Jason Thomas
Head of Global Research & Investment Strategy at Carlyle, where he helps formulate firmwide investment strategy, serves as CIO for managed accounts, and advises Carlyle investment committees; he is a frequent market commentator on AI-related capital spending, infrastructure, energy demand, and macroeconomic trends.
High-Bandwidth Memory Repricing Pushes SK Hynix and Micron Past $1 Trillion
SK Hynix and Micron’s rise past $1 trillion in combined market value was presented on Bloomberg Technology as a sign that investors are repricing high-bandwidth memory as a constraint on AI infrastructure. Bloomberg’s Ryan Vlastelica said the gains reflected growing appreciation that memory demand is feeding directly into revenue and share prices, while Ian King cautioned that memory has long been a volatile commodity business built around supply cycles. The broader argument was that the AI boom is exposing limits in hardware supply, export-control enforcement and power capacity, not simply lifting technology stocks.
Electricity Grids Become the New Bottleneck for AI Growth
Bloomberg Primer argues that electricity grids have become a central constraint on economic growth as AI, electric vehicles and heat pumps push demand higher after decades of flat consumption in many Western countries. The piece contrasts China’s continuous grid buildout with stalled Western systems, and follows efforts including superconducting cables, grid-stabilizing machines for renewable-heavy systems and Nigerian mini-grids. Its central claim is that countries able to expand and stabilize power delivery will be better positioned to capture the next wave of industrial and digital growth.