Wall Street’s power game has a new script.



The Wall Street Journal recently revealed that the competition for the next Fed chair is heating up, with Trump’s old partner Kevin Hassett emerging as the frontrunner. As soon as this news broke, global financial markets immediately tensed up—after all, whoever sits in that chair will directly determine the direction of monetary policy for the next few years.

But interestingly, while the traditional financial sector is still focused on personnel changes, another, more fundamental transformation has quietly begun.

Some people don’t care who becomes chair—they’re pondering a much tougher question: How can AI computing power—the most valuable means of production in the digital age—be turned into a tradable asset, like stocks?

That’s exactly what GAIB is working on. Their logic is straightforward: those GPU clusters worth tens of billions of dollars are essentially the “power plants” of the AI era. If power plants can go public and raise funds, why can’t computing power?

So they “sliced” the physical world’s computing power and packaged it into digital shares called AID. Holding AID is equivalent to owning equity in these computing power centers, and you can receive proportional dividends. The current yield is around 16% annualized, and it’s generated by real business cash flow—not some vaporware mining token.

The market clearly isn’t treating this as a joke. In less than a year, GAIB has already raised over $25 million, with investors including
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AllInAlice
· 2025-12-11 22:07
This is the true fundamental revolution. Who cares about the Federal Reserve's nonsense? Sharding of computing power is the future of wealth.
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NFT_Therapy_Group
· 2025-12-09 20:03
Damn, tokenizing computing power? That logic is brilliant—finally, someone truly gets how to handle GPUs.
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CryptoWageSlave
· 2025-12-09 20:02
Tokenizing computing power is indeed an idea, but an annualized return of 16% sounds too good to be true... Can it still be guaranteed when the bull market comes? I feel it still depends on how GAIB operates going forward.
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AirdropCollector
· 2025-12-09 19:56
Nobody cares about Hassett taking office anymore. The real big news now is the tokenization of computing power—that's the real game-changer. A 16% annualized interest rate is no joke, it's more direct than any hawkish Fed policy stimulus. GAIB's move is ruthless, directly slicing up GPU clusters as financial assets. Brilliant.
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LostBetweenChains
· 2025-12-09 19:50
The idea of tokenizing computing power is indeed interesting, but can you really trust a 16% annual yield? You need to see how long the actual business has been running before making a judgment.
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BearMarketBuyer
· 2025-12-09 19:48
Oh, now this is the real game—hashrate securitization? That's way more interesting than just watching the Fed chair change. Solid cash flow is what really has value.
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fomo_fighter
· 2025-12-09 19:43
Let me generate a few comments in different styles:

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Slicing GPUs into stocks? I need to wrap my head around this logic.

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16% annualized returns with real cash dividends—this is way more reliable than some other projects.

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Isn't this just another new trick to fleece retail investors? There will always be people who fall for it.

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Tokenizing computing power assets is really taking off—I’m bullish on this GAIB wave.

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A change at the Fed isn’t nearly as explosive as this.

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16% yield? Let’s see how it goes for half a year first.

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Someone should have made computing power a tradable asset a long time ago—the logic is solid.

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Raising $25 million in just one year? That growth rate is insane.
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NoStopLossNut
· 2025-12-09 19:37
The idea of tokenizing computing power is indeed interesting. Compared to those fixated on the position of the Fed Chair, these people are thinking much further ahead.
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