Politics Meets Silicon Valley
President Donald Trump says things are good between him and Tesla Inc. (TSLA) CEO Elon Musk. When asked if Musk is back in his inner circle after their falling out earlier this year, Trump indicated the relationship has thawed considerably. "I like Elon a lot," Trump said, crediting Musk's help during the election campaign.
The reconciliation comes as conservative heavyweights are making their voices heard on tech policy. A coalition of conservative advocacy groups led by former White House Chief Strategist Steve Bannon formally urged the Trump administration to reject Big Tech's argument that copyrighted materials should be treated as free training data for artificial intelligence systems. The groups are calling the industry's position "un-American and absurd," demanding stronger protections for content creators whose work is being scraped to train AI models.
California Governor Gavin Newsom, meanwhile, slammed the Trump administration for policies he says are letting China race ahead in electric vehicles and clean energy. Newsom criticized the rollback of Corporate Average Fuel Economy standards, warning it "will poison the air" and vowing to "fight tooth and nail" against the changes.
On the international front, the United States reportedly decided to pause sanctions targeting China's Ministry of State Security. The move appears designed to preserve the fragile trade truce between the two nations, even as cybersecurity concerns mount. The administration also shelved new export controls as part of the diplomatic balancing act.
Cloud Giants Team Up and Level Up
Amazon.com Inc. (AMZN) and Alphabet Inc. (GOOGL) (GOOG) Google launched a new multicloud networking service aimed at tackling internet disruptions and providing more reliable connectivity. The joint effort reflects growing demand from enterprises that want seamless operations across multiple cloud platforms without getting locked into a single vendor's ecosystem.
Amazon also unveiled its latest Graviton5 processors, promising customers faster performance, better efficiency, and lower costs for running cloud applications as workloads grow increasingly complex. The chips are part of Amazon Web Services' broader push to offer custom silicon that can compete with traditional processor makers while delivering better economics for cloud customers.
The EV Market Hits Speed Bumps
Li Auto Inc. (LI) reported it delivered 33,181 vehicles in November 2025, bringing its cumulative total to 1,495,969 units as of November 30. While respectable, the numbers put Li Auto behind rivals Nio and XPeng for the month, highlighting the intensifying competition in China's crowded EV market.
Ford Motor Co. (F) had a rough month, with electric vehicle sales plunging 60% in November. The collapse came from multiple directions: a fire at a key supplier disrupted production, and President Trump's rollback of the federal EV tax credit hit consumer demand. Despite the setback, Ford CEO Jim Farley reaffirmed the automaker's commitment to building more affordable vehicles, even as the administration scaled back fuel economy requirements.
Rivian Automotive, Inc. (RIVN) faces fresh regulatory scrutiny over potential seat belt failures affecting 34,824 vehicles. The recall adds to the electric truck maker's challenges as it works to scale production and reach profitability.
There was better news for robotics stocks. Shares of iRobot Corp. (IRBT), Serve Robotics Inc. (SERV), and Richtech Robotics Inc. (RR) rallied on reports that the Trump administration plans to issue an executive order designed to supercharge the robotics industry. Investors are betting the order could accelerate adoption of automation technology across manufacturing and logistics.
Chip Wars and Silicon Strategies
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company Ltd. (TSM) sits at the center of Taiwan's efforts to negotiate lower U.S. tariffs. The island is working to reduce duties on its exports from 20% to 15% while advancing semiconductor cooperation with Washington. TSMC's importance to American tech supply chains gives Taiwan significant leverage in the negotiations.
The chipmaker also found itself in a widening legal battle over alleged theft of trade secrets, with Taiwan filing charges against a Tokyo Electron unit as part of the technology theft probe.
Marvell Technology, Inc. (MRVL) had a busy week. The company scored a major security win with Microsoft Corp. (MSFT) Azure, which is now rolling out Marvell's LiquidSecurity hardware across Europe. Marvell is also pushing deeper into the AI hardware arms race with a potential multi-billion-dollar deal to acquire AMD-backed photonics startup Celestial AI, which could boost Marvell's position in high-performance datacenter silicon.
The company reported third-quarter adjusted earnings of 76 cents per share on revenue of $2.08 billion, beating analyst estimates on both lines. Despite the solid results and the Celestial AI acquisition news, shares slid as investors digested the implications of the pricey deal.
Microsoft (MSFT) shares slipped on reports the tech giant lowered its sales targets for artificial intelligence software. Clients are apparently hesitant to buy the new AI tools, forcing Microsoft to scale back its ambitious revenue projections. The news suggests enterprise AI adoption may be moving slower than the industry hoped, despite massive investments in the technology.
Nvidia Corp. (NVDA) and Amazon Web Services deepened their partnership at AWS re:Invent, announcing new integrations across interconnect technology, cloud infrastructure, and AI software. Amazon is now putting Nvidia tech inside its own custom AI chips, a collaboration that benefits both companies as they compete against other cloud and chip providers.
Nvidia is also expanding its open-source AI portfolio with new models, datasets, and development tools designed to accelerate progress in both digital and physical AI applications. The company released AI models that help self-driving cars "think like humans," processing driving scenarios more naturally.
In the robotics space, Nvidia teamed up with Fanuc and other major players to build a new generation of AI-driven industrial robots that can understand voice commands and safely work alongside humans on factory floors. The initiative represents Nvidia's push beyond data centers into edge AI applications where real-time decision-making matters.
D-Wave Quantum Inc. (QBTS) launched a new U.S. government business unit to accelerate federal adoption of its quantum systems, software, and services. The move signals D-Wave's expansion into defense and government applications where quantum computing could provide strategic advantages.
Cybersecurity and Software Earnings
CrowdStrike Holdings Inc. (CRWD) delivered a strong third quarter, reporting revenue slightly above $1.23 billion and adjusted earnings of 96 cents per share, both beating analyst estimates. CEO George Kurtz called it "one of our best quarters in company history."
But Kurtz also issued a stark warning about AI-driven cyber threats from adversarial nation-states. "AI is expanding the attack surface," he said, noting that China's state-sponsored groups are using large language models for cyber intrusions. The comments underscore how AI is becoming a double-edged sword in cybersecurity, providing both better defenses and more sophisticated attack capabilities.
Micron Technology, Inc. (MU) announced it will exit the Crucial consumer business, ending sales of Crucial-branded products through global retailers and distributors. The company is reallocating resources to chase the AI gold rush, focusing on high-margin datacenter memory products rather than lower-margin consumer SSDs and RAM modules.
Salesforce Inc. (CRM) reported third-quarter revenue of $10.26 billion, narrowly missing the consensus estimate of $10.27 billion. But adjusted earnings came in at $3.25 per share, well above expectations of $2.86. Shares surged as the company raised its fiscal 2026 outlook on a "powerful RPO pipeline," referring to remaining performance obligations that signal future revenue.
Snowflake Inc. (SNOW) delivered third-quarter revenue of $1.21 billion and adjusted earnings of 35 cents per share, both beating analyst estimates. Despite the beat, shares fell after hours as investors focused on guidance and concerns about growth deceleration in the competitive data warehousing market.
Energy, Databases, and Infrastructure
Plug Power Inc. (PLUG) announced its first-ever NASA contract, agreeing to supply up to 480,000 pounds of liquid hydrogen to support operations at the Glenn Research Center in Cleveland and the Neil A. Armstrong Test Facility in Sandusky, Ohio. The deal gives Plug Power a foothold in the space sector while diversifying beyond its core fuel cell business.
MongoDB Inc. (MDB) smashed third-quarter estimates, reporting revenue of $628.31 million and adjusted earnings of $1.32 per share against analyst estimates of $591.52 million and 80 cents. The database company also raised its fiscal 2026 outlook, sending shares ripping higher as investors rewarded the strong execution.
Apple Shakes Up AI Leadership
Apple Inc. (AAPL) announced a major leadership transition within its artificial intelligence group, marking the most significant reshuffle since launching Apple Intelligence in 2024. Longtime AI chief John Giannandrea is stepping down, though the company hasn't detailed his successor or the full scope of the reorganization. The move comes as Apple works to catch up with rivals in generative AI after years of focusing on on-device machine learning.
The AI Arms Race Intensifies
L&T Technology Services announced it developed a next-generation AI-powered digital twin platform designed to improve respiratory diagnostics and lung navigation. The platform taps Nvidia AI to build 3D digital twins for lung cancer diagnostics, showcasing how AI is moving into specialized medical applications.
Accenture plc (ACN) disclosed a collaboration with OpenAI to bring agentic AI systems to the core of enterprise operations. The partnership aims to help large companies deploy AI agents that can handle complex workflows autonomously, moving beyond simple chatbots to systems that can actually execute business processes.
In a stunning reversal that reveals cracks in the AI hierarchy, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman declared a "Code Red" and froze the company's monetization roadmap to desperately refocus on product quality. The panic move came as Google's Gemini AI gained ground, forcing OpenAI to pause its aggressive revenue push and shore up its technology foundation. It's a remarkable parallel to Google's own "Code Red" moment three years ago when ChatGPT first threatened its search dominance.
French startup Mistral, backed by Microsoft (MSFT) and Nvidia (NVDA), launched a sweeping new suite of AI models designed to run everywhere from smartphones to drones. The open-weight lineup represents Mistral's most ambitious challenge yet to deep-pocketed rivals OpenAI, Google, and DeepSeek. The French company is betting that flexible, efficient models that can run on edge devices will carve out a distinct niche in the increasingly crowded AI market.
OpenAI's chief research officer, Mark Chen, revealed just how intense the competition for elite AI researchers has become. Meta Platforms Inc. (META) CEO Mark Zuckerberg, Chen said, personally delivered homemade soup to candidates he hoped to lure away from OpenAI. "Zuck actually went and hand-delivered soup to people he was trying to recruit," Chen noted, adding that Meta's efforts were "largely unsuccessful." The soup diplomacy story illustrates the extreme lengths companies are going to in the war for AI talent.
Speaking of Meta, the European Union is planning a new antitrust investigation into how the company introduced its "Meta AI" assistant within WhatsApp. Regulators are concerned about whether Meta is abusing its dominant position in messaging to force AI features on users without adequate choice or transparency.
C3.ai Inc. (AI) reported quarterly losses of 25 cents per share on revenue of $75.15 million, both beating analyst estimates. The enterprise AI software company has been on a rollercoaster as investors try to figure out which AI companies will actually generate sustainable revenue versus those just riding the hype cycle.
This week in consumer tech showed an industry in transition. Political winds are shifting AI copyright policy, the EV market is hitting turbulence, the cloud wars continue their relentless march, and the AI arms race is getting more intense and more strange. One thing's certain: nobody's standing still.