『Apple's $30B Broadcom Deal, H200 China Exemptions & Private Credit's $700B Data Centre Bet』のカバーアート

Apple's $30B Broadcom Deal, H200 China Exemptions & Private Credit's $700B Data Centre Bet

Apple's $30B Broadcom Deal, H200 China Exemptions & Private Credit's $700B Data Centre Bet

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(00:00:00) Apple's $30B Broadcom Deal, H200 China Exemptions & Private Credit's $700B Data Centre Bet
(00:00:29) Broadcom's Five-Customer ASIC Platform
(00:01:27) US Onshoring: Scale and Execution Risk
(00:02:06) China's H200 Exemption Window
(00:02:39) Private Credit's $700B Infrastructure Bet
(00:03:17) TSMC Chokepoint and Stranded Asset Risk
(00:03:48) Key Watchpoints

Apple has committed thirty billion dollars to Broadcom for custom RF and ASIC chips through 2031 — making it the fifth hyperscaler-tier customer on Broadcom's platform, alongside Google, Meta, ByteDance, and OpenAI. This episode examines what that consolidation means for Broadcom's competitive position as a genuine structural alternative to Nvidia for companies determined to own their silicon rather than rent it.

Broadcom is investing one-and-a-half billion dollars in its Fort Collins facility to support a target of fifteen billion domestically manufactured chips. The commitment is real, but the execution risks — labour availability, yield rates, and US cost structure — remain unresolved. Apple's deal is also the most concrete single capex expression of the Trump administration's domestic chip manufacturing push yet.

Elsewhere, China is permitting limited Nvidia H200 purchases for its top AI firms through a case-by-case regulatory exemption process. That signals a shift from blanket export controls to managed access — a channel, not a reopened market.

On the capital side, Apollo, Blackstone, KKR, and Ares have all launched data centre financing platforms in the last thirty days. Private credit is targeting roughly seven hundred billion dollars of the estimated one-point-seven-five trillion needed in global data centre capex through 2028. But US relative value is already compressing as banks enter aggressively — Europe and power-and-cooling infrastructure are the less saturated plays.

Underpinning all of it: TSMC remains the production chokepoint for advanced AI silicon, and no amount of private capital resolves a geopolitical disruption to Taiwan. Debt investors are already shortening loan terms to manage GPU obsolescence risk. The ten-year infrastructure thesis is under active revision.

This episode includes AI-generated content.
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