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Rumble to Acquire Germany’s Northern Data in $767 Million AI Cloud Deal

Rumble, the U.S.-based video platform that also hosts Donald Trump’s Truth Social, announced on Monday that it will acquire German AI cloud company Northern Data in an all-stock deal worth about $767 million, sending Rumble’s shares up more than 25% in premarket trading.

Under the terms of the agreement, Northern Data shareholders will receive 2.0281 newly issued Rumble Class A shares for each share held, representing a 12.99% discount to Northern Data’s last closing price. The acquisition gives Rumble access to Northern Data’s AI computing arm, Taiga, and its large-scale data center unit, Ardent.

The deal also includes a $150 million GPU-leasing agreement with Tether, the cryptocurrency firm that owns roughly 48% of Rumble, as well as $200 million in tax liability support from Rumble. Upon completion, Rumble will gain control of 22,400 Nvidia GPUs, significantly boosting its AI computing capacity.

Tether, which invested $775 million in Rumble in December 2024, has agreed to become an anchor customer of the combined group, supporting long-term AI infrastructure demand.

Following the merger, Northern Data shareholders will hold 30.4% of the new company, which will operate under Rumble’s name. The deal is expected to close in the second quarter of 2026, after which Northern Data will delist from the stock market.

Northern Data had withdrawn its 2025 forecast in October amid volatility in the GPU market, but the merger positions both companies to capitalize on rising global demand for AI data centers.

CoreWeave Cuts Revenue Forecast After Data Center Delay, Shares Drop

CoreWeave (CRWV.O), a cloud infrastructure company backed by Nvidia, trimmed its annual revenue forecast on Monday after delays at a third-party data center partner disrupted operations, overshadowing strong quarterly results driven by soaring demand for AI computing services.

Shares fell more than 6% in extended trading, after Chief Financial Officer Nitin Agrawal forecast 2025 revenue between $5.05 billion and $5.15 billion, down from a previous estimate of $5.15 billion to $5.35 billion. Analysts had expected around $5.29 billion, according to data from LSEG.

CoreWeave said the customer impacted by the delay agreed to extend the contract’s expiration date, ensuring the total deal value remains intact, though the company did not name the client.

Despite the setback, the company posted a strong September quarter, with revenue more than doubling to $1.36 billion, beating Wall Street expectations of $1.29 billion.

CoreWeave has emerged as a major infrastructure provider for AI-driven workloads, securing high-profile contracts such as a $14 billion deal with Meta Platforms and a $6.5 billion partnership with OpenAI, both of which rely on its vast GPU-powered cloud network.

Once focused on Ethereum mining, CoreWeave has successfully repurposed its powerful GPU infrastructure to fuel the global AI cloud boom. However, its rapid growth has also exposed challenges — including rising chip prices, competition for computing capacity, and high expansion costs.

The company now expects to more than double capital spending next year, investing between $12 billion and $14 billion to meet surging demand.

CoreWeave shares have more than doubled since going public earlier this year at $40 per share, giving the firm a market capitalization above $50 billion, though its operating margin slipped to 16% in Q3 from 21% a year earlier.

Amazon’s $38 Billion OpenAI Deal Signals Major Comeback in the AI Race

Amazon has struck a $38 billion cloud deal with OpenAI, marking a significant win for the company’s Amazon Web Services (AWS) division and a major step toward reclaiming lost ground in the artificial intelligence boom. The agreement comes after Amazon had faced mounting criticism for lagging behind rivals Microsoft and Google in securing AI partnerships and deploying consumer-facing language models.

After years of dominance in the cloud industry, Amazon’s market share slipped to 29% by September — down from 34% before ChatGPT’s debut in 2022, according to Synergy Research Group. The new partnership with OpenAI, however, suggests AWS is regaining momentum. The deal will allow OpenAI to use Amazon’s infrastructure, including its custom-built Trainium chips, to train next-generation models.

Analysts said the collaboration, though smaller than OpenAI’s $250 billion commitment with Microsoft’s Azure or Oracle’s $300 billion deal, is strategically vital for Amazon. “It’s a key first step in Amazon’s effort to partner with a company that will spend over a trillion dollars on computing power in the coming years,” said Mamta Valechha of Quilter Cheviot.

The announcement sent Amazon’s shares up 5%, hitting a record high. The company has recently expanded its AI footprint, including the launch of Project Rainier, an $11 billion AI data center in Indiana where models from startups like Anthropic are being trained. CEO Andy Jassy is also pushing a leaner management structure to boost efficiency, as Amazon plans to spend around $125 billion in capital expenditures this year — outpacing Alphabet’s $93 billion.

Analysts expect the OpenAI partnership to increase AWS’s backlog by about 20% in the fourth quarter, potentially adding $40 billion in future revenue.