Now, it’s my turn. I get to vote this week. For lots of busy good reasons, I haven’t read a huge amount on our own election but there’s no doubt it is important. However, I’m conscious I’m just one of 4 billion people voting in the current 12 month period. This also prompts another nagging feeling that it is external events over the lifetime of the next government which will define it. From Ukraine, to Utah, to even Mars, our planet is at an inflection point. The ‘world order’ is dangerously shifting as North Korean troops enter a European conflict zone for the first time, and yet, it would be ill-advised to down tools and just wait. There are other themes and trajectories already established and unlikely to change. Simply put, the numbers are now too big. And, we will continue to watch SIX in particular.
Artificial Intelligence: It is striking to see various commentaries question the real ‘value’ of AI. During the summer, Goldman Sachs estimated that tech companies were about to spend $1 trillion on AI but queried whether they would ever earn a return on this capital expenditure. Fair question, but there’s another point to be made. The ‘winner takes all’ nature of this tech arms race is existential. The poster child of the AI revolution is Nvidia. Yet again, it smashed analyst forecasts this week in its latest quarterly results. My takeaway is that, of course, there will be misallocation of capital in this existential race but tech companies are going to continue to spend to stay in the race. ‘Exhibit A’ must be Nvidia’s own revenues in its data centre chip division. A whopping $30.8 billion revenues generated in the last quarter revealed a growth rate of 112% vs a year ago. Also, for context, this division has increased its quarterly revenue 7-fold since the early quarters of last year. Note, data centres are the battle ground where AI models are tested and trained, and this trend is set to continue.
Cleantech: European cleantech suffered a blow this week as Northvolt sought Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection from its creditors. It’s a significant blow to Europe’s efforts to decouple from its dependency on China for electrical vehicle (EV) battery materials, chemistry, design and manufacture. Northvolt tried to deliver in all four process functions and received $15 billion of investment backing to do so. This has been a very expensive way to experience execution risk; both Goldman Sachs and VW have written off investments in Northvolt of $1 billion each. However, just like AI, loss is a recurring feature in any new technology area. So, keep an eye on the big numbers. In this instance, the EU is outspending the US with a $125 billion spend in 2023 (vs $86 billion). But….. China is really the cleantech benchmark. The Middle Kingdom spent $390 billion in 2023 across renewables, carbon capture, utilization and storage, hydrogen, batteries and nuclear power.
Space: Elon Musk’s SpaceX is the most valuable private company on the planet with a recent funding mark indicating a $250 billion valuation, ahead of ByteDance (parent company of TikTok) on $225 billion. At current pace, it is launching its Starlink satellites (via Falcon 5 rockets) every 2.8 days. If you’re just about getting your head around that launch frequency think about Space X’s massive re-usable Starship which completed its 7th test flight last week. Its payload capacity is 150 tonnes and the plan is for Starship to do two launches…. daily. Now, what if the entire tonnage launched into space in history has been just shy of 40,000 tonnes? That means in the very very near future, Starship alone would be capable of repeating the entire payload history of space in just over 4 months. I’m not sure we have grasped the enormity of this feat and the implications for industries like telecommunications, mining, military defence, tourism, manufacturing or even housing (on Mars?).
Crypto/Blockchain: Bitcoin is on the cusp of breaking the $100,000 mark. However, we need to start thinking about the entire crypto/blockchain ecosystem. Check out MicroStrategy which on the face of it is a loss-making software business but since 2020 has been investing in Bitcoin. If you thought Nvidia was the best performing share price in the world you’d be nearly correct – it has delivered 2660% returns to shareholders in the last 7 years. But….. MicroStrategy has rocketed by 3420%. Its current market value is $117 billion, making it more valuable than Nike, UPS or Starbucks. Of course, MicroStrategy is a leveraged play on Bitcoin but there are other ways to ‘leverage’ the rapid expansion of stablecoins, crypto funds, tokenisation, blockchain etc. The crypto asset ecosystem has just passed the $3 trillion valuation mark which exceeds the asset value of most countries’ stock markets. These numbers, and the opportunities to plug into this investment pool, are too big to miss…or ignore.
Banks: It would be easy to move on to the ‘next shiny thing’ in the space or crypto universe but the banking sector is worth watching right now. Governments are finally getting good selling prices (even premia) for rescued bank shares as the UK (Nat West), Germany (Commerzbank), Ireland(AIB), Greece (Piraeus Bank), the Netherlands (ABN-AMRO) and Italy (Monte dei Paschi) all reduce sovereign shareholdings or exit altogether. As an aside, and interesting contrast to ‘shiny new things’ Monte dei Paschi began commercially lending 20 years before Christopher Columbus’s trip to America was financed. Anyway, old or not, the bank sector is hotting up. Breaking news over the weekend suggests Italy’s Unicredito will make a €10 billion + bid for rival BPM, and note Unicredito is already circling Germany’s Commerzbank. Also, it is worth noting that the tax/accounting professional services arm of UK wealth player, Evelyn Partners, has just been bought by private equity (Apax) for £700m. That is significantly more than the £500 million price tag suggested by City analysts.
Technology Rotation: We have written previously about the particularly strong comeback for technology hardware thanks to AI, semiconductors, EVs and iPhones. The world has become very used to these themes powering the “Magnificent Seven” – Microsoft, Apple, Nvidia, Google, Meta, Amazon and Tesla – to all-time-highs but this analysis of last week’s technology price action in the newsletter, Clouded Judgment, caught the eye:
This week saw the rapid acceleration of an interesting trend that started not too long ago – Magnificent 7 underperformance and software outperformance. Might this be the start of a rotation into software and growth (ie more risky assets)? Meta was down 3% over the last week. Amazon was down 7%. Microsoft down 3%. Google down 6%. Nvidia flat. Apple / Tesla were slightly up. QQQ was down 1.5%. Meanwhile, the WCLD index was up 6% over the last week! In addition to that, there were some really big moves in individual names. Snowflake was up >30% on Thursday after reporting earnings on Wednesday, which lifted the rest of the software market. Also just on Thursday Mongo was up 14%, Confluent / Datadog / Cloudflare were each up 7%.
As a reminder, the Magnificent 7 have an aggregate value of $13.5 trillion which is more than the GDPs of India, Germany and Japan combined. The potential risk of an investor rotation OUT of the Magnificent 7 is a multi-trillion dollar consideration, and also can’t be missed.
Clearly, my vote can’t change any of the big numbers above. However, these are the numbers which are far more likely to define our investing and business futures on this island.