Two Friday stories that would have read as satire in 2024: the U.S. government has discussed taking direct equity stakes in major AI companies, and Anthropic — fresh off a funding round near $1 trillion — publicly asked the industry to consider slowing down. The AI boom is being nationalized in slow motion, and that changes which stocks win.

Senior administration officials have discussed the federal government taking direct equity stakes in major AI companies — an idea pitched, remarkably, by OpenAI's Sam Altman himself. The administration already holds direct investments in more than ten companies, including Intel (INTC). On the other end of the spectrum, Senator Bernie Sanders is drafting legislation that would transfer 50% of top AI companies' equity into a public wealth fund. You don't have to believe either version becomes law to see the direction: both parties now treat frontier AI as too important to be left entirely to its shareholders — the same political evolution that produced regulated utilities, defense primes, and the mortgage giants.
Add the new executive order increasing AI-industry oversight, the 30-day pre-release review window from earlier this spring, and the fact that OpenAI and Anthropic are both preparing to go public — into an S&P 500 that just confirmed they'll wait 12 months for index inclusion like everyone else — and the picture is coherent: the wild-west phase is ending.
The same Friday, Anthropic published a call for the leading labs to consider slowing development, warning its own models are on a path toward 'recursive self-improvement' — AI improving AI, the feedback loop that keeps safety researchers up at night. The cynics (including the White House AI adviser) call it regulatory capture: a company near a $1 trillion valuation, on track for $50 billion in annualized revenue (up from $9 billion eighteen months ago), asking for rules just as it reaches the front. Both readings can be true. Either way, the call for restraint from inside the house is new — and it lands while AI is now the No. 1 cited reason for U.S. layoffs three months running, at 22% of all 2026 job cuts.
For portfolios, the utility era is clarifying rather than bearish. Regulation is a fixed cost, and fixed costs favor giants: Microsoft (MSFT), Alphabet (GOOGL), Nvidia (NVDA) can fund compliance departments the way they fund cafeterias. Government equity, if it ever arrives, makes Washington a stakeholder in the boom continuing — the opposite of a kill switch. The names at risk are the unprofitable application startups priced for frictionless speed, in a world adding friction.
No new positions on the politics alone — but the architecture holds: infrastructure over applications, balance-sheet giants over borrowed-money startups, and the gold sleeve (IAU, ~12%) as the hedge against the institutional-upheaval scenarios nobody can price — a Fed being restructured, a government buying into tech labs, a trillion-dollar company asking for a speed limit. We also keep Intel (INTC) on the watch list as the most direct 'government as shareholder' beneficiary.
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