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EU Moves to Curb Reliance on U.S. Cloud Giants in Major Push for Digital Sovereignty

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The European Union is preparing a significant escalation in its drive for technological independence, with officials considering new rules that could restrict governments across the bloc from using American cloud providers to process sensitive public-sector data.

The discussions, now taking place inside the European Commission ahead of a major “Tech Sovereignty Package” expected later this month, mark one of the clearest signs yet that Europe is moving to reduce its dependence on U.S. technology infrastructure amid worsening geopolitical and economic tensions with Washington.

According to officials familiar with the talks, cited by CNBC, the proposed measures would not completely ban U.S. cloud companies from operating in Europe’s public sector. However, they could sharply limit the ability of American providers such as Amazon Web Services, Microsoft, and Google Cloud to host or process highly sensitive government information in sectors including finance, healthcare, and judicial systems.

“The core idea is defining sectors that have to be hosted on European cloud capacity,” one European Commission official told CNBC.

The move pinpoints growing alarm in Europe over what policymakers increasingly see as a vulnerability: the bloc’s overwhelming dependence on U.S. technology firms for critical digital infrastructure.

For years, American hyperscalers have dominated Europe’s cloud market, providing the backbone for everything from government databases and hospital systems to banking operations and enterprise computing. But that dependence has become politically sensitive as relations between Brussels and the administration of Donald Trump have deteriorated over trade disputes, industrial policy, defense spending, and technology regulation.

European officials have also become increasingly concerned about the implications of the U.S. CLOUD Act, a 2018 law that allows American law enforcement authorities to request data from U.S.-based companies regardless of where the information is physically stored. That legislation has fueled fears within Europe that sensitive public-sector information hosted on American platforms could ultimately fall under U.S. legal jurisdiction.

As a result, digital sovereignty has rapidly evolved from a niche policy issue into a central strategic priority for the European Union.

The upcoming “Tech Sovereignty Package,” expected to be unveiled on May 27, is designed to strengthen Europe’s autonomy in key technological sectors, particularly cloud infrastructure, semiconductors, and artificial intelligence.

The package is expected to include the Cloud and AI Development Act and Chips Act 2.0, both aimed at encouraging the growth of European-controlled alternatives to dominant U.S. and Asian technology providers.

One Commission official said the current discussions focus specifically on public-sector workloads rather than private companies. Still, the proposals could fundamentally reshape the cloud computing landscape across Europe because government contracts are among the most valuable and strategically important parts of the market.

Under the proposals being discussed, governments and public institutions handling highly sensitive information could be required to use sovereign European cloud infrastructure or platforms operating under stricter European oversight.

“U.S. cloud providers could face restrictions in certain sensitive and strategic sectors,” one official said.

The discussions underscore how Europe is increasingly viewing technology infrastructure through the lens of national security and geopolitical resilience rather than simply efficiency or cost. That shift has accelerated dramatically since the outbreak of multiple global crises in recent years, including the pandemic, semiconductor shortages, the war in Ukraine, and escalating tensions between the United States and China.

European policymakers now worry that dependence on foreign-controlled technology systems could leave the bloc exposed during future geopolitical confrontations or economic disputes. The Commission itself acknowledged earlier this year that Europe faces a “significant problem of dependence on non-EU countries in the digital sphere,” warning such reliance could create vulnerabilities in critical sectors.

The latest cloud sovereignty discussions also reflect broader concerns that Europe risks falling permanently behind the United States and China in the global technology race. American firms currently dominate cloud infrastructure globally, with Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure, and Google Cloud controlling the overwhelming majority of the European cloud market.

European alternatives remain comparatively small and fragmented, though governments across the bloc are increasingly trying to change that. France has emerged as one of the strongest advocates of technological sovereignty. Earlier this year, Paris announced plans to deploy a government-developed video conferencing platform called Visio across state institutions by 2027, replacing services such as Microsoft Teams and Zoom in many official settings.

The European Commission has also begun directly funding sovereign cloud projects. In April, Brussels awarded a €180 million tender to four European cloud initiatives intended to supply infrastructure for EU institutions and agencies. One of the projects includes a partnership involving French defense and aerospace company Thales and Google Cloud, illustrating the complex balancing act Europe faces between reducing dependence on U.S. firms while still leveraging their technology.

The cloud sovereignty push could carry major implications for global technology competition. For American cloud giants, Europe represents one of the world’s most important markets. Any restrictions on handling government data could create both financial and reputational challenges, while also encouraging other regions to pursue similar digital sovereignty strategies.

The proposals also arrive at a moment when cloud infrastructure is becoming even more strategically important because of the explosive rise of artificial intelligence. AI systems require enormous amounts of computing power, storage, and data processing, making control over cloud infrastructure increasingly central to economic competitiveness and national security.

The EU’s strategy appears aimed not only at reducing foreign dependence, but also at ensuring Europe retains greater control over the infrastructure underpinning the next generation of AI-driven economies.

A European Commission spokesperson described the broader package as “about Europe waking up and getting its act together.” The spokesperson added that the initiative would “improve opportunities for sovereign cloud offerings” and support “a more diverse set of cloud and AI service providers.”

However, the proposals face political and practical hurdles. This is because any final measures would require approval from all 27 EU member states, many of which maintain deep technological and commercial ties with U.S. companies. It is also believed that limiting access to American cloud platforms could increase costs, reduce efficiency, and slow innovation for European public institutions.

Yuan Strengthens to Strongest Level in Over Three Years as Beijing Accelerates Currency Internationalization

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China’s central bank has fixed the yuan at its strongest rate against the US dollar in more than three years, underscoring Beijing’s determination to internationalize its currency and reduce reliance on the dollar amid growing global skepticism toward US assets.

According to SCMP, the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) set the yuan’s daily midpoint fixing at 6.8487 per US dollar on Thursday — the strongest level since April 2023. This marked a noticeable tightening from Wednesday’s rate of 6.8562 and continues a steady appreciation trend that has seen the yuan gain 2.64% against the greenback so far this year.

Analysts increasingly expect further strengthening, with some forecasting the currency could reach 6.65 per dollar by the end of 2026. While a stronger yuan aligns with Beijing’s long-term goals of rebalancing the economy toward domestic consumption and enhancing the currency’s international credibility, it also introduces fresh challenges for China’s massive export sector.

The move comes at a time of persistent weakness in the US dollar, which has been weighed down by policy uncertainty in Washington, questions surrounding the Federal Reserve’s independence, and concerns over America’s long-term fiscal sustainability. The US dollar index stood at 97.97 on Wednesday, a sharp decline from over 119 at the start of the year.

Serena Zhou, senior China strategist at Mizuho Securities Asia, said Thursday’s fixing reflected improved risk sentiment in Asian markets following positive signals from the Middle East.

“Today’s fixing more reflects an improvement in Asian market sentiment driven by Middle East developments,” she said. “Expectations that the US and Iran may be approaching a peace deal have lifted equities and improved confidence in the yuan.”

Zhou anticipates the yuan trading around 6.80 this quarter before strengthening further to 6.65 by year-end. She noted that China’s policy objectives, reducing trade imbalances and boosting domestic demand, are “broadly aligned with a gradually stronger currency.”

Beijing’s Push for Yuan Internationalization

The yuan’s rise is part of a broader, deliberate strategy by Beijing to elevate the currency’s role in global finance. China has aggressively promoted cross-border yuan settlement, expanded currency swap lines, and supported the development of offshore yuan markets in hubs like Hong Kong, Singapore, and Dubai.

This momentum is clearly visible in the data. According to the Bank for International Settlements, the yuan’s share of global foreign exchange turnover has climbed to 8.8% from just 2% in 2013. It now ranks as the third most active currency in cross-border trade settlement, with a share exceeding 7%.

Recent developments have added fuel to the trend. In April, the United Arab Emirates indicated it could settle oil transactions in yuan if dollar supplies face disruption. Such moves, though still limited in scale, signal growing interest among commodity producers and emerging markets in diversifying away from the dollar.

The currency’s appreciation is also likely to feature prominently in the upcoming summit between Chinese President Xi Jinping and US President Donald Trump, expected in Beijing in mid-May. Trump has repeatedly accused China of keeping its currency artificially weak to gain unfair trade advantages — a charge that China’s central bank governor firmly rejected during talks in March.

Impact on Exporters and Corporate Profits

Despite the stronger yuan, China’s export machine has shown surprising resilience so far. Customs data showed exports rose 11.9% year-on-year in the first quarter. However, the currency shift is beginning to create tangible financial pressure for individual companies.

Major exporters have reported significant foreign exchange losses in recent months. Electric vehicle giant BYD swung from a 1.9 billion yuan gain in the first quarter of 2025 to a 2.1 billion yuan loss this year — a nearly 4 billion yuan swing that hurt its net profit. Optical module maker Eoptolink saw financial expenses surge 1,678% year-on-year to 522 million yuan, largely due to currency losses, while construction equipment leader Sany Heavy Industry recorded around 800 million yuan in FX-related losses.

Analysts caution against overinterpreting these headline figures. Soochow Securities argued in a January report that Chinese exporters’ competitiveness today relies more on technological superiority, supply chain efficiency, and product quality than on pure price competition. The increasing use of the yuan in trade settlement has also reduced many companies’ exposure to currency swings.

“Large exporters typically hedge against huge currency moves through forward contracts and options,” Zhou noted. “The actual impact is often more manageable than headline figures suggest.”

Exporters are also showing a greater willingness to convert dollar earnings back into yuan as appreciation expectations build, creating additional natural support for the currency.

But for Chinese policymakers, managing the yuan’s rise involves a careful balancing act. A stronger currency helps control imported inflation, supports household purchasing power, and enhances Beijing’s narrative of a stable and reliable financial system. However, too rapid an appreciation could undermine export competitiveness at a time when global demand remains uneven, and trade tensions persist.

The PBOC’s daily fixing mechanism gives authorities significant influence over the currency’s trajectory, allowing them to guide the market while maintaining an appearance of flexibility. The current path suggests Beijing is comfortable with gradual appreciation but remains ready to step in if volatility threatens economic stability.

Peloton Returns to Profit as Subscription Growth and New Partnerships Fuel Turnaround Push

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Peloton delivered a modest but symbolically important quarter on Thursday as the connected fitness company returned to profitability, beat Wall Street revenue expectations, and signaled that its long-running turnaround effort may finally be gaining traction after years of declining demand and financial pressure.

The company reported fiscal third-quarter revenue of $630.9 million for the period ended March 31, ahead of analysts’ expectations of $617.6 million, according to LSEG data. Earnings per share came in at 6 cents, slightly below forecasts of 7 cents.

Peloton posted net income of $26.4 million, or 6 cents per share, a sharp reversal from the $47.7 million loss recorded during the same period a year earlier.

The results underscored a gradual stabilization at a company that became one of the biggest corporate winners of the pandemic-era stay-at-home boom before suffering a painful collapse as gyms reopened, demand weakened, and consumers pulled back discretionary spending amid inflation and higher interest rates.

“The first order of business in earnings is reporting how you did financially, and we feel like that was a pretty good quarter in terms of where we are strategically,” CEO Peter Stern told CNBC.

The latest quarter suggests Peloton’s strategy is increasingly shifting away from relying solely on hardware sales toward building a broader recurring-revenue ecosystem centered on subscriptions, partnerships, and digital fitness services.

While equipment demand remains under pressure compared to the company’s pandemic peak, Peloton said growth in equipment sales and subscription revenue helped improve profitability and cash generation.

Free cash flow jumped nearly 60%, an important metric for investors closely monitoring whether Peloton can sustain its recovery without returning to aggressive borrowing or restructuring. For the full fiscal year, Peloton raised the lower end of its revenue forecast, projecting annual sales between $2.42 billion and $2.44 billion.

The company’s subscription business once again emerged as the financial backbone of the business. Subscription revenue rose 2% year over year to $428 million and exceeded analyst estimates, while connected fitness subscription revenue reached $202.9 million, also ahead of expectations.

However, beneath the stronger financial performance, Peloton continues to face structural challenges. Its paid connected fitness subscriber base fell to 2.66 million from the prior year, signaling that while existing members remain engaged, the company is still struggling to meaningfully expand its core user base in a more competitive and economically pressured environment.

That decline highlights a central issue facing Peloton’s long-term growth ambitions: how to evolve from a pandemic phenomenon into a sustainable global fitness platform. The company has spent the past two years attempting to reinvent itself through cost reductions, leadership changes, pricing adjustments, and strategic partnerships aimed at broadening its reach beyond high-end home exercise equipment.

One of the most notable moves came last month when Peloton partnered with Spotify to make more than 1,400 fitness classes available to Spotify Premium subscribers. The agreement gives Peloton access to significantly wider international audiences while potentially introducing its fitness content to users who may never purchase Peloton hardware.

Stern indicated the partnership had already been incorporated into the company’s guidance because negotiations had been underway for an extended period.

“We’re really excited about our deal with Spotify, that allows us to reach Peloton members in a lot more countries and is also a high margin revenue for us,” Stern said.

Importantly, Spotify users accessing Peloton content are not counted as Peloton subscribers, meaning the partnership could eventually become an additional monetization layer without artificially inflating subscriber metrics.

The strategy is seen as part of a broader shift underway across the fitness industry, where companies increasingly view digital content distribution and subscription ecosystems as more stable revenue streams than hardware sales alone.

Peloton is also attempting to diversify its customer base beyond home users. In March, the company launched new Bike and Tread products designed specifically for commercial gyms and high-traffic fitness centers, marking an effort to expand deeper into institutional fitness markets.

That push could help Peloton capture additional recurring revenue from hotels, corporate wellness programs, and fitness chains at a time when consumer spending remains uneven. The company has simultaneously leaned on pricing changes to improve margins, even as consumers face mounting economic pressure.

Peloton recently raised prices on both its equipment and subscription plans, a move Stern defended as necessary after years of keeping pricing largely unchanged while expanding the platform’s content offerings.

“We’re really sensitive to the fact that people feel stress in this economic environment, and it’s impacting different people in really different ways,” Stern said.

“That being said, we feel like the price changes that we made in Q2 – it was time. We had added a tremendous amount of value over the succeeding three or four years since we previously made any change in our subscription prices.”

The company’s ability to raise prices without triggering a sharper subscriber decline may indicate Peloton still retains strong brand loyalty among its core users, even after years of operational turbulence.

Still, the road ahead remains complicated.

Peloton continues operating in a consumer environment shaped by elevated borrowing costs, inflationary pressure, and shifting exercise habits as more people return to gyms and outdoor activities. The company also faces growing competition from traditional fitness brands, streaming platforms, and technology companies entering the digital wellness space.

At the same time, investors increasingly want evidence that Peloton can evolve into a scalable subscription-driven business rather than remain dependent on cyclical hardware demand. The company’s latest results suggest progress toward that transformation, but the decline in connected fitness subscribers shows the turnaround is still incomplete.

Peloton’s recovery effort is now being closely watched across corporate America because it represents a broader test of whether pandemic-era digital consumer brands can reinvent themselves after the extraordinary conditions that fueled their initial growth disappeared.

For now, Wall Street appears cautiously encouraged that Peloton is at least moving back toward financial stability after several turbulent years marked by layoffs, executive shakeups, inventory problems, and collapsing demand. The challenge ahead will be proving that the company’s improving profitability can translate into durable long-term growth.

Tekedia Capital Portfolio Startup Corgi, Raises $160M Series B at $1.3B Valuation to Expand AI-Powered Insurance Platform

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Tekedia Capital portfolio startup Corgi, an AI-native insurance company, has secured $160 million in a Series B funding round, pushing the company’s valuation to $1.3 billion. The round was led by TCV, with participation from a wide range of new and existing investors, bringing the company’s total funding to more than $268 million.

Investors participating in the round include Oliver Jung, Leblon Capital, Kindred Ventures, Repeat VC, Zone 2 Ventures, Audeo Ventures, Quadri Ventures, First Order Fund, Vocal Ventures, Maiora Ventures, Nordstar, Seven Stars Ventures, HEXA Capital, Alpha Square Group, GSBackers, OurCrowd, Alumni Ventures, Global Growth Fund, and 8188 Capital.

The fresh capital will support Corgi’s expansion beyond its startup-focused insurance offerings into additional sectors, including trucking, payroll, and small-business coverage. The company plans to continue scaling its core platform as demand for AI-driven insurance solutions grows.

Corgi is also moving into new verticals, beginning with trucking, where it plans to bring faster quoting, more adaptive risk models, and coverage aligned with real-world operations.

“Insurance is one of the largest industries in the world, but it’s still built on infrastructure from centuries ago,” said Emily Yuan, co-founder and COO of Corgi. “We started with property management and are expanding into trucking insurance, payroll, and small business, automating some of the hardest workflows in the real economy.”

Corgi’s long-term vision is to modernize one of the most complex sectors in financial services. Traditional insurance is fragmented across TPAs, MGAs, reinsurers, and carriers, resulting in slow processes, disconnected systems, and delayed decision-making. The company is rebuilding this stack from the ground up to enable faster decisions, streamlined operations, and real-time coverage.

“Where other companies might take the boring but safe path, Corgi will always dream bigger, accomplish more, and take more swings for the fences,” said Nico Laqua, co-founder and CEO of Corgi. “We will for sure always be the most passionate, genuine, curious, and ambitious of any company.”

Corgi is an AI-native, full-stack insurance carrier built for startups. As a licensed carrier, Corgi designs and manages insurance end-to-end, using modern infrastructure and AI to power underwriting, policy management, and claims. The company delivers fast, flexible coverage tailored to how startups operate and scale.

Unlike traditional insurance providers that operate mainly as brokers, Corgi functions as an AI-native, full-stack insurance company. While brokers typically do not underwrite their own policies or directly pay claims, instead relying on third-party financial institutions, Corgi designs, sells, and manages its own insurance products internally.

This integrated model allows the company to handle claims directly, reducing delays often associated with traditional insurance processes. By combining proprietary insurance infrastructure with artificial intelligence, Corgi aims to deliver insurance services that are faster, more affordable, and more efficient for customers.

The startup has seen rapid revenue growth across its existing product lines, with annual recurring revenue (ARR) surpassing $40 million since full regulatory approval in July 2025. This reflects a growing demand for its insurance products that prioritize speed, flexibility, and modern operations across multiple industries.

The company’s long-term ambition extends beyond building a conventional insurance business; it seeks to reconstruct the trillion-dollar insurance industry from the ground up by creating modern financial infrastructure designed to serve future generations.

SpaceX and Anthropic Strike High-Stakes AI Infrastructure Deal as Compute Race Expands Beyond Earth

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SpaceX said Wednesday it has signed an agreement giving Anthropic access to Colossus 1, a massive artificial intelligence supercomputer platform, in a deal that underscores how the global AI race is rapidly evolving into a battle over computing power, energy supply, and physical infrastructure.

Anthropic plans to use the additional compute capacity to expand services for subscribers of its Claude Pro and Claude Max AI assistants, according to a statement released by SpaceX.

The partnership brings together two companies that increasingly sit at the center of Washington’s sophisticated technology ambitions: one dominating commercial space launch and satellite infrastructure, the other emerging as one of the strongest challengers to OpenAI and Google in advanced AI systems.

More significantly, the agreement reveals how AI competition is entering a new phase where access to chips, electricity, and data-center scale may matter as much as the sophistication of the models themselves.

SpaceX said Anthropic has also expressed interest in jointly developing “multiple gigawatts” of orbital AI computing capacity, a concept that could fundamentally reshape how the industry thinks about future AI infrastructure.

“The compute required to train and operate the next generation of these systems is outpacing what terrestrial power, land, and cooling can deliver on the timelines that matter,” SpaceX said.

The idea may sound futuristic, but it reflects mounting pressure across the sector as terrestrial AI systems consume enormous amounts of electricity and overwhelm existing computing networks.

Training and operating frontier AI models now requires vast clusters of high-performance GPUs, advanced cooling systems, and uninterrupted energy supplies. Industry analysts estimate the largest technology companies could spend more than $700 billion this year alone on AI infrastructure, with much of that capital flowing into data centers, semiconductor procurement, and power generation.

Anthropic said last month that demand for Claude has led to “inevitable strain on our infrastructure,” which has impacted “reliability and performance” for its users, particularly during peak hours.

The industry’s hunger for compute has become so intense that executives increasingly describe electricity itself as the next major AI bottleneck. That dynamic helps explain why companies are exploring nuclear energy agreements, dedicated power plants, and even space-based infrastructure as potential long-term solutions.

Orbital computing could eventually offer several strategic advantages. Space-based systems would theoretically have access to near-constant solar energy, reduced cooling constraints, and physical separation from terrestrial infrastructure risks such as cyberattacks, grid failures, or geopolitical disruptions.

While such projects remain years away from commercial reality, the fact that companies are openly discussing gigawatt-scale orbital AI systems illustrates how dramatically the economics and ambitions of artificial intelligence have changed over the past two years.

The SpaceX-Anthropic partnership also underpins the growing convergence between the AI, aerospace, and defense sectors.

SpaceX already operates one of the world’s most sophisticated satellite and launch ecosystems through Starlink and its reusable rocket infrastructure. Integrating AI compute capabilities into that ecosystem could eventually position the company as a strategic infrastructure provider not just for communications and defense, but also for distributed global AI networks.

The agreement may also deepen speculation that Elon Musk is seeking to build a broader vertically integrated technology empire spanning rockets, satellites, chips, AI systems, and cloud-scale infrastructure.

That strategy increasingly mirrors trends across the wider industry, where major players are racing to control every layer of the AI stack, from semiconductors and cloud computing to proprietary models and enterprise applications.

The deal is expected to strengthen Anthropic’s position in an increasingly expensive and competitive AI market. Claude has gained traction among enterprise users for coding, reasoning, and long-context AI tasks, helping Anthropic secure major partnerships and multibillion-dollar commitments from large cloud providers and infrastructure companies.

Yet scaling those systems requires enormous compute resources at a time when the global supply of advanced chips remains constrained.

The AI boom has already transformed the semiconductor industry into one of the most strategically important sectors in the world economy. Companies such as Nvidia, AMD, and Intel are benefiting from surging demand for processors used in AI training and inference workloads, while cloud providers are spending aggressively to expand capacity.

At the same time, concerns are growing that the concentration of computing resources among a handful of companies could deepen barriers to entry in AI development and widen the gap between dominant firms and smaller competitors.

The deal also arrives amid heightened geopolitical competition over AI leadership. Governments in the United States, China, and Europe increasingly view AI infrastructure as a national strategic asset tied to economic competitiveness, military capability, and cybersecurity resilience.

Washington has been pushing aggressively to strengthen domestic AI infrastructure and reduce dependence on foreign supply chains, especially as tensions over semiconductors and advanced technologies intensify.

Against that backdrop, alliances such as the one between SpaceX and Anthropic are becoming about more than commercial expansion. They are emerging as part of a broader contest over who controls the next generation of global computing infrastructure.

SpaceX did not disclose the financial terms of the agreement or the scale of compute resources Anthropic will initially receive through Colossus 1. But it explained that Colossus 1 features over 220,000 NVIDIA GPUs, including dense deployments of H100, H200, and next-generation GB200 accelerators.