1. Blackstone is Spain's biggest residential property landlord.
Over the past decade, Blackstone has become Madrid’s largest private owner of residential real estate, and the second largest in all of Spain. Ms. Riquelme’s apartment is one of 13,000 that Blackstone currently owns in Madrid, and among 19,600 it owns nationwide. Across Spain, around 185,000 rental properties are now owned by large corporations, half of those by firms based in the United States, according to a review of property registries by the nonprofit Civio. Rental prices have increased 57 percent since 2015 and home prices 47 percent, according to PwC, in large part because the country has failed to build enough homes for its growing population, even as more than 4 million homes sit empty. After the pandemic pushed Spain’s unemployment rate up to 15 percent, evictions nationwide spiked. In Madrid, tenant groups estimate that 20,000 renters in the city currently face the threat of eviction.Ms. Riquelme, a bookkeeper by trade, emigrated from Chile in 2000 and bought her apartment for 56,000 euros during the housing bubble, making mortgage payments to CaixaCatalunya, a now defunct bank. After she and her husband split, she could no longer keep up, and the bank eventually foreclosed. CaixaCatalunya sought €150,000 ($170,000) in fees and mortgage arrears, then sold her apartment at auction for just €40,000 ($45,000) to a subsidiary of Blackstone... Ms. Riquelme’s apartment was one of 400,000 private units across the country bought a decade ago by three American equity firms: Blackstone, Cerberus and Lone Star. Blackstone oversees at least 27 different domestic subsidiaries and investment funds in Spain that use a variety of models to buy both private and public housing. Some funds have focused on buying foreclosed residences, often converting entire buildings into short-term rentals. Others have scooped up public-housing units from cash-strapped city governments and then privatized them. Still more bought up homes as the government cleared its books of troubled assets after nationalizing several banks amid the Eurozone debt crisis...For Blackstone, it was an expansion of a real estate plan that took root in the wake of the 2008 housing crash... In 2013, Madrid’s city government sold 5,000 public-housing units to Blackstone and to another American investment bank, Goldman Sachs. Blackstone bought 1,860 apartments in 18 complexes for €128.5 million ($146 million) — including hundreds of units in the PAU development in Carabanchel. That amounts to just €69,500 (about $78,000) per unit, on average. A court-mandated audit of the deal later revealed that the sales were made at well below market rates... These days, just 2 percent of Spanish homes available for rent are public housing, according to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. In France it’s 14 percent; in the Netherlands it’s 34 percent.
2. The Chairman of Maruti Suzuki India Ltd (MSIL), the largest car maker in India, has said that car purchases in India are largely limited to the top 12% of households with an annual income of over Rs 12 lakh. MSIL reported a 4.3% year-on-year decline in net profit for Q4 FY 25. While overall passenger sales for 2024-25 grew by 2% to 4.3 million units, the sale of small cars declined by 9%. He said,
“We have seen that in this current year, the sale of small cars (sedans and hatchbacks) has declined by about 9 per cent. So, if there is a 9 per cent decline in the car segment that is bought by 88 per cent of the people in this country, from where will you get the growth?” he added. Bhargava further noted that India has penetration of cars of just 34 of 1,000, “probably the lowest among any country around this area of the world”. “For a country that is growing, this PV sales growth rate of just 2-3 per cent a year is not going to increase the penetration of cars at all... especially because 2025-26... growth has been foreseen at 1-2 per cent.” The MSIL chairman expressed doubts on whether the major income tax relief, given by the Union government in the latest Budget, is going to boost small car sales in 2025-26.
“The cost of the car has gone up by an average of ₹80,000-90,000. How much cash will the income tax relief give? People are not going to put all the income tax savings aside and use it to buy a car. They have other priorities too. I mean, these are small households and they have many requirements. Their children have requirements. A car is not going to be the top requirement for these people,” he said. The small car segment has been declining over the past few years. In 2024-25, the Indian car industry sold 1.353 million sedans and hatchbacks, which was about 12.6 per cent lower year-on-year, according to Siam. Bhargava said it is a fallacy to think that the decline in the small car market and the growth of the SUV (sport utility vehicle) market is a result of people’s aspirations changing, and people wanting to buy big cars. “It's not true. What is happening is that people can’t afford small cars,” he added.
Nouriel Roubini, the economist, telling his clients that “traders [now] trump Trump”. Or, to put it another way, there now seems to be a bond market “put”, or a level of price swings that will force the White House to modify policy, at least verbally — probably around 4.5 per cent for 10-year yields.
4. The world of Trump in a graphic!
“China at present imports very few things from the US that it can’t get from others, including money. The US imports all kinds of things that we can’t get from anyone other than China at speed, or at affordable prices.”
Wonder why he does not ask where China will sell all its $300 bn odd goods that used to go to the US, and how those factories will remain open?
5. Robots are largely born in Asia.
In June 1941, and in response to a proposal by the MIT engineer Vannevar Bush, Roosevelt established the Office of Scientific Research and Development. Bush was its head, reporting directly to the president. The results of its work — mass production of penicillin for battlefield wounded, proximity fuses that transformed anti-aircraft fire, and, not least, the Manhattan Project — made an unarguable case for the partnership between government and university-based research science... Largely forgotten now beyond histories of science, he was one of the 20th century’s most remarkable visionaries, not least for his conviction that peacetime federal governments had an obligation to fund basic scientific research, liberated from the demands of commercial profit...
Bush argued that since colleges were “the wellsprings of knowledge and understanding”, they should be parties to research contracts with the government that would provide the necessary stability of funding for sustained experimental work. This would guarantee the “free play of free intellects working on subjects of their own choice, in the manner dictated by their curiosity for exploration of the unknown”. The National Science Foundation, created by Congress and signed into law by President Harry S Truman in May 1950, owed much to Bush’s eloquence and vision.
7. The US Treasuries have not been a risk-free asset for several decades, as this graphic's volatility shows.
But most economists agree that the decline in manufacturing jobs is mainly the result of rising productivity. New technologies have boosted output per worker, pushing down the relative price of manufactured goods. One study by Michael Hicks and Srikant Devaraj at Ball State University in Indiana estimated that 88% of the decline in manufacturing jobs in America between 2000 and 2010 can be attributed to productivity improvements. Trade accounted for only 13%.Changing consumption patterns are also a factor. When incomes rise in poor countries, individuals tend to spend less on food and more on manufactured goods, a phenomenon known as Engel’s law. When incomes rise in rich countries, consumption shifts away from manufactured goods towards services. In 1950 goods accounted for around 60% of American consumption; today they represent just a third of spending with services accounting for two-thirds.
10. Some statistics on India's life and health insurance markets.
Health and general insurance companies covered 572 million lives in FY24. The industry settled claims worth Rs 83,500 crore in FY24, up 17.7 per cent from FY23. It processed 26.8 million claims that year, up from 23.5 million the previous year, and 21.8 million in FY22. The stand-alone health insurance companies improved their claim ratio to 89 per cent in FY24, from 84 per cent in FY23. The industry had an agent network of 1.9 million and assets under management of Rs 4.75 trillion in FY24. There were 25 general insurance companies in FY24, including four public sector undertakings. The number of stand-alone health insurance companies was five. Overall, the non-life insurance penetration in India, which includes health insurance, is just 1 per cent of GDP. This includes health coverage by different government schemes. Globally, the US has the maximum non-life insurance penetration (9.3 per cent), followed by the Netherlands (7.2 per cent), Canada (4.7 per cent), Germany (3.4 per cent), and Australia (3.3 per cent). Insurance penetration is measured as the percentage of insurance premium to gross domestic product (GDP)...Medical inflation was 14 per cent in FY24, the highest in Asia... the growth rate in health insurance dropped in FY25 to 8.98 per cent from 20.25 per cent in the previous year, with the gross premium income of insurers at Rs 1.18 trillion against Rs 1.08 trillion in FY24... The stand-alone health insurance industry operated on around a 3.5 per cent profit margin in 2023-24 (FY24). For the overall general insurance industry, it’s slightly higher. The private general insurers enjoy a much higher margin; the public sector players much lower. The average margin for hospitals could be at least 30 per cent.
Some China-based firms hit hard by US tariffs are reaching out to Indian exporters to fill orders on their behalf and help them retain their American customers as they navigate a trade war causing seismic shocks in global commerce. At the Canton Fair that runs through May 5 in Guangzhou — the world’s biggest trade fair — several Indian firms were approached by Chinese companies to supply goods to their US customers... In return for the sales, the Indian firms would pay a commission to the Chinese businesses... Indian firms at the Canton Fair were instead approached to supply goods to US companies under the brands of the Chinese firms, or co-branded with the Indian firms... Most of the queries came in sectors like hand tools, electronics and home appliances... The commission paid to the Chinese firms would be negotiated between the buyers and suppliers.
12. India healthcare facts of the day.
India’s out-of-pocket expenditure (OOPE), as a percentage of total health expenditure (THE), declined from 62.6 per cent in 2014-15 to 48.2 per cent in 2018-19, the year when Ayushman Bharat was launched. Since then, it has dropped down further to 39.4 per cent in 2021-22. Such reduction in OOPE has gone hand-in-hand with increased public spending in healthcare from 29 per cent of THE in 2014-15 to 48 per cent in 2021-22.
Over half of those admitted in the Ayushman Bharat authorised hospitals for treatment under the scheme were above 45 years.
90% of the 36,118 empanelled hospitals have less than 50 beds.Between 1995 and 2023, world trade (goods and commercial services) registered strong growth, averaging 5.8 per cent per year, resulting in almost a fivefold increase... (it) outpaced growth in global gross domestic product (GDP), which increased by an average of 4.4 per cent per year over the same period. The global trade-to-GDP ratio showed a significant upward trend, rising from 20 per cent in 1995 to 31 per cent in 2022.
16. Finally, the collapse of the Spanish and Portuguese electricity grids is a stark reminder of the challenges with electricity grid management once intermittent renewables assume a high share of the energy mix.
At 12.33pm local time on Monday, the frequency on Spain’s electricity grid suddenly dropped, from the 50 hertz level at which the grid’s operator tries to maintain it, to 49 hertz, according to Aurora Energy Research, a consultancy. A move bigger than 0.1 hertz forces many power stations to automatically switch off for safety reasons. Any loss of power in Spain has an immediate knock-on effect in Portugal, which relies heavily on its neighbour for electricity supplies... Frequency fluctuations are not uncommon, but grid operators normally overcome them by asking power generators to increase or decrease their output, or by using batteries. However, in this case, not enough additional generation capacity could be brought online fast enough...
Renewables are weather-dependent, but solar panels lack the big turbines that can help keep the system running if there is a power failure somewhere along the line — a process known as “inertia”. About a fifth of Spain’s annual electricity supply comes from solar, on average, but at lunchtime on Monday the proportion was far higher — at more than 55 per cent. Aurora said the lack of inertia “contributed to the instability”... Greater use of batteries, as well as cables that import and export power to other countries, can also help balance out intermittent supplies. Spain’s relatively poor connection with France has long been a source of complaint in Madrid.
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