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The tech giants open their wallets

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When Donald Trump launched his 2024 presidential campaign, he promised to bring jobs back to America and facilitate unprecedented investment in the country’s future. Many in the tech industry who had been skeptical of Trump during his first term initially scoffed at these ambitious pledges. But little more than a month into Trump’s second term, it’s clear that Silicon Valley has not only warmed to the president’s vision but is now leading the charge in what could be a new era of American innovation and economic growth.

This is JP Hampstead, co-host of the Bring It Home podcast with Craig Fuller. Welcome to the 16th edition of our newsletter, which marvels at the tsunami of recently announced multibillion-dollar technology investments.

The past few months have seen a flurry of ambitious investment announcements from some of the biggest names in tech. These commitments, totaling well over $1 trillion, are poised to reshape the American technological landscape and potentially cement U.S. dominance in critical fields like AI and semiconductor manufacturing for decades to come.

On Monday, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSMC), the world’s largest contract chipmaker, pledged to invest $100 billion in U.S.-based chip manufacturing over the next four years. This comes on top of $65 billion in investments the company had already committed to facilities in Arizona. TSMC’s expanded presence promises to create up to 25,000 high-tech jobs and significantly bolster America’s domestic chip production capabilities.

(Photo: C-SPAN)

Just a few weeks prior, Apple announced plans to spend a staggering $500 billion in the U.S. over the next four years. This unprecedented commitment includes the construction of an advanced manufacturing facility in Houston to produce servers supporting Apple’s AI initiatives. The tech giant also plans to double its U.S. Advanced Manufacturing Fund to $10 billion and establish a manufacturing academy in Michigan to train the next generation of American workers.

Meta made public its plans to invest up to $65 billion in AI-related projects in 2025 alone. The social media giant projects that it will bring a gigawatt of computing power online this year, including a truly massive new facility in Louisiana, positioning itself at the forefront of the AI revolution.

Perhaps the most intriguing development — and the one with the biggest question mark regarding its plausibility and feasibility — comes from the newly formed Stargate Project, a joint venture among OpenAI, SoftBank and Oracle. This ambitious initiative aims to invest up to $500 billion over the next four years to develop AI infrastructure across the United States. With an initial focus on a $100 billion deployment, Stargate estimates the creation of “hundreds of thousands of American jobs” and positions itself as a key player in the “reindustrialization of the United States.”