>>> US Gapping down

Gapping down
In reaction to earnings/guidance
:
  • WHG -8.3%, GPC -7.2%, VMC -6.9%, SUN -6.7%, AHH -5.5%, SXC -5%, CNH -4.9%, MDT -4.6%, VMI -4.5%, ALLE -4.2%, GIS -3.4% (guidance), HRI -3.1%, LDOS -1.9%, POR -1.8%, LPX -1.4%, IVA -1.3%, SGI -1.3%, USAC -1.3%
Other news:
  • OCUL -30.6% (topline results from the SOL-1 Phase 3 superiority trial of AXPAXLI, its investigational product candidate, for the treatment of wet age-related macular degeneration)
  • VMC -7.5% (increases quarterly cash dividend to $0.52/share from $0.49/share)
  • WPM -2.3% (production guidance)
  • STEX -1.7% (files prospectus supplement relating to 2,443,750 shares; supplement relates to the resale from time to time by the Selling Stockholder)
Analyst comments:
  • BBWI -2.4% (downgraded to Neutral from Buy at Citigroup)
  • DG -0.6% (downgraded to Sell from Neutral at Rothschild & Co Redburn)

>>> Europe : Brokers Upgrades & Downgrades - 17th of February 2026 V3(++)

>>> Up
* Albemarle Raised to Buy at BofA; PT $190 (++)
* Avolta Raised to Buy at UBS; PT 65 Swiss francs
* BASF Raised to Hold at Berenberg; PT 48 euros
* BASF ADRs Raised to Hold at Berenberg; PT $14.20
* Cancom Raised to Overweight at Cantor; PT 31 euros (+)
* Citigroup PT Raised to $152 from $135 at Morgan Stanley
* Dollar Tree Raised to Buy at Rothschild & Co Redburn; PT $165
* Eurofins Scientific Raised to Buy at CIC; PT 80 euros (++)
* FinecoBank Raised to Buy at UBS; PT 23.80 euros
* Genmab Raised to Buy at Jefferies; PT 2,650 kroner
* Genmab ADRs Raised to Buy at Jefferies; PT $41.50
* Huscompagniet Raised to Buy at Danske Bank Markets; PT 43 kroner (++)
* L'Oreal Raised to Buy at HSBC; PT 437 euros (+)
* Note Raised to Buy at Nordea; PT 182 kronor
* Schroders Raised to Equal-Weight at Morgan Stanley; PT 612 pence
* SF Urban Properties AG Raised to Outperform at ZKB (+)
* SSP Raised to Buy at UBS; PT 245 pence
* Theon International Raised to Buy at Stifel; PT 34 euros

>>> Down
* Alfen Cut to Underperform at Oddo BHF; PT 8 euros
* Aspo Cut to Reduce at Inderes; PT 7.60 euros (+)
* Conoco Cut to Neutral at Roth Capital Partners; PT $112
* Credit Agricole Cut to Hold at Deutsche Bank; PT 20 euros
* Dollar General Cut to Sell at Rothschild & Co Redburn; PT $111
* Ecora Royalties Plc Cut to Hold at Peel Hunt; PT 154 pence
* Henkel Cut to Neutral at Grupo Santander; PT 86.70 euros
* InterContinental Hotels Cut to Hold at Peel Hunt (+)
* Norsk Hydro Cut to Sell at SEB Equities; PT 75 kroner
* Plazza Cut to Market Perform at ZKB (+)
* Prosegur Cash Cut to Hold at Bestinver; PT 74 euro cents (+)
* Prysmian Cut to Hold at Berenberg
* Puig Cut to Neutral at JB Capital Markets; PT 18.50 euros
* Solvay Cut to Neutral at Oddo BHF; PT 28 euros
* Unilever Cut to Hold at Kepler Cheuvreux
* Warner Bros Discovery Cut to Neutral at Rothschild & Co Redburn (+)
* Zurich Airport Cut to Neutral at Intesa Sanpaolo (++)

>>> Initiation
* Addnode Group AB Rated New Buy at SB1 Markets; PT 96 kronor
* Allianz Rated New Sector Perform at RBC; PT 405 euros
* AXA Reinstated Outperform at RBC; PT 48 euros
* Mha Rated New Buy at Stifel; PT 205 pence (+)
* Moreld Rated New Buy at Clarksons; PT 21 kroner
* Pinewood Technologies Reinstated Buy at Berenberg; PT 725 pence
* PZ Cussons Rated New Buy at Singer Capital Markets; PT 118 pence (++)

>>> Call
* Atos, Aumovio Drop as Bernstein Highlights AI Disruption Risks (++)
* Genmab Resumed With a Buy at Jefferies: Europe Research Digest (++)
* Citigroup is Morgan Stanley’s Top US Pick, Target Boosted (+)
* AI Disruption May Push US Small-Bank Mergers, JPMorgan Says (+)
* AXA Rated Outperform at RBC on ‘Fundamental Improvements’
* BASF Shares Raised to Hold at Berenberg on Political Outlook
* SSP Raised to Buy at UBS on Cash-Flow Focus, Earnings Growth (+)
* Prysmian Cut to Hold at Berenberg on Limited Upside (+)
* Kepler Cheuvreux Downgrades Unilever, Sees More Value Elsewhere (+)

>>> US Gapping up

Gapping up
In reaction to earnings/guidance
:
  • DTE +28.5%, ENLT +8%, ETOR +6.7%, FLR +6.6%, KNF +3.7%, WAY +3.5%, CEVA +3.4%, NESR +2.7%, LH +2.6%, SON +2.4%, KRYS +2%, RNW +1.9%, SSTK +1%
Other news:
  • ZIM +35.2% (to be acquired by Hapag-Lloyd for $35 per share in $4.2 bln cash deal)
  • CMPS +23.1% (announces successful achievement of the primary endpoint in the ongoing Phase 3 COMP006 trial)
  • RYI +12.8% (Ryerson and Olympic Steel announce successful closing of merger)
  • KW +9.7% (to be acquired in an all-cash transaction by Fairfax Financial Holdings (FRFHF) and KW Management Group for $10.90/share)
  • NPO +5.2% (increases quarterly cash dividend 3.2% to $0.32/share from $0.31/share)
  • BNC +4.4% (issues statement refuting YZi Labs' latest claims; Confirms BNC is fully compliant with Nasdaq rules for holding the annual meeting)
  • LAD +3.2% (implements shift to align its IT and technology teams more closely)
  • NWG +3.2% (launches £750 mln 2026 share buyback program)
  • NKTR +3.2% (announces research collaboration with UCSF and Dr. Stephen Hauser for NKTR-0165, a Tumor Necrosis Factor Receptor 2 antibody, in multiple sclerosis)
  • GSK +2.5% (receives EU approval for Exdensur in severe asthma and CRSwNP; launches £0.45 bln fourth tranche under £2 bln buyback program)
  • ESLT +1.9% (secures $435 mln in multi-year international defense awards)
Analyst comments:
  • LUV +2.1% (upgraded to Buy from Neutral at UBS)
  • DLTR +1.8% (upgraded to Buy from Neutral at Rothschild & Co Redburn)
  • ALB +1.2% (upgraded to Buy from Neutral at BofA Securities)
  • ACN +0.9% (upgraded to Overweight from Equal Weight at Wells Fargo)
  • UPST +0.7% (upgraded to Neutral from Sell at Compass Point)

>>> Europe : Brokers Upgrades & Downgrades - 17th of February 2026 V2(+)

>>> Up
* Avolta Raised to Buy at UBS; PT 65 Swiss francs
* BASF Raised to Hold at Berenberg; PT 48 euros
* BASF ADRs Raised to Hold at Berenberg; PT $14.20
* Cancom Raised to Overweight at Cantor; PT 31 euros (+)
* Citigroup PT Raised to $152 from $135 at Morgan Stanley
* Dollar Tree Raised to Buy at Rothschild & Co Redburn; PT $165
* FinecoBank Raised to Buy at UBS; PT 23.80 euros
* Genmab Raised to Buy at Jefferies; PT 2,650 kroner
* Genmab ADRs Raised to Buy at Jefferies; PT $41.50
* L'Oreal Raised to Buy at HSBC; PT 437 euros (+)
* Note Raised to Buy at Nordea; PT 182 kronor
* Schroders Raised to Equal-Weight at Morgan Stanley; PT 612 pence
* SF Urban Properties AG Raised to Outperform at ZKB (+)
* SSP Raised to Buy at UBS; PT 245 pence
* Theon International Raised to Buy at Stifel; PT 34 euros

>>> Down
* Alfen Cut to Underperform at Oddo BHF; PT 8 euros
* Aspo Cut to Reduce at Inderes; PT 7.60 euros (+)
* Conoco Cut to Neutral at Roth Capital Partners; PT $112
* Credit Agricole Cut to Hold at Deutsche Bank; PT 20 euros
* Dollar General Cut to Sell at Rothschild & Co Redburn; PT $111
* Ecora Royalties Plc Cut to Hold at Peel Hunt; PT 154 pence
* Henkel Cut to Neutral at Grupo Santander; PT 86.70 euros
* InterContinental Hotels Cut to Hold at Peel Hunt (+)
* Norsk Hydro Cut to Sell at SEB Equities; PT 75 kroner
* Plazza Cut to Market Perform at ZKB (+)
* Prosegur Cash Cut to Hold at Bestinver; PT 74 euro cents (+)
* Prysmian Cut to Hold at Berenberg
* Puig Cut to Neutral at JB Capital Markets; PT 18.50 euros
* Solvay Cut to Neutral at Oddo BHF; PT 28 euros
* Unilever Cut to Hold at Kepler Cheuvreux
* Warner Bros Discovery Cut to Neutral at Rothschild & Co Redburn (+)

>>> Initiation
* Addnode Group AB Rated New Buy at SB1 Markets; PT 96 kronor
* Allianz Rated New Sector Perform at RBC; PT 405 euros
* AXA Reinstated Outperform at RBC; PT 48 euros
* Mha Rated New Buy at Stifel; PT 205 pence (+)
* Moreld Rated New Buy at Clarksons; PT 21 kroner
* Pinewood Technologies Reinstated Buy at Berenberg; PT 725 pence

>>> Call
* Citigroup is Morgan Stanley’s Top US Pick, Target Boosted (+)
* AI Disruption May Push US Small-Bank Mergers, JPMorgan Says (+)
* AXA Rated Outperform at RBC on ‘Fundamental Improvements’
* BASF Shares Raised to Hold at Berenberg on Political Outlook
* SSP Raised to Buy at UBS on Cash-Flow Focus, Earnings Growth (+)
* Prysmian Cut to Hold at Berenberg on Limited Upside (+)
* Kepler Cheuvreux Downgrades Unilever, Sees More Value Elsewhere (+)

>>> What to look at today - 17th of February 2026

US equity-index futures fell and Treasuries edged higher, underscoring a cautious mood heading into the market’s reopening after a holiday. Contracts for the S&P 500 dropped 0.4% and those for the Nasdaq 100 Index slipped 0.7% in a sign of risk aversion before the US returned Tuesday after observing the Presidents’ Day holiday on Monday. Asian stocks fell 0.1% in thin trading, with China, Hong Kong and several regional markets shut for the Lunar New Year. European shares were also set for a weaker open. Treasury 10-year yields fell two basis points to 4.03%. Precious metals slid. Japan’s bonds rallied across the curve after demand at a bond auction showed signs of stabilization. Oil held its gains, with traders pricing in higher geopolitical risk after Iran held naval exercises near a critical shipping corridor before talks with the US. Developments in the Middle East have thrust geopolitical risk back into focus, as traders also weigh the outlook for Federal Reserve interest-rate cuts following Friday’s inflation data. Shifting sentiment around artificial intelligence is adding to the unease, rippling beyond the tech sector amid the emergence of the so-called AI scare trade. Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi held talks with the head of the UN’s atomic watchdog in Geneva on Monday, ahead of a second round of nuclear negotiations with the US. Trump has threatened to strike the Islamic Republic unless it agrees to a deal curbing Tehran’s nuclear program in exchange for sanctions relief. He’s mobilized warships and fighter jets near Iran in response to a recent deadly crackdown by the regime there following mass protests. Investors seeking clues on the Fed’s rate path will get a chance Tuesday, when Governor Michael Barr speaks on the labor market and AI, while San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly discusses AI and the economy. Traders will also be watching for ADP private payrolls numbers on Tuesday and the minutes from the Fed’s January meeting on Wednesday for a fresh read on the economy. In Japan, demand at a five-year government bond auction increased for the first time since September amid receding expectations for an early rate hike by the country’s central bank. This was the first auction of conventional Japanese government bonds after Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s historic election victory earlier this month. Meanwhile, the impact of AI, which has driven selling pressure across multiple stock-market sectors in recent weeks, continued to draw attention. The S&P 500 has declined for two straight weeks and is down 0.1% this year. The tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 has fallen for three consecutive weeks, leaving it about 2% lower year-to-date. A JPMorgan Chase & Co. team led by Mislav Matejka urged caution on stocks at risk of AI-driven “cannibalization” including software, business services and media companies.  Firms are developing tools to capitalize on the divergence. Goldman Sachs Group Inc. launched a new basket of software stocks that goes long firms that will benefit from AI adoption, while shorting the companies whose workflows could be replaced.  With AI disruption rippling through markets, a lot will come down to earnings resilience, particularly in the US. 

Nikkei -0.83% Hang Seng closed CSI closed Shanghai closed Shenzen closed

Eur$ 1.1845 CNH 6.8883 CNY 6.9048 JPY 152.92 GBP 1.3611 CHF 0.7691 RUB 76.8208 TRY 43.7261 WTI$ 63.37 +0.76% Gold 4,891 -2.04% BTC 68,350 -0.70% ETH 1,978 -1.02%

S&P -0.39% Nasdaq -0.72% EuroStoxx -0.35% FTSE -0.18% Dax -0.41% SMI +0.03%

Macro :
- Hedge Funds Buy Most Asian Stocks in a Decade, Goldman Says
- Italian Power Drops as Market Weighs Gas, Carbon Policy Shifts
- EVs must be 70% made in the EU to qualify for state support, Brussels says - FT

Keep an eye on :
- ACAST SS : Acast to Distribute Video Podcasts to Apple Podcasts Using HLS
- ADP FP : ADP Jan. Passenger Traffic +5%
- ALSN SW : Also Sees 2026 Ebitda EU300M to EU340M
- ANTO LN : Antofagasta FY Revenue Beats Estimates
- BSLN SW : Basilea FY Net Income Beats Estimates
- BHP LN : BHP Targets $10 Billion in Asset Sales to Help Fund Copper Expansion - WSJ
- DHT US : Danaher closes in on nearly $10bn deal for medical device maker Masimo - FT
- DKSH SW : DKSH FY Operating Profit CHF335.4M Vs. CHF333.9M Y/y
- FGR FP : Eiffage Buys Assets of Claus Heinemann Elektroanlagen
- ENG SM : Enagas FY Ebitda Meets Estimates
- ERG IM : ERG Could Seek Industrial Partners, Corriere Reports
- EXO NA : Reale Group Agrees to Buy 80% of Lifenet From Exor and Invin
- FCT IM : Norwegian Cruise Orders Three New Ships From Fincantieri
- GIVN SW : Givaudan to Invest CHF55m in Campus in Grasse, France
- GTT FP : GTT Gets Order From Jiangnan for Tank Design of 4 LNG Carriers
- HACK SS : Hacksaw 4Q Revenue Misses Estimates
- IDR SM : Activist Third Point Builds Indra Stake, Urges Board to Buy EM&E
- MoonShot : China AI Startup Moonshot Seeks $10 Billion Value in New Funding
- NWRN SW : Newron Secures Up to EU38 Million to Advance Evenamide Program
- NEXI IM : Nexi Shareholder Pact Drops to 41.37% After Funds Cut Stakes
- NOEJ GY : Norma 4Q Adjusted Ebit EU0.4M Vs. EU3.6M Y/y
- NCLH US : Activist Elliott Builds Big Stake in Norwegian Cruise Line -- WSJ
- PLUS LN : Plus500 Executives to Sell 1.5 Million Shares Via Goldman Sachs, Plus500 Offering by Holders Prices at £45/Share, Terms Show
- ROSE LN : Rosebank Looks Again to its Raise-to-Buy Strategy: ECM Watch
- SINCH SS : Sinch 4Q Net Sales Miss Estimates
- SRE LN : Sirius Real Estate Starts £75 Million Capital Raise, Sirius Real Estate Raises £75m for German Acquisition Pipeline
- Space X IPO : SpaceX to Compete in Pentagon Contest for Autonomous Drone Tech
- TRIP US : Starboard to Push for Big Shake-Up of Tripadvisor's Board -- WSJ
- TRUEB SS : Truecaller 4Q Revenue Beats Estimates
- VK FP : Baker Hughes, Vallourec in MOU For Hydrogen Storage Projects
- VCT LN : Vicat FY Ebitda Meets Estimates
- VOW GY : Volkswagen Says Launch of Criminal Proceedings in France over Diesel Issue 'Inadmissible'
- FHZN SW : Zurich Airport Reaches Agreement in Airport Charges Talks

>>> Europe : Brokers Upgrades & Downgrades - 17th of February 2026

>>> Up
* Avolta Raised to Buy at UBS; PT 65 Swiss francs
* BASF Raised to Hold at Berenberg; PT 48 euros
* BASF ADRs Raised to Hold at Berenberg; PT $14.20
* Citigroup PT Raised to $152 from $135 at Morgan Stanley
* Dollar Tree Raised to Buy at Rothschild & Co Redburn; PT $165
* FinecoBank Raised to Buy at UBS; PT 23.80 euros
* Genmab Raised to Buy at Jefferies; PT 2,650 kroner
* Genmab ADRs Raised to Buy at Jefferies; PT $41.50
* Note Raised to Buy at Nordea; PT 182 kronor
* Schroders Raised to Equal-Weight at Morgan Stanley; PT 612 pence
* SSP Raised to Buy at UBS; PT 245 pence
* Theon International Raised to Buy at Stifel; PT 34 euros

>>> Down
* Alfen Cut to Underperform at Oddo BHF; PT 8 euros
* Conoco Cut to Neutral at Roth Capital Partners; PT $112
* Credit Agricole Cut to Hold at Deutsche Bank; PT 20 euros
* Dollar General Cut to Sell at Rothschild & Co Redburn; PT $111
* Ecora Royalties Plc Cut to Hold at Peel Hunt; PT 154 pence
* Henkel Cut to Neutral at Grupo Santander; PT 86.70 euros
* Norsk Hydro Cut to Sell at SEB Equities; PT 75 kroner
* Prysmian Cut to Hold at Berenberg
* Puig Cut to Neutral at JB Capital Markets; PT 18.50 euros
* Solvay Cut to Neutral at Oddo BHF; PT 28 euros
* Unilever Cut to Hold at Kepler Cheuvreux

>>> Initiation
* Addnode Group AB Rated New Buy at SB1 Markets; PT 96 kronor
* Allianz Rated New Sector Perform at RBC; PT 405 euros
* AXA Reinstated Outperform at RBC; PT 48 euros
* Pinewood Technologies Reinstated Buy at Berenberg; PT 725 pence

>>> Call
* AXA Rated Outperform at RBC on ‘Fundamental Improvements’
* BASF Shares Raised to Hold at Berenberg on Political Outlook

>>> Stoxx 600 Pre-Market Indications

  • Lotus Bakeries (7LB TH) -1%
  • Hensoldt (HAG TH) -1%
  • Eni (ENI TH) -1.1%
  • Credit Agricole (XCA TH) -1.1%
  • Zalando (ZAL TH) -1.1%
  • Henkel (HEN3 TH) -1.2%
    • Henkel Cut to Neutral at Grupo Santander; PT 86.70 euros
  • Reckitt (3RB0 TH) -1.2%
  • Prysmian (AEU TH) -1.6%
    • Prysmian Cut to Hold at Berenberg
  • Fresnillo (FNL TH) -4.3%
    • Silver Tumbles With JGB Yields as Sentiment Sours: Markets Live

The In formation : Let’s Spend $10 Trillion on AI That Improves the Real World,

Let’s Spend $10 Trillion on AI That Improves the Real World, Not Just Ads

Four years ago, right around the time the concept of the metaverse became fashionable, I wrote a post calling it a “dystopian nightmare.” I argued that instead of diving into virtual worlds, we should all do more to connect with the real world around us.

Time will tell if the metaverse will eventually come to fruition, but with global business and leisure travel, as well as live event attendance, blowing past pre-pandemic levels in 2024 and 2025, it’s pretty clear humans weren’t meant to live inside a headset.

Fast-forward to today, when some seek to create a world where content increasingly doesn’t come from friends or even human influencers, but rather straight from an AI model, an engineered confection of pixels and waveforms optimized to capture your attention until the next ad arrives.

When the prospect of advanced AI emerged a few short years ago, there was a surplus of enthusiasm about a future of human prosperity, one in which radical advances in healthcare, materials, manufacturing and robotics would transform the world for the better, raising the quality of life for all people on the planet.

I think it’s fair to ask at this point if that’s really where we are headed. How much of our gargantuan investment into AI will be used to truly better the human condition, and how much will be subverted to create better ways to entertain and distract us?

Why It Matters Now

We all understand the momentous era we are entering as large language models have emerged as one of the most disruptive innovations in the history of technology. They are upending every aspect of the tech market, from startups to established enterprises, from chips to software, data centers and even power generation.

Since the founding of OpenAI and the advent of the modern AI industry, as much as $1 trillion has been invested, and that number is growing daily, much of it now in the form of infrastructure: chips, servers, data centers and power to scale solutions in anticipation of massive, lucrative applications. Analysts believe AI investment could reach a total of $10 trillion by 2030. This is substantial, even when considered against global gross domestic product, which is projected to exceed $150 trillion in that same time.

Perhaps even more importantly, the process of building that infrastructure is consuming vast amounts of natural resources, including oil and gas and precious supplies of fresh water. There is growing pressure to demonstrate a return on the investment, and that pressure will only increase as these massive, leveraged investments continue to mount.

Where will those returns come from? Is there a path that can generate the needed economic returns and truly build a better future for humanity?

One Answer Lies in the Real World

Online goods and services represent about 20% of the global economy. Certainly AI will make online ads, social networks and gaming better and more lucrative, as well as streamlining white-collar work in professions including software engineering, customer support, marketing, law and medicine.

However, the other 80% of the global economy is outside that realm, out in the real world, in industries like energy, agriculture, manufacturing, construction, transportation and logistics—in other words, the acts of extracting, refining, growing, assembling, combining and shipping the atoms that warm us, shelter us, feed us and generally make life possible for human beings. These are our most essential human needs, not chatbots.

To justify the massive investment in overall AI spending, you have to believe AI can transform not just the 20% of the economy that is online but the 80% that is not. If we can unleash AI on that part of the economy—and assuming we can manage the transition in how humans work alongside machines (not a small matter)—then we have a real shot at a future that can increase the standard of living for humanity as a whole. That would be worth the trillions needed to bring AI into existence, not to mention the use of precious resources like power and water.

The problem is that AI is in many ways trapped inside the screen, deeply knowledgeable about concepts derived from the mountains of text on the internet, and yet woefully ignorant about the world outside the door of the data center, much less the factory floor, the farm, the construction site, the oil refinery and the cities in which we live. To unleash the power of AI on this massive swath of the economy, we must give AI knowledge of the world, skills to interact with it and embodied forms to manipulate it physically. It needs a brain adapted for the real world and a body to move through it.

LLMs and World Models Are Not Enough

This is the opportunity at hand. It’s why the AI industry is excited about what people are calling physical AI, world models and spatial intelligence. This is why Nvidia’s Jensen Huang is so excited about humanoid robots, calling them “the next multitrillion-dollar industry.” We can adapt AI to increase productivity and do real, meaningful work in the physical world—often tasks that are either undesirable or dangerous to humans.

LLMs alone aren’t enough to make this vision a reality. Models for physical AI (trained on video and other inputs to control robot movement), world models (which attempt to simulate how environments function and evolve, often generating synthetic 3D simulations of scenes) and spatial models (which capture and re-create the physical world) will all play a part in realizing this vision.

In the realm of physical AI, breakthroughs in simulation and transfer learning are bringing fluid movement to robots, enabling them to amaze us with new skills involving moving and manipulating real-world objects. World models help by making simulation training easier and more realistic, conjuring an infinite variety of synthetic training environments.

All those are necessary but not sufficient advances to bring AI fully into the real world.

Building the Large Geospatial Model

At Niantic Spatial, we are focused on the final missing piece, spatial intelligence. To reason, plan and act on problems involving the world, AIs must know it. But they lack the kind of intuitive spatial understanding that human hunter-gatherers naturally evolved. And the textual sources they train on do little to give them a coherent, accurate grasp of the physical world’s structure, shape, contents and topology.

For the past several years, we’ve been building a large geospatial model that acts as a living, breathing map of the world, one that is native to robots and AI.

Unlike what I’ve worked on previously, it is a map built not for people but for machines—to assist robots in navigation and task planning, and to help AIs complete tasks and answer questions that require grounding in real-world data. This map can help a robot figure out the safest path to take through an urban maze, transport supplies over rugged terrain to a remote destination, or move within a job site or factory complex to perform work at different locations. This kind of map can also help AI agents solve complex real-world problems like computing fire risk in suburban environments or optimizing a city to improve quality of life.

We are building on everything we have learned from building maps for people—Google Maps, Earth, Local, and Street View—but reimagining it in a world where AI understanding is the primary goal. Just as Google Maps became a key building block of Web 2.0, we seek to make the Niantic geospatial model a building block for the future of AI, working alongside physical AI models from companies like Physical Intelligence, Skild AI, and Flexion Robotics, and world models from companies such as World Labs, General Intuition, and Nvidia. These are all part of a burgeoning ecosystem that also includes robotics firms like Boston Dynamics, Agility Robotics, and Apptronik and a host of companies creating industry-specific mobile robots for manufacturing, agriculture, healthcare and other sectors.

Where We Go Next

It’s an exciting world, with many separate innovations pursued concurrently. Over the next two months, we’ll be launching new versions of our model that can reconstruct reality in a way humans can interact with and that allow machines to “see” and navigate with pinpoint accuracy. Future versions will add the semantics needed for deeper understanding, planning and problem solving.

AI truly has great potential. But it will be up to all of us to make sure we channel this massive investment into tech that will not merely entertain and distract us but truly help create a better reality. That’s something I think we can all get excited about.