This is Brad DeLong's Grasping Reality—my attempt to make myself, and all of you out there in SubStackLand, smarter by writing where I have Value Above Replacement and shutting up where I do not… CROSSPOST: HORACE DEDIU: The Most Brilliant Move in Corporate History?Horace’s tagline: ‘An allergy to centralized computing. Based on Tweets by MilkRoadAI’. As Facebook, Amazon, Google, and Microsoft together plan to spend $650 billion of their roughly $1.6 trillion...Horace’s tagline: ‘An allergy to centralized computing. Based on Tweets by MilkRoadAI’. As Facebook, Amazon, Google, and Microsoft together plan to spend $650 billion of their roughly $1.6 trillion in annual revenue on the build-out, Apple says “no thanks”. It believes it can buy whatever it turns out to need in terms of cloud-datacenter “AI” on the cheap from one of those four—or from Anthropic or OpenAI. Could the world work out so that it cannot do that, and its device-sales profits melt away as someone else offers sufficiently better natural-language interfaces or other game-changing capabilities? I find it hard to see how. Maybe someone smarter than I am, however, could…Horace Dediu’s piece argues that Apple’s restraint on AI capex may be the most brilliant corporate move of this cycle. Where Amazon, Google, Microsoft, and Meta are together spending about $650 billion a year on AI data centers—94% of operating cash flow, financed increasingly with debt—Apple has kept capex to roughly $14 billion and refused to hand its cash flow to Nvidia. The hyperscalers’ AI services currently generate only about $35 billion in revenue, a small fraction of what they are spending on infrastructure. They think they have to spend not so much to make money as to guard against Christensenian disruption of their current platform-monopoly profits. Apple does not see that as a risk—Apple Silicon made by TSMC and the promise of on-device low-latency low-infrastructure cost inference are sufficient protection. And I am not ingenious enough to see how they could be likely to be wrong:
What do I think? I think Horace is probably right. The view that Anthropic and Claude are going to conquer the digital world with AI runs into the fact that Anthropic’s current run-rate revenues are $14 billion a year (at least half of OpenAI’s), while Facebook, Amazon, Google, and Microsoft together have $1.6 trillion a year in revenue and have every incentive, if push comes to shove, to cross-license their AI technologies so that nobody can take their platform-monopoly profits from them via superior enterprise or consumer natural-language or agentic-’bot interfaces. 100x scale has a logic of its own. And as long as the sun shines on TSMC, Apple will pay whatever is necessary to keep Apple Silicon-based on-device inference with its latency and infrastructure cost advantages at least the equal of what can be done in the cloud. Apple could fail to execute—but so could everybody else. The others are making the big $650 billion betsnot so much to make money as to guard against Christensenian disruption from someone else’s AI-cloud. But that is really not a big risk Apple thinks it needs to buy insurance again, and I am not invntie enough to see how it could be likely to be wrong. If reading this gets you Value Above Replacement, then become a free subscriber to this newsletter. And forward it! And if your VAR from this newsletter is in the three digits or more each year, please become a paid subscriber! I am trying to make you readers—and myself—smarter. Please tell me if I succeed, or how I fail…##crosspost-horace-dediu-the-most-brilliant-move-in-corporate-history |
CROSSPOST: HORACE DEDIU: The Most Brilliant Move in Corporate History?
Monday, 16 March 2026
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