Trump lands in Beijing with Nvidia and Apple CEOs in tow

Morning Brew Daily////4 min read

The traditional boundaries between corporate leadership and statecraft have dissolved. We are witnessing the rise of the 'CEO-Diplomat,' where the architects of our digital reality hold as much sway as any career ambassador. This shift is not merely a novelty; it reflects a world where technological supremacy is synonymous with national security. When a sitting president brings the titans of the S&P 500 to negotiate with a global rival, the message is clear: the economy is the new front line.

Silicon Valley heavyweights anchor high-stakes China summit

Donald Trump recently arrived in China, marking his first visit in nearly a decade, but the real story lies in the passenger manifest of Air Force One. Flanked by 17 corporate heavyweights, including Tim Cook of Apple and Elon Musk, the administration is signaling a shift toward 'deal-making' diplomacy. Perhaps most significant was the last-minute addition of Jensen Huang, CEO of Nvidia. Initially excluded, Huang was reportedly recruited mid-flight to serve as a pivotal broker in the ongoing technological tug-of-war.

For China's Xi Jinping, the goal remains predictability. After a period of escalatory tariffs—some exceeding 100%—Beijing is desperate for a stable working relationship. However, the friction point remains artificial intelligence. While the Biden Administration previously restricted Nvidia's top-tier exports to hobble Chinese AI labs, the current administration has signaled a 'cozier' stance, allowing the sale of H200 chips. This meeting isn't just about trade; it’s about establishing who controls the compute power of the next century.

Data center backlash hits Kevin O'Leary in Utah

While tech giants negotiate in Beijing, the physical infrastructure of AI is meeting fierce resistance at home. Kevin O'Leary is spearheading a $100 billion project dubbed 'Wonder Valley' in Utah. The scale is staggering: 40,000 acres, equivalent to the size of Washington DC, with an energy appetite that exceeds the entire state's current annual consumption. Despite promises of job creation, local sentiment has soured.

Trump lands in Beijing with Nvidia and Apple CEOs in tow
Elon Musk, Jensen Huang, and Tim Cook join Trump’s China trip

A recent Gallup poll reveals a startling trend: seven out of ten Americans would rather live near a nuclear power plant than a data center. In Utah, this opposition is fueled by the environmental crisis at the Great Salt Lake, which has already lost 73% of its water. Residents fear that massive data cooling systems will exacerbate water scarcity and potentially unleash toxic dust clouds. Furthermore, the economic promise is being questioned; while 10,000 construction jobs were initially touted, permanent staffing is expected to drop by nearly 80% once the facility is operational.

Amazon faces the 'tokenmaxxing' productivity trap

Inside the corporate machine, the pressure to adopt AI has birthed a perverse new behavior: tokenmaxxing. At companies like Amazon, workers are reportedly inflating their AI usage metrics to satisfy internal leaderboards and performance targets. Because LLMs process data in units called 'tokens,' employees are using automated tools to scrape emails and generate unnecessary Slack activity just to appear productive.

This is a classic manifestation of Goodhart’s Law: when a measure becomes a target, it ceases to be a good measure. Jensen Huang himself fueled this fire by suggesting that high-earning engineers should consume at least $250,000 in AI tokens annually. The danger here is systemic. If global markets and capital expenditures are based on inflated 'fake' demand from employees gaming the system, the AI bubble may be far more fragile than the Nasdaq suggests.

American productivity surges despite social isolation

In a rare bright spot for the domestic economy, the US is experiencing what experts call a 'productivity miracle.' After years of stagnation following the 2008 crisis, output per worker has doubled to a 2% annual rise. Surprisingly, this surge predates the ChatGPT era. The growth is driven by the 'beast mode' of the US energy industry and the belated, effective deployment of 2010s-era tech like cloud computing and video conferencing by non-tech firms.

However, this economic efficiency comes at a steep social cost. The American Enterprise Institute reports that regular social interaction between neighbors has plummeted. Only 25% of young Americans now socialize with those living next door, down from 51% in 2012. We are becoming a nation of highly productive recluses, trading 'borrowing a cup of sugar' for 15-minute grocery deliveries. As we optimize for the balance sheet, we are atrophying the social constitution required for a healthy society.

Topic DensityMention share of the most discussed topics · 14 mentions across 13 distinct topics
Jensen Huang
14%· people
Amazon
7%· companies
Apple
7%· companies
China
7%· places
Donald Trump
7%· people
Other topics
57%
End of Article
Source video
Trump lands in Beijing with Nvidia and Apple CEOs in tow

Elon Musk, Jensen Huang, and Tim Cook join Trump’s China trip

Watch

Morning Brew Daily // 25:08

Morning Brew Daily, a daily talk show that covers the latest news on business, the economy, and everything else, with Neal Freyman and Toby Howell. Witty, informative and everything you need to start your day. Available on all podcasting platforms and Youtube. Listen to the podcast here: https://link.chtbl.com/MBD Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/mbdailyshow Follow us on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mbdailyshow/ Follow us on TikTok: http://www.tiktok.com/@mbdailyshow Sign up for the Morning Brew Newsletter: https://www.morningbrew.com/daily/subscribe?utm_campaign=mbd_yt&utm_medium=multimedia&utm_source=youtube

Who and what they mention most
Nvidia
23.8%5
OpenAI
19.0%4
Amazon
19.0%4
Elon Musk
14.3%3
4 min read0%
4 min read