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Saturday, June 6, 2026

Weekend reading links

1. Potato glut hits Europe, and in particular Belgium.
Europe faces a surplus of five million metric tons of the type of potato used for fries. For months, the price of a metric ton of potatoes on the spot market in Belgium, the world’s biggest exporter of frozen fries, has languished at precisely zero. It was nearly 600 euros ($690) three years ago.

2. The Murugappa Group (through Axiro Semiconductors and CG Semi), the Tata Group (through Tata Electronics), and Crystal Matrix are leading India's semiconductor chip design and manufacturing push

3. Very good assessment of a decade of the IBC law.

The idea was to enable timely exit of non-viable firms, preserve viable businesses, restore credit discipline, and unclog credit channels... Till March 2026, 1,419 companies had emerged from insolvency with approved resolution plans, with the proportion of companies achieving such outcomes improving steadily... Creditors have realised ₹4.32 trillion through resolution plans. The oft-cited haircut of around two-thirds, measured against admitted claims, can be misleading because claims are frequently inflated while asset values are deeply eroded by the time firms enter insolvency. A more meaningful benchmark is liquidation value: Resolution plans have, on average, yielded 167 per cent of the liquidation value. Importantly, firms resolved under the IBC demonstrated operational revival post-resolution. Within five years, sales and capital expenditure nearly doubled, asset utilisation improved sharply, and the aggregate market capitalisation of resolved firms rose from about ₹2.8 trillion to ₹9 trillion... 

In all, 3,003 companies have entered liquidation under the IBC, but most had little realistic prospect of revival. Their assets averaged barely 5 per cent of admitted claims, and four-fifths were already sick or defunct before entering insolvency. The IBC merely provided an orderly exit for firms that had failed long before the process began. Yet, the incidence of liquidations in India is comparable to that in the United States and significantly lower than in the United Kingdom and Australia... Resolution plans rescued 78 per cent of distressed assets, while liquidations accounted for 22 per cent. When all pathways to revival are considered — resolution plans, withdrawals, settlements, appeals, and rescues during liquidation — the number of revived companies substantially exceeds those liquidated.

4. John Burn-Murdoch points to evidence that remote working and NOT AI is responsible for the ongoing declines in entry-level hirings. 

Peter John Lambert and Yannick Schindler have a fascinating counter-proposal: the take-off of remote work. Early-career workers require more supervision than experienced hires, and build important skills, knowledge and social capital by observing and working alongside senior colleagues. Working from home adds friction to these processes, making entry-level workers more costly to bring on board in terms of time and resources and slowing their prospects for promotion. As such, the rise of remote work has worsened the trade-off for hiring entry-level workers, while leaving the calculus for senior hires unchanged. The evidence fits the theory. Lambert and Schindler analysed hundreds of millions of new hires and job postings and found that although both occupational exposure to AI and remote working rates line up with the outsized pullback in junior hiring, the link with AI evaporates once you account for whether a role is remote. In other words, it only looks like AI is behind the hiring crunch for junior software developers because coding jobs are also disproportionately done remotely. Jobs less exposed to AI but amenable to remote work (eg lawyers) have also seen weak junior hiring; roles with high AI exposure but an emphasis on in-person work (eg receptionists) have held up better.
5. Is Steve Jobs leaving the greatest corporate legacy ever?
Apple now rakes in sales of over $1bn a day. Its services business alone, driven by the App Store and Apple Pay, generates more revenue than Netflix, Spotify and Adobe combined, with a margin of around 75 per cent. Under Cook, the company has returned around $1tn to shareholders through dividends and buybacks… Nearly two decades since the product launched, Apple shipped well over 200mn iPhones in 2025 and the device still accounts for about half of Apple’s $400bn of annual sales, with high product margins underpinned by the highly efficient, Asia-based supply chain also created by Cook. Apple’s astonishing profitability is sustained by an annual cadence of new iPhones, each iteration featuring largely incremental improvements on the one before. Research and development spending as a proportion of revenue went from 8 per cent at its height in 2001 to a 2 per cent low in 2012 as the iPhone boom began, meaning that for a while Apple was spending proportionally far less than its Big Tech peers.
6. Good primer on why oil prices have remained less elevated than expected - decline in Chinese oil imports (almost 4 m bpd) and rise in US exports (almost 4.5 mbpd).

7. The US economy is increasingly resembling a one-trick pony of AI.
The US corporate profit share has climbed to a record 13.8 per cent of GDP, while net income margins across the broad US equity market have recovered to about 9.7 per cent, close to earlier highs. At the same time, market leadership has become unusually concentrated: a handful of AI‑linked stocks now account for roughly 40 per cent of the S&P 500’s market capitalisation, according to Bank of America data. Headline profitability is being flattered by a small slice of the economy earning extraordinary returns from the scramble to build AI capacity...
Spending strength is increasingly coming from upper-income households where wealth and income are more tied to equities than wages. The stock market has, in effect, become part of the growth model: rising AI profits lift share prices; higher share prices support the spending power of wealthier households; and that spending helps keep demand alive. Lower-income households, by contrast, are more exposed to squeezed real incomes and softer labour-market momentum... Large technology groups have produced surging revenues and margins with only limited growth in headcount... So long as investors believe AI will earn very high long-term returns, the loop can remain self-sustaining: capital expenditure stays firm, equities stay buoyant and affluent consumers keep spending.

8. The spectacular surge in Google's capex.

Five years ago, its capital expenditure on servers, network equipment and such was $25bn, which it funded out of operating cash flows of $92bn. In 2027, analysts expect $250bn of capital expenditure, versus cash flows of $260bn — a tighter fit. In its second quarter next year, Visible Alpha estimates suggest Google will spend more than it makes, for the first time in its listed history.

9. A good illustration of deficient national security discipline comes from how the US is allowing the exports of tungsten scrap to China even as it spends money abroad buying tungsten mines

Since early 2025, Chinese scrap traders have been seeking tungsten throughout the US, prompted by a shortage outside China caused by declining supply and intense demand from the aerospace, weapons and tools industries. The effort has set off a bidding war with American buyers and calls to ban sales of a critical national security resource to overseas buyers... Sellers said they were fielding calls from Chinese buyers looking for the material, while American buyers said they were being outbid by Chinese rivals willing to pay as much as five times the usual price... 

Tungsten scrap commonly comes from worn-out industrial tools such as drill bits and mining equipment. It can be crushed and chemically processed back into tungsten powder or carbide for use in new machinery and tools. The shortage has been triggered by Beijing imposing export restrictions on it and an array of other critical minerals in early 2025 and the country cutting mining quotas. China accounts for more than half of global mined and refined tungsten supply and about half of demand... 

Tungsten is broadly used in military applications, including in bullets and missiles. Traders said stocks were already low before the Iran war and that companies do not typically hold large stores of the metal. There was “no availability” outside China of the so-called “intermediate” products that manufacturers need — mined ore that has been processed... The price of tungsten has risen by more than 200 per cent since May 2025, while tungsten scrap has risen 350 per cent, according to Argus Media.

10. The AI wave is lifting all stocks, including those legacy IT firms like HP and Dell

11. India's non-tax revenue fact of week.

In the last three years, the share of RBI surplus in the government’s non-tax revenue has stayed between 42 and 52 per cent.

12. SpaceX IPO in a graphic.

13. Real Madrid at the top of European football club valuations.

14. The universe of PSUs in India has been rising.
15. Rama Bijapurkar's categorisation of India's consumption class.
The important thing is that 93% of households have annual consumption less than $5700.

Last month, Anthropic crossed $47bn in run-rate revenue, a metric used by start-ups which estimates annual revenues based on short-term performance. This is a more than fivefold increase since the start of the year... Anthropic’s valuation has soared from $350bn to $900bn in 12 weeks. It is now one of the fastest-growing companies in history.
17. The biggest threat to the US superpower status now appears to be its surging public debt, which is now $36 trillion held by the public and federal agencies 
The exorbitant privilege has ensured the dollar's status as the world's pre-eminent reserve currency and the Treasury market's role as the world's safest haven asset, thereby allowing the US access to unlimited global capital at a low cost. While there are no competitors to the dollar on the horizon, the Treasury's safe haven status is facing competition. 

18. The most important difference between the dotcom bubble and the AI bubble.
19. Japan is losing people. 
Japan’s population peaked in 2008 at 128 million, and it is projected to fall to 87 million by 2070. The country is now roughly the same size it was in 1989... All but two of the country’s 47 prefectures reported population decreases in 2025, and the rate of decline is accelerating.

20. Finally, this says as much about the Indian stock markets as about the Korean and Taiwanese markets.

India’s stock market capitalisation was overtaken in the past week first by Taiwan and then by South Korea, as the value of Indian equities held by foreign investors slumped to a 10-year low of 7.3tn rupees ($76bn) on June 1. The value of Indian stocks was more than double that of Taiwanese stocks and roughly 3.5 times that of South Korean stocks 18 months ago, analysts at Bernstein said this week. “Fast forward just five months into 2026, and that lead has evaporated,” they added. 

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