Musk’s US$5b xAI gamble: Early X poll shows majority backing AI expansion

Malay Mail

SAN FRANCISCO, July 24 — Tesla CEO Elon Musk has launched a poll asking users on social media platform X whether the electric carmaker should invest US$5 billion (RM23.4 billion) in his artificial intelligence startup xAI — with early votes showing most in favour of the move.

“Board approval & shareholder vote are needed, so this is just to test the waters,” Musk said of the poll which came on the heels of Tesla posting its lowest profit margin in five years on price cuts and increased spending on AI projects.

During Tesla’s earning conference call, Musk said xAI would be “helpful in advancing full self-driving and in building up the new Tesla data center,” adding that there are opportunities to integrate xAI’s chatbot, Grok, with Tesla’s software.

Nearly three hours after the poll was posted, roughly 386,000 people had participated with 70 per cent voting in favour of the investment.

Tesla did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment, while xAI could not be reached for comment.

Musk, the world’s richest person, launched xAI last year, hoping to build an alternative to ChatGPT. The startup raised US$6 billion in a series B funding in May, attaining a post-money valuation of US$24 billion. Backers include Andreessen Horowitz and Sequoia Capital.

Musk has previously said that he plans for a quarter of xAI to be owned by investors in X, formerly known as Twitter, which he bought for US$44 billion although the social media firm’s value has plunged since then.

On the earnings call, Musk also dismissed concerns that he may be diverting resources from Tesla to some of his other companies.

In June, CNBC reported that he had ordered Nvidia to ship thousands of AI chips destined for Tesla to xAI and X. Musk said Tesla’s data centre was full and there was no place to put the chips.

Musk is a frequent poller on X. In 2021, he asked Twitter users about whether he should sell 10 per cent of his Tesla stake and commenced selling shares just days after the poll. — Reuters


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