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Vol. III · No. 159 · Today's Front Page
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The Federal Reserve’s Paralysis Problem: Why Powell Can’t Cut, Can’t Hike, and Is Running Out of Time

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With inflation stuck above target, unemployment creeping higher, and an election cycle turning every word into a political football, the Fed finds itself in the most uncomfortable position it has occupied in a generation. Jerome Powell has been in tighter spots. But not many. The Federal Reserve Chair enters the summer of 2026 with inflation…

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<em>With inflation stuck above target, unemployment creeping higher, and an election cycle turning every word into a political football, the Fed finds itself in the most uncomfortable position it has occupied in a generation.</em>

Jerome Powell has been in tighter spots. But not many.

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The Office Debt Cliff: How $1.5 Trillion in Commercial Real Estate Loans Is About to Hit a Wall

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Post-pandemic office reckoning underestimated. Bill now due. Loan maturities + closed refinancing market + record vacancy = one of largest credit events in commercial property history. $1.5 trillion CRE debt matures in US through end-2027.…

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Post-pandemic office reckoning underestimated. Bill now due. Loan maturities + closed refinancing market + record vacancy = one of largest credit events in commercial property history.

$1.5 trillion CRE debt matures in US through end-2027. Originated under cheap money, full offices, rising rents — none of which hold now.

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Apple’s $4 Billion Bet on Neural Silicon: How the M4 Ultra Is Quietly Rewriting the AI Hardware Race

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While Nvidia dominates the data-centre conversation, Apple has been building something more subversive — a vertically integrated AI compute stack aimed squarely at the enterprise desktop and the professional edge. The M4 Ultra is the…

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<em>While Nvidia dominates the data-centre conversation, Apple has been building something more subversive — a vertically integrated AI compute stack aimed squarely at the enterprise desktop and the professional edge. The M4 Ultra is the opening shot.</em>

The war for AI compute supremacy has, until now, been fought in the data centre. Apple is about to open a second front.

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The Nvidia PC Shock: How the AI King Walked Into Intel’s House

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Nvidia is no longer content to live inside the PC. It wants to redefine the PC. The company unveiled RTX Spark, a new Windows-focused AI superchip platform developed with Microsoft and built around local personal…

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Nvidia is no longer content to live inside the PC.

The company unveiled <strong>RTX Spark</strong>, a new Windows-focused AI superchip platform developed with Microsoft and built around local personal AI agents. Nvidia says RTX Spark brings a full CUDA and RTX ecosystem to slim Windows laptops and compact desktops, with up to 128GB of unified memory and 1 petaflop of AI performance. Devices are expected from major PC makers including ASUS, Dell, HP, Lenovo, Microsoft Surface, and MSI.

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Cloud Giants Line Up Behind Nvidia’s Vera Rubin — the Next AI Data-Center Engine

AWS, Google Cloud, Microsoft and Oracle are among the first to deploy Nvidia's Vera Rubin systems — a sign the AI build-out is accelerating, not cooling.

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Cloud Giants Line Up Behind Nvidia's Vera Rubin — the Next AI Data-Center Engine Photo

While Nvidia's splashy move into PCs grabbed headlines, the company's real profit engine — the data center — just got its next chapter. Nvidia's Vera Rubin platform is rolling out to the world's largest cloud…

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While Nvidia's splashy move into PCs grabbed headlines, the company's real profit engine — the data center — just got its next chapter. Nvidia's <strong>Vera Rubin</strong> platform is rolling out to the world's largest cloud providers, and the list of early adopters reads like a who's-who of the industry.Who's deploying itAmong the first cloud operators to stand up Vera Rubin-based instances in 2026 are Amazon Web Services, Google Cloud, Microsoft and Oracle Cloud Infrastructure. Microsoft says it will deploy Nvidia's Vera Rubin NVL72 rack-scale systems as part of its next generation of AI data centers, built to squeeze more efficiency and performance out of both training and inference workloads.The NVL72 designation matters: these are not single accelerators but full racks engineered to act as one giant unit, the kind of dense, liquid-cooled hardware that modern frontier-model training now demands.Why it signals acceleration, not a slowdownFor months, skeptics have argued that AI infrastructure spending must eventually cool. The Vera Rubin commitments suggest the opposite — that the hyperscalers are doubling down. When AWS, Google, Microsoft and Oracle all queue up for the same next-generation systems in the same year, it tells you demand for compute is still outrunning supply.Nvidia frames Rubin as the successor generation to the Blackwell systems that powered the last training wave. Each cycle has delivered large jumps in performance-per-watt, and efficiency is now the constraint that matters: data centers are bumping against power and cooling limits, so getting more useful compute from each megawatt is the whole game.The competitive backdropNvidia's dominance is not going unchallenged. AMD continues to push its Instinct accelerators, and the hyperscalers are all designing in-house silicon — Google's TPUs, Amazon's Trainium, Microsoft's Maia — to reduce dependence on a single supplier. Yet the fact that those same companies are simultaneously buying Vera Rubin at scale shows how hard Nvidia's combination of hardware and its CUDA software stack remains to displace.The bottom lineThe PC announcement may define how consumers eventually meet Nvidia, but Vera Rubin is where the money is. With every major cloud lining up to deploy it, the 2026 AI build-out looks less like a bubble deflating and more like an industry pouring the next layer of concrete. For Nvidia's rivals, the uncomfortable truth is that even as they build alternatives, they are still writing Nvidia very large checks. Photo: Takuya Oikawa / BY-SA via flickr

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Microsoft Builds Its Own AI Models to Cut the Cord With OpenAI

At Build 2026, Microsoft rolled out seven of its own MAI models — a clear signal it wants to run AI on its own terms, and on its own Azure servers, rather than lean on OpenAI.

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Microsoft Builds Its Own AI Models to Cut the Cord With OpenAI Photo

For years, Microsoft's AI strategy could be summed up in three letters: OpenAI. The company poured billions into the ChatGPT maker and wired its models into everything from Windows to Office. At its Build developer…

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For years, Microsoft's AI strategy could be summed up in three letters: OpenAI. The company poured billions into the ChatGPT maker and wired its models into everything from Windows to Office. At its Build developer conference in San Francisco on June 2, Microsoft made it plain that the era of total dependence is ending.Seven new models, built in-houseThe headline of Build 2026 was the launch of seven new AI models under the <strong>MAI</strong> — Microsoft AI — family, developed entirely in-house by the company's AI Superintelligence Team led by Mustafa Suleyman. The lineup includes MAI-Code-1-Flash, a model that turns plain written descriptions into working source code for apps and websites. Aimed at developers, it is the kind of bread-and-butter capability Microsoft previously sourced from its partner.The strategic message is hard to miss. Microsoft now has proprietary models it can run on its own Azure cloud infrastructure, which means it can stop paying third parties such as OpenAI for every inference. At the scale Microsoft operates, that is not a rounding error — it is a structural change to the economics of its AI business.Why Microsoft wants its own stackOwning the models matters for more than cost. It gives Microsoft control over the roadmap, the ability to tune models for its own products, and insurance against a partner whose interests may not always align with its own. OpenAI has grown into a competitor in its own right, selling enterprise tools that overlap with Microsoft's, and the two companies' relationship has visibly cooled from its early-honeymoon phase.By standing up the MAI family, Microsoft positions itself alongside OpenAI, Anthropic and Google as a builder of frontier models rather than merely a reseller of someone else's. That is a meaningful shift for a company that spent the first act of the AI boom betting on a single horse.The competitive backdropThe timing is pointed. <strong>Anthropic confidentially filed for an IPO on June 1</strong>, and OpenAI is pursuing an offering of its own, possibly this year. As the leading labs head toward public markets and the scrutiny that comes with them, Microsoft is reducing its exposure to any one of them.The broader industry is also moving under everyone's feet. The center of gravity in AI is shifting from chat to so-called agentic systems — software that completes tasks in research, coding, customer support, legal work, payments and commerce rather than just answering questions. Code-generation models like MAI-Code-1-Flash are squarely aimed at that agentic future, where AI does the work instead of describing it.What to watch nextThe open question is how good the MAI models actually are against the best from OpenAI and Anthropic. Announcing seven models is easy; matching frontier quality is not. Microsoft has the data, the Azure capacity and now a dedicated superintelligence team, but it is entering a race where the leaders have a head start measured in years.Still, the direction of travel is unambiguous. Microsoft no longer wants to be the company that rents its intelligence. After Build 2026, it is building its own — and the partnership that defined the first chapter of the generative-AI era just became a lot more complicated.

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Nvidia’s RTX Spark Pushes AI Into the PC, Putting Intel and AMD on Notice

Nvidia's new RTX Spark superchip moves the AI battle from the data center onto the desktop, and Wall Street noticed immediately.

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Nvidia's RTX Spark Pushes AI Into the PC, Putting Intel and AMD on Notice Photo

Nvidia has spent the AI boom owning the data center. This month it made clear it wants the desk in front of you too. On June 1, the company unveiled the RTX Spark, a so-called…

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Nvidia has spent the AI boom owning the data center. This month it made clear it wants the desk in front of you too. On June 1, the company unveiled the <strong>RTX Spark</strong>, a so-called superchip that fuses CPU and GPU onto a single package and is aimed squarely at the next generation of Windows machines.What Nvidia actually announcedThe RTX Spark combines central-processing and graphics-processing capability in one part rated at roughly one petaflop of compute. Developed with Taiwan's MediaTek, it is designed to run AI agents locally and securely rather than shipping every request off to the cloud. Nvidia says the chip will power a wave of "AI personal computers" due in the fall, with compact desktops and laptops coming from Dell, HP, Lenovo, ASUS, Microsoft Surface and MSI, and models from Acer and GIGABYTE to follow.CEO Jensen Huang framed the move in characteristically grand terms, saying the company intends to "reinvent the PC." Stripped of the showmanship, the message is simpler: the same agentic AI workloads driving demand in the data center are coming to consumer hardware, and Nvidia wants to supply the silicon at every layer.Why Intel and AMD should worryThe market read the announcement instantly. Shares of AMD, Intel and Qualcomm fell as investors absorbed the threat of Nvidia entering a CPU market those companies have long divided among themselves. For decades the x86 desktop has been Intel-and-AMD territory, with Qualcomm more recently pushing Arm-based Windows chips. Nvidia arriving with a high-performance, AI-first part — and a roster of every major PC maker already on board — changes the competitive math.The strategic logic is the part worth watching. Nvidia is no longer content to sell GPUs that slot into someone else's platform. By owning the CPU-GPU package and the software stack that runs on it, the company captures more of the value of each AI PC sold and makes itself harder to design out.The data-center engine keeps runningThe PC push does not mean Nvidia is easing off its core business. The company says its <strong>Vera</strong> data-center CPUs are now in full production and describes them as a "new major growth driver" on the back of demand for AI agents, citing early customers including Anthropic, OpenAI and SpaceXAI. In other words, the desktop play is an expansion of the franchise, not a pivot away from it.The bottom lineIf the RTX Spark ships on schedule and the promised lineup of fall laptops and desktops materializes, 2026 could mark the moment the AI hardware war stopped being a story about racks of servers and started being about the machine on your desk. For Intel and AMD, the comfortable duopoly just got a very well-funded third player — one that already dominates the part of computing everyone is rushing toward. Photo: yellowcloud / BY via flickr

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The Nvidia PC Shock: How the AI King Walked Into Intel’s House

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Nvidia is no longer content to live inside the PC. It wants to redefine the PC. The company unveiled RTX Spark, a new Windows-focused AI superchip platform developed with Microsoft and built around local personal…

🔒 Subscribe to keep reading 5 min read 5 min

Nvidia is no longer content to live inside the PC.

The company unveiled <strong>RTX Spark</strong>, a new Windows-focused AI superchip platform developed with Microsoft and built around local personal AI agents. Nvidia says RTX Spark brings a full CUDA and RTX ecosystem to slim Windows laptops and compact desktops, with up to 128GB of unified memory and 1 petaflop of AI performance. Devices are expected from major PC makers including ASUS, Dell, HP, Lenovo, Microsoft Surface, and MSI.

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