In 2024, for instance, Saudi Arabia, Oman and Qatar together supplied more than three-quarters of India’s ammonia imports and 30 per cent of Morocco’s. As a result, food production in south Asia and north Africa has become deeply dependent on Gulf nitrogen flows... About 70 per cent of the world’s ammonia is used in fertiliser production, and just under30 per cent of global ammonia exports originate in the Middle East... Roughly half of the world’s global seaborne sulphur passes through the Strait of Hormuz, with most of this produced by the Gulf’s state-owned energy companies — above all Adnoc, QatarEnergy, the Kuwait Petroleum Corporation and Saudi Aramco... Gulf countries account for 35 per cent of global urea trade; Saudi Arabia was the world’s largest urea exporter in 2024, while Oman ranked third. Monoammonium phosphate (MAP) and diammonium phosphate (DAP), two of the principal fertilisers used to supply crops with phosphorus, are also closely tied to Gulf production and export routes. In 2024, countries upstream of Hormuz accounted for 18 per cent of global MAP and DAP trade.As Leiden University’s Christian Henderson has recently shown, Gulf countries have also become deeply enmeshed in cross-border control of large agribusiness companies throughout the Middle East as a whole. Egypt, the world’s second-largest urea exporter, offers a clear example of what this means for the production of fertiliser. A substantial share of Egypt’s export-oriented nitrogen capacity is controlled by Fertiglobe, a company in which the UAE’s Adnoc now holds a controlling stake and that claims to be the world’s largest seaborne exporter of urea and ammonia, according to its 2024 financial results. Fertiglobe’s Egyptian assets include the Egyptian Fertilizers Company, with an annual capacity of 1.7mn tonnes of urea and 0.9mn tonnes of ammonia, alongside Egypt Basic Industries Corporation, which adds another 0.7mn tonnes of ammonia. For comparison, Misr Fertilizers Production Company (MOPCO), which operates Egypt’s largest nitrogen fertiliser plant, reported 1.7mn tonnes of urea and 1.1mn tonnes of ammonia in 2024. About 44 per cent of MOPCO is owned by Saudi and UAE investment funds.
This level of dependence on the Middle East makes claims of food security ring hollow in countries like India. These countries can exercise chokeholds that can expose countries to deep vulnerabilities in their food security system. It is an area that needs to be kept in mind and diversification strategies should be pursued.
2. European luxury houses are struggling.
So far this year, nine leading European luxury stocks have lost at least a collective €140bn in market capitalisation, a bitter blow for an industry that was riding high during the first half of this decade, when LVMH was the continent’s most valuable company... The luxury sector, which supersized between 2019 and 2023, was already grappling with some hard truths before the conflict began. Middle-class shoppers who previously spent tens of billions of dollars on luxury items pulled back once their Covid-era savings and furlough payments ran out and the cost of living rose. Some 50mn luxury consumers exited the market between 2022 and 2024, according to a report by Bain, most of them aspirational shoppers who felt left behind by skyrocketing prices... the Chinese market, the motor of growth until 2023, has been hit by relatively weak consumption in the pandemic’s aftermath.
And the problems in the Middle East will worsen matters, given that the UAE is an important market.
3. India's contract manufacturers command much higher PE valuations than their much bigger global counterparts.
Take Dixon Technologies. Over five years, its revenue has grown nearly fivefold to about Rs 18,000 crore, helped along by the PLI scheme and by assembling for companies like Xiaomi and Google... And yet, for all that scale, the economics remain surprisingly thin. Profit margins hover around 2%. A meaningful chunk of profits comes from government incentives. More tellingly, even at this scale, Dixon still depends on imported components, external designs, and global clients. India may now assemble a significant share of the world’s smartphones, but much of the value still sits outside the factory.
What happens when PLI gets phased out?
4. Sobering statistics about higher education in general and specialised fields like Agriculture.
A 2020 survey at the Tamil Nadu Agricultural University found that less than 12% of students thought of farming as a future career. Nearly 60% of students wanted to be government employees, and more than a quarter of them wanted to get into business and entrepreneurship. Only 3% said they wanted to work for private companies. And it’s not just about the students. Their goals come from practical considerations. Take the case of the University of Agricultural Sciences, Bangalore. Just a little over 16% of its total 882 students of agriculture got placed in 2023–24. It only gets slightly better in the postgraduate courses, where only 37% out of the 287 students were placed. The story is similar in other universities as well.
What does it tell us about the career prospects in specialised fields like agriculture when nearly 60% of students want to be government employees?
5. Some stock market facts on the Adani Group.
Adani Green is trading at a trailing price-to-earnings (P/E) multiple of 1,109X, compared to peer Tata Power’s 47X, according to data from market information provider Screener.in. And Adani Total Gas’s trailing P/E multiple is 473X, compared to Indraprastha Gas’ 18X... the shareholding patterns in Adani group companies... several of them shared common foreign portfolio investors (FPIs). And strangely, several of them had negligible investments in non-Adani companies. As a result, the percentage of shares effectively available for trading by the public was just about 5% in Adani Total Gas and 11% in Adani Green. The comparable figure for Indraprastha Gas is 55%, and for Tata Power, 53%... only one FPI owns more than 1% of Adani Green now, compared to 10 in December 2020. But that FPI—Asia Investment Corporation (Mauritius)—is still heavily invested in the Adani Group, with 93% of its holdings in Adani companies... LIC’s stake in multiple Adani Group companies has gone up over the last few quarters.
Altman has a relentless will to power that, even among industrialists who put their names on spaceships, sets him apart. “He’s unconstrained by truth,” the board member told us. “He has two traits that are almost never seen in the same person. The first is a strong desire to please people, to be liked in any given interaction. The second is almost a sociopathic lack of concern for the consequences that may come from deceiving someone.” The board member was not the only person who, unprompted, used the word “sociopathic.” One of Altman’s batch mates in the first Y Combinator cohort was Aaron Swartz, a brilliant but troubled coder who died by suicide in 2013 and is now remembered in many tech circles as something of a sage. Not long before his death, Swartz expressed concerns about Altman to several friends. “You need to understand that Sam can never be trusted,” he told one. “He is a sociopath. He would do anything.”
This is a good portrait.
Altman is not a technical savant—according to many in his orbit, he lacks extensive expertise in coding or machine learning. Multiple engineers recalled him misusing or confusing basic technical terms. He built OpenAI, in large part, by harnessing other people’s money and technical talent. This doesn’t make him unique. It makes him a businessman. More remarkable is his ability to convince skittish engineers, investors, and a tech-skeptical public that their priorities, even when mutually exclusive, are also his priorities. When such people have tried to hinder his next move, he has often found the words to neutralize them, at least temporarily; usually, by the time they lose patience with him, he’s got what he needs. “He sets up structures that, on paper, constrain him in the future,” Wainwright, the former OpenAI researcher, said. “But then, when the future comes and it comes time to be constrained, he does away with whatever the structure was.” “He’s unbelievably persuasive. Like, Jedi mind tricks,” a tech executive who has worked with Altman said.
Guyana, a former British colony on the north-eastern flank of South America with a population of about 800,000, is undergoing rapid change following ExxonMobil’s 2015 discovery of about 11bn barrels of oil, one of the largest finds in decades. Crude production has since risen to more than 900,000 barrels per day, with consultancy Wood Mackenzie projecting that the government’s share of oil profits will total $41bn over the next five years. Between 2019 and 2024, Guyana’s GDP almost quintupled to $25bn.
8. India's trade balance sheet.
The cumulative exports (merchandise and services) during FY26 (April-March) are expected to be $860.09 billion, as compared to $825.26 billion in FY25 (April-March), an estimated growth of 4.22 per cent. A closer look reveals stagnation in merchandise exports over the last four years, with a negative CAGR (compound annual growth rate) of 0.42 per cent, while total export figures have been lifted by services exports, which grew at a CAGR of about 8.9 per cent over the same period... in April 2015, the government said that the objective of the Foreign Trade Policy 2015-20 was to double India’s share in global merchandise exports in five years. The reality is that since 2014, India’s merchandise exports have grown from $314 billion to $441 billion, a CAGR of 2.9 per cent, and India’s share in global merchandise exports has remained stuck at about 1.8 percent.
9. Ruchir Sharma points to the spectacular boom in South Korean and Taiwanese equity markets led by three semiconductor stocks - TSMC, Samsung, and SK Hynix.
Over the past year, these two nations accounted for 75 per cent of emerging market returns, and most of those gains came from just three stocks — all big makers of semiconductors... Together their profits are on track to top those of Apple, Amazon and Alphabet combined. Samsung is expected to increase operating profit more than sixfold this year to around $185bn, surpassing every member of the “Mag Seven” American companies other than Nvidia... TSMC is the most widely held stock, owned by 92 per cent of global equity funds. In comparison, Microsoft, the most widely owned US stock, is held by 84 per cent of those funds... Today, by some measures, emerging markets have grown even more concentrated than the US, with the leading five stocks accounting for a greater share of the index. While the top US stock (Nvidia) represents 8 per cent of the US index, the top EM stock (TSMC) accounts for a record 13 per cent of the EM index. In fact, based on MSCI methodology, TSMC now constitutes a larger share of the MSCI EM index than all the stocks in India put together.
10. China could boost consumption by cutting its high payroll taxes.
China levies European-level payroll taxes, creating a large wedge between the cost of employing a worker and their after-tax income — around 38 per cent. These taxes are also highly regressive, applied to income below a ceiling of three times the average wage. Payroll taxes raised 6.5 per cent of GDP in 2024, against just 1.1 per cent for personal income taxes. A dramatic, permanent payroll tax cut would therefore significantly boost consumption. It would put more money in workers’ pockets, especially lower-income workers with the highest propensity to spend. It would raise employment by lowering labour costs. And it would reduce informal labour by giving workers stronger incentives to participate in the social security system.
11. Striking facts about India's gold ownership.
Between 2011 and 2025, India imported approximately 12,670 tonnes of gold at a cumulative cost of roughly $609 billion. At the current spot price of $4,677 per ounce (as of 4 April 2026), that gold is now worth approximately $1.905 trillion. The $1.3 trillion appreciation alone exceeds India’s entire stock of foreign exchange reserves. No other asset class, government scheme, or financial product has generated comparable wealth for Indian households over this period. Data shows there is not a single year between 2011 and 2025 in which holdings have not at least doubled in value... Gold imported in 2015 for $35 billion is now worth $157 billion—a 350% gain... Even the pandemic year of 2020, when India imported just 430 tonnes at $22 billion, has returned $65 billion at today’s prices... Estimates from the World Gold Council suggest Indian households hold between 25,000 and 34,600 tonnes of gold. At today’s prices, that equates to a holding worth between $3.8 trillion and $5.2 trillion—roughly equivalent to India’s entire GDP.
12. Norway's brand equity of democracy and humanitarianism comes up against allegations of being a war profiteer due to rising oil prices, as it adds billions to its $2.2 trillion sovereign wealth fund.
The country has earned about $140bn more in 2022 and 2023 from petroleum following Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine than it did in 2021. Now, Nordea credit investment director Robert Næss has forecast Norway has earned at least an additional $8bn from the conflict in Iran, which shows no immediate signs of ending...Norway was something of a regional laggard in terms of support to Kyiv in the early days of the Ukraine conflict, behind the Baltic states and on some metrics neighbouring Sweden and Denmark relative to the sizes of their economies. It has since somewhat caught up but its support as a percentage of GDP is still behind Estonia and Lithuania, according to the Kiel Institut’s Ukraine Support Tracker.
13. AI bests humans in table tennis.
An AI-powered robot has beaten expert table tennis players in a landmark machine-over-human triumph in a major competitive sport. The mechanical maestro, known as Ace, uses a network of cameras and AI to achieve the rapid planning and reaction times needed to compete. The invention made by Japanese tech group Sony highlights how researchers are using AI to improve robots’ ability to adapt to physical tasks they have struggled with, particularly those involving people... Ace beat three out of five elite table tennis players who had more than ten years of training, and scored 48 points versus 70 in two defeats to professionals, according to a paper published in Nature on Wednesday. The robot had improved further, Sony said: since the paper’s submission, it had played four further matches against humans, beating two elite players and winning one out of two matches against professionals. The robot handled spin and unexpected changes in trajectory caused by the ball clipping the net on its way over, the researchers said. It outscored the elite players in aces — points won directly from serve — by 16 to eight.
14. EVs make up half of car sales in China. Of the 27.8 m cars sold in China in 2025, 13.9 m were EVs accounted for 13.9 m, a steep increases from just 1.3 m five years back.
The government aims to have 28mn public charging facilities installed by the end of next year, up from 21mn at the beginning of this year. This would be enough to power about 80mn EVs (there are already more than 50mn on China’s roads). The plan targets underserved areas such as rural communities, as well as expressway service stations and public parking lots. State media estimated the three-year investment period would drive about $28bn in spending on equipment and construction. Chinese companies are also pouring billions of dollars into research aimed at improving EV range and charging speed. CATL, the world’s biggest battery maker, on Tuesday unveiled cells that power a car for 1,500km on a single charge. As battery technology and access to charging infrastructure improves, analysts expect consumers in lower-tier cities — who number in the hundreds of millions — will favour EVs.
15. India rural-urban income facts of the week.
According to the Institute for Competitiveness’ 2025 report on Income Inequality and Labour Markets in India, in 2023-24, the top 10 per cent urban income threshold of ₹44,000 was more than double the rural equivalent of ₹21,500. The top 1 per cent urban threshold of ₹90,000 was 80 per cent higher than its rural counterpart, up from 68 per cent in 2017-18. At the bottom, the urban floor of ₹6,000 was double the rural equivalent of ₹3,000, a figure that has remained flat in nominal terms over seven years.
16. Some striking graphics from a16z. The combined market cap for the 10 largest companies in the S&P is about six times larger than it was in 2015.
Since 2023, Tech has been responsible for more than 60% of earnings growth.While tech is big today, it’s still not nearly as big (relatively) as Transport (or Real Estate and Finance) ever were at their peaks in the 19th Century.Finally, about 70% of today's market is in industries that were tiny or non-existent in 1900. While in 1900, the economy was basically textiles, iron, coal, steel, and tobacco, the rails to transport them, and the banks to finance them, today those sectors are a tiny fraction of the overall pie.



















