The eco-friendly footwear darling just traded merino wool for machine learning in the most desperate corporate pivot since MoviePass tried blockchain.
Nothing says “we’re out of ideas” quite like a sustainable shoe company announcing it’s becoming an AI infrastructure provider. Allbirds, the once-$4 billion darling of tech CEOs and their wool-obsessed feet, just secured $50 million to rebrand as NewBird AI and enter the GPU-as-a-service business. This isn’t innovation—it’s desperation wearing a machine learning costume.
The Numbers Tell a Brutal Story
From unicorn valuation to fire sale in five years, Allbirds’ collapse reads like a masterclass in mistaking hype for demand.
The math is savage. Shares that peaked equivalent to $520 in 2021 recently traded at $3 before surging 600% to $18 on AI speculation alone. Between March and April, Allbirds sold its intellectual property and assets for a measly $39 million to American Exchange Group, closed nearly all U.S. stores, then immediately pivoted to chasing GPU dreams. Your local GameStop probably has more sustainable revenue streams at this point.
Experts Aren’t Buying the Silicon Valley Fairy Tale
Industry veterans call the pivot exactly what it looks like: a Hail Mary from a company that ran out of runway.
Bill Kleyman, CEO of Apolo, didn’t mince words about Allbirds’ AI ambitions. “On the surface, it’s a strange pivot… not a very natural adjacency,” he told ABC News, describing the move as desperate and undercapitalized. Competing against Amazon, Oracle, and established cloud providers with $50 million is like bringing flip-flops to a Formula 1 race. The AI infrastructure game demands massive capital, power agreements, cooling systems, and actual technical expertise—none of which scream “sustainable footwear company.”
Environmental Hypocrisy Reaches Peak Silicon Valley
SEC filings reveal Allbirds plans to abandon its environmental charter for energy-hungry data centers.
Here’s the kicker: Allbirds filed with the SEC to drop its public benefit corporation status because the “Electronics Infrastructure Business would be less focused on environmental conservation.” A company that built its entire brand on sustainability just admitted it’s abandoning those principles to chase AI money. You know an industry has jumped the shark when wool shoe manufacturers are pivoting to power-hungry GPU farms. The irony would be hilarious if it weren’t so perfectly emblematic of how venture capital chases whatever’s trending this quarter.




























