US AI Startup Goes All In on Chinese Mega-Model | Rewire News Morning Brief
Jensen Huang announced on a podcast, "I believe we have achieved AGI," with 80% of US AI startups running Chinese open-source models. The technological revolution is accelerating, but so are the cracks.
1 | Jensen Huang Announces "I Believe We Have Achieved AGI," Then Spends Half an Hour Explaining Why AI-Generated Things Are Not Junk
NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang made a judgment on the Lex Fridman podcast that no one in the industry dares to make lightly. When Fridman asked, "How far are we from an AI that can found and operate a billion-dollar company," Huang replied, "I think it's right now. I believe we have achieved AGI." He cited the popularity of the open-source Agent platform OpenClaw as evidence, while also acknowledging that such systems may create short-term value rather than enduring businesses.
This statement distanced him from his peers who have been busy distancing themselves from the term AGI in recent months. While clauses triggering AGI in contracts between OpenAI and Microsoft are written, Huang chose this time to declare the term. The person announcing AGI sells GPUs, so the motive doesn't need to be guessed.
In the same episode, he also defended DLSS 5. This generative graphics enhancement technology, collectively criticized by the gaming community as "AI junk," Huang referred to as "artist-driven optional enhancement." Announcing that AGI has arrived while explaining why AI-generated things are not junk, this juxtaposition is the most accurate snapshot of the current AI narrative.
(Source: Lex Fridman Podcast / The Verge / Ars Technica / Tom's Hardware)
2 | 80% of US AI Startups Are Running Chinese Models, While the Pentagon Aims Its Gun at Anthropic
A report from the US-China Economic and Security Review Commission provided a glaring figure that about 80% of US AI startups are using Chinese open-source models. Models from Alibaba, The Dark Side of the Moon, and MiniMax have dominated the global rankings of HuggingFace and OpenRouter. The Commission warned that this is forming a "self-reinforcing competitive advantage," where the open-source ecosystem and manufacturing data constitute a dual-loop that can approach the forefront even under chip restrictions.
The Cursor event last week was the most specific case. The AI programming tool valued at $29.3 billion claimed a self-developed breakthrough when releasing Composer 2, only to have developers discover through API debugging within hours that the underlying model was The Dark Side of the Moon's Kimi K2.5. The co-founder admitted that not disclosing the base model was a mistake.
Meanwhile, the Pentagon classifies Anthropic as a "supply chain risk," with Senator Warren writing to the Secretary of Defense calling it a "retaliatory action" and pointing out that the contract could have been terminated without the need for a punitive label. The real supply chain risk is not in Anthropic's contract terms, but in the model dependence of 80% of startups.
(Source: U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission / VentureBeat / TechCrunch / Reuters)
3|IEA Chief: Iran Crisis More Severe Than Both 1970s Oil Shocks Combined, Putin Biggest Winner
IEA Chief Birol provided a quantitative comparison at the Australian National Press Club. The two oil crises of 1973 and 1979 collectively led to a global daily loss of around 10 million barrels of supply, while the current Iran crisis stands at 11 million barrels per day. Natural gas losses are around 140 billion cubic meters, nearly double the Russia-Ukraine conflict. At least 40 energy assets in 9 Middle Eastern countries have been severely damaged. The CEO of Chevron was more direct at CERAWeek, stating that oil prices have "not yet fully reflected" the actual shortage.
The biggest beneficiary of this crisis is not in the Middle East. According to CREA data, Russia earned about $7 billion from fossil fuel exports in the first two weeks of March. Urals crude oil spiked from around $57 per barrel to close to $100, almost on par with Brent, erasing the long-standing discount. Trump's 30-day sanctions waiver (expiring on April 11) allows countries to purchase Russian oil in transit. Treasury Secretary Benson claimed it would not bring "significant financial benefit," with analysts saying this restriction is "almost unenforceable."
(Source: IEA / Fortune / Al Jazeera / CNBC / Guardian / CREA)
4|Fink Annual Letter: AI Will Worsen Wealth Inequality, Antidote is Getting More People Invested
BlackRock CEO Fink placed AI at the center of the inequality narrative in his annual letter to investors. His key argument is that the vast wealth created by the past few generations has mainly flowed to those who already hold financial assets, and the prosperity of AI will accelerate this trend. If market participation channels are not broadened, the dividend will only make the rich richer.
Fink's solution comes with a clear product logic. He proposes establishing a government retirement investment fund of about $1.5 trillion to operate parallel to existing Social Security trust funds. He also points to tokenization as a key tool to expand market access. This happens to be BlackRock's most core business bet in the past two years. The man managing $11.6 trillion in assets says "getting more people invested" translates to "getting more people's money into products I manage."
The signal is not just coming from BlackRock. On the same day, according to Bloomberg, JPMorgan launched a new tool to help clients hedge AI-related debt risk. As Wall Street begins to price hedge products for the AI bubble, the threshold of being "too big to short" is not far off.
(Source: BlackRock Annual Letter / CNN / Reuters / Bloomberg)
5|Otman Resigns as Helion Board Chair, OpenAI Negotiates Fusion Power Purchase Agreement
Sam Otman has resigned as the board chair of the fusion power company Helion Energy to allow OpenAI to negotiate a power purchase agreement as an independent buyer. According to TechCrunch, the proposed agreement would give OpenAI access to 12.5% of Helion's total power output, corresponding to 5 gigawatts in 2030 and 50 gigawatts in 2035.
Just weeks after Otman admitted that "data centers are hard" following an outage at a Texas facility, OpenAI retreated from self-built infrastructure. The signal is now clearer that OpenAI is not looking to solve its energy bottlenecks within the traditional grid framework but is betting on the as-yet-uncommercialized fusion power. The 2030 target of 5 gigawatts means that Helion needs to go from the lab to full-scale power production in less than four years, something no fusion company has achieved.
Otman previously held dual roles as Helion chair and OpenAI CEO, with the decision-maker for both the selling and buying sides being the same person. His resignation was a prerequisite for the deal to proceed, signaling that commercialization is now close enough to require addressing conflicts of interest. As traditional energy loses 11 million barrels per day due to the Iran crisis, betting on fusion power is less science fiction and more hedge.
(Source: TechCrunch / CNBC / Axios)
Also Worth Knowing ↓
According to The New York Times, Trump has established the "Pax Silica" fund to reduce reliance on foreign chips. This multilateral framework has now included eight countries, including the US, Japan, South Korea, and Sweden, with India joining in February of this year. On the same day, Musk announced that SpaceX and Tesla will build an advanced chip factory in Austin. (Source: NYT / Reuters)
The CEOs of Kalshi and Polymarket have co-invested in a $35 million prediction market VC fund, the same day the Senate introduced a bipartisan bill to ban sports betting on prediction markets. The fund, named 5c(c) Capital, was founded by early Kalshi employees. While the two companies compete fiercely in product offerings, they have found common ground in betting on the same racetrack. (Source: Fortune / TechCrunch / WSJ)
Luma AI has released the Uni-1 image generation model, surpassing Google and OpenAI on multiple benchmarks, at a 30% lower cost. Google's Nano Banana series has been the undisputed leader for the past several months until Luma entered the image race from its video generation tool and directly reshuffled the rankings. (Source: VentureBeat)
Apple has announced that WWDC 2026 will open on June 8, teasing "AI Progress." Following last year's visual overhaul, Apple Intelligence needs to deliver on its long-delayed Siri upgrade promise. (Source: TechCrunch / The Verge)
Strategy has restored its potential Bitcoin purchasing power to $42 billion, acquiring $76 million in BTC last week through a common stock sale. Just the previous week, it had made a $16 billion purchase through STRC preferred stock financing. The buying pace has not slowed despite market turbulence. (Source: CoinDesk / Fortune)
According to Bankless, two U.S. senators and the White House have reached a "principled agreement" on stablecoin yield provisions. The transition in crypto regulation from "enforcement-first" to "rule-first" has taken another step forward. (Source: Bankless)
Disclaimer: This content is provided for general branding and informational purposes only and doesn't constitute financial, investment, legal, or tax advice. Any events, rewards, online events, or related information mentioned herein should not be considered a recommendation, solicitation, or invitation to purchase, sell, trade, or otherwise deal in any crypto assets or to use any services. Crypto assets are highly volatile and may result in loss. WEEX services and online events may not be available in all regions and are subject to applicable laws, regulations, and eligibility requirements. You are responsible for ensuring that your use of WEEX services complies with local laws and for carefully assessing the risks before participating in any crypto-related activities.
You may also like

BlackRock and VanEck Revive Bitcoin ETF Momentum with Massive Capital Inflow

Reflecting on Vitalik and Aya's Conversation in Hong Kong: The Ethereum Ecosystem is Entering a Multi-Node Future

Kiyosaki: Only Gold, Silver, Oil, and Bitcoin Will Survive the Next Crash

SBI bets $76M on EDX as institutional crypto race heats up

New Hampshire Rejects $100 Million Bitcoin-Backed Bond Proposal, Republican Lawmaker Slams Short-Sightedness

QIZ Security Secures $17 Million in Seed Funding to Accelerate Post-Quantum Encryption Governance Platform

Jamie Coutts: Bitcoin Approaches the Final Stages of the Bear Market

Ethereum Foundation May Evolve into a 'Mascot'? Diversified Organizations Are Taking Over Its Functions

Multicoin Partner Dialogue: Crypto Market Has Hit Bottom, Three Cryptocurrencies to Watch in This Cycle

Ripple is regulated in Europe before it is classified in America: inside the Luxembourg license

Nokia and AI: How the Cell Phone Manufacturer Reborn in Data Centers

The U.S. CBDC Ban Until 2030 Will Take Effect Without Trump's Signature

Tangem: the risk of laser attacks is "virtually nonexistent"

Crypto IPO market stalls as capital rotates to AI and macro uncertainty weighs

Living in Europe Puts a Target on Your Back for Having Bitcoin

Nano Banana 2 Lite vs. Nano Banana 2: When to Save Your Money and When to Upgrade

Royalty Automation: Is the Market Dispensing with State Bureaucracy?

Haddad Attacks Selic at 14.25%: What Changes in the Fiscal Debate

S&P 500 Earnings in Q2 2026: Highest Increase in 5 Years

Pantera Capital: As Perpetual Contracts Move to Financial Centers, Hyperliquid Aims to Embrace All

Bitcoin: Ki Young Ju Sees a Rebound in the Coming Months

Vitalik Buterin urges Elon Musk to remake X for AI governance

Margex Review 2026: Overview of the Crypto Trading Platform

ESMA targets MiCA crypto custodians with resilience review

From Automotive Finance to Bitcoin and AI Engines: An Analysis of Cango's 'What Not to Do' Strategy

Goldman Sachs Report Analyzes China's AI Large Model Competitive Landscape: Who Will Be the Long-Term Winner?

Strategy's Cryptocurrency Selling Limit Exceeds $1.25 Billion: A Detail Overlooked by the Market

Vitalik: Open to Slowing or Pausing AI, Supports d/acc Platforms

SK Hynix Rings the Bell in New York: Nasdaq Crowds Overflowing








