Numbers Which Make You Wonder….

I’m quite enjoying the “rubber meets road” moment for the leaders whose numbers never add up. In a previous political era they might just have been called liars and shunned by serious media. Now, it’s about eyeballs for the media and their audiences retaining some memory cells. Good ol’ Nigel Farage has moved from trying to avoid discussing the number of white people in ads (thanks to Reform MP Sarah Pochin) to rowing back on previous tax promises. Currently, known as “aspirations”. Like Brexit, more lies. In the US, gold-plated ballrooms and newly minted tech billionaires don’t quite cut it for the 50% of US have-nots who don’t benefit from 401k investment savings. But, the have-nots do have votes…..for now. New York has just voted for a Democrat socialist mayor with the biggest mandate since 1969. Meanwhile public representative seats and offices have flipped this week from MAGA red to Democrat blue in New Jersey, Georgia, California and Virginia. Even Mississippi is turning. In Washington adjacent, Virginia, the political landscape has morphed back to 1987 as Federal workers, either sacked or not being paid, discover some numbers are very real. Here’s a few other numbers flagging change which caught the eye in recent days….

Sports betting was legalised in the US in 2018. Americans bet over $148 billion on sports last year, which is more than they spent on movies, books, concerts and sports tickets…. combined.  Meanwhile, Disney through its sporting broadcast arm, ESPN, is teaming up with DraftKings as its new sports betting partner. Expect more deals in the sports betting space with $148 billion of US wallets on offer and then wonder about societal shifts. Housing shortages and fewer children seems to be freeing up a lot of discretionary spending power. Watch also prediction marketplaces like Kalshi and Polymarket. The latter is doing over $1 billion of volume each month and is fully crypto-native. More traditional financial businesses are taking notice. Robinhood’s share price is up 235% year-to-date and has reported 2.5 billion prediction contracts (fees of $25m) traded on its platform in just October 2025. That is more than all of the contracts traded in Q3 2025. Any more predictions…?

You can probably bet on OpenAI doing more AI/cloud infrastructure deals. The famous Financial Times graphic of OpenAI playing a central role in $1 trillion of AI projects is worth revisiting. OpenAI has recently announced a re-jig of its corporate structure to allow for a profit making entity under the stewardship of the original non-profit foundation. The profit bit is going to have to wait. Thanks to Microsoft’s recent results (and a circa 27% stake in OpenAI) analysts have estimated quarterly losess at OpenAI could be as high as $11 billion. Per quarter! Now think about those trillion dollars of projects planned. Then digest this little gem…

OpenAI is requesting US government support to help guarantee financing for the massive investments in AI chips and data centers it needs for expansion, per Bloomberg.

The latest OpenAI infrastructure project commitments, per Wall Street analysts, are heading towards $1.4 trillion. UK water utility observers will be familiar with the privatise-the-gains and socialise-the-losses model. It doesn’t end well. And, Fox News and Trump think Zohran Mamdani is the communist….

On a more capitalist pursuit, M&A deal flow, the news is very encouraging and starting from a less frothy base. Deal research house, Pitchbook, gives the latest update on confidence levels in the C-suite. As we often say, it’s what companies DO, not say, which counts:

 

“Q3 activity increased by 25.6% in M&A value and 3.8% in deal count as buyers jumped back into the market after macroeconomic headwinds disrupted momentum earlier in the year. Moreover, 2025 is shaping up to be an incredible year for global M&A despite the spooky headwinds present in the market, including geopolitical volatility, stubborn inflation, and a slowing global economy. YTD, there have been 37,096 M&A transactions for an aggregate of $3.4 trillion….. This resurgence in large-scale deals leaves the door open for two consecutive years of M&A deal value growth for the first time in over a decade. Deal count itself is on pace for year-over-year growth, with an active fourth quarter that could see the ecosystem hit nearly 50,000 deals for the year. ”

 

One can expect more deals in the electricity/power sector. Close to home, Energia was bought by French private equity house, Ardian, and Blackstone bought TXNM Energy for $11.5 billion earlier in the month. It’s all part of the AI infrastructure story but the daddy of the AI rush is Nvidia’s Jensen Huang. He had some sobering thoughts in an FT interview. “China is going to win the AI race.” warned Huang, citing China’s advantages in energy and less‑stringent regulation. He later clarified that China is “nanoseconds behind” the US, adding “it’s vital that America wins by racing ahead and winning developers worldwide.” Huang might have backed away from his original statement but consider that last year China added 426 GW of electricity generation capacity. In the US that number was 30 GW. A growth differential of 14x doesn’t take many ‘nanoseconds’ for China to establish a dominant cheaper electricity base. If electricity is going to decide the global AI race then “drill baby, drill” could cost US industrial policy dearly. Go ask Germany, where manufacturing output is 20% below 2019 levels thanks to disastrous energy policy decisions. But there are prescient decisions to be made too…..

Investors can see M&A activity pick up, corporate earnings growth above 12% year-on-year, cost of capital shift to a lower trajectory and even the possibility of the US Supreme Court stifling Trump’s ‘emergency’ tariff powers. It’s always awkward to claim ‘emergency’ in court when your lawyer (for US government) agrees the consumer pays 30-80% of tariff costs, and the judges note that tariffs have been imposed on countries like Brazil and Great Britain who actually have trade DEFICITS with the USA. More ketchup on the walls of Mar-a-Lago me thinks. However, the key point is that the investment environment for private investors is picking up momentum. And, Spark Private can help. A flow of new EIIS season deals has just hit our investors’ in-boxes. In this instance, the numbers are real, and do warrant real attention. This is a genuine opportunity to build an exciting diversified portfolio of 8-10 companies with a variety of timing/risk horizons and big thematic exposures in a matter of weeks.