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The Allbirds, the Internet-Famous Shoes That Took Silicon Valley by Storm, Are Now All in on AI

Allbirds, the once-popular sustainable shoe brand favored by Silicon Valley elites and celebrities, has announced a drastic pivot from footwear manufacturing to AI infrastructure. On April 15, 2026, the company revealed plans to abandon its shoe business entirely, rebrand as "NewBird AI," and focus on GPU-as-a-service and AI cloud solutions. The move caused its stock to surge over 800% in a single day. The brand, known for its wool-based eco-friendly shoes, had struggled financially in recent years. Revenue fell from a peak of $298 million in 2022 to $152 million in 2025, with cumulative losses of $419 million over five years. In March 2026, Allbirds sold its intellectual property and footwear assets for just $39 million—a fraction of its former $4.1 billion valuation. The company secured up to $50 million in convertible notes to fund the acquisition of GPU hardware for AI compute leasing. However, the announcement lacked details about technical capacity, clients, or infrastructure plans. Critics highlight the high execution risks in the competitive AI infrastructure market, dominated by major cloud providers. The shift reflects a broader trend of companies rebranding around AI to attract investor interest, despite uncertain fundamentals. Allbirds also removed its "public benefit" corporate mission, signaling a departure from its original sustainability ethos. The move underscores the power of AI narrative in today’s capital markets, where storytelling often precedes substance.

marsbitHace 17 hora(s)

The Allbirds, the Internet-Famous Shoes That Took Silicon Valley by Storm, Are Now All in on AI

marsbitHace 17 hora(s)

GameStop Exits and Runs Away, Saylor Is Still Buying

Ryan Cohen, CEO of GameStop, announced the company is divesting its entire Bitcoin holdings of approximately 4,710 BTC (worth around $450 million), transferring them to Coinbase Prime, signaling an intent to sell. This move comes less than a year after GameStop initially invested $513 million in Bitcoin, which represented only about 10.4% of its cash reserves at the time—characterized more as a speculative trial rather than a core strategic commitment. In contrast, Michael Saylor and MicroStrategy continue to aggressively accumulate Bitcoin, even during market downturns, demonstrating a deeply held conviction in the asset. While MicroStrategy’s approach has been all-in, leveraging debt to buy more Bitcoin during dips, GameStop’s exit reflects a lack of long-term belief in Bitcoin as a treasury asset. The divergence highlights a broader trend: the initial “corporate Bitcoin treasury” strategy—where companies buy Bitcoin to potentially boost stock performance—is losing steam as the market corrects. Analysts suggest the space may consolidate, evolve into more sophisticated financial strategies, or see Bitcoin downgraded to a high-risk alternative asset rather than a revolutionary balance sheet choice. GameStop is now pivoting toward becoming a diversified investment holding company, with ambitions to grow into a $100 billion+ enterprise, possibly through acquisitions. The episode underscores a divide between short-term speculators and long-term believers like Saylor, who continues to buy despite volatility. The market will ultimately judge which strategy prevails.

比推02/04 13:15

GameStop Exits and Runs Away, Saylor Is Still Buying

比推02/04 13:15

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