The $500 Billion Partnership That Never Launched
While grand promises of a $500 billion AI revolution captivated investors and politicians alike, the much-hyped Stargate Project between SoftBank and OpenAI has hit a wall. The ambitious joint venture, launched with fanfare at the White House, pledged $18 billion each from both tech giants to revolutionize American AI infrastructure.
Six months later? Crickets. The project that was supposed to rival the world’s largest cloud providers can’t even get a single major data center deal inked. Pretty awkward for a venture that promised to invest $100 billion “immediately.” Turns out, building the future is harder than announcing it at press conferences.
Talk is cheap. Building trillion-dollar AI infrastructure? That’s where the real adults show up—or don’t.
Behind closed doors, SoftBank’s Masayoshi Son and OpenAI’s Sam Altman can’t agree on basics like where to put the data centers or who to buy energy from. Classic corporate drama. Instead of a nationwide network of AI computing hubs, they’re now aiming for one measly facility in Ohio. By the end of 2025. Maybe. With the global AI market growth projected at 38.1% annually through 2030, the stakes couldn’t be higher for getting this right.
The trademark? SoftBank owns it. The actual deals happening? OpenAI’s making them without their partner. Talk about an awkward first date that never improved.
While the partnership flounders, OpenAI isn’t exactly waiting around. They’ve bypassed the stalled project entirely by signing a massive $30 billion cloud computing agreement with Oracle. They’ve also inked deals with CoreWeave. Apparently, OpenAI figured out that waiting for committee decisions is for suckers.
The company is still pushing forward with an impressive 1.2 GW facility in Abilene, Texas, under Oracle’s guidance despite the partnership challenges. Despite the mess, SoftBank hasn’t lost faith in AI’s potential. They’ve authorized follow-on investments of up to $40 billion in OpenAI and plan to bring in co-investors for about $10 billion of that. Money talks, even when projects don’t. The company is focusing efforts on their vision to achieve Artificial Super Intelligence as part of what they see as the evolution of the Information Revolution.
The project’s dramatic downscaling has investors nervous. Billions of dollars are on the line, and the slow progress is undermining confidence faster than a tech CEO can say “synergy.”
What was meant to be a four-year masterplan with Microsoft, Oracle, Nvidia, and Arm has turned into a case study of corporate miscommunication. Instead of revolutionizing American AI infrastructure, they’re struggling to agree on a meeting agenda.
The Stargate Project’s current status? One small step for a data center, one giant leap backward for the $500 billion vision they sold everyone on. Sometimes even the biggest tech dreams need more than money to become reality.








