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Showing posts with label Debt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Debt. Show all posts

Saturday, December 27, 2025

Weekend reading links

1. The rise of zero-sum politics in the West.

In the US, UK, France and Germany zero-sum beliefs on the left (eg people only get rich by making others poor) and the right (eg immigrants succeed at the expense of the native-born) are related expressions of the same underlying worldview. Namely that there is only so much to go around and we must therefore use restrictions, exactions and preferential treatment to redress the balance between winners and losers.
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3. Tim Wu contrasts America's all-in bet on proprietary AI-led innovation with China's diversified bet on renewables and green technologies coupled with applications of AI through open-source models. The article has this graphic which shows how Chinese exports to developing countries has taken off exponentially.
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Last year, 70 per cent of the world’s EVs were manufactured in China. China also accounts for roughly 80-85 per cent of global solar photovoltaic manufacturing, and more than 75 per cent of all global battery production.
4. Data centre construction in the US is now on par with office construction!
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And this on their power demand.
Across America, data centres represent a combined capacity of about 51GW. Running at their maximum, this equates to 5 per cent of the country’s peak demand. By 2028, an estimated 44GW of additional capacity will be required by new data centres, according to S&P Global Energy. Given constraints to grid infrastructure, power capacity coming online in the next three years will only be able to provide about 25GW for these data centres. That leaves a gap of 19GW — just over 40 per cent of the power needed... After more than two decades of flat or anaemic growth, US power demand is now surging. Electricity usage is projected to rise by an average of 5.7 per cent a year to 2030, based on forecasts from utility companies... more than half of the expected increase stems from the rapid build-out of AI data centres, according to consultancy Grid Strategies.

And the constraints to power capacity expansion.

Boosting the US power grid is an enormous and time-consuming task due to a complex web of regulatory, financial and supply chain challenges. Interconnection queues — backlogs of projects waiting to plug into the network — have become a major chokepoint, slowing the rollout of new power capacity and leaving data centres facing lengthy delays... The average time from filing an interconnection request to achieving commercial operation now exceeds eight years, according to energy think-tank RMI... On average, federal permitting for a new US transmission line takes about four years, according to the Department of Energy. State processes add further delays to grid build-out. Last year, almost 900 miles of new high-voltage transmission lines were completed, according to lobby group Americans for a Clean Energy Grid. This is the most since 2020, but still far short of the 5,000 miles a year the group estimates is needed to support grid reliability and growth.
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5. Like in China, India's solar manufacturing capacity is entering a glut and is also due for consolidation. 
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Edinburgh-based energy consultant Wood Mackenzie estimates the country’s solar module manufacturing capacity will exceed 125GW by 2025, which is more than three times its domestic demand of around 40GW. Nomura projects capacity additions of 100-110GW in the next three years, further raising the risk of oversupply and painful consolidation.
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This is an interesting comparison with China, pointing to future pain.
In China, half of the six major solar IPOs of the past two decades now trade below their issue price. In the US, SunPower has filed for bankruptcy. Even today, China’s JA Solar, with nearly 85GW each of ingot-wafer and cell capacity, is valued on par with India’s Waaree Energies, which has only a fraction of that scale... Some distress from oversupply is already visible in the supply chain. While the large, cash-rich players, including Adani, Waaree and Premier Energies, are tightening their hold on the sector by backward-integrating their supply chain and protecting their future margins, the smaller players are struggling to keep their plants running.

Worsening matters further is the lack of demand for solar power among discoms. 

India’s solar energy capacity currently totals 130GW, according to the ministry of new and renewable energy... As of September, around 44GW of tendered clean energy capacity, out of 93GW since fiscal year 2024 (FY24), remains without buyers... The ministry said in early November that it may look to cancel these projects on a case-by-case basis. One of the primary reasons for unsigned agreements is that state utilities expect solar prices to fall further. 
This capacity explosion has been facilitated by industrial policy.
In 2022, India imposed 40% tariffs on solar modules and 25% tariffs on solar cells to discourage imports from China. Last year, the country dictated that Indian solar power producers must purchase from an approved list of domestic solar-module makers—there are 93 companies in the approved list so far. Similar rules for solar cells will come into effect next year. Further restrictions on imports of ingots and wafers that are building blocks of modules and cells are expected in the coming years.

But industrial policy does not appear to be able to bridge competitiveness. 

Under new domestic content requirements, an entirely ‘Made in India’ module would cost more than double Chinese-manufactured modules, making it uncompetitive without substantial government policy support.

While India's solar manufacturing capacity is now largely at the level of modules, the government is pushing hard to integrate backwards into cells, ingots, wafers, and polycrystalline. But that's challenging. 

Owing to the complexities involved, the cell is the most capex-intensive segment. According to Nomura, capital expenditure per GW of cells can total ₹6,500 crore versus ₹2,000 crore for modules. Ingots and wafers need up to ₹4,500 to build 1GW capacity. As the supply glut in modules deepens, large integrated players such as Reliance Industries, Adani Enterprises, Waaree, Premier and Tata Power, which are investing across the value chain, are better positioned to survive... All large and listed players have announced plans to backward integrate, expecting that impending import restrictions further down the value chain will keep profits coming. According to Nomura, 70-80GW of cell capacity additions will come online over the next three years. It is 18.5GW right now.

Solar energy has the lowest tariff rate.

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While the ratio of debt to GDP in the world’s biggest economy shrank from 106 per cent in 1946 to 21.6 per cent in 1990-91, it has since lurched back up to almost 100 per cent thanks to, among other things, the financial crisis and Covid-19... The postwar experience of the UK provides a case study of how these factors interact. The country’s debt-to-GDP ratio went from more than 250 per cent in 1946 to just 42 per cent three decades later. In a seminal piece of research, Barry Eichengreen and Rui Esteves show that for most of the 1946 to 1955 debt consolidation episode, the UK ran consistent, large primary budget surpluses despite the Labour government’s huge expansion of the welfare state. Yet the largest contribution to debt reduction came from inflation, which was responsible for more than 80 per cent of the debt consolidation over the period. That said, from 1955, fiscal discipline and economic growth did most of the work — surprisingly given Britain’s record at the time for economic incompetence — because the contribution of consumer price inflation, which peaked at 24 per cent in 1975, was neutralised by rocketing interest rates.

7. K-shaped income gain + K-shaped wealth gain = K-shaped economy. Rana Faroohar writes about the K-shaped economy in the US.  

Consider income growth, which was higher for low-income households right before and during the pandemic — in large part because of support from the Biden administration — but has diverged since. Wage growth for low-income workers is now lower than for middle- and high-income workers. This is partly explained by the artificial intelligence boom that is showing up in higher unemployment figures for young college graduates as more entry-level white-collar work is done by technology. Asset growth is K-shaped too, with higher-income households seeing lots of paper wealth from stocks at still near-record highs and rising home prices. According to investment group Apollo, the cash flow received in fixed income, including private credit, is nearing levels not seen in decades. That wealth effect has propelled the existing K-shaped trend in consumer spending. The percentage of overall spending done by the top 10 per cent of the socio-economic spectrum has risen from 36 per cent to nearly half since 1989, according to Moody’s analytics.

8. Daron Acemoglu points to the breakdown of the liberal democratic politics.

Liberal democracy was made by its pledges. It plunged into crisis because of their undoing. A lot of this volte-face was about the eclipse of the industrial compact and the rise of a post-industrial society, dominated by digital technologies and the college-educated professionals that these empowered. Digital technologies severed the link between economic growth and shared prosperity. With the widespread automation enabled by digital tools, companies could expand without hiring more employees and paying workers more, and the skill bias of these technologies gave a boost to the earnings of highly educated and managerial workers. The result was a staggering increase in inequality in the US, with the inflation-adjusted wages of low-education men falling most years between 1980 and 2014 — even as the aggregate economy and the urban, globalised professionals were flourishing.
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That the computer age was leaving behind the working class, which used to typically support left-leaning parties, was unnoticed by the college-educated, who were becoming politically and socially ascendant in the environment digital technologies created. That they had started living separately, socialising separately, marrying separately, and holding very different views from the less educated undergirded this omission. There was also a major sin of commission on the part of left liberals. As they abandoned classic working-class or social democratic issues, they started focusing on cultural politics — in part because cultural divides had become more pronounced and in some ways more intractable in an age defined by shifting mores, globalisation and increasing immigration flows from countries with dissimilar traditions.

But the cultural divide that emerged between different education groups and ideologies did not have a simple solution. Even as norms were changing on important issues such as gay marriage, new rifts were opening related to the assimilation of new immigrants, transgender rights and cosmopolitan versus local priorities. The college-educated, fatefully, turned to social engineering efforts, trying to accelerate cultural change — in universities, schools, the entertainment industry and even workplaces. These efforts, though often well meaning, were nonetheless perceived by many working-class communities as the imposition of the priorities of college-educated values on the rest of society. The scene was set for a crisis of liberalism and of liberal democracy.

9. Importance of Samarium, a rare earth mineral, and how the US gave up its leadership.

Most rare-earth magnets are made of neodymium, which is used in everyday applications such as cellphones, auto parts and electronics. But the defense industry requires samarium-cobalt magnets, which can withstand extreme heat... Unless new sources of samarium or a substitute material can be found, American manufacturers won’t be able to build fighter jets or precision-guided missiles. They may be forced to sacrifice precision if they can’t get the right magnets... 

Although samarium-cobalt magnets were invented in an Air Force research lab in Ohio in the 1960s, the industry moved to China in the 1980s, partly because of rich rare-earth deposits there. Today, China mines, processes, sells and consumes such large volumes of rare-earth metals that it can drop the price below the cost of production when foreign competitors come online. American and European companies have struggled to stay afloat. Many either declared bankruptcy or opened factories in China.

And the difficulty of reshoring, even with good policy intent, without a crisis hitting.

In recent years, American policymakers have tried to build a domestic supply. The National Defense Authorization Act of 2023 and 2024 gradually tightened restrictions on the use of rare-earth metals from China in weapons systems, and stipulated that all such materials must be China-free by Jan. 1, 2027. But such mandates have been inconsistently enforced, partly because alternatives are not available. In 2023 and 2024, when magnets were supposed to be made of metal that was created outside China, Lockheed Martin notified the Pentagon that its F-35 Joint Strike Fighter had Chinese-made magnets. The military paused production of the jet for months but eventually issued a waiver allowing the parts.

10. The Bank of Japan raises its benchmark interest rates to a 30 year high.

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Alongside, yields on 10 year government bonds have touched 2% for the first time since 1999. 

11. Assessment of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code implementation.

The data from the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Board of India (IBBI) shows that by September, 8,659 corporate insolvency resolution processes (CIRPs) had been admitted. Of those 1,898 cases were ongoing. More tellingly, about 1,300 CIRPs that resulted in resolution plans took an average of 603 days, while 2,896 cases that ended in liquidation took 518 days, far exceeding the statutory outer limit of 330 days prescribed under the IBC... Despite procedural delays, the IBC has had a meaningful impact on India’s banking system and credit culture. Resolved cases have delivered 32.44 per cent recovery of admitted claims, translating into more than 170 per cent of liquidation value, and have helped rescue about 1,300 firms. Equally important, the threat of losing control has altered borrower behaviour, improving repayment discipline and encouraging early settlement.

12. US corporate profits are at all time highs.

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13. America's K-shaped economy.
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14. Financial engineering is never far away in boom times. FT reports how Big Tech firms are shifting debts assumed to finance AI spending out of their balance sheets through project financed SPVs. 
Financial institutions including Pimco, BlackRock, Apollo, Blue Owl Capital and US banks such as JPMorgan have supplied at least $120bn in debt and equity for these tech groups’ computing infrastructure, according to a Financial Times analysis. That money is channelled through special purpose holding companies known as SPVs. The rush of financings, which do not show up on the tech companies’ balance sheets, may be obscuring the risks that these groups are running — and who will be on the hook if AI demand disappoints... 

Tapping private capital funding through off-balance sheet structures protects companies’ credit ratings and flatters their financial metrics. Meta in October completed the largest private credit data centre deal, a $30bn agreement for its proposed Hyperion facility in Louisiana that created an SPV called Beignet Investor with New York financing firm Blue Owl Capital. The SPV raised $30bn, including about $27bn of loans from Pimco, BlackRock, Apollo and others, as well as $3bn in equity from Blue Owl. The deal meant Meta could in effect borrow $30bn without any of the debt appearing on its balance sheet. This made it easier to raise a further $30bn in the corporate bond market a few weeks later.

15. Demystifying Adam Smith's invisible hand

The popular understanding of the “invisible hand” is even further off the mark. Smith borrows the phrase from Macbeth, who talks about a “bloody and invisible hand” shortly before murdering Banquo. In all his works, the economist mentions the phrase just three times, in three different contexts—and never in reference to the price mechanism... In fact, he often favoured the visible hand of government. He urged the state to provide education. He favoured legal caps on interest rates. Today, almost all free-market economists despise America’s Jones Act, which requires that shipping between American ports be conducted on vessels that are built, owned and largely crewed domestically. Smith, by contrast, favoured the Navigation Acts, a similar British law. 

Smith acknowledged the benefits of markets, but also their costs. Consider his famous pin factory. The division of labour within it allowed workers to produce thousands more pins than if they were working alone. Countries that perfected the art of dividing labour, Smith argued, would grow rich. Yet he also worried that a life spent on a few simple operations would make a labourer “as stupid and ignorant as it is possible for a human...to become”. Did Smith think the costs outweighed the benefits? It is hard to be sure.

16. VC failure rates

Sequoia’s best-ever US fund had half its investments fail.

17. Cross-border payments company Aspora is disrupting US-India remittance transfers. 

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Fintechs Wise and Remitly do that by partnering with a local bank, with which they park funds worth two to three days of remittance volume as a lien. This fund lies as a security, untouched. Now, when a person in the US sends money to somebody in India, the fintech pings its Indian banking partner, which uses its own funds to make a local transfer to the recipient’s account. This reduces the speed of transfer from days to minutes. The fintech then reimburses the banking partner for all the transfers via a bulk cross-border transfer.

... 30–40% of the $135 billion remittances to India are locked in as liens to banks. Aspora does about $300 million worth of remittances a month. So, to maintain two days’ worth of remittance volumes with its local banking partners, like Yes Bank, the startup needs to park away at least $20 million of capital... In 2024, Aspora chose to route nearly a third of its cross-border remittances through stablecoins. These digital currencies operate with little legal oversight and take away the need to have so much capital as a lien... In using stablecoins, all that a fintech like Aspora had to do was partner with a cryptoexchange in the originating and receiving countries. And in the process, it can simply swap the US dollar for a stablecoin like Tether. That gets swapped out for the rupee by another exchange in India. This swapping involves a fee of 20 basis points in all, said the crypto-exchange executive, as the exchanges also take care of compliance, conversion, and the payout. That’s much less than maintaining liquidity, which can add up to 1% of the total cost...
When a fintech uses stablecoins to process remittances, the recipients are in a fix. For one, Indians have to pay a 1% tax on the money they receive. Two, the instruction that comes along with the remittance would only show that the money came from an exchange, not the sender... In fact, in some cases, when users sent money to their own accounts in India, local banks, unable to see the sender, saw it as suspicious activity and blocked their accounts.

The big risk Aspora faces is regulatory. Though not banned in India, RBI does not recognise Stablecoins or cryptocurrencies generally. Only about 1% of the $135 bn annual remittances use Stablecoins for now. 

The article also has an interesting graphic about the changes in sources of remittances into India. Declining share of Gulf remittances (except Qatar) and increasing shares from the US, UK, Australia, and Singapore. 

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 18. For all talk of China's AI surge, it has few listed companies in the sector.
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And the US and Europe dominate the higher end of the supply-chain. 
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19. The world economy's China problem in one graphic.
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20. Huawei triples local sourcing ratio in smartphones from 19% in 2020 to 57% in 2024!
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Huawei increased the proportion of Chinese-made components in the Mate 70 Pro to 57%. The estimated total component cost of the Pura 80 Pro is $380, with the Chinese-made component ratio steady at 57%... For the Pura 80 Pro's system-on-a-chip, which integrates multiple semiconductors, the company used the Kirin 9020 chipset designed by subsidiary HiSilicon... For DRAM, which handles short-term memory, Huawei switched from imported products to those made by ChangXin Memory Technologies. For long-term NAND flash memory, it switched to products made by Yangtze Memory Technologies. Huawei switched to products from BOE Technology Group for the organic light-emitting diode display, which is estimated to cost over $64 per unit.
But in recent years Chinese companies have also entered the sphere with state support, led by Kaluga Queen, a farm on Lake Qingdao. And they have dived in with such stunning efficiency and focus — echoing what has happened with, say, solar panels — that Kaluga is now the biggest caviar producer in the world. Indeed, China accounts for between half and two-thirds of global production... And Chinese officials now want their entrepreneurs to expand into other gourmet foods like smoked salmon, Wagyu beef and truffles. That is creating waves: at a recent meeting of the North Atlantic Seafood Forum, a Nordic luminary flourished a 7kg Chinese-farmed salmon on stage — and declared it to be tasty, and cheap because of Beijing’s subsidies. Meanwhile, the Japanese government has restricted exports of Wagyu genetics to China to protect its beef farmers, and some Italian and French caviar houses are complaining about the pricing threat from Chinese rivals. American caviar makers are reportedly lobbying the White House for protection, too.
22. Finally, in celebration of racial integration, the Springbok rugby team.
The one thing that unites South Africans of all colours is the Springboks rugby team... South African rugby has been so “transformed” — a word the African National Congress uses to mean overcoming the grim legacy of apartheid — that affirmative action is no longer necessary. A squad, picked purely on merit, is automatically multiracial. The Springboks’ most celebrated players include Siya Kolisi, the inspirational captain, who is Black and from an impoverished township in the Eastern Cape. Sacha Feinberg-Mngomezulu, the brilliant fly-half, has a Zulu mother and a father of Jewish heritage. The 50-plus member squad named this year by Johan “Rassie” Erasmus, the Afrikaner head coach who has led the team to successive World Cup victories, contains players from South Africa’s Black, white and so-called Coloured communities. The Springboks are a case study of what successful Black empowerment looks like. Where once players were selected from among 4.5mn white people, today they are drawn from the entirety of South Africa’s 65mn population.

Saturday, November 8, 2025

Weekend reading links

1. Paul Krugman highlights that Trump tariffs are in practice, lower than the official rates. Tariffs on paper are the average tariff rate one would predict if we apply the announced tariff rates to what we were importing before the tariffs. The tariff rate in practice is the actual amount collected in tariff revenue divided by the value of imports. 

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One illustration.
Imports from Canada are a case in point. Even under the Trump tariffs, most goods from Canada can enter duty-free if they’re “USMCA compliant” — that is, they qualified for zero tariffs under the free-trade agreement formerly known as NAFTA, rebranded but barely changed in practice during Trump’s first term. In 2024, only 38 percent of U.S. imports from Canada entered under the USMCA. That’s surprisingly low, but the main reason was probably paperwork: certifying that a good complies with the free trade rules requires a lot of documentation. For smaller exporters, in particular, that paperwork often wasn’t worth doing, because tariffs were low even for goods not certified as USMCA compliant. Now the tariffs are much higher, and there has been a rush to do the extra paperwork. In June 2025, 81 percent of imports from Canada entered duty free. Not incidentally, this points to a hidden cost of the tariffs: Companies are incurring significant administrative costs to deal with a vastly more complex tariff system.

2. Important point about Zohran Mamdani's victory in NYC.

More than 2mn New Yorkers cast ballots in the largest turnout in a mayoral race since 1969.

To put this in perspective, 1.1 million voters voted four years back! 

The Times has a very good account of this remarkable victory.

A backbench assemblyman who had immigrated to New York City at age 7, he had almost no citywide profile. Even fellow socialists thought his views on policing and Israel would put a hard ceiling on his support... Mr. Mamdani’s political rise may be remembered for what came first: the buoyant, flamboyant, rule-breaking primary run that united a new coalition of Brooklyn gentrifiers and Queens cabbies around the city’s growing affordability crisis and the birth of a megawatt talent... The arc of his success is nothing short of staggering. At the start of the year, Mr. Mamdani was polling at 1 percent, tied, as he likes to say, with the candidate known as “someone else.” Few New Yorkers recognized his name, and his own political team put the odds of winning as low as 3 percent. Now, at age 34, he will be New York City’s youngest leader in more than a century, amid a pile of historic firsts: the first Muslim mayor, the first South Asian and arguably the most influential democratic socialist in the country.

3. Nothing captures the essence of the first ten months of President Trump more than tariffs. The FT has a good graphic. 

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The point to be noted is the difference between the notional tariff and the actual tariff.

4. European defence spending is on the rise, and is expected to be an important driver of economic growth and innovation. 
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5. Japan's famed convenience stores, konbinis, are facing the consequences of the country's demographic problems.
FamilyMart, 7-Eleven and Lawson all rely on a franchise business model to operate stores, taking a cut of sales or gross profit as a royalty in return for store owners using their brand, products and supply chains. In 7-Eleven’s case, typically between 40 per cent to 70 per cent of gross profit — sales minus cost of goods sold — is paid to the company. 7-Eleven Japan does not recognise the Convenience Store Union because franchisees are not its employees... store owners were under pressure because they were struggling to hire more staff. They had little leeway to raise wages unless the companies share more of the profits... Japan’s big three convenience store chains are trying to introduce technology such as self-service tills, artificial intelligence-assisted ordering systems and cleaning robots to reduce the volume of work. If those efforts fall short, the companies could be forced to introduce new franchise contract terms in order to account for higher wages, said analysts. Or, if new franchisees cannot be found, they will have to close stores.

6. Venture capital fund returns

For many years, long-run venture capital returns reported by Cambridge Associates reflected the huge profits from the dotcom boom of the late 1990s, a time when the average VC fund returned more than 20 per cent a year. Last year, though, those funds finally faded into history. Cambridge’s 25-year view now only catches funds raised — and invested — as the 90s boom turned into a bubble. These showed an annualised return of only 8 per cent. For every other period measured by Cambridge since then, VC returns fall below returns from investing in companies trading on Nasdaq. These are averages, and the profits in VC have always been heavily skewed to a handful of successful firms, making it essential to get exposure to the right funds.

And the top VCs benefit from a Mathew Effect,

Startups struggling for attention are drawn to the investors with the best track records: winning the right financial backers acts as a strong signal for young companies with little else to validate their claims of future greatness. That means the most successful VC firms usually get first option on the smartest founders and the best deals.

7.  FT visual article on perhaps the grandest follies of our times, the Saudi Arabian futuristic city of Neom and its 170 km long 500 m tall mirror glass structure, The Line, conceived by Prince Mohammed Bin Salman.

The budget for The Line was $1.6tn, Neom executives were told in late 2021. But an updated internal estimate the following spring put the cost at around $4.5tn, according to a person familiar with the estimates. That is roughly the size of Germany’s annual economic output. Teams then began tackling the unprecedented design and engineering challenges raised: imagining what life would be like inside a 500 metre-high, 170km-long wall; sourcing the steel and cement that would consume much of global supply; and making water circulate in a manmade deepwater port with no current... Its staggering requirements for materials were enough to overwhelm both the capacity of its local infrastructure, and its pricing power... to make the concrete for the first 20 modules, the contractors would need a supply of cement every year that would be greater than France’s annual output. Each 800-metre module required, by design, about 3.5mn tonnes of structural steel, 5.5mn cubic metres of concrete and 3.5mn tonnes of reinforcement steel — the narrow steel bars twisted into cage forms to strengthen the reinforced concrete. “We were going to take something like 60 per cent of the global production of green steel [per year], which causes the price to go up,” said a senior design manager.

8. Ed Luce writes that peak Trump is over. He writes that the Democratic Party election victories owed significantly to their focus on rising prices, and that the deal with China postponing tariffs for one year may have won Trump some reprieve on the inflation front. 

Trump now has a strong incentive to declare similar wins on other trade wars. In that regard, Tuesday night was also a good one for Brazil, India, Canada and other targets of Trump’s ire. By a quirk of timing, the US Supreme Court on Wednesday held hearings on the legality of his tariff war. Was it coincidence that conservative justices sounded unusually bold in querying that? They too might possibly help Trump by striking the tariffs down.

9. John Burn-Murdoch points out that culture conflicts (and not economic differences) have been the drivers of political polarisation in the US.

In their pioneering paper The Business of the Culture War, published earlier this month, MIT and Harvard economists Shakked Noy and Aakaash Rao use second-by-second TV viewing data to show how the commercial incentives of cable news channels helped to sow discord not only among their viewers but across America more broadly.
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Their key insights are that content relating to crime, immigration, race, gender and criticism of elites reliably increases viewing figures (while economics and healthcare cause people to switch away). This means there is a resulting shift in coverage towards more culture war issues and fewer socio-economic stories, which leads voters to rate these issues as more important. Politicians then respond by campaigning more on cultural hot button topics. All told, they estimate that the emergence and growth of cable news can account for fully one-third of the increase in US cultural conflict since 2000.
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10. State capacity fact of the day, Competition Commission of India
It has exactly one active office. In New Delhi... CCI has no presence in Bengaluru, one small outpost in Navi Mumbai, and a “touch-and-go” office in Kolkata that lawyers say is barely functional. Markets regulator Sebi, by comparison, has 22 offices. The aviation regulator, DGCA, has around 20. When it conducts raids, it flies 25–30 officers to Mumbai. Every investigation means teams of lawyers and informants shuttling to Delhi for two years. “In India, such a large country, there is only one big agency for 28 states,” said Kumar. “Look at the US. There are competition agencies in all the states.” The costs add up. Filing a case itself can set a company back Rs 50,000 to Rs 6 lakh. Add multiple Delhi trips—three or four by the informant, three by lawyers, over a 2–2.5-year period—and justice becomes a luxury good... The Commission is still operating with roughly the same headcount it had in 2009. The Director-General’s office, sanctioned for around 20 officers, has seven. The merger-control team has six. Case disposals that once took three months now take six to eight—on a good day.
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11. FT reports that the US has added "poison pill" termination clauses to recent trade deals with countries like Malaysia and Cambodia, which threaten to end the deals if either signs a rival pact that jeopardises "essential US interests" or "poses a material threat" to US security. This is a form of "loyalty test" for trade partners. 
Simon Evenett, professor of geopolitics and strategy at IMD business school in Lausanne, Switzerland, said the clauses were so broad that they handed the US unilateral powers to terminate the agreements, giving Washington fresh leverage across the region. The agreement with Malaysia also includes a provision requiring it to align with US sanctions and other economic restrictions. “Ultimately, poison pill provisions transform trade agreements from purely commercial instruments into tools for managing partner countries’ broader foreign economic policy orientation,” Evenett wrote in a paper this week. Although there is a partial legal precedent for poison pills in the 2020 US-Mexico-Canada Agreement, Evenett said the USMCA clause had legally defined triggers, in contrast to the broad conditions in the Malaysia and Cambodia pacts.

12. The rise and rise of US Government debt

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Saturday, October 18, 2025

Weekend reading links

1. As Zohran Mamdani charges to victory in New York mayoral elections, an FT long read looks at the rise of Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) and socialism in general in the US.

In 1910, Wisconsin elected the first Socialist member of the US House of Representatives. And in the same year, Milwaukee, the largest city in the state, returned a socialist as mayor. Socialists would run Milwaukee for a total of 38 of the next 50 years, earning it the reputation as one of the best-governed cities in the country. The press called the Milwaukee mayors “sewer socialists”, a label they adopted for themselves, as it drew attention to their preference for providing high-quality public goods and services over the pursuit of class struggle. The term made a comeback this year when Mamdani used it to describe his own vision for New York. “Sewer socialism,” he said, means “that we want to showcase our ideals, not by lecturing people about how correct we are, but rather by delivering and letting that delivery be the argument itself.” 

As the historian Joshua Freeman pointed out, New York had a sewer socialist of its own in the first half of the 20th century: Fiorello La Guardia, who was mayor from 1934 to 1946. Although nominally a Republican, La Guardia governed “like a socialist”, Freeman argued. During his tenure, the city’s physical infrastructure was transformed out of all recognition. And as well as building highways, swimming pools and playgrounds across all five boroughs, he established the New York City Housing Authority, the first such public body in the country, introduced rent controls, brought competing private subway lines under unified public control and kept transport fares low — priorities all echoed in Mamdani’s promises to “freeze the rent” for stabilised tenants and provide “fast and free buses”. “Zohran has definitely seen La Guardia as one of the mayors to emulate,” said Gustavo Gordillo, a co-chair of the New York DSA.

2. Good primer on the practice of borrowing against receivables. This practice has a long history, including Satyam Computers in India to Enron in the US. 

Receivables are difficult for auditors to scrutinise. Companies have lots of clients. Even when they are legitimate, it is hard to tell how much cash will eventually arrive from them. Shady practices such as “channel stuffing”, which involves sending customers more product than they have ordered and temporarily recognising the additional revenue, require a forensic eye to spot... Factoring, in which a supplier sells its receivables to another party at a discount to get hold of cash more quickly, has grown fast. According to FCI, a trade body, the field had a turnover of $4trn last year, up from just over $2trn in 2010... the cost of digging into the creditworthiness of a given company’s receivables can ruin the economics of lending money in such a manner, as margins are often thin. Some forms of credit, such as that secured against regular transactions, are among the most reliable in corporate lending, and thus offer modest returns. Others are riskier and mean borrowers must cough up to entice lenders. 

China’s local-government-financing vehicles, through which the country’s astounding infrastructure boom has been funded, might be the source of the next receivables blow-up. According to data collected by Goldman Sachs, a bank, the receivables of LGFVs for which financial information is available ran to 22.7trn yuan last year, equivalent to $3.2trn or 17% of China’s GDP, up from 13% in 2018. That is bad enough. Worse still, money is largely owed to the LGFVs by local governments themselves, many in perilous financial positions.

3. Important China fact of the day - Nobel Prize edition.

China, despite its vast scientific workforce, has won only one Nobel for research conducted on the mainland (although six Chinese-born laureates have won for research in America, and one for research in Britain).

4. Africa is returning to the era of long-serving dictators

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 5. Advances in battery and e-bike technologies and dedicated bike lanes are powering a revolution in the use of bicycles across global cities. 

Montreal has become North America’s leading cycling city... Across the city more than a third of the population cycles at least once a week... In London cyclists now outnumber cars in the City, the financial district, by two to one. Paris, where they now outnumber motorists across the whole city, is catching up with Europe’s traditional bike capitals, Amsterdam and Copenhagen, though cycling is still growing in those cities, too. In Copenhagen, the Danish capital, bikes account for almost half of commuter journeys to work and school... Even in Beijing, just 30 years after most cyclists were pushed off the city’s roads to make way for cars, the number of cyclists is rising again.
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6. The Government of India has approved a new scheme to promote the shipbuilding industry.
The Union Cabinet has just approved an outlay of nearly ₹70,000 crore to re-vitalise the shipbuilding industry. On the anvil are the establishment of a Shipbuilding Finance Scheme of about ₹25,000 crore to help domestic shipbuilders, a ₹25,000 crore Maritime Development Fund for low-cost financing that will be made available to shipbuilding and related industries, and a ₹20,000 crore fund for setting up shipbuilding development clusters where concentrated attention can be given to the requirements of shipbuilders. This will include expanding the existing capacity of maritime infrastructure and enhancing land connectivity. In addition, the state will establish an apex body to provide credit risk coverage and generally to enhance capability development.

But Michael Pinto urges a note of caution on one aspect of the scheme

This is the proposal to link disbursement of funds under the scheme to the use of at least 40 per cent of local content. It is difficult to see the logic of this proposal. The government must decide its priorities: Does it want to encourage shipbuilding in the country or does it want to encourage the use of local inputs? There could well be a contradiction between the two. If an entrepreneur is investing his money in shipbuilding, we must assume that he will use the best materials at the most competitive rates. If such materials are available locally, there is no way that anyone would go outside to source them. By insisting on a minimum local content will we not be compromising on quality issues and protecting local suppliers who have not taken the trouble to upgrade their production to international standards?

7. Putting in perspective, the importance of rare earths in the defence sector.

In the first week of the Iran-Israel conflict in June this year, approximately 800 missiles were exchanged. Each contained anywhere between two and 20 kilogrammes of rare earth elements, including two, dysprosium and terbium, now subject to Chinese export controls. Based on conservative estimates from the limited data, this means anywhere between 1.6 and 16 metric tonnes of rare earth elements were vaporised in that conflict in seven days. Ukraine’s extraordinary recent performance in its drone war against the Russian invasion is almost entirely dependent on electronics and magnets imported from China. Ukraine is now less concerned about whether European arms deliveries will arrive on time and more worried about the flow of tech imports from China. In the past 30 years, China has become the world leader in the processing of most of the 54 raw minerals that the US Geological Survey classifies as critical for US industry, including the defence sector. Currently the Chinese can process virtually any mineral 30 per cent more cheaply than its competitors.

8. This long read on the story of Patrick James, the founder of the collapsed auto-parts conglomerate, First Brands, is fascinating. With a string of business failures behind him, and finding formal asset-backed lenders cut off, he turned to the private credit industry, and his success in mobilising massive private debt is a testament to the problems of lax lending standards in the $2 trillion industry.  

The bankruptcy filing was only the beginning of a harrowing experience for the group’s lenders. It was soon revealed that First Brands, which last year made a loss of $12mn, had racked up close to $12bn in both conventional loans and off-balance sheet financing. That was billions of dollars more than many of its lenders had realised. Even worse, an investigation under way as part of the bankruptcy began to probe whether the invoices and inventory underpinning much of the group’s financing were pledged “more than once” or “commingled” between lenders. Department of Justice prosecutors are also examining how so much money disappeared so quickly... many of First Brands’ mainstream lenders were unaware that the group had also raised billions of dollars backed by its inventory through off-balance sheet “special purpose entities”...
Many lenders now fear they may have fallen prey to a shell game, involving hidden off-balance sheet entities and phantom collateral. One lawyer told a Texas courtroom this month that his client was as much a “victim” as a creditor. Another claims that more than $2bn extended by lenders “simply vanished”... Billions of dollars in losses have been collectively inflicted on titans and pioneers of private capital, such as Blackstone and CarVal, to little-known equipment leasing firms. Financial institutions from Zurich to Tokyo are facing reputational damage for their dealings with a company that was scarcely known outside the murkier corners of credit markets until a few weeks ago. Even insurance firms may now be on the hook after writing policies against the complex financial products that funded First Brands.

This description of loans made by Jeffries, one of the earliest private credit lenders to First Brands, is instructive. 

Jefferies, which does not take deposits, generally did not underwrite such loans. Instead, it passed on much of the risk outside the banking system to collateralised loan obligations, investment vehicles that transform risky loans into bonds with pristine credit ratings through the alchemy of securitisation. Several CLO managers told the FT that many of their peers were likely to have done only cursory checks on James’s business record in their haste to package his company’s debt up into tradeable securities. While Jefferies’ stock in trade was selling risky loans to investment funds, James also made heavy use of supply-chain financing — a controversial tool through which a bank pays a company’s suppliers, in an arrangement accountants do not class as debt. In addition, First Brands tapped other forms of borrowing tied to assets, inventory and invoices, although it consistently also took out traditional bank loans.

9. China's sweeping rare earth export control restrictions take a leaf out of the US playbook

The type of supply chain restriction that China is embarking on first came into play in 2020. Washington dusted off an obscure provision known as the foreign direct product rule to target the Chinese tech giant Huawei, which the U.S. government considered a national security threat. But instead of restricting American technology exports just to Huawei, the United States said any company anywhere in the world could not ship a product to Huawei if it contained U.S. parts or was made with U.S. equipment or software. Because of the United States’ key role in the global chipmaking industry, the rules basically encompassed all advanced technology. It was a broad exertion of U.S. economic power that became the basis of a series of global tech rules during the Biden administration. Although foreign governments chafed at being told what to do, many cooperated for fear of being cut off from U.S. technology.

10. In a reflection of how dependent the US economy has become on the AI-fuelled equity market boom, research by Mark Zandi at Moody’s shows that the top 10% of spenders account for half of all US personal spending, and a wealth effect of 5 cents (from every dollar Americans gain on the stock market, they spend a nickel).  

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Saturday, September 27, 2025

Weekend reading links

1. For all talk of AI focus, it does not appear to be showing up in Infosys's personnel hiring over the last six months. 
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Amidst all the investment frenzy in the US and elsewhere over AI, Infosys is spending Rs 18,000 Cr buying back its shares, on top of spending Rs 95,000 Cr on buybacks and dividends over the last five years. 

2. China's dominance of the wind turbines market increased sharply since 2020! (HT: Adam Tooze)
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As recently as 2020 the global wind turbine market was still a two-horse race with the US not out of the running. Today, China produces more than double the turbines built by the US and Europe put together.
3. It must remain a matter of big concern that even as the world economy has financialised, the cost of sending hard-earned and pitifully small amount of remittances remains elevated at an astronomically high 7.9% for Sub-Saharan Africa (HT: Adam Tooze). 
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Additionally, the cost of sending remittances to Africa remains the highest in the world, which dampens the benefits from migration that accrue to Africa. Remittances are one of the most tangible ways for countries of origin to realize the development benefits of migration. Despite the technological advancements in recent decades, the cost of sending remittances remained at 6.2 percent globally in the second quarter of 2023, more than twice the Sustainable Development Goal target of 3 percent. This is largely due to the fees and foreign exchange margins that migrants and their families must pay in origin and destination countries. SubSaharan Africa was the region with the highest cost of remittances in 2023, at 7.9 percent, whereas South Asia had the lowest cost, at 4.3 percent. Figure 3.3 shows that in 18 of Africa’s 29 core countries and seven of Africa’s nine periphery countries for which data are available, the cost of sending remittances is higher than the global average.

The low rate for South Asia is one of the less discussed successes of India's financial market evolution. 

4. France's public debt has risen alarmingly since the GFC.

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5. Adam Tooze points to the scale of Friedrich Merz's fiscal stimulus (via TS Lombard). 
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Clearly, Germany is stimulating its economy with vengeance, and it appears to have enough space to do so.

6. Unit economics of AI solutions in India is not very attractive.
Netflix, a video-streaming service, costs as little as $1.69 a month in India, compared with $7.99 in America. For cloud services with a low marginal cost, this is no great sacrifice. But running AI queries is expensive. Processing costs for typical users currently hover at around $0.07 per million “tokens” (the units of data processed by AI models) and the response to a single query can run to hundreds or thousands of tokens. That expense is the same whether the user is in Bangalore or the Bay Area.

7. This sums up the challenge with making money in India.

While India’s large population offers scale, it is a difficult market to monetise. According to digital market researcher Sensor Tower, Indians led the world in 2024, downloading 24.3bn apps and spending 1.13tn hours on them. However, their spending was not even in the top 20, at less than $1bn.

8. Palestine is rapidly disappearing.

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9. The Economist has an issue focusing on gig workers, who number 200 million in China (40% of urban workforce) of whom about 84 million rely on platform-based employment (delivering parcels and food, and driving bikes and cars) and another 40 million are freelance factory workers. There are some emerging trends in gig work in China.
Lately gig work in China has spread to its vaunted manufacturing sector. The regimented proletariat is gradually being replaced by millions of casual workers who fill jobs “on-demand”, flitting from one factory floor to another at the direction of giant recruitment platforms. The jobs often require no skills beyond a knowledge of the Roman alphabet. The workers may stick with them for no more than a few weeks or even days. Researchers put their number at perhaps 40m, a third of China’s manufacturing workforce—and more than three times the size of America’s.

One reason for the rise of this gig army is that firms want flexibility. Employers prize the freedom to scale their business up or down, responding to seasonal demand, the vagaries of the market and the shifting winds of geopolitics. Technology has played a role, too. Smartphone apps help match customers’ orders with available delivery drivers; in manufacturing, technology has automated away many tricky tasks that used to need experience. Even as this has created jobs for highly skilled engineers, it has left gaps in assembly, packaging and inspection that any warm body can fill. Flexible employment of all kinds suits many workers. Those who are adept at navigating the platform economy can earn more by job-hopping than they could from a single employer.

This is an important snippet about the gig workers.

The average age of factory gig workers is 26. About 80% are male; 75-80% are single and childless. In manufacturing hubs increasing numbers of young workers sleep in parks and under overpasses.

10. FT reports of failures by subprime auto lender Tricolor Holdings and car parts supplier First Brands Group that raise questions about lending and gatekeeping standards. 

Tricolor had won pristine triple-A ratings as it borrowed in credit markets, while First Brands may have amassed as much as $10bn in debt and off-balance sheet financing and was close to raising even more last month... Both companies made use of asset-backed debt, with Tricolor bundling up subprime car loans into bonds and First Brands tapping specialist funds to provide credit against its invoices. At its core, asset-backed finance is the ability to lend against a specific asset or loan, including consumer credit card balances, leases on railcars and solar panels, aircraft and music royalties...
US investment firms have in recent years pushed deeper into asset-backed debt, often pitching it as a safer product than the loans to junk-rated companies that are their bread and butter. But Tricolor is now being probed over fraud allegations by the US Department of Justice, while some investors have long had questions around First Brands’ financial reporting and use of invoice factoring, with lenders now concerned that they lacked visibility about the scale of off-balance sheet financing... Several large banks have also been caught up in the collapse, including JPMorgan Chase and Fifth Third, which are exposed to losses on hundreds of millions of dollars' worth of auto loans. A second investor who has since sold their position in packaged-up Tricolor loans said they had no idea how potential financial irregularities went unnoticed by JPMorgan Chase, one of the banks that underwrote debt offerings.

These kinds of news are now a recurrent staple of financial markets.

11. Michael Moritz comes out all guns blazing at the decision to levy $100,000 fees for H-1B visas.

Every day the Oval Office seems closer to becoming the equivalent of what the sidewalk outside Satriale’s Pork Store used to be for Tony Soprano: a place where a dubious cast of characters spawns brutish extortion schemes and hit jobs... As usual with the Trump administration, the announcement was chaotic and half-baked... Set aside the drama, the announcement demonstrated yet again the fragile grasp the president and his acolytes have about why the US — especially its technology sector — has worked so well. The large tech companies hire foreign nationals because they possess particular skills. They also retain them to perform tasks in areas where the US has labour shortages.

12. New Zealand appoints Anna Bremen, a Swedish economist who has been the first deputy governor of the Sveriges Riksbank since 2019, to head its central bank, the Reserve Bank of New Zealand. 

13. Akash Prakash has some striking numbers about the AI boom in equity markets in the US.

The Magnificent Seven (Mag-7) holds a 32 per cent weight in the S&P 500. In January 2023, just after ChatGPT was launched, this number was only 18 per cent. Nvidia, with an 8 per cent weight in the S&P 500, now has the largest single-stock weight in the history of the index. Its current market capitalisation is equivalent to 15 per cent of US gross domestic product... If we look at the top 10 companies in the S&P 500 (basically the Mag-7, Broadcom, Berkshire and JPMorgan), they account for a record 40 per cent share of the index and 25 per cent share of corporate earnings. We have never seen such concentration of company size and earnings... Since January 2021, 55 per cent of the entire gain in the S&P 500 was accounted for by the top 10 stocks... In 2023 and 2024, the Mag-7 saw earnings growth of about 35 per cent within the S&P 500, while earnings for the remaining 493 stocks grew only 3 per cent...

The Mag-7 and Oracle account for over 35 per cent of total S&P 500 capex. US hyperscalers (the major tech companies) have doubled their share of private domestic investment since 2023. For these hyperscalers, capex has now crossed 20 per cent of sales, compared with under 10 per cent previously. Even on operating cash flow, they are using over 65 per cent to fund data centre buildouts. To put this in perspective, their capex-to-sales ratio is 20 per cent, and research & development-to-sales is 15 per cent, meaning 35 per cent of sales is being reinvested into growth. Truly unprecedented numbers... At their peak in 2000, telecom companies’ capital expenditure accounted for 0.8 per cent of US gross domestic product. Today, hyperscalers’ capex is already at 1.2 per cent of US gross domestic product (GDP), with the current projection being that this number will cross 1.4 per cent by 2028.

14. Countries that have managed to increase their tax to GDP ratio significantly between 2000 and 2022.

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15. Very interesting snippet about the impact of superstitions.

In 1966 — a hinoeuma, or “fire horse”, year under an astrological superstition — the fear of giving birth to a wild, destructive and unmarriageable daughter induced a nationwide collapse in pregnancies... The number of babies born in Japan in 1966 plummeted by 463,000 from the previous year, representing a 25 per cent drop. To reduce opportunity risk, marriages also tumbled by 10 per cent. By the end of 1967, with the threat lifted, births had rebounded by an astounding 42 per cent. On historic charts, the spasmodic V-shape makes 1966 look like a colossal data error... Hinoeuma years, which combine the animals of the Chinese zodiac with 10 celestial signs, come around on a 60-year cycle. The next one is 2026.

16. The Magnificent Seven now make up a third of the US stock market capitalisation. 

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Nvidia's $4.3 trillion capitalisation exceeds the $3 trillion value of UK FTSE 100.

17. A China Labour Watch (CLW) report has found that more than half the factory staff assembling iPhones at Foxconn's largest factory at Zhengzhou were seasonal staff known as "dispatch workers", despite Chinese law capping their use at 10% of companys workforce. 

US-based CLW also found that dispatch workers faced staggered payment schedules that withhold part of their wages to deter them from quitting during peak production. These staff were not entitled to the same benefits as full-time employees, such as paid sick leave, paid holiday and social insurance that includes medical coverage and pension contributions. CLW also claimed that there is systematic discrimination in hiring certain ethnic minorities and pregnant women... Foxconn uses the flexibility afforded by temporary contracts to adjust to fluctuating demand cycles and, in recent years, to respond to Apple’s shifting requirements about where iPhones should be made... Dispatch workers get a base salary of Rmb2,100 per month, the minimum wage in Henan, but the bonuses make their salaries competitive in the manufacturing sector. These bonuses are typically paid out after three to four months to ensure retention. Many workers preferred the flexibility of short-term contracts and higher hourly wages. However, many said that they had to work a lot of overtime to bolster their hourly wages, which can be as low as Rmb12 for some workers, but range between Rmb25 and Rmb28 for most, depending on experience levels and hiring cycles. CLW found that many staff work 60 hours per week and others up to 75 hours.

18. Stunning graphic that shows the scale of Nvidia stock's performance.  

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