Skip to navigationSkip to main contentSkip to right columnADVERTISEMENTSurbhi JainSun, June 7, 2026 at 7:31 PM GMT+2 4 min readBenzinga and Yahoo Finance LLC may earn commission or revenue on some items through the links below.President Donald Trump‘s new AI executive order may have avoided the heavy-handed regulation that some in Silicon Valley feared, but it has opened a new question for investors: who will gain a seat at the table as Washington builds its framework for overseeing frontier AI systems?The order, signed Tuesday, gives the administration 60 days to determine which frontier AI models will fall under its new voluntary cybersecurity framework. It also tasks officials with identifying which “trusted partners” beyond the federal government could receive early access to advanced AI models before their public release.The 60-Day Countdown BeginsThe executive order largely sidestepped some of the most controversial proposals floated in earlier drafts. Participation remains voluntary, and the final version explicitly states that it does not authorize the creation of a government licensing system for AI developers.Don't Miss:A single bad hire can set a startup back years. Here are the 5 hires founders most often misjudge — and whyStill Learning the Market? These 50 Must-Know Terms Can Help You Catch Up FastStill, the administration’s next move could prove important. Over the next two months, officials must define what qualifies as a frontier model and establish the criteria for selecting outside organizations that may participate in the program.That uncertainty is already creating a new area of focus for investors looking at companies with deep ties to both artificial intelligence and government operations.Could Cloud Giants Be In The Mix?Among the names investors may watch are Microsoft Corp and Oracle Corp, both of which maintain extensive relationships with federal agencies through government cloud offerings and infrastructure contracts.If the administration ultimately leans on major cloud providers to help evaluate, secure or host advanced AI systems, those companies could emerge as natural candidates for any trusted-partner ecosystem. The executive order does not specify who those partners might be, but hyperscale cloud providers already sit at the center of many AI deployments.For Microsoft, the question is particularly relevant given its close involvement in the AI race through OpenAI and its broader Azure ecosystem.See Also: Avoid the #1 Investing Mistake: How Your ‘Safe' Holdings Could Be Costing You Big TimePalantir’s Government AI AnglePalantir Technologies Inc may also attract attention as investors assess potential beneficiaries of the new framework.The company has built much of its business around government data integration, intelligence workflows and decision-support platforms. While the executive order does not mention Palantir, the initiative’s focus on coordination, monitoring and information sharing between government agencies and AI developers overlaps with areas where the company already operates.For now, investors are left waiting for details. 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