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AI & TECH

Anthropic leases SpaceX compute as $200B fraud risks erupt in its shadow stock market

Monday, May 18, 2026 · from 5 podcasts
  • Anthropic bypassed competitors to lease a SpaceX data center, signaling compute scarcity now outweighs strategic rivalry.
  • Fraudulent tokenized shares and layered SPVs in Anthropic’s $200B shadow market could collapse at IPO.
  • An AMD audit shows Claude's token usage spiked 170x, costing one project $42,000 monthly for the same work.

Anthropic traded competitive distance for survival. Demand for Claude has outstripped its hardware, forcing the AI lab into a deal with a rival: leasing the Colossus 1 data center controlled by Elon Musk’s SpaceX and xAI. On FYI, Frank Downing explained the 300-megawatt facility’s mixed chip architecture is ideal for inference, allowing Anthropic to run existing models while hoarding its own Nvidia GPUs for research.

"This marks a sharp pivot. Anthropic previously blocked Musk’s xAI from accessing its models. Now, the need for inference capacity has overruled strategic insulation."

- Frank Downing, FYI - For Your Innovation

The pivot reveals a staggering price of entry. Building a one-gigawatt AI data center costs $60 billion upfront. On FYI, Downing noted that if a model builder like Anthropic uses the capacity itself, it can generate $30 billion annually - a two-year payback period that explains the current frenzy. SpaceX aims to bypass terrestrial limits by launching compute clusters into orbit, where Brett Winton expects the shift to begin around 2028.

Meanwhile, Anthropic’s restrictive stock policies have spawned a chaotic $200 billion shadow market. On Bankless, Dio Casares detailed a landscape where layered special purpose vehicles (SPVs) extract 10% fees plus carry, and roughly 10-20% of proposed deals involve fraud or misrepresentation. Brokers sell forward contracts on employee shares that vanish if the employee is fired or sued.

"It’s a gold rush where the middlemen are out-earning the primary investors. The further an investor moves from the cap table, the more they are buying a promise rather than a share."

- Dio Casares, Bankless

Anthropic is now explicitly warning investors. On Bitcoin And, host David Bennett reported the company declared any stock transfer via SPVs or crypto tokens without board approval is void, labeling platforms that imply a $1.5 trillion valuation as potential fraud. This fight for cap table control clashes with a secondary market that Casares predicts will trigger a "logistical nightmare" at IPO, with years of litigation to untangle nested SPV distributions.

The company’s compute crisis is degrading its product. On Nerd Snipe, Theo argued Anthropic routes public users onto inferior Google TPUs and Amazon Trainium chips to reserve Nvidia stacks for researchers. An audit by AMD’s head of AI showed that between January and March, input tokens for similar tasks in Claude Code increased 170x, pushing one project’s estimated monthly costs from $26 to over $42,000.

"The data is staggering: the input tokens required for similar tasks increased by 170x, while output tokens grew 64x. This inefficiency translates to a massive cost explosion."

- Theo, Nerd Snipe

The pressure is structural. On The AI Daily Brief, Nathaniel Whittemore noted Claude Code’s annualized revenue jumped from $1 billion to $2.5 billion in two months, demonstrating the market’s shift from chatbots to autonomous builders. Yet Anthropic’s clash with the Pentagon over military use led the Defense Secretary to designate it a supply chain risk - a fracture that OpenAI capitalized on by signing an agreement with the Department of War. For Anthropic, the race is now threefold: secure enough compute to serve growth, police a fraudulent secondary market, and maintain a product that hasn’t been lobotomized by its own infrastructure choices.

Source Intelligence

- Deep dive into what was said in the episodes

AI InequalityMay 17

  • Nathaniel Whittemore defines Q2 2026 as the AI 'second moment,' shifting from chatbot assistants to workable agentic systems, with stakes marked by billions of weekly users and $650 billion in planned capex.
  • Claude Code revenue grew from $1 billion to $2.5 billion annualized in two months. Anthropic's enterprise share reached 70% of first-time buyers, and its overall revenue run rate hit $19 billion.
  • The quarter saw rapid frontier model releases: GPT-5.2 Codex, Genie 3, Opus 4.6, GPT-5.3 Codex, Sonnet 4.6, Gemini 3.1 Pro, Nano Banana 2, and GPT-5.4, with no single benchmark winner across common tests.
  • OpenClaw became the most starred open-source project on GitHub. Nvidia launched Nemo Claw as an enterprise-grade wrapper, and Anthropic integrated its features into Claude Code and Claude Co-work.
  • Survey data shows 71% of practitioners used vibe coding, 62% used agentic automation, and the average respondent uses 3.5 models. ROI shifted from time savings (13.6% of use cases) to increased output and new capabilities.
  • Customer service AI adoption is mature with 91% of businesses experimenting, but 64% of customers prefer no AI in interactions. Legal AI adoption lags, with only 15% of tasks using AI despite 80% capability.
  • HR AI deployment grew 320% in 12 months, from 19% to 61%. Finance AI adoption faces data quality obstacles, with 91% of firms reporting low impact.
  • Anthropic and the Pentagon clashed over terms for Claude's use, leading to Anthropic being designated a supply chain risk and a subsequent lawsuit. ChatGPT's agreement with the Department of War triggered a 775% surge in one-star reviews.
  • Nathaniel Whittemore argues the capability overhang - the gap between AI's potential and deployed value - is widening, increasing the disparity between leading and lagging companies.
Also from this episode: (2)

Enterprise (1)

  • Enterprise AI shifted from pilots to production, with 40% of enterprises predicted to have working agents by end of 2026. Pulsia, a fully agentic company, reached $6 million annualized revenue with a single founder.

AI & Tech (1)

  • Generative Engine Optimization (GEO) market was under $1 billion in 2025, projected to reach $34 billion by 2034. Sales AI use cases are mature, with 63% categorized as 'primetime' for most organizations.

The $200 Billion Shadow Market Behind Anthropic's Stock | Dio CasaresMay 14

  • Anthropic and Open AI have conducted employee tender offers, allowing staff to sell up to $30 million of shares directly at the round price to reduce off-book secondary transactions.
Also from this episode: (10)

Startups (2)

  • Dio Casares states the private secondary market for stocks like Anthropic and SpaceX operates on a 'Wild West' insider-access model where brokers with connections sell access and find buyers, sometimes doing both.
  • Casares explains two types of private secondaries. Primary secondaries involve new capital entering via SPVs or employee sales approved by the company. The second type involves cashing out existing shareholders, which is more complex and often viewed with distrust by company management.

VC (2)

  • The private market is massive, with recorded secondary transactions plus funding rounds exceeding $200 billion annually, now larger than IPO fundraising. Fees on Anthropic deals can reach 10% plus carry.
  • Platforms like Hive and Forge operate marketplaces for private shares but often do not verify share authenticity or conduct KYC, leading management to send cease-and-desist letters. Their model involves finding discounted blocks and mass-emailing potential buyers.

Markets (4)

  • A significant fraud risk exists where brokers sell fake share certificates; Casares estimates 10-20% of proposed deals may be fraudulent. Another risk involves forward contracts on employee shares that can be rescinded if the employee leaves under adverse circumstances.
  • The complex structure of nested SPVs creates operational and legal risks. Each layer can impose fees and delays in distributing shares post-IPO, as each SPV may have its own rules for distributing cash or stock.
  • Post-IPO, chaos may erupt as nested SPVs navigate DTCC settlement and bank AML procedures. Delays of weeks can occur at each SPV layer, potentially leading to lawsuits from investors who hedged positions expecting immediate liquidity.
  • His firm Patagon aims to professionalize the space by conducting deep due diligence, verifying shares, structuring proper vehicles, and building a platform to streamline the entire investment process for clients.

Regulation (1)

  • Casares argues the market lacks policing because authorities prioritize other crimes like terrorist financing over regulatory filings. This allows the 'Wild West' environment to persist despite existing securities laws.

AI & Tech (1)

  • Casares warns retail investors in tokenized private equity perps or nested SPVs that they often cannot verify underlying assets. He advises trusting gut feelings and being wary of complex, opaque structures.

Anthropic solved their compute problem by buying it from Elon?May 14

  • Theo argues Anthropic's Claude Opus 4.7 is not a meaningful improvement over prior models and comes with user experience regressions due to overly strict safety system prompts.
  • Figma's stock dropped 5% after a competitive announcement from Anthropic, contributing to an 85% decline since its IPO. Ben cites this as evidence of Anthropic's negative market impact.
  • Theo reveals Anthropic confirmed a routing error last year where 0.8% to 16% of Sonnet requests were sent to a dumber, 1M-context version, establishing a precedent for performance regressions via model versioning.
  • Theo's primary conspiracy is that Anthropic now forces all Claude Code users onto the dumber 1M-context model version to route traffic away from scarce Nvidia GPUs and onto partners like AWS and Google TPUs, explaining the performance drop.
  • The hosts claim Anthropic employees use different, superior internal versions of Claude and its tools, creating a disconnect where employees don't experience the external product's failures and dismiss user complaints.
Also from this episode: (5)

AI & Tech (5)

  • Anthropic is aggressively banning third-party tools like T3 Code and OpenClaw that interface with Claude Code. Theo attributes this to a compute crisis and poor caching implementations that increase costs.
  • Theo states OpenClaw's heartbeat function, which polls for tasks, costs him $4.31 daily without active use, extrapolating to roughly $120 monthly in wasted API spend.
  • Ben cites a GitHub issue from an AMD AI head showing a massive spike in Claude Code usage and cost at their company. Input tokens increased 170x and costs jumped from $26 to over $42,000 monthly after model updates.
  • Theo and Ben argue Anthropic's engineering is incompetent, citing recent changes like a new tokenizer, a 5-minute cache TTL, and hidden reasoning data that complicate their stack across three hardware providers, leading to reliability and intelligence issues.
  • Theo attributes Anthropic's problems to a research-first, safety-obsessed culture that devalues engineering and product reliability, creating opaque policies and a 'holier-than-thou' attitude that frustrates developers.

SpaceX And Anthropic Partnership | The Brainstorm EP 131May 13

  • Anthropic has been supply-constrained on compute, restricting user tokens and cutting off research compute, forcing them to lease Colossus 1 - a 300MW, 220,000 GPU data center - from SpaceX to lift capacity limits.
  • Anthropic previously enforced a policy to cut off competitors like XAI from using its models, but the compute deal has reopened communication between them.
  • SpaceX’s vertical integration from chip fabrication to model inference reduces its risk when leasing out compute, as it can more rapidly rebuild capacity.
  • Building a gigawatt-scale AI data center costs roughly $60B: $19B for the facility, $30B for GPUs, and $11B for other IT equipment like CPUs and networking.
  • A gigawatt of leased compute infrastructure generates about $15B annually; a model provider operating on that scale can generate $30B in revenue.
  • OpenAI’s revenue scaled with compute; they generated $20B on roughly 2 gigawatts early this year, implying about $20B per effective gigawatt for inference.
  • Revenue per watt is increasing as model utility and enterprise willingness to pay rise, creating pricing power for both infrastructure providers and model companies.
  • Space-based AI compute economics hinge on Starship launch costs; at $300/kg, launching a gigawatt costs $7.5B, beating terrestrial facility costs.
  • Manufacturing satellites on a production line offers cost efficiencies over building unique terrestrial data centers, where $5B of the $19B facility cost is labor.
  • Compute scarcity on Earth means AI companies like Anthropic would pay a premium for space-based watts even before launch costs break parity, valuing velocity over price.
  • ARK analysts project SpaceX could begin scaling space-based AI compute in 2028-2029, reaching tens of gigawatts per year in the early 2030s.
Also from this episode: (1)

Energy (1)

  • Small modular nuclear reactors are more likely to scale in the US than gigawatt plants, fitting incremental demand like offsetting retired coal plants.

Anthro Apology | Bitcoin NewsMay 12

Also from this episode: (10)

AI & Tech (2)

  • Anthropic warns investors that tokenized products offering exposure to its private shares are invalid without board approval, labeling them as potential fraud.
  • A PreStokes dashboard showed Anthropic with an implied valuation above $1.5 trillion, despite the platform holding only roughly $23 million in total assets.

Protocol (7)

  • The draft Clarity Act includes a provision barring the SEC from classifying any token serving as the principal asset of a US-listed spot ETF as of 01/01/2026 as a security, which would cover Bitcoin and Ethereum.
  • The Clarity Act draft creates a 60-day certification window where token issuers can submit evidence to the SEC; the agency's non-response effectively grants regulatory legitimacy.
  • Bitfarms, now Kiel Infrastructure, reported a $145 million net loss in Q1 2026 as it transitioned from Bitcoin mining to AI, selling 2,690 Bitcoin for $20 million in proceeds.
  • German Finance Minister Lars Klingbeil plans to eliminate the tax exemption for digital assets held over 12 months, aiming to close a €98 billion deficit in the 2027 budget.
  • US Indo-Pacific Command confirmed it is running a Bitcoin node and experimenting with the protocol, citing its utility as a computer science tool for power projection.
  • Jason Lowrey's 'Soft War' thesis argues Bitcoin's proof-of-work creates a 'macro chip' that can project power in cyberspace, though critics contend it cannot secure data external to Bitcoin's own asset.
  • Three Tennessee men were federally indicted for a California crypto wrench attack spree, using delivery driver disguises to rob victims; one victim was forced to transfer $10M in Bitcoin and $3M in Ethereum.

Business (1)

  • April CPI data showed prices rose 0.6% month-over-month and 3.8% year-over-year, with core CPI at 0.4% monthly and 2.8% yearly.