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Showing posts with label US Economy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label US Economy. Show all posts

Saturday, June 13, 2026

Weekend reading links

1. Ruchir Sharma goes behind the record corporate profits share of GDP in the US (11% of GDP, up from 7% in the 1990s) and finds two problems. One, the share is boosted by the lower corporate tax rates which translate into higher fiscal deficits.

Lately the US deficit has risen to more than 6 per cent of GDP and a deficit that high reflects a large transfer of income to households and corporations. Under a well-established accounting formula, the Kalecki-Levy Equation, corporate profits are in part a mirror image of the government’s deficit. Based on this framework, deficits were the single largest contributor to the increase in earnings as a share of GDP since the late 1990s. And in this decade, deficits have accounted for more than half of corporate profits, twice the level of the dotcom era. Strip away government support, and US profits look less extraordinary.

Second, the share falls sharply when we include the universe of private companies.

Since the dotcom bust in 2000, the number of publicly listed businesses has fallen by half, with many new companies remaining private for longer, funded by private equity and venture capital. This is the new home of excess and weak earnings. As a result, the profit growth of the average business listed in standard indices provides a misleading picture of the overall economy. Profit growth has been less impressive once the private companies are included in the data. Further, private firms planning to go public are much larger and less profitable today than in the 1990s. The biggest names in the IPO pipeline, including SpaceX, Anthropic and OpenAI, have little to no profits.

2. Britain's much-delayed HS2 railway project's cost has increased by another £20bn to £102.7bn (a range of estimates ( £87.7bn to £102.7bn in 2025 prices) and will be completed only by the 2040s, with the first trains not expected till 2036. 

3. Why has oil not hit $150 or $200 despite about 12-15 mbpd being taken out?
One of the biggest surprises for the oil market has been China, the world’s largest importer. It slashed inbound shipments by almost 40 per cent in May compared to last year’s average, according to Vortexa Ltd. The reduction is enough to offset anywhere between a third and a fifth of the barrels lost to the war, depending on the estimates used. At the same time, the US has emerged as the world’s most important swing supplier since launching strikes on Iran in late February. American crude and fuel exports in May were more than 2 million barrels a day higher than the average for all of last year. Other emergency measures have also eased the strain. Governments around the globe coordinated a historic release of strategic reserves, while Gulf producers rerouted shipments through alternative export routes. Some tankers continued moving cargoes via the strait despite the risks, using increasingly opaque methods to avoid military threats... Saudi Arabia’s East-West pipeline shipped millions of barrels a day to the Red Sea, while the United Arab Emirates has been piping barrels to the port of Fujairah outside the gulf.

And this is important. 

Another factor keeping a lid on prices has been Trump’s relentless jawboning, making it hard for even the most bullish traders to hold long positions for prolonged periods of time. Open interest in Brent crude futures is the lowest since August as elevated market volatility forces traders to roll back risk exposure. Steep price drops on the prospect of peace have pushed many oil bulls to the sidelines, leaving them to hold small positions for very limited periods of time, several traders said. The lack of risk-taking has helped keep a lid on financial flows, while supply levers have averted the worst hit to the market. The question now, is whether that can last without a peace deal.

4. The evidence to date points to widespread AI use not translating into anything proportionate in terms of business value creation. Sample this from the software industry pointed out by John Burn-Murdoch

5. EU energy subsidies during the Ukraine invasion and spike in gas prices. 

Between late 2021 and mid 2023, EU countries spent about €540bn on subsidising energy prices to protect consumers from price shocks in the aftermath of Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine and to cushion energy-intensive industries from soaring costs. Of that total, €158bn was accounted for by Germany, whose industry heavily depended on Russian gas supplies. In the wake of the Ukraine energy shock, Brussels also relaxed state aid rules for the rest of the decade to allow governments to subsidise clean technologies and industrial decarbonisation.

6. Emerging AI-related roles in the software industry.

Agent engineers who build and fine-tune agents; architects who determine how humans and agents divide tasks; AI governance specialists who keep agents compliant and accountable; AI transformation advisors who help enterprises navigate workflow reimagination; solution designers who translate business problems into agentic solution architectures; and AI assurance partners who help clients govern their own AI deployments.

7. Rana Faroohar makes the point that we may be at the cusp of a new investment super-cycle driven by the combination of AI, clean energy, defence, and manufacturing.

In a recent issue of his TPW Advisory Monthly report, investor Jay Pelosky did just that, collating data on AI, clean energy and defence spending around the world from sources including Gartner, BloombergNEF (on energy), the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute and the International Institute for Strategic Studies (on defence) and others. So far, $6.9tn was spent globally in 2025 in the three areas, and the number will probably reach $10tn by the end of this year and $16tn by 2030. 

What’s more, says Pelosky, these three areas reinforce one another, amplifying potential investment. AI requires more energy. The move towards tech sovereignty in the US, China and even Europe (in a nascent way) adds to the need for investment in AI and energy, while the move towards a more 19th-century “spheres of influence” geopolitics calls for greater defence spending globally. Add to this the desire of policymakers in all three regions to increase resilience in critical sectors affected by concentration or globally dispersed supply chains: products such as advanced semiconductors, active pharmaceuticals and lithium batteries, for example.

8. Rupee trajectory over the last two years

The rupee depreciating by nearly 6 per cent against the dollar in the first five months of 2026 alone, exceeding the combined full-year declines recorded in 2025 (5 per cent) and 2024 (2.8 per cent). The rupee touched a record intraday low of 96.57 per dollar on May 19 and has lost roughly 14 per cent of its value against the greenback over the past two years. Against the euro, the erosion has been equally stark, with the Indian currency declining by more than 7 per cent over the past 12 months and nearly 16 per cent in the past two years, he added.

The problem with a depreciating rupee is that foreign investors now must earn an extra 14% over the last two years to offset the depreciation.

9. India's FTAs may be creating a perverse incentive for even domestic manufacturers due to the inversion of duty structures.

Many finished goods now enter India at low or zero duty from partners such as ASEAN, Japan, South Korea, the UAE and Australia. As a result, Indian manufacturers often pay high duties on imported inputs, especially those sourced from non-FTA countries, while competing against finished products imported duty-free under FTAs. For example, steel and aluminium attract MFN duties of 7.5-10 per cent, but machinery, industrial equipment and engineering products made from these materials can enter India duty-free under several FTAs. Indian manufacturers, therefore, face higher input costs when competing with tariff-free imported machinery produced with globally priced inputs.

Similar distortions exist in chemicals, plastics, rubber and textiles. Duties on inputs such as caustic soda, soda ash, polypropylene, PVC and SBR raise production costs. At the same time, many finished products in these sectors can be imported at low or zero duty... the growing incentive for firms to manufacture outside India rather than within it. When raw materials and components attract duties in India, but finished products can be imported duty-free from FTA partners, companies may find it more profitable to locate production abroad and export back to the Indian market. In such cases, FTAs effectively encourage offshore manufacturing at the expense of domestic value addition. ASEAN countries are increasingly becoming manufacturing hubs for supplying the Indian market.

10. The Gulf War has resulted in a surge in Chinese exports of solar panels, especially to South East Asian and African countries. This came at a time when many Chinese firms laden with excess capacity, low margins, and large indebtedness were facing an existential crisis. 

11. The revival of manufacturing in the US hits the wall of labour scarcity.

Perhaps the largest problem for would-be reshorers is a lack of labour. Despite widespread nostalgia for manufacturing jobs, new US factories often struggle to find reliable workers. When Japanese group Panasonic started producing electric vehicle batteries near Reno, Nevada in 2017, the company suffered more than 100 per cent annual turnover in its early years. Not only were employees reluctant to take jobs in an access-controlled, sterile environment, but every November, the group would lose workers to seasonal logistics jobs at nearby Amazon facilities that paid a similar wage... Despite political enthusiasm for reviving manufacturing, jobs posted on LinkedIn receive fewer applications than other sectors it competes with, such as technology.

12. More on the SpaceX bubble.

Goldman Sachs, the investment bank leading the IPO, projects that SpaceX’s AI revenues need to increase 100-fold by 2030, reaching $322bn from $3.2bn today. But its AI lab remains far behind Anthropic, Google and OpenAI at the frontier, and shows little sign of catching up. Morgan Stanley also estimates that overall revenue needs to increase 180-fold to $3.4tn by 2040, up from $18.7bn last year. Earnings must flip from a $4.9bn loss in 2025 to $2.7tn.

SpaceX ends the first day of trading at 20% premium on its $135 listing price, which raised $75 bn and left it with a valuation of $2.1 trillion. The listing prospectus claimed at $28.5 trillion addressable market.

SpaceX plans to use the IPO proceeds for a range of ambitious projects, from its skyscraper-sized reusable Starship rocket, founding a 1mn-strong colony on Mars, starting a lunar economy to building a network of orbital AI data centres capable of delivering vast amounts of computing capacity... A portion must also go towards repaying a $20bn bridge loan the group took out in March to back its merger with Musk’s lossmaking AI start-up, xAI, and social media platform X.

This is staggering. 

It also hands Musk a vast financial windfall, with his 42 per cent stake in SpaceX valued at more than $800bn. Combined with his $280bn holding in electric vehicle maker Tesla, his wealth has now surpassed $1tn, equivalent to about a third of the market value of the UK’s FTSE 100 index.

Richard Waters explains the rationale driving the astronomical valuation.

It is hard to find changes in SpaceX’s business prospects that account for a fourfold valuation jump within the space of a year. Rather, it is testament to Musk’s unrivalled grip on the public imagination, transmuted into Wall Street gold. When the history of SpaceX’s record-breaking IPO is written, it will go down as a textbook case of Musk’s ability to conjure a compelling vision of the tech future for both Silicon Valley and Wall Street, ably backed by an army of promoters in the financial world. (With fees estimated at about $500mn, it’s probably not surprising that there were few warnings from the Wall Street establishment that the shares might be overvalued.)... 

Musk has been busy in recent months spinning up new visions capable of embellishing his company’s prospects... What starts out sounding like science fiction fantasy doesn’t take long to seem not only plausible but even downright likely. Wall Street has been more than willing to translate Musk’s tech dreams into financial projections capable of supporting the sky-high valuation, implausible as those numbers may seem. Goldman Sachs, the lead bank on the IPO, predicted that revenue would soar to $474bn by 2030, most of it from AI...
The IPO involved only about 4 per cent of SpaceX’s shares, but a high level of demand was built in, partly because some index investors will soon be required to add the company to their portfolios. Even without the index funds, SpaceX’s sheer size — at about 2.5 per cent of US stock market capitalisation — has made it too big for many investment managers to avoid.

13. South Korean capitalism is spreading wealth around

Samsung Electronics... agreed last month for employees to share the chipmaker’s blockbuster profits from an AI-led boom... SK Hynix... handed employees a similar profit-sharing deal last year... Samsung is also going to give Won500mn loans at low rates to employees... Samsung and SK Hynix together control much of the market for the advanced memory chips used in AI servers. Employees at both companies are in line for average annual bonus payouts of Won600mn, which compares with a national average salary of about Won50mn... district of Hwaseong... expected to gain corporate income tax receipts of Won1tn to Won1.3tn from Samsung alone this year, an extraordinary sum for a city authority whose annual budget is about Won3.5tn.

14. Germany amps up spending on its ailing railways sector, where on-time arrivals of long-distance trains have fallen from 84% two decades back to 60%. 

By the end of 2026, Deutsche Bahn will have rebuilt 900 kilometres of train lines since 2024, close to a quarter of its 2036 target. That is equivalent to half of the roughly 1,900 kilometres of new lines built after 1945. Flix, which started as a coach operator but also runs long-distance trains, has earmarked €2.4bn for up to 65 new high-speed trains that it plans to roll out from 2028. Italian high-speed train operator Italo also has ambitions for Germany, promising up to €3.6bn of investment in new trains if it gets multiyear access to the network.
 

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. 

Saturday, May 30, 2026

Weekend reading links

1. This captures the big problems with Chinese exports to Europe.
In the early 1970s workers at Dongfeng, or “East Wind”, imported American trucks to inform their early attempts at making off-road vehicles destined for the People’s Liberation Army. Nearly 60 years later Stellantis, the European owner of the Jeep brand, is partnering with Dongfeng to produce a new battery-powered version of the iconic American light utility vehicle for consumers in China, the Middle East and south-east Asia... International carmakers, struggling for survival amid an expensive transition to electric vehicles, are turning to China’s technologically advanced and cost-efficient factories as manufacturing bases for their global businesses. Foreign companies already account for around two-fifths of China’s car exports to Europe, when joint ventures with local groups are included, according to the Rhodium Group, a US consultancy... Indeed, Volkswagen, BMW, Nissan, Hyundai and others are increasing exports from Chinese factories with spare capacity to markets other than Europe and the US.

2. A new approach to making clean hydrogen

Most of the hydrogen the world uses today — mainly for fertilizer and refining — is produced using natural gas in a process that creates lots of emissions. In recent years, the United States and other countries have invested billions of dollars trying to make “green” hydrogen with wind and solar power, but it has proved difficult and expensive. Now a growing number of companies think a better answer could lie underground. Dozens of start-ups are trying to find large reservoirs of natural hydrogen thought to exist below the surface. Others, like Vema, are trying to stimulate the processes that generate that hydrogen, without any emissions. It’s a field often referred to as “geologic hydrogen.”...
Hydrogen is the most abundant element in the universe, and it gets made naturally in the Earth’s crust when certain iron-rich minerals react with water and rust. This process, known as serpentinization, often leaves behind rocks with a mottled green color. For a long time, many geologists believed that any natural hydrogen produced this way was unlikely to accumulate in large underground deposits because the tiny molecules would slip away through cracks in rocks. Lately, that conventional wisdom has been upended... By the 2020s, scientists were publishing papers estimating that natural hydrogen deposits underground could supply the world’s needs for hundreds of years. One promising location was North America’s Midcontinent Rift, an enormous formation of iron-rich basalt that stretches 1,200 miles from Kansas to Michigan... The Energy Department has estimated that geologic hydrogen could be produced for less than $1 per kilogram. That would be cheaper than hydrogen made from fossil fuels and one-sixth the current cost of making hydrogen from wind and solar power.

It has started attracting private capital.

Companies are racing to find the fuel. One of the best-funded start-ups, Koloma, has raised $400 million from investors including Amazon and United Airlines and has drilled exploratory wells in Iowa. HyTerra, an Australian firm, is searching for hydrogen and helium in Kansas and Nebraska. Not everyone thinks the best strategy is to search for natural deposits underground. A better idea, some say, is to create them. In Quebec, a startup called Vema Hydrogen plans to spend the rest of the year injecting water into its underground test wells to see if it can speed up the process of serpentinization that creates natural hydrogen underground... Vema has already raised $15 million and is working to raise more. There are ophiolites all over the Earth, including a ridge stretching from Costa Rica to Alaska, and the company is looking at sites in Oregon and California as well. Other start-ups, including one out of M.I.T. called GeoRedox, are developing their own approaches.

3.  Semiconductor chips are one area where China lags badly.

Chinese companies will most likely make just 2 percent as many A.I. chips as foreign firms do this year, said Tim Fist, a director at the Institute for Progress, a think tank in Washington. The production gap between Chinese and foreign manufacturers is especially big for memory chips, which are essential for the large calculations done by A.I. Companies outside China will make 70 times as much memory storage capacity this year as Chinese chip makers will, Mr. Fist said...The inability to get essential tools from ASML has been a major chokehold for Chinese chip makers. Since U.S. officials led an effort to lobby the Dutch government to block shipments to China, no Chinese company has been able to buy ASML’s most advanced tools. Instead, Chinese chip makers have recruited engineers with experience using those machines at TSMC, the world’s top chip maker. And now, Chinese start-ups are trying to make their own chip manufacturing equipment... China’s A.I. companies are trying to get the computing power they need by strapping together numerous less powerful chips. Huawei has taken such an approach... The chips Huawei does produce are prone to defects and use more electricity than cutting-edge foreign ones.

4. This is one of the greatest messages from a student to a teacher, Albert Camus to his elementary school teacher Louis Germain after he won the Nobel Prize.  

5. Japanification in demographics.
And this impact of smartphones is striking.
6. Soumaya Keynes has a good read on the history of export restrictions and their impact, and why trade wars will endure. 

7. Southeast Asian economies struggle on the face of rising inflation from the War.
Their currencies have weakened.
The Philippines and Indonesia have already raised interest rates. 

This is a good illustration of the extent of damage from the Strait of Hormuz closure.
In a sign of Bab el-Mandeb strait’s strategic importance, Djibouti – whose coastline runs along the waterway – is home to military bases of several major countries, including the US, Italy, France, Japan, and the sole People’s Liberation Army base outside China. The Bab el-Mandeb strait is among several trade chokepoints that, when blocked, require vessels to travel more than 8,000 miles. These also include the Strait of Gibraltar and the Suez and Panama Canals...
The knock-on effects of a blockage can be much more significant where there is no alternative route to fall back on, as with the Strait of Hormuz, the Øresund between Denmark and Sweden, and the Turkish straits, comprising the Dardanelles and the Bosphorus, which act as the gateway between the Black Sea and Mediterranean. With the Hormuz strait, says Jasper Verschuur, co-author of a study into the risks of the world’s 24 narrow straits, “there is no alternative for 80 per cent of the trade”.

This is India's exposure to various maritime routes

9. Sajjid Chinoy writes that India's economic problem is less of a current account and more a capital account problem, arising from the sharp decline in FDI and FPI inflows. In the circumstances, he argues that demand compression can be counterproductive by slowing growth. He suggests a combination of depreciation and augmentation measures for foreign capital inflows.
The objective must be to attract a large-enough quantum of near-term capital inflows across multiple avenues — even if it involves a subsidised swap — to change exporter, importer and investor behaviour, and prevent a destabilising overshooting of the Rupee.

I am not sure how this is at all possible precisely when capital is flowing the other direction.  

10. For all talk of private participations and efficiencies, the long-distance railway networks in continental Europe is largely state-owned - Deutsche Bahn (Germany), Ferrovie dello Stato (Italy), Renfe (Spain), SNCF (France), and SBB (Switzerland). The Economist writes about how Italo, the private high-speed rail operator co-founded by Luca Cordero di Montezemolo, is trying to disrupt the German network. 

11. Securitisation and deepening of financial intermediation in Europe. 

The securitisation market in Europe remains moribund, comprising around 0.3 per cent of GDP compared with 4 per cent in the US.

12. SpaceX's IPO prospectus takes the widest liberties with US securities law. 

13. K-shape in US economy.

And now in wage decline
14. Ukraine's drones are inflicting massive damage and casualties on Russia as the country forces its way into its most favourable situation since the war began.
Some intelligence reports indicate that a staggering 1.2mn Russian soldiers have been killed or wounded since February 2022, a casualty figure no major power has suffered in a single conflict since the second world war... Backed by some €90bn in EU loans, Kyiv is pouring resources into domestic arms production in a bid to reduce dependence on western weapons and the political constraints that often accompany them. It has moved at breakneck speed to scale up the manufacture of land, sea and air drones, artillery systems, electronic warfare equipment, and even ballistic and cruise missiles.

15. The consulting industry is threatened by AI.  

Few industries are debating AI’s implications more intensely than consulting, whose core work of research, summarising data and producing neatly designed PowerPoint presentations is highly automatable. Richard Susskind, co-author of The Future of the Professions, says consultants are more vulnerable than other mainstream professions in part because the work of junior staff “can now be taken on, with mild supervision, by increasingly capable AI systems”. The sector now has two new competitors, he adds: “the AI-empowered client and disruptive start-ups. Both challenge the conventional model.”... AI also threatens one of professional services’ foundational economic models: billing by time. When a bot can review thousands of contracts in minutes and draft complex documents in seconds, the relationship between hours worked and value delivered begins to break down. Increasingly, clients are demanding pricing linked to outcomes rather than labour inputs.

16.  

Saturday, May 23, 2026

Weekend reading links

1. Samsung's spectacular turnaround, from being in the doldrums as late as in 2024.
This month its market value, which has soared by 400% in the past year, hit $1trn for the first time, propelled by furious spending on artificial-intelligence infrastructure. In the first quarter of 2026 its operating profit rose to 57trn won ($38bn), more than eight times as much as a year before. Analysts expect profits to keep rising at a blistering pace, thanks in particular to the seemingly insatiable demand for its advanced memory chips... Semiconductors accounted for 61% of sales and 94% of operating profits in the first quarter. It is one of just three firms capable of making at scale the memory chips needed for ai, alongside SK Hynix, a South Korean rival, and Micron, an American one. The number of memory chips Samsung sold in the first quarter was up by about 20% on the preceding three months, but the average selling price rose by 90%.

2. The Economist argues that the calm in global oil markets despite a supply shock of some 14 mb per day can be traced to the 4 mbpd of increased exports by the US and the 4.5 mbpd of reduction in Chinese imports, coupled with rationing across countries. 

3. As the rise of AI threatens white-collar jobs and increases the returns to capital, The Economist proposes some measures to redistribute the gains. 

If employment falls, income that once went to workers is likely to show up as high profits in AI firms, chipmakers, data centres or elsewhere in the supply chain. Clever tax reforms, such as levies on corporate profits that are above a normal return on capital, on land and on natural resources, could capture these rents. The case for inheritance taxes to prevent the entrenchment of a capital-owning elite looks even stronger than before. At the same time governments could help workers adjust. Public wage-insurance, which smooths out falls in income after job losses, can help workers find better opportunities (and so can eventually pay for itself). Denmark’s active labour-market policies, in which the state helps people find and train for new occupations, have been proved to cut spells in unemployment... 

A last set of radical ideas, such as the partial nationalisation of ai firms. This week a South Korean presidential adviser floated a citizens’ “dividend” from AI businesses, sending the local stockmarket down by 5%, before backtracking. In America politicians murmur about giving citizens shares in AI companies via “Trump accounts”. In economic terms there is little difference between a well-designed tax system and a government stake in the private sector—and countries without AI giants will have to rely on taxes rather than seizing shares in foreign companies. But America may find that some public ownership is the best way to make the social upside from the technology transparent.

4. The changing face of Reliance Industries.

5. America's remarkable productivity growth miracle since the pandemic (it predates the AI boom).

Now with AI coming of age, the productivity spurt is likely to continue. 

6. Egypt may well be the leader in land monetisation to promote economic growth in any substantial form.  (HT: Adam Tooze)
Since 2015, Egypt has increasingly contributed public land as equity, while foreign investors provide capital, development expertise, and project execution. Once a project is completed, revenues are shared according to pre-agreed division... in 2023, Egypt appointed the bank’s International Finance Corporation as its advisor for the asset monetization program, leveraging its experience supporting emerging markets. While land monetization has been tried elsewhere, Egypt’s projects are among the largest... For the Ras el-Hekma development on the country’s North Coast, Egypt contributed approximately 40,600 acres of state-owned land along the Mediterranean. The UAE (via its ADQ sovereign wealth fund) committed roughly $35 billion, the largest foreign direct investment in Egyptian history. Egypt received immediate foreign currency inflowsfor the land, a 35 percent stake in the project, and long-term profit participation... A similar project, also on the North Coast, is Alam el-Aroum/Samla near Marsa Matrouh. The Qatar Investment Authority-linked Qatari Diar is investing almost $30 billion, which includes a $3.5 billion upfront land payment for some 20 million square meters and $26 billion in development investments. A revenue share for Egypt (15 percent after cost recovery) is part of the deal.

Another arrangement is in place for Egypt’s New Administrative Capital (NAC). About thirty miles east of Cairo, the NAC is designed as the government seat and a commercial hub; reports estimate total development costs of up to $58 billion, including infrastructure and governmental, commercial, and residential districts. Foreign direct investment plays a role in specific sub‑components like the Central Business District (CBD) and future free-trade‑zone ventures. Chinese banks led by the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China provided 85 percent of funding for twenty towers in the CBD. The China State Construction Engineering Corporation developed the CBD; Gulf investors (such as the United Arab Emirates’ DP World) developed commercial parcels. The state monetized land incrementally for the NAC, and parcel sales financed development, without increasing Egypt’s debt.
All this appears very impressive. While the article paints a picture of success, it would be interesting to peel layers and scrutinise this. 

7. This is anecdotal, but tells a lot about why India lags in manufacturing.

8. Spain is undertaking an ambitious experiment in immigration.
Since 2022, Spain’s foreign-born population has surged by an annual average of 665,000, the equivalent of adding a city the size of Málaga each year. Last year the country accounted for roughly one-third of the total increase in the EU’s immigrant population, according to the Rockwool Foundation, a Berlin think-tank. Supporters say the influx has given Spain’s ageing society a much-needed burst of economic vigour. Critics call it a poorly planned strategy that is straining the country’s infrastructure and creating new social tensions... In less than a quarter of a century, Spain’s foreign-born population has gone from one in 20 residents to almost one in five, a higher proportion than even the US... Last month the Spanish government’s most contentious immigration move to date took effect — a sweeping amnesty giving at least half a million people the chance to gain residency and work permits and move out of the shadow economy... applicants must prove he was in Spain before January 1 this year and has been there for five consecutive months.

The country is already experiencing an acute housing shortage, has among the highest youth unemployment rates at over 10%, and the anti-immigrant Vox party is running third. The final outcome on the rapid rise in immigration is yet to be known. 

9. Ruchir Sharma points to an area where China trails badly behind the US, the negligible role of the renminbi as an international currency. 

With a 17 per cent share of global GDP, but only 2 per cent of central bank reserves, China is trailing 30 to 40 years behind previous superpowers at a similar stage of their ascents... Britain at its peak accounted for 40 per cent of trade, but 60 per cent of trade payments were in sterling. China by contrast has a leading 15 per cent share of global trade, but only 2 per cent of trade bills are invoiced in renminbi...
China will remain an incomplete superpower until it can match this financial firepower. For decades, it has kept its financial system more tightly sealed than any other major nation. It now ranks in the bottom fifth of nations by international investment position, which captures the level of foreign ownership in the domestic market. Foreigners own less than 5 per cent of the stocks and bonds in China, one-fifth the level in the US. Its home market is something of a local prison. Beijing has generated economic growth with heavy infusions of government money, corralled at home by capital controls. Its money supply has multiplied sixfold since 1980 to 230 per cent of GDP, among the highest in the world. This liquidity sloshes around inside the walled economy, much of it in the domestic debt market, battered lately by a property bust. Beijing is wary of easing controls, lest it unleash capital flight.

10. The US has been the biggest oil export beneficiary of the Iran war.

Prices for whey protein isolate have soared fivefold to €28,000 a tonne since 2023, outstripping cheese and butter prices by more than four times as producers struggle to keep pace with a booming protein market... Thirty years ago whey was primarily used in animal feed or spread on farmland as a fertiliser. Whey is the liquid separated from curds during the cheesemaking process. Now, dairy groups upgrade the liquid by filtration to produce whey protein isolate, a valuable ingredient for use in sports supplements as well as groceries such as yoghurt, bread and fizzy drinks, as weight-loss drugs and the protein megatrend propel demand. “This is reshaping the economics of dairy,” said Jose Saiz, analyst at Expana, a commodity market information service. “It used to be a product with no value . . . now cheese could become the byproduct of whey production.”

12. The UK's experience of small altnets driving broadband expansion and lowering prices has come with excesses. 

Over the past decade, more than £31bn has been raised to roll out full fibre broadband across the UK, with private equity giants, including Macquarie and KKR, backing upstart challengers — or “altnets” — in the sector. Yet despite the initial investor optimism that the “altnets” could snatch customers away from industry leaders, the firms have been dogged by high build costs, lower-than-expected customer uptake and a sharp response from the country’s largest provider — BT’s Openreach — to deploy its own fibre infrastructure. The destruction of shareholder value has been brutal. At the last count, the “altnets” posted losses of more than £1.5bn in 2024, according to Enders Analysis. After accumulating some £9bn of net debt as of 2025, some companies have already been placed into administration, while others have fallen into the hands of lenders... 

Prior to the “altnet boom”, which accelerated from 2021 onwards, only 24 per cent of Britons had access to full fibre internet, according to Ofcom. Fast forward five years, that number is now more than 78 per cent, with altnets serving almost 20mn homes with full fibre, according to Assembly Research. By next year, Ofcom estimates 95 per cent of UK homes will have full fibre, putting it in line with Europe’s leaders, including Spain and Luxembourg, where regulators encouraged full fibre rollout earlier than the UK. The “altnets” have also forced BT’s telecoms infrastructure provider Openreach and Virgin Media O2 to expand their own fibre networks, giving consumers a choice between providers who are now forced to think faster and harder about how to up their game. This added competition has meant prices have fallen, with the average monthly real-terms list price of UK full fibre broadband falling from £62.38 in September 2021 to £43.46 in September 2025, a drop of 30 per cent... altnets are taking close to 1mn [customer] lines from BT annually.
13. Alan Beattie argues that EU has initiatied several trade measures against China, though their implementation has been weak, primarily due to internal opposition within the bloc. 
One of the recent instruments with a bit more bite is the Foreign Subsidies Regulation (FSR), launched in 2023 and designed to level the playing field against state-backed Chinese companies bidding for contracts or producing and selling in the EU. It’s notable that it gives a lot of investigatory and decision-making powers to the Commission, specifically to the internal market and competition directorates, which are used to having autonomous powers. By starting investigations into their operations, the FSR has managed to get some Chinese companies to pull out of public procurement bids. But when the EU tries to use its internal market powers to investigate supposedly subsidised Chinese businesses trading in the single market, it becomes clear just how strongly Beijing is willing to resist. Last week, in an investigation dating to 2024 into the Chinese cargo scanner company Nuctech, Beijing cited new supply chain security laws to forbid Chinese companies to comply with requests for information, saying Brussels’ extraterritorial reach was illegitimate.

14. Arvind Subramanian and Devesh Kapur on the contrasting tales of India and China in monetisation of lands by urban local bodies. 

China’s land revenues increased from less than 1 per cent of GDP to more than 10 per cent at its peak. In contrast, India’s revenues have stagnated at about 1 per cent of GDP through the entire growth phase. Put differently, the Chinese government’s collections from land revenue for every urban resident that was available for spending were about 15 times more than India’s in 1999; at its peak in 2020, this multiple increased to 225.
15. As AI capex surges, there are growing doubts about whether it will generate the returns required to justify it.

For each of these hyperscalers, I collected the consensus estimates of analysts for the capital expenditures and revenues between 2025 and 2030. In these five years, capital investments are expected to rise by 20 per cent a year, a growth rate never seen before in this industry. Meanwhile, revenues are expected to grow 15 per cent annually. If we make the heroic assumption that there are no costs, then the additional revenue is the profit these companies are expected to make from their additional investments in AI data centres. Yet, even under these extremely optimistic assumptions, I calculate the implied return on investment is highly negative for all of them except Amazon. These numbers show that if the hyperscalers continue on the current trajectory, the AI boom will become a story of one of the largest destructions of shareholder value in history... If the hyperscalers want to generate, say, a 10 per cent return on investment, they would have to find an additional $2tn to $5tn in revenue a year. A tall order for a group of companies that currently generates revenues of just $1.5tn per year.

See this comparison with the technology, media and telecom (TMT) bubbles of the late nineties.

In 2025, US businesses invested almost $1.5tn in IT equipment and software. At the peak of the TMT bubble, it was $466bn or $829bn when adjusted for inflation. Indeed, the US economy is growing solely because of the tech boom. I calculate that over the past four quarters, 93 per cent of US GDP growth was explained by tech investments. Even at the peak of the TMT bubble, it barely reached 60 per cent.

16. Tim Harford points to evidence that retailers jack up prices in response to shocks much faster than they bring prices down, and that retailers make their money not so much during the upcycle than in the downward phase.

Johannes Brinkmann and Nikhil Datta of the University of Warwick recently published an analysis of the impact on petrol and diesel prices of the oil price shock in 2022, following Russia’s onslaught in Ukraine. They found that in the UK, retailer margins compressed: the wholesale price of diesel rose by 39 pence per litre, while retail prices only rose 16 pence. This is the opposite behaviour to that predicted by the greedflation hypothesis. A natural explanation of this price compression is that retailers feel under more intense scrutiny when prices are rising. Brinkmann and Datta show that searches on the petrolprices.com website increased dramatically when prices did — and that areas where such searches were more common were also areas where the price compression was more intense. 

Brinkmann and Datta’s analysis is merely the latest in a long tradition of research describing “rocket and feather” pricing at the pump — capturing the idea that pump prices neither faithfully track the ups and downs of the crude oil market, nor exaggerate them — instead, they shoot up like a rocket but drift down again like a feather. What is more, the quick surge upward reaches prices less lofty than one would expect; it is during the slow descent that retailers make their money. Fifteen years ago, Matthew S Lewis and Howard Marvel noted that customers spent more effort searching when prices were rising, even though there was little benefit to that search, since most retailers were charging similar prices. When pump prices were falling, there was more variability from forecourt to forecourt and a higher return to shopping around, but most customers did not bother, feeling content that prices were moving in the right direction.

17.  Preference shares are a complicated instrument.

The “preference” investors receive — usually a slightly higher dividend — comes at the expense of voting rights. Preference shares therefore arguably resemble the worst of both worlds of debt and equity. Like bonds, they do not offer any influence over the company’s decision-making. Like ordinary shares, they do not come with a contractual claim to annual payouts as dividends are subject to management discretion. Such non-voting shares have been a prominent feature in corporate Germany. Four of the 40 blue-chips in the Dax have used them to establish substantive two-tier share structures for years: Volkswagen, Porsche and BMW, the three auto giants, and glue and detergent maker Henkel. All are dominated by controlling families who hold a tight grip over the firm. 

Two further Dax companies — Merck and Fresenius — are listed as “partnerships limited by shares”, a German legal structure known by its acronym KGaA, that makes some shareholders more equal than others through other means. Deutsche Bank listed its asset management arm DWS as a KGaA in 2018, too, warning at the time that this structure could dent its valuation. Yet the club of German blue-chips with differential voting rights will soon become smaller after BMW shareholders voted to abolish preference shares last week at its annual meeting. The group’s 54.7mn preference shares, representing 10 per cent of BMW’s equity, will soon be swapped into ordinary shares with voting rights... In the US, dual-class share structures have become increasingly popular as fast-growing tech groups want to tap public markets while keeping outsized voting power for insiders. Elon Musk’s SpaceX even wants to grant its CEO 10 times as much voting power as external investors.

Sample this about SpaceX  

Elon Musk's special class of shares currently gives him control of 85 per cent of the voting power at SpaceX.