Investors have turned to Davos for AI. They left talking about Greenland

investors-have-turned-to-davos-for-ai.-they-left-talking-about-greenland

Investors have turned to Davos for AI. They left talking about Greenland

U.S. President Donald Trump (R) speaks to Apple CEO Tim Cook (L) as he attends a reception for business leaders at the World Economic Forum (WEF) annual meeting January 21, 2026 in Davos, Switzerland.

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This week, between panels, hotel lobbies, and meetings, it often felt like two conferences were taking place in the same snowy Swiss village.

In Davos, the mood was surprisingly optimistic. Executives and investors have talked about moving artificial intelligence from hype to production, terms such as “global models” and “physical AI” were launched, with discussions of the enormous reserves of capital ready to support them.

In the other, a number of discussions appeared to end on tariffs, Greenland, geopolitical tensions and a growing sense that the global rules that investors have relied on for decades are changing in real time.

The two worlds constantly overlapped. Often, in the same conversation.

“What Davos has highlighted this year is not a crisis of innovation, but a crisis of consistency and a loss of confidence,” Chavalit Frederick Tsao, chairman of Singapore-based family business firm Tsao Pao Chee, said on the sidelines. “Technology advances faster than our collective wisdom.”

This tension between rapid innovation and political uncertainty defined much of the week.

There was Trump first…Thousands of people waited in line for more than an hour on Wednesday to hear US President Donald Trump’s speech at the Congress Hall. I waited in line for 90 minutes. Inside, the atmosphere was more like a concert than a political forum.

Trump’s speech oscillated between humor, provocation and unpredictability. But when he turned his attention to Greenland – insisting that the United States must acquire this Arctic island – the mood in the room changed.

The people who were laughing moments before fell silent. Some shook their heads; others exchanged worried glances.

In the coming hours, Greenland and tariffs dominate conversations and appears to have shifted from investments in AI infrastructure and energy to commercial leverage and political risk.

…Then came MuskThe next day, Elon Musk returns to Davos after years away from the forum.

In a crowded session, TeslaThe CEO of presented an ambitious vision for the development of robotaxis, humanoid robots and AI. He said Tesla’s driverless robo-taxi would be “very, very widespread” in the United States by the end of 2026. He also predicted that AI could surpass human intelligence as soon as this year.

For many participants, this lifted the mood. Subsequently, conversations focused on data centers, battery storage, computing power and how cities and networks will cope with the expected increase in energy demand.

The contrast with the day before was striking.

One day, Davos was trying to understand the geopolitical implications of Trump’s speech. Then it was about talking about the technological future again at full speed.

“Conviction driven”This whiplash continued to show up in interviews throughout the week.

Waleed Al Mokarrab Al Muhairi, deputy CEO of Abu Dhabi-based investment giant Mubadala, told CNBC’s Dan Murphy that the investment stance through 2026 could be summed up in two words: “conviction-driven.”

“So it’s not chaotic, but the world is definitely becoming more and more fragmented,” he said.

“That comes with its own opportunities, but also pitfalls… As long as you can deploy capital in a methodical, strategic, conviction-based way, then I think you’ll be ahead of the pack.”

Meanwhile, Joe Kaeser, president of Siemens Energy, presented AI as an industry opportunity rather than a consumer race.

“No continent in the world has as much data on industrialization, mechanization and automation as Europe,” he told CNBC.

“Combine this with computing power, and Europe has the best options for defining where the physical and the virtual come together.”

Kaeser said leaders were still waiting to see if policy announcements would translate into action.

“The jury is still out on whether things will be executed as advertised,” he said. “But if one of the most important players is not willing to play, it’s bad for everyone.”

Countries tried to reassure investorsFor finance ministers and other policymakers, much of the message from Davos this year was about reassurance.

Enoch Godongwana, South Africa’s finance minister, highlighted recent credit improvements, his country’s removal from the US Financial Action Task Force’s gray list and political stability, before the conversation turned to managing ties with Washington and trade negotiations.

“The number one risk for the South African economy is the geopolitical situation,” he told CNBC. “It’s difficult to predict and we don’t know its implications.”

The Saudi Minister of Finance, Mohammed Al-Jadaan, has repeatedly returned to the need for dialogue.

“What businesses need is certainty,” he said, adding that disputes should be resolved through dialogue.

Two Davos side by sideBy the end of the week, a clear trend emerged.

The panels on AI, energy transition and industrial reinvention were packed. Private discussions focused on expansion, deployment and long-term prospects.

But in less busy moments — over coffee, in hallways, on shuttles — talk returned to Greenland, tariffs and how quickly politics could change the investment calculus.

One Davos focused on the technological frontier and what AI could unlock. The other focused on managing geopolitical uncertainty and preserving the conditions for this progress.

Both happened at the same time, in the same village, often in the same conversation.

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