The $1tn question: How are Swiss law firms planning their AI future?
Dominic Carman
As Elon Musk’s total wealth hits the $1.4tn mark to surpass Switzerland’s annual GDP, how and where does AI fit in the Swiss legal landscape?
The recent SpaceX debut on Nasdaq was a global news story. Surpassing the previous record held by Saudi Aramco and having acquired xAI, another Elon Musk startup, SpaceX raised $85bn in its IPO, resulting in a company valuation of $2.1tn after its first day ofpublic trading.
The ultimate goal of launching up to 1m scalable, solar-powered data centres in space may be some way off, but the really big headlines of the moment belong to Musk himself: the first man to become a dollar trillionaire, he is now worth $1.4tn whereas a decade ago, his net worth hovered around the $14bn mark. For context, this puts Musk’s wealth well above the entire GDP ($1.15tn) of Switzerland – one of only 21 countries whose annual GDP exceeds $1tn, according to the IMF.
When the GDP of the world’s 20th largest economy, ranked third for GDP per capita, can be surpassed by one man’s accumulated wealth in this century, then where will AI take us next?
As big companies swiftly pivot towards agentic AI systems that are capable of complex, autonomous reasoning and actions, they are looking to raise record sums in a race to secure public funding for advanced AI development: rivals OpenAI (creator of ChatGPT) and Anthropic (maker of Claude, Fable and Mythos) have both filed for IPOs, targeting $1tn valuations.
We are, of course, only at the beginning of the AI journey. According to Goldman Sachs, a total of $7.6tn in aggregate capital expenditure (CapEx) will be needed across the global AI ecosystem within the next five years as baseline CapEx climbs from $765bn in 2026 to over $1.6tn annually by 2031.


