A note to John Gowing · Gowings Bros · Companion to AI Datacentres ↗
The verdict
A ten-person Australian SME asked whether to build an on-prem frontier LLM — the question a portfolio company will eventually put to you. The hardware bar is achievable; the capability gap is not closable with hardware. Three named conditions flip the answer. Most SMEs satisfy none of them.
This brief is the companion to AI Datacentres. Both documents ask one investor's question — what does this capital precisely buy? There, the answer is a long-lived, leasable infrastructure asset, and the verdict is build. Here it is a fast-depreciating box that buys locality and sovereignty, not frontier capability — and the verdict defaults the other way. Same discipline, opposite scale, opposite answer: the control case that sharpens the build.
No novel reasoning at the edge, no high-fidelity agentic multi-step tool use. The open-weight gap collapses to under five points and the stack is fit for purpose.
If the operative need is Australian-resident weights — not a physical air-gap — AWS Sydney or Azure Australia East delivers identical capability at 30–50% of the three-year TCO.
Every named connector is OAuth-gated SaaS that routes data through US-domiciled cloud. If they drive the workflow, the on-prem story is already punctured.
LensRead as a capital-preservation test for an inter-generational, conservatively-geared book: $1.59M of three-year capex against a box that depreciates to the capability gap's pace, weighed as depreciating capex rather than durable underlying-asset value. On-prem buys neither leasable asset nor leverage — only locality.
SourceOn-prem frontier LLM briefing, 11 May 2026 — §Verdict and §Conditions under which the recommendation flips. AUD throughout; $ prefix on all figures. USD/AUD planning rate 1.50, RBA spot ≈ 1.38.