This post is co-authored with Gregory Bernstein, Co-Founder and CEO of The New Industrial Corporation – the prime mover firm in the rise of production capital.
The 1957 departure of the “Traitorous Eight” from Shockley Semiconductor to found Fairchild Semiconductor marked a cultural watershed in American industry. By striking out on their own, the founders of Fairchild left behind the “Organization Man” thinking that defined post-war corporate culture in favor of the entrepreneurial iconoclasm that continues to fuel Silicon Valley.
But this narrative overlooks a fundamental pattern that repeats throughout technological and industrial history. Markets are the only thing that matter, and Urgent Buyers are the critical substrate of attractive new market opportunities.
An Urgent Buyer is, in essence, a customer with an existential need that existing solutions cannot satisfy. These buyers emerge during periods of crisis and strategic realignment when the status quo fails and incremental progress is insufficient. They are willing to pay premium prices, accept technical risk, and commit to large-scale deployment of new technologies.
For Fairchild, Cold War imperatives created a new pool of Urgent Buyer demand. Today, we are witnessing an Urgent Buyer moment of a similar historic scale. Decades of underinvestment in critical industrial capacity have led to systemic failures in energy infrastructure, critical mineral supply chains, and defense readiness. To make up for lost time, Western governments have mobilized a dramatic fiscal and policy response.
This structural desperation forms the foundation upon which the most valuable companies of the next decade will be built.
The Sputnik Moment
When the Soviet launch of Sputnik in 1957 ignited a technological arms race, America’s military establishment was desperate for advanced electronics that could power more sophisticated weapons systems and space vehicles. With national security at stake, the Department of Defense turned up its risk tolerance to meet the need for smaller, more reliable, and more powerful components.
In 1958, Fairchild produced its first silicon transistors for IBM as part of the Air Force’s B-70 supersonic bomber. Next came the company’s breakthrough into the Minuteman ballistic missile program. True to Urgent Buyer form, these early deliveries were procured at a steep premium, as much as 30 times the price of germanium transistors.
The Minuteman program was a godsend for us. The military was willing to pay high prices for performance. How does a small company compete against the giant (TI) or Motorola? It has to have something unique. And then it has to have an outlet.
– Charlie Sporck, Fairchild
As the Space Race accelerated, that outlet grew. In 1964, Fairchild produced more than 100,000 integrated circuits for the Apollo Program alone. NASA and the Department of Defense weren’t just customers; they were Urgent Buyers whose needs catalyzed semiconductor technology development and what became one of the world’s most important industries.
Energy, Minerals, and Materiel
Today, the Big Tech companies standing on the shoulders of Fairchild find themselves on the other side of the Urgent Buyer equation. Grid deficiencies, equipment shortages, permitting hurdles, and the lack of clean baseload power have turned the world’s largest companies into Urgent Buyers for our modern equivalent to the Space Race – the competition to be first to AGI.
Microsoft is spearheading the revival of Three Mile Island and investing in the development of modular reactors like Arbor. Google has agreed to purchase power from SMR company Kairos and is financing emerging developers like Elementl. Amazon is investing directly in advanced nuclear company X-Energy. Meta, rare bee problems notwithstanding, has taken similar steps to access clean power at scale.
The Urgent Buyer moment in energy differs fundamentally from previous investment booms. While the telecom bust of the late 1990s resulted from speculative overcapacity, today’s energy infrastructure needs are underpinned by concrete, long-term, measurable demand. Based on current plans, Microsoft, Amazon, Google, and Meta expect to triple data center power capacity to nearly 26-plus gigawatts by the end of 2028 and have collectively committed to support a tripling of global nuclear capacity by 2050.
Speaking recently at the Milken Conference in Los Angeles, NVIDIA’s Jensen Huang provided a sketch of the scale required to achieve and maintain Western AI supremacy:
How large can these factories be? We’re building ones that can be a gigawatt, and each gigawatt is about $50-60 billion. Over the next 10 years, or so I wouldn’t be surprised to see tens of gigawatts of AI factories around the world.
But even as today’s Urgent Buyers commit capital and narrative fuel to new energy projects, supply will take years to catch up with demand due to regulatory hurdles and technical complexity. Goldman Sachs estimates that gas will still account for 60% of data center power demand growth by 2030. This, in turn, creates massive headroom for emerging companies to build into.
Both critical minerals and defense production are earlier in the Urgent Buyer trajectory, but the writing is on the wall. China’s control of 87% of rare earth processing has turned manufacturers into geopolitical hostages. The American defense industrial base is so depleted that we would exhaust missile stockpiles within days of conflict with China. Emerging New Industrial companies like Vulcan Elements and KoBold Metals are on the vanguard here, but this problem echoes across the West. In Europe, the capability gap created by America’s security retreat is so large that it will require spending of €250 billion annually to close.
Should the status quo hold, all China needs to do is call in the chips of Deng Xiaoping’s famous maxim: “Hide your strength, bide your time”.
Urgency on the Horizon
For Western economies, the time to act is running out quickly. Even as we respond to today’s Urgent Buyer challenges, several new waves of risk and opportunity are already forming in unfamiliar and unforgiving domains: at sea, in the sky, underground, and in the High North.
At sea, America’s retreat from securing global maritime routes threatens trade and supply chains. Western shipbuilding and port infrastructure have deteriorated while undersea communication networks carrying an estimated $10 trillion in daily transactions face growing technological threats.
In the sky, climate volatility demands new atmospheric resilience technologies. Weather modification capabilities are evolving from speculative science to strategic necessity (see Rainmaker Technologies’ ongoing engagements across the Middle East) as traditional insurance, storm adaptation, and agricultural practices fail against increasingly extreme climate patterns.
Underground, America’s aging water and utility networks represent just one part of a $3.7 trillion infrastructure funding gap threatening economic competitiveness and national security. As systemic failures accelerate, the coming catch-up infrastructure investment surge will overwhelm century-old incumbents, creating opportunities for companies to reimagine infrastructure delivery with better technology and operational standards.
In the Arctic, receding ice (12% per decade) and geopolitical competition are creating new shipping routes, unlocking vast resources – potentially 10% of undiscovered oil and 30% of untapped natural gas, and sparking a security and intelligence race. A single aggressive move by any Arctic power could trigger a regional arms race for energy, trade routes, and resources.
History shows that Urgent Buyer moments arrive with stunning speed, transforming strategic paradigms virtually overnight. Across these domains, the timing of catalytic events is unclear. But when Urgent Buyer moments arrive, preparedness is the ultimate competitive advantage.
Additionally, an important structural dynamic, what Russell Napier calls “National Capitalism”, stands to accelerate the number of Urgent Buyer scenarios we face.
These are the proverbial “unknown unknowns”, second and third-order consequences of a world where governments direct national savings, investment mandates, trade protectionism, and capital controls toward strategic priorities. In such an environment, nations will increasingly face critical capacity gaps with no domestic solutions. Trade disruptions and geopolitical realignments will create existential needs that only companies capable of rapidly retooling supply chains can address. These adaptive businesses will command premium prices during national capacity crises when domestic alternatives can’t scale quickly enough.
The coming industrial realignment will reward companies, and investors, specifically built to thrive amid disruption, not those struggling to adapt legacy operations to new structural realities.
The Urgent Buyer Capital Cycle
These cascading vulnerabilities have not gone unnoticed in Western capitals or on Wall Street, triggering massive fiscal and balance sheet responses that are accelerating the Urgent Buyer phenomenon globally.
The Trump administration has tapped emergency powers to increase American critical mineral production, Germany has approved a €1 trillion spending package for defense and infrastructure modernization, while the UAE has committed $1.4 trillion over ten years for US investments in critical technologies and manufacturing.
These aren’t ordinary initiatives but desperate attempts to rebuild lost capacity in a world of rapidly shifting alliances while there’s still time.
As BlackRock’s Larry Fink noted in his 2024 Chairman’s Letter, “we’re standing at the edge of an opportunity so vast it’s almost hard to grasp.”
By 2040, the global demand for new infrastructure investment is $68 trillion. To put that price tag in perspective, it’s roughly the equivalent of building the entire Interstate Highway System and the Transcontinental Railroad, start to finish, every six weeks for the next 15 years.
For capital allocators, the fundamental realignment creating Urgent Buyers across energy, minerals, and defense represents more than a series of discrete market opportunities. If past cycles, like the Cold War, are any indication, we can expect entirely new asset classes, pioneered by entrepreneurial financiers, to emerge quickly.
Led by pioneers like Arthur Rock, who organized the initial funding for Fairchild, Cold War needs sparked the creation of modern venture capital. Delivering for today’s Urgent Buyers similarly requires new financial architecture that can serve as a capital launchpad for new industrial champions, propelling the defining technologies and founders of the era toward the largest pools of emerging demand.
At its core, the Urgent Buyer phenomenon arises when existential crises and strategic imperatives trigger immediate, premium demand. This shakes capital markets out of their risk aversion and siloed thinking. In these crucible moments, builders, investors, and customers align on the need for rapid scale, which collapses the traditional capital cycle. Today’s Urgent Buyers across energy, minerals, and defense can’t afford to wait for promising technologies to mature. They are underwriting and supporting industrial-scale deployment from day one.
As we have written on numerous occasions, bridging the gap between the venture-world optimists and the industrial realists will demand new financing mechanisms that blend venture capital’s appetite for technical risk with the realities of large-scale deployment. On the other side of that complexity lies a transformed risk-return equation. Urgent Buyers offer what capital allocators dream of but rarely find: guaranteed demand at premium prices from deep-pocketed customers who cannot accept delays.
The stakes could not be higher.
During the Cold War, Urgent Buyers cemented Western technological supremacy and catalyzed the rise of entire industries. Today’s Urgent Buyers offer the same multi-decade potential, but only for those poised to deploy capital at the speed and scale this moment demands. Those who fail to recognize this inevitability risk irrelevance, watching from the sidelines as a new generation of financial institutions emerges to serve a new class of techno-industrial champions.