eight trillion dollars in assets

From politics to finance. If anything has become clear during Donald Trump’s first year in the White House, it is how blurred the separations (if there are any) between geopolitics, defense, economics and taxation are for him. He made it clear shortly after assuming his second term, with the round of tariffs which followed what he baptized as “Liberation Day.” And it has become clear again now with the threats of liens to European countries on account of the tensions created around Greenland, an island that the Republican wants to incorporate to the USA. Against this backdrop, Brussels is asking what response the EU should (can) offer. There is talk of activating tariffs worth 93 billion to punish American companies, to dust off the so-called “commercial bazooka”…and even a financial ‘nuclear bomb’ with which Brussels could pressure Trump, one that amounts to eight trillion of dollars. What has happened? That Trump is not willing to give in to Greenland. And he did not like it one bit that a delegation of eight European countries (and colleagues in NATO) sent a small group of soldiers to the Arctic island to guarantee its defense. The Republican weekend threatened to punish them to all (Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Netherlands, Norway, Sweden and the United Kingdom) true to its style: imposing tariffs on them. The new rates will focus on commercial exports to the US and would be activated on February 1 with a value of 10%, although the idea is to raise them to 25% in June if the outlook does not change in Greenland. The message is clear: the Republican wants the Stars and Stripes flag to fly in Greenland, regardless of who he is, be it Denmark, the greenlanders themselves or other European nations with which it shares an alliance in NATO. “We need Greenland for national security reasons,” ditch the republican. “He will not allow himself to be blackmailed”. Trump threatening tariffs is nothing new. In fact, one of his first star measures shortly after returning to the White House (just a year ago) was to announce a wide range of rates for an even broader list of nations, including the EU. What is more shocking is that it encounters the manifest anger that the EU has shown on this occasion. “Europe will not allow itself to be blackmailed,” he warned shortly after from Trump’s announcement Mette FrederiksenPrime Minister of Denmark. Similar messages (more or less emphatically) have been launched by Emmanuel Macron, Keir Starmer or even the leaders of Norway and Finland, Alexander Stubb, who on other occasions has praised the American for his international policy. Not only the leaders have spoken out. Community parties have also done it, which they seem willing to go beyond rhetoric. How to respond to Trump? That is the debate that has been flying over Europe since the weekend. Bloomberg assures that representatives of the 27 EU countries met yesterday precisely to discuss solutions. This week a new summit will be held with the same objective: to discuss retaliation. For now, the European People’s Party (among other formations) has shown in favor to leave in the air the trade pact reached in the summer with Washington. It talks about restrict access of North American companies to the EU market and imposing tariffs on the US worth 93 billion of euros. all this on the eve of the World Economic Forum meeting in Davos. The clearest and most resounding voice has probably been that of Macron, who has encouraged for the EU to activate its anti-coercive instrument, known as the community “trade bazooka”, which (if applied) could complicate US access to EU markets. Brussels itself clarify that this tool allows it to “launch countermeasures against a non-member country, including a wide range of restrictions related to trade, investment and financing.” These are big words if we take into account that in 2024 transatlantic trade in goods and services between the EU and the US exceeded 1.68 billion of euros. “The biggest lender”. In recent days, another course of action has circulated, much more complex (and emphatic) that focuses on another key link between both territories: the enormous amount of US assets in the hands of Europeans. In a report released yesterday, George Saravelos of Deutsche Bank AG, I remembered that Europe is the largest lender to the US. To be more precise, their countries hoard eight trillion dollars in bonds and stocks. For reference, it assumes almost double than the rest of the world as a whole. “Enjoys influence”. He is not the only one who has slipped that figure. In another report published today by ING Think, Carsten Brzeski and Bert Colijn recall that in recent days there has been talk of “the exposure” of the US to investors on the other side of the pond. “European countries own $8 trillion in US bonds and stocks, making Europe by far the largest US lender. Not only does this illustrate the interdependence between the regions, but Europe also enjoys influence over the US.” Why is it important? Financial Times even goes further and estimates, using data from the Federal Reserve, that the total value of US financial assets in the hands of NATO countries in Europe reaches 12.6 trillion dollars. Savarelos slips that this figure represents a “weakness” of the US that makes it “dependent on others to pay its bills through large external deficits,” and cast a reflection: “In a context where the geoeconomic stability of the Western alliance is seriously disturbed, it is not clear why the Europeans would be so willing to assume this role.” “Danish pension funds were among the first to repatriate money and reduce their exposure to the dollar a year ago. With dollar exposure still very high in Europe, the events of recent days could further drive dollar rebalancing,” duck the analyst. The question therefore is… Does the EU have a secret weapon, a pressure tool in its favor against Trump? Could Europe embark on “an … Read more

Ten AI startups have skyrocketed their valuation by $1 trillion in 12 months

Logic tells us that companies that they lose money consistently should have a black future. What is happening in the world of AI is just the opposite, and right now ten startups in very red numbers They have achieved something unusual in one year: in one year they have grown by one trillion dollars in their joint valuation. It is something simply extraordinary… and disturbing. The big three. OpenAI is of course the protagonist of this select group, and today it is estimated that its valuation amounts to half a billion dollars. Elon Musk’s company, xAI, is valued at 200 billion, while Anthropic is also close to that figure according to a Financial Times study. In one year the valuation of these AI startups has skyrocketed. Source: Financial Times. And his immediate followers. Databricks, which was founded in 2013, was quick to join that segment and now has an estimated valuation of $100 billion. Figure (robotics), SSI (Sutskever’s startup), Scale AI, Perplexity, Thinking Machine Lab (Mira Murati’s startup) or Cursor complete this group of new startups (almost all of them) and with skyrocketing valuations. Investment fever. This growth in its valuation is due, of course, to the fact that all of these firms have raised multimillion-dollar investment rounds by firms that trust in a future full of AI. In fact, venture capital and investment companies in the US have injected 161 billion dollars throughout this year, and they have done so without being able to see even a hint that their bet is going to be a winner. All these AI companies They burn money like there’s no tomorrowand its profitability—and future—is an absolute unknown. bubbles are good. “Of course there is an (AI) bubble.” The person who says it is Hermant Taneja, president of the venture capital firm General Catalyst. His firm has invested in Anthropic and Mistral, and has done so without batting an eye because according to him, “Bubbles are good. Bubbles align capital and talent into a new trend, which causes some carnage, but also creates new lasting businesses that change the world.” Maybe it is, but only for a few.. Sam Altman, co-founder and CEO of OpenAI, also think there is a bubblebut it coincides with that positive vision because it is probably him who will benefit (if everything explodes). Robin Li, CEO of Baidu, already indicated a year ago that the bubble will end up bursting and that only 1% of companies will survive. Bezos adds to that perception: “this is the good type of industrial bubble that is totally contrary to financial bubbles. The banking bubble, the crisis of the banking system, that is simply bad, as happened in 2008. These bubbles are the ones that society must avoid.” It happened with dotcoms. The analogy with the dotcom bubble It’s inevitable. At that time something similar happened with the inflated valuations of internet companies, and when the bubble burst only a few survived, but those that did managed to become the mistresses of the world. ANDThis bubble is much bigger. At least, from the point of view of the figures invested. In the dotcom fever, venture capital companies invested 10.5 billion dollars, which if we adjust for inflation becomes about 20 billion dollars. In 2021, these same firms invested 135 billion in startups in the SaaS (Software as a Service) segment. This year, investment in AI companies will likely exceed $200 billion, according to PitchBook. One of the directors of these firms describes this with a strong word. “This is FOMO“. And the valuations are skyrocketing. Startups that have $5 million in annual recurring revenue are seeking investment rounds that value them at $500 million. That they pursue those valuations that are 100 times their income makes ridiculous the excesses that already occurred in 2021, for example. Although venture capital firms know that they will lose money on most of their bets, they also hope that one or two that they get right will more than make up for that entire bet. Not investing is losing forever. Mark Zuckerberg shares this vision of venture capital firms, and his company is making colossal investments to avoid missing out on AI. The founder and CEO of Meta recently explained that He doesn’t care about losing 200,000 million dollarsbecause it would be much worse to be left behind in this race. Marc Benioff, co-founder and CEO of Salesforce, agrees and believes that a trillion dollars of investment will end up wasted, but AI will end up producing 10 times that in value: “The only way we know to create great technology is to try as many things as possible, see which ones work, and then focus on the ones that succeed.” Time will tell if they were right and if this bubble, as investors defend, is “a good one.” In Xataka | OpenAI is making the tech industry unite its destiny with yours. For the sake of the global economy, it better work

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