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  3. Busy couple of weeks on results front

Busy couple of weeks on results front

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Investments and Portfolios
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  • A Online
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    Adam Kay
    Global Moderator
    wrote last edited by Adam Kay
    #221

    I think the worse is over but things will remain choppy until we see some definitive policy in the US and some reciprocity from their trading partners.

    Earnings have been largely good with specific tech centric strength which bodes well. So what we have is solid fundamentals which now look far less likely to be impeded by tariff/trade concerns. It's what we want. It's a case of, business is doing just fine, let's not derail with geopolitical game playing.

    It's what we thought would happen (common sense) so just pleased we now see some light!

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      Adam Kay
      Global Moderator
      wrote last edited by
      #222

      Consumer CPI came in at +0.2% bringing the YoY inflation rate to 2.4% with no indication of any tariff impact. Future are up/stable and Trump is meeting in Saudi with a slew of US CEOs including Huang and Musk. I'm guessing some big investment announcements will drop in the next 48 hours.

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        Adam Kay
        Global Moderator
        wrote last edited by
        #223

        In the news:US and Saudi sign multiple mega deals cover various investments. Included is $80B in data centres using NVDA technology. I'm not going to say much more-no surprises. They cant supply the demand anyway but it reaffirms the fact that Nvidia is the greatest beneficiary of tech and will be for a very long time. And of course with then, so will MU, AVGO, KLAC and SMCI directly and indirectly GOOG/MSFT/AWS/ORCL

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        • S Online
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          SteveRutter
          wrote last edited by
          #224

          Certainly been a nicer experience looking at the dashboard over these last couple of days...

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            Adam Kay
            Global Moderator
            wrote last edited by
            #225

            Agreed Steve, the headless chicken action is not pleasant for anyone.

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              Adam Kay
              Global Moderator
              wrote last edited by Adam Kay
              #226

              Colossus-2 (Xai):
              Colossus 2, targets 1 million NVIDIA GPUs ( Blackwell B200/B300) by December 2025, with potential expansion to 2 million by December 2026. Requiring 1,641 MW for 1 million GPUs and 3,281 MW for 2 million, it will use SMCI’s liquid-cooled servers and NVIDIA’s high-performance networking. Located in Memphis, it leverages TVA’s 1.2 GW power commitment and Tesla MegaPacks. This cluster is xAI’s primary vehicle for massive GPU scale-out, designed to train advanced AI models.

              Demand aint slowing down! Min this is another $50 billion

              This is approx 15,625 racks if 64 config and 13,888 if 72.

              Mega packs onsite- $150 Million in batteries.

              Screenshot 2025-05-21 at 17.12.10.png
              Why batteries are used.
              Power Smoothing: Batteries, often part of an Uninterruptible Power Supply (UPS) system, help stabilise power delivery. Data centres, especially those running AI workloads, have massive and fluctuating power demands due to high-performance computing (e.g., GPUs for AI training). Batteries smooth out spikes and dips in power draw, ensuring consistent voltage and preventing damage to sensitive equipment.

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                Adam Kay
                Global Moderator
                wrote last edited by
                #227

                TSMC Chairman C.C. Wei statements at annual shareholder meeting Tuesday 3 June, via media reports.

                “Overall AI demand is still very strong”, TSMC still cannot meet chip demand, and related business opportunities continues to increase.

                All AI orders are with TSMC, including Nvidia and ASICs.

                Humanoid robot-related chips are already making a significant contribution to TSMC’s revenue

                TSMC has no plans to build chip fabs in the Middle East

                It takes time to build a chip cluster (chip manufacturing location complete with supply chain), and currently such clusters only exist in the US, Taiwan, Japan, Europe and China.

                TSMC’s business remains robust and we continue to expand to meet customer demand.

                TSMC still sees revenue and earnings reaching new record highs this year despite tariffs, currency volatility.

                TSMC technology “cannot be stolen” due to robust safeguards and the complexity of its capabilities.

                It is the result of 10,000 R&D engineers and thousands more production engineers who optimise and refine the chip production technology.

                “If our technology could be stolen that easily, TSMC wouldn’t be where it is today,” he said, adding “it’s beyond the capacity of an individual, 10 people, or even a hundred, to steal.

                Tariffs won’t affect TSMC because importers usually bear the cost, not exporters like TSMC.

                But if tariffs can lead to higher prices, or could cause global economic growth to slow, which could affect TSMC

                TSMC has talked with the US about the impact of tariffs on importing chip-making equipment to TSMC Arizona, and there appears to be some flexibility.

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