4D·

Europe hopelessly left behind? 🇪🇺📉

I would like to initiate a discussion on the occasion of the recently announced 500 billion dollar Stargate project in the USA.

Do you think it is possible for Europe to catch up with the existing technological backlog? Or is "Stargate" the final nail in the coffin? And which countries do you see at the forefront of the AI age in the future?


For me, these countries are on the winning side:


USA 🇺🇸 - The USA has been at the forefront of technology right from the start. OpenAI (ChatGPT), Alphabet $GOOGL (+0.37%) (Gemini), Meta $META (+0.73%) Microsoft $MSFT (-1.34%) .... The list of companies relevant to the industry is long. Nowhere else in the world is more invested in AI. "Stargate" will now increase this imbalance many times over


China 🇨🇳 - China acts independently of the West and yet is still a major player with companies such as Tencent $TCEHY (+1.48%) , Alibaba $BABA (+2.78%) , Huawei, Xiaomi $1810 (+5.19%) and Baidu $9888 (+4.04%) are ideally positioned. Chinese companies are fast and innovative. The gigantic subsidies from the Chinese government also play a decisive role in this context. Another advantage is that the Chinese are currently receiving energy from Russia virtually as a gift.


Japan 🇯🇵 - With SoftBank, Japan has $9984 (-0.71%) a real AI champion in its country. In Japan, NVIDIA and SoftBank $NVDA (-3.74%) and SoftBank are building a joint innovative AI infrastructure. The fact that SoftBank and OpenAI are to be the lead partners in the Stargate project and that Masayoshi Son (CEO of SoftBank) will chair the new company will benefit Japan. The huge assets that are being built up there will flow back into the home country in one way or another. The close cooperation with the government (+high subsidies), the leading position in robotics and the recent developments in the semiconductor industry should also be noted.


Singapore 🇸🇬 - Very small country, lots of money, very good government, very well-educated population, lots of expats, lots of foreign investment, very few logistical challenges as a city state...... So things are looking VERY good for Singapore.


UAE 🇦🇪 /Saudi Arabia 🇸🇦/Qatar 🇶🇦 - Rich Gulf states that will invest billions in AI projects abroad (e.g. UAE participation in "Stargate"). They will generate large returns on these investments, while at the same time investing in the digitalization of their own country, thereby bringing great prosperity to their relatively small populations. Although there is also a large expat community in the UAE, including in the field of AI, I think that the Gulf states will mainly benefit from their investment funds.

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I am unsure about these countries unsure:


Canada 🇨🇦 - Canada is innovative and wealthy, but there are not really any relevant companies in the AI sector. In addition, the universities are middle class and they lose a lot of talent to their neighbor, the USA. However, the country has potential, also because it is very attractive for foreign specialists.


Taiwan 🇹🇼 - TSMC $2330 from Taiwan supplies the world with chips, including those urgently needed for AI, but the country's heavy dependence on a single company, which has recently been expanding abroad (especially Japan and the USA), poses a risk. The development of the conflict with China and the possible success of Rapidus from Japan and Samsung in the field of 2nm chips will also be decisive for Taiwan's future in the field of AI.


South Korea 🇰🇷 - Technological leader, politically unstable. Companies like Samsung $005930 and SK Hynix $000660 from South Korea are leaders in the field of AI. There is a great deal of expertise in the country and the government is also supporting the transformation. However, I am unsure about the excessive dependence on the chaebols (e.g. Samsung), which account for an unhealthily large proportion of economic output. The dysfunctionality of the rule of law due to corrupt politicians and courts, the recent very tense domestic political situation and the constant threat from neighboring North Korea should also be viewed critically.


India 🇮🇳 - The next few years will show whether India can become the new China. India is growing dynamically and, with its 1.4 billion inhabitants, has a huge potential workforce, but it is still heavily dependent on foreign know-how. India is not as innovative as developed countries and has to deal with domestic challenges such as hunger, which could make investment in AI more difficult. Indian companies are very open to AI and are trying to adapt it quickly, but developing it is another matter.


The Netherlands 🇳🇱 - With ASML $ASML (-1.76%) the Netherlands is home to one of the most important companies when it comes to AI. Without ASML's machines, the particularly advanced chips required for AI could not be produced. This puts the Netherlands, with its small population, in a rather comfortable position. However, it is also heavily dependent on a single company, which is also increasingly being targeted by geopolitics, with the result that the USA regularly blackmails the Netherlands to dictate where it has to deliver these machines. Recently, there have also been developments that threaten ASML's monopoly.


Germany 🇩🇪 - Germany is good at AI research, but there is a lack of AI champions. Companies such as Siemens $SIE (-0.61%) are doing well in terms of industrial AI and SAP is also $SAP (-0.32%) is investing heavily in its own AI, but there is still no sign of a German export hit in the field of AI. There is also a massive lack of investment in AI infrastructure and politicians are blocking rather than promoting. There is a general lack of a national vision, a combination of strategic policy and large-scale private investment, as is the case in other countries. The EU is also more of an obstacle to new investments. The concept of joint ventures is also used less in this country, although this could help to pool knowledge and resources in order to make a difference for one's own country. So all is not lost, but a political reorientation and new entrepreneurial courage are needed to catch up, which is getting bigger every day.


France 🇫🇷 - The French are also innovative and have an AI star in their country with Mistral AI, but they have similar problems to the Germans. Politics at national and EU level and the lack of major investments and new infrastructure are paralyzing the country.


UK 🇬🇧 - With universities such as Oxford and Cambridge, the UK has been conducting top-level research for a long time, including in the field of AI. They are innovative with many expats from abroad, although recently less from continental Europe. Unfortunately, however, they do not have any notable tech companies to call their own. Two of the most innovative tech companies and British hopefuls, ARM $ARM (-2.64%)

and Graphcore, are now both owned by the aforementioned Japanese SoftBank Group, but this does not mean that the UK can no longer benefit from the positive development of these companies. Nevertheless, they are no longer British.


ConclusionIt will not be easy for Europe to catch up. The competitors are mostly fast, very financially strong, innovative and led by visionaries. We cannot compete with a fragmented capital market, slow decision-making processes and bureaucrats from Brussels. However, it is also clear that the potential is there. We (still) have many bright minds here, but without a fundamental change in policy, decisive reforms and some pioneering spirit, I believe it will be impossible to catch up. The window of opportunity is getting smaller.

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How do you see it all? Do you disagree somewhere or are you missing an important country?

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11 Comments

Europe is dead.
We are transferring our entire wealth to the Americans.
People invest billions of their hours (free time) to watch free advertising on instagram, YouTube and co. And they are still training their ML models.

We can no longer catch up :)
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@Investment4Life It's just getting started, I've also made good investments here in the meantime.
....
Trump has announced the "Stargate Project" The fun is supposed to cost 500 billion...
Sponsors are still being sought, no one knows yet where the electricity will come from, legal regulations have been revised and are probably not easily applicable abroad...The plan is going ahead without a plan👍
In my opinion, the "America against the World" strategy won't work.
One thing is certain, the USA will suffer lasting damage with the current administration.
China is greatly underestimated when it comes to AI.
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@Mark777 think Stargate will be a success. However, we should wait until the plans are concretized. So far we only have information from press releases and a few interviews.
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Apart from the fact that China controls most of the rare earths, Switzerland manufactures precision technology for chip production machines and an endless number of companies in different countries serve existentially specialized niches to get the construct up and running and/or keep it running.
keep it running: China has the best chance of covering everything independently.

The USA can do a lot, but not everything.

Europe can do almost nothing. 🥹

But: In times of need and without trade, everyone loses - but everyone would make something work.
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@GeldGenie I didn't have Switzerland on the plan!
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@PikaPika0105 What DE gave up in terms of precision technology, we took over. 😉 But in typical Swiss fashion, we also keep the ball flat. Gold is used in almost every tech gadget. CH has the 5 most important refineries.

We also have a strong influence on financial flows and our National Bank is one of the largest institutional investors in the world. 🫣
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Europe has been far behind for a long time. Europe has not only overslept AI, but also other megatrends such as smartphones, cloud computing, social media, etc. We are no longer even leading the way in electric cars. We are only going downhill. And even if there is good research here, it is not being commercialized on a large scale. At most, small start-ups are being set up, but they have little international relevance. Aleph Alpha or DeepL come to mind, for example. The only glimmer of hope I have is with SAP. But I can't say whether it will be enough for market leadership. There's also the defense industry. Maybe there is still something possible in the AI sector. But it's difficult to say.
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@AdriInvests Yes Commercialization of research is going very badly here
In my opinion, AI is a bubble that makes absolutely no sense. Because most of what it does has nothing to do with intelligence.
In my opinion, a lot of money is spent on optimizing ailing systems instead of renewing the system itself. We don't need ki to manage rail traffic better, we need better infrastructure.
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@Madhatter5566 So you're probably partly right, but partly it's nonsense. Of course, AI doesn't repair broken rails, but AI will massively increase productivity in many areas of the economy in the coming years. Companies that do not use AI will then be at a growth disadvantage in most cases. Military AI will reshape the balance of power in the world. In addition, for countries like Germany and Japan in particular, AI represents an enormous opportunity to overcome demographic change. Fewer people are working, but productivity is not falling or is even rising. This would also give us the opportunity to do without mass migration from culturally incompatible countries. Japan is following this path, but what about Germany?
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I find it difficult to compare Europe and the USA 1:1. Within the EU, the individual states also have their own interests. There's always someone who doesn't want this, but doesn't want that...
But it's still better than each country cooking its own soup...
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