The Synozur Alliance

The Silicon Seven

The “Magnificent Seven” made sense for a 2023 market led by mobile, ads, and EVs. In 2026, AI has changed the map. This post argues that Apple and Tesla no longer belong in the top strategic tier, while OpenAI and Anthropic do. The new “Silicon Seven” are the companies that control foundation models, AI infrastructure, and enterprise distribution—the three power centers that will shape the next era of enterprise technology.

In 2023, Jim Cramer popularized the “Magnificent Seven” — Apple, Microsoft, Alphabet, Amazon, Meta, NVIDIA, and Tesla — as the cohort dragging the S&P 500 higher. It was a useful framing for that moment: mobile was mature, digital advertising was a duopoly, and EVs felt like the next big platform shift.

The Magnificent Seven is also the title of a 1960 western.

Three years later the framing needs a refresh. The market’s center of gravity has moved decisively to artificial intelligence, and two members of Cramer’s list — Apple and Tesla — are not setting the AI agenda. Meanwhile, two private companies — OpenAI and Anthropic — have become more important to enterprise technology strategy than half the original list.

So here is the 2026 rewrite. Call it the Silicon Seven.

Three control points that matter

You earn a seat on this list by owning at least one of three control points in the AI stack:

Apple and Tesla do not own any of these layers. They are AI consumers, not AI shapers. That is the structural reason they come off the list.

The Silicon Seven

In rough order of how directly each shapes the frontier:

What they’re worth

Market values as of May 19, 2026. Public-market caps are spot; private valuations are most-recent round.

Company

Market Cap

Approx. Multiple

NVIDIA

$5.34T

~14.5x revenue

Alphabet

$4.66T

~4.1x revenue

Microsoft

$3.10T

~1.8x revenue

Amazon

$2.79T

~3.2x revenue

Meta

$1.53T

~4.5x revenue

OpenAI*

~$852B

~29x revenue

Anthropic*

$965B

~112x revenue

*Private market valuations from most recent funding rounds as of May 28. 2026

Why Apple comes off the list

Apple still has the most valuable consumer hardware franchise in the world. None of that is changing. But on the AI scorecard, Apple is missing every box. There is no frontier model with Apple’s name on it. There is no hyperscale AI infrastructure business. Apple Intelligence shipped late, shipped thin, and outsourced its heavy lifting to OpenAI.

Apple is a great place to use AI. It is not a place where AI gets decided.

Why Tesla comes off the list

Tesla has real AI ambitions in autonomy (FSD) and robotics (Optimus). Those are technical achievements. They are also narrow. Tesla does not have a general-purpose foundation model, does not sell AI infrastructure to anyone else, and does not have an enterprise distribution channel.

A car company that uses AI is not the same as a company that defines AI. Tesla is the former.

Why OpenAI goes on the list

CNBC reported in late 2025 that OpenAI closed a funding round valuing the company at roughly $122 billion in new capital, with a secondary valuation north of $500 billion. ChatGPT crossed 900 million weekly active users earlier this year. The revenue run-rate is above $24 billion annualized — roughly $2 billion a month.

Those numbers put OpenAI ahead of most of the original Magnificent Seven on AI revenue specifically. They also make OpenAI the default consumer surface for artificial intelligence — the place where most people first meet the technology. That is the same role iPhone played for mobile in 2008.

Why Anthropic goes on the list

Anthropic closed a $30 billion Series G in February 2026 at a $380 billion post-money valuation. Run-rate revenue is around $14 billion. More than 500 enterprise customers spend over $1 million each year on Anthropic’s API.

The thing to notice is the customer mix. Anthropic is the frontier lab that regulated industries — banks, insurers, healthcare networks, federal agencies — have settled on as the default. That kind of enterprise gravity is hard to dislodge, and it gives Anthropic a structurally different revenue profile than a pure consumer play.

Three to watch

Just outside the Silicon Seven sits a second ring of companies that may shape the next phase of the AI market.

Together, these three are the “frontier of the frontier” - outside the core seven for now, but strategically important because they point to where the next power shift may rise.

The next four years

Our Synozur 2026 AI Report puts global enterprise AI spending at $453 billion this year, growing to $923 billion by 2030 — roughly a doubling in four years. That is the pool the Silicon Seven are fighting over.

Each of the seven has a defensible structural position in that fight. Each owns at least one of the three control points — foundation models, AI infrastructure, or enterprise distribution — and most own more than one. Companies outside this set may participate in the AI economy. They will not shape it.

That is the test Cramer’s original list no longer passes for Apple and Tesla. It is the test OpenAI and Anthropic pass cleanly. And it is the reason the Magnificent Seven, as a frame, needs to be retired.

Long live the Silicon Seven.