(0:15) Meta Loses $310 Billion in Market Value as AI Spending and Legal Risks Spook Investors
(1:05) Mistral AI Secures $830 Million in Debt Financing to Build Paris Data Center
(1:56) Woman Jailed Five Months After Facial Recognition System Falsely Linked Her to Bank Fraud
(2:52) South Korean AI Chip Maker Rebellions Raises $400 Million at $2.3 Billion Valuation
(3:52) Fifteen Percent of Americans Would Accept an AI Direct Supervisor
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Transcript
Meta loses $310 billion in market value as AI spending and legal risks spook investors.
Mistral AI secures $830 million in debt financing to build Paris data center.
And woman jailed five months after facial recognition system falsely linked her to bank
fraud.
Welcome to today's Pivot 5, I'm Robin.
And I'm Sean, let's dig in.
Meta is having a rough month.
The stock dropped 11% in one week, 18% for March overall, wiping out $310 billion in market
value.
This is their worst monthly performance since October 2022.
Yeah, in back then, it was Meta for spending that spooked investors.
Now it's AI infrastructure costs with no clear revenue timeline.
Right, and here's what's interesting.
The market's treating Meta's AI spending way differently than Microsoft or Google's.
Meta seems skeptical that Meta can actually monetize AI given how dependent they are on
advertising revenue.
I think that's a fair concern, honestly, like Microsoft has enterprise customers lined
up.
Meta's got to figure out how AI fits into an ad-base model.
Exactly.
Watch whether Zuckerberg adjusts spending guidance or gives us a clearer monetization roadmap
soon.
Meanwhile, Mistral AI just raised $830 million in debt to build a data center near Paris.
This facility in Briere's, Lychotel, will run on Nvidia chips and should be operational
by Q2, 2026.
This is part of their bigger European push, right?
They're investing $1.4 billion across Europe, including Sweden, targeting 200 megawatts
of compute capacity by 2027.
Yeah, and CEO Arthur Mench is positioning this as infrastructure for European customers
who want AI independence, governments and enterprises that don't want to rely on US cloud
providers.
Beta Sovereignty Angles, Smart Play, especially in Europe.
What's notable here is they're using debt financing for infrastructure.
Mistral's raised over $3 billion total, but they're preserving equity for model development.
That tells you where they think the real value is.
This next story is wild.
Angela Lips spent more than five months in a North Dakota jail after facial recognition
software incorrectly identified her as a bank fraud suspect.
She'd never even been to North Dakota before her arrest.
Anyway, so they arrested her in Tennessee, extradite her to North Dakota, and she sat
in jail for five months before anyone figured out it was wrong.
Yep.
She was released on Christmas Eve wearing summer clothes in freezing temperatures.
The Fargo Police Chief acknowledged missteps and says they've overhauled their AI procedures.
Overhauled after five months of someone's life gone.
That's not great.
This is why facial recognition cases keep piling up.
The consequences are severe, and we're going to see more pressure on law enforcement to
verify AI identifications before making arrests.
You can't just trust the algorithm.
South Korean shipmaker Rebellions just closed a $400 million pre-IPO round at a $2.3 billion
valuation.
They've raised $650 million in just six months, and Korea's National Growth Fund picked
them as their very first investment under the K-Invidia initiative.
So Korea is basically trying to build its own NVIDIA competitor, and Rebellions is the
chosen one.
Exactly.
They design inference chips using chiplet architecture in HBM3E memory, now packaged into full data
center systems called Rebel Rack and Rebel Pod, and they've got Samsung and SK Heinex
as investors, which gives them preferred access to memory chips.
That's huge, because the CEO said memory supplies tight, having Samsung and SK Heinex backing
you is a structural advantage.
Yeah, and they're targeting meta and XAI specifically, not hyperscalers.
They're running proof of concept trials with US customers right now.
If this pans out, Rebellions could be a real player in inference compute.
Last one, a new Quinnipak poll found that 15% of Americans would accept a job where an
AI program is their direct supervisor, assigning tasks and setting schedules.
20-15% but that's still one in seven people, and companies are already doing this.
Workday has AI agents approving expense reports, Amazon cut thousands of middle managers using
AI workflows.
Uber even built an AI model of their CEO to screen pitches before meetings.
It's called the great flattening, and people are worried.
70% of respondents think AI will decrease job opportunities overall.
And 30% of employed Americans are concerned AI could make their specific job obsolete.
That's not a small number.
No, it's not.
The question is whether this creates new opportunities or just concentrates power at the top.