WSJ What’s News - Tech Leaders Promise Massive AI Investment Under Trump
Episode Date: January 22, 2025A.M. Edition for Jan. 22. Prominent tech executives, including OpenAI’s Sam Altman and SoftBank CEO Masayoshi Son, pledge to spend up to half a trillion dollars to build out AI infrastructure in the... U.S. over the next four years. Plus, WSJ reporter Marcus Walker joins us from Israel to discuss whether the Gaza cease-fire could pave the way for lasting peace. And Delta comes out on top in the latest WSJ ranking of U.S. airlines. 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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Travel moves us.
Tech leaders pledge up to a half a trillion dollars in US AI investments during Trump's
term.
Plus, Pentagon pick Pete Hegsath faces new accusations over his drinking and an update
on the state of the Gaza ceasefire four days on.
So far there is indeed a pause in the fighting.
Aid agencies have also taken the chance to rush in more aid.
But of course the big question is how long will this pause continue and will it turn
into a real winding down of the war?
It's Wednesday, January 22nd.
I'm Luke Vargas 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.
President Trump's defense secretary pick Pete Hengsteth is facing new allegations from
an ex-relative who told U.S. lawmakers that he regularly abused alcohol, leading to erratic and aggressive behavior.
That sworn statement by Hegseth's former sister-in-law resurfaces allegations about
his drinking, which Hegseth brushed off during his confirmation hearing last week, calling
them a smear campaign coming from anonymous sources, even while telling senators
that he would abstain from consuming alcohol if tapped to lead the Pentagon.
It's not clear if the new allegations will have any effect on Hegseth's confirmation,
which the Republican-controlled Senate is expected to vote on later this week.
The leaders of OpenAI, Oracle, SoftBank, and Emirati investor MGX are pledging to invest
up to a half a trillion dollars in AI infrastructure in the U.S., including data centers, over
the next four years.
The joint venture, known as Stargate, is the latest high-profile initiative timed with
the start of the Trump administration, and in remarks at the White House, SoftBank CEO Masayoshi
Sun sought to tie its unveiling to political change in Washington.
As you say yesterday, this is the beginning of golden age of America.
This is one great example, I think.
We wouldn't have decided to do this.
I hope so, or I think so.
This is the beginning of golden age. We wouldn't have decided to do this. I hope so or I think so. This is the beginning of a golden age.
We wouldn't have decided unless you won.
People familiar with the matter say the initial $100 billion committed to Stargate includes
projects already announced and initiated under the Biden administration, including a data
center in Texas where construction began last year.
Softbank shares closed today up more than 10 percent in Tokyo.
Oracle is rising in off-hours trading, as are Nvidia, Microsoft, and Arm Holdings, who
were named as technology partners for the Stargate project.
We report that President Trump's threat of imposing 25 percent tariffs on Canadian
and Mexican imports is part of
a strategy to push for an early renegotiation of the U.S.-Mexico-Canada trade agreement,
which is up for review in 2026.
That is according to people familiar with the matter who say that Trump is particularly
focused on changing automotive rules under the pact and forcing car plants to move from
Canada and Mexico back to the
U.S.
Both countries have threatened to retaliate against U.S. tariffs, with Canada considering
an export tax on oil that could make gasoline more expensive for Americans.
Trump said this week he aims to impose tariffs on the two countries on February 1.
He also said yesterday that he's weighing slapping tariffs on the European Union as
well as an additional 10% levy on Chinese goods, triggering a fall in stocks in China
and Hong Kong today.
And in other market news, shares of Netflix are up more than 14% in off-hours trading
after the streaming service beat Q4 revenue and profit projections, and it's shaping
up to be a busy earnings morning
with Procter & Gamble, J&J, and Abbott Laboratories all reporting results before the opening bell,
while pipeline operator Kinder Morgan and lender Discover Financial Services will post
results this afternoon.
Coming up, reporter Marcus Walker joins us from Israel to discuss whether the Gaza ceasefire
could pave the way for lasting peace, and we'll take a look at the winners and losers from the journal's
latest ranking of U.S. airlines.
That's after the break.
Let's turn our focus now to the Middle East, where a six-week Gaza ceasefire between Hamas
and Israel is now in its fourth day.
The deal had been a long time coming, but does it actually put the two sides any closer
to formally ending their war?
To consider that and many other questions about the current state of play, I'm joined
now by Wall Street Journal reporter Marcus Walker, who's in Israel this morning.
Marcus, you and your colleagues are reporting that fighting has paused since the deal came
into effect and that much-needed aid is indeed rushing into Gaza, so some positive early
indications there.
But we've also seen how fragile this deal has been.
And if Israel hopes to recover all 33 hostages in Gaza that were meant to be freed in the
first phase of this deal, the situation is going to need to hold and in fact for another five plus
weeks.
Paul Anthony It will be and I'm sure that every Saturday
that more hostages are released from Gaza and more detained Palestinians are released
from Israeli prisons will be a wobbly process as both sides accuse each other of breaking
the fine print.
But things will really get difficult on day 16 of this deal when they're supposed to
start negotiating the second phase, which will be about arrangements that really bring
this war to an end.
If that collapses, then this will only be a brief pause.
Is there any sense, Marcus, of what that phase two longer term part of this deal could look
like?
Marcus Well, some of the key features of phase two
have been written down in the deal. They include an Israeli withdrawal, for example, from the
Gaza-Egypt border area. So some of it we know, but there are big open questions. Above all,
there's this big question about who governs Gaza next. And really, we have no more than
slogans there and finding
an answer for that could be crucial for establishing whether the war resumes at some point.
Right, and Marcus, how much flexibility both sides are going to bring to discussions about
longer term arrangements is very much bound up in who sees themselves as the winner and
loser of this conflict, a question you've been trying to tackle in some of your recent
reporting.
Indeed, ultimately, whether this pause in the fighting becomes an end to the war depends loser of this conflict, a question you've been trying to tackle in some of your recent reporting. Matthew 14.30
Indeed, ultimately, whether this pause in the fighting becomes an end to the war depends
not so much on the fine print of the deal, which I think is more something that both
sides can use as an alibi if they want to go back to fighting, but rather on the overall
political calculation. And the overall dilemma for Israel, for Netanyahu politically, is that he is under pressure from his right-wing allies and there's dissatisfaction on the right of Israeli politics because they have clearly and visibly not been able to stamp out Hamas, which was his political show in town in Gaza. They've come back onto the streets wearing their balaclavas in a show of force directed as much at the Gaza
population as anybody else showing that there is only us, we are back in charge.
Nat. That was very visible at that first hostage handover, was it not?
David. Absolutely. And Hamas was able to spin that whole process for a propaganda win, which
has caused much frustration in Israel.
The difficulty for Netanyahu is that Trump wants Israel to wrap this up. He said so many times.
He has bigger fish to fry in the region.
He wants to broker a normalization of relations between Israel and Saudi Arabia.
The Saudis say they can't do that while there's a war going on in Gaza.
So Netanyahu is caught between some internal political pressures and these wider international diplomatic opportunities
for Israel, but also pressure from the Trump administration.
Right, so lots of political machinations to follow on the Israeli side, Marcus. I have
to ask though, where does all of this leave the Palestinian cause?
The Palestinian national cause and hopes for an end to the occupation in the West Bank
and for self-determination are probably in their worst place for many decades because they are facing
an Israel that's in no mood to give concessions and Palestinian politics is now caught between
two very unappealing alternatives. On the one hand you have Hamas whose attack on Israel has
just triggered the complete leveling of Gaza and on on the other hand, you have Fatah,
the secular nationalist movement that controls the Palestinian Authority in the West Bank,
which is deeply unpopular and seen as discredited. It's seen as corrupt and authoritarian and as
having delivered nothing for the Palestinian cause in the last 20, 30 years. And there seems to be
no emergence of a third alternative. Now the
Palestinian Authority is trying to convince international partners,
including the US, that it should be involved in governing Gaza. So far we've
heard nothing sympathetic towards it from the Trump administration. The Arab
countries that would be financing the reconstruction of Gaza are open to it,
but only if it reforms because they see the Palestinian authority as corrupt.
So at the moment the PA is pretty friendless at an international level, but at the same time nobody wants to work with or deal with Hamas.
So that Palestinians find themselves isolated in the bigger picture, which is of course the game at a regional Middle Eastern level is
Trump wants a normalization of relations between
the Saudis and Israel, and many countries want that, in part in order to orchestrate
a containment of Iran. The Saudis want some sort of gesture by the Israelis towards a
restoration of negotiations, but nobody really expects Saudi Arabia to truly go to bat for
the Palestinians.
Nat. I've been speaking to Wall Street Journal reporter Marcus Walker with us in Israel today.
Marcus, thank you so much as always for the update.
Thank you.
And finally, Delta has once again taken the crown in the journal's annual ranking of
U.S. airlines, with Southwest coming in a close second.
Journal travel reporter Alison Pauley says our scorecard, which ranks nine
major carriers on seven metrics, shows that 2024 was a pretty smooth year for travelers.
The airlines lost fewer bags, more than three out of four flights arrived on time, and cancellations
were flat compared with 2023. However, bumping and tarmac delays were the weak spots. This tells us that the airline
industry is operating better overall than it was in recent years. We all remember specific meltdowns
where carriers stranded passengers and lost tons of bags. Those still happen, but for the most part,
airlines are doing a lot better. They've right-sized their schedules, which means they're able to run flights effectively, given the number
of flights and number of passengers that they have.
As for the losers, Frontier came last in our ranking, with American Airlines and Spirit
claiming the seventh and eighth spots respectively. And if you'd like to check out the full breakdown
of each carrier's performance, we've left
a link in our show notes.
And that's it for What's News for this Wednesday morning.
Before we go, a quick heads up that we've got a special bonus episode coming your way
later today.
In What's News and Earnings, we'll be digging into the latest reports from big banks for
signs of what's in store for the economy.
That will be in the feed around midday, and then we'll have our usual PM show tonight.
Today's show was produced by Daniel Bach with supervising producer Christina Rocca.
I'm Luke Vargas for the Wall Street Journal, and as always, thanks for listening.