Published: Thursday, September 18, 2025 · 3:46 PM | Updated: Thursday, September 18, 2025 · 3:46 PM
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🗝️ Key Points
- Prime minister Keir Starmer said that the UK and US had renewed their "special relationship for a new era" during president Donald Trump's state visit to Britain, as £250bn.
- Starmer made the comments in a press conference alongside Trump on Thursday, capping off the US president's state visit to the UK this week.
- "This historic second state visit is a moment to celebrate the unique bond between our two countries," said Starmer.
Prime minister Keir Starmer said that the UK and US had renewed their “special relationship for a new era” during president Donald Trump’s state visit to Britain, as £250bn ($338bn) of investment has been pledged between companies from both countries.
Starmer made the comments in a press conference alongside Trump on Thursday, capping off the US president’s state visit to the UK this week.
“This historic second state visit is a moment to celebrate the unique bond between our two countries,” said Starmer. “But today, we’ve gone far beyond that, we’ve renewed the special relationship for a new era.”
“The United Kingdom and the United States stand together today as first partners on defence, first partners in trade, with the groundbreaking deal we struck in May and now with the new agreement that we’ve just signed this afternoon, when confirming our status as the first partners in science and technology, ready to define this century together just as we did the last,” he said.
Meanwhile, Trump said that the countries’ “enduring connection is why I was thrilled that the United Kingdom was the very first country with which we made a historic trade deal and a very good trade deal”, calling Starmer a “tough negotiator”.
Read more: The UK companies partnering with US big tech
Trump said the Tech Prosperity Deal announced by the UK and US on Tuesday was “one of a kind”. He said it would ensure the US and UK “lead the next great technological revolution side-by-side”.
The landmark tech deal came as several major US and UK companies pledged transatlantic investments. Earlier on Thursday at a state visit business event, Starmer said that £250bn was “flowing both ways across the Atlantic”.
US companies have pledged £150bn worth of investment in Britain during Trump’s state visit, in a package of deals set to create more than 7,600 jobs across the UK.
A number of tech giants, including Microsoft (MSFT), Nvidia (NVDA) and Google (GOOG, GOOGL), had already announced billions of pounds of investment in the UK earlier this week.
New investment pledges announced on Wednesday included £100bn over the next decade from private equity giant Blackstone, £3.9bn from investment firm Prologis (PLD) and £1.5bn from data software platform company Palantir (PLTR).
The UK government said this marked the largest investment package ever associated with a visit of its kind, surpassing previous records set by the Chinese and Korean state visits in 2015 and 2023 respectively.
Read more: Bank of England holds interest rates at 4%
Investments by US tech firms already announced this week include chipmaker Nvidia’s pledge alongside AI infrastructure partners including Nscale and CoreWeave (CRWV), that would invest £11bn in UK AI factories.
Microsoft (MSFT) also said that it plans to pump $30bn (£22bn) into AI infrastructure and its ongoing operations across the UK over four years through to 2028.
Meanwhile, Alphabet’s (GOOG, GOOGL) Google announced the opening of its data centre in Waltham Cross, Hertfordshire, as part of a two-year £5bn investment in the UK.
In addition, software giant Salesforce (CRM) pledged to put a further $2bn into its UK business through 2030, extending a previous five-year investment of $4bn made in 2023.
Alongside pledges of inward investment, UK companies have also committed to invest in the US. That includes British pharmaceuticals company GSK (GSK.L), which has promised to invest nearly £22bn into US research and development (R&D) and manufacturing over five years.
Oil major BP (BP.L) has said it plans to invest over £3.6bn annually in the US for the next five years, while enterprise software company Sage (SGE.L) has committed to £1.6bn in operational spending in the US over three years.
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