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Energy Transfer Signs Long-Term Natural Gas Supply Deal with CloudBurst

Energy Transfer (ET.N), a leading U.S. pipeline operator, announced a long-term natural gas supply agreement with CloudBurst Data Centers, a private company based in Denver. This deal focuses on supporting the development of CloudBurst’s data center in Central Texas. Shares of Energy Transfer rose by 2.1% following the announcement.

As power demands from AI continue to rise and grid infrastructure advances slowly, many data centers are seeking more direct energy sources, bypassing traditional utilities. This shift is expected to significantly increase natural gas consumption in the coming years.

Under the agreement, Energy Transfer will supply up to 450,000 million British thermal units (MMBtu) of firm natural gas daily through its Oasis Pipeline to CloudBurst’s campus near San Marcos, Texas. The supply is contingent upon CloudBurst making a final investment decision (FID) with its customer. The natural gas will be used to generate nearly 1.2 gigawatts of electric power for the data center’s operations, with the supply set to continue for at least 10 years starting with Phase 1 of the project.

This agreement marks Energy Transfer’s first commercial arrangement to directly supply natural gas to a data center. RBC Capital Markets analyst Elvira Scotto viewed the deal as a promising step for midstream companies looking to expand into the AI and data center sectors.

CloudBurst is expected to make its FID later this year, with the facility potentially becoming operational by the third quarter of 2026.

OpenAI Co-founder Sutskever’s Startup SSI in Talks for $20 Billion Valuation

Safe Superintelligence (SSI), a startup co-founded by OpenAI’s former chief scientist Ilya Sutskever, is reportedly in discussions to raise funding at a valuation of $20 billion. This would mark a significant increase from its previous $5 billion valuation during a September funding round, where it raised $1 billion from investors like Sequoia Capital, Andreessen Horowitz, and DST Global.

SSI’s talks come at a time when high-profile AI ventures are facing a reappraisal of their valuations following Chinese startup DeepSeek’s release of a cost-effective AI model. Despite not yet generating any revenue, SSI’s mission is to develop “safe superintelligence” that is both smarter than humans and aligned with human interests. However, much of the company’s work and approach remains under wraps, fueling intrigue among investors.

The company’s founders include Daniel Gross, previously of Apple, and Daniel Levy, a former OpenAI researcher. While SSI’s approach to AI is still not widely known, Sutskever’s reputation for groundbreaking work in AI, particularly in scaling and inference techniques, has garnered significant attention. SSI’s focus on “scaling in peace” aims to insulate progress from short-term commercial pressures, a stark contrast to the trajectory of OpenAI, which shifted to commercial products after the success of ChatGPT in 2022.

The conversation around SSI’s valuation highlights the ongoing competition in the AI space, with OpenAI in talks to potentially double its valuation to $300 billion, and rival Anthropic nearing a funding round that would value it at $60 billion.

Amazon Shares Drop as Cloud Growth Misses Expectations

Amazon’s stock fell by 4% on Friday after the company’s quarterly cloud computing revenue growth fell short of investor expectations. The disappointing results reflected a slowdown in growth at Amazon Web Services (AWS), which posted a 19% increase in revenue to $28.79 billion. This figure was slightly below the anticipated $28.87 billion. The performance echoed similar disappointments from other major tech giants, including Microsoft and Alphabet, who also saw cloud revenue growth fail to meet expectations.

The missed expectations came as cloud companies, particularly those heavily investing in AI, are under greater scrutiny. AWS’s growth rate matched that of the previous quarter, raising concerns among analysts about potential capacity constraints or other unidentified issues.

The disappointing results led to a $100 billion drop in Amazon’s market value. However, Amazon’s stock has still risen about 4% in 2025, outpacing losses seen by Microsoft and Alphabet, whose stocks have fallen by 3%. Despite this drop, Amazon’s shares continue to be favored by analysts, with 68 recommending buying the stock and no analysts advising to sell.