King Charles meets with US tech leaders, talks startup challenges

Britain's King Charles met ​with U.S. tech leaders on Tuesday ​as part of his ‌four-day state visit, ​discussing challenges for early-stage startups as the UK touts itself as a top destination for technology firms. Among the ‌leaders Charles met with were Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, Apple CEO Tim Cook, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang, Advanced Micro Devices CEO Lisa Su, Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff and Alphabet President Ruth ‌Porat.


Reuters | Updated: 29-04-2026 04:21 IST | Created: 29-04-2026 04:21 IST
King Charles meets with US tech leaders, talks startup challenges

Britain's King Charles met ​with U.S. tech leaders on Tuesday ​as part of his ‌four-day state visit, ​discussing challenges for early-stage startups as the UK touts itself as a top destination for technology firms.

Among the ‌leaders Charles met with were Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, Apple CEO Tim Cook, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang, Advanced Micro Devices CEO Lisa Su, Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff and Alphabet President Ruth ‌Porat. Charles noted issues facing companies formed from work at universities and the difficulty ‌of those startups getting funding. "These are the people I always think have the greatest difficulty getting off the ground," he told the CEOs. "They get into this terrible valley of death."

Huang noted big areas ⁠of opportunity, ​such as AI ⁠and quantum robotics: "We just need a vibrant VC ecosystem and a startup culture," he told the king, referring ⁠to venture capital. Charles responded, "You're all deadly competitors," to laughter.

Huang joked back: "No one has to die." ​King Charles responded, "Really?" to more laughter. Bezos recounted starting Amazon in 1995 and that ⁠he struggled to raise $1 million from investors, $50,000 at a time, and noted 40 said no.

The king responded, "And ⁠all ​those 40 are kicking themselves," to wide laughter. Charles compared people who passed up investing in Amazon to the popular Harry Potter books and how many publishers ⁠turned down the book.

The meeting follows an announcement in September during President Donald Trump's visit to ⁠the UK ⁠that companies including Microsoft, Nvidia, Google and OpenAI had pledged 31 billion pounds ($42 billion) in British investments over the next few years, in ‌AI, quantum ‌computing and civil nuclear energy.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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