The 5 biggest global business rivalries to watch, and how their outcomes will shape the future

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The 5 biggest global business rivalries to watch, and how their outcomes will shape the future

Fortune Magazine | August 2025 Issue

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2 key takeaways from the article

  1. Power is precarious: The more of it you possess, the more competitors you attract, gunning for your customers, star employees, and market share. Fortune magazine drilled down on five of the biggest rivalries in business.  3 of these shared here.
  2. In AI chips, driven by soaring demand for its high-performance chips that power generative AI, Nvidia now is the most valuable company in the world.  AMD is positioning itself as a viable second source for AI chips amid surging demand. In electric vehicles, Elon Musk, has seen Tesla’s fortunes erode as he gets entangled in social media and politics.   Since 2023, the U.S. auto-industry started paying attention to BYD. Its affordable models, ultrafast charging technology, and complimentary driver assistance systems have helped the company garner 20% of the global EV market.  In Artificial Intelligence, Altman’s leadership of OpenAI has made him one of Silicon Valley’s most powerful, and polarizing, figures. He fell out with Elon Musk years ago and has clashed recently with Meta’s Mark Zuckerberg, who has been poaching OpenAI staff with multimillion-dollar comp packages. In Finance, Jamie Dimon is poised to go down in history as one of the greatest bankers of all time.  Marc Rowan, a onetime corporate lawyer, has emerged in recent years as the dominant figure in the fast-growing world of private equity. In Energy, having missed out on the U.S. shale gas boom, Exxon Mobil was playing catch-up when Darren Woods took over as CEO in 2017.   Mike Wirth took over in 2018—one year after Woods at Exxon Mobil. After serving as the energy darling of investors for a few years, Chevron now faces a revitalized Exxon.

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Topics:  Business Rivalries, Decision-making, Leadership, Competition

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