
US power stocks plummet as DeepSeek raises data center demand doubts
NEW YORK/HOUSTON, Jan 27 (Reuters) - Shares of U.S. power, utility and natural gas companies sold off on Monday in some of the biggest recorded one-day drops, as new AI technology from Chinese start-up DeepSeek cast doubt on a projected surge in U.S. electricity demand and tech spending.
Power producers were among the biggest winners in the S&P 500 last year on expectations of ballooning demand from the energy-guzzling data centers needed to scale Big Tech's artificial intelligence technologies.
The wider adoption of AI models like the one developed by DeepSeek, which it says it built in under two months and is cheaper than models currently used by U.S. companies, could result in less electricity demand overall and result in a smaller power build-out, analysts and economists said.
"If proven true, the efficiencies used within DeepSeek's open-source model can be applied by the hyperscalers to their models, which would result in a more moderated demand," analysts with Evercore ISI said in a note.
Big Tech firms, which are also known as hyperscaling data center developers, have devoted tens of billions of dollars in AI data center development over the last year.
In the U.S., data centers consumed roughly 4.4% of electricity in 2023 but are anticipated to use 6.7% to 12% of all power by 2028, according to a report produced by the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.
Independent power provider Constellation Energy (CEG.O), opens new tab, whose shares had shot up about 100% in 2024 largely on its ability to sell nuclear and gas-fired power to U.S. data centers, sunk by about 20% in trading on Monday after news of DeepSeek's advancements.
Vistra (VST.N), opens new tab was down 30% and rival Talen Energy Corp (TLN.O), opens new tab was down 22%.
DeepSeek AI could also threaten the dominance of current AI leaders, which are based in Silicon Valley, and slow their deployment of data centers. DeepSeek's AI assistance had overtaken U.S. rival ChatGPT in downloads from Apple's app store on Monday.
But with the wider adoption of AI, even with more energy-efficient models, power demand could surge everywhere, said Ed Hirs, an energy economist at the University of Houston. He cautioned that a sell-off of power stocks could be short-sighted and short-lived.
"In this instance, if DeepSeek turns out to be what everybody wants, and they sell to U.S. companies, and the U.S. companies change their algorithms to adopt to it, it just means a greater, faster broader development," Hirs said.
Still, electricity companies, and even producers of feedstocks related to power generation, were under pressure.
Earlier this month, Constellation acquired private natural gas producer Calpine Energy for $16.4 billion in one of the largest U.S. power industry deals ever, a sign of rising expectations that demand for gas will grow as a generation source for AI.
Shares of publicly-traded producers of natural gas, which makes up the biggest share of fuels used to generate electricity in the United States, also slumped.
EQT Corp (EQT.N), opens new tab was off 9%. Midstream operator Energy Transfer (ET.N), opens new tab, which said it has received connection requests from dozens of data centers, was down about 7%.
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The Independent
2 hours ago
- The Independent
‘It is a better programmer than me': The harsh reality of being laid off because of AI
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'It was kind of like having an interview with an automated voicemail,' she said, adding that the 'robot' asked her questions about herself and responded with generic answers, leaving her unhopeful the technology would help her get to the next round. After several months unemployed, Jane obtained a government position in April, before starting a new gig in sales just a few weeks ago. 'What's happening is there's a huge white collar slowdown,' said Jane. 'I think jobs are going away.' Workers across the country are grappling with the same issue, as tech CEOs sound the alarm on a potential job market bloodbath in the coming years. In an Axios interview last month, Dario Amodei, the CEO of Anthropic, a leading artificial intelligence company, predicted AI could eliminate half of all entry-level white-collar jobs and increase unemployment to 10 to 20 percent within the next five years. The general public is 'unaware that this is about to happen,' he told the outlet. 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Daily Mail
2 hours ago
- Daily Mail
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NBC News
3 hours ago
- NBC News
He invented a viral watch-cleaning device. Now he says the American dream has been 'ripped out of my hands' by Trump tariffs.
Checkbook Chronicles Anthony Mendoza, a veteran Army major and father of two daughters, saw his invention as a pathway to entrepreneurial success, That dream is hanging by a thread. June 15, 2025, 8:04 AM EDT By Rob Wile President Donald Trump's April 10 announcement that he was raising tariffs on China to 145% left Anthony Mendoza shattered. The 41-year-old Phoenix resident, father of two and veteran U.S. Army major had stumbled onto an invention that allows amateur antique watch aficionados to gently rinse a timepiece's components. He named it ChronoClean, and the device began to go viral. By last winter, Mendoza had sold out of his first 500 units. Yet with a single social media post, the president seems to have dashed Mendoza's plans for the future of his business. 'I really felt like my American dream had been ripped out of my hands,' Mendoza said. 'And that our own president and government was letting it happen.' 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The president first imposed a total of 20% duties on exports from China in early March. Over the next several weeks, the level would steadily rise until it hit a high of 145% in the second week of April. At that point, Mendoza thought he'd have to abandon the ChronoClean entirely, just as the second set of products was ready to ship. The duties would stay at that three-figure level for about a month more, shaking global markets and keeping Mendoza awake at night. Having recovered from a devastating divorce and still unable to find steady work after retiring from a 20-year career in the Army, Mendoza had pinned his entrepreneurial hopes on the success of ChronoClean. Finally, on May 12, the Trump administration announced a breakthrough after trade talks between the U.S. and China in Geneva. That agreement brought the duty level back down to what was initially announced as 30%. Mendoza jumped, telling his Chinese liaison to immediately ship the units. Even at the newly lowered tariff level, Mendoza's shipping costs doubled from $1,100 on the first batch of ChronoClean devices to $2,650 for the second. Looking ahead To this day, Mendoza must grapple with the uncertain environment Trump's on-again, off-again tariff pronouncements have created. As a backup plan, Mendoza says he has routed some orders directly to the U.K. to avoid the U.S. duties. But it's an expensive hedge: Mendoza said it cuts into his bottom line. He remains anxious about further escalations from Trump. 'If it goes back to 145%, I won't be able to import my next shipment into the U.S.,' Mendoza said. He has a lead time of about five months, and has to be able to make decisions with certainty. 'Because they are selling so well, I need to start working on my next order now,' he said. A closer look at this moment in time Mendoza describes himself as having 'strong political feelings.' 'I don't like the way things are right now,' he said. He called the Trump administration's insistence on moving vast manufacturing operations from overseas to the U.S. 'a slap in the face' to small-business owners. 'It sounds great if you don't understand how logistics work. For my product, the reason it sells is because it's the cheapest you can buy,' Mendoza said, pointing to the reality that affordable manufacturing outside of the U.S. helps him keep his prices low for customers. As a single parent, Mendoza is working to try to put his two daughters through college. Between those expenses and funding ChronoClean, Mendoza said his financial cushion is thin. It's all the more wrenching given what he's gone through, he said. 'It's like, 'You've been deployed, you started as a private, retired a major, got through a horrible divorce, you're a great father and now you've started your own business and invented a product people want — they're begging for it,'' he said of ChronoClean. 'Then here comes your own government to shatter that dream, so big businesses and Elon Musk can get richer," Mendoza said. "To me, that's not the American dream. It's small business, middle America, everyone should have a good chance at this. [The tariffs] will potentially put me out of business, it's hard to wrap your head around it.' Rob Wile Rob Wile is a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist covering breaking business stories for