that risk.
That was the journal's Sherry Queen in Singapore.
And adding a note of caution to the AI building,
out this week is financial crisis hero Michael Berry of the Big Short fame, who's doubling down
on bets that the hype around AI is souring. Since last year, he's taken bearish bets on the
likes of Tesla chipmaker applied materials and an ETF tracking semiconductor makers. And following
Samsung and S.K. Hynix's announcement this week of plans to invest more than a half a trillion
dollars into a new AI chip hub. He wrote on Substack that, quote, I see that as the beginning of an end.
Barry has also added to a months long short of invidia.
Barry and the companies, he said he's shorting, didn't return requests for comment.
After years of battling with the European Union, Alphabet's Google has lost a bid to overturn its biggest
ever EU antitrust fine. The EU's Court of Justice this morning upheld the more than four
half billion dollar fine, which was levied after regulators alleged that Google unfairly used
its dominance to make sure that traffic on Android devices went to its own search engine.
Back in the U.S., Alibaba, and a U.S.-based payments processor have agreed to pay $600 million
to settle DOJ allegations that they allowed merchants to sell and import illegal pharmaceuticals
and other restricted items into the U.S.
The operator of Chinese ecommerce site, Alibaba.com, admitted that it failed.
failed to prevent around 80,000 sales for merchants between 2016 and 2024.
Undercover law enforcement officials found they were able to buy contraband pharmaceuticals
and counterfeiting equipment on dozens of occasions.
Meanwhile, the DOJ and 17 states have reached settlements with three major egg providers
to resolve allegations that they illegally colluded for years to inflate prices,
including when eggs hit record highs last year.
Neither Calmain Foods, Versova, or Hickman's Egg Ranch admitted wrongdoing, but under the settlements, they're on the hook for $3.3 million to be paid to the states and 53 million eggs, which will be donated to food banks and nonprofits.
Massive Russian strikes have pounded Kiev and other Ukrainian cities, killing at least 13 people and wounding dozens more.
As we've reported in recent days, the attack follows weeks of Ukrainian strikes on crucial oil refinery.
and military sites deep within Russian territory.
Foreign correspondent Stephen Kalen says that Russia's retaliation is one of the largest since the war began
and included striking Ukraine hard with long-range missiles.
Missiles remain pretty difficult to intercept, and a large part of that is that Ukraine doesn't
have enough of the air defense systems and particularly the interceptors used in those systems
to strike down those missiles.
They've been asking the U.S. and other allies around the world to provide them,
with more, but they've not received enough. And Russia's been exploiting that weakness while it
faces setbacks on the battlefield. It hasn't really been making many advances. And Ukraine has
been more successful at striking more deeply into Russian territory. President Vladimir Putin
recently reiterated demands tantamount to Ukraine's subjugation, giving no indication that he's
prepared to end its invasion of Ukraine, which is now in its fifth year.
Coming up with the world's top economists, sounding the alarm on artificial intelligence,
we'll look at how the consulting and advertising industries are trying to adapt
and make the most of AI in the process.
That's after the break.
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We turn now to Cintra in Portugal, where the world's top central bankers and economists have been gathering this week.
And one question, dominating discussions there, is artificial intelligence a boon or threat
the global economy. While some are highlighting its productivity potential, many officials are
warning that high debt, stretched stock valuations and cyber vulnerabilities could tip economies
into a recession. With almost every industry adopting AI, policymakers warned that if the technology
is widely successful, the resulting job displacement could spike unemployment and cripple consumer
spending, as our Daniel Bach reports. One industry grappling with how AI will impact their
bottom line is consulting. For years, consulting firms have relied on armies of junior analysts to do
things like crunch data, build decks, and take care of a lot of tedious research. That bedrock
work allowed senior partners to rake in the profits thanks to billable hours. AI is increasingly
capable of automating a lot of this junior level work. It does it faster. It's more reliable.
That's significantly cutting down on the hours it takes to perform some consulting projects.
That's journal reporter Mark Maurer, who says the consulting industry has long been debating how to improve or jettison the hourly billing model, something AI is now accelerating.
But Mark says with a shift in pay models, there are new risks.
Firms are primarily focused on two alternatives to the hourly model.
One is fixed fee.
The other option has been outcome-based pricing.
That generally means consultants get paid if they achieve certain metrics for the clients.
And these are metrics that are mutually agreed upon between the two parties.
But Mark says with a shift in pay models, there are new risks.
There's the risk that the firm will have to absorb the costs of working for free if a project takes way longer than expected.
Or if a project drags out for a while, the firm could face major delays in getting paid.
GPT Zero, which is an AI detection platform, has uncovered some of these examples.
I spoke to the CEO who noted that the shift toward fixed fee and value-based billing,
as he puts it, considerable pressure on consultancies to produce more output.
And if that comes at the expense of fact-checking or certain things that they were relying on AI to do,
that could result in reputational damage for the firms.
Still, some firms are embracing the new pay models.
Elevate is one example.
The AI-Native accounting firm is offering financial incentives,
to junior employees to get creative and find ways to integrate AI into their workflows.
And speaking of creatives, Madison Avenue is already all in on artificial intelligence.
Journal advertising reporter Suzanne Bernice recently returned from the Can Lion Ad Festival
in the south of France and says that Rose-fuelled conversations between industry execs
about the technology were filled with a mix of excitement, dread, and of course how to do more
and pay less. You can now see that AI is definitely here.
here. And that is both good and bad for the business. There's lots of fear still about copyright
infringements and different things. But clearly now we can see clients, marketers, agencies.
This is go time, right? Like, creative is definitely being rewritten and using these tools
pretty aggressively. CMOs tell me it's all about the pressure in the C-suite. How do I do more
with less money? Most CMOs think is we're at this now tipping point where it's not just about
cost savings, but how do we get to a place where this improves the work and actually helps do
things creatively that one could never have done without these tools? AI, of course, already plays
a huge role in the ad business. Google, Meta, and Amazon currently control almost two-thirds of
U.S. ad revenue, where agencies have already had to adapt, restructure, and invest in getting ads in
front of app users. And where marketing meetings used to be about SEO on Google, Suzanne says
brands and agencies are still trying to navigate chatbot-driven search and how to be included
in AI-generated summaries. The other big area was the rise of agentic, right? Everybody thinks
we're going to outsource all of our purchasing to these chatbots. And then the big question will be,
after years of these advertising agencies figuring out, hey, how do I talk to humans? How do you now
convince a chatbot to buy your product? The other side of this is this idea of agent
machine-to-machine ad buying. We are nowhere near this yet. And obviously, consumer behavior is really
going to have to catch up now to the technology that's out there. But it's coming for sure.
And it's something every brand and agency is trying to learn and figure out how to navigate.
According to advertising giant WPP Media, global revenue from generative search ads are projected
to hit about $5 billion this year and top $100 billion by 2030. As to how the AI
shift will impact jobs in the economy. WPP plans to cut hundreds of jobs in the coming months
after slashing nearly 10,000 positions last year. Investors also aren't sure with shares in rival
publicies down about 2% over the past year. And that's it for what's news for this Thursday morning.
Today's show was produced by Hattie Moyer and Daniel Bach. Our supervising producer is Sandra
Kilhoff, and I'm Luke Vargas for the Wall Street Journal. We will be back tonight with a new show.
Until then, thanks for listening.
