President Trump just made a new AI decision involving Elon Musk… | And the biggest winner is likely to be RAD Intel. | Its technology already analyzes billions of signals, powering Fortune 1000 brands and delivering measurable ROI (per SEC filings). | Despite significant valuation growth, its early-stage Reg A+ offering remains open at about $0.85/share. | If you missed the surge of leading AI infrastructure companies… | This could be the opportunity you were waiting for. | Early-stage pricing closes soon — secure your $0.85 entry. | | | Short form: Nasdaq ticker is reserved. No future guarantees of a public listing. | This is a paid advertisement for RAD Intel made pursuant to Regulation A+ offering and involves risk, including the possible loss of principal. The valuation is set by the Company and there is currently no public market for the Company's Common Stock. Please read the offering circular and related risks at invest.radintel.ai |
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| | Markets woke up this week to another reminder that the global economy still runs through narrow physical corridors. | Following U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iranian targets, the conflict in the Middle East escalated sharply. Missile exchanges intensified across the region. Energy infrastructure became a target again. | The Strait of Hormuz—through which roughly one-fifth of global oil and gas flows—has slowed dramatically as shipping companies reassess security risks. | | | | More than a hundred large cargo vessels have delayed transit through the corridor while maritime insurers rapidly increased premiums for tankers operating in the Gulf. Brent crude pushed toward $85 per barrel, reflecting the market's immediate concern about supply disruption. | For most investors, this looks like a familiar story: energy volatility, shipping risk, and geopolitical tension. | But there is a second layer to the story. It has less to do with oil—and more to do with information. | The Real Battlefield: Data | Modern economies run on data flows as much as energy flows. Financial markets rely on real-time signals. Supply chains depend on predictive logistics systems. Corporations increasingly make strategic decisions through machine-learning models. | Artificial intelligence now processes enormous volumes of behavioral and economic information—search patterns, supply chain activity, advertising signals, consumer sentiment, and financial transactions. | Those signals are becoming one of the most valuable resources in the modern economy. And the ability to interpret them quickly is becoming a strategic advantage. | Washington Is Paying Attention | This is exactly why artificial intelligence has moved rapidly from a technology conversation into a high-stakes policy conversation. | It is the driving force behind President Trump's recent AI decisions involving Elon Musk and other tech leaders. The administration realizes that as AI systems grow more powerful, the infrastructure behind them—data pipelines, analytics engines, and predictive models—is now as strategically important as energy or telecommunications networks. | Regulators are debating data transparency and exploring new export restrictions on advanced AI chips produced by companies like Nvidia and AMD. This underscores how closely national security, tech leadership, and AI development are now intertwined. | Artificial intelligence is no longer just a Silicon Valley industry. It is the strategic architecture of the global economy. | AI Enters the Security Arena | That shift is already visible in modern conflict. Defense agencies increasingly deploy AI tools to analyze satellite imagery, communications data, and battlefield signals in real time. These systems help military analysts detect patterns, identify threats, and process massive streams of information far faster than traditional methods. | In other words, the same technologies used by corporations to analyze consumer behavior are now being adapted for national security. The underlying capability is the exact same: the ability to process billions of signals and turn them into decisions. | The Rise of Decision Infrastructure | The first phase of the AI boom focused on large language models and generative tools. | The next phase revolves around something less visible, but far more lucrative: Decision infrastructure. | Across industries—from advertising to logistics to finance—companies are investing heavily in systems that can analyze vast datasets and recommend actions in real time. Retailers forecast demand using predictive analytics. Financial firms monitor market signals through machine-learning models. Marketing platforms analyze audience behavior to optimize campaigns dynamically. | These systems operate quietly in the background, but they increasingly shape how corporations allocate capital, manage risk, and reach customers. | A Different Kind of Infrastructure | When people think about infrastructure, they typically imagine roads, pipelines, and electrical grids. But the modern economy is building a different kind of infrastructure. One made of data pipelines, analytics platforms, and AI systems capable of interpreting vast amounts of information. | Energy still powers the global economy. But increasingly, data determines how that power is used. The companies building systems that can understand those signals will shape the next phase of economic competition. |
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| The Hidden Beneficiary | As the Trump administration and visionaries like Musk push for American AI dominance, the biggest winner is likely to be a company operating at the very heart of this new decision infrastructure: RAD Intel. | While retail investors chase overvalued, household tech names, RAD Intel is already doing the heavy lifting. Its technology actively analyzes billions of signals, powering major Fortune 1000 brands with actionable, predictive insights. | More importantly for serious investors: This isn't a speculative concept. RAD Intel is delivering measurable, documented ROI, supported by their official SEC filings. | If you feel like you missed the massive, life-changing surge of leading AI infrastructure companies over the last three years, this is the exact setup you've been waiting for. | Despite significant valuation growth, RAD Intel has kept its early-stage Reg A+ offering open to everyday investors at about $0.85/share. The company has already reserved its Nasdaq ticker, signaling its clear ambition for the public markets. | But this early-stage pricing closes soon. By the time the broader retail market catches on to the "decision infrastructure" powering the new AI economy, this entry point will be gone. |
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| | How did you find today's briefing? | |
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| | Written by Deniss Slinkins Global Financial Journal |
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