Investment in AI continues to accelerate as companies move from pilot testing to scaled deployment, backed by major capital flows and regional policy support.
Investment Accelerates as AI Matures – SwissCognitive AI Investment Radar

This week’s AI Investment Radar captures another phase in the shifting landscape of AI finance. While macroeconomic pressures persist, companies are moving steadily from early pilots to structured adoption—backed by significant capital commitments and policy alignment.
In the United States, IBM announced a $150 billion investment to support both domestic innovation and long-term AI infrastructure. Meanwhile, Alphabet’s stock lifted as investor confidence in its AI strategy grew, despite lingering concerns around its cloud business. On the other end of the spectrum, Apple is facing investor pressure to clarify its AI roadmap amid slowing iPhone sales and growing tariff anxieties.
Venture activity also continued at pace. Canopy secured a $70 million Series C to apply AI in accounting, and Capably AI closed a $4 million seed round to expand intelligent automation for enterprises. Elsewhere, Goodfire raised $50 million in a Series A backed by Anthropic, targeting enterprise understanding of AI model behavior, while Fortress committed $100 million to Dataminr as it expands its real-time AI capabilities.
Public and policy efforts also featured strongly. The UK government confirmed the rollout of AI Growth Zones, aligning investment with regional development plans. In Europe, fintech firms are already positioning around the EU’s proposed €200 billion AI programme, while Donald Trump Jr.’s visit to Bulgaria underlines rising geopolitical interest in emerging AI markets.
Other highlights include Capgemini’s steady Q1 AI bookings, Google’s continued $75 billion AI spending, and survey data showing that 98% of executives who have invested in AI plan to expand their commitments in 2025.
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Previous SwissCognitive AI Radar: Momentum in Motion.
Our article does not offer financial advice and should not be considered a recommendation to engage in any securities or products. Investments carry the risk of decreasing in value, and investors may potentially lose a portion or all of their investment. Past performance should not be relied upon as an indicator of future results.
Investment in AI continues to accelerate as companies move from pilot testing to scaled deployment, backed by major capital flows and regional policy support.
Investment Accelerates as AI Matures – SwissCognitive AI Investment Radar
This week’s AI Investment Radar captures another phase in the shifting landscape of AI finance. While macroeconomic pressures persist, companies are moving steadily from early pilots to structured adoption—backed by significant capital commitments and policy alignment.
In the United States, IBM announced a $150 billion investment to support both domestic innovation and long-term AI infrastructure. Meanwhile, Alphabet’s stock lifted as investor confidence in its AI strategy grew, despite lingering concerns around its cloud business. On the other end of the spectrum, Apple is facing investor pressure to clarify its AI roadmap amid slowing iPhone sales and growing tariff anxieties.
Venture activity also continued at pace. Canopy secured a $70 million Series C to apply AI in accounting, and Capably AI closed a $4 million seed round to expand intelligent automation for enterprises. Elsewhere, Goodfire raised $50 million in a Series A backed by Anthropic, targeting enterprise understanding of AI model behavior, while Fortress committed $100 million to Dataminr as it expands its real-time AI capabilities.
Public and policy efforts also featured strongly. The UK government confirmed the rollout of AI Growth Zones, aligning investment with regional development plans. In Europe, fintech firms are already positioning around the EU’s proposed €200 billion AI programme, while Donald Trump Jr.’s visit to Bulgaria underlines rising geopolitical interest in emerging AI markets.
Other highlights include Capgemini’s steady Q1 AI bookings, Google’s continued $75 billion AI spending, and survey data showing that 98% of executives who have invested in AI plan to expand their commitments in 2025.
Thank you for reading this post, don't forget to subscribe to our AI NAVIGATOR!
Previous SwissCognitive AI Radar: Momentum in Motion.
Our article does not offer financial advice and should not be considered a recommendation to engage in any securities or products. Investments carry the risk of decreasing in value, and investors may potentially lose a portion or all of their investment. Past performance should not be relied upon as an indicator of future results.
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