“But what’s the economics of that? I’m going to leave that to my secretary of Defense and the deputy secretary of Defense,” the head of the Department of Commerce stated. “These guys are on it and they’re thinking about it.”
In a statement to CNBC, a spokesperson for Lockheed said, “As we did in his first term, we are continuing our strong working relationship with President Trump and his Administration to strengthen our national defense.”
The U.S. government will buy 433.3 million shares of Intel common stock at $20.47 per share. The ownership will be passive with no board representation, other governance or information rights.
The equity stake will be funded by $5.7 billion in remaining CHIPS and Science Act grants and $3.2 billion awarded to the company under the Secure Enclave program.
Former CACI International executive Jeffrey Keen has been named senior vice president of federal civilian programs at defense and national security company Xcelerate Solutions.…
Pradeep Paruchuri, senior director of solutions engineering at UiPath, said agentic artificial intelligence could help government agencies improve efficiency by…