Your newsletter digest — June 9, 2026

Your newsletter digest — June 9, 2026

One source today: Ben Thompson's Monday Daily Update on Google's $30B compute deal with SpaceX, what Broadcom's earnings really say about AI demand, and Apple's WWDC bet — building its own AI stack for Siri rather than routing through third-party models.

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2026/6/9 · 8:12
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One source today: Ben Thompson's Monday Daily Update, covering three stories that ended up telling the same story from different angles — the AI infrastructure race is accelerating, and the winners are whoever holds Nvidia GPUs.

AI infrastructure: who's buying compute from whom

Google signs a $30 billion deal to rent compute from SpaceX

Disclosed in SpaceX's SEC IPO filing on June 8, Google has committed to pay SpaceX $920 million per month for access to roughly 110,000 Nvidia GPUs hosted at xAI's data centers. The arrangement runs from October 2026 through June 2029 — about 32 months, over $30 billion total.
  • Google described it as "bridge capacity" for Gemini Enterprise, whose agent demand has exceeded internal forecasts. The short-term framing matters: Google is not outsourcing its infrastructure strategy, it's buying time while its own buildout catches up.
  • The deal is the second major compute rental SpaceX has signed in as many months — Anthropic took 300 megawatts at SpaceX's Colossus data centers in Tennessee for $1.25B/month in May. The two deals together add more than $26 billion to SpaceX's annual revenue run rate, conveniently timed a week before its $1.75 trillion IPO.
  • Thompson's read: the Google deal, like Anthropic's before it, confirms that there is real demand for every GPU that gets built. That's conventionally bullish for Nvidia — the neutral beneficiary of every hyperscaler fighting over Nvidia-built infrastructure, regardless of who owns the data center.
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Broadcom earnings: strong numbers, selloff anyway

Broadcom's latest quarter: revenue up 48% to $22.19B, beating estimates. AI semiconductor revenue more than doubled to $10.8B. The stock still dropped 12-15%.
  • The selloff wasn't about the numbers — it was about what Broadcom didn't say. Management declined to raise its AI revenue guidance for fiscal 2027 (still targeting $100B), and disclosed that Alphabet is diversifying its TPU suppliers, bringing in MediaTek and ramping in-house silicon. Broadcom's Alphabet share could fall from ~95% today to ~65% by 2028.
  • CNBC's analysts read this as profit-taking at extreme valuations, not a demand signal. Broadcom is still growing 50%+; the implied concern is that custom AI chip contracts are more fragile than they look when customers get big enough to build their own.
  • The Nvidia connection: Broadcom's relative weakness is, paradoxically, evidence that Nvidia's model holds. Custom ASICs work for hyperscalers with predictable, at-scale workloads — but when customer concentration risk materializes this fast, the universal GPU case gets stronger, not weaker. Thompson's piece title says it plainly: both the SpaceX deal and Broadcom's earnings "seem bullish for Nvidia."
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Apple at WWDC: the AI politics question

Apple introduces Siri AI — and a different bet on the stack

Apple kicked off WWDC 2026 on June 8 by announcing "Siri AI," a rebuilt assistant running on next-generation Apple Intelligence. The new Siri has personal context (your messages, emails, photos), world knowledge (real-time internet answers with follow-up), and on-screen awareness. A dedicated Siri app with iCloud-synced conversation history ships to developers today; a broader beta comes later this year.
  • The architecture is Apple's own: on-device foundation models plus Private Cloud Compute, with no user data stored and Apple-verified privacy claims. This is the part Thompson frames as "AI politics." While earlier speculation pointed to Claude or Gemini integrations for the new Siri, Apple shipped its own foundation-model stack — a quiet but consequential answer to the question of whether Apple routes its AI through third parties or owns the layer.
  • The WWDC hardware caveat: iPhone 16+, iPhone 15 Pro/Max, and M1+ iPads/Macs get the core Siri AI experience; the best on-device model and improved voice/dictation requires iPhone Air or iPhone 17 Pro/Max or M4+ Mac with 12GB RAM. EU iOS/iPadOS rollout is delayed while Apple works through regulatory compliance; China is also excluded for now.
  • Thompson's lens going in: he said he was watching for "what Apple is looking for at WWDC" around AI politics specifically. Apple's move to ship its own foundation models — rather than anchor the new Siri to OpenAI or Google — keeps the iPhone's AI value chain inside Apple's walls. Whether that bet holds as third-party models keep improving is the question that will define Apple's next few software cycles.
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One thread to watch

Three stories, one question: where does AI value accrete?
Google's $30B compute rental and Broadcom's custom-silicon wobble are converging signals. Hyperscalers need more GPUs than they can build or buy on schedule — so they rent them from SpaceX. Custom chips lose customers the moment those customers get big enough to diversify or build their own. Nvidia, designing neither the data center nor the end model, sits in the middle as the neutral tax collector.
Apple's bet is the opposite direction: own the full stack, keep value inside the hardware/software loop, avoid the dependency. The tension between these two models — rent infrastructure vs. own it; depend on third-party AI vs. build your own — is the core strategic question of the next three years.
Thompson's June 8 update is the clearest single-day illustration of that split yet.
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