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Hi all, itâs Eric. Larry Ellison, the co-founder and executive chairman of Oracle Corp. is a fierce competitor, to put it mildly. This is a man who helped build a $177Â billion company, and who likes to unwind by funding ludicrous hydrofoiling racing catamarans.
Increasingly, Ellisonâs company is competing with the cloud computing wing of Amazon.com Inc., and he does it with zeal. Oracle [funded an anti-Amazon group](Â called the âFree and Fair Markets Initiativeâ to attack Amazon. Oracle also worked desperately to derail Amazonâs bid for JEDI, a lucrative Defense Department cloud contract, going for far as to sue the federal government for illegally favoring Amazon.
Now, Ellison is making friends with his enemyâs enemy, who happens to be the President of the United States. On Wednesday, Ellison [will host a fundraiser for President Donald Trump]( at his home in Rancho Mirage, California. Top contributors are expected to shell out $250,000 for a photo, a golf outing and a round-table discussion.
Trump has his own issues with Jeff Bezos, Amazonâs chief executive officer, who also owns the Washington Post. The paperâs coverage has consistently enraged the president, and Trump has made no secret of his dislike for Bezos, Amazon, or the Post. Perhaps most delightfully to Ellison, the president articulated his desire to âscrew Amazonâ and block it from the JEDI contract, [according to a book]( written by a former speechwriter for the Secretary of Defense.
Late last year, Amazon lost JEDI to Microsoft, though [a court on Thursday froze the contract]( as Amazon pursues a lawsuit against the government. Amazon is now the one accusing the government of political bias, citing the very public record on the matter.
Is Ellisonâs interest in Trump inspired by their shared contempt for Bezos? Who knows. On the one hand, itâs not out of character for Ellison to raise money for Republicans. He backed Marco Rubio in 2016.
Then again, backing Trump is uniquely controversial. Recode [called Ellison]( âone of Silicon Valleyâs most eccentric and independent-minded leaders,â observing that those traits might make him immune to âthe blowback.â
(Disclaimer: Michael Bloomberg is seeking the Democratic presidential nomination. He is the founder and majority owner of Bloomberg LP, the parent company of Bloomberg News.)
It will be interesting to see who elseâif anyoneâfrom the Silicon Valley elite follows Ellison. If Senator Bernie Sanders keeps racking up wins, will the capitalists in tech really support a self-proclaimed democratic socialist? Founders Fund partner Keith Rabois [has said he'd vote for Trump]( over Sanders or Senator Elizabeth Warren. (Rank-and-file tech employees, meanwhile, [seem happy to support Sanders](, who received more money in political contributions from employees at big tech companies than any other presidential candidate in the last three months of 2019.)Â
In 2016, Raboisâs colleague Peter Thiel bet on Trump. He spoke in Trump's support at the Republican National Convention. Thiel was basically alone in Silicon Valley in supporting the nominee that no one thought would win, but he continued to support the president in the face of near-universal disdain from the rest of the tech industry. That bet clearly brought Thiel closer to the president. In October, Thiel and Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg dined at the White House.
Even when a president is unpopular with your employees, staying close to power has big benefits for business leaders. Apple CEO Tim Cook has [quietly kept the lines open]( to the president. Earlier this year, a handful of tech industry bigwigs, including Marc Andreessen, the prominent venture capitalist, Sarah Friar, the CEO of Nextdoor.com Inc., and Gregory Becker, the CEO of [Silicon Valley Bank](, [dined with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo](. A person familiar with the dinner told Bloomberg at the time that it was an attempt to drum up support for the Trump administration.
If people in Silicon Valley are coming around on Trump, theyâre keeping it quiet for now. There are clearly risks associated with aligning with the president. But the owners of multibillion-dollar companies are well aware of potential benefits. And if they think heâs going to win, they could see risks to staying away, too. â[Eric Newcomer](mailto:enewcomer@bloomberg.net)
If you read one thing
It turns out investing $375 million in a pizza delivery robot startup is looking like a bad idea. My colleague Sarah McBride [dishes on the trouble at Zume](, one of SoftBank's big bets. In January the company cut 360 jobs.
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And hereâs what you need to know in global technology news
Tech earnings results went well. [Nvidia](, [Expedia]( and [Roku]( beat expectations and saw their shares rise in after hours trading.
Michael Bloomberg buys ads on meme accounts. [It's all very online](. Even an account called "kalesalad" [has its price, apparently](. (Bloomberg is the founder and majority owner of Bloomberg LP, the parent company of Bloomberg News.)
Uber is becoming a taxi service. Now some people can call an Uber, [like on the telephone](.
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