Intel shares soar on report of Google chip deal, possible future Nvidia business
The Tony Awards was a curtain call for a record-smashing season on Broadway
London’s robotaxi war is “months” away as Uber opens waitlist to battle Alphabet’s Waymo
On Monday, SOL Strategies, a solana treasury firm, reported the sale of 65,001 tokens to settle more than $4.1 million of debt.
The sale reduced the company’s total holdings of solana by nearly 12.5% from 521,174 tokens to 456,173 tokens, worth roughly $29 million as of writing.
The sale “reflects a decision to reduce debt and further clean up our balance sheet to assist us to fully focus on the operating businesses,” SOL Strategies CEO Michael Hubbard said in a statement.
The news comes one week after the firm announced closing the acquisition of HoudiniSwap, a privacy-based decentralized exchange aggregator, for $18 million.
Shares of SOL Strategies have dropped over 6% today as the underlying cryptocurrency at the center of the firm’s treasury strategy has decreased 5% in the last 24 hours, and 16.8% in the past seven days. The token is down 78% from its all-time high of $293.31 in January 2025.
Meanwhile, solana ETFs have seen $5.5 million in outflows in June, on track to record their first monthly outflow since their inception last year, data from SoSoValue shows.
Amazon has set a record in the Canadian corporate bond market by issuing CA$14 billion ($10.04 billion) of Canadian dollar-denominated notes, according to a new Securities and Exchange Commission filing. The five-part deal officially eclipses the previous record of CA$8.5 billion established just last month by Alphabet.
This massive push comes as hyperscalers aggressively diversify funding to bankroll historic AI capital expenditure, a strategy mirrored by Alphabet’s parallel expansion into European debt markets to fuel its soaring infrastructure demands.
Press Gazette just published its annual look at the biggest news sites in the world across all languages; for the most part, it doesn’t make for particularly pretty reading.
The journalism industry publication’s latest update, which is based on estimates provided by Similarweb for May, found that 37 of the world’s 50 most visited news sites saw their reach shrink. Press Gazette highlighted that American outlets have been hit particularly hard by declining Google traffic compared to European counterparts, owing to the platform’s AI features rolling out earlier in the US.
Even the BBC, having climbed the rankings from last year to top the 2026 chart — reportedly in part thanks to Similarweb’s decision to combine the “.co.uk” and “.com” versions of the URL, given that the sites redirect to each other depending on the user’s location — showed a 1.9% decline from last year.
Releasing the iOS 27 developer beta is a start, but Siri can’t rescue us from app overload until it can run the third-party apps we actually use.
Beijing may spend roughly $295 billion (2 trillion yuan) over the next five years to build a nationwide network of AI-focused computing hubs, according to a Bloomberg report.
The blueprint would connect data centers across the country into a unified computing network while prioritizing domestic suppliers such as Huawei for much of the underlying technology. State-owned telecom giants, including China Mobile and China Telecom, would operate much of the infrastructure, per the report.
The proposal, still under discussion, would mark one of China’s most aggressive efforts yet to build an AI infrastructure stack largely independent of US technology.
The AI race is increasingly becoming a competition not just over models and chips, but over access to computing power itself.
China’s latest push suggests Beijing has increasingly treated computing power as a strategic national resource, similar to electricity or transportation infrastructure. The latest blueprint would push that strategy further by connecting fragmented regional data centers into a national computing network.
The latest Digital China Development Report issued by the China National Data Administration found that the country had more than 13.7 million standard server racks in operation by the end of 2025, and had built 42 large-scale AI computing clusters. China’s total intelligent computing capacity has reached 1.59 million PFLOPS, ranking second globally.
A Chinese planning document from the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology targets 2028 for connecting major computing hubs into a unified national system. Much of that infrastructure is expected to be concentrated in regions such as Inner Mongolia, Ningxia, and Gansu, where abundant land and relatively inexpensive power can support energy-intensive AI workloads.
The Chinese documents also highlight the scale of China’s AI ambitions. The country now has more than 6,200 AI companies and an AI industry worth more than $176.9 billion (1.2 trillion yuan), official data shows.
The timing is notable. In May, Washington cleared around 10 Chinese firms to buy Nvidia’s H200 chips, easing some restrictions aimed at slowing China’s AI development.
Bloomberg reported the project could be funded primarily through sovereign debt and state-backed investment funds, underscoring China’s willingness to continue spending on strategic technologies even as broader economic growth slows.
AST SpaceMobile is up 6% in the premarket action just before the start of regular trading, after the space-based cellular broadband network operator announced that its Bluebird 8, 9, and 10 satellites will be launched on June 17 from Cape Canaveral, Florida.
Adding its BlueBird 8, 9, and 10 to its constellation, each satellite featuring the largest commercial communication array ever of ~2,400 square feet, is expected to further expand AST SpaceMobile’s direct-to-device broadband reach and nearly double the peak data speeds compared to its own initial Block 1 BlueBird satellites, per the company’s press release.
The company has seen its shares plummet in recent weeks after a Blue Origin rocket, which was to carry AST’s Block 2 BlueBird satellite, exploded while testing.
Like other AI-adjacent stocks, Applied Digital has hit a bit of a speed bump of late, caught up in the malaise that sent the wider market tumbling at the end of last week. However, after unveiling a new lease agreement with an undisclosed US-based hyperscaler worth at least $5.2 billion, the stock is soaring once again today in premarket trading, up more than 11%.
The deal is with a “high investment-grade hyperscaler,” per the company’s press release, and will cover 210 megawatts of critical IT load at the company’s Delta Forge 2 AI Factory campus under a take-or-pay structure (in which the buyer is obliged to pay a minimum of $5.2 billion over 15 years) with renewal options.
If all renewal options are exercised, the deal would be worth approximately $12.7 billion over a 30-year total term. Initial operations at the Delta Forge 2 site are expected to commence in the first quarter of 2028.
Emphasizing the company’s “franchise model — a core team of design, construction, and operations professionals replicated across every campus, in every market,” CEO Wes Cummins noted that the latest lease is Applied Digital’s third long-term agreement with the same hyperscaler. The agreement also brings the company’s total base-term lease revenue to $36 billion, rising to $86 billion if all options are taken up.
Today OpenAI announced it has filed confidentially with the SEC to go public. The company said in a blog post that it filed the draft S-1 form.
OpenAI’s filing comes a week after archrival Anthropic — now valued at $965 billion — also filed a confidential S-1 for its own public offering. Both IPOs are expected to be among the largest in US history.
In a press release, OpenAI wrote:
“We expect it to leak so we’re just announcing it. We have not decided on timing yet; it may be a while because there are things we want to do that are likely easier as a private company. But it’s a complicated set of tradeoffs and this gives us the option to go public sooner if that ends up being best.”
In a press release, OpenAI wrote:
“We expect it to leak so we’re just announcing it. We have not decided on timing yet; it may be a while because there are things we want to do that are likely easier as a private company. But it’s a complicated set of tradeoffs and this gives us the option to go public sooner if that ends up being best.”
Paramount has reportedly offered up some concessions in an effort to prevent an antitrust lawsuit by California and about 10 other states, according to Bloomberg reporting on Monday.
Reuters first reported on the potential suit from a group of unnamed states last week, which could throw a wrench in Paramount’s plans to buy rival Warner Bros. Discovery in a Hollywood megamerger.
The list of concessions is unknown, though Bloomberg previously reported that Paramount is open to divesting some of its kids TV assets to appease EU regulators.
Late last month, reports said US regulators appeared likely to approve the $110 billion merger, following a meeting between Paramount CEO David Ellison and DOJ antitrust staffers.
The list of concessions is unknown, though Bloomberg previously reported that Paramount is open to divesting some of its kids TV assets to appease EU regulators.
Late last month, reports said US regulators appeared likely to approve the $110 billion merger, following a meeting between Paramount CEO David Ellison and DOJ antitrust staffers.
Despite having an unrealized loss of nearly $9.7 billion, the leading ethereum treasury firm has acquired even more of the token.
BitMine Immersion Technologies announced it has acquired 126,971 tokens over the past week, the firm’s largest purchase of ethereum this year. The company’s total stockpile stands at 5.5 million, or around 4.6% of ethereum’s total supply.
“We increased our buying as we believe this pullback in ETH prices does not reflect the strengthening of Ethereum fundamentals,” BitMine Chairman Tom Lee said in a statement.
The acquisition comes after the crypto markets saw a broad downturn last week, with many tokens hitting multiyear lows.
Lee argued the sell-off in crypto was a “superficial take.” As artificial intelligence grows more capable, demand for hardened infrastructure is likely to increase alongside expectations that AI systems will expose flaws in centralized rails and weak decentralized protocols, according to Lee.
“We believe this actually strengthens the use case and product market fit for hardened and reliable decentralized blockchains like ethereum,” Lee said. “Thus, we believe ETH prices should not be coming under pressure.”
Meanwhile, last week ethereum ETFs saw more than $173 million in outflows, marking the fourth consecutive week of net redemptions, data from SoSoValue shows.
Joe Lubin, cofounder of ethereum and current CEO of software development firm Consensys, said the recent moves by the Ethereum Foundation, namely staff turnover and leadership changes, are not evidence of a crisis, but a necessary evolution, per a CoinDesk report. Lubin emphasized that “Ethereum is not on the decline, not at all,” even if “we are not front and center right now in terms of capital inflows, investments.”
That’s the wrong direction for a business trying to scale its autonomous vehicles.
Nvidia shares are modestly higher after it announced a multiyear partnership with SK Hynix on memory chips and building out AI data centers.
The agreement secures a long-term pipeline of memory chips for Nvidia. At the center of the partnership is the integration of SK Hynix’s high-bandwidth memory chips into Nvidia’s newly unveiled Vera central processing units. The Vera processor is Nvidia’s first stand-alone data center microprocessor designed to compete directly against traditional enterprise server lines.
The collaboration is also structured to reshape how semiconductors are manufactured. Under the terms of the agreement, SK Hynix will implement Nvidia’s CUDA-X library and PhysicsNeMo framework directly into its memory design and manufacturing workflows.
The announcement happened during a high-profile visit to Seoul by Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang, who arrived on June 5 to align with core infrastructure partners. Over the weekend, Huang met with SK Group Chairman Chey Tae-won, SK Hynix CEO Kwak Noh-Jung, and other top South Korean technology executives during a dinner meeting, according to Nvidia’s blog posts and Reuters.
Last week, SK Hynix told investors that its proposed US listing has received strong backing, which would potentially give US investors an alternative way to play the memory chip crunch.
Shares of Intel soared in early trading on a report that Google and Nvidia are considering turning to the chipmaker as a backup supplier to TSMC, as surging demand continues to outpace supply.
The Information reports that Google has placed an order with Intel to manufacture more than 3 million of its increasingly popular tensor processing unit chips in 2028.
According to the report, Nvidia is currently testing to see if Intel could manufacture its next-gen Feynman chips.
Taiwan-based TSMC has enjoyed a huge lead in the market of manufacturing advanced chips for Apple, Nvidia, and others.
Intel has been struggling to fight its way back into the AI chip business, but has made headway with the help of the Trump administration, which sought to shore American chipmaking with a $8.9 billion investment of taxpayer money, and several high-profile deals.
The Information reports that Google has placed an order with Intel to manufacture more than 3 million of its increasingly popular tensor processing unit chips in 2028.
According to the report, Nvidia is currently testing to see if Intel could manufacture its next-gen Feynman chips.
Taiwan-based TSMC has enjoyed a huge lead in the market of manufacturing advanced chips for Apple, Nvidia, and others.
Intel has been struggling to fight its way back into the AI chip business, but has made headway with the help of the Trump administration, which sought to shore American chipmaking with a $8.9 billion investment of taxpayer money, and several high-profile deals.
On Monday, Amazon announced a multiyear, multibillion-dollar deal to buy optical fiber from 175-year-old glassmaker Corning to power and connect its rapidly expanding US artificial intelligence data centers. Shares of Corning popped more than 9% on the news.
Corning said the investments would create 1,000 new, highly skilled jobs at Corning's manufacturing facilities in North Carolina.
This isn’t Corning’s first Big Tech rodeo. Last month the stock jumped when Nvidia invested $500 million in Corning warrants, and the stock ripped in January following a deal with Meta to provide fiber-optic cable connections for its AI data centers.