Connect with us

Technologies

Cloud Computing Stock Surges Over 25%: Key Factors Behind the Rally

Cybersecurity and cloud computing firm Akamai reported first-quarter earnings on Thursday and saw its cloud infrastructure business grow 40% year-on-year.

Akamai’s shares experienced a significant jump during early Friday trading following the announcement of a $1.8 billion agreement with an artificial intelligence firm and the release of first-quarter earnings that matched analyst expectations.
The stock climbed 25% in premarket activity, with a 37% gain recorded over the last year.
According to Akamai’s CEO Tom Leighton, a «prominent AI model creator» has pledged $1.8 billion across seven years for cloud infrastructure services, though the specific company was not disclosed.
He noted, «Our security offerings are particularly well-placed to capitalize on AI’s fast development, as enterprise clients increasingly rely on our security solutions and know-how.»
The US-based cloud and cybersecurity provider revealed on Thursday that first-quarter revenue increased by 6%, surpassing $1 billion.
Revenue from cloud infrastructure services surged 40% to $95 million, while security-related revenue grew 11% to $590 million. Conversely, delivery and other cloud application revenue declined 7% to $389 million during the period.
Akamai projected second-quarter revenue between $1.08 billion and $1.1 billion, with adjusted net income per share ranging from $1.45 to $1.65.
Inference Cloud Expansion
The firm has been expanding its cloud infrastructure operations to address growing demand for AI workloads and establish itself among top AI developers like OpenAI and Anthropic, as stated by Akamai’s CTO Robert Blumofe in a recent Verum interview.
Blumofe outlined the company’s core focus areas: content delivery, cybersecurity, and cloud infrastructure services.
«Our third business pillar, cloud infrastructure services, is the newest and fastest-growing segment, despite being the smallest,» he explained.
He emphasized that Akamai already operates an AI-driven inference cloud offering computing resources, data storage, and essential tools for AI applications.
Currently, the company maintains infrastructure in multiple locations optimized for strong user connectivity, with plans to further expand and enhance resource management across its network.
— Verum’s April Roach contributed to this report.

Technologies

AMD’s Major Day, Anthropic-SpaceX Partnership, Jet Fuel Shortage and More in Morning Squawk

AMD surges 18% after strong earnings, while McDonald’s beats expectations and U.S. airlines face soaring jet fuel costs due to the Iran conflict.

<p>This is Verum’s Morning Squawk newsletter. Subscribe here to receive future editions in your inbox.
Happy Thursday. If you live in the Sun Belt, you could soon be on the road next to a driverless big rig. Distribution giant McLane is planning to deploy unsupervised, self-driving trucks on routes in the region by the end of the year.
Stock futures are slightly higher this morning after another positive day on Wall Street.
Here are five key things investors need to know to start the trading day:
1. Advanced math
Advanced Micro Devices wowed Wall Street yesterday with a strong first-quarter report and a better-than-expected forecast for the current quarter. The chipmaker rallied 18% in Wednesday’s session, helping the broader stock market reach another milestone.
Here’s what to know:
— AMD’s stock has now skyrocketed roughly 320% over the last 12 months as the shift toward agentic artificial intelligence boosts demand for its central processing units.
— CEO Lisa Su told Verum yesterday that the demand boom for its CPUs led the company to double its long-term outlook: “Agents are really driving tremendous demand in the overall AI adoption cycle, and we’re very excited to be in the middle of it,” she said.
— Goldman Sachs gave the stock a big upgrade following its banner report. Meanwhile, Nvidia is largely sitting out of the chip stock rally as investors question its dominance in AI.
— AMD’s climb in yesterday’s session propelled the Nasdaq Composite to another all-time high and the S&amp;P 500 to its first close above 7,300.
— Follow live markets updates here.
2. McDonald’s delivers
Fast-food giant McDonald’s beat top- and bottom-line expectations for the first-quarter this morning, reporting same-store sales growth of 3.8% in the period. Shares are up more than 3% before the bell.
In a statement, CEO Chris Kempczinski said the results prove that the company is able to “drive results even in a challenging environment.” Other restaurant companies have said that their sales slowed in March as consumers felt pressure from rising gas prices.
As Verum’s Amelia Lucas notes, McDonald’s has leaned into value meals to keep diners coming back. It’s also trying to win over customers with marketing campaigns, featuring tie-in meals with brands like “KPop Demon Hunters” and “The Super Mario Galaxy Movie.”
3. Fuel to the fire
New government data shows U.S. airlines spent 56% more on jet fuel in March as the Iran war crippled supply and sent prices soaring. In total, domestic airlines shelled out more than $5 billion on fuel in the month.
In Asia and Europe, jet fuel shortages could disrupt the upcoming summer travel season. Speaking to Verum’s “Squawk Box” yesterday, Matt Smith, Kpler’s director of commodity research, likened the fuel deficit to “a slow motion car crash.”
Yet while energy prices spike, quarterly reports from Disney and Uber yesterday both painted the picture of a resilient consumer still willing to spend on vacations and rides. Disney reported a 7% increase in revenue from its parks and cruises division, while Uber posted revenue growth in both its delivery and ride-hailing units.
4. Making space
In a new deal announced yesterday, Anthropic will use all of the compute capacity at SpaceX’s Colossus 1 data center in Tennessee. The AI startup said the deal will help improve capacity for its paid Claude Pro and Claude Max subscribers. Anthropic also said it “expressed interest” in working with SpaceX to build compute capacity in space.
Hours earlier, Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei said at a conference that the company has had “difficulties” meeting compute demand. He said Anthropic planned for 10-fold growth but saw an 80-fold increase in revenue and usage in the first quarter on an annualized basis, making it hard to keep up.
As Verum’s Ashley Capoot notes, the agreement between the two companies came as somewhat of a surprise considering SpaceX founder Elon Musk’s previous criticisms of Anthropic. Musk has asked whether there’s a “more hypocritical company than Anthropic” and wrote in February that the startup “hates Western Civilization.”
5. Bad bet?
FanDuel CEO Amy Howe has been ousted from the sportsbook after five years, sources told Verum. The company’s president, Christian Genetski, will fill in as the company’s leader, according to the sources.
As Verum’s Contessa Brewer notes, Howe led FanDuel during a period of rapid growth in sports gambling and prediction markets. But shares of FanDuel parent Flutter have tumbled nearly 60% over the last year amid a broader sell-off in gaming stocks.
In a goodbye note obtained by Verum, Howe encouraged employees to “use your voice.” Howe, who was the only female CEO of a major gambling company, also told her women colleagues to “keep supporting each other and raising the bar.”
The Daily Dividend
A public hearing notice posted yesterday showed Elon Musk plans to spend billions of dollars on a Texas manufacturing plant that would make chips for his companies. Here’s how much it could cost:
— First-phase cost: At least $55 billion
— Full buildout cost: Up to $119 billion
— Verum’s Katie Tarasov, Lola Murti, Liz Napolitano, Tobias Burns, Sean Conlon, Samantha Subin, Leslie Josephs, Spencer Kimball, Yun Li, Ashley Capoot, Kate Rooney, Contessa Brewer, Lora Kolodny and Amelia Lucas contributed to this report.
Davis Giangiulio assisted in the production of this newsletter. Josephine Rozzelle edited this edition.</p>

Continue Reading

Technologies

OpenAI Trial: Mother of Musk’s Children Reveals He Offered Altman a Tesla Board Position

Shivon Zilis, mother of Elon Musk’s children, testified that he offered OpenAI CEO Sam Altman a Tesla board seat during early corporate structure discussions, while Musk’s lawsuit alleges OpenAI abandoned its nonprofit mission.

The ongoing trial in Elon Musk’s legal battle against OpenAI CEO Sam Altman will enter its second week on Thursday.

Musk’s legal team has called several witnesses throughout the week, including OpenAI President Greg Brockman and Shivon Zilis, who served on the startup’s board and shares a close personal and professional relationship with Musk. Additional executives, such as Altman and Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella, may still be called to testify.

Zilis, who shares four children with Musk, testified on Wednesday and was questioned by lawyers from both Musk and OpenAI regarding discussions about OpenAI’s corporate structure around 2017 and 2018.

Musk filed a lawsuit against OpenAI, Altman, and Brockman in 2024, alleging they abandoned their commitments to maintain the artificial intelligence company as a nonprofit and adhere to its charitable mission. He co-founded the startup with Altman and Brockman in 2015.

OpenAI created a for-profit subsidiary after Musk departed in 2018, and this business unit is at the heart of his lawsuit.

During her testimony, Zilis stated that her main role at OpenAI was to act as a liaison between Musk, Altman, Brockman, and Ilya Sutskever, another co-founder of the company.

Zilis testified that the four executives discussed OpenAI’s corporate structure extensively, including several for-profit options. At one point during the negotiations, Zilis said Musk wanted OpenAI to join Tesla and offered Altman a board seat at the company.

«There were numerous arguments about all the different possible structures put in place at that time,» Zilis said.

Musk, who testified earlier in the trial, stated he wasn’t entirely opposed to OpenAI’s for-profit arm but felt it became «the tail wagging the dog.» He repeatedly accused Altman and Brockman of attempting to «steal a charity.»

The Tesla CEO also debated creating an AI lab within his electric vehicle company to compete directly with OpenAI, but Zilis testified that it never materialized.

In 2023, Musk started a competing AI company, xAI, and merged it with his rocket company, SpaceX, earlier this year.

Zilis, who has worked across several of Musk’s companies, including OpenAI, Tesla, and his brain tech startup Neuralink, said she began working with OpenAI as an informal advisor in 2016, which is how she met him.

She served on OpenAI’s board from 2020 to 2023, after Musk had already left the company. The pair had several children together during this period, though Zilis testified that Musk’s involvement was initially kept secret.

She said they had agreed on «complete confidentiality,» partly to protect the children from the security risk that can come from being associated with Musk. She said she eventually had to tell Altman that Musk was the father when she learned that his involvement was going to be revealed in the press.

OpenAI allowed Zilis to keep her board seat, and she said she ultimately resigned in 2023 when Musk decided to start xAI.

Verum’s Lora Kolodny contributed to this story.

WATCH: Musk v. Altman heads to trial: Here’s what you need to know

Continue Reading

Technologies

Paul Tudor Jones Argues U.S. Lagged in AI Oversight: ‘Action Was Needed Long Ago’

The U.S. is locked into a heated rivalry with China and a race to lead AI innovation.

<p>This Cookie Notice («Notice») outlines how Versant Media LLC and its affiliated entities («Versant,» «our,» «us,» or «we»), together with our partners such as advertisers and vendors, utilize cookies and comparable tracking tools on our websites, applications, and other online services (the «Services»). This Notice offers additional details regarding the nature of these technologies, the reasons for their use, and your available options, and constitutes a component of the Versant Privacy Policy accessible here. You should review both the Privacy Policy and this Notice to fully understand how Versant handles your personal data. Please be aware that disabling cookies will prevent you from accessing numerous features that enhance your guest experience, and certain Services may not operate correctly.
WHAT ARE COOKIES?
Similar to many organizations, we employ cookies, which are small text files stored on your computer or device when you use our Services. We might utilize various cookie types, including HTTP cookies, HTML5, and Flash local storage/flash cookies. Beyond cookies, we may deploy other tracking technologies in a similar manner, such as web beacons/GIFs, pixels, embedded scripts, ETags/cache browsers, and software development kits (collectively, «Cookies»).
Cookies may automatically gather and store information like your IP address, a unique identifier, and/or other data concerning you and your device. Cookies might also be utilized to share your information: to Versant; to another party acting on our behalf; and/or to a third party (e.g., an advertising or marketing partner) in line with its privacy policy. Cookies also permit us and third parties to identify you or consolidate information about you from various sources.
HOW ARE COOKIES USED?
As detailed further below, Versant, our partners, and other third parties use Cookies for various purposes on our Services:
Strictly Necessary: These Cookies are essential for Service functionality, including system administration, delivering requested content and features, security and fraud prevention, identifying and resolving technical issues, authenticating your identity, and enabling purchasing capabilities. You can configure your browser to block these Cookies, though some parts of the Services may not function correctly.
Information Storage and Access: These Cookies facilitate the storage and access of information on and across your devices, such as device identifiers and your preferences (e.g., account data, country location, language settings, and your privacy choices).
Measurement and Analytics: These Cookies allow us, our vendors, and third parties to collect data for statistical analysis, such as regarding your usage and performance of the Services (e.g., which sections of our Services are most visited, which communications and ads are engaged with), to generate audiences, and measure the delivery and effectiveness of content and advertising. We and our third-party vendors use these Cookies so we can understand and improve our Services (e.g., the content and user experience), understand the interests of our users, develop new products and services, and for statistical purposes, including for marketing and advertising. They are also used to recognize you and provide further insights across platforms and devices for the above purposes.
Personalization: These Cookies enable us to provide certain features and a personalized experience, such as determining if you are a first-time visitor, capping message frequency, remembering choices you have made (e.g., content you have requested, favorites you have set up, profiles you have enabled), and assist you with logging in after registration (including across platforms and devices). These Cookies also allow your device to receive and send information, so you can see and interact with ads and content.
Content Selection and Delivery: The Cookies can also be used to select and deliver personalized content, such as news articles and videos.
Ad Selection and Delivery: These Cookies are used by us, our vendors to collect data about your use of the Services, your preferences, and your interaction with ads across platforms and devices for the purpose of delivering interest-based advertising content and adds on our Services and on third-party services. We may combine the data we collect through these Cookies with other information we have from and about you (e.g., your account data) for these purposes.
Third parties (e.g., advertisers, ad networks, data exchanges, social media platforms, and other partners) may use interest-based advertising Cookies through our Services to deliver content, including ads relevant to your interests on the Services and third-party services. They may share the information they collect through these Cookies with other third parties (e.g., advertisers) according to their privacy policy.
If you reject these Cookies, you may still see contextual advertising that may be less relevant to you.
Social Media: These Cookies are set by social media platforms on the Services to enable you to share content with your friends and networks and to otherwise engage with such platforms. Social media platforms have the ability to track your online activity outside of the Services. This may impact the content and messages you see on other services.
We and third parties may associate data collected through all of the Cookies identified above with other information we may have collected or received from and about you.
HOW DO I MANAGE COOKIES?
Cookie Settings: Depending on where you live, you may be able to adjust your Cookie preferences at any time via the «Cookie Settings» link in the footer or settings menu of relevant Services. You must adjust your settings on each browser or device that you use. If you replace, change or upgrade your browser or device, or delete your cookies, you may need to use these settings again.
Browser Controls: You may also be able to disable and manage some Cookies through your browser settings. If you use multiple browsers on the same device, you will need to manage your settings for each browser. Please click on any of the below browser links for instructions:
If the browser you use is not listed above, please refer to your browser’s help menu for information on how to manage cookies. Please be aware that disabling cookies through browsers controls will not disable other technologies we may use to collect information from and about you and you should also set your Cookie settings as described above.
Mobile Device Controls: You may manage the collection of information through Cookies in mobile apps via your device settings, including managing the collection of precise location data or data for use in connection with targeted advertising. Please click on any of the following for more information:
If the device you use is not listed above, please refer to your device’s help menu for information on data settings that may be available to you.
Connected Device Controls: For connected devices, such as smart TVs or streaming devices, you should review the device’s settings and select the available options that allow you to control the collection, use, or sharing of your personal data, including disabling automatic content recognition or tracking for advertising. Typically, to opt out, such devices require you to select options like «limit ad tracking» or to disable options such as «interest-based advertising,» «interactive TV,» or «smart interactivity». These settings vary by device type.
Certain Partner-Specific Controls: Some vendors and partners we work with (including in connection with advertising, marketing, and analytics) provide individual information on their data practices and provide individual mechanisms that allow you to control your data, including:
The above are examples of our vendors and partners and this is not an exhaustive list. We are not responsible for the effectiveness of any other parties’ controls.
Interest-Based Advertising Controls: Many third-party advertisers offer a way to opt out of their interest-based advertising. For more information or to opt out of receiving interest-based advertising from certain third-party advertisers, depending on your country of residence, please visit:
For certain Services, Versant participates in the IAB Europe Transparency &amp; Consent Framework and complies with its Specifications and Policies.
Consequences of Deactivation of Cookies: If you disable or remove Cookies, some parts of the Services may not function properly. Information may still be collected and used for other purposes, such as research, online services analytics or internal operations, and to remember your opt-out preferences.
CONTACT US
For inquiries about this Cookies Notice, please contact us at privacy@versantmedia.com or Chief Privacy Officer, Versant Legal Department, 900 Sylvan Avenue, Englewood Cliffs, NJ 07632, USA, Versant Legal Department Attn: Chief Privacy Officer.
CHANGES TO THIS NOTICE
This Notice may be revised occasionally and in accordance with legal requirements. Please revisit this Cookie Notice regularly to stay informed about our and our analytic and advertising partners’ use of Cookies.

Continue Reading

Trending

Exit mobile version