Don’t Get Angry, Get Ready….

I was right. The first of my predictions for 2026 was spectacularly on the money. Sadly, it won’t make any of us wealthier given its focus on noise rather than direction. To refresh memories, the final words in my last article, Themes and Dreams For 2026, were as follows: “I’ve a feeling I won’t be short of writing material in 2026.” Little did I know there would be a year’s worth of material in just the first 10 days of 2026. Where do we start?

The US is celebrating its 250th birthday by re-branding as an exploration company with an army (hat tip George Carlin) as Venezuela is ‘acquired’ and ‘takeover bids’ are lined up for the Panama Canal and Greenland. Back at HQ, the Boss re-asserts control of executive salaries and cash flows in the company’s defence supply divisions while promising a 50% expansion of investment ($1 trillion to $1.5 trillion) in its business development unit, previously known as the Department of War, and before that, as the Department of Defense. Meanwhile, the company’s traffic stop management division has secured immunity from regulatory or criminal oversight of its shoot-to-kill (or stop) policy on a nationwide basis, not just in Minneapolis. Of course, none of these revolutionary business initiatives can happen without funding. The company’s Treasury unit has set up overseas bank accounts to deposit proceeds of its newly acquired Venezuelan oil unit. In the interests of tax efficiency these bank accounts will be overseen directly by the Boss, and will not be consolidated in the parent company accounts. But, of course. However, US Inc is not the only company turning to oil….

It is probably more accurate to say some companies are breaking with a seismic global shift to electric power. Again, it’s American-sourced exceptionalism. This week General Motors (GM) has followed Ford and abandoned its move in to electric vehicles (EV). These recent investment write-offs amount to $7 billion and $19 billion respectively which will hurt. But… that might not be the end of the pain. The train, or car, has already left the station. The Electric Age, per the superb Noah Smith, is here with 25% of cars purchased in 2025 of the EV variety. In many Asian and a few European countries that penetration rate is through the 40-50% level. China leads the world in the entire EV technology stack and have focused their attentions on battery production, manufacturing scale and grid expansion (solar). Fewer moving/motor parts, efficiency and superior performance are the current and long-term edge for EVs which will kill the internal combustion engine (ICE). Writer’s note: Be careful how you say or ‘weaponise’ that acronym these days.  All is political these days rather than factual which highlights why the US is making a fatal error on oil over electric. Noah Smith writes:

 

The main reason America is missing the EV transition is that we’ve insisted on thinking of EVs in terms of climate — as a “green” technology whose purpose is to save the environment, rather than a superior technology whose purpose is to save you time and money. Trump canceled EV subsidies because he associates them with the environmental movement and the political left.

 

It’s not just electric vehicles(EVs) experiencing their electric break-through moment. EVs share the same components as drones, trains, cameras, phones …..and robots. Just this week at the massive CES 2026 conference in Las Vegas, Nvidia’s Jensen Huang didn’t even blink when asked how long it would take for humanoid robots to match human-level ability. “This year”, he said. Guess what – those robots run on many of the exact same components which go inte EVs. Think batteries, power/motor electronics, sensors, software…..and AI. Clearly, in the AI piece of the assembly package, the US is perceived as the global leader. However, even AI and its support infrastructure is inextricably tied to electric power. And, before you say “but, but, but… the Venezuela oil reserves”, get ready for more non-delivery from the “stable genius” back at HQ. Venezuela currently produces less than a million barrels of oil per day. It’s like a rounding error of less than 1% of global oil production. Yes, that production level can grow but please note the lack of announcements from US oil company executives about investment plans and potential commercial negotiations with Venezuela’s 5,000 plus generals and regional warlords. While the Department of War was planning ‘business development’ in Latin America, China built more solar power capacity than the rest of the world combined in 2025. For perspective, that additional solar capacity of 380GW built in 2025 equates to 5x China’s total existing nuclear capacity (58 plants). Get ready or get digging on two fronts.

First, we have written a lot in 2025 about the asynchronous explosion of excitement and revenue projections for the AI world and the mining sector. At certain times in 2025 one AI company, Nvidia, was worth 4 times more than the entire publicly listed mining sector. Get ready for a change. Gold, silver, platinum and copper prices have soared which has finally juiced the risk spirits of mining sector executives. We said the sector needed a big deal. Well, global giants Glencore and Rio Tinto are talking a megadeal again with a copper focus (yep, all that electricity) and a $260 billion valuation. Metals of course in earlier times were the basis for currency. In time, central banks became the back-stop or guarantor of currency but we might have to dig again.

The global reserve currency, the US Dollar, lost almost 10% of its value in 2025. In isolation, this is not unprecedented. In fact, the Trump regime are quite keen on a softer dollar and lower interest rates for trade deficit and investment reasons. However, we must get ready for a further assault on institutional independence in the US. The current Fed Chair, Jerome Powell, is due to leave his post in May this year. The new appointee (apparently already decided by the Boss) will be expected to cut interest rates dramatically to keep Trump happy. However, the potential unintended consequence of this action in the context of a $40 trillion US national debt is loss of credibility for the Fed and its ability to prudently manage that debt, and the currency. Hopefully, the bond markets are more effective than Russian or Chinese radar systems in spotting and thwarting that assault on Fed and dollar credibility. A final word on markets and pensions.

Those of you reading your pension updates/reviews for 2025 might be underwhelmed by the performance. Before you get angry, I would recommend a read of Terry Smith’s own review of his fund which underperformed in 2025. As always, my former boss writes superbly and highlights some key factors driving investment markets these days. Terry always sticks to the basics and this might well be a theme for 2026. The thoughts above should ready minds for investment opportunities in electrification, real assets, financials, mining and assets located outside the exploitation company, US Inc, formerly known as the United States of America…..