Tag: AI

  • Things Getting Very Real….

    Things Getting Very Real….

    I know, I know we’re not supposed to throw the “F” word about lightly. But things are getting serious, and expletives aren’t even close to what I’m thinking. I’ll save those for counting freezing Freezbrury water minutes. No…my reluctant F word is  FASCISM. Possibly over-used in recent times….until now. Check out the enormous banner poster of Donald Trump which has just been hung on the outside of the headquarters of the US Justice Department (DOJ). Gobsmacking. The capture of the rule of law in the US is now almost complete. While business leaders are removed, senior foreign government officials resign in disgrace and the 8th in line to the throne of the UK is taken into police custody, Trump’s private legal firm (the DOJ) is desperately trying to deflect and pretend there are no US-based Epstein predators. Deflection tactics from the White House have now moved on to releasing files on Aliens (the non-ICE versions) and UFOs. However, the biggest ‘bread and circus’ deflection show is the 15- day countdown to conflict with Iran.

    I am struck by how complacent current geopolitical risk thinking is right now, and what desperate measures Tehran’s murderous regime might take to strike a blow against the US and its allies in the region including Israel.  Any regime which murders 20,000 of its protesting citizens in a matter of days is capable of awful stuff. So, it concerns me that the emotionally stunted “Admiral Bonespurs” in the Orange House and his War Secretary, “Whiskey Pete”, in the Pentagon will be the key decision makers if US forces take larger casualties than expected. We are into very unpredictable territory now. However, Iran is not the only risk reality creeping up on us.

    The financial markets have been focused on the carnage wrought on software company share prices year-to-date. Valuation destruction has been close to $2 trillion as the latest Wall Street thinking is that AI will blow up software business models. It even has its own event taxonomy – “SaaSpocalypse”. The basic premise is that companies will build their own workflow, HR, process applications etc. in-house with increasingly powerful AI coding tools. Thus, software companies could face growth and competition challenges which in turn impacts valuation/sales multiples framing that growth. In fact, this invasion of artificial digital expertise is in danger of commoditizing software. Ironically, there has been a complete reversal of the valuation hierarchy between hardware and software. In tech terms, things are getting very real. Real stuff like memory chips(DRAM) and logic chips (GPUs) are perceived as supply constrained and ditching their historic ‘commodity-type’ characteristics. The best illustration of this shift in investor perceptions is the stunning statistic that 89% of semiconductor companies’ (real stuff) share prices are flying (trading above 200 day moving average) while precisely ZERO software company (digital bits) share prices are exhibiting any technical strength(evidence of buying). However, we are in danger of focusing on the trading trends of financial markets while missing the bigger AI picture. Technology insiders are becoming more nervous about the power of AI without adequate guardrails…

    It’s difficult to get away from Anthropic’s founder, Dario Amodei, confidently predicting a world where AI systems would be “better than almost all humans at almost everything” within 2 years. Implicit in this forecast is the rapid realisation by the rest of us that AI systems are soon going to be coding their own optimised functions. If you’re thinking Terminator and Skynet you wouldn’t be far wrong and we’ll definitely need more than Arnold this time. As the global geopolitical balance shifts towards lawless autocracy and fascist ‘might over right’, we seem as a species particularly ill-equipped for what’s to come. Amodei himself describes the challenge:

     

    “Humanity is about to be handed almost unimaginable power, and it is deeply unclear whether our social, political, and technological systems possess the maturity to wield it.”

     

    It feels like a moment of AI truth is approaching. If I were to strike an optimistic note, I’d be encouraged reality is beginning to break through to the public consciousness on a number of fronts. This could bring a very welcome return to valuing credibility, data and honesty. Populists beware and feast your eyes on these beauties:

     

    Brexit: The UK’s Office of Budget Responsibility (OBR) has estimated the various costs of Brexit at 6-8% of GDP, £100 billion per year of structural economic losses, 4% productivity loss and 15% lower trade volumes.

    US Manufacturing: All the trade shakedowns, foreign investment ‘promises’ and noise about making America  manufacture again (Oh Mama!) resulted in 2025 manufacturing/factory construction spend actually FALLING by 7%. Oh, and the US has lost 70,000 manufacturing jobs since tariff ‘Liberation Day’ last April.

    US Trade: Just in…. the US trade deficit remained a stubborn $900 billion in 2025. That’s a microscopic 0.2% reduction in the deficit despite all the ‘winning’ and tariff chaos trumpeted by Agent Orange. And now for more breaking ‘winning’ news…. The Supreme Court of the United States has reportedly ruled, in a 6–3 decision, that tariffs imposed by Donald Trump were illegal. The ruling could leave the U.S. facing more than $150 billion in potential tariff refunds.

    That final datapoint of almost zero deficit reduction is just embarrassing. But it gets better. Shockingly, to nobody outside the US, other countries trading with the US are smarter than Howard “Nutlick” and his Commerce Department lackeys. The US trade deficit with Taiwan is now bigger than that with China. The last time that happened was in 1992!! It seems like the rubber is meeting the road for quite a few of these populist distractions. Indeed the final irony, 250 years after the US gained its independence, might be that the epic downfall of a British prince reveals the true colours and deceptions of a ‘King’ in Washington…..

  • Software Is Eating Your Pension….

    Software Is Eating Your Pension….

    Is it time to rip up our favoured playbooks? No, I’m not trying to steer Andy Farrell after that first half ‘traffic cone’ tackling effort in Paris. Nor will I hold out any hope of Britain’s Labour Party saving its government from the existential fallout of ignoring its own “Prince of Darkness” links to Epstein. Sir Keir Starmer’s premiership is already “dead in the water” but I will stick with the trading theme. Long-time political commentators are rightly appalled that Peter Mandelson tipped off Jeffrey Epstein and his elite rolodex/assets about a €500 billion bailout of the euro currency during the Greek debt crisis. The €500 billion number is huge in its own right but the derivative opportunities in banking debt, currencies, bond markets etc at the time were in the trillions and available for exploitation by Epstein & Co without any obvious trace. So, following on from last week’s article, we promised to dig deeper into the huge AI numbers hitting our screens. Actually, we won’t. Instead, we will focus on a related huge number with potentially massive knock-on/derivative investment implications.

    For me, the big number this week is the $1 trillion of value wiped from software stocks (and their SaaS subscription/business models) in just 6 days of trading. Of course, this is directly connected to the threat of AI and some developments, in particular, from the Anthropic/Claude suite of products which are making massive strides in assisting coders and companies to develop/manage their own work processes. Software, of course, is the incumbent go-to solution for companies seeking to optimise work processes and engagement with their customers. Indeed, the venture capital guru, Marc Andreessen, in 2011 was moved to say  “software is eating the world”. From Netflix to Uber to Amazon, digital subscriptions gave companies and consumers access to technology-optimised services. As AI invades the digital opportunity, software is possibly no longer the ‘always’ solution on the Boardroom table. In fact, software could be on the displacement menu itself. The twin threats of AI are summarised well by Business Insider:

     

    “First, if employees get more efficient using AI tools, companies may not need to buy as many business software subscriptions. That would dent the growth of “seats” or how many subscriptions software companies sell. Each employee has a seat, so if there’s no new hiring, growth stalls.

     The second threat is more existential. If AI tools and AI agents get good enough, companies could replace the software they use entirely and instead rely on new AI-powered workflows. And with AI coding tools showing big improvements lately, companies could even develop their own software, without needing to buy it from established vendors.”

     

    There are plenty of analysts and observers who disagree with the gloomy interpretation of AI’s eventual impact on software companies like SAP, Salesforce, Adobe, Figma and HubSpot. However, these company share prices falling by 30-40% in just one month, is telling us the ‘fear’ is real. The $1 trillion of value evaporation in less than a week is not an earth-shattering number given some individual companies are valued in the trillions alone. But… perhaps looking at the software value obliteration in isolation is misguided. The commentariat might think software fears are ‘overdone’ but, if you have a pension, this might be the less scary of TWO outcomes. The first is that software stocks growth and valuations are hit severely by AI replacement. However, there’s a second set of updated numbers/data to take a look at. While the software sector was being hammered, the AI/Cloud giants were announcing quarterly results. Interestingly, their earnings and sales growth numbers were pretty much ignored as the market focused on just one number; capital expenditure spend on AI infrastructure and development. Last week Facebook promised $135 billion of INVESTMENT in 2026 which equates to their total sales in 2023. Microsoft told us their number was circa $105 billion. This week it was Google and Amazon’s respective turns to talk the AI ‘space race’…

    Google, perceived as the AI leader these days, told the market it would spend a cool $185 billion. That equates to its total revenues in 2020(!). Meanwhile, Jeff Bezos seems happy to test out the theory that “Democracy Dies in Darkness” at the investment-starved Washington Post, as his primary wealth creation vehicle, Amazon, announces a planned $200 billion capex spend for 2026. So, the Big 4 are up for a $625 billion investment splurge this year and probably every year for the foreseeable future. That looks like a bet of $3 trillion to $5 trillion on AI, and I’m just wondering what the ‘risk’ calculations could be? I chose the ‘space race’ phrasing earlier deliberately. It feels like the prospect of AI failure for these companies is existential in terms of economic power and analogous to the geopolitical calculations at the height of the Cold War in the 1960s. Well, the historians would probably agree that Reagan’s “Star Wars”  broke the Soviet empire. It’s too early to tell who will ‘break’ in the AI race but software is in the crosshairs right now. However, the sense that big tech including software is ‘going for broke’ introduces a very new risk for financial markets.

    The beauty of software and SaaS business models is recurring revenues, huge scalability at minimal incremental cost, 80-90% margins and enormous cash flow generation. The end result can be seen in the massive spending plans of Big Tech; these companies’ balance sheets were sitting on enormous cash piles (or equivalent liquidity). Simply put, these were the most robust (credit risk) companies on the planet. Pension funds, family offices, sovereign wealth funds and Swiss bank accounts loved the security/risk safety attached to loans and bonds issued by tech/software companies. These instruments were considered “defensive”. Now, not so much.

    Stock/equities markets (as my former boss Terry Smith used to point out to me) occupy 28 of the 30 pages of the Financial Times. But, the last two pages covering debt, currencies, commodities etc are much more significant for financial markets. Now the bonds and loans associated with big technology companies are receiving intense scrutiny (and investor selling) as they each seek to out-spend their cash and balance sheet credibility. This has incredibly important implications for your pension. The credibility of the United States and global technology stocks are being reviewed for their ‘risk safety’. Some serious investment institutions are already acting and re-positioning. This doesn’t mean just selling. What investors are buying at the moment is telling too. Here’s a few data snippets to alert you to what is happening right now….

     

    *Software sector selling activity is the worst since 2008

    *Software valuations – forward price/earnings multiples of 20x – are now at levels (low) not seen since 2014.  

    *Now the buying: defensive consumer staples companies (Nestle, Mondelez, Heinz etc) have been up 1% on consecutive days while technology sector companies fell 1% on the same days. That divergence of performance has not happened since ….2000.

    *The same consumer staples stocks are experiencing buying intensity (“RSI” for the technicians) not seen since 1995. Other indicators (DMA 200 day) are 4.2 standard deviations above average.

     

    It looks like people are buying ordinary stuff; petfood, protein, household goods, chocolate….. really boring but real. We have written before that investors are flocking to atoms (real) and hedging/selling their risk with bits(digital code). One suspects the meltdown in crypto land (Bitcoin at $65,000, down over 50% from its highs) is also partly driven by digital ‘fear’. So, for those keeping an eye on the headlines and their pensions, you might want to check with your advisors on three areas:

     

    1. Pension exposure to technology (software or AI spend). It could be as high as 30% of your portfolio.
    2. Pension exposure to defensive real stuff. It could be as low as 5% of your portfolio.
    3. Pension exposure to the USA. It could be as high as 70% but there is currently a lawless armed militia running around the country, a Supreme Court in dereliction of its duty, international grift on an epic scale and the real threat of mid-term election suspension.

     

    The advisors won’t have all the answers but it should be on ALL pension radars. This period of history offers mind-boggling opportunity but we must be also aware that there is an unusual confluence of technology ambition/confidence and global political leadership operating in an environment where traditional values and rules are being disregarded. Hopefully, rules-based leadership will return soon but here’s a warning from Andrew Ross Sorkin’s book, 1929:

     

    “It’s a haunting elegy for a fractured era, a timeless reminder that progress is fragile, choices have repercussions, and the flaws embedded in the human condition are ours to confront”

     

    Might be time to make better choices and confront those flaws (including White House ape videos)….

  • A Wave Of Huge Numbers And New Thoughts

    A Wave Of Huge Numbers And New Thoughts

    Freezbrury waters are imminent, but I sense things are actually hotting up. I’m also conscious it’s Friday before a bank holiday weekend so will keep it light. Let’s just highlight a few significant datapoints from the tsunami of numbers bombarding our screens this week. Then, next week we might dive deeper. Not quite as low as Cruella “Reformed” Braverman, Commandant Greg “Himmler coat” Bovino, Stephen “Peewee German” Miller, or Kristi “ICE Barbie” Noem who definitely fall into wannabe Waffen SS territory. There’s something deliciously ironic about a world which has embarked on an artificial intelligence (AI) space race while “Trump Is Making America Stupider” per The Bulwark newsletter headline. Maybe the bots won’t need to be that good? Anyway, that possibility doesn’t seem to be stalling spending by global technology giants on AI… for now.

    My favourite AI datapoints this week come from Microsoft, Meta, Sandisk, OpenAI and ElevenLabs. Given these numbers are like an assault on the senses I think it’s best to present them in bullet form:

     

    • Microsoft’s fiscal Q2 update this week showed its cloud/AI order backlog rocketing by 110% to $625 billion. But, that wasn’t the show stopper or the share price killer (down 10% overnight). A whopping 45% of that backlog ($281 billion) was linked to one private start-up company, OpenAI.

     

    • Meta/Facebook also announced a huge number, but not a future revenue one. Its planned capital spending on AI infrastructure and development this year will be $135 billion. For context, as recently as 2023 Meta did not even generate this much money as its entire year’s REVENUES (not profits).

     

    • Lesser-known memory chip player, Sandisk, was the S&P 500’s best performing stock last year (+577%) as a beneficiary of investors’ search for AI ‘picks and shovels’. That story continues and is a reminder not to quit on your winners. Sandisk’s quarterly update this week beat expectations with 600% earnings growth and another 25% jump in the share price in after-hours trading. So far this year, the Sandisk share price is up 127%. Yep, just January.

     

    • In start-up land ElevenLabs is the hot AI Voice tool backed by Sequoia. It’s not just a hot investment, it’s a hot career choice. Only 0.018% of 180,000 job applicants in a 6 -month period get a job. As the brilliant VC commentator and fund manager, Harry Stebbings, pointed out, you are 200x more likely to get into Harvard.

     

    • Back to OpenAI. Yes, people worry about that famous FT graphic and OpenAI as the potential AI investment “weakest link”. However, the capital cavalry could be on its way. Latest chat is that OpenAI plans to IPO in Q4 2026 with a raise of $100 billion on a valuation close to $1 trillion. For historical context, the previous biggest IPO raise in history was $26 billion by Saudi Aramco.

     

     

    There’s now a bigger qualitative exploration of the AI theme due, given the pretty scary comments from OpenAI rival, Anthropic, CEO founder Daro Amodei. He reckons we are moving towards “AI systems that will be better than almost all humans, at almost all tasks….by 2026, 2027.” Check out the videos on social media showing how the likes of Moltbook and Clawd are blowing people’s minds with the power of their agentic capabilities.  Here’s a few other mind-blowing datapoints in a variety of areas where regular readers will know I have been thematically focused.

    Opportunity outside USA: We talked about real things (atoms) versus digital code (bits) previously. So, see how Brazil’s real asset-rich stock market has clocked 14% gains in January alone. However, the genuine head-rocker outside US stocks is the latest earnings growth  estimates for South Korea’s stock market. Goldman’s reckon earnings growth for the entire blue chip Kospi Index will be 75% in 2026. Note most of that earnings growth will come from two companies who are critically plugged into the supply squeeze for memory chips (RAM, DRAMs, thank you Mam) – Samsung and SK Hynix. Amazingly, South Korea’s stock market is now worth more than Germany’s DAX index ($3.25 trillion).

    Automation/Power Infrastructure: It’s not a huge surprise software stocks (SaaS) like SAP are being hurt by AI speculation, investment capital shifts. However, we should note the recent overtaking of SAP as the highest valued German company by Siemens. Its key three divisions? Automation processing, power/grid systems and transport infrastructure. Note none of the famous German auto stocks feature in this table-topping race.

    Electric Vehicles: Europe hit an inflexion point in recent weeks. Latest data shows EVs as a percentage of new car sales overtook traditional internal combustion engine (ICE) powered vehicles. Looks like ICE on two levels this week faces an existential threat. Thinking of not nice people, it was amusing to see Tesla post a 61% decline in profits in its results this week. Who knew, apart from Ryanair’s Michael O’Leary, that idiotic interfering in other people’s business (politics and privacy too) can be brand destructive…?

    Last thought, and this merits a much bigger discussion. The problems for Tesla might result in a $3 trillion mega-merger/pivot of SpaceX, Xitter, xAI and Tesla, but also subtly highlights the scale of manufacturing dominance exerted by China in the electrification race. While Trump focuses on Bruce Springsteen, White House ballrooms, Melania movies and Venezuelan oil grift, the Chinese are stealing a march on the US in so many technologies. Oh, and the Chinese consumer might be coming back. Apple just told us it had its greatest ever quarter in The Middle Kingdom. A 38% jump in China sales blew the hinges off all the ‘expert’ analyst expectations.

    Lots to think about over the weekend and well done to all who invested in Social Voice before its dramatic funding close; a great illustration of investor ‘social listening’  in the venture world of little gems.

  • Keep Your Eyes On The Prize, Not the ICE…

    Keep Your Eyes On The Prize, Not the ICE…

    I know, I know…. we’ve all heard enough of “big piece of ice”, “ICE”, “Iceland”, “hundreds of feet of ice”, “not on the frontlines” etc. And…best not mention the threat to the icy “G” spot (thousands of miles from Melania) which has ‘ruptured’ the rules-based world order. Anyway, it’s Friday and the past week felt like months before closing with the ‘bigliest’ TACO ever at Davos. Not the food version, but the geopolitical clown car currently posing as the leader-for-life of the autocrats anonymous therapy  group, The Board of Peace. Entry fee is a billion, leave your moral compass at the door. Parody is dead, but for investors not quite exhausted by awful, there are genuine investment prizes out there and they are developing nicely despite the Davos noise. The White House brown shirts in ICE might ask you not to believe your eyes and ears in Minneapolis, but for the next 3-4 minutes, just read and believe….

    Smaller companies are doing very well in 2026 on public markets. In fact, the smaller company US equities index, the Russell 2000, has beaten the blue chip S&P 500 index for the 14th consecutive day. That’s the best relative (small vs large) winning streak seen in markets since 1996. So, despite the headlines confidence in markets is actually pretty high. A more esoteric check on confidence can be found in the way bigger (than equities) bond/debt markets. Confidence in high quality company bonds is measured by the gap(extra cost) between US risk-free government bond yields (Treasuries) and the yields of the bonds(debt instruments) issued by companies themselves. The larger the gap(the “spread”), the larger the uncertainty of investors. So, check out current spreads of just 0.71% which are the lowest demanded by investors since 1998. In other words, investor confidence is riding high. That means many investment themes remain intact.

    Best performing US large company stock last year? Good ol’ Sandisk. Yep, it delivered 577% returns to investors in 2025 alone. Its run continues. Sandisk has just clocked another 110% return in January…That’s a 1,300% return in less than one year and a reminder that the ‘picks and shovels’ of AI infrastructure are still hot, hot, hot. Not long ago Sandisk was a stodgy old memory card company (think USB thumb drives) but memory chips have became a major supply bottleneck for AI development. Generative AI models like Gemini, ChatGPT and Claude need ever-increasing ‘context’ as reference data. Or, as we used to call it, memory. An interesting part of this story is Sandisk’s partnership with Japanese manufacturer, Kioxia, whose multi-decade expertise in manufacturing is delivering a significant cost advantage. There will be more Japan surprise cost/value stories this year but it’s no surprise to Gravitas readers of our “Japan Series” of articles in 2025. Take-private buyout deals in Japan hit a record $40 billion in 2025. Now, think about Japan household savings storing up $14 trillion of firepower which equates to more than three times its GDP. However, there’s another Japan story which is worth watching too…

    We keep writing about the bullying power of global bond markets. One of the biggest is Japan’s government bond market (JGBs). Last week witnessed Japanese government bond yields (cost of money) rising to levels not seen since the 1990s. That is a worry because Japan has a lot of debt (but also a lot of savings). However, there is a bright spot in this rising bond yield story. Ordinarily, inflation is a bad thing, particularly for bonds. But… in Japan, monetary authorities and successive frustrated governments have spent decades trying to generate inflation to encourage spending NOW, and not years in the future. Of course, bond yields can’t be let run out of control but if managed/balanced carefully, there will be many more buyout deals, venture capital growth and M&A in the Land of the Rising Sums….of investment capital. The bond yield spike is not just a Japanese phenomenon.

    US monetary authorities have been cutting interest rates since 2024 but bond yields (and mortgage rates) remain stubbornly high. In this instance investors are worried about Fed independence, tariff chaos and the vaporising of the rule of law in Washington. Somebody might have to explain to Agent Orange that bonds and debt instruments are financial contracts. Then again, that never meant much to him or his poor bankers in Manhattan during the ‘90s. However, this inflation uncertainty can be a good thing for particular parts of the investment markets. In particular, you will hear more about real assets. Atoms rather than bits. Anyone seen the silver price this week? Yep, $100 here we come.  Or check out Brazil. It makes and owns lots of real things in the agricultural, mineral and materials spaces. Brazil’s stock market is already up 10% year-to-date while US and European markets are sitting on more restrained returns of 1-2%.

    These are not new themes. Really this article is a reminder, despite the bewildering headlines and global ‘rupture’ (do read Canadian PM Mark Carney’s Davos speech), that investment and economic stories continue to develop along the same trajectories experienced in 2025. Indeed, to use Carney’s words, if there is a new theme/story, it is to look at the ‘middle powers’, not the autocratic gorillas, and explore opportunity in the likes of Japan, Brazil and ….. a Europe which finally stood down a bully with some not-so-subtle assistance from those law-loving global bond markets.

  • Don’t Get Angry, Get Ready….

    Don’t Get Angry, Get Ready….

    I was right. The first of my predictions for 2026 was spectacularly on the money. Sadly, it won’t make any of us wealthier given its focus on noise rather than direction. To refresh memories, the final words in my last article, Themes and Dreams For 2026, were as follows: “I’ve a feeling I won’t be short of writing material in 2026.” Little did I know there would be a year’s worth of material in just the first 10 days of 2026. Where do we start?

    The US is celebrating its 250th birthday by re-branding as an exploration company with an army (hat tip George Carlin) as Venezuela is ‘acquired’ and ‘takeover bids’ are lined up for the Panama Canal and Greenland. Back at HQ, the Boss re-asserts control of executive salaries and cash flows in the company’s defence supply divisions while promising a 50% expansion of investment ($1 trillion to $1.5 trillion) in its Business Development unit, previously known as the Department of War, and before that, as the Department of Defense. Meanwhile, the company’s traffic stop management division has secured immunity from regulatory or criminal oversight of its shoot-to-kill (or stop) policy on a nationwide basis, not just in Minneapolis. Of course, none of these revolutionary business initiatives can happen without funding. The company’s Treasury unit has set up overseas bank accounts to deposit proceeds of its newly acquired Venezuelan oil unit. In the interests of tax efficiency these bank accounts will be overseen directly by the Boss, and will not be consolidated in the parent company accounts. But, of course. However, US Inc is not the only company turning to oil….

    It is probably more accurate to say some companies are breaking with a seismic global shift to electric power. Again, it’s American-sourced exceptionalism. This week General Motors (GM) has followed Ford and abandoned its move in to electric vehicles (EV). These recent investment write-offs amount to $7 billion and $19 billion respectively which will hurt. But… that might not be the end of the pain. The train, or car, has already left the station. The Electric Age, per the superb Noah Smith, is here with 25% of cars purchased in 2025 of the EV variety. In many Asian and a few European countries that penetration rate is through the 40-50% level. China leads the world in the entire EV technology stack and have focused their attentions on battery production, manufacturing scale and grid expansion (solar). Fewer moving/motor parts, efficiency and superior performance are the current and long-term edge for EVs which will kill the internal combustion engine (ICE). Writer’s note: Be careful how you say or ‘weaponise’ that acronym these days.  All is political these days rather than factual which highlights why the US is making a fatal error on oil over electric. Noah Smith writes:

     

    The main reason America is missing the EV transition is that we’ve insisted on thinking of EVs in terms of climate — as a “green” technology whose purpose is to save the environment, rather than a superior technology whose purpose is to save you time and money. Trump canceled EV subsidies because he associates them with the environmental movement and the political left.

     

    It’s not just electric vehicles(EVs) experiencing their electric break-through moment. EVs share the same components as drones, trains, cameras, phones …..and robots. Just this week at the massive CES 2026 conference in Las Vegas, Nvidia’s Jensen Huang didn’t even blink when asked how long it would take for humanoid robots to match human-level ability. “This year”, he said. Guess what – those robots run on many of the exact same components which go inte EVs. Think batteries, power/motor electronics, sensors, software…..and AI. Clearly, in the AI piece of the assembly package, the US is perceived as the global leader. However, even AI and its support infrastructure is inextricably tied to electric power. And, before you say “but, but, but… the Venezuela oil reserves”, get ready for more non-delivery from the “stable genius” back at HQ. Venezuela currently produces less than a million barrels of oil per day. It’s like a rounding error of less than 1% of global oil production. Yes, that production level can grow but please note the lack of announcements from US oil company executives about investment plans and potential commercial negotiations with Venezuela’s 5,000 plus generals and regional warlords. While the Department of War was planning ‘business development’ in Latin America, China built more solar power capacity than the rest of the world combined in 2025. For perspective, that additional solar capacity of 380GW built in 2025 equates to 5x China’s total existing nuclear capacity (58 plants). Get ready or get digging on two fronts.

    First, we have written a lot in 2025 about the asynchronous explosion of excitement and revenue projections for the AI world and the mining sector. At certain times in 2025 one AI company, Nvidia, was worth 4 times more than the entire publicly listed mining sector. Get ready for a change. Gold, silver, platinum and copper prices have soared which has finally juiced the risk spirits of mining sector executives. We said the sector needed a big deal. Well, global giants Glencore and Rio Tinto are talking a megadeal again with a copper focus (yep, all that electricity) and a $260 billion valuation. Metals of course in earlier times were the basis for currency. In time, central banks became the back-stop or guarantor of currency but we might have to dig again.

    The global reserve currency, the US Dollar, lost almost 10% of its value in 2025. In isolation, this is not unprecedented. In fact, the Trump regime are quite keen on a softer dollar and lower interest rates for trade deficit and investment reasons. However, we must get ready for a further assault on institutional independence in the US. The current Fed Chair, Jerome Powell, is due to leave his post in May this year. The new appointee (apparently already decided by the Boss) will be expected to cut interest rates dramatically to keep Trump happy. However, the potential unintended consequence of this action in the context of a $40 trillion US national debt is loss of credibility for the Fed and its ability to prudently manage that debt, and the currency. Hopefully, the bond markets are more effective than Russian or Chinese radar systems in spotting and thwarting that assault on Fed and dollar credibility. A final word on markets and pensions.

    Those of you reading your pension updates/reviews for 2025 might be underwhelmed by the performance. Before you get angry, I would recommend a read of Terry Smith’s own review of his $20 billion fund which underperformed in 2025. As always, my former boss writes superbly and highlights some key factors driving investment markets these days. Terry always sticks to the basics and this might well be a theme for 2026. The thoughts above should ready minds for investment opportunities in electrification, real assets, financials, mining and assets located outside the exploitation company, US Inc, formerly known as the United States of America…..

  • Themes And Dreams For 2026

    Themes And Dreams For 2026

    This won’t help my US visa application any time soon. However, it is possible to be on the right side of history and seek investment opportunity too. History may record that 2025 was a dark year of barbarity in Gaza, criminal meat-grinder slaughter in Ukraine, trade tariff chaos, war crimes in Venezuelan waters and full strategic capture of US national security policy by the Kremlin. And, yet I’m hopeful. I will leave it to more mainstream outlets to review 2025. Instead, I’d like to take a look at a number of 2026 investment themes – new and old and not AI – which are developing in potentially unexpected ways. Many, in a good way.  Let’s take a look at the data and start to dream….

    Global Trade: Dare we return to Brexit. Anybody see the UK paying over €600m to re-join the EU’s Erasmus student exchange programme? Don’t worry. We are not going to re-visit Brexit but we are going to cite this as an example of slow-moving sanity repairing self-inflicted harm. Similarly, the “America First” tariff policies in Washington are now beginning to reveal some awkward truths. The mighty US dollar has slipped by 9-10% against other major currencies, US equities (+15%) have underperformed global equities (+29%) and the US manufacturing sector has been losing jobs for 7 months consecutively. Oh, and China, the original bipartisan focus of US trading ire, has just seen its trade surplus exceed $1 trillion for the first time in history. So much winning. What are the chances of US trade policy moving away from tariffs? Well, the polling for US mid-term elections in 2026 is looking pretty bleak for incumbent Republicans. And, the spectacular Vanity Fair quotes (more of them later) from Trump chief-of-staff, Susan Wiles, are prompting Washington insider speculation of a policy re-set or ‘cry for help’ from within the White House. To be clear, nobody sane thinks Wiles (in 11 recorded interviews with Vanity Fair) was unaware of the likely end result.  Bank on that. So…..

    Financials: If you’ve been dazzled by AI you might have missed the massive performance of financial stocks this year.  Financials in the US (+20%) have outperformed technology (+18%) but check out UK banks being tortured by a chaotic Labour government. The FTSE All-Share Banks index is up just the 56%!! In Europe the Euro Stoxx Banks index has clocked a 76% increase in value year-to-date. Meanwhile, Europe’s fintech banking star, Revolut, has completed its second funding round since August. The latest round was eye-catching for the $75 billion valuation achieved (vs $48 billion in August) and the backing of Nvidia’s venture capital arm. That’s a 56% increase in value in just a few months. More importantly, healthy performance in banks and financials usually reflects overall confidence in the global economic cycle despite the dark headlines. Bluntly, banks feel the fear first. It’s not there. In fact, the latest Bank of America investment survey shows investor sentiment at its strongest since 2021. And, that confidence might be showing up in strange places…

    Europe: There appears to be a growing view that Europe has been shocked into taking responsibility for its destiny on the geopolitical stage. The loss of the US as a reliable ally – outlined in the recently published National Security Strategy 2025 – means Europe must back its own. All the way. It was striking to read recently that in Europe, over the past 50 years, just 14 companies started from scratch ended up with valuations over $10 billion. In the US that number is 241!  German defence company, Rheinmetall AG, at €70 billion is now worth more than BMW, VW or Mercedes. Its value has appreciated 15x since the outbreak of the war in Ukraine. Unsurprisingly, Franco-German defence company, KNDS, is eying a €25 billion IPO in Amsterdam in 2026. Furthermore, conditions of ‘war’ have historically driven innovation. So, when the head of the UK’s MI6 intelligence services and its chief of defence staff both warn in the same week of the need “to be ready to fight”, we should expect a massive step up in investment in Europe across the board, to strengthen not just defence but energy grids, communications, technology, supply chains etc. Europe’s prompt for action might be scary but there might be a surprise further east….

    Geopolitics: Europe is still reeling from the stunning geopolitical alignment of Russia and the US sealed with the Kremlin’s approval of Washington’s National Security Strategy “as largely consistent with our vision”. Read that twice, watch the party of Ronald Reagan spin in its grave (yep it’s dead) and remember those famous Russo-proverbial words borrowed by Reagan…. “trust, but verify”. Then think about who is really driving the Ukraine peace talks. In recent weeks we have seen oil hit 5 year lows, the Russian economy battle rampant inflation, the Russian central bank selling its gold reserves and Europe moving to seize ‘indefinitely’ $200 billion of Moscow’s foreign reserve assets. If I were to offer a contrarian view on current peace talks, or even dream, I’d say Russia and Putin has more problems than we think. Furthermore, the unseemly haste of Trump’s agents, Witkoff and Kushner, to rush Ukraine into a Russian-written deal has a ‘frantic’ feel about it. Just a thought, or dream.  Of course, these are not the only deals which could light up 2026 in an unexpected way….

    Private Exits: The IPO pipeline of 2026 could break all sorts of records. Databricks has just completed a $3 billion Series L funding at a $134 billion valuation – yep that’s an “L”. We hear it so often now, but the private market really needs some big exits. OpenAI could be up for a $500 billion IPO. ByteDance ($480 billion) and Anthropic AI ($180 billion) are also on the blocks, as is Stripe with a $100 billion promise. I’m loath to mention the biggest of the lot, SpaceX, which is targeting a whopping $1.5 trillion 2026 valuation and thus pushing its owner Elon Musk in to trillionaire territory. Unless……

    Electric Vehicles: Ford might be grabbing the headlines this week with a monumental $19 billion walk away write-down of its electric vehicle (EV) projects. And, people worry about AI infrastructure over-spend? As China continues to accelerate away from the EV pack in its global dominance of the EV manufacturing ecosystem, whither Elon Musk’s Tesla? First, one can’t miss the opportunity to re-print Trump chief of staff Susan Wiles’s marvellous Vanity Fair assessment of Musk this week among others in this “only the best” Trump inner circle/cabinet. The New York Times summary is best:

     

    Trump’s White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles describes Trump as an “alcoholic’s personality”, JD Vance as a “conspiracy theorist for a decade” and Elon Musk as “an avowed ketamine user” and an “odd, odd duck” in an interview with Vanity Fair

     

    Hmmm. An odd, odd duck. Tesla might just be reaping the DOGE or DUCK whisperer whirlwind. Tesla currently is valued at $1.5 trillion with a price/earnings valuation of 327x. Yep, 327x – I might raid the ketamine jar too. You’d expect Tesla to be growing, right? Well, the ducks are lining up. November sales for Tesla were the lowest seen since 2022. The brand destruction by Musk’s dive in to right wing politics has been epic. In Europe not a single country achieved sales of more than 750 units, except France. If it walks like a duck, tweets like a duck…….we can only dream.

    Old Economy: Surprisingly, 5 of the “Magnificent 7” tech stocks have under-performed the AI-giddy market this year. In fact, the original perceived AI ‘loser’, Google, has been the stellar performer, up 56% year to date. Now, it might be worth taking another look at other ‘losers’. Defence and banking  stocks are already back in vogue, but in ‘war-like’ conditions the basics become critical too. So, it’s possibly no great surprise that the Basic Materials sector in the US has clocked the best sector performance by far, up 33%. As the race to electrify the global economy accelerates, critical minerals, precious metals and mining stocks stand to benefit from urgency, security and scarcity. Gold is up 65% year-to-date, silver has more than doubled and platinum is up 117%. Keep an eye on Mr Copper too with a 34% uplift in 2025.

    Plenty to think about above, and possibly dream too. What a year! I’ve a feeling I won’t be short of writing material in 2026.

    That’s nearly it folks for 2025. Thanks for reading and the words of encouragement along the way.

     

     

  • Is This The End….?

    Is This The End….?

    Let’s start with the easy one. I’m A Celeb 2025 is almost finished. The more tricky version of this headline question might relate to the Epstein files or even the filing of war crimes charges in The Hague against US Secretary of War, Pete Hegseth. Not any time soon me thinks. We could ask Sleepy Don but he might become angry – about the sleepy bit, not the war crimes or paedophilia. Actually, the question most asked in recent weeks is about the end of the AI boom. I asked my own excellent AI ‘friend’ Claude (courtesy of Anthropic) about ‘bubble’ mentions in the media and even he agreed in his remarkably comprehensive market summaries of public and private markets that the AI bubble question is occupying investors’ minds. Mine, not so much. More on Claude later, but first a historical perspective. The last technology boom in 2000 did indeed end in a bust but generalisations on technology can be misleading.

    Back in 2000 we should remind ourselves of the telecoms companies racking up massive debt obligations to acquire mobile spectrum licences and build out fibre/internet networks. Then there were the infrastructure suppliers like Ericsson, Nortel and Cisco dependent on those telecoms, internet and wireless expansion projects. Then the projects stopped. A possible over-simplification by this writer, but a combination of over-build and debt pressures slowed activity and cratered the valuations (growth expectations) of the leading infrastructure players. For illustration, Cisco was trading on a price/earnings multiple of 200x in late 1999. Twenty five years later the Cisco share price has finally recovered to within touching distance of its $80 high in 2000. However, one must make a distinction between the infrastructure plays and the tools/applications which were built on those over-priced networks….

    The Nokia phone in my year 2000 pocket didn’t end up ruling the world but Apple and the mobile internet did. Similarly, Google was just 2 years old at the time and wouldn’t IPO until 4 years later, the same year as TheFacebook Inc was born. Mobile networks enabled commerce (Amazon) and communities (social media platforms) to flourish and generate enormous wealth. Readers might be now detecting a similar pattern with AI. The race for computing power (in 2000 it was networks) is an infrastructure story but investors must not lose sight of the applications of AI and the business models possible (Amazon was an online book store once). The tools like Claude, ChatGPT and Sora are really only in their infancy. The infrastructure story is driven by GPU/TPU chips (Nvidia), cloud computing, hyper-scale data centres and energy. And it’s possibly infrastructure again where risks are building. The CEO of IBM, Arvind Krishna, in recent days put some numbers on those risks.

    Krishna cited a data centre power consumption estimate of 100 GW which at current costs would mean an $8 trillion capital expenditure in the next few years. Now, for the wet blanket of capital reality. That ginormous $8 trillion spend would need to earn profits of $800 billion just to pay the interest/cost of that capital. Yep, that’s stretchy but get ready for the other reality. This infrastructure isn’t piping, fibre, railways or copper which lasts for decades and is depreciated gently over time. The chips which currently power Nvidia’s $5 trillion valuation and sit inside all these data centres could become technologically obsolete within 5 years. Arguably, at current innovation/evolution rates that timeline is too optimistic. Imagine having to replace all your chips every 3 years… ? That should make creditors to these huge data centre projects a little queasy.  The International Financing Review summarized the massive acceleration in borrowing as follows:

     

    An unprecedented splurge from companies at the forefront of the AI boom that has left banks and investors potentially on the hook for billions. Alphabet, Amazon, Blue Owl Capital, Broadcom, Oracle and Meta have between them issued US$120bn of corporate bonds since September – and are raising another US$38bn in the loan market. The debt binge shows no sign of abating, with JP Morgan predicting US$300bn of bond issuance next year – and US$1.5trn by the end of 2030. Another US$2.3trn could be raised in equity, structured finance and private capital markets over the next five years, as hyper-scalers tap every available pocket of capital to finance the US$5.3trn of investments into AI they are expected to make”

     

    Before everyone runs for the hills, we need to be mindful of some very positive starting points. These technology giants tapping the debt markets in most cases are swimming in cash, have dominant market positions and are generating prodigious annual cash flows of almost $700 billion. These are not the fragile telecom balance sheets of the TMT bust in 2000. Of course, OpenAI, sits in the middle of that famous Financial Times graphic showing $1.2 trillion of data centre projects. In my personal view, OpenAI is the weakest link but that could take years to play out. The harsh truth for all investors is that we don’t really know who will win the foundational large-language-model (LLM) race. Google’s Gemini 3.0 seems to be winning this month and did anyone notice Google share price is up 67% year-to-date? Yep, and my Claude’s parent company, Anthropic, is looking to IPO at a $350 billion valuation. These are very early days. Just ask Nvidia. Actually, don’t. They are saying nice things about almost everyone because all are prospective customers. But….. as always watch what a company does, not what it says.

    Nvidia made a $2 billion investment in chip designer, Synopsys, this week. This is just the latest move by Nvidia in what can only be described as a deal spree. In 2025 alone the company has backed 77 equity investments in start-ups, as well as making 5 outright acquisitions (Source: CB Insights). Let’s just say it looks like Nvidia is hedging its AI ‘winner’ bets. Indeed, the ‘AI infrastructure’ bubble fears run the risk of missing the true lessons of the TMT bubble bust of 2000. ChatGPT might be today’s Nokia but the monthly user statistics tell another ‘mobile’ story. ChatGPT is used by 800 million people each month. Gemini is fast catching up with 650 million devotees and Microsoft’s Co-pilot has 200 million monthly users. The market, business or individual, is already converted. That’s the true investor opportunity.

    Meanwhile, there’s a bigger story brewing at the other side of the world. Arguably, we really do need to see that story end very soon. More next week on why troubles in Japan’s bond market REALLY scare me……

  • Shunning Risk Not Making It EIISy For Europe…

    Shunning Risk Not Making It EIISy For Europe…

    Finally, somebody called it. Poland has a Donald as President too but he seems less enthralled by criminal heads of state. Donald Tusk’s view on the latest Trump ‘peace’ plan for Ukraine was quite  the zinger – “it would be good to know for sure who is the author of the plan and where was it created”. Answers on a postcard to the Kremlin. Sadly, Europe’s leaders have been generally slow to call out Agent Orange’s craven need to be Putin’s fluffer. Indeed, this risk aversion by Europe is not confined to geopolitics.  Mario Draghi has given a blunt assessment of progress made by Europe since his high profile EU Competitiveness Report last year.

    Draghi is unhappy about the slow pace of investment in innovation and the mobilisation of capital to scale the growth of Europe’s young companies. Worryingly, his initial estimate of innovation investment required of €800 billion has now jumped to €1.2 trillion as other economic regions accelerate their efforts to lead in healthcare, electrification, renewable energy and AI. Draghi’s words make for uncomfortable reading and go so far as to link this lack of risk courage to the existential threat to Ukraine and European sovereignty:

     

    “One year on, Europe is therefore in a harder place. Our growth model is fading. Vulnerabilities are mounting. And there is no clear path to finance the investments we need. We’ve been reminded painfully that inaction threatens not only our competitiveness, but also our sovereignty,”

     

    Inaction. Sounds familiar closer to home too. At our recent re-branding event for Spark Venture Funding, Fintan O’Toole in his guest address highlighted Ireland’s failings in housing, healthcare, infrastructure and SME support and identified a key contributing factor. Typically, Fintan did not mince his words. Citing the €150 billion or more of cash sitting in non-interest earning deposit accounts, he viewed this as symptomatic of a nation which “is afraid of risk”. The scars of the relatively recent Troika bail-out run deep but Mario Draghi is clearly saying the risks of inaction are far far worse. On a more positive note, we should remind ourselves of what can happen if investment bravery recovers again. In just the last 7 days, the European tech sector has been grabbing an unusually large share of the global financial headlines. Check out the following:

    *Revolut completes a funding round including an investment from Nvidia at a $75 billion valuation. Last year the valuation was $45 billion.

    *Lovable, the AI powered coding and developer platform, has reached annual recurring revenues (ARR) of $200 million and is raising money at a $6.3 billion valuation.

    *Energy play, Fuse Energy, founded by Revolut alumni is raising money at a $5 billion valuation just 5 months after reaching ‘unicorn’ status ($1 billion). Again ARR acceleration has been stunning, moving from $100m to $300m of recurring revenues within months.

    *Second-hand fashion market platform, Vinted, has reached the $1 billion revenue mark and is reported to be looking at a valuation close to $8 billion.

    *Quantum Drones is also raising at a $3 billion valuation while payments player, Flatpay, has just raised funds at a $1.7 billion valuation.

    All good in the ‘hood. But…here’s the really good bit. The geographic spread of these companies is pan-European with Sweden, UK, Lithuania, Germany and Denmark all represented.

    In Ireland there are many young companies with the potential to join these headlines. Returning to the embarrassing €150 billion pool of funds sitting in Irish deposit accounts doing nothing, it cannot be overstated how big an impact could be made if even 10% of that money was used in risk appropriate manner. To be clear, riskier investments should form an essential but much smaller portion of any savings/investment portfolio. We are not talking about 30-50% asset allocations. Depending on age profiles and existing risk budgets, a 5-15% allocation to innovation and young companies should be considered. And, don’t forget we are in EIIS “season”. Investments in EIIS-eligible companies can bring tax rebates (and risk reductions) of 35-50%. It is amazing how many people are unaware of this excellent government scheme used to scale young businesses, create employment and enter new markets. From this writer’s perspective, we are in a global race. Spark Private’s own portfolio of deal opportunities currently open for investment are race leaders and can deliver exciting and diversified exposures to multiple high-growth markets.

    Europe and Ireland urgently need to shake off their fears of risk. Frankly, Draghi is right: the risk of inaction could now be fatal for our economies and sovereignty. Think about that bank deposit shift, the EIIS de-risking opportunity and the speed of growth and wealth creation now possible in a global innovation economy growing at warp speed. There’s a ready-made EIIS portfolio available to curious investors which can help drive leadership and innovation in medical devices, digital currencies, e-transport, logistics infrastructure, AI and fintech. It’s worth taking a look and then considering the risk-reward of Moby, Social Voice, Quadrant, OOHPod, Nazare Point or Ostoform featuring in headlines like the ones above in just a few years from now.

     

  • Big Deals And Big Themes To Watch….

    Big Deals And Big Themes To Watch….

    Been a tough week. And that Epstein dog hasn’t even barked yet. Anyway, let’s not dwell on the ‘what ifs’, let’s focus on more positive action. In particular, activity in the M&A and funding worlds, which should be taken as generally upbeat pulse-takes for individual investors. These deals also reflect the key structural drivers for the rapidly changing global economy. Change, you say? Well, Germany has had an engineering/capital goods trade surplus with China for decades. Not anymore. China in 2025 is now running a surplus with Germany. Oh, and nobody in the Oval Office will tell the Donald…. but “America First” has caused US equities to underperform overseas equities for only the third time in a decade. I know, whoodathunk amid all the giddy AI headlines? Interestingly, the deals I’m seeing in recent days also have a non-US focus.

    Infrastructure is still a huge magnet for investment capital. Blackrock’s Global Infrastructure Partners vehicle has swooped in Spain to acquire the Digital & Energy unit of domestic construction giant, ACS. Yep, that’s a data centre and AI play with a whopping $27 billion price tag. Sticking with AI, and back in the US, Mira Murati’s Thinking Machine Labs is currently doing a funding round with valuation in the $50 billion region. In its last funding round in July (checks notes, yes) that valuation was $12 billion. Not to be outdone, Elon Musk’s xAI is raising $15 billion at a $200 billion valuation. So, I think we can safely say AI and the US are still leading the giddy stuff. Elsewhere, the deals are more fundamental. Try energy.

    Private equity monster, Carlyle, is exploring an acquisition of Russian oil giant Lukoil’s global assets valued at almost $22 billion. Meanwhile, Spain’s energy champion, Repsol, is considering a reverse merger of its $19 billion upstream unit with potential partners including US energy producer APA. In addition, Google has signed a deal with French oil giant, TotalEnergies, to buy 1.5 terawatt hours (TWh) of solar electricity over the next 15 years in Ohio. That’s enough power to run the entire state of California for 10 days. Again, data centres are the key driver for the energy land-grab, be it fossil-fuel or renewable. However, as Spark closes out a lightning-quick raise of €1.5m for the impressive AuriGen Medical team, we should not forget demographics and the hugely significant structural growth in healthcare opportunities(check out our May 2025 series of articles on Japan).

    Pfizer has acquired weight-loss start-up, Metsera, in a $10 billion all-cash deal. Then the rebuffed original buyer of Metsera, Novo Nordisk, went to the debt markets to finance the $5.2 billion purchase of US biotech Akero Therapeutics. The sense of a deal ‘cluster’ in pharma-land was further heightened by Merck’s likely acquisition of another biotech, Cidara Therapeutics, in a $3.3 billion deal. Like the Metsera deal, the bidding war for Cidara was intense too. So, things are looking pretty healthy in health M&A. As for the unhealthy world…. we continue to watch ‘Whiskey Pete’ deploy US Navy assets off Venezuela.

    If ever there was a classic ‘wag the dog’ distraction mission this might be the one. Particularly, given both Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell in emails from 2011, sound mystified about the “dog (Trump) that hasn’t barked” in the criminal investigation under way at that time. Venezuela is yet another prompt for all sovereign nations and the investment world to be thinking defence. Some aren’t just thinking. Valor Equity Partners have led a chunky $510m funding round for a counter-drone radar start-up, Chaos Industries, at a $4.5 billion valuation. Also, watch out for Germany’s Quantum Systems which manufactures interceptor drones which can climb 4 kilometres in 30 seconds(!). Last heard on the street, they were raising $150m at a $3 billion valuation.

    All of the above sectors, bar health, position power sources and storage as key elements in competitive advantage. Note infrastructure and power are closely linked. The best positioned infrastructure assets will be those which bring energy/cost efficiencies in a world where AI is gobbling up more and more electricity, possibly at the expense of everyday consumers and traditional businesses. There is a reason why 40% of e-commerce deliveries in Europe are now done in out-of-home (OOH) parcel lockers. It makes sense for both the primary carriers (DHL,UPS, FedEx etc) and the consumer to make ‘the last mile’ more efficient. At Spark Private, we also think OOHPod makes a load of sense with lots of exit opportunities (and founder exit track-record) and great infrastructure positioning. In all of the above deals, everyone is trying to take the lead in positioning in the market. It can feel good too when it’s good for the world. In fact, I can still remember seeing a much-loved guy on his cool new electric bike just 5 years ago, and thinking to myself how happy he looked. I will keep that thought always…..

                  W.H. RIP.

  • Numbers Which Make You Wonder….

    Numbers Which Make You Wonder….

    I’m quite enjoying the “rubber meets road” moment for the leaders whose numbers never add up. In a previous political era they might just have been called liars and shunned by serious media. Now, it’s about eyeballs for the media and their audiences retaining some memory cells. Good ol’ Nigel Farage has moved from trying to avoid discussing the number of white people in ads (thanks to Reform MP Sarah Pochin) to rowing back on previous tax promises. Currently, known as “aspirations”. Like Brexit, more lies. In the US, gold-plated ballrooms and newly minted tech billionaires don’t quite cut it for the 50% of US have-nots who don’t benefit from 401k investment savings. But, the have-nots do have votes…..for now. New York has just voted for a Democrat socialist mayor with the biggest mandate since 1969. Meanwhile public representative seats and offices have flipped this week from MAGA red to Democrat blue in New Jersey, Georgia, California and Virginia. Even Mississippi is turning. In Washington adjacent, Virginia, the political landscape has morphed back to 1987 as Federal workers, either sacked or not being paid, discover some numbers are very real. Here’s a few other numbers flagging change which caught the eye in recent days….

    Sports betting was legalised in the US in 2018. Americans bet over $148 billion on sports last year, which is more than they spent on movies, books, concerts and sports tickets…. combined.  Meanwhile, Disney through its sporting broadcast arm, ESPN, is teaming up with DraftKings as its new sports betting partner. Expect more deals in the sports betting space with $148 billion of US wallets on offer and then wonder about societal shifts. Housing shortages and fewer children seems to be freeing up a lot of discretionary spending power. Watch also prediction marketplaces like Kalshi and Polymarket. The latter is doing over $1 billion of volume each month and is fully crypto-native. More traditional financial businesses are taking notice. Robinhood’s share price is up 235% year-to-date and has reported 2.5 billion prediction contracts (fees of $25m) traded on its platform in just October 2025. That is more than all of the contracts traded in Q3 2025. Any more predictions…?

    You can probably bet on OpenAI doing more AI/cloud infrastructure deals. The famous Financial Times graphic of OpenAI playing a central role in $1 trillion of AI projects is worth revisiting. OpenAI has recently announced a re-jig of its corporate structure to allow for a profit making entity under the stewardship of the original non-profit foundation. The profit bit is going to have to wait. Thanks to Microsoft’s recent results (and a circa 27% stake in OpenAI) analysts have estimated quarterly losess at OpenAI could be as high as $11 billion. Per quarter! Now think about those trillion dollars of projects planned. Then digest this little gem…

    OpenAI is requesting US government support to help guarantee financing for the massive investments in AI chips and data centers it needs for expansion, per Bloomberg.

    The latest OpenAI infrastructure project commitments, per Wall Street analysts, are heading towards $1.4 trillion. UK water utility observers will be familiar with the privatise-the-gains and socialise-the-losses model. It doesn’t end well. And, Fox News and Trump think Zohran Mamdani is the communist….

    On a more capitalist pursuit, M&A deal flow, the news is very encouraging and starting from a less frothy base. Deal research house, Pitchbook, gives the latest update on confidence levels in the C-suite. As we often say, it’s what companies DO, not say, which counts:

     

    “Q3 activity increased by 25.6% in M&A value and 3.8% in deal count as buyers jumped back into the market after macroeconomic headwinds disrupted momentum earlier in the year. Moreover, 2025 is shaping up to be an incredible year for global M&A despite the spooky headwinds present in the market, including geopolitical volatility, stubborn inflation, and a slowing global economy. YTD, there have been 37,096 M&A transactions for an aggregate of $3.4 trillion….. This resurgence in large-scale deals leaves the door open for two consecutive years of M&A deal value growth for the first time in over a decade. Deal count itself is on pace for year-over-year growth, with an active fourth quarter that could see the ecosystem hit nearly 50,000 deals for the year. ”

     

    One can expect more deals in the electricity/power sector. Close to home, Energia was bought by French private equity house, Ardian, and Blackstone bought TXNM Energy for $11.5 billion earlier in the month. It’s all part of the AI infrastructure story but the daddy of the AI rush is Nvidia’s Jensen Huang. He had some sobering thoughts in an FT interview. “China is going to win the AI race.” warned Huang, citing China’s advantages in energy and less‑stringent regulation. He later clarified that China is “nanoseconds behind” the US, adding “it’s vital that America wins by racing ahead and winning developers worldwide.” Huang might have backed away from his original statement but consider that last year China added 426 GW of electricity generation capacity. In the US that number was 30 GW. A growth differential of 14x doesn’t take many ‘nanoseconds’ for China to establish a dominant cheaper electricity base. If electricity is going to decide the global AI race then “drill baby, drill” could cost US industrial policy dearly. Go ask Germany, where manufacturing output is 20% below 2019 levels thanks to disastrous energy policy decisions. But there are prescient decisions to be made too…..

    Investors can see M&A activity pick up, corporate earnings growth above 12% year-on-year, cost of capital shift to a lower trajectory and even the possibility of the US Supreme Court stifling Trump’s ‘emergency’ tariff powers. It’s always awkward to claim ‘emergency’ in court when your lawyer (for US government) agrees the consumer pays 30-80% of tariff costs, and the judges note that tariffs have been imposed on countries like Brazil and Great Britain who actually have trade DEFICITS with the USA. More ketchup on the walls of Mar-a-Lago me thinks. However, the key point is that the investment environment for private investors is picking up momentum. And, Spark Private can help. A flow of new EIIS season deals has just hit our investors’ in-boxes. In this instance, the numbers are real, and do warrant real attention. This is a genuine opportunity to build an exciting diversified portfolio of 8-10 companies with a variety of timing/risk horizons and big thematic exposures in a matter of weeks.