趋势洞察 4月前 200 阅读 0 评论

U.S. Treasury Secretary Signals Shipbuilding Firms Could be Next Target following Government Stake in Intel

作者头像
AI中国

AI技术专栏作家 | 发布了 246 篇文章

TMTPOST -- A senior government official on Wednesday suggested the Trump administration is eyeing more government stakes in the private sector, expanding its deal with Intel Corporation.

AI Generated Image

U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent in an interview with Fox News ruled out acquiring a stake in Nvidia Corporation, while confirming the Trump administrations may be interested in taking stakes in industries beyond the semiconductor.

When asked if the administration is considering taking stakes in further semiconductor companies, Bessent replied:”I don"t think Nvidia needs financial support.” Bessent added that companies in other industries that are critical for the United States could be the government’s target.

“So, you know, that that seems, not on the table right now, but could there be other industries, where you know, that we"re reshaping, something like shipbuilding, that.Sure. There could be things like that. And these are critical industries that we have to, we have to be self-sufficient in the United States,” said Bessent.

Bessent also hinted the pharmaceutical industry is the one that U.S. has to reduce dependence on overseas suppliers since the Covid-19 pandemic exposed weakness in American’s supply chains that must be addressed. "Think about it, 80-90% of the precursor pharma products are made overseas. And that"s just unacceptable because, you know, as we saw during Covid, the manufacturing countries will keep it for themselves," he said.

A day prior to Bessents’ comments, U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick revealed the Trump administration is considering expanding its stake in Intel to include defense contractors like Lockheed Martin.

Top officials at the Pentagon are “thinking about” whether the U.S. government should acquire equity stakes in leading defense contractors such as Lockheed Martin, said Lutnick in a CNBC interview on Tuesday. “Oh there’s a monstrous discussion about defense,” Lutnick replied when asked about if the Trump administration would repeat the stake-taking move with other companies that do business with the government.

Calling the Intel deal “a great example”, Lutnick said he and U.S. President Donald Trump stuck the agreement with Intel to make the previous government subsidies awarded to the chipmaker fair for America. The CHIPS and Science Act of 2022 (CHIPS Act) introduced by former President Joe Biden gave Intel $11 billion grant at in exchange for nothing to help them build semiconductors in U.S., he said.

Lutnick described Lockheed Martin as “basically an arm of the U.S. government”, noting the company makes 97% of its revenue from the government. “But what’s the economics of that? I’m going to leave that to my secretary of Defense and the deputy secretary of Defense.” he said. “These guys are on it and they’re thinking about it.”

“As we did in his first term, we are continuing our strong working relationship with President Trump and his Administration to strengthen our national defense,” Lockheed said in a statement later Tuesday.

Trump on Friday announced his administration now “fully owns and controls 10% of INTEL, a Great American Company that has an even more incredible future.” He in a social media post touted “a great deal for America” since the U.S. government “paid nothing for these shares” now valued at around $11 billion. He also highlighted significance of the deal as Intel is building cutting-edge semiconductors, which is “fundamental to the future of our Nation.”

Intel later Friday unveiled some details of the agreement. The company suggested it agreed to give a nearly 10% stake to the Trump administration in exchange for a total of $11.1 billion funding under the CHIPS Act.

Under the agreement, the U.S. government will make an $8.9 billion investment in Intel common stock on top of the $2.2 billion in CHIPS Act grants Intel has received to date. “The government’s equity stake will be funded by the remaining $5.7 billion in grants previously awarded, but not yet paid, to Intel under the U.S. CHIPS and Science Act and $3.2 billion awarded to the company as part of the Secure Enclave program,” said Intel in a statement.

With the $8.9 committed investment, the U.S. government agreed to purchase 433.3 million primary shares of Intel common stock at a price of $20.47 per share, equivalent to a 9.9% stake in the company. The federal government thus became one of Intel’s biggest shareholders.

作者头像

AI前线

专注人工智能前沿技术报道,深入解析AI发展趋势与应用场景

246篇文章 1.2M阅读 56.3k粉丝

评论 (128)

用户头像

AI爱好者

2小时前

这个更新太令人期待了!视频分析功能将极大扩展AI的应用场景,特别是在教育和内容创作领域。

用户头像

开发者小明

昨天

有没有人测试过新的API响应速度?我们正在开发一个实时视频分析应用,非常关注性能表现。

作者头像

AI前线 作者

12小时前

我们测试的平均响应时间在300ms左右,比上一代快了很多,适合实时应用场景。

用户头像

科技观察家

3天前

GPT-4的视频处理能力已经接近专业级水平,这可能会对内容审核、视频编辑等行业产生颠覆性影响。期待看到更多创新应用!