Tag: AI

  • You’re Watching The Wrong Dictator Reality Show..

    You’re Watching The Wrong Dictator Reality Show..

    It deserves an expletive. It’s exhausting. Magic water spigots turned on in Northern California, summary dismissal of Inspectors General watchdogs and sending uninvited military planes into the airspace of your closest Latin American ally. Of course, it could be worse as an ally – you could just be asked over an introductory phone call to give up over 95% of your sovereign territory. Perhaps, there will be a Eurovision-style poll run by Fox News to decide the future of Denmark and Greenland. I can almost see it now… say hello to the voting panel in Belgrade, or Moldova…. or Transnistria. More expletives. But, no. This week we were given a trillion dollar reminder that we are watching the wrong dictator reality show.

    The trillion dollar damage to tech stock valuations inflicted by China’s unveiling of a super-cheap AI large language model, DeepSeek (with similar performance powers to ChatGPT, Gemini etc) was indeed a “wake up call” for US Big Tech according to President Trump. However, at the same time, the geopolitical machinations of China are veering into reality show territory. Thanks to the erosion of truth in the world there’s no need for James Bond-style subterfuge. Instead, it can be as brazen as hell. Chinese ships have been damaging undersea cables around Taiwan in recent months but this week marked the third severing of an undersea cable in three months…. in the Baltic Sea. The fibre-optic cable in the latest incident connected Sweden and Latvia but this time involved a China-owned ship in the sabotage operation. It would seem that Russia, as China’s “mineral colony”, has invited China to assist in infrastructure “grey-zone” conflict. Indeed, China has its own domestic reasons to ratchet up the geopolitical temperatures of distraction.

    The latest economic activity data from China is looking pretty grim. January manufacturing activity actually contracted which won’t put the cheer into the upcoming New Year celebrations for 1.4 billion Chinese. This manufacturing slowdown has surprised many given recent monetary stimulus initiatives by the Beijing regime. However, we can expect further stimulus measures given Chinese government debt/GDP ratios are closer to 60% compared to US and European governments labouring under debt burdens over the 100% mark already. This monetary firepower will have knock-on effects across international markets and global economic growth. But… there is a strategic price to be paid by the rest of the world. And, it’s not just the obvious trade deficits. DeepSeek is more likely to be a temporary shock and, despite the hysterical headlines, the emergence of a better engineered cheaper way to harness computing power is a net benefit to all, including broader equity markets. However, DeepSeek highlights the growing excellence of China across multiple technologies.

    According to a 2024 study by the Australian Strategic policy Institute (ASPI), China now dominates the US in 57 of 64 critical technologies, up from just three in 2007. The US, which led in 60 sectors in 2007, now leads in just seven. Rankings by the ASPI were based on cumulative innovative and high-impact research and patents. ASPI credits President Xi Jinping’s ‘Made in China 2025’ plan for the infusion of “massive direct state funding for R&D in key technology,” stating that existing strategic investments turned into a plan to achieve technological “supremacy”. The areas where China excels include…

     

    • advanced integrated circuit design and fabrication
    • high-specification machining processes
    • advanced aircraft engines
    • drones, swarming and collaborative robots
    • electric batteries
    • photovoltaics
    • advanced radiofrequency communication

     

    Oh, and did we mention nuclear fusion? Of course, you might have missed this if you’d been watching the fantasy Greenland invasion on the other show. In the past week, Chinese scientists broke the nuclear fusion record for sustained plasma at over 100 million degrees by maintaining a mix of electrons and ions in a fluid state for more than 1,000 seconds. As a reminder, nuclear fusion replicates the sun’s energy, offering limitless, carbon-free energy.

    So, if you were a White House strategist you might want to curtail China’s technology advances. And, this is where things have taken a very strange turn. The Trump campaign has made lots of noise about China with tariffs being the chosen commercial weapon to rebalance US trade deficits with the Middle Kingdom. Fast forward to today and tariffs were, instead, the chosen weapon to bully Colombia. But… the US actually has a trade surplus with Colombia. More strange has been the Trump reverse-ferret on TikTok which he’d now like to see continue operating in the US (rather than enforce the ban upheld by the Supreme Court) with a US investor partner like Elon Musk or Larry Ellison. That all make sense? Now, for the really weird stuff.

    Remember when Taiwan was supposed to be protected by its US ally from the increasing threat of China? Well, while we’ve all been distracted on DeepSeek news, there were some fairly seismic developments in US-Taiwan trade relations. Check out this headline about the two ‘allies’….

     

    Trump’s 100% tariff threat on Taiwan chips raises cost, supply chain fears  –  Business Insider

     

    So much for the tough talk on China. Beijing must be thrilled and President Xi will be encouraged to keep up the ‘grey zone’ infrastructure sabotage in the Baltic Sea and Straits of Taiwan. Meanwhile, the new US Defense Secretary , Pete Hegseth, fresh off the Fox & Friends chat sofa, has got to work defending the nation. First priorities….. revoking former chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Mark Milley’s security detail, removing all portraits of the general in the Pentagon and pursuing his demotion.

    Anyone get the feeling the wrong ‘enemy’ is being pursued…..?

     

  • A World Losing Control Of Truth….

    A World Losing Control Of Truth….

    You know that feeling. No control, just watching helplessly. On a personal level, I observed the devastating wildfires in Los Angeles from afar via Google Maps and X(itter) but was updated on the ground by my son dangerously close to events on the UCLA campus. Evacuation to San Diego was his fortunate escape while the estimates of fatalities and rebuild costs continue to climb. Sadly, the losses are not just in the physical world of lives and properties. Truth has also been scorched by the partisan politics of the US. Incoming President Trump and his oligarch allies have been quick to blame political incompetence for the fires and deflect from the urgency of the climate crisis. A cursory look at Xitter and other online channels reveals waves of misinformation on lack of water and firefighting resources, saving smelt fish(yep), DEI /woke policies (open season it seems) and even funding Ukraine as the ultimate source of blame. Now, for a few stubborn facts:

    No rain in Los Angeles (LA) since May 2024

    Highest summer temperatures in LA ever

    Land/vegetation is the second driest on record – UCLA research suggests 25% drier than average

    Strongest seasonal Santa Ana winds in 14 years (up to 150 kph)

    That lethal combination of extreme heat, bone-dry fuel and tornado-like winds are climate change driven. Fires are nothing new for California, but the change in wind/heat patterns has dramatically increased the intensity of the fires and the speed-of-spread when they occur. However, the extent of climate denial deflection at the highest US political leadership levels is amply demonstrated by the words of the incoming Trump nominee for Energy Secretary, Chris Wright, at his Senate confirmation hearing just this week: “I stand by my past comments…..the hype over wildfires is just hype”. Not for the first time, the world of finance will have its say too. In particular, the exit of insurance companies and house protection coverage for residents of LA, West Virginia, Florida and Texas is probably more instructive than the internet warriors in their underpants shrieking about political mismanagement, conspiracy theories or super-powered immigrant arsonists.  Credibility and truth are inextricably linked and the biggest bully of them all is flexing its truth-seeking muscles….

    We have written in recent days about debt markets constraining the actions of autocrats in the geopolitical world. However, in the financial world there are increasing words of worry from some very credible players about a credibility gap emerging. So, without bamboozling with jargon, let’s flag two financial facts.

    *Interest rates around the world are either falling or stabilising at lower levels than 18 months ago.

    *Bond yields which usually track interests rates are not falling, or even stabilising. Longer term yields in the UK, Japan and US have broken free of their relationship with interest rates and are rocketing higher.

    This divergence of trajectories for interest rates and bonds is HIGHLY unusual. So, what’s happening? Well, debt and bond markets do track interest rates set by the central banks….normally. But, in this instance, credibility or credit has come into play on two fronts. First, central banks like the Fed and Bank of England are facing increased scrutiny in their battle to tame inflation. Second, government bonds track the credibility of sovereign governments – their ability to confront or tell the truth. And that’s a problem now. Nobody believes current UK government policies are able to deliver growth and not many believe Trump’s tax cuts and tariffs menu will tame inflation. Bluntly, there are increasing fears in financial circles that the Fed has lost control of the most important financial market in the world: the US Treasury market. Again, truth and credibility (not denial) are critical to attract risk capital, insurance, investment etc.

    Finally, we should note the warning in President Joe Biden’s farewell address to the nation this week. Critics might argue his presidency wasn’t bold enough, even cruel enough, but his departing words might resonate with those who read President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s farewell speech warnings in 1961 about the dangers of the “military-industrial complex”. Biden points to an oligarchy of “extreme, power, wealth and influence” in a “tech-industrial complex” which wields a very modern weapon to serve their own interests. The tacky million dollar Trump inauguration donations and spineless abandonment of content moderation by the tech oligarchs could be mistaken as the source of bitterness for an ousted president but I’ve a feeling the following statement will be revisited by historians as a prescient warning:

     

    “Americans are being buried under an avalanche of misinformation and disinformation, enabling the abuse of power. The free press is crumbling [or] disappearing. Social media is giving up on fact checking. The truth is smothered by lies told for power and for profit…. Meanwhile, artificial intelligence is the most consequential technology of our time, perhaps of all time.”

     

    I’ve got some bad news. That “avalanche of misinformation” is just the start, and the reference to AI is key. It feels like every funding round at the moment is attached to “AI-agents”, bots who will carry out the mundane content generating tasks of human workers. In fact, one in every two dollars of VC funding in the US right now is going to AI. The number globally is 37% (Source: CB Insights). However, let’s think about that ‘army’ of bots to be unleashed on the future of work and communications. First, know that an estimated 50% of all online traffic right now is bot generated. Yep, that’s bot created content, bot engagement, bot dissemination….. the whole false fly-wheel effect. Now, imagine a vicious circle of billions of bots, content pieces and false engagement. Then think false content.

    You will hear more about “Dead Internet Theory” in 2025. It started out as a peripheral online conspiracy theory claiming the internet has been taken over by artificial intelligence(AI). Viral posts, engagement rankings, traffic stats etc all have a whiff of AI-bot promotion these days but there’s worse to come. The sheer volume of misinformation coming our way via AI-agency bots could kill online platforms’ utility value. Even this week, using Xitter was an exercise in dodging the underpants brigade + bots and finding real true information on the LA fires. And, now the chat is Elon Musk will be buying Tik Tok. A change of commercial control perhaps, but the reality at a higher communications level is more existential. We could lose control of not just the internet, but truth itself.

     

    “You can’t handle the truth!!”  – Colonel Jessup, A Few Good Men.

     

     

  • Still Some Golden Theme Tickets Left…

    Still Some Golden Theme Tickets Left…

    I’m going to save you some time. Forget about calendar-driven commentariat reviews and 2025 forecasts for investment or geopolitical risk. Sorry to be the “Grinch of Guru”, but calendars and structural investment themes have zero correlation. Opinion is cheap and even the betting markets are displaying their patchy predictive powers in recent weeks. Yip, just a 6% chance of the Ba’athist beast, President Assad, being toppled in Syria. About as much chance as a Chinese spy in Buckingham Palace… oh wait. Sadly, Prince Andrew is a multi-year clown car journey in particularly poor company but there’s a lesson there too. Almost all significant investment themes – risks and opportunities – are multi-year stories whose plots twist and turn but keep a very clear direction of travel. So, let’s take a look at some of the major themes we have previously visited and a few more developing ones; all with interesting plot twists.

    Europe Crisis or Opportunity: Nothing good in the headlines…..German government falls, UK in second month of GDP contraction, France on its 4th premiership in a year. But, but here’s a few twists on the negatives. The lists of where Europe lags the US is a long one, from labour productivity, to AI and innovation, to stock market performance. And yet, if you strip out the performance of AI hardware star, Nvidia, from the S&P 500 then Europe’s stock market (MSCI EMU) has actually earned better returns for investors than the US benchmark since the most recent bull market started in October 2022. That suggests there are lots of European companies doing very well despite ‘core’ European economies struggling. Check out also in recent days Spotify becoming only the second European tech company since SAP to crack the $100 billion market cap mark. The headlines do not lie but the narrative on Europe is more nuanced than you think.

    Healthcare: Another structural theme from previous years’ writings, healthcare has actually been a winning area for Europe thanks to the miracle weight-loss drugs, Ozempic and Wegovy. Their Danish owner, Novo Nordisk, became Europe’s most valuable company in 2024. However, we might be about to enter an accelerated era of therapy/drug discovery for all types of medical illness. The clue is in the Nobel Prizes awarded in both Physics and Chemistry in 2024 to pioneers of AI usage in research. Now, for those already struggling with how AI large language models (LLM) work and the warp-speed calculations of the almost-monthly iterations of these technologies, get ready for the ultimate head wrecker. Google has just developed a quantum computing chip, “Willow”, which performed a computation in less than 5 minutes that would have taken today’s fastest computers 10 septillion years to complete. Yeah, that’s 25 zeros which exceeds known timescales in physics and vastly exceeds the age of the universe. Think about that. This chip created by quantum physics “used” time which theoretically can’t exist unless…… there are other parallel universes. Google Quantum AI founder, Hartman Neven, calmly wrote that the stunning performance of this chip indicates that “we live in a multiverse”.  Maybe Willy Wonka wasn’t so wrong to say “Come with me and you’ll be, In a world of pure imagination”.

    Artificial Intelligence (AI): Arguably, the world of AI has moved in a completely different direction. The shift of investment capital away from bits (software) to atoms (hardware) has been spectacular. Another company nobody ever heard of until recently, Broadcom, has become the latest technology hardware company to join the trillion dollar market capitalisation club. The US chip maker is now one of FOUR tech hardware companies in the list of the 10 most valuable companies on the planet. Clearly, investors see AI infrastructure as the early ‘win’ in the AI arms race. However, do NOT ignore software. Interestingly, the Clouded Judgment software newsletter has flagged a 20% expansion in median software valuation multiples since mid-November (from 5.6x to 6.7x revenues). Also, Nvidia has dropped in value by 11% in recent weeks. Yes, rotation from hardware to software and back again will be a feature of the multi-year AI revolution but the venture capital data from CB Insights confirms the direction of AI travel. Global venture capital (VC) deals in AI jumped 24% in Q3 to the highest levels seen since the Q1 2022 peak. In fact, one in every three dollars of VC investments went to AI start-ups.

    Banking and Fintechs: Closer to home, Revolut has just confirmed it has more than 3 million customers in Ireland. A staggering 75% of all Ireland-based adults now use the UK fintech platform for banking and payments. Meanwhile, the US bank sector has rocketed 30% higher this year, Europe is seeing Italian banking M&A deals and the largest asset manager in the world, Blackrock, has embarked on a private asset acquisition frenzy. We have written before that the future is private and I’m wondering are big corporates thinking the same? Sticking with the fintech sector, it was striking in the past week to see the shipping/logistics giant AP Moller lead an €80m investment round for UK fintech, Zopa Bank. In the same week, we note another globally significant name, Walmart, was the lead investor in a $300m round for fintech platform, One. Hmmm….Private banking/fintech, private opportunity.

    Climate & Electrical Vehicles (EV): Apparently, 11 out of 16 EV battery manufacturing projects in Europe have been canned or delayed. Of course, the $15 billion investment in Northvolt was the highest profile casualty in 2024 but there will be other twists and turns in the electrification journey. And, possibly a lesson in long-term planning. China 20 years ago had almost zero car production capacity. Now, it is on track to manufacturing 30 million cars a year and has surpassed Japan as the biggest exporter in the world with 5.17m units sent overseas. In fact, Chinese built EVs now account for 76% of the global EV market. So, if one were to be thinking 20 years ahead again what is most likely to drive investment returns in the transport world? Well, how about not driving. More specifically, self-driving. So, I’m quietly stunned that Google’s Waymo self-driving cars are clocking up 175,000 rides per week compared to 50,000 rides 6 months ago. That’s actually more than 1 million miles of autonomous transport delivered with an almost flawless safety record. I sense 2025 could see self-driving transport go mainstream and, as I write, Waymo have announced they are about to trial robo-taxis in their first non-US city, Tokyo, next year.

    The list of themes above is not exhaustive but they are structural themes measured in decades rather than calendar years. These are the most likely golden tickets to deliver standout returns like Nvidia’s 27,000 % return over the last 10 years. But, as always, we should keep an eye out for reversals of long standing narratives too. Argentina might be the prompt for contrarian thought while on track to deliver the best stock market returns of 2024. Who knew! So here’s two thoughts to chew over for the festive season: i) A European refugee reversal as Syrian and Ukrainian citizens potentially return home in 2025 and ii) A renewed embrace of nuclear power/investment to drive the electrification of the global economy.

    “Oh you should never, never doubt what nobody is sure about”         –   Willy Wonka

     

  • Does Europe Have Whatever It Takes?

    Does Europe Have Whatever It Takes?

    This is tricky. Here goes… I’m going to sound like Boris Johnson for a moment. Relax. No Greg Wallace, Master Chef or “middle-class women of a certain age”. More like the Middle Ages, and a stunning personal discovery this week that, before counterparties sign off a private investment in Germany, a public notary must read every single word out loud. Yip, not a banana-straightener but for a venture capital investor this week that meant “12 hours and counting” for a Series A investment document to be read out loud in front of founders and investors. In person. It sort of feels like Germany has missed out on a few productivity hacks since the Gutenberg printing press arrived in 1439. Meanwhile, European leadership is in disarray as the French government collapses, Germany’s industrial base struggles and the UK paddles alone in its own faeces-filled waters. It is difficult to ignore the “Europe is Donald Ducked” chorus growing louder by the day. And yet, I believe Europe can change course for the better. First, let’s identify a few key problems…

    Actually, why don’t we turn to the man who rescued Europe once before. Back in 2012 Mario Draghi as President of the European Central Bank (ECB) declared that “the ECB is ready to do whatever it takes to preserve the euro”. Remember the “PIIGS” who struggled in the crosshairs of European debt crisis traders for weeks? Well, Portugal, Ireland, Italy, Greece and Spain have more than survived that credit (or credibility) crisis. In fact, this week Greece was able to borrow at cheaper rates than France. Stunning. And perhaps, that should be Europe’s inspiration. Greece was a mess. Not now. However, the same Mario Draghi in his 400 page EU Competitiveness report is telling us Europe is in a mess and that “without action, we will have to either compromise our welfare, our environment or our freedom”.  Draghi sees the following challenges:

     

    1. Productivity: European GDP growth has lagged the US by 0.5% every year since 2000. Interestingly, demographics (population growth) has played its part in that too. How about building that wall? Maybe not.
    2. Innovation: There are no leading technology companies in Europe. Draghi identifies a “middle tech” trap where Europe seems happy to be in “the peloton” rather than lead. Indeed, outside the information and communications technology sector, European productivity growth matches and often beats US competition.
    3. Finance: Draghi bemoans the lack of joined-up thinking and fragmentation in the area of debt financing and regulation. Think about those hoarse notaries and the 1,330 banks servicing Germany. Then know that Canada has just 93 banks.
    4. Security: Draghi deals with a number of distinct challenges in his report but I have lumped them together as almost existential threats: defence(war), climate crisis (decarbonisation) and industrial dependence(China).

     

    There’s a danger these challenges are perceived as nothing new. Arguably, the outbreak of a full scale European war is the only really new challenge of recent years. The other challenges have been slow-moving train wrecks over a decade or more. However, the point to be made is, like our climate crisis, Europe is running out of time. As always, I try to use data to tell a story and here are a few standout numbers which have crossed my desk in recent weeks:

     

    *In the 1950s to 1970s period European investment in innovation equated to 4% of GDP. That percentage is now 0.5%.

     

    *Venture capital investment in Europe is 6 times lower than the US.

     

    *71% of all current funding for AI globally is in the US. Europe accounts for just 14% of global AI investment.

     

    *The performance gap between US and European stock markets this year is over 21%. That’s the biggest performance divergence since 1976. In fact, US stock markets now account for 65% of global stock market capitalisation but with just 26% of global GDP.

     

    *According to Bank of America research, US to European equity valuations have risen to 3.6x in November, an all-time record. This ratio has DOUBLED in 8 years, and is 3 times the historic average.

     

    *The US stock market has outperformed Europe in 12 out of the last 15 years.

     

    *There are more than 270 regulatory bodies involved in digital networks in the EU today.

     

    *The EU has 34 mobile network operators. China has four, and the US three.

     

    If the list above feels a bit “money” oriented there is good reason. If investment, performance, valuations and growth gravitate to one economic region the knock-on effect is significant for competing regions like the EU. Stripe didn’t even bother starting out in Ireland. The Collison brothers went straight to California. It’s not just start-ups. One of Europe’s homegrown fintech stars, Revolut, is about to IPO but co-founder and CEO, Nikolay Storonsky, has said the US will be their public listing home as London “can’t compete”. Not surprisingly, CB Insights are saying 40% of the world’s AI companies (and talent) are located in the US.

    It’s not just a money tale – those stats above about regulators and network fragmentation are massive hurdles to companies competing for investment capital based on growth. You don’t need a notary to grow GDP. However, like Greece and Ireland in the recent past, it is possible to be ‘forced’ into survival strategies which may require pain. As an illustration, the decision of VW to close manufacturing plants in Germany for the first time in 87 years might only be the start of bad news for the 100,000 VW workers striking in protest. Now for some better news, and a bit of European inspiration…

    Europe has proven already it has whatever it takes to win the battle of the skies. In a truly pan-European collaboration project, Airbus has emphatically emerged as the dominant aircraft manufacturer on this planet. Even before Boeing’s troubles, Airbus was racing towards 60% global market share and currently is winning the market for large single-aisle planes on an 80/20 basis. The European champion of the skies has been beating Boeing for 5 consecutive years and has an order backlog of 8,600 planes. This is the inspiration and illustration of European collaboration. Now look to the skies again.

    War is a tragic European fact of life in Ukraine. However, battles for survival can bring innovation. WW2 was the catalyst for Europe to invent radar, penicillin and jet engines. Today, you might consider the 200 Ukrainian companies currently manufacturing Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs). Yep, drones are the future and Elon Musk has had the temerity to suggest US F-35 jet fighters are “already obsolete”. If Musk is right and “Future wars will be drone wars” then Europe is the epicentre of UAV innovation. Interestingly, Germany’s start-up AI software company, Helsing, has focused on drones and jet-fighters and is now manufacturing its own attack weapons. These drones are armed and don’t need pilots or GPS, it’s all AI. And, Helsing is already valued at $5 billion.

    Our other survival battle is climate. And Europe can lead. One of the key drivers of productivity and valuation divergences over the years has been energy costs. An auto factory or chemical plant in Europe can typically pay $500m to $1 billion more for its power supply…. each year. Electrification is not just the decarbonised future, it is European industrial survival. While Europe might be stuck in a “middle-technology” trap it might be the US and China who remain wedded to cheaper fossil fuel options. Draghi’s analysis envisages Europe spending €3-4 trillion on electrification, or about 25% (!) of EU GDP over the next 10 years.

    Investment/spend is critical to innovation, and Europe right now looks like it is losing out in the energy race. So, we must hope a power crisis breeds innovation opportunity in electrification and perhaps gives Europe a head start over more complacent rivals. In fact, one of my favourite stats this week emerged in the decarbonisation space. A research paper from University of Chicago and Wharton estimates the total carbon burden of US corporates is $87 trillion. That’s 1.3 x the market capitalisation of US companies in 2023, and starkly demonstrates payment for damages caused by greenhouse emissions would bankrupt corporate America.

    Adversity forcing dramatic shifts in industrial policy and investment capital could ultimately be Europe’s saviour. Furthermore, we should look east to see how countries and cultures free themselves from government and regulatory over-reach. Poland is now, per capita, as rich as Japan or Spain. Its military is arguably the strongest in Europe, and its GDP has grown by 3.5x since 1990. Quietly Poland is becoming a tech and innovation hub. And, behind that drive is a STEM graduate pipeline ranked 4th in Europe between 2013 and 2019. That will only accelerate as Microsoft invests $1 billion, Google builds an R&D centre and a talent brain drain now moves into reverse. Inspiring stuff.

    It can be done. However, it might need a further crisis to prompt Europe’s leaders to commit to ‘whatever it takes’ to survive and lift itself out of decades of decline. And… the data and vibes suggest we are close to that moment.

     

     

  • Is The World Going Full Oligarch?

    Is The World Going Full Oligarch?

    The lettuces won’t be happy. It looks like the UK’s new Chancellor of The Exchequer, Rachel Reeves, and her Autumn Budget 2024 will survive a relatively benign financial market reaction. So far, government debt (Gilts) markets are stable and the domestic-focused FTSE 250 stock index has bounced slightly. Liz Truss will shake her head in delusion but the more understanding reality of today’s world is that the government of the world’s 5th biggest economy was brought down by international asset traders back in October 2022. It probably won’t be the last sovereign state to lose power to commercial interests and yes, money. Simply put, at exactly the wrong moment in time, many of the world’s governments’ ATM spending cards are about to be declined. Check out the following recent headlines:

     

    Interest payments on the national debt (US) top $1 trillion as deficit swells  –   CNBC

     

    IMF warns Japan of debt deterioration in the event of future shock   –   The Japan Times

     

    Why France’s fiscal freak out matters to the world  – Axios

     

    China’s Fiscal Package Aims To Ease Debt Woes, Property Crisis   –  Asia Financial

     

    There’s never a good time for fiscal capacity to be tight. But… literally the planet’s survival is at stake. The climate crisis is everyone’s crisis but governments are expected to lead. Indeed, according to the IEA, governments globally in 2023 spent $1.3 trillion or 1.2% of global GDP on clean energy investment. That bill will surely rise but there’s a big question mark over how the clean energy transition will be funded by stretched governments running record deficits and the highest debt burdens in history. For a clue to that question, let’s take a look at another spending race.

    This race depending on your perspective also has an existential angle. The race, of course, is AI and Packy McCormack’s excellent piece in his Not Boring newsletter has identified a shift in commercial goal – “companies are spending for capability as opposed to straightforward ROI”. Why the ditching of seeking returns on investment? Apparently, the first company to create the AI “Digital God” boils down to an existential pursuit. Loser companies die. Indeed, Larry Page of Google fame has reportedly said many times internally…..

     

    “I am willing to go bankrupt rather than lose this race”

     

    That feels like extremely high stakes thinking. It might explain another development in the world’s most advanced technology economy. It’s one thing for a government to depend on a private company, SpaceX, to conduct an international space rescue mission. But, it’s quite another to see SpaceX’s owner Elon Musk in the words of VP hopeful, Tim Walz, “skipping like a dipshit” at various Trump rallies. Musk may cause me involuntary eye-rolls every time I read him on X or see him on TV but he’s a super-successful builder of future technologies. In fact, he has feet in both existential races with Tesla (climate) and xAI (AI) which is about to raise funds at a $40 billion valuation. If the latter doesn’t feel like an existential race, maybe the monies will convince you. In 2023, just 4 companies – Facebook, Amazon, Google and Microsoft – spent $196 billion or 0.72% of US GDP on AI research and infrastructure. Remember, these companies are really only ‘getting ready’. Furthermore, they are arguably investing at levels which historically would have only been within the compass of sovereign governments.

    I remember reading first about social media companies becoming effectively supra-sovereign powers. At the time, Facebook had 2.5 billion people on its platform, multiples of any other country populations on the planet. Now social media steers business and moves elections, but tech money might be about to go one step further. Forget about tech companies currently rolling out nuclear power for their hyper-scaling data centres. What about a seat in government?  Well, Elon Musk is on the cusp of entering a Trump ministerial cabinet with a role brief focused on cost cutting. I will give you a clue; plenty of those cuts will be in the regulatory, business and tech governance areas. Musk is not alone. Racist rallies in Madison Square Garden or not, big business is keen to put on the Orange war paint for Trump chaos and……… commercial insurance or favour. Check out the latest Trump luvvies from the world of business:

     

    Winklevoss Twins donate $1m each to Trump as champion of cryptocurrency  – The Guardian

     

    Steve Schwarzmann says Trump would be “efficient and effective” president this time – Business Insider

     

    Silicon Valley’s Andreesson Horowitz give Millions to Trump  – Bloomberg

     

    Billionaire Ken Griffin says “expectation today is that Donald Trump will win the White House” –  Fortune

     

    Washington Post flooded by cancellations after Bezos non-endorsement decision  –  NPR

     

    Ooooohh what would Washington Post legends Katherine Graham or Ben Bradlee think in this “Fat Nixon” era? It would appear big tech and big money “broligarchs” see Trump support as commercial insurance at the very least, and possibly a route to unfettered, compliance-light opportunity. One could become dispirited about the overt involvement of big business in politics. But, in reality business was always there in the Washington background. However, it’s not just a US phenomenon.

    Europe has had its share of big business influence on policy. In the UK, they have had trade and Brexit. In Germany, it was the powerful industrial sector and its push for cheap(then) dependency on Russian energy. We will say no more on either policy disaster, except there might be an intellectual reason why US business leaders are in a different universe of wealth creation compared to their strategically inept European counterparts.

    On a final more serious note, perhaps the difference this time is that governments really do need the balance sheets, cash and spending power of big tech. Just six US technology companies – Apple, Amazon, Google, Meta, Microsoft and Nvidia – have a combined market value of $15 trillion. For context, that $15 trillion equates to the  GDP of China as recently as 2020. In this writer’s reluctant view, politicians have two options – tax these guys or become partners. It might seem distasteful but public-private partnership is now an existential fact of life….or death.

    Gotta dip with the dipshits.

     

  • Torn In The USA: A European View

    Torn In The USA: A European View

    I know, I know. Who wants views, just get this bloody vote over with. Well, we hope the bloody bit doesn’t come true but, if you want Hitler’s generals and your chief cheerleader is a just-revealed Putin (pay)pal, then you never know. Anyway, forget the politics. Let’s pause and reflect where the US economy is today, not where it will be in 11 days. Also, note that financial markets, for the first time in 2024, through emerging market equities and inflation-measuring instruments (bonds, gold) are beginning to think about a different USA to come. However, in this article I’d like to highlight ten things which the average European would envy about our US ally today.

     

    1. The US stock market now accounts for 50% of the global total, but is home to less than 5% of the world’s population.

     

    1. The IMF this week (Financial Times) has provided some explanation for this dominance by highlighting stagnant European productivity growth since 2005. In the same two decade period US productivity has rocketed by 40%.

     

    1. Technology you say. You’d be right. Just 5 US technology companies – Apple, Amazon, Google, Microsoft and Meta/Facebook – have a collective market value of $12.2 trillion which is more than the value of any other stock market in the world. Indeed, the new AI chip star, Nvidia, is worth more than the entire stock markets of five of the G7 countries.

     

    1. The old stuff is going well too. US domestic oil production hit 13.4 million barrels a day in August. That’s the highest production number for ANY country(even OPEC) in history. The US is a NET exporter of oil while Europe watches its eastern gas pipelines anxiously. But, you won’t hear that on Fox News. Drill baby, drill…just not the facts.

     

    1. Not surprisingly, US banks with the biggest corporate customers in the world are doing quite well. US banking giant, JP Morgan, has a market value of $540 billion which exceeds the combined value of Europe’s top 10 banks.

     

    1. Maybe Europe will disrupt US economic hegemony and bounce back with AI? Ehhhh…that’s not looking like a great bet right now. The sheer cost of talent and large-language-models (LLM) used to train and build AI applications are turning the AI race into Big Tech 2.0. Recent newsflow would suggest it’s only Microsoft/OpenAI, Amazon, Meta and Google who have the deep pockets to win the race. And, Asia will be watching anxiously too. The Asian dominance of hardware/semiconductor chip production is in “transition” as Taiwan’s TSMC just told the markets that the production yields in its new Arizona plant are 4% higher than in its home base Taiwan.

     

    1. Speaking of home bases…US home owners are sitting on $32 trillion of value attached to their home equity. That’s a quadrupling of property wealth from the $8 trillion low recorded as recently as 2012. How did that happen?

     

    1. Jobs, and lots of them. The US economy is at full employment, the highest seen in 100 years. Oh, and average hourly earnings are up 26% since 2020. In fact, US real (adjusted for inflation) wage growth is up 26% since 2000. More companies too…

     

    1. Back in 2015, 2.8 million new companies were formed in that year. The number in 2023 was 5.5 million. That’s a near doubling of start-up activity in less than 10 years. And…. money doesn’t just talk.

     

    1. Risk earns rewards. High risk venture capital (VC) is the oxygen of innovation and explains much of the US tech dominance. The US capital markets are the source of 50% of ALL venture capital funding globally. Asia is 40%. And Europe…… ahem…… 5%.

     

    That’s enough. But, I could mention military dominance too as Russia impales itself on imperial delusion in Ukraine and is now resorting to throwing North Korean troops into meat-grinder combat action on its own soil in Kursk. Of course, the US is not in a perfect place, leaving aside its toxic partisan politics. Its health and hate crises seem to be impossible to address by looking overseas for solutions or perspective. Indeed, the sheer presence of 350 million guns in the most prosperous land on the planet are a startling reflection of fear in the midst of so much opportunity. We can only watch over the next few days, as US citizens cast their votes. The list of ‘wins’ above looks like a fabulous starting point. The polls suggest voters are not so sure.

    As Europeans, we can attest to similar ‘win’ lists for Germany and the UK ten years ago. Not so today, and their voters painfully know they played their part in believing not-so-great-again political calculations in new energy and trade policies. Tick tock…..

     

     

  • Four Huge Trends For Your Private Portfolio

    Four Huge Trends For Your Private Portfolio

    I scared a few people last week. Apologies. Then again, you could be a public servant or journalist in the US today and be referred to as “the enemy within” by the bookie’s favourite for the Oval Office. Or, how about being a lifetime Tory party member faced with the extremist choice of “KemiKaze” Badenoch or “Honest Bob” Jenrick as your next leader? Better still, put yourself in the shoes of the Tory tactical masterminds who ‘traded’ leadership votes and eliminated their own likely winning candidate, Jimmy “Dimly” Cleverly. Breathe, just breathe slowly. We can’t promise an end any time soon to populist buffoonery but in the real world big changes are afoot. Four developments, in particular, caught the eye this week and highlighted future opportunities for those building new businesses or investment portfolios.

     

    Electricity: If $150 billion of hurricane damage in Florida doesn’t focus climate crisis minds I’m not sure what will. Indeed, there is an encouraging reality check beginning to filter into financial discussions. Just this week the Washington Post ran a story about the cost of extreme weather exerting further strain on an already challenged Federal government’s fiscal position($35 trillion debt). Of course, moving away from fossil fuels to electricity is already set to be the greatest financial shift ever experienced by the global economy – $275 trillion to be invested in the transition by 2050(Source: McKinsey). So, the following statistics really hit home. They are sourced from the International Energy Agency (IEA) and flag the recent growth of electricity use being twice as fast as the growth of energy demand. However, the future is about to turbo charge that relationship. Between now and 2035 electricity usage will outpace energy demand growth by a factor of 6x. Yep, that’s electric vehicles (EVs), AI chips, data centres all doing their future thing. Another way of looking at this shift is that this 6x electricity acceleration equates to the entire energy demands of Japan (4th biggest GDP in world) being added EACH year to global electricity usage.

     

    Banking: In the old days it was banks that provided loans, or credit. Now, every second ‘growth’ headline in investment markets is referencing “private credit”. So, what is it? It is quite simply lending by private pools of capital(not banks), usually sitting within large investment firms. The original “Barbarians at the Gate” were private equity firms who used debt to buy out big companies. Today you might read about Blackstone buying software Smartsheet for $8 bilion. Back in 1988 it was KKR buying RJR Nabisco for $25 billion. Historically, the debt part of the ‘leveraged’ buy-out came from banks. Now the Barbarians (private equity) want to do the banking (debt) too. In the last 12 months there have been 14 different partnerships announced between banks and private credit(debt) firms. Most recently, Citibank announced a partnership with private equity/credit giant, Apollo Global. Amazingly, this relationship turns banking orthodoxy on its head – Citibank’s investment bank will source the deals and Apollo will provide the money/debt. Bankers turned deal makers, deal makers turned bankers. Wowzers. Note, if the Barbarians are now keen to provide debt funding to companies, then they must see opportunity and excellent returns. Current estimates of the size of the market indicate private lending assets (AUM) currently at $1.5 trillion growing to $2.7 trillion by 2027 (Source: Prequin).

     

    Life Sciences: Despite the anti-elite denial of science prevalent in the social media and political spheres, the incredible speed-to-discovery of vaccines seen during Covid-19 is set to continue. However, with a little AI twist. Arguably, AI won its first Nobel Prize in recent days. From The Japan Times….

     

    “The recent awarding of the Nobel Prize in chemistry is an incredible vote of confidence in the potential for artificial intelligence to transform the way medicines are invented by using AI to illuminate and manipulate proteins, life’s most basic building blocks. The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences honoured University of Washington professor David Baker and two scientists from Google DeepMind, CEO Demis Hassabis and senior research scientist John Jumper.”

     

    Yep, AI machine-learning cracked the code to predicting protein structures with Google scientists right in the middle of it all. Meanwhile the Nobel Prize for Physics went to the “Godfathers of AI”, Geoffrey Hinton and John Hopfield, who developed the tools which power the neural networks underpinning today’s AI boom. Now, think about the Nobel tradition of rewarding decades of research and recognition. Then think about chemistry protein discovery work barely 2 years old and not one, but two, Nobel prizes. Simply astonishing.

    Nuclear Power: It’s not just gold hitting all-time highs. Uranium mining stocks are flying too. Let’s face it, the news flow in nuclear power has been hard to miss. Japan has just re-started a 47 year old nuclear reactor at the Takahama nuclear power station. Amazon is pumping $500 million into nuclear capabilities, and Google has entered an interesting deal with Califormia start-up, Kairos Power. Google has committed to buying nuclear power generated by multiple small modular reactors(SMRs) built by Kairos. And, one for the nuclear history buffs – the infamous Three Mile Island nuclear power station will be restarted in a $1.6 billion deal struck between Microsoft and the energy utility, Constellation. Again, AI is the power demand trigger for these moves. And, mining stocks sitting on uranium reserves might just be the wrong price (low) if a Big Tech AI race goes nuclear on many levels.

    So, there’s four thoughts or trends which are very much part of our future. You might spot AI as the common factor across a lot of these developments but that’s possibly not the only private opportunity. There seems to be some enormous shifts happening in traditional sectors like infrastructure, materials, banking, power and chemistry. The good news is that there are lots of private companies plugged into these transition sectors right now and many will need funding (debt or equity) in the years to come. If that sounds like a private portfolio-building strategy then you’d be right. It’s time to take a private dip. Even better, we might be able to help you very soon…..

     

     

  • M&A Deals Showing Us New Opportunities

    M&A Deals Showing Us New Opportunities

    Global leadership is on my mind. Not the extreme stuff. If you can’t avoid the headlines on the excruciating UK Conservative party leadership battle between “Honest Bob” Jenrick and “Jimmy Dimly” Cleverly, I can assure you it’s well worth the effort. Instead, I’m just back from the IMI National Leadership conference and one of the key speaker messages in our uncertain geopolitical world was to watch ‘personalities’ closely. And, believe them. So, rather than jump into geopolitics, this advice can also be applied to business and financial markets too. The return of large merger and acquisition activity (M&A) is a reliable ‘tell’ of executive confidence. These big deals are the real “believe them” leadership actions, not the quarterly analyst conference call types where management commentary is invariably upbeat, and the analysis even worse. So, with excellent timing a number of M&A developments are catching the eye….

     

    Banking: We mentioned in recent weeks an interesting standoff between Unicredito and the German establishment after the Italian bank swooped in to take a 9% stake in Commerzbank. Let’s just say the biggest Commerzbank shareholder, the German government, were not happy. So, imagine the scenes in Berlin’s political corridors last week when Unicredito used derivative instruments to up their beneficial interest in Commerzbank to 21% and overtake the government’s 12% stake as the biggest shareholder in Commerzbank. This is highly unusual cross-border aggressive M&A tactics and suggests high levels of Italian banking confidence. Indeed, another Italian bank, Intesa, in recent days briefly became the most valuable bank in the eurozone. Not long ago the Italian banking system was in a mess as the world’s oldest bank, Monte dei Paschi di Siena, entered near-collapse restructuring in 2022.

     

    Software: All the tech glory has been in hardware in 2024, and software has been feeling the pain. Valuations in SaaS have slipped, pipelines have sputtered and AI has become a deflationary impetus in the coding ecosystem. Uncertainty has bred deal paralysis. So, the sector would have been hugely relieved to see a big private equity buy-out of Smartsheet by Blackstone and Vista for a chunky $8.4 billion, and a 41% premium to its recent share price average. We will return to the significance of private equity doing buy-outs of large public listed companies, but for now let’s focus on high-risk sector consolidation where management teams are already under pressure…

     

    Hardware: Yes, AI has been a winner for chip manufacturing superstars like Nvidia and Broadcom. However, as with all sudden technology shifts, there can be disruption to established players. Intel is a good example of model disruption. The share price is off 50% and the company has adopted a split company strategy across manufacturing(foundry) and chip design(product). As the sole US player with sufficient process/manufacturing technology, Intel has a future but possibly with a partner…..or predator. Apollo Global have been mentioned in the media as private equity financing partners, but recent reports suggest California’s Qualcomm have approached Intel in pursuit of a friendly takeover. That combination would be a $300 billion (+) chip monster supported by US government policy (US Chips & Science Act) and would cause a seismic shake up in the semiconductor manufacturing ecosystem.

     

    Mining: The software sector might feel unloved over the past 18 months, but spare a thought for the mining sector. And, I’m not talking crypto. No, the basic materials critical to our decarbonised electrified future are supplied by a global mining industry which has been starved of investment capital for….. 15 years. That is about to change. Supra-sovereign legislation like the Critical Raw Materials Act (EU) are a siren sound to the frightening mis-match between our cleantech future and the metals needed to meet climate crisis targets. So, watch the ‘leader signals’ as gold and silver prices hit all time highs, and then check out the deal activity. AngloGold is buying Centamin for $2.5 billion while BHP and Lundin are jointly closing a $4 billion purchase of Canadian copper play, Filo. Also, there’s an interesting $2.8 billion green equipment partnership deal between Australian giant, Fortescue, and Swiss construction player, Liebherr. We’d better start believing……in our planetary survival.

     

    UK: Our final M&A development is not a sector specific observation but highlights another unloved area of the investment world. The UK has been in the international investment ‘naughty corner’ thanks to its own historic lack of investment in domestic assets….and a world-first voluntary trade-reduction deal which nobody wants to talk about anymore. So, it was intriguing to read a recent piece of research from stockbroker, Peel Hunt, on UK deal activity. Apparently, there are currently a remarkable 19 ongoing bids for UK companies in the FTSE 350 index. Not all will happen, as Rightmove, Currys and Anglo American have demonstrated. But, the imminent take private deals for the Royal Mail and Hargreaves Lansdowne are a serious ‘tell’. Britain is in play.

     

    The deal environment is definitely picking up. Early private equity research data from Pitchbook shows deal count in Q3 was up 8% and deal value up 20% compared to last year. Also, helpfully, the story on the exit side of things is progressing too – global private equity exits are up 13% in value and 3% in deal count. Now, consider that private equity houses have circa $4 trillion of unspent investment capital (“dry powder”) to deploy and things could get rather interesting in unloved parts of the market. Finally, keep an eye on the Middle East for more than conflagration reasons. Oil prices might be falling but investment in the region is rocketing. The recent FT Mining Summit 2024 featured a whopper statistic that 20% of the world’s cranes are located in just one country…. Saudi Arabia. Oh, and Abu Dhabi’s national oil company just bought Bayer’s plastics spin-off for $16 billion. Yep, plastics. If market personalities are telling you they are beginning to love the unloved, believe them.

     

     

  • Are You Following The Wrong Monster AI Moves?

    Are You Following The Wrong Monster AI Moves?

    There are now “Nvidia watch” parties. Yip. Stay up on a Wednesday night, grab some popcorn and watch the release of Nvidia’s quarterly results. There’s a whiff of Nokia about this single company focus. Then again, the commentariat are beginning to say in all seriousness that Nvidia’s results are more important to global financial markets than the Federal Reserve’s Open Market Committee (FOMC) and its guidance on the direction of interest rates. Bonkers. Anyway, Nvidia’s results this week were a bit of a yawn. Stunning growth, earnings beat, $50 billion buy backs and raised forward guidance. Still not enough for the party people, as the AI chip monster promptly lost $150 billion of market value in the after-hours trading session. Interestingly, data from the last 50 trading days has confirmed Nvidia as the most traded stock in the world with an average value transfer of $40 billion each day(!). That’s more than previous kings of the tape, Apple and Tesla, daily trading combined. So, AI certainly is focusing trading minds but we could be missing more significant business events. Like real monster moves. Try these for size….

    Coding Carnage:  During a leaked “fireside chat,” the head of Amazon Web Services (AWS), Matt Garman, suggested that in as little as two years, human developers may need to learn different skills to make way for artificial intelligence coders. “If you go forward 24 months from now, or some amount of time — I can’t exactly predict where it is — it’s possible that most developers are not coding,” he exclaimed in audio leaked to Business Insider.

    Consulting Charge: The big global consultancy firms are on the AI charge, and I don’t mean their fees. CB Insights has flagged some very big numbers as the Big 4 accountancy outfits ramp up AI investment:

     

    • Deloitte — announced $1.4B upskilling program (December 2022) and $2B for development of industry-specific applications of tech including AI (April 2024)
    • EY — invested $1.4B in AI, launching EY.ai enablement platform (September 2023)
    • KPMG — spending $2B on AI & cloud services in partnership with Microsoft over 5 years (July 2023)
    • PwC — investing $1B in genAI in its US operations over 3 years (April 2023)

     

    Then check out what another professional services giant is saying. Less than one year after announcing it would invest $3B in AI tech, publicly traded Accenture reported $600M in gen AI bookings in Q2 FY 24 and $900M in Q3 FY 24. On the company’s Q2 earnings call, CEO Julie Sweet said, “Our sales in generative AI…are the fastest we’ve ever seen.”

    Productivity Proof: There’s lots of commentariat guff about AI lacking enough use cases. Ahem. Let’s see what European payments player, Klarna, is doing. Quite well actually. Having cut staff from 5,000 to 3,800, staff productivity has exploded upwards by 78%. The company has so much faith in the AI tasks performed in marketing and customer service that management is talking about cutting staff by a further 50%. One can only imagine what other European fintechs like Stripe and Revolut are going to do. But two things are certain. These nimble fintechs can’t do nothing as the cost advantage is existentially massive with AI. Oh, and that’s fintechs. So, what are the lumbering ‘digital transition’ legacy banks going to do? Do, or dAI me thinks.

    Of course, AI chip expectations attached to Nvidia have a good chance of ultimately disappointing as with all cyclical manufacturing companies in history. However, the twaddle about “lack of use cases” now needs to come with serious business health warnings. Note that Klarna also told the market that 90% of its staff are using generative AI tools… daily.  Also, when talking to a medtech consultant with IBM in Dubai this week, she stated that EVERY pitch or business project now contains an AI piece.

    Just today I’m reading about plans in the UK to move to a 4-day week and you know AI will be in the discussion. It’s also in HSBC’s latest report on the UK venture capital scene. A stunning more than one in every 5 dollars raised ($4.4 billion forecast for 2024) is going to the not so niche sector of AI. Not technology, not life sciences…. just AI. Now think about ChatGPT’s parent, OpenAI, potentially receiving multi-billion dollar investments from Apple and Nvidia at a $100 billion + valuation, and then see CB Insights report M&A activity in the AI sector delivering a record 119 deals in Q2 this year.

    The business message seems very clear. Don’t watch. Move, and fast.

  • Mr Copper To Sing Again?

    Mr Copper To Sing Again?

    I remember the original ‘Mr. Copper’, Yasuo Hamanaka, being a pretty decent karaoke singer. That’s a story for another day but there’s a risk-aware part of me saying that copper, as in the metal, needs to be sung from those Roppongi rooftops right now. Hamanaka’s claim to trading fame was cornering 5% of the copper market when discovered by US authorities 30 years ago, culminating in jail time for Mr Copper and a top 10 all-time trading loss of almost $3 billion for the mighty Sumitomo Corporation. The scandal dominated global financial headlines for weeks back then but I feel another copper story with big numbers is building. Let’s start with a selection of recent headlines…

     

    Massive copper shortage on the horizon –  The Week 

     

    Copper demand to boom as new technology drives power consumption Trafigura says – Reuters

     

    AI to add 1 million tons to copper demand by 2030 – Data Centre Dynamics

     

    Copper is the “new oil”, and prices could soar 50%   – Fortune

     

    Copper shortage threatens EV transition – DPA Magazine

     

    I think we get the picture. Copper is not just a battery/electric vehicle (EV) story – EVs actually use four times more copper than non-electric autos. Copper is also now a data centre and AI story. However, there’s an even bigger picture. McKinsey estimate the global shift away from fossil fuels to a decarbonised economy will require annual physical infrastructure spend of $9 trillion.  Yep, that’s every year until 2050. Or, the combined market value of Microsoft, Apple and Nvidia in capital expenditure……. every single year for the next 25 years. The critical detail in this decarbonisation move is electrification. Energy supply is one aspect; nuclear, natural or renewable. The transmission and storage of that converted power via electricity is the copper-critical bit. Let’s consider a few more numbers.

    *CRU Group estimate global copper demand to surge by 9.5 million tons in the next decade.

    *S&P Global go bigger – they see global copper demand doubling from current 25 million tons per year to 50 million tons by 2035.

    *For historical context, 700 million tons of copper has been produced over the course of human history. Net-Zero targets for 2050 demands that humanity produces 2x more  than it has ever produced, or 1.4 billion tons (Source: S&P Global).

    *However, the mining industry would like to have a word. Due to chronic underinvestment, planning delays, investment capital scarcity, genuine sustainability concerns, higher interest rates and shiny AI tech excitement the global mining sector is currently projected to increase production by just….. 20%.

    *Oh, and the world hasn’t made a major new copper discovery since 2014. This lack of copper discoveries also means existing mines going deeper, incurring greater costs while the grade (metal per ton of rock) falls alarmingly.

    We have a problem. Arguably, it starts with the investment maths. Consultants, PWC, reckon AI could add $15.7 trillion to the economy by 2030. But…. these technologies and their Big Tech owners require massive amounts of electricity. Both Google and Microsoft consume more electricity than small European countries. So, how about the USA, home of the original Silicon Valley? Right now, US data centre power usage accounts for 22GW, or 4.5% of the nation’s power consumption. However, according to SemiAnalysis research, that figure is projected to reach 100GW, or nearly 20% of nationwide consumption by 2030 due to AI buildout.

    To be absolutely clear, the expansion of grid infrastructure across generation, transmission and distribution is critically dependent on copper and its performance properties. Yet, there appears to be an enormous squeeze on grid capacity coming. That’s not just cheap commentariat opinion. As always, money really talks. So, can you name the electric power company that has outperformed the rocketing AI poster-child Nvidia this year? Well, that would be Vistra Corp which has clocked up a share price gain of 157% compared to Nvidia’s ‘slow-coach’ 121%.

    So, if electric power is spotted as a potential winner by canny investors ahead of a supply squeeze, where does that leave the mining sector and copper? There have been a few clues. For example, BHP Billiton in recent months unsuccessfully tried to buy Anglo-American (and its copper mines) in a massive $50 billion deal. Interestingly, the ultimate fossil fuel kingdom, Saudi Arabia, can also see the electric future. The Saudi mining company, Manara Minerals, is in talks with Pakistan on a potential $1-2 billion purchase of a 15% stake in its Reko Diq copper and gold mines.

    These numbers are big, but, in global terms, are ridiculously small compared to the $15 trillion excitement about AI. The ultimate reality check and irony is that one company, Nvidia, is currently valued at more than $3 trillion. In stark contrast, the entire global mining sector is valued at circa $2 trillion. Clearly, there will be no credible AI roll-out without a functional electricity grid and energy storage infrastructure. How long before tech investors start to scream for more mining and copper production investment?  Probably in less time than it took for Mr Copper’s illegal trading arrangements to be discovered. Meanwhile, we plan to sing the mining story before the screaming……