Motley Fool Money

NASA Doubles Down on the Moon

20 min
Mar 2, 2026about 2 months ago
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Summary

This episode covers three major business stories: Berkshire Hathaway's leadership transition to Greg Abel with strong financial performance despite Q4 headwinds, OpenAI's historic $110 billion funding round and ambitious Stargate infrastructure initiative, and NASA's accelerated Artemis program targeting lunar landings every 10 months starting in 2028.

Insights
  • Greg Abel's leadership style emphasizes operational efficiency and disciplined capital allocation over aggressive growth, signaling continuity with Buffett's philosophy while taking a more granular approach to subsidiary performance
  • OpenAI's funding is increasingly about infrastructure and energy security rather than just software development, positioning the company as both an AI firm and infrastructure developer
  • NASA's shift to frequent lunar missions (every 10 months vs. every 3 years) creates sustained demand for aerospace contractors and lunar technology providers, not just one-off missions
  • Berkshire's $373 billion cash hoard and refusal to deploy capital in expensive markets demonstrates conviction in long-term value creation over quarterly performance pressure
  • The AI infrastructure space, particularly data center companies, represents an underappreciated beneficiary of the massive capital spending required for advanced AI model training
Trends
AI infrastructure becoming as critical as software development, with companies measuring needs in gigawatts rather than hardware componentsAerospace and defense contractors positioned for sustained revenue growth from recurring lunar missions rather than episodic space programsEnergy grid constraints emerging as a limiting factor for AI advancement, driving companies to invest in power generation and grid upgradesLeadership transitions in mega-cap companies emphasizing cultural continuity and operational discipline over transformational changeData center and satellite communications companies emerging as below-the-radar beneficiaries of AI and space exploration spendingPrivate space companies (SpaceX, Blue Origin) becoming critical infrastructure partners for government space programsDisciplined capital allocation becoming a competitive advantage as markets become more expensive and capital-intensiveGlobal talent wars intensifying in AI sector with equity packages and licensing deals becoming key competitive tools
Companies
Berkshire Hathaway
Trillion-dollar conglomerate undergoing leadership transition from Warren Buffett to Greg Abel as new CEO
OpenAI
Secured $110 billion funding round valuing the company at $730 billion, 14th most valuable S&P 500 equivalent
Amazon
Committed $50 billion to OpenAI funding round, securing 6% stake and partnership for customer-facing applications
NVIDIA
Invested $30 billion in OpenAI funding round, securing 3.5% stake as key hardware supplier for AI infrastructure
SoftBank
Contributed remaining funding to OpenAI's $110 billion round after Amazon and NVIDIA commitments
Lockheed Martin
Primary contractor for NASA's Orion crew capsule used in Artemis missions
Boeing
Involved in propulsion systems for Orion capsule in NASA's Artemis lunar program
Northrop Grumman
Involved in propulsion systems for Orion capsule in NASA's Artemis lunar program
Intuitive Machines
Selected by NASA to develop cargo capabilities for Artemis missions, ticker symbol LUNAR
Kratos Defense and Security
Leader in satellite communications for Earth-Moon relays needed for sustained lunar presence
SpaceX
Commercial lunar lander partner for NASA's Artemis 3 docking test mission in 2027
Blue Origin
Commercial lunar lander partner for NASA's Artemis 3 docking test mission in 2027
Alphabet
Identified as key competitor to OpenAI in AI development and market leadership
Anthropic
Identified as key competitor to OpenAI in AI development and market leadership
Kraft Heinz
Berkshire Hathaway subsidiary that received $4.5 billion write-down in recent quarter
Occidental Petroleum
Berkshire Hathaway investment experiencing underperformance requiring operational attention
BNSF Railway
Berkshire Hathaway subsidiary lagging behind peers in performance metrics
Dairy Queen
Berkshire Hathaway subsidiary mentioned as part of conglomerate's diverse business portfolio
Pilot Travel Centers
Berkshire Hathaway subsidiary providing travel center services
People
Warren Buffett
Stepped down as Berkshire Hathaway CEO after 60 years, remains chairman attending office 5 days weekly
Greg Abel
New Berkshire Hathaway CEO who released inaugural shareholder letter emphasizing operational discipline
Charlie Munger
Berkshire Hathaway vice chairman who endorsed Greg Abel's ability to maintain company culture
Jared Isaacman
NASA Administrator leading the accelerated Artemis program overhaul announced Friday
John Quast
Host of Motley Fool Money episode discussing these major business developments
Matt Frankel
Motley Fool contributor providing analysis on Berkshire Hathaway, OpenAI, and aerospace investments
Rachel Warren
Motley Fool contributor analyzing Berkshire financials, OpenAI funding, and NASA's lunar program
Quotes
"A hidden gem doesn't have to be small or unknown. It has to be, among other things, misunderstood is one thing we're looking for. Berkshire definitely qualifies."
Matt Frankel
"Greg will keep the culture."
Charlie Munger
"He isn't hiding behind Buffett's shadow. He's not sugarcoating the underperformance of legacy assets."
Matt Frankel
"OpenAI's approach seems to be spending to pay their own way, so to speak, to fund local grid upgrades and power generation."
Rachel Warren
"Talk is cheap, but whiskey costs money. NASA has the plans, but what is your personal thesis on us establishing a permanent human presence on the moon within the next 10 years?"
John Quast
Full Transcript
NASA doubles down on the moon? You're listening to Motley Fool Money with the Hidden Gems Team. Welcome to Motley Fool Money with the Hidden Gems Team. My name is John Quast, and I'm joined today by Fool contributors Matt Frankel and Rachel Warren. So today we have some important developments with AI infrastructure and the space race, but we first wanted to touch on a company near and dear to many of us, and that's Berkshire Hathaway. Now, Berkshire Hathaway is a trillion-dollar conglomerate. It has insurance operations, a railroad, dairy queen, don't want to forget that one. But maybe before we go any further, Matt, I think we need to pause and address the Omaha elephant in the room. Why are we talking about a trillion-dollar company on the Hidden Gems show? Well, first of all, I think Pilot Travel Centers is the one I wouldn't want to forget because I can't do a road trip without them. Yeah, it may sound weird that we're talking about a trillion-dollar company on Hidden Gems. It's really important to point out that a hidden gem doesn't have to be small or unknown. It has to be, among other things, misunderstood is one thing we're looking for. Berkshire definitely qualifies. If you look at just the price to earnings of Berkshire, for example, it looks very expensive. But you've got to realize there's more to Berkshire than just its operating businesses, which is literally a third of its value. You have the $370 billion in cash that doesn't show up in the earnings results. You have all the stocks they own, and all those companies' earnings don't show up in Berkshire's results. It's a really tricky company to value. In a lot of ways, it's really misunderstood just how to analyze the company. Yeah, there's a lot of moving pieces, for sure. And the reason that we're bringing up Berkshire Hathaway today is, you know, it was led by Warren Buffett for 60 years, but Warren Buffett has now stepped down from the CEO chair that has allowed Greg Abel to step up. And on Saturday, Abel released his first letter as the CEO to shareholders. And here on the Hidden Gems team, we love talking about leadership. And so Matt, I was just wondering, what stood out to you in this inaugural letter from Greg Abel? Of course, he went through the motions of discussing the business segments, insurance, and all that stuff. But the main theme was really to reassure investors that not much is going to change, and in a very good way. He cited Charlie Munger's comment that was made shortly after they announced that Greg Abel was going to be CEO. Charlie Munger said, Greg will keep the culture. He discussed maintaining the decentralized model where all of Berkshire's subsidiaries operate pretty independently. All the value Warren Buffett placed on corporate integrity over profits. There were some very famous quotes about that. Similar thoughts on Berkshire's cash hoard, what Buffett said about risk management, capital allocation, and all the other things that make Berkshire, well, Berkshire. He also clarified Buffett's role as chairman a little bit, which was really nice to me, saying that as Berkshire's chairman. He is still in the office five days a week, which I'm actually surprised to hear, and available to Greg Abel and the rest of the senior leadership. That was actually really nice to hear. At over 90 years old, Buffett is a machine, still going into the office five days a week. Rachel, we did want to get your thoughts as well here. It wasn't just a letter to shareholders from Greg Abel. It wasn't just some leadership commentary. The letter also had some of the financial numbers for Berkshire Hathaway. I'm just curious, what stood out to you? Yeah, there were some interesting takeaways. I think one of the most striking takeaways from the numbers was the contrast between what continues to be really a fortress-like cash pile that Berkshire has accumulated, right? About $373.3 billion as of this most recent report. And the takeaway between that cash pile, really a notable dip in performance in terms of quarterly operating earnings. Those Q4 operating earnings slid about 30% to $10 billion. And that was primarily caused by a significant downturn in insurance underwriting. There was a sharp reduction in investment income. So, Berkshire's pre-tax underwriting profit plummeted by 54% in Q4, and insurance investment income fell about 25%. And, you know, there's a few different factors here, right? I mean, despite that record cash pile, I noted you have falling short-term interest rates that significantly reduced the interest that Berkshire could collect on its Treasury bills And Abel noted that the insurance industry multi run of favorable pricing and terms began to decelerate or even reverse in late 2025 And so that had an impact as well And we also seeing this trend of new capital entering the market that really forced rates down And so Berkshire intentionally wrote less property and casualty business rather than sacrifice underwriting discipline for volume. So you've got this massive horde of dry powder, lack of share buyback since last May. I think we're seeing a leader who's refusing to force a play in an expensive market. That is one thing that I'm glad is continuous here for Berkshire Hathaway is that it is never playing the short game. It's always going to set itself up for long-term stability. But that said, it does want to continue to grow its operating income long-term and it did take a hit here in the most recent quarter. So just curious of your thoughts here on Abel. What do you think his approach is going to be and what do you think of his leadership style? I think it's going to be very measured. I mean, I think he's very much signaled that he's not going to be pressured into average investments just to appease those that might be itchy for action. There was that $4.5 billion write down on Kraft Heinz, Occidental. We've got BNSF Railway that's still lagging behind its peers. And I think that math proves that Abel really has his work cut out for him in terms of operational tightening. And I think he's also shifting a bit. I mean, we were used to Buffett's handoff visionary style. I think maybe Abel is going to take a more granular operational stewardship approach. I really admired his intellectual honesty in this report. He isn't hiding behind Buffett's shadow. He's not sugarcoating the underperformance of legacy assets. And so, there's really, I think, a long-term strategic approach that he's applying here. There's very much that tactical discipline of an engineer. I think looking ahead, we should be expecting a CEO who's maybe less of a stock picker, more of a master allocator. He's already taken over the direct oversight of the equity portfolio. His focus seems to really be on making Berkshire's existing subsidiaries like the energy and rail sector is more efficient and resilient. So I do think that we are going to see that continue to be a focus moving forward. He isn't trying to be the next Oracle of Omaha. I think he's really positioning himself as the guardian of the company's culture for the next few decades. After the break, an important player in the artificial intelligence space just secured a historic round of funding. You're listening to Motley Fool Money with the Hidden Gems team. Starting a business can be overwhelming. You're juggling multiple roles, designer, marketer, logistics manager, all while bringing your vision to life. Shopify helps millions of business sell online. Build fast with templates and AI descriptions and photos, inventory and shipping. Sign up for your one euro per month trial and start selling today at shopify.nl. That's shopify.nl. It's time to see what you can accomplish with Shopify by your side. Welcome back to Motley Fool Money. OpenAI just secured a $110 billion funding round. That values the private firm here at $730 billion. And what's crazy to me is OpenAI was only founded about 10 years ago. And just for perspective, it's valued now at $730 billion. If it were in the S&P 500, that would make it the 14th most valuable constituent in the index. It's an absolutely massive funding round here with investments from NVIDIA, SoftBank, and Amazon. Rachel, let's start with you here. Where is OpenAI going to spend all of this money? Obviously, there's the hardware investments, but beyond that, OpenAI is investing heavily in their Stargate initiative. This is a sprawling $500 billion multi-year plan to construct world-class data centers and secure stable energy sources. We're in a time where with the advances we're seeing in AI, the current energy grid is really struggling to keep up with those demands. And so, I think OpenAI's approach seems to be spending to pay their own way, so to speak, to fund local grid upgrades and power generation. And this really ensures that the massive training runs for future models aren't throttled by electricity shortages or local utility constraints. These are very practical concerns. And this could effectively turn OpenAI into an infrastructure developer as much as it is a software firm. Importantly, there's a considerable portion of these funds that are being deployed to secure high-quality data and elite talent. We're in a time where they are aggressively striking licensing deals with media organizations to ensure their models learn from premium human-created sources. It's a very fierce global talent war, and they've been offering a lot of lucrative equity packages to the world's top researchers. And this is, I will note, finally very vital to maintain their lead over competitors like Alphabet and Thropic. So it's an exciting time for OpenAI and the business. Okay, so it's spending on the physical assets and resources. It also investing in the human side of things But this is more than just securing a funding bag With NVIDIA and Amazon in particular the funding is also a partnership deal And so Matt is there anything from these partnerships with NVIDIA and Amazon, with OpenAI, anything that we need to pay attention to? Yeah. I mean, it feels like at least once a week, we're hearing about new partnerships OpenAI is forming. I mean, it would probably be shorter to tell you the list of companies that have large tech companies they're not partnering with at this point. But it's worth noting that these were rather large investments, even by OpenAI, Amazon, and NVIDIA standards. The whole funding round came from three companies. Amazon's committing $50 billion, NVIDIA's accounting for $30 billion. The rest came from SoftBank, if you're curious. Based on the $730 billion, that's the pre-money valuation, so add the $110 billion and it's even more. This means that Amazon and NVIDIA both bought stakes of 6% and about 3.5% of the business of OpenAI. That's in addition to any prior investments they made. NVIDIA has been an investor since at least 2024, for example. With Amazon, the partnership, in addition to everything that Rachel was talking about with the hardware and things like that, OpenAI is going to help develop customer-facing applications, presumably things like agentic commerce tools and things like that, to deploy across Amazon's platform. That's a pretty high potential tech trend that we're still just seeing roll out. With both of those, Rachel's right, a lot of this is essentially prepaying for compute power, though. OpenAI, they recently revised their spending number downward to $600 billion by 2030. They're going to need some money. Yeah. I think it's so interesting that many of these AI companies now, they're measuring what they're building in terms of gigawatts of electricity that they need, not so much how many of the physical components of the hardware that they need. Just as a follow-up here, Matt, is there anything in the AI infrastructure space that you want to highlight here in light of OpenAI's recent funding round? They're going to need more money, as I said. That's one thing I do want to highlight. They even came out and said that they expect this funding round to be ongoing, not like they're not capping it at $110 billion. In the AI infrastructure space, I'd say that the data center companies are really worth a look right now. They're an interesting below-the-radar a beneficiary of literally everything Rachel was talking about with prepaying for compute power and things like that. I'm a big fan of that part of the industry. Okay, so I have to ask, is this the final funding round, do you think, before we see an OpenAI IPO on the public market? My gut feel is yes, but I'm curious as to what Rachel says. I think it's possible, but I also think we're in a time where the company is spending so rapidly, I wouldn't be surprised if they seek another round of investment before dipping their toe in the public market, so to speak. But whenever, if and or when that IPO happens, I think a lot of investors are going to be very excited to see what's in store. It'll be a momentous day, without a doubt. Okay, so we're saving my favorite story here for last on the show. We're going to go to outer space. You're listening to Motley Fool Money with the Hidden Gems team. Hi, I'm Neil. And I'm Ken. And we are from the Triviality Podcast, a pub trivia style game show where a lack of seriousness meets a little bit of knowledge. Join us each week for an hour-long game of general knowledge trivia featuring special guests from around the world, plus tons of extra themed episodes. If you want to improve your trivia game, or you just want to scream at us in your car when we get easy questions wrong, then we're the show for you. Find triviality on all your favorite podcast apps. But you know that, because you're already listening to a podcast. Welcome back to the show. Yeah, we are going to outer space right now for our final topic of the show. It's my favorite one. That's why we saved it for last. On Friday, NASA announced that we're doing everything that we thought we were going to do, only faster. So Artemis 1, that happened in 2022. Artemis 2 is currently scheduled for April 1st. But beyond that, Artemis 3, it was supposed to land on the moon in 2028. But Rachel, those plans have now changed. Yeah, so NASA has announced a major overhaul of the Artemis program, and this just happened last Friday. And it's really all about increasing mission frequency, reducing risk through a very step-by-step approach. This is all under the leadership of NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman. And so the agency is essentially shifting from launching every three years to pursuing a new target of one mission every 10 months. Really something that would put them on track to match the pace of the Apollo era. So perhaps the most significant change is the redefinition of Artemis 3, which you alluded to, John. That was originally slated to land humans on the moon. It's now scheduled for mid-2027. Artemis 3 will instead be a low orbit test mission where the Orion capsule will practice docking with commercial lunar landers from SpaceX and Blue Origin It basically like a dress rehearsal right to ensure that the docking systems the new spacesuits are fully flight proven before an actual landing attempt Basically, Artemis 3 is kind of inserted as a new mission in the lineup. And what was supposed to be Artemis 3 is now Artemis 4. And the interesting thing here in this press release from me, from NASA, is that, okay, we want to land on the moon here in 2028. That's still there with Artemis 4, but we want to be there at a minimum every year after that initial landing. If we're going to really go to the moon this frequently and establish a permanent presence, who are some of the beneficiaries here, Matt? There's a wide range of public companies that could be big winners here. Just for example, the Orion crew capsule that was just mentioned, Lockheed Martin is the main contractor on that. Every time there's a manned mission, they'll make money. Boeing, Northrop Grumman, they're both involved with the propulsion of the capsule. Intuitive Machines, their ticker symbol is lunar, so that should be a pretty obvious beneficiary there. That's been selected by NASA to develop cargo capabilities for Artemis missions. Kratos Defense and Security, which I'm sure you've heard me talk about before. It's one of my favorite space stocks. They're best known for drones, but they're also a leader in satellite communications that would be a big player, likely, in the Earth-Moon communication relays that would be needed to have more permanent presence on the moon. I could go on, but those are just a few examples of what I see as potentially big winners. What we're seeing here from NASA is that, Hopefully, we go around the moon here soon this year. Next year, we kind of get up there close by. 2028, we put boots on the ground. And then we continue to do that every year thereafter. Okay, talk is cheap, but whiskey costs money. NASA has the plans, but I'm curious, both of your takes here, what is your personal thesis or ideas on us establishing a permanent human presence on the moon within the next 10 years? I mean, this is a fun one to talk about. I personally don't think that this is going to be an achievable reality within the next 10 years, maybe the next 20 or 30. Obviously, we're seeing very ambitious goals here, right, from the Artemis program. But the idea of establishing a permanent settlement, you know, there's massive technical radiation infrastructural hurdles. I think it's a really exciting concept. There's a lot of long-term problems that have to be solved to make that happen. I don't think we're going to get there in the next decade, but I think a decade from now, we are going to be closer than we are at the time of this podcast. Yeah, so it really depends on what you mean by a permanent settlement or permanent presence on the moon. So do I think that there's going to be like a moon city within 10 years? No. But assuming, and this is a pretty big assumption, that the 2028 timeline that we've talked about actually holds, where we land on the moon in 2028, have another landing at least once a year thereafter, we could see some form of sustained presence on the moon within a decade. Right now, the NASA timeline calls for the Artemis 10 mission, which is scheduled for 2035 at the soonest, to carry astronauts to the moon to remain for 180 days. Again, 2035 at the soonest. There are a lot of factors that will determine if that will even happen. Delays are absolutely not unheard of in space travel. There are logistic challenges, like Rachel mentioned, of building a permanent moon base that deals with radiation and temperatures and things like that. There's budgetary concerns. The budget for the next 10 years might not always be as space-friendly as it is right now. I believe we will have regular manned moon missions a decade from now, and maybe even an Antarctica-style outpost where people go and spend a little bit of time. But I don't think we're going to have a permanent habitation within a decade. Well, no matter what, I'm sure that we will be keeping our eyes on it. Matt and Rachel, thank you so much for being on the show today, especially thanks to our listeners for sticking with us. But that's all the time that we have for this show. As always, people on the program may have interest in the stocks they talk about, and The Motley Fool may have formal recommendations for or against, so don't buy or sell stocks based solely on what you hear. All personal finance content follows Motley Fool editorial standards and is not approved by advertisers. advertisers, advertisements, and our sponsored content and provided for informational purposes only. To see our full advertising disclosure, please check out our show notes. Thanks to our producer, Dan Boyd, and the rest of the Motley Fool team. For Rachel, Matt, and myself, thanks for listening, and we'll chat again soon.