Tech stocks tank as US AI dominance no longer a sure bet

Chinese startup DeepSeek rolls out open LLMs to rival Meta, OpenAI at fraction of cost

Share prices for some of the biggest American tech brands that crested the AI hype waves crashed this morning on the rocks of DeepSeek, a Chinese startup that last week released LLMs that challenges US dominance.

As The Register revealed at the weekend, DeepSeek launched some openly available machine-learning models which perform favorably against US competitors OpenAI and Meta, according to benchmarks. And what's really set the cat among the investors is that they could be trained using fewer Nvidia chips, or so DeepSeek claims.

Illustration of three AI robots thinking about a problem

China's DeepSeek just dropped a free challenger to OpenAI's o1 – here's how to use it on your PC

READ MORE

DeepSeek, founded in 2023, by Liang Wenfeng and financially supported by his quantitive hedge fund High Flyer, released DeepSeek V3 at the close of 2024, and has now rolled out R1, classified as a reasoning model optimized from V3.

This led investors to question the viability of spending tens of billions of dollars on AI training, especially when the returns on investment still seem uncertain, when DeepSeek can do so with less. This existential crisis hit stock valuations, with Nvidia down by as much as 14 percent in pre-market trading today, Microsoft falling 7 percent, and Meta down 5 percent.

The Nasdaq 100 futures was down 3.51 percent at the time of writing amid the searching questions that DeepSeek is seemingly posing.

"Deepseek R1 is AI's Sputnik moment," said Marc Andreessen, partner in venture capitalist Andreessen Horowitz, which raised billions last year to spend on AI startups. As Reg readers no doubt know, this effectively indicates that something has to change so US big tech can compete without spending so much.

Microsoft, AWS, Google and others are plowing billions into AI in the expectation that those bets come off. Meta said last week it is spending $60 billion on AI and there is also the Stargate initiative that is betting a collective $500 billion.

As of September last year, the hyperscalers had spent $200 billion in capital expenditure since the start of 2023, and yet AI licenses were around a tenth of that. The bubble was expanding and expanding.

Former Microsoft exec Steven Sinofsky said on X:

The current trajectory of AI if you read the news in the US is one of MASSIVE CapEx piled on top of even more MASSIVE CapEx. It is a race between Google, Meta, OpenAI/Microsoft, xAI, and to a lesser extent a few other super well-funded startups like Perplexity and Anthropic.

The past 5 years of AI have been bigger models, more data, more compute, and so on. Why? Because, I would argue, the innovation was driven by the cloud hyperscale companies and they were destined to take the approach of doing more of what they already did. They viewed data for training and huge models as their way of winning and their unique architectural approach.

The "big scale solutions" are "consuming too much capital," he added on X. He reckons that beyond this, the current path is not sustainable.

"It is a path that works against the history of computing, which is that resources needed become free, not more expensive. The market for computing simply doesn't accept solutions that cost more, especially consumption based pricing. We've seen Microsoft and Google do a bit of resetting with respect to pricing in the hopes of turning these massive CapEx efforts into direct revenue."

The arrival of DeepSeek - which claims it built a scale-out architecture to train its V3 model on 14.8 trillion tokens using 2.788 million Nvidia H800 GPU hours – has been impactful in the financial world over the past few hours.

DeepSeek claimed it would cost less than $6 million to rent that many GPU hours in the cloud to train V3, though that figure doesn't include all the research and development work that went into it. In reality, DeepSeek owns thousands of GPUs that it spent many millions on; that's still less than the tens of billions of investment being demanded by Silicon Valley, mind you.

"It seems as if there is a bit of reality dawning that China has not been sitting idle, even as these tariffs and investment restrictions on tech companies have been put in place," said Mitul Kotecha, Asia head of emerging markets macro and foreign exchange strategy at Barclays, as quoted by the Financial Times. ®

More about

TIP US OFF

Send us news


Other stories you might like