Ben's Market Chat - Insights and Interviews
This week we discuss the productivity gains in the global economy thanks to the AI spend revolution. We witnessed a consistent 2-2.5% productivity gain throughout the late 90’s-early 2000’s as China opened up and started a global trade boom. AI is likely to deliver a similar if not even bigger opportunity. Productivity dampens inflationary pressure and drives growth. In this week’s Ben’s Fireside Interview we talk to Martin Dubbey, CEO & founder of Harod Associates Group, one of the fastest growing fraud investigation and asset tracing businesses in the UK. Harod utilises a proprietary investigation and asset tracing technology platform which Martin and team architected and which he talks about. Harod’s clients include Family offices, Corporates and High net worths looking to protect their assets in a fast moving and digital world. Head to https://www.youtube.com/@bensmarketchat [https://www.youtube.com/@bensmarketchat] for the full interview. The $750bn of AI spend this year and at least this number again next year, has resulted in a major boost for semiconductors and hardware at the expense of the vast number of MAG7 companies YTD. However, the SMH (US semiconductor ETF) has fallen over 10% in the last 2 weeks. Earnings are upon is for Q2 over the next couple of weeks and guidance will be key. Do investors believe that capex spend momentum will slow? In terms of the 2nd derivative (ie the pace of growth) this may well imply a slower pace. Equally, if we see guidance from MAG7/Hyperscalers that AI related ROI is starting to grow, a potential rotation from PHASE 1 (the hardware beneficiaries) to PHASE 2 (the spenders) may well ensue implying a strong finish to the year for MAG7. Q3 guidance therefore could present a seminal turning point for the technology sector and focus therein. It looks like the war with Iran is back. It didn’t really ever go away. Anthony Scaramucci told us a few weeks ago that the US does not control the narrative. This war and economic consequences are likely to linger for many more months. Will this be enough to dislodge the growth trajectory in the US? We don’t think so. Despite the short term impact on inflation, longer term, productivity is likely to dampen the energy spike. We remain overweight the US going into the second half and increase exposure to US small caps as productivity gains tend to have a democratising effect on smaller company performance vs their larger rivals. Europe remains a backwater for us despite its cheap valuation and EM is a cheaper play on the semiconductor trade in the US given the over reliance in the indices to TSMC, Samsung and Hynix. If we are witnessing a transition, EM, at least at the headline Index level, may not fair so well for the balance of the year. If you're enjoying this content, please comment, like, and subscribe to see our videos every week! Join our email list to be the first to see these videos every week: https://mailchi.mp/traderoutescapital/giuox24tmg Join the community on LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/newsletters/7084134627111489536/ Always do your own research or seek the advice of your professional financial advisor. You can find us on LinkedIn and YouTube, Money Matters, Ben Hakham CEO at Traderoutes Capital.
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