The Global Overview
Semiconductor Surge
The global semiconductor industry is poised to reach a historic peak of $975 billion in annual sales in 2026, with growth projected to accelerate from 22% in 2025 to 26% (Deloitte). This surge is overwhelmingly powered by the demand for high-value AI chips, which are expected to constitute roughly half of total industry revenue despite representing less than 0.2% of total unit volume. This concentration on high-margin, low-volume AI chips is causing some concern about market stability should the AI boom slow, leaving buyers for non-AI chips facing potential inventory shortages and price increases.
AI’s Expanding Frontier
Generative AI is rapidly moving beyond text and image generation, with significant advances in creating realistic video from simple text prompts. In the scientific realm, AI is accelerating discovery in fields from materials science to medicine. DeepMind’s AlphaFold program, for example, has been instrumental in solving the longstanding biological challenge of protein folding, which could revolutionize drug discovery. Meanwhile, the development of increasingly powerful and energy-efficient AI-specific hardware, such as new generation GPUs and TPUs, is crucial for both training and deploying these complex models.
The Geopolitics of Technology
Technology policy is increasingly becoming a central element of national security and international competition, particularly between the U.S. and China. Semiconductors and computing power are now viewed as critical infrastructure for national sovereignty. In the U.S., the Trump administration is actively shaping the regulatory landscape, with a notable debate in Congress over a potential federal “AI moratorium” that would prevent states from enacting their own regulations for a period. This move highlights the growing trend of digital policymaking as a tool of realpolitik.
Space-Tech Innovation
In space exploration, robotics and AI are playing an increasingly vital role. On the International Space Station, experiments are underway using microbes to mine valuable metals from meteorites in microgravity, a process known as biomining. On Mars, NASA and Anthropic have successfully completed the first AI-planned drive. These developments are part of a broader push towards greater automation in space, aimed at enabling longer-term human presence on the Moon and beyond by using robots for tasks like construction and resource extraction.
Stay tuned for the next Gist—your edge in a shifting world.
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