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In an unusual move for a software investor, Vista launched its own cloud provider, VC2, focused on AI inference. This strategy provides a full-stack, high-performance solution for its portfolio and the broader market, addressing the unique cost and speed requirements of enterprise-grade AI agents.
The anticipated scarcity of AI inference compute is forcing a new VC playbook. Firms predict they will need to broker "special deals" between their own portfolio companies to secure capacity for startups. This transforms the VC value-add from providing cloud credits to acting as a strategic dealmaker for compute, a critical and scarce resource.
The merger combines Lightning AI's software suite with Voltage Park's GPU infrastructure. This vertical integration provides a seamless, cost-effective solution for AI development, from training to deployment, much like Apple controls its hardware and software for a superior user experience.
Nebius's competitive edge is full vertical integration. By controlling the stack "down" to building its own data centers, it gains cost and speed advantages. By building "up" with software platforms, it accesses enterprise markets that competitors focused on raw compute cannot.
CoreWeave argues that large tech companies aren't just using them to de-risk massive capital outlays. Instead, they are buying a superior, purpose-built product. CoreWeave’s infrastructure is optimized from the ground up for parallelized AI workloads, a fundamental shift from traditional cloud architecture.
For PE firms buying founder-owned software companies, AI is a game-changer. It dramatically accelerates paying down the technical debt and modernizing the tech stack—often the biggest hurdles to growth post-acquisition. This allows firms to unlock value faster and more efficiently than ever before.
An AI-native VC firm operates like a product company, developing in-house intelligence platforms to amplify human judgment. This is a fundamental shift from simply using tools like Affinity or Harmonics, creating a defensible operational advantage in sourcing, screening, and winning deals.
Instead of being disrupted by new 'AI-native' PE firms, incumbents like Bain Capital and TPG are forming a joint venture directly with OpenAI. This creates a dedicated 'deployment arm' of forward-deployed engineers to embed AI solutions across their vast portfolio of companies, accelerating enterprise adoption at scale.
Private equity firms are aggressively implementing AI across thousands of their portfolio companies. This isn't just for efficiency; it's a strategy to boost profitability and make these companies, particularly struggling SaaS businesses, more attractive for exit in a tough market. This creates a massive, real-world testbed for enterprise AI.
The joint venture between Google and Blackstone is likely not aimed at the crowded AI training market. Instead, it appears to be a strategic play for the rapidly growing inference market, where demand for running open-source models is exploding and requires different infrastructure.
Asset management giant Brookfield is moving beyond just financing AI infrastructure. It is building its own cloud company, Radiant, to be the primary tenant in its global data centers. This strategy cuts out middlemen like CoreWeave and leverages Brookfield's government connections to target the lucrative "sovereign AI" market.