Support the Guardian

Fund independent journalism

Business Today
Business live
OpenAI reportedly claims it has evidence China’s DeepSeek ‘used its model’ to train AI chatbot
Live  
OpenAI reportedly claims it has evidence China’s DeepSeek ‘used its model’ to train AI chatbot
White House advisor David Sacks says there is ‘substantial evidence’ of DeepSeek using OpenAI technology
Headlines
Exclusive  
Roman Abramovich may owe HMRC £1bn for unpaid taxes, analysis shows
Roman Abramovich may owe HMRC £1bn for unpaid taxes, analysis shows
Infrastructure  
Reeves plans to create ‘Silicon Valley’ between Oxford and Cambridge
Markets  
US tech stocks partly recover after Trump says DeepSeek AI chatbot is ‘wake-up call’
Artificial intelligence  
Former OpenAI safety researcher brands pace of AI development ‘terrifying’
Analysis  
How Trump tariffs could upend car markets in Europe, the US and China
Timeline  
Heathrow third runway: a saga of promises, protest and U-turns
Environment  
Water industry promises £22bn of environmental investment, funded by rising bills
Starbucks  
Company posts smaller-than-expected sales drop amid turnaround effort
Boeing  
Planemaker reports $11.8bn annual loss – its largest since 2020
AllBright  
London’s women-only members’ club enters administration
Supermarkets  
Asda ditches Aldi and Lidl price-match scheme just a year after launch
Stock markets  
Tech billionaires lost almost $100bn in sell-off sparked by DeepSeek
Explainer  
Who is behind DeepSeek and how did it achieve its AI ‘Sputnik moment’?
London  
Green transition should benefit ordinary Londoners, says deputy mayor
Today's agenda
OpenAI has claimed that it has evidence that the Chinese competitor DeepSeek used the American company’s AI model to train its rival chatbot, according to Bloomberg News.

The release of DeepSeek’s open source R1 model has roiled global financial markets after the Chinese company appeared to have achieved comparable results to rivals who used far greater money and computing resources.

The claims prompted investors to question the underpinnings of the US stock market boom, which has been predicated on the idea that AI “hyperscalers” will need huge amounts of computing power to train AI models. The share price of the chip company Nvidia recorded the biggest one-day decline in value in stock market history on Monday, before recovering some of its losses on Tuesday.

Global share prices steadied on Wednesday. Japan’s Topix index rose by 0.7%, while Australia’s ASX rose by 2.9%. The FTSE 100 was roughly flat at the opening bell.

AI companies and investors have been scrambling to understand the implications of DeepSeek’s rapid rise. OpenAI and its major backer, Microsoft, have been investigating whether DeepSeek obtained data in an unauthorised manner, after observing some individuals exporting large amounts of data from OpenAI’s products, Bloomberg reported.

The Financial Times reported that OpenAI, led by Sam Altman, said it had seen some evidence of “distillation”, which it suspects to be from DeepSeek. That would violate OpenAI’s terms of service.

OpenAI has itself faced heavy criticism for its own approach to others’ intellectual property. The company is facing early hearings in a case led by the New York Times in which media companies claim the company used their data without permission.

Nevertheless, the claims could open up a new front in the technological struggles between the US and China.

The venture capitalist David Sacks was appointed by the US president, Donald Trump, as the AI and cryptocurrency “tsar”. He said on Tuesday night that there was evidence of “distillation”, when one AI model asks repeated questions of another to train itself on how to respond.

Sacks told Fox News: "There’s substantial evidence that what DeepSeek did here is they distilled knowledge out of OpenAI models, and I don’t think OpenAI is very happy about this.

"I think one of the things you’re going to see over the next few months is our leading AI companies taking steps to try to prevent distillation."

WH Smith has reported falling sales in its UK high street stores, only days after its parent company confirmed it was seeking a buyer for its legacy retail business.

Like-for-like sales in the retailer’s UK high street division – where it sells newspapers, books, stationery, cards and gifts – fell by 3% in the 21 weeks to 25 January, compared with a year earlier, although it said this was in line with expectations. It said it exited the Christmas trading period “with a clean stock position” and added it was on track to achieve full-year cost savings of £11m.

It came as WH Smith reported 7% higher revenue in its more successful travel arm, and rising revenue in its North American division. The company’s share price rose by 5.7% in early trading on Wednesday morning, making it the second-biggest riser on the FTSE 250 index of mid-sized companies.

WH Smith’s eponymous parent company’s decision to put out a “for sale” sign for its 500 UK high street stores could lead to the name disappearing from British town centres but potentially live on in railway stations, airports and hospitals across 32 countries. The intended sale of the high street stores has created uncertainty for 5,000 staff.

The move would allow the company to focus on its more successful travel arm, which accounted for three-quarters of the group’s revenue in the year to the end of August. The company said it was driving sales at its travel division stores by stocking more travel essentials including new food and health and beauty ranges.

The agenda
• 
2.15pm GMT: Bank of England governor Andrew Bailey at Treasury select committee
• 2.45pm GMT: Bank of Canada interest rate decision

We'll be tracking all the main events throughout the day …
Nils Pratley on finance
The stock market is always terrible at valuing technology revolutions
The stock market is always terrible at valuing technology revolutions
Opinion
Analysis  
What will Washington do about Chinese startup DeepSeek and its AI chatbot?
What will Washington do about Chinese startup DeepSeek and its AI chatbot?
Media
Strictly Come Dancing  
Wynne Evans to ‘take time out’ from live tour
Wynne Evans to ‘take time out’ from live tour
Horse racing  
Trainers abandon TV interview boycott plan to avoid ‘public conflict’
Spotlight
The Tate & Lyle boss who’s moved on from sugar
Biscuits, gummies and seaweed  
The Tate & Lyle boss who’s moved on from sugar
Nick Hampton, the head of the modern, low-calorie version of the historic food company, is in charge of a quest to create new ingredients
Popular on business
AI-linked stocks remain volatile after DeepSeek rout; Boeing posts its second-biggest annual loss on record – as it happened
AI-linked stocks remain volatile after DeepSeek rout; Boeing posts its second-biggest annual loss on record – as it happened
Asda ditches Aldi and Lidl price-match scheme just a year after launch
Gravity finally catches up with WH Smith on the high street
No more excuses: the time has come for the RBA to cut interest rates
Coca-Cola recalls drinks in Europe over ‘higher levels’ of chemical chlorate
Get in touch
If you have any questions or comments about any of our newsletters please email [email protected]
You are receiving this email because you are a subscriber to Business Today. Guardian News & Media Limited - a member of Guardian Media Group PLC. Registered Office: Kings Place, 90 York Way, London, N1 9GU. Registered in England No. 908396