Mistral's pitch to LVMH and BNP was the sovereign-cloud LLM story. Airbus and BMW is a different product: factory-floor inference, embedded into PLM and MES stacks, where the buyer cares about latency, IP containment and on-prem deployment more than benchmark scores. Both customers already run Nvidia-heavy industrial AI programs (BMW with the Omniverse factory twins, Airbus with the Helsing and Palantir work), so Mistral is positioning as the European model layer on top of someone else's compute, not as a full-stack competitor.
The France data center announcement is the tell. If Mistral wants Airbus and BMW workloads, it needs in-country compute that satisfies ITAR-adjacent and German works-council constraints, which is why every serious European industrial AI play eventually ends up building or leasing local capacity. The number to watch is whether these are paid production contracts or co-development MOUs. BMW and Airbus have signed a dozen of the latter across the AI vendor field in the last eighteen months; the unit economics only show up when one of them moves to per-seat or per-inference billing across a real plant.