Tag: America

  • Technology Sector Serves Up Critical New Pension Risks…

    Technology Sector Serves Up Critical New Pension Risks…

    That was quick. Half the year gone already but no World War III, no AI ending humanity and no gains for all those crypto lemmings who increased the wealth of the Trump family by $1.4 billion. The Donald deftly sidestepped the crypto shake down with the reassuring deflection of a practiced mobster – “The stock market is going up…Everybody’s profiting”. Sure, Jan. Between Love Island and the upcoming weekend sports-fest one can understand people lacking a little financial focus. So, I will keep it brief today. I’d like to take a look at a number of technology sector financial milestones which have been achieved and then flag a couple of unintended consequences, and probably pension risks. First, the milestones….

     

    • Tech-heavy Nasdaq Index gained 20% in H1 vs S&P 500 up 9.5%.
    • Semiconductor/chip sector went rocketed 82% in the same 6 months (Nvidia, Broadcom, Intel etc)
    • Memory chip stocks like Sandisk, Micron, Hynix and Samsung are up a whopping 120% in H1.
    • Research house, Gartner, say AI spending will hit $2.6 TRILLION in 2026.
    • The AI hyper-scalers – Google, MSFT, Amazon and Meta – are set to spend $650 billion on AI infrastructure in 2026. 
    • The combined weight of AI-focused stocks across hyperscaling, semiconductor chips, power, hardware and software tots up to 51% of the total value of the S&P 500 index.
    • Nine major AI companies accounted for almost half of global technology borrowing, raising $122 billion in corporate bonds in a single year to fund data centres and infrastructure.

     

    So, my first observation based on these milestones is that, if your pension is tracking global/US stock markets, then there is a strong possibility you are ‘running’ a significant bet on AI without actually realising it. It’s what the pensions/wealth industry might refer to as a ‘concentration risk’. And, I think the following headlines are flagging a few other AI risks right now….

     

    • OpenAI Leans Toward waiting Until Next Year For IPO – New York Times
    • Tesla Caps Employee AI Spend At $200 Per Week After Adoption Push – The Information
    • OpenAI in early talks to give 5% stake to US government – The Guardian

     

    OpenAI, as a reminder, is attached to almost $1 trillion of AI infrastructure projects and the ‘mood music’ in the above headlines is not great. These projects have been funded by trillions of equity and debt from technology and banking partners. So, these partners must be wondering why OpenAI feels the need to grease Donald Trump’s tiny toddler fingers. I’m wondering too, but speculation gets us nowhere. Of course, the complete anti-Donald antidote is truth, numbers, facts and genuine science. So, I was intrigued to come across some excellent research by former colleagues of mine at Quant Insight. These guys use big AI computational power and principal component analysis (PCA) to strip out all the ‘noise’ attached to the pricing/trading behaviour of financial instruments in the equity, debt and FX markets. The benefit of this huge analytical undertaking is to identify the key factors/drivers of a share price or bond price in the current market environment/regime. This is what they found was driving the $10 trillion semiconductor sector ETF (SOXX) which rocketed 80% in Q2 alone….

    It turns out that the biggest external (macro) factor driving the share prices of semiconductor companies was….. lower cost of corporate borrowing. Now think about these companies involved in heavy capex manufacturing and infrastructure activities. A glance at the financial milestones above and trillions of dollars of planned investment spend means these tech companies need external funding given their own revenues and cash flow can’t keep up with the pace of investment required. This means technology companies are now borrowing which was never really a feature of these high margin/cash flow companies previously. For pension funds this ALSO means the whole AI infrastructure story is not just a stock market story. Hidden behind the headlines, there is a borrowing, credit, balance sheet story. Now, think about that 51% exposure of the S&P 500 index to AI. You think you’re getting equity and AI exposure but….. you’re also acquiring an exposure to a credit (lending) book as large as many dedicated private credit funds. Now check out the recent headlines on private credit funds.

    Actually don’t. Enjoy the weekend sport first!

  • The Truth Can Hurt ….. Investment

    The Truth Can Hurt ….. Investment

    Forty years ago this week, reactor 4 of the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant exploded. The human and monetary costs were in the thousands and hundreds of billions respectively. More difficult to quantify was Chernobyl’s contribution to the collapse of the Soviet Union. However, I did re-watch the excellent HBO series Chernobyl in recent days and was struck by a non-monetary factor which might resonate for those currently enduring daily White House appeals to ignore our eyes and ears. The words of Professor Valery Legasov of Moscow State University in the opening scene of Chernobyl seem almost prescient  –  “What is the cost of lies? It’s not that we’ll mistake them for the truth. The real danger is that if we hear enough lies, then we no longer recognize the truth at all.”  For the USSR, the truth of technological decline, an obsolete economic model, and the inability of centralised power to deal with the complexity of a more connected global economy was easy to see. But fatally, not recognized. Fast forward to today, and we could be in similar TRUTH territory….

    Don’t worry, we won’t go down any conspiracy theory rabbit holes. So, no need to wonder why a would-be assassin might gain access without security challenge to the Washington Hilton and within one floor of almost the entire Trump regime senior leadership at Saturday’s annual White House Correspondents dinner. If the current head of the FBI is nicknamed “J. Edgar Boozer” then the truth is closer to incompetence than conspiracy. Similarly, but with far greater global economic impact, if Germany’s normally cautious Chancellor Merz is saying that the US has “no clear exit strategy” and is being “humiliated” by Iran, then the truth is that the US does not really “hold all the cards” or the keys to “Schrödinger’s Strait” of Hormuz. The consequences are plain to see as oil prices soar past $110 per barrel again and OPEC’s number 3 producer, UAE, just left the cartel after 59 years of membership.

    Clearly, the old world order alliances from NATO to OPEC are fragmenting. And, that’s before anyone dares to mention the eye-catching new Pew (March 2026) poll showing 60% of Americans now view Israel unfavourably — up from 42% in 2022. That’s almost as bad a swing as Trump’s voter approval on dealing with inflation shifting to a net MINUS 40, and national Consumer Sentiment surveys (Michigan/Ipsos) diving to the lowest levels seen since 1978. And yet….

    There’s a danger we have been distracted and miss other truths. Watch what people do, not what they feel. For example US consumer sentiment might be plummeting but US retail sales are running ‘hot’ at 7.7% year-on-year growth, the fastest growth pace seen since 2022. Meanwhile, fossil fuels and Strait of Hormuz blockades (unless you’re a Russian oligarch’s yacht – I know…Russia, Russia, Russia) might be dominating the gloomy headlines but there’s more positive long-term developments accelerating at speed. If you have been unable to copy or track Baron Trump’s oil trading strategies or share the Fox Business congratulations of Maria Bartiromo on Eric Trump’s new $24 million contract with the Pentagon(yup), then there’s good news and bad news. The bad news is you’re not making millions on risk-free trading or commerce, but the good news is you won’t need a fitting for an orange jump suit. However, away from the fossil fuel supply crisis, check out the following quiet developments which could hurt your investment portfolio if you miss them…

     

    • In 2025, for the first time in history, clean power met every single unit of new global electricity demand.
    • Renewable energy sources (33.8%) officially crushed coal (33.0%) for the first time in 100 years.
    • Electric vehicle (EV) sales in emerging markets have surged 80%.
    • In Europe, EV sales soared 51% in March while EV sales smash through 25% of the total global market.
    • Chinese company, CATL, just unveiled a battery with a 1,500km range that charges in 6 minutes
    • China exports of batteries, EVs and solar cells were up 34%, 53%, 80% respectively last month.

     

    A quick glance at the last two developments might suggest another uncomfortable truth; China is winning this global electrification ‘war’ and arguably is the winner of the Persian Gulf one too. However, there’s clearly only one country, USA, winning the global race for AI investment capital right now. The AI chip superstar stock, Nvidia, has just clocked up another $1.25 trillion increase in market value in less than 4 weeks. Nvidia’s current market capitalisation of $5.25 TRILLION is just shy of the entire value of Germany’s GDP and surpassed by only those of China and the USA itself. Google and Nvidia’s combined market value is now over $10 trillion.

    AI is acting like a ‘death star’ for other investment sectors as it sucks up huge amounts of investment dollars. In Q1 of this year software stocks collapsed 29% from their highs while 81% of all venture capital funding ($265 billion out of $330 billion) went to AI start-ups, with 65% of that going to just 4 companies (Source: Pitchbook). You’ll keep hearing and reading that word “concentration” and how investment capital is racing into ever narrower niches within technology. However, it might be worth keeping a mix of old and new names on the investment radar. Here’s two to watch:

    NEW: Anthropic, the parent of my new best work friend this week, Claude, is apparently trading in private markets right now at a $1 trillion valuation. Of course, it does help valuations if your annualised revenue jumps from $9 billion to $30 billion….in just 3 months.

    OLD: Samsung, the unwieldy Korean conglomerate of TV, phone and memory chip manufacture, is going to be the most profitable company in the world by 2027. Bloomberg reckon Samsung will edge out Nvidia for top spot with a whopping operating profit of $330 billion. Yep, good old memory chips (DRAM, NAND etc) are needed by Claude, Gemini and all the other agentic chatbots to remember you (and your prompts).

    So, that’s all good for now. But, let’s get back to the Truth thing. And, we’re not talking about AI chatbot hallucinations, or even Trumpolini’s Jesus delusions. It’s much more basic than that. In the middle of all this AI euphoria sits the company who kicked things off with ChatGPT, Open AI, and its CEO, Sam Altman. This week we heard OpenAI are behind on planned revenues and new subscriber growth targets. These things happen in fast growing tech stories, but OpenAI is attached to $1.2 trillion of AI infrastructure deals where OpenAI’s commitment is $600 billion despite current annual cash burn of…… $17 billion. Furthermore, OpenAI does not have a huge balance sheet like Google, Microsoft or Amazon. So, credibility and confidence matters. And, I’m concerned.

    Altman’s career history per various in-depth media articles (the New Yorker one is best) is littered with massive commercial relationship breakdowns and a common theme. Loss of trust. Phrases like “profound mistrust”, “lack of candour”, “consistent pattern of lying” and “deceptive and chaotic behaviour” are used to describe the CEO of a company seeking to publicly list (IPO) in New York this year with a valuation of more than $800 billion. This week Altman faces Elon Musk in court for a $150 billion lawsuit brought by the latter regarding governance at OpenAI. Let’s just say the potential damage to Altman’s credibility could have ‘nuclear’ consequences for the AI financial ecosystem. Watch carefully and remember the fragility of the Open AI balance sheet in the context of its trillion dollar commitments. Then think of Chernobyl and Valery Legasov’s most powerful words which we have cited before on these pages…

    “Every lie we tell incurs a debt to the truth. Sooner or later that debt is paid”

  • Short Prompts, Longer Impacts….

    Short Prompts, Longer Impacts….

    That was exhausting. And it was only a short week. Iranian civilization and the White House insider trading desk were given a bit more time to exist under autocratic regimes while Schrödinger’s ceasefire broke out everywhere but in the Strait of Hormuz and Lebanon. This paradox seemed to inspire Melania Trump who went to the Presidential podium to assure the world’s press that Epstein criminality was not a hoax, but at the same time that she “never had a relationship” with dear Jeffrey.  I’m thinking that’s a “relations” denial but that’s the Clinton nostalgia in me. Anyway, this very strange First Lady intervention has prompted some very short-term thinking about what exact Epstein bombshell is about to drop. The longer term implications might take a bit longer to decipher but, at the bare minimum, Melania appears to be keeping an eye on the catastrophic GOP polling for the mid-term elections this November. In fact, there were a few other developments this week which prompted relatively light commentary levels but could have far weightier longer term impact. Let’s start with a prompt, but one of the AI variety…

    Anthropic is the parent of the chat bot Claude which recently fell out with the Pentagon. Well, it looks like Anthropic might have prompted one of their LLM chat bots (large language models) rather too well. The latest reports suggest a cousin of Claude (certainly not Greg), Mythos, could be a bigger threat to the planet than Agent Orange in the Oval Office. Yeah, seriously. Apparently, and this is the really simple language version….Mythos was tasked/prompted to find vulnerabilities in software and systems deployed by the world’s biggest institutions, banks, utilities and blue chip companies. Mythos didn’t come back with one or two “exploits” or ways to hack software, it came back with hundreds even thousands of ways to hack into software systems. Mythos was SO good, Anthropic has taken the immediate decision not to release the model to the public. That’s not all. Some very senior people have been spooked by Mythos. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell called the CEOs of America’s biggest and most important banks into a closed-door meeting this week at the Treasury building in Washington, D.C. Expect to hear a lot more about Mythos and wonder how long before Polymarket or Kalshi start running betting books on the probability of world destruction being at the hands of digital weapons rather than nuclear weapons. But if we stick with the nuclear threat…..

    Earlier in the week, CNBC’s Trump-cheering anchor, Joe Kernen, was destroyed by former Transport Secretary, Pete Buttigieg in a toe-curling TV clip which has gone viral. Kernen tried desperately to amplify Tehran’s imminent nuclear capabilities but struggled to deflect from the strategically disastrous consequences of the Iran war including the shutting down of the Strait of Hormuz. “Whataboutism” is about to hit peak volume in MAGA land to drown out the inevitable rise in prices, inflation and voter discontent in the “golden age” of the USA. Peace talks begin at the weekend in Islamabad but the longer term consequences of world fuel supplies being cut by 10-20% will be felt for months to come. As each day passes, the global economy will pay the price of minimal shipping traffic passing the Strait of Hormuz. Before the war, daily shipping traffic averaged 130 vessels. Currently, Schrödinger’s ceasefire is delivering a daily traffic total of…… 6-7 vessels. Not 67, six…or seven. No wonder Trump is panicking, and that’s before he even checks the latest polls and actual votes.

    Amid all the ceasefire headlines, US voters are beginning to shift sharply. In Georgia, former Trump lovey, Marjorie Taylor Green’s seat witnessed a 25 point voter move towards the Democrats. In another swing state, Wisconsin, politicised Supreme Court elections saw a 20 point shift to the Democrats. According to the election analysis publication, the Downballot, Democrats have improved upon their 2024 presidential election margins by an average of 11% in special elections so far in 2026 and roughly 13% since the start of 2025. Prediction markets, Kalshi and Polymarket, are giving Democrats 88% odds of House control and 53% for the Senate in November 2026. Meanwhile, closer to home, Hungary goes to the polls this weekend with the real possibility of Trump and Putin fanboy, Viktor Orban, being ousted from power. A particularly eye-rolling moment during the last week of the campaign was the the arrival of US Vice-President JD Vance to complain about EU interference in the election……while on a trip to Hungary to interfere in their election. The EU-US relationship has never looked so broken, and will take years to repair. Indeed, it’s increasingly clear from a European perspective that no senior US leader gets a pass for staying quiet during this insanity. It’s not the only upside-down shift in the world we used to know…

    The downturn in the performance of software stocks like SAP, Salesforce and Microsoft has been a feature of financial market commentary in recent months, spawning multiple SaaSpocalypse headlines. I’m not convinced the valuation meltdown of software under the threat of AI is fully merited. Current valuation multiples, price/earnings below 20x, are back at pre-Covid levels and below those of lower growth consumer staples stocks like Walmart. In fact, Walmart is currently trading at higher valuation multiples than Amazon. Clearly, longer-term prospects for software have currently shifted in investors’ minds but perhaps the bigger story is in hardware. The semiconductor sector (ETF $SOXX) has risen by 108% over the past year while the software sector (ETF $IGV) has declined by 14% over the same period. This scale of market performance divergence is unprecedented and is a reminder (if the Strait of Hormuz isn’t already) that the securing of the supply of physical assets (atoms, molecules) is becoming THE strategic business edge in the global tech race, and not digital code (bits).

    A final thought on performance, as Ireland’s government considers new tax frameworks and savings products to encourage households and businesses to take risk with circa €340 billion sitting in bank deposits. Of course, Spark (and our 60-strong stable of companies we have funded) have skin in this game so one hopes the government is mindful of the benefits of diversification across the entire investing spectrum. A narrow solution steering monies into already publicly listed (and funded) companies would be a missed opportunity to drive investment into our capital starved start-up and SME sectors. Oh, and the investment returns in private assets are certainly worth investigation. Our own EIIS Private Portfolio service launched just over two years ago has funded 24 companies to date. Current valuations and funding milestones/marks indicate an estimated (average) performance by the entire portfolio of somewhere near 25%. Steady stuff, and early yet as these companies are just 2 years into their scaling up journey. However, there is one other BIG factor to consider. The EIIS tax rebate scheme does work, and all Spark investors have been receiving their tax rebates. Now, here’s the interesting twist. That return of cash completely changes the returns profile of the portfolio above. The average return  to investors (if you had invested in all 24 companies) is actually over 100%. In just 2 years, and that’s mostly cash, not just paper. Expect us to write lots more on this very soon.

    Let’s call that a little prompt, with a very big long-term impact.

  • Time To Look At The Big Savings Picture

    Time To Look At The Big Savings Picture

    As Artemis II hurtles towards a lunar orbit we are reminded of how distance can give us new perspectives on our little planet. So too for time and our savings habits. Funnily enough, those perspectives are more reminders than new lessons. And, it’s definitely a good week for reminders. Top prize for memory-jogging was the Reform UK’s housing spokesperson, Simon Dudley, whose outstanding contribution to post-Grenfell safety debate was that “everyone dies in the end” while attacking current safety regulations. Thus ended Dudley’s 23-day reign as Reform housing guru –  even Igor Tudor’s stint at Spurs was 44 days. Of course, on a bigger stage, Pam Bondi learned a very old lesson this week that in a lawless society, the shelf-life of an Attorney General is limited no matter how good the cosmetic surgery. Let’s not go there with ex “ICE Barbie”, Kirsti Noem, except to say that these evangelical-political types really do have the most astonishing fetishes hidden in those bible-stacked closets. Poor Cricket clearly knew too much. Now, let’s take a look at areas of investment where we might need to know a bit more.

    In the week of Ireland’s first Savings & Investment Forum, we must applaud any efforts to put our savings capital to better use. The critical impetus is to move from a ‘savings’ no-risk culture to an investment wealth-creation culture. However, I’m personally concerned the investment options in new tax and incentive frameworks might be quite narrow. So, as luck would have it, the most striking thing I read this week highlights the dangers of a relatively ‘narrow’ approach to investment. Credit to Ben Carlson of A Wealth of Common Sense for highlighting the updated findings of Hendrick Bessembinder’s work. If that name sounds familiar it’s because we quote Bessembinder’s work extensively in our EIIS Private Portfolio brochure and newsletters. The Professor of Finance at Arizona State University in a 2018 research paper made a very powerful case for diversification, or a ‘portfolio approach’ to investing. His view, and mine, is that ‘picking winners’ is beyond the capability of all but a handful of people on the planet. Hence, my encouragement to build multi-year portfolios. His research covering S&P 500 stock returns since 1926 flagged two key features of investing:

     

    **60% of all stocks underperform risk-free government bonds(Treasuries).

    **Only a tiny 4% of the entire stock market’s securities (company shares) account for the vast majority of investor gains.

     

    The enormous concentration of performance in just a few stocks is strong justification for just buying ‘the market’ or indexing. Think about the Magnificent 7 or MANGO stocks these days and the ‘cost’ of not being invested in a single name like Nvidia (350,000 % outperformance since 1999). Now, let’s take a look at Bessembinder’s latest updated research with a full 100 years of data in the analysis. The inclusion of an extra 10 years of data shows that concentration of performance has accelerated into an even smaller pool of stocks:

     

    “Over the 1926 to 2016 period studied in Bessembinder (2018), 89 firms accounted for half of the $43 trillion in net wealth creation. After including outcomes for the most recent nine years, just 46 firms account for half of the $91 trillion in net wealth creation over the full century.”

     

    Wowzers! $45 trillion of wealth generated by just 46 companies accounts for more than half of ALL returns over time. However, I want to concentrate on the almost 60% of stocks who don’t even beat cash/Treaury bonds. That’s not a figure which helps the marketing departments of private client stockbrokers or active fund managers. But….. it does help those of us who are trying to increase investment in private assets including venture capital, private equity and infrastructure projects. You might wonder why, given it seems to ‘prove’ that investing can result in many companies failing to beat cash – at last count there’s more than €340 billion in Irish bank accounts. Well, one of the most common rebuttal arguments of investing in young venture capital type opportunities is that “most companies fail”.  Now check out that figure from the PUBLIC markets. Yes, 60% of those publicly listed companies fail to beat cash in performance terms. So, here’s the mindset change required for investing in private markets – many of the investments won’t better cash but it’s worth it if you can just find a few winners in your portfolio. Furthermore, that should not merit a guffaw from a professional advisor that those winners are too rare to justify investing in the asset class. Repeat slowly back to him/her that 46 companies over 100 years delivered half of ALL returns in the S&P 500. This week we also received a reminder of what private markets can deliver for early stage investors.

    SpaceX has filed paperwork to IPO in June. The plan is to raise $75 billion of new money at a valuation of….. $2 trillion. For historical context, please note that the previous global record IPO was Saudi Aramco which raised $29 billion in 2019. In 2025 the entire US capital markets raised a total of $44 billion across 202 IPO listings. For the valuation curious, SpaceX looks like it’s hoping to raise money at circa 100x this year’s revenues. I think the big picture pointer here is that private asset ‘winners’ can generate an outsized proportion of your overall investment returns while the majority will destroy wealth/purchasing power. However, the big learning reminder today is that this outcome is not much different to what happens in those orderly, liquid, mature public markets.

    Hopefully, Europe and Ireland will grasp that lesson and understand that diversification should not stop at publicly listed investments. Each asset class has its own risks but the bigger picture doesn’t look too different, be it public or private assets. FORTY SIX companies tell that 100 year old story. Now, Europe must think about how it can fund its own SpaceX and mobilise the €14 trillion of European household savings sitting in wealth destructive low-yield bank accounts. Yep, FOURTEEN TRILLION. It seems apt as we look to the skies and the possible this week, that Artemis is both the Greek goddess of hunting….and transitions.

  • When Words Are Definitely NOT Our Bonds…

    When Words Are Definitely NOT Our Bonds…

    There’s only one thing sicker than an Irish parrot outfit this morning. That’s the global bond market. The biggest bully of them all is sick of the nonsense. Not just the front-running of the US President’s social media posts. The Financial Times rightly flagged this week the gob-smacking scale of corruption and ‘insider’ trading going on close to the Oval Office but, in real financial terms, the pricing reactions of equity and oil markets to Trump’s Monday TACO were relatively muted. Of course, oil prices dipped below $100 earlier in the week but they’re back above $110 now. Similarly, the S&P 500 spiked for a day but it too is back slightly below Monday levels. Arguably, Trump’s words have been losing credibility since his first TACO retreat on tariffs in April last year but there’s a much more dangerous aspect to this credibility failure now. Truth has officially fled the higher echelons of US institutions and that impacts the biggest contracts of them all, United States Treasury bonds’ (or IOUs) credit worthiness with the rest of the world. Here are the headlines you’re not reading…

     

    • The yield on the US 10-year Treasury bond has deteriorated/risen by 13.5% (in yield or cost of money terms) since the Iran war began.
    • The yield on the US 20-year Treasury bond has deteriorated/risen by 11% in the same period (25 days!!).
    • The yields on US Treasuries are used to price almost everything so the average cost of a mortgage in the US is now at a 7 month high despite job creation being at a multi-year low.
    • It’s not just the cost of US assets. The global disruption caused by the Iran ‘operation’ has driven Japanese government bond yields up by 16%.
    • UK bond yields above 5% are the highest seen in 20 years.

     

    The price moves above are the ones that really count. And their message is very clear: the damage done to energy infrastructure and global supply chains is inflationary. The bond traders don’t believe a word of what is coming out of the White House and Pentagon propaganda machines. The opening up of the Strait of Hormuz is dependent on Iranian cooperation and the ability of logistics companies to commit their ships and crews to a safer and insurable environment.  At current levels of reduced shipping activity, the world is losing 11 million barrels of oil every day, as well as numerous other critical distillates like ammonia, diesel, helium, urea etc.  The key point is that bond markets do not “price” temporary cost spikes or supply squeezes. The bond market is explicitly contradicting the Trump regime and suggesting longer-term disruption. In fact, the French government have laid out the following observations:

    • 30-40% of Gulf oil refining capacity is destroyed.
    • That is the worst energy infrastructure destruction since WW2.
    • Full repairs could take 3 years.

     

    Thanks Donald. Actually, you don’t need to thank him. Speaker of the House of Representatives, Mike Johnson, went full North Korea at this week’s National Republican Congressional Committee fundraiser by presenting Trump with a new award. The Guardian reports:

     

    “The president has done so much for the American people and we want to honour him, in some small way, some token of our appreciation for his leadership,” said Mike Johnson, the US House speaker. “So, tonight, we have created a new award.” Johnson then introduced the “America First” award, made up of a golden eagle statue. “We could think of no better title for what that is,” said Johnson. “That’s this beautiful golden statue here – appropriate for the new golden era in America.”

     

    Idolatry and empty words. Asia might have other words right now. Latest headlines suggest crisis:

     

    Pakistan is reducing government working hours to save energy

    India is diverting gas from factories to homes

    Philippines declares a national emergency

    Japan to temporarily lift coal power plant curbs over Hormuz crisis

     

    Clearly, bond markets are looking East and not West for the true story. Indeed, it was striking how most commentators and traders earlier in the week were looking to Tehran to verify whether the US President was telling the truth about ‘negotiations’. Yes, an autocratic theocracy is now more credible than the leader of the ‘free world’.

    It’s a very strange world, but I suspect the bond market will have a very big say about how events unfold in the Middle East from here.

  • The War Of Unintended Consequences…

    The War Of Unintended Consequences…

    I know. The headline should read “LAW” but where’s the law these days? Certainly, it’s nowhere near Washington as the new Trump fund raising “squeeze” is an emailed request for cash donations in exchange for “private national security briefings” straight from the desk of The Don himself. I kid you not. Anyway, let’s get back to the war, or ‘excursion’ per the Orwellian Oval Office. Clearly, things on the Iran war front are not going to plan. My particular favourite summary of the moment is a delicious one from The Economist: “Although Donald Trump claims to have destroyed 100% of Iran’s military capabilities, the remaining 0% is wreaking havoc on the global economy.” Now, the purpose of this article is not to re-hash all the negative first-order global impacts of the war ranging from higher fuel prices, to supply chain disruption, to inflation, to reduced growth….to interest rate hikes. Yuk! None of this helps financial markets or business in the near term but I’m intrigued by some of the second-order possibilities which could emerge from an extended period of uncertainty. I’m thinking of three areas in particular:

    AI Infrastructure: The simple math of a shock to the global economy is that financial flows dramatically shift. Quickly. Extra money will be needed to meet higher energy bills, economic stress etc. That money must come from somewhere else in the system. So, one thing to consider is that the hundreds of billions Saudi Arabia , UAE, and Qatar committed to the funding of AI infrastructure projects might just be needed to rebuild energy infrastructure closer to home. Current estimates of the cost of the attack on Qatar’s Ras Laffan LNG hub is up to $20 billion per annum . And the worst bit, the rebuild could take 5 years – so let’s call that $100 billion. There is a teeny weeny bit of irony here given the US tech broligarchs’ man in the big house (and ballroom) has screwed up royally. Current estimates suggest $4 trillion is needed to build data centres, processing chips, training models, memory chips and storage by 2030. A squeeze on access to that investment capital will favour the biggest balance sheets and cash flows like Google, Microsoft and Amazon. Not for the first time, I worry about OpenAI’s positioning in the middle of all this AI excitement (remember the famous FT graphic) and being attached to more than $1 trillion of AI projects. So might its bankers worry, watching its tiny balance sheet.

    Electric Revolution: There was a theory for years that Saudi Arabia was deliberately keeping the oil price lower in order to delay the electric/renewable revolution. Their thinking apparently was that if energy was cheap it would remove the urgency to seek alternatives to fossil fuels. So, with Asian buyers already paying over $170 per barrel of oil we are beginning to see some interesting developments. In a little more than 2 weeks, Chinese EV player, BYD Co, is seeing its showrooms packed with customers wanting to switch to EV models. From Bloomberg….”At a BYD Co car dealership in Manila’s financial district, demand for the Chinese company’s electric vehicles is so high that Matthew Dominique Poh said he’s seen a month’s worth of orders in just the past two weeks.”  This feels similar to the Covid-19 acceleration of remote working. Also, spare a thought for US auto manufacturers who have scaled back their EV ambitions to keep the Dearest Leader happy and have written off $55 billion of EV projects. Timing is everything they say…..Get ready for some pretty interesting EV headlines in the coming months.

    Defence: Ukraine was the wake-up call when the world’s second most powerful military power turned the Kremlin’s “3 day operation” into a battlefield quagmire which has decimated its stores of equipment and weaponry, incurred more than 1 million of its own military casualties and incredibly has now lasted longer than the Soviet Union’s WW2 conflict with Nazi Germany. Fast forward to today and we are witnessing the world’s most powerful military gain almost total superiority over Iran but now staring down the barrel (!) of a strategic disaster that “nobody ever expected” per the stable genius hurling ketchup against the walls of Mar-a-Lago. The trapping of 20% of the world’s fuel supplies in the Strait of Hormuz and the destruction of critical energy infrastructure in UAE, Saudi Arabia and Qatar has been achieved with drones which cost as little as $20,000 but require the US to quickly run through their stores of $2m missile air defence weapons. Astonishingly, the Pentagon is looking for an additional $200 billion of budget to fund this “excursion”. However, the bigger picture is that military strategy and economics have utterly changed. Drone warfare developed on the battlefields of Ukraine is the scary future. For some it will be opportunity. Check out the IPO this week of the Ukrainian drone software company, Swarmer, on the Nasdaq. The IPO price was $5 per share but by the close of its first day of trading the share price was $55. Just the 950% gain in one day of trading. Oh, and last year Swarmer had generated just $300,000 of revenues. The US military-industrial complex is having its “ChatGPT” moment and will soon embark on a massive drone warfare investment programme.

    Clearly, not all of the above is cheery stuff but it does feel like some ‘leaders’ in business, technology and investment are now facing very different prospects than they planned for just a few short weeks ago. And, there doesn’t seem to be a “TACO” option this time.

  • What’s The Crack…?

    What’s The Crack…?

    God bless the Taoiseach, Micheál Martin’s script writers for his St Patrick Day’s trip to Generalissimo Trump’s Oval Office. The Taoiseach might succeed in avoiding eye contact with Secretary of State, Marco Rubio’s over-sized shiny shoes chosen by the Boss (no seriously), but the usual exchange of pleasantries laced with some colloquial Irish banter could scupper the whole event. As the non-strategic ‘genius’ of trapping 20% of the planet’s oil supplies in the Strait of Hormuz begins to hurt the entire global economy, it would probably be best to avoid slipping “That’s gas!” into the chat, or “Now we’re suckin’ diesel!” or even “What’s the craic?”.  Zero craic for the Taoiseach’s advisors anyway. But, on a broader level, the Trump regime bluster is beginning to crack. Current commentariat thinking is that Trump will avoid an Iran quagmire by declaring ‘victory’ soon and flooding the media with the usual deflections and outright lies. Bizarrely, this time I wish that messaging strategy would work. However, there’s a tiny flaw in this plan. Or, as Captain Blackadder used to say to Private Baldrick, “It’s bollocks”.

    The opening of the Strait of Hormuz is in the gift of the new hardline regime in Tehran, not Washington.  Yep, that regime change thing isn’t going so well. Unless the US puts boots on the ground, there won’t be much need to crack hydrocarbons in the Persian Gulf for the foreseeable future. Oil production volumes in the region are already being wound down but the bottom line is that the global economy is ‘missing’ circa 8 million barrels of oil per day (out of approx. 100m global demand). This doesn’t sound like an earth-shattering proportion of overall demand but …..welcome to the world of commodities. Any supply/demand imbalance can lead to outsized price movements as the marginal price (most expensive barrel) sets the price for the entire market. The International Energy Agency is already describing the situation as “the largest supply disruption in history” and has released 400 million barrels from reserves. However, despite this announcement (delivery times vary) the price of oil continued to rise to over $100. That doesn’t feel like price control. And, Trumpolini can go on Fox News every night and bluster but the gas prices at the pump are the only truth for voters. It’s not the only crack in the victory messaging….

    There are other critical products which travel through the Strait of Hormuz. Seaborne diesel disruption could cause global supply to fall by up to 12%. To be clear, diesel is the most macro-sensitive oil derivative product in the global economy. Think freight, agriculture, mining and industrial activity. Then think of all those ‘always winning’ MAGA voters employed in those sectors. Also, keep an eye on headlines from India and Indonesia who are both frantically seeking new supplies of urea, ammonia and other fertilizer feedstocks. Bangladesh has already closed its universities to save fuel and now we’re talking about the guts of 2 billion people impacted by the basics of food production, education and power. However, if you thought this was just a developing world problem, let’s take a look at the very highest echelon of the financial food chain.

    I’ve always been conscious that financial fragilities and leverage can exist in the global economy for extended periods of time but ultimately something cracks. And, that crack can be far removed from the specific vulnerable market. We frequently write about the perils of depending on “other people’s money”. We have also written about the massive growth in a market known as ‘private credit’. In other words, private loans to private companies which do not come from banks. This market has grown five-fold since 2010 to $2.5 trillion globally. Remember these are loans from institutions (not banks) like Blackstone, Apollo, Ares, HPOS, Carlyle, Blue Owl etc. Of course, the explosion of AI investment spend on infrastructure has accelerated the growth of this asset class (private credit) but, as always with fast-growth lending, due diligence standards slip, risk management gets sloppy, and bang….. there’s a problem. Well, this multi-trillion dollar asset class already had two problems:

     

    1. In October 2025, two companies in the US in quick succession suddenly collapsed. Private credit instruments backing auto-parts supplier First Brands and car dealership Tricolour suffered catastrophic losses. Suddenly, risk entered the private credit equation.
    2. In January “SaaS-pocalypse” became a market driver as investors began to fear for the growth and security of once-robust software (SaaS) business models under threat from AI. This, in turn, affected perceptions of the security of loans extended to software companies. Companies like SAP and Oracle saw their share prices fall up to 50% from their highs.

     

    In recent months we have been reading smallish headlines about private credit funds experiencing “difficulties”. Guess what? Depending on “other people’s money” can be tricky when headlines cause anxiety. Yep, people who invested in these private credit funds and vehicles (SPVs) wanted to get their money back. Blue Owl was the first high profile name to suspend redemptions. Then it was Blackstone limiting investor withdrawals, followed by the Big Daddy of them all, Blackrock/HPS. Now, Morgan Stanley and Cliffwater are doing the same this week. So, that’s 6 ‘financial gates’ closing as fast as the Strait of Hormuz. You don’t need to guess what other investors in other funds are thinking. Now consider the impact of a disrupted global economy and how the traditional providers of capital to the global economy are reacting. Clearly, deal conversations with Tokyo banks, UAE sovereign wealth funds and European family offices are going to be of a very different tone to those held just a few short weeks ago.

    Listen carefully…that sucking sound is not Kash Patel, JD Vance (how quiet is he!) or Howard Lutnick simpering to the Dearest Leader’s latest delusions. Nope, that’s the sound of the global financial system experiencing geopolitical and leverage cracks simultaneously, and the beginnings of capital flows going into ‘flight to safety’ mode. Hopefully, stability will return to the Middle-East soon. We have stared down the barrel of threatened global chaos before. In fact, for 47 years senior US strategic security personnel gamed out the theory that the Iranians would never shut down the 2-mile wide Strait of Hormuz knowing that the US and their allies’ response would be too damaging. That theory is now dead because the White House moved first and apparently (based on this week’s Truth Social outbursts) had no coherent plan for after…..

    Now, that would be gas if it wasn’t so serious.

  • Battle For Capital Starts At Home

    Battle For Capital Starts At Home

    Investment capital does not come easy. Unless you’re Kristi Noem, the very recent US Secretary of Homeland Security. It seems Kristi had no problem accessing capital to fund a $220m personal branding campaign, a fleet of $70m luxury jets with queen-sized beds to ride around the nation and multiple photo shoots of the DHS Secretary on horseback at national monuments. Those rides – that word is doing some heavy lifting – are now over. “Generalissimo Bonespurs” bravely reached for his social media keyboard last night and fired her via Truth Social. At least it was a fate less lethal than that experienced by Kristi’s late puppy, Cricket, who was shot by “ICE Barbie” for discipline issues. No tears from Cricket, or the rest of the caring world me thinks. Anyway, I’d like to stick with investment capital and discipline.

    The screaming headlines away from the Arabian Peninsula in 2026 have been again all about AI, and the ‘space race’ to spend more and more money to build that AI future. Leaving aside the discipline or uncertainty of returns(success) on that capital spend, there is one certainty. This enormous shift of investment capital – $650 billion spend this year by MSFT, Amazon, META and Google alone – risks ‘crowding out’ other sectors desperately looking for capital to fund their own growth plans. In fact, Pitchbook data indicates funding for AI exceeded half of all VC deal value in 2025 (53% of $513 billion). However, this sector concentration phenomenon highlights a challenge for Europe. Clearly, the investment capital is out there but Europe is struggling to muster up ‘big ticket’ investment to truly dominate/gain monopoly on the global stage. Consider SAP as the only European ‘startup’ of recent decades to achieve a valuation of over €100 billion. Then think of the still privately owned SpaceX eying up a 2026 IPO with a $1.7 trillion valuation. The US is on a different planet to Europe in terms of swinging the investment capital ‘bat’. Indeed, Mario Draghi’s report on EU competitiveness way back in 2024 flagged a couple of things relevant to today’s article:

     

    • Europe needs to radically overhaul innovation. Draghi noted only 4 of the world’s top 50 tech companies were European.

     

    • His solutions included innovation in Europe’s financial markets: 5% of European GDP (or €800 billion per annum) needs to be invested in Europe’s best innovative companies, infrastructure, energy etc. This capital could be unleashed through joined-up thinking on common EU debt instruments and unlocking the vast private savings pools in Europe’s aging societies.

     

    Closer to home, the government and Tanaiste Simon Harris are promising a new savings scheme to incentivise savers to deploy some risk capital. Despite the presence of so many bold brave successful US multinational corporations in Ireland’s economy, we have become a nation fearful of risk. Possibly we have been spoiled and become risk flabby due to multi-national ‘air cover’. The €170 billion of savings sitting in Irish banking deposit accounts earning returns below the rate of inflation is a damning indictment of our national financial literacy and an exercise in mass wealth destruction. Something radical needs to happen so we will be writing further on this theme in terms of what’s possible and what we believe might work. After all, we are pretty much the only Irish free-to-access platform for investing and purchasing the shares of young fast growing companies. So, we do have a view close to the coalface and….. we also know the hurdles currently experienced by both the companies seeking investment and the institutions assessing the returns prospects of those companies. Let’s first consider how venture capital institutions, family offices and private equity houses make that returns assessment.

    One of the more thought provoking pieces I have read in the last 12 months was an article by Progress Ireland’s Sean Keyes. He used real numbers in an investment decision example to demonstrate how an Irish company when competing against other European companies (not even US ones) for investment “need to be smarter, harder working, or luckier than Europeans to achieve the same results”.  Why? Simply put, investment companies have a ‘hurdle’ or returns target which they put in all their marketing literature for their investors, partners, shareholders etc. It will be expressed as an annual rate of return over the duration term of the investment (eg 20% or 30% per annum over 5 years). However, this is NOT the same as what the investee company achieves in its own operations. Think of two companies earning profits of €1m per annum for 5 years and then selling/exiting for €10 million to a new owner. You’d be right to think that both companies delivered €15 million over the holding period of the investment. But…. that is NOT what the investment company will receive. That will depend on the tax regime of the relevant investment. Here’s where the numbers don’t look good for Ireland’s companies. We DO have a low corporation tax (15%) but other taxes significantly change the returns picture for investment companies. Consider the following:

     

    • Ireland taxes dividends at the highest rates in Europe (remember the distribution – out of company – of those €1m per annum profits)
    • Capital Gains Tax is the 4th highest in the EU (remember that €10 million exit)

     

    Clearly, the post-tax picture for investors in Irish companies compared to the exact same average EU company is lower. Therefore, an investment manager needs to know that an Irish company is going to deliver a supra-normal PRE-tax performance in order to deliver a post-tax result in line with his ‘hurdle’ requirements. The Progress Ireland article is worth a read to understand the framework calculations but for the purposes of this article (and Friday lunch deadline approaching) I would flag the two key numbers which standout. An Irish company receiving €1m of VC funding and required to beat a hurdle of 30% per annum over 5 years needs to generate€ 23.7m over the 5 years. Meanwhile, the average EU start-up receiving the same €1m VC investment only needs to deliver €11.3m over the same period. That feels like an Irish start-up needs to be roughly twice as lucky, smart and hard working than average. It also feels wrong. Not the maths, the returns hurdle implicit in any Irish start-up investment by an institutional player is way too onerous. Radical thinking is required and none of these challenges are addressed if we end up incentivising SSIA-type savings schemes which steer investment capital into publicly listed companies on global stock markets.

    We already have an incentive solution for that. It’s called a pension. So, we will return to this topic again with more on the potential solutions and the wider imperative for Europe to mobilize its vast savings’ pools. Frankly, if we and Europe don’t encourage risk-taking discipline, then we all economically end up like poor Cricket.

     

  • 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)….