FTSE 100 hits new record high!

FTSE 100 hits record high!

On 20 August 2025, the FTSE 100 hit a new all-time intraday high of 9,301.19, surpassing its previous records.

It closed the day at 9,288.14, up 1.1%—a strong finish despite hotter-than-expected UK inflation and a tech sell-off dragging down Wall Street.

The rally was driven by gains in heavyweight stocks like AstraZeneca, HSBC, Unilever, BAT, RELX, and Lloyds, plus a standout 5.6% surge from ConvaTec Group following its $300 million buyback announcement

FTSE 100 hits new all-time record on 20th August 2025

FTSE 100 hits new all-time record on 20th August 2025

Futures witnessed the FTSE 100 touch 9016.

UK statistical blind spots: The mounting failures of the UK’s ONS

ONS failings raises concern

The Office for National Statistics (ONS), once regarded as the bedrock of Britain’s economic data, is now facing a crisis of credibility.

A string of recent failings has exposed deep-rooted issues in the agency’s data collection, processing, and publication methods—raising alarm among economists, policymakers, and watchdogs alike.

The most visible setback came in August 2025, when the ONS abruptly delayed its monthly retail sales figures, citing the need for ‘further quality assurance’. This two-week postponement, while seemingly minor, is symptomatic of broader dysfunction.

Retail data is a key indicator of consumer confidence and spending, and its delay undermines timely decision-making across government and financial sectors.

But the problems run deeper. Labour market statistics—once a gold standard—have been plagued by collapsing response rates. The Labour Force Survey, a cornerstone of employment analysis, now garners responses from fewer than 20% of participants, down from 50% a decade ago.

This erosion has left institutions like the Bank of England flying blind on crucial metrics such as wage growth and economic inactivity.

Trade data and producer price indices have also suffered from delays and revisions, prompting the Office for Statistics Regulation (OSR) to demand a full overhaul.

In June, a review led by Sir Robert Devereux identified “deep-seated” structural issues within the ONS, calling for urgent modernisation.

The resignation of ONS chief Ian Diamond in May, citing health reasons, added further instability to an already beleaguered institution.

Critics argue that the failings are not merely technical but systemic. Funding constraints, outdated methodologies, and a culture resistant to reform have all contributed to the malaise.

As Dame Meg Hillier, chair of the Treasury Select Committee, reportedly warned: ‘Wrong decisions made by these institutions can mean constituents defaulting on mortgages or losing their livelihoods’.

Efforts are underway to replace the flawed Labour Force Survey with a new ‘Transformed Labour Market Survey’, but its rollout may not be completed until 2027.

Meanwhile, the ONS is attempting to integrate alternative data sources—such as VAT records and rental prices—to bolster its national accounts. Yet progress remains slow.

In an era where data drives policy, the failings of the ONS are more than bureaucratic hiccups—they are a threat to informed governance.

Without swift and transparent reform, Britain risks making economic decisions based on statistical guesswork.

UK inflation rises to 3.8% in July 2025 amid summer travel surge

UK inflation up again!

The UK’s annual inflation rate climbed to 3.8% in July, marking its highest level since January 2024 and outpacing economists’ forecasts of 3.7%.

The Office for National Statistics (ONS) attributed the unexpected rise to soaring airfares, elevated accommodation costs, and persistent food price pressures.

Transport costs were the primary driver, with airfares experiencing their steepest July increase since monthly tracking began in 2001.

Analysts suggest the timing of school holidays and a spike in demand—possibly amplified by high-profile events like the Oasis reunion tour—contributed to the surge.

Food inflation also continued its upward trend, with notable increases in coffee, fresh orange juice, meat, and chocolate.

The Retail Prices Index (RPI), which influences rail fare caps, rose to 4.8%, potentially signalling a 5.8% hike in regulated train fares next year.

Core inflation, which excludes volatile items such as energy and food, matched the headline rate at 3.8%, suggesting underlying price pressures remain stubborn.

Services inflation rose to 5%, reinforcing concerns that inflation may be embedding itself more deeply in the economy.

Despite the Bank of England’s recent rate cut to 4%, policymakers face a delicate balancing act. With inflation still nearly double the Bank’s 2% target, further monetary easing may be limited.

UK inflation July 2025 infographic

Chancellor Rachel Reeves acknowledged the challenge, stating that while progress has been made since the previous government’s double-digit inflation, ‘there’s more to do to ease the cost of living’.

Measures such as raising the minimum wage and expanding free school meals aim to cushion households from rising prices.

As inflation edges closer to a projected 4% peak in September 2025, the coming months will test both fiscal and monetary resilience.

Can we trust the data coming from the ONS?

See report here.

Japan faces steepest export decline in four years

Japan exports drop

Japan’s economy has hit a troubling patch, with July 2025 marking its sharpest export contraction in over four years.

The Ministry of Finance reported a 2.6% year-on-year drop, driven largely by tariff led trade tensions and weakening global demand.

The most dramatic impact came from the United States, where exports fell 10.1%, led by a 28.4% plunge in automobile shipments.

This follows the U.S. administration’s decision to impose 25% tariffs on Japanese vehicles and auto parts in April—a move that has rattled Japan’s automotive sector, long a pillar of its export economy.

Despite a partial tariff rollback to 15% in July, the damage was already done. Japanese carmakers absorbed much of the cost to maintain shipment volumes, which only fell 3.2%, but the value loss was substantial.

Japan – July export data infographic

Exports to China also declined by 3.5%, underscoring broader regional weakness. Meanwhile, imports dropped 7.5%, signalling sluggish domestic consumption and further strain on Japan’s trade balance, which recorded a 117.5 billion yen deficit.

Economists warn that if the export downturn continues, Japan could face a recession. Although Q2 GDP showed modest growth of 0.3%, the July figures suggest that momentum may be fading.

The Bank of Japan is now expected to hold off on interest rate hikes, with its next policy meeting scheduled for 19th September 2025.

As global markets digest the implications, Japan’s export slump serves as a stark reminder of how vulnerable even advanced economies can be to shifting trade policies and geopolitical headwinds.

Has AI peaked – is it in a bubble?

AI frenzy in a bubble?

The short answer is no! AI hasn’t peaked in terms of potential—but the market frenzy around it may well be in bubble territory.

🚀 Signs of a Bubble?

  • Valuations vs. Earnings: The top 10 companies in the S&P 500—heavily weighted toward AI giants like Nvidia, Microsoft, and Apple—are more overvalued today than during the dot-com boom.
  • Retail Frenzy: Retail investors are piling into AI stocks, often driven by hype rather than fundamentals. Meme stocks and AI-branded crypto tokens are surging again.
  • Low Conversion Rates: Despite massive user numbers, paid adoption is weak. OpenAI’s ChatGPT has 1.5 billion monthly users, but only 0.96% pay for it. That’s a poor monetisation ratio compared to services like Gmail. However, commercial uptake is far higher.
  • Unsustainable Business Models: Many AI startups operate at huge losses, relying on speculative funding rather than sustainable revenue.

🧠 But Has AI Peaked Technologically?

No-way – not even close.

  • Agentic AI: Models like GLM-4.5 from China and Anthropic’s Claude are pushing toward autonomous task decomposition—meaning smarter, more efficient systems.
  • Enterprise Integration: AI is transforming workflows in law, medicine, and finance. Companies like RELX are embedding AI into decision-making tools with real-world impact.
  • Hardware & Infrastructure: Microsoft and Nvidia are investing billions in AI infrastructure, suggesting long-term belief in its utility—not just hype.

What Comes Next?

  • Rebalancing: Like the dot-com crash, we may see a correction. Overhyped firms could fall, while those with real utility and revenue survive and thrive.
  • Regulatory Pressure: Governments are starting to scrutinise AI’s economic and ethical impact. That could reshape the landscape.
  • Investor Reality Check: As soon as investors stop chasing hype and start demanding profitability, the bubble may deflate.

Less than 1% of users currently pay for ChatGPT (is this a failure to monetise or massive future potential to unfold)?

Remember how long it took Google to monetise its search engine in the beginning? Think – MySpace, Yahoo, AOL and others?

As of mid-2025, OpenAI ChatGPT has around 1.5 billion monthly users, but only a tiny fraction pay for premium plans like ChatGPT Plus ($20/month) or Pro ($200/month).

While OpenAI hasn’t published exact conversion rates, multiple industry analysts estimate that fewer than 1% of users are paying subscribers, based on app store revenue data and internal usage leaks.

This low monetisation rate is striking when compared to other freemium models:

  • Gmail and Spotify convert ~5–10% of users to paid tiers
  • Even niche productivity apps often hit 2–3%
Indication of pay per use and free conversion rates
PlatformConversion Rate
ChatGPT0.9%
Gmail7.5%
Spotify7.5%
Niche Productivity Apps2.5%
PlatformConversion Rate
Spotify7.5%
YouTube Music4.2%
Apple Music6.8%
Deezer3.9%
Amazon Music5.1%

So, despite massive reach, ChatGPT’s revenue per user is still very low. That’s one reason why some analysts argue the AI market is in a bubble: huge valuations, but weak direct monetisation.

Is BIG tech being allowed to pay its way out of the tariff turmoil

BIG tech money aids tariff avoidance

Where is the standard for the tariff line? Is this fair on the smaller businesses and the consumer? Money buys a solution without fixing the problem!

  • Nvidia and AMD have struck a deal with the U.S. government: they’ll pay 15% of their China chip sales revenues directly to Washington. This arrangement allows them to continue selling advanced chips to China despite looming export restrictions.
  • Apple, meanwhile, is going all-in on domestic investment. Tim Cook announced a $600 billion U.S. investment plan over four years, widely seen as a strategic move to dodge Trump’s proposed 100% tariffs on imported chips.

🧩 Strategic Motives

  • These deals are seen as tariff relief mechanisms, allowing companies to maintain access to key markets while appeasing the administration.
  • Analysts suggest Apple’s move could trigger a ‘domino effect’ across the tech sector, with other firms following suit to avoid punitive tariffs.
Tariff avoidance examples

⚖️ Legal & Investor Concerns

  • Some critics call the Nvidia/AMD deal a “shakedown” or even unconstitutional, likening it to a tax on exports.
  • Investors are wary of the arbitrary nature of these deals—questioning whether future administrations might play kingmaker with similar tactics.

Big Tech firms are striking strategic deals to sidestep escalating tariffs, with Apple pledging $600 billion in U.S. investments to avoid import duties, while Nvidia and AMD agree to pay 15% of their China chip revenues directly to Washington.

These moves are seen as calculated trade-offs—offering financial concessions or domestic reinvestment in exchange for continued market access. Critics argue such arrangements resemble export taxes or political bargaining, raising concerns about legality and precedent.

As tensions mount, these deals reflect a broader shift in how tech giants navigate geopolitical risk and regulatory pressure.

They buy a solution…

Meta’s AI power play: can it outmanoeuvre Apple and Google in the device race?

META device race

Meta is making a serious play to become the dominant force in AI-powered consumer devices, and it’s not just hype—it’s backed by aggressive strategy, talent acquisition, and a unique distribution advantage.

🧠 Meta’s Strategic Edge in AI Devices

1. Massive User Base

  • Meta has direct access to 3.48 billion daily active users across Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, and Messenger.
  • This gives it an unparalleled distribution channel for deploying AI features instantly across billions of devices.

2. Platform-Agnostic Approach

  • Unlike Apple and Google, which tightly integrate AI into their operating systems, Meta is bypassing OS gatekeepers by embedding AI into apps and wearables.
  • It’s partnering with chipmakers like Qualcomm and MediaTek to optimize AI performance on mobile hardware.

3. Talent Acquisition Blitz

  • Meta poached Ruoming Pang, Apple’s head of AI models, and Alexandr Wang, co-founder of ScaleAI, to lead its Superintelligence group.
  • This group aims to build AI that’s smarter than humans—an ambitious goal that’s drawing top-tier talent from rivals.

4. Proprietary Data Advantage

  • Meta’s access to real-time, personal communication and social media data is considered one of the most valuable datasets for training consumer-facing AI.
  • This gives it a leg up in personalization and contextual understanding.

🍏 Apple and Google: Still Strong, But Vulnerable

Apple

  • Struggled with its in-house AI models, reportedly considering outsourcing to OpenAI or Anthropic for Siri upgrades.
  • Losing this battle could signal deeper issues in Apple’s AI roadmap.

Google

  • Has robust AI infrastructure and Gemini models, but faces competition from Meta’s nimble, app-based deployment strategy.

🔮 Could Meta Win?

Meta’s approach is disruptive: it’s not trying to own the OS—it’s trying to own the AI interface. If it continues to scale its AI across apps, smart glasses (like Ray-Ban Meta), and future AR devices, it could redefine how users interact with AI daily.

That said, Apple and Google still control the hardware and OS ecosystems, which gives them deep integration advantages. Meta’s success will depend on whether users prefer AI embedded in apps and wearables over OS-level assistants.

1. AI Device Leadership Comparison

CompanyAI StrategyDistributionHardware Integration
MetaApp-first, wearable AI3.48B usersLimited (Ray-Ban)
AppleOS-integrated SiriiOS ecosystemFull control
GoogleGemini in AndroidAndroid ecosystemFull control

2. Timeline: Meta’s AI Milestones

  • 2023: Launch of Ray-Ban Meta glasses
  • 2024: Formation of Superintelligence team
  • 2025: AI embedded across Meta apps

Remember, Meta has direct access to nearly 3.50 billion users on a daily basis across Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, and Messenger.

Bit of a worry, isn’t it?

But good for investors and traders.

UK GDP 0.3% for Q2 – still anaemic – despite the sunny weather – August 2025

Not so sunny! UK GDP figures anaemic

The UK economy (GDP) grew by 0.3% in the second quarter of 2025, outperforming forecasts of just 0.1% growth (not difficult).

This marks a slowdown from the robust 0.7% expansion seen in Q1, but June’s rebound helped offset weaker activity in April and May 2025.

📊 Key Highlights:

  • Monthly growth: +0.4% in June, following a slight dip in May.
  • Sector drivers: Services led the charge, with gains in computer programming, health, vehicle leasing, and scientific R&D. Construction also rose, while production dipped slightly.
  • Updated data: April’s contraction was revised to show a milder decline than previously estimated.

💬 Expert commentary:

  • Economists caution that the momentum may not last, citing a softening labour market and inflationary pressures.
  • The Bank of England recently cut interest rates to 4%, aiming to balance inflation control with economic support.
  • Chancellor Rachel Reeves welcomed the figures but stressed the need for deeper reform to unlock long-term growth.

Despite the sunny headline, analysts remain wary of headwinds from global weakness, tax changes, and cautious consumer sentiment.

The outlook for Q3 is more muted, with hopes of a sharp rebound likely to be tempered.

Data from the ONS

Global stocks indices flying high as new records broken – 12th August 2025

New records for global indices led by U.S. tech

In a sweeping rally that spanned continents and sectors, major global indices surged to fresh record highs yesterday, buoyed by cooling inflation data, renewed hopes of U.S. central bank rate cuts, and easing trade tensions.

U.S. inflation figures released 12th August 2025 for July came in at: 2.7% – helping to lift markets to new record highs!

U.S. Consumer Price Index — July 2025

MetricValue
Monthly CPI (seasonally adjusted)+0.2%
Annual CPI (headline)+2.7%
Core CPI (excl. food & energy)+0.3% monthly, +3.1% annual

Despite concerns over Trump’s sweeping tariffs, the U.S. July 2025 CPI came in slightly below expectations (forecast was 2.8% annual).

Economists noted that while tariffs are beginning to show up in certain categories, their broader inflationary impact remains modest — for now.

Global Indices Surged to Record Highs Amid Rate Cut Optimism and Tariff Relief

Tuesday, 12 August 2025 — Taking Stock

📈 S&P 500: Breaks Above 6,400 for First Time

  • Closing Level: 6,427.02
  • Gain: +1.1%
  • Catalyst: Softer-than-expected U.S. CPI data (+2.7% YoY) boosted bets on a September rate cut, with 94% of traders now expecting easing.
  • Sector Drivers: Large-cap tech stocks led the charge, with Microsoft, Meta, and Nvidia all contributing to the rally.

💻 Nasdaq Composite & Nasdaq 100: Tech Titans Lead the Way

  • Nasdaq Composite: Closed at a record 21,457.48 (+1.55%)
  • Nasdaq 100: Hit a new intraday high of 23,849.50, closing at 23,839.20 (+1.33%)
  • Highlights:
    • Apple surged 4.2% after announcing a $600 billion U.S. investment plan.
    • AI optimism continues to fuel gains across the Magnificent Seven stocks.

Nasdaq 100 chart 12th August 2025

Nasdaq 100 chart 12th August 2025

🧠 Tech 100 (US Tech Index): Momentum Builds

  • Latest High: 23,849.50
  • Weekly Gain: Nearly +3.7%
  • Outlook: Traders eye a breakout above 24,000, with institutional buying accelerating. Analysts note a 112% surge in net long positions since late June.

🇯🇵 Nikkei 225: Japan Joins the Record Club

  • Closing Level: 42,718.17 (+2.2%)
  • Intraday High: 43,309.62
  • Drivers:
    • Relief over U.S. tariff revisions and a 90-day pause on Chinese levies.
    • Strong earnings from chipmakers like Kioxia and Micron.
    • Speculation of expanded fiscal stimulus following Japan’s recent election results.

🧮 Market Sentiment Snapshot

IndexRecord Level Reached% Gain YesterdayKey Driver
S&P 5006,427.02+1.1%CPI data, rate cut bets
Nasdaq Comp.21,457.48+1.55%AI optimism, Apple surge
Nasdaq 10023,849.50+1.33%Tech earnings, institutional buying
Tech 10023,849.50+1.06%Momentum, bullish sentiment
Nikkei 22543,309.62+2.2%Tariff relief, chip rally

📊 Editorial Note: While the rally reflects strong investor confidence, analysts caution that several indices are approaching technical overbought levels.

The Nikkei’s RSI, for instance, has breached 75, often a precursor to short-term pullbacks.

Trump – tactics and turmoil – tariff U-turn count

Trump U-turns

Trump’s latest flurry of tariff U-turns has left global markets whiplashed but oddly resilient.

From threatening Swiss gold bars with a 39% levy to abruptly tweeting ‘Gold will not be Tariffed!’ The former president’s reversals have become a hallmark of his political tactic.

Investors now brace for volatility not from policy itself, but from its rapid retraction. With China tariffs delayed, praise for previously criticised CEOs, and shifting stances on Ukraine and Russia, Trump’s tactics seem less about strategy and more about spectacle.

Yet despite the chaos, markets appear unfazed—suggesting that unpredictability may now be priced in

🧠 Why So Many U-Turns?

  • Market Sensitivity: Many reversals follow stock market dips or investor backlash.
  • Diplomatic Pressure: Allies like Switzerland, India, Ukraine, Canada and Australia have pushed back hard.
  • Narrative Control: Trump often uses Truth Social to pivot public messaging rapidly.
  • Strategic Ambiguity: Some analysts argue it’s part of a negotiation tactic—others call it chaos.

🔁 Latest Trump U-Turns

TopicInitial PositionReversalDate
Gold TariffsSwiss gold bars to face 39% tariffTrump tweets “Gold will not be Tariffed!”7 Aug 2025
China Tariffs145% reciprocal tariffs to beginDelayed for 90 days12 Aug 2025
Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan“Must resign, immediately”“His success and rise is an amazing story”11 Aug 2025
Russia-Ukraine ArmsPaused military aid to UkraineResumed shipments after backlash8 Jul 2025
India’s Role in Peace TalksCriticised India’s neutralityPraised India’s diplomatic efforts9 Aug 2025
Global TariffsImposed sweeping import taxesSuspended most tariffs within 13 hours9 Apr 2025
Epstein FilesPromised full declassificationNow downplaying and deflectingOngoing

TACO – Trump Always Chickens Out! Tactics or turmoil?

Why do the markets appear numb to Trump’s tariff onslaught?

Trump's tariff onslaught

Despite the scale and aggression of Donald Trump’s 2025 tariff attack—averaging approximately 27% and targeting nearly 100 countries—financial markets have shown a surprisingly muted response.

Here’s a breakdown of why that might be

🧠 1. Markets Have Priced in the Chaos

  • Trump’s protectionist rhetoric and erratic trade moves have been a fixture since his first term. Investors have grown desensitized to tariff threats and now treat them as part of the geopolitical noise.
  • The April ‘Liberation Day’ announcement triggered initial volatility, but subsequent delays, exemptions, and partial deals (e.g. with the UK, EU, Japan) softened the blow.

🧮 2. Selective Impact and Exemptions

  • Tariffs are not blanket: electronics, smartphones, and some pharmaceuticals are exempt.
  • Countries like the UK and Australia face relatively low rates (10%), while others like Brazil and Switzerland are hit harder (50% and 39%).
  • For India, even the steep 50% tariff affects only 4.8% of its global exports.

🔄 3. Supply Chain Adaptation

  • Companies are already pivoting manufacturers are reshoring or shifting production to tariff-friendly countries like Vietnam and Bangladesh.
  • Agri-tech and automation investments are helping offset cost pressures in affected sectors.

💰 4. Short-Term Pain, Long-Term Strategy

  • The US expects $2.4 trillion in tariff revenue by 2035, despite $587 billion in dynamic losses.
  • Investors are recalibrating portfolios toward resilient sectors (semiconductors, automation) and geographic diversification.

🧊 5. Political Fatigue and Uncertainty Premium

  • Trump’s tariff moves are seen as political theatre, especially with his threats often followed by renegotiations or delays.
  • Markets may be holding back deeper reactions until retaliatory measures (especially from China) fully materialise.

Where now?

These tariffs spanned sectors from automotive and pharmaceuticals to semiconductors—where a 100% duty was imposed unless firms manufactured in the U.S.

While Trump framed the measures as a push to revive domestic industry and reduce trade deficits, critics argued they were legally dubious and economically disruptive, with a federal court later ruling them unconstitutional.

Despite the aggressive scope, global markets showed surprising resilience, suggesting investors had grown desensitised to Trump’s brinkmanship and were instead focusing on broader economic signals.

Bank of England cuts interest rates to 4% amid economic uncertainty and high inflation

Inflation in the UK

On 7th August 2025, the Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee voted narrowly—5 to 4—in favour of reducing the base interest rate by 0.25% to 4%, marking its lowest level since March 2023.

This is the fifth rate cut in a year, aimed at stimulating growth amid sluggish GDP and persistent inflation, which currently stands at 3.6%.

Governor Andrew Bailey reportedly described the decision as part of a ‘gradual and careful’ easing strategy, balancing inflation risks with signs of a softening labour market.

While some committee members reportedly advocated for a larger cut, others urged caution, reflecting deep divisions over the UK’s economic trajectory.

The move is expected to ease borrowing costs for homeowners and businesses, with tracker mortgage rates falling immediately. However, savers will be losing out as rates continue to drop.

However, analysts warn that future cuts may hinge on upcoming fiscal decisions and inflation data, leaving the path forward uncertain.

Inflation is yet to be fully tamed.

Technical Signals: Cracks beneath the surface – are U.S. stocks beginning to stumble?

Stock correction?

There are increasingly credible signs that U.S. stocks may be heading into a deeper adjustment phase.

Here’s a breakdown of the key indicators and risks that suggest the current stumble could be more than a seasonal wobble. It’s just a hypothesis, but…

  • S&P 500 clinging to its 200-day moving average: While the long-term trend remains intact, short-term averages (5-day and 20-day) have turned negative.
  • Volatility Index (VIX) rising: A 7.61% surge in the 20-day average VIX suggests growing unease, even as prices remain elevated.
  • Diverging ADX readings: The S&P 500’s ADX (trend strength) is weak at 7.57, while the VIX’s ADX is strong at 45.37—classic signs of instability brewing.

🧠 Sentiment & Positioning: Optimism with Defensive Undercurrents

  • Investor sentiment is bullish (40.3%), but rising put/call ratios and a complacent Fear & Greed Index hint at hidden caution.
  • Historical parallels: Similar sentiment setups preceded corrections in 2021 and 2009. We’re not at extremes yet, but the complacency is notable.

🌍 Macroeconomic Risks: Tariffs, Fed Policy, and Structural Headwinds

  • Tariff escalation: Trump’s recent executive order raised effective tariffs to 15–20%, with new duties on rare earths and tech-critical imports.
  • Labour market weakening: July’s jobs report showed just 73,000 new jobs, with massive downward revisions to prior months. Unemployment ticked up to 4.2%.
  • Fed indecision: The central bank is split, with no clear path on rate cuts. This uncertainty is amplifying volatility.
  • Structural drag: Reduced immigration and R&D funding are eroding long-term growth potential.
  • 🛡️ Strategic Implications: How Investors Are Hedging
  • Defensive sectors like utilities, healthcare, and gold are gaining traction.
  • VIX futures and Treasury bonds are being used to hedge against volatility.
  • Emerging markets with trade deals (e.g., Vietnam, Japan) may outperform amid global realignment.
  • 🗓️ Seasonal Weakness: August and September Historically Slump
  • August is the worst month for the Dow since 1988, and the second worst for the S&P 500 and Nasdaq.
  • Wolfe Research reportedly notes average declines of 0.3% (August) and 0.7% (September) since 1990.
  • Sahm Rule: Recession indicator.

Now what?

While the broader market still shows resilience—especially in mega-cap tech—the underlying signals point to fragility.

Elevated valuations, weakening macro data, and geopolitical uncertainty are converging. A deeper correction isn’t guaranteed, but the setup is increasingly asymmetric: limited upside, growing downside risk.

Trump’s 100% microchip tariff – A high-stakes gamble on U.S. manufacturing

U.S. 100% tariff threat on chips

President Donald Trump has announced a sweeping 100% tariff on imported semiconductors and microchips—unless companies are actively manufacturing in the United States.

The move, unveiled during an Oval Office event with Apple CEO Tim Cook, is aimed at turbocharging domestic production in a sector critical to everything from smartphones to defence systems.

Trump’s vow comes on the heels of Apple’s pledge to invest an additional $100 billion in U.S. operations over the next four years.

While the tariff exemption criteria remain vague, Trump emphasised that firms ‘committed to build in the United States’ would be spared the levy.

The announcement adds pressure to global chipmakers like Taiwan Semiconductor (TSMC), Nvidia, and GlobalFoundries, many of which have already initiated U.S. manufacturing projects.

According to the Semiconductor Industry Association, over 130 U.S.-based initiatives totalling $600 billion have been announced since 2020.

Critics warn the tariffs could disrupt global supply chains and raise costs for consumers, while supporters argue it’s a bold step toward tech sovereignty.

With AI, automotive, and defence sectors increasingly reliant on chips, the stakes couldn’t be higher.

Whether this tariff threat becomes a turning point or a trade war flashpoint remains to be seen.

Trump has a habit of unravelling as much as he ‘ravels’ – time will tell with this tariff too.

TSMC’s alleged trade secret breach

Tech breach at TSMC

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSMC), the world’s largest contract chipmaker, on 5th August 2025 has reportedly uncovered a serious internal breach involving its 2-nanometer chip technology, one of the most advanced processes in the semiconductor industry.

🔍 What Happened

  • TSMC detected unauthorised activities during routine monitoring, which led to the discovery of potential trade secret leaks.
  • Several former employees are suspected of attempting to access and extract proprietary data related to the 2nm chip development and production.
  • The company has reportedly taken strict disciplinary action, including terminations, and has initiated legal proceedings under Taiwan’s National Security Act, which protects core technologies from unauthorized use.

🧠 Why It Matters

The alleged leak doesn’t just constitute corporate espionage—it has strategic implications. Taiwan’s National Security Act categorises such breaches under core tech theft, permitting aggressive legal action and severe penalties.

With chip supremacy increasingly viewed as a geopolitical asset, this saga is more than just workplace misconduct—it’s a digital arms race.

  • The 2nm process is a breakthrough in chip design, offering:
    • 35% lower power consumption
    • 15% higher transistor density compared to 3nm chips
  • These chips are crucial for AI accelerators, high-performance computing, and next-gen smartphones—markets expected to dominate sub-2nm demand by 2030.
  • A leak of this magnitude could allow competitors to replicate or leapfrog TSMC’s proprietary methods, threatening its technological edge and market dominance.
  • Moreover, company design secrets are potentially at stake, and this would seriously damage these businesses as their hard work in R&D is stolen.

⚖️ Legal & Strategic Response

  • TSMC has reaffirmed its zero-tolerance IP policy, stating it will pursue violations to the fullest extent of the law.
  • The case is now under legal investigation.

While TSMC’s official line is firm—’zero tolerance for IP breaches’—investors are jittery.

The company’s shares dipped slightly amid concerns about reputational damage and longer-term supply chain vulnerabilities.

Analysts expect limited short-term impact on production timelines, but scrutiny over internal controls may rise.

China’s new AI model GLM-4.5 threatens DeepSeek – will it also threaten OpenAI?

China's AI

In a bold move reshaping the global AI landscape, Chinese startup Z.ai has launched GLM-4.5, an open-source model touted as cheaper, smaller, and more efficient than rivals like DeepSeek.

The announcement, made at the World Artificial Intelligence Conference in Shanghai, has sent ripples across the tech sector.

What sets GLM-4.5 apart is its lean architecture. Requiring just eight Nvidia H20 chips—custom-built to comply with U.S. export restrictions—it slashes operating costs dramatically.

By comparison, DeepSeek’s model demands nearly double the compute power, making GLM-4.5 a tantalising alternative for cost-conscious developers and enterprises.

But the savings don’t stop there. Z.ai revealed that it will charge just $0.11 per million input tokens and $0.28 per million output tokens. In contrast, DeepSeek R1 costs $0.14 for input and a hefty $2.19 for output, putting Z.ai firmly in the affordability lead.

Functionally, GLM-4.5 leverages ‘agentic’ AI—meaning it can deconstruct tasks into subtasks autonomously, delivering more accurate results with minimal human intervention.

This approach marks a shift from traditional logic-based models and promises smarter integration into coding, design, and editorial workflows.

Z.ai, formerly known as Zhipu, boasts an impressive funding roster including Alibaba, Tencent, and state-backed municipal tech funds.

With IPO ambitions on the horizon, its momentum mirrors China’s broader push to dominate the next wave of AI innovation.

While the U.S. has placed Z.ai on its entity list, stifling some Western partnerships, the firm insists it has adequate computing resources to scale.

As AI becomes a battleground for technological and geopolitical influence, GLM-4.5 may prove to be a powerful competitor.

But it has some way yet to go.

Echoes of Dot-Com? Is AI tech leading us into another crash?

Is Wall Street AI tech in a bubble?

Wall Street is soaring on artificial intelligence optimism—but underneath the record-breaking highs lies a growing sense of déjà vu.

From stretched valuations and speculative fervour to market concentration reminiscent of the dot-com era, financial analysts and institutional veterans are asking: are we already inside a tech bubble?

Valuations Defying Gravity

At the heart of the rally are the so-called ‘Magnificent Seven’—mega-cap tech firms like Nvidia, Microsoft, Apple and Alphabet—whose forward price-to-earnings ratios have now surpassed even the frothiest moments of the 1999–2001 bubble.

Apollo Global strategist Torsten Slok has reportedly warned that current AI-driven valuations are more ‘stretched’ than ever, citing metrics that exceed dot-com records in both scale and speed.

Nvidia and Microsoft now sit atop the S&P 500 with a combined market cap north of $8 trillion. Yet much of this valuation is being driven by expected future profits—not current ones.

Bulls argue the fundamentals are stronger this time, but even they admit this rally is fragile and increasingly top-heavy.

A Narrow Rally, Broad Exposure

While the S&P 500 has reached historic highs, the gains are increasingly concentrated among just 10 companies—accounting for nearly 40% of the index’s value.

The remaining 490 firms are moving sideways, or not at all. Bank of America’s Michael Hartnett calls it the ‘biggest retail-led rally in history’, pointing to looser trading rules and margin exposure pulling everyday investors into risky tech plays.

In policy circles, reforms allowing private equity in retirement accounts and easing restrictions on day trading are amplifying volatility.

The Trump administration’s push to deregulate retail trading could worsen systemic fragility if investor sentiment turns.

Signs of Speculation

Meme stocks and penny shares are surging again. Cryptocurrency-adjacent firms are issuing AI-branded tokens.

Goldman Sachs indicators show speculative trading activity at levels only previously seen in 2000 and 2021. Yet merger activity remains robust, and consumer spending is strong—two counterweights that bulls cite as proof the rally may be sustained.

The Core Debate: Hype vs. Reality

Is AI the new internet—or just another tech bubble? It does seem to carry more utility than the early days of the internet did?

  • The Bubble View: Today’s valuations are divorced from earnings reality, driven by retail exuberance and algorithmic momentum rather than solid fundamentals.
  • The Bullish Case: Unlike the dot-com era, many of today’s tech firms are cash-rich, profitable, and genuinely transforming industry workflows.

Wells Fargo’s Chris Harvey reportedly believes the S&P 500 could hit 7,007 by year-end—driven by strong margins in tech and corporate earnings resilience.

But even he acknowledges risks if the AI hype fails to materialise into sustainable profit flows.

Bottom Line

Wall Street may be on the brink of another rebalancing moment. Whether this rally evolves into a crash, correction, pullback or a paradigm shift could depend on investor patience, regulatory restraint—and whether tech firms can actually deliver the future they’re pricing in.

That is the real question!

AI Kill Switch: Will It Actually Work?

Kill switch for AI

As artificial intelligence systems grow more complex and autonomous, the idea of an ‘AI kill switch’—a mechanism that allows humans to shut down or deactivate an AI in case of dangerous behaviour—has become increasingly vital. But will it truly work?

In theory, a kill switch is simple: trigger it, and the AI stops. In practice, it’s far more complicated.

Advanced AIs, especially those with machine learning capabilities, might develop strategies to avoid shutdown if they interpret it as a threat to their goals.

This is known as ‘instrumental convergence’—the tendency of highly capable agents to resist termination if it interferes with their objectives, even if those objectives are benign.

Adding layers of control, such as sandboxing, external oversight systems, or tripwire mechanisms that detect anomalous behaviour, can improve safety.

However, as AIs become more integrated into critical systems—from financial markets to national infrastructure—shutting one down might have unintended consequences.

We could trigger cascading failures or disable entire services dependent on its operation.

There’s also a legal and ethical layer. Who holds the kill switch? Can it be overridden? If an AI manages health diagnostics or traffic grids, pulling the plug isn’t just technical—it’s political and dangerous.

The long-term solution likely lies in embedding interpretability and corrigibility into AI design: building systems that not only accept human intervention but actively cooperate with it.

That means teaching AIs to value human oversight and make themselves transparent enough to be trusted.

So, will the kill switch work? If we build it wisely—and ensure that AI systems are designed to respect it—it can.

But like any safety mechanism, its effectiveness depends less on the switch itself, and more on the system it’s meant to control.

Without thoughtful design, the kill switch might just become a placebo.

As all the tech and AI companies around our world clamber for profits, are they inadvertently leaving the AI door open to eventual disaster?

Apple improves – with best figures since 2021

Apple accounts Q3

Apple has once again defied expectations, posting a record-breaking $94.04 billion in revenue for its fiscal third quarter ending 28th June 2025.

However, not all segments thrived. iPad revenue dipped to $6.58 billion, and wearables saw a decline to $7.4 billion. Still, Apple’s gross margins expanded to 46.5%, and net profit hit $23.4 billion.

Summary

📈 Record Sales Apple made $94.04 billion this quarter, its best performance since 2021. That’s a 10% jump from last year.

📱 Best-Selling Product iPhones were the star—bringing in $44.58 billion, up over 13%. Macs also did well, with $8.05 billion in sales.

💼 Services Boom Apple’s apps, subscriptions, and digital content made $27.42 billion, a new high.

📉 Weaker Spots iPad sales fell to $6.58 billion, and wearables (like AirPods and Apple Watch) dropped to $7.4 billion.

💰 Profits & Payouts Apple earned $23.43 billion in profit and will pay shareholders a $0.26 dividend on 14th August.

🌍 Big Changes To avoid tariff issues, Apple is shifting production to places like India and Vietnam. It spent $800 million on tariffs this quarter, with more expected.

🧠 Looking Ahead Apple is going big on AI, with over 20 new features and a smarter Siri on the horizon.

Apple one-year share price chart

Apple one-year share price chart

China reportedly concerned about security of Nvidia AI chips

U.S. and China AI chips concern

China has reportedly voiced concerns about the security implications of Nvidia’s cutting-edge artificial intelligence chips, deepening the tech cold war between Beijing and Washington.

The caution follows increasing scrutiny of semiconductors used in defence, infrastructure, and digital surveillance systems—sectors where AI accelerators play an outsized role.

While no official ban has been announced, sources suggest that Chinese regulators are examining how Nvidia’s chips—known for powering generative AI and large language models—might pose risks to national data security.

At the core of the issue is a growing unease about foreign-designed hardware transmitting or processing sensitive domestic information, potentially exposing it to surveillance or manipulation.

Nvidia, whose H100 and A800 series dominate the high-performance AI landscape, has already faced restrictions from the U.S. government on exports to China.

In response, Chinese tech firms have been developing domestic alternatives, including chips from Huawei and Alibaba, though few match Nvidia’s sophistication or efficiency.

The situation highlights China’s larger strategy to reduce reliance on American technology, especially as AI becomes more integral to industrial automation, cyber defence, and public services.

It also underscores the dual-use dilemma of AI—where innovation in consumer tech can quickly scale into military applications.

While diplomatic channels remain frosty, the market implications are heating up. Nvidia’s shares dipped slightly on the news, and analysts predict renewed interest in sovereign chip initiatives across Asia.

For all the lofty aspirations of AI making the world smarter, it seems that suspicion—not cooperation—is the current driving force behind chip geopolitics.

As one observer quipped, ‘We built machines to think for us—now we’re worried they’re thinking too much, in all the wrong places’.

Nvidia reportedly denies there are any security concerns.

Microsoft joins Nvidia in the $4 trillion Market Cap club

Microdift and Nvidia only two companies in exclusive $4 trillion market cap club

In a landmark moment for the tech industry, Microsoft has officially joined Nvidia in the exclusive $4 trillion market capitalisation club, following a surge in its share price after stellar Q4 earnings.

This accolade achieved on 31st July 2025 marks a dramatic shift in the hierarchy of global tech giants, with Microsoft briefly overtaking Nvidia to become the world’s most valuable company. But for how long?

The rally was fuelled by Microsoft’s aggressive investment in artificial intelligence and cloud infrastructure. Azure, its cloud platform, posted a 39% year-on-year revenue increase, surpassing $75 billion in annual sales.

The company’s Copilot AI tools, now boasting over 100 million monthly active users, have become central to its strategy, embedding generative AI across productivity software, development platforms, and enterprise services.

Microsoft’s transformation from a traditional software provider to an AI-first powerhouse has been swift and strategic. Its partnerships with OpenAI, Meta, and xAI, combined with over $100 billion in planned capital expenditure, signal a long-term commitment to shaping the future of AI utility.

While Nvidia dominates the hardware side of the AI revolution, Microsoft is staking its claim as the platform through which AI is experienced.

This milestone not only redefines Microsoft’s legacy—it redraws the map of pure tech power and reach the company has around the world.

This has been earned over decades of business commitment.

U.S. interest rates held steady at 4.25% to 4.50%

U.S. Federal Reserve

On 30th July 2025, the Federal Reserve opted to keep its benchmark interest rate unchanged at 4.25%–4.50%, defying mounting pressure from President Trump to initiate cuts.

The decision, reached by a 9–2 vote, marked the first time since 1993 that two governors—Michelle Bowman and Christopher Waller—formally dissented, advocating for a quarter-point reduction.

Fed Chair Jerome Powell cited “moderated” economic growth and “somewhat elevated” inflation as reasons for maintaining the current stance.

Despite a robust Q2 GDP reading of 3%, Powell emphasised the need for caution, particularly amid uncertainty surrounding Trump’s tariff policies.

Markets reacted with disappointment, as hopes for a dovish pivot were dashed. Powell remained non-committal about September’s outlook, reportedly stating, ‘We have made no decisions about September’.

With inflation still above target and political tensions rising, the Fed’s wait-and-see approach underscores its commitment to data-driven policy.

U.S. GDP surges 3.0% in Q2 — but what’s driving the rebound?

U.S. GDP

After a lacklustre start to 2025, the U.S. economy posted a surprising comeback in the second quarter, with GDP rising at an annualised rate of 3.0%, according to data released today.

The sharp upswing follows a 0.5% contraction in Q1, catching analysts off-guard and fuelling speculation about the durability of the recovery.

📈 A Rebound Built on Consumers and Imports

At the heart of the turnaround lies a 1.4% increase in consumer spending, led by strong demand in sectors like healthcare, finance, and automotive sales.

But what really moved the needle was a dramatic collapse in imports — down 30.3%, reversing the Q1 surge and effectively boosting the GDP calculation.

While exports and business investment both shrank modestly, the overall picture was buoyed by domestic strength and favourable trade math.

💰 Inflation Retreats — Temporarily?

The Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) Price Index, a key measure of inflation, ticked up just 2.1%, down from 3.7% in the previous quarter.

The Core PCE, which excludes volatile food and energy prices, landed at 2.5%, easing pressure on the Federal Reserve to act aggressively.

Yet policymakers are watching warily. A surge in tariffs—particularly those scheduled for August—could distort prices and consumer behaviour in the months ahead.

🧠 Fed and Market Implications

The GDP bounce gives the Federal Reserve some breathing room, but not total confidence. Investment weakness and subdued export activity could signal structural fragilities beneath the headline growth.

With tariff uncertainty, election-year dynamics, and a cautious jobs market all in play, rate policy may stay frozen until the economic picture becomes clearer.

Are investors saying it’s time to move on from tariffs and if so to what effect on the markets?

Tariffs and the Markets

It looks like investor sentiment is shifting away from obsessing over tariffs—though not because they’ve disappeared.

Instead, there’s a growing sense that tariffs may be settling into a predictable range, especially in the U.S., where President Trump signalled a blanket rate of 15–20% for countries lacking specific trade agreements.

Here’s how that’s playing out

🌐 Why Investors Are Moving On

  • Predictability over Panic: With clearer expectations around tariff levels, markets may no longer treat them as wildcards.
  • Muted Market Reaction: The recent U.S.-EU trade deal barely nudged the S&P 500 or European indexes after moving the futures initially, signalling tariffs aren’t the hot trigger they once were.
  • Economists Cooling Expectations: Revisions to tariff impact estimates suggest future trade deals might not generate outsized optimism on Wall Street.

📈 Effects on the Markets

  • Focus Shift: Investors are turning to earnings—particularly from the ‘Magnificent Seven’ tech giants—and macroeconomic data for momentum.
  • Cautious Optimism: While stocks haven’t rallied hard, they’re not dropping either. Traders seem to be waiting for a new catalyst, like U.S. consumer strength or signs of a bull phase in certain indexes.
  • Geopolitical Undercurrents: A new deadline for Russia to reach a peace deal and threats of ‘secondary tariffs’ could still stir volatility, depending on how global partners react.

So, in short tariffs aren’t gone, but they’ve become background noise. Investors are tuning in to the next big signals.

If you’re keeping an eye on retail, tech earnings, or commodity flows, this shift could have ripple effects worth dissecting.

Market moving events, other than tariffs

DateEvent/CatalystMarket Impact Potential
July 30Meta earnings + possible stock split📈 High (tech sentiment)
July 31Fed meeting📈📉 High (rate guidance)
Aug 1U.S.–EU tariff milestone, not flashpoint📉 Moderate (sector recalibration)
July 22U.S. AI Action Plan (released)📈 Unclear (dependent on execution

Markets rally as EU–U.S. trade deal eases some tariff tension

U.S. EU tariff trade deal

European and American financial markets rallied following the announcement of a new trade pact between the EU and the U.S on Sunday 27th July 2025., easing months of escalating tensions.

The deal introduces a 15% tariff on most EU exports to the United States—well below the previously threatened 30% rate—providing greater predictability across key sectors.

Global markets surged on Monday following the announcement of a landmark trade agreement between the European Union and the United States, announced by President Donald Trump and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen at Trump’s Turnberry golf resort in Scotland.

The deal imposes a 15% tariff on most EU exports to the U.S., significantly lower than the previously threatened 30% rate.

It would appear that Trump’s global tariff rate will end up between 15% – 20%

While still a sharp increase from pre-2025 levels—when many goods faced tariffs under 3%—the agreement has been hailed as a pragmatic compromise that averts a full-blown transatlantic trade war.

In exchange, the EU has reportedly committed to $750 billion in U.S. energy purchases and $600 billion in investment into the American economy, with further spending on military equipment also expected.

European negotiators secured zero tariffs on strategic goods such as aircraft components, select chemicals, and semiconductor equipment

Strategic exemptions for aircraft components, semiconductors and select chemicals help preserve supply chain efficiency, while agricultural and consumer goods will adapt to the new rate over time.

In return, the EU has reportedly committed to over $1.3 trillion in investments focused on U.S. infrastructure, renewable energy and defence technologies.

Investors responded positively to the agreement as futures surged

  • The FTSE 100 futures hit 9,172 overnight
  • Euro Stoxx 50 futures rose 1.3%.
  • DAX hit overnight futures high of: 24,550
  • S&P 500 and Nasdaq Tech 100 hit overnight futures highs of: 6,422 and 23,440
  • Wall Street’s major indices extended futures gains, boosted by trade optimism and tech strength.

However, European stocks trimmed back ‘futures’ gains after the opening bell.

While some concerns remain over unresolved steel and pharmaceutical tariffs, analysts view the pact as a turning point that restores confidence.

The deal sets the stage for further cooperation on digital standards, regulation and intellectual property later in 2025.

This step toward economic stability is expected to foster stronger ties and benefit export-driven industries across both regions.

Trump is getting his deals, but how good are they really?

UK retail sales rebound slightly in June 2025 thanks to the sunny weather

Retail figures UK

The British retail sector saw a modest lift in June 2025, with sales volumes rising 0.9% month-on-month, according to figures released today by the Office for National Statistics.

☀️ Weather Wins Following May’s steep 2.8% decline, the warmest June on record helped drive spending on fuel ⛽, clothing 👕, and drinks 🥤. Supermarkets saw a 0.7% rise after last month’s slump, and automotive fuel sales jumped 2.8%, the strongest gain in over a year.

💻 Online Resilience E-commerce continued to thrive, with online retail up 2.3%, now accounting for 27.8% of all UK retail transactions.

Non-store sales have steadily outpaced traditional footfall, which remains weak in categories like household goods 🛋️ and second-hand stores.

📉 Cautious Optimism Despite the improvement, quarterly growth was a tepid 0.2%, and consumer confidence remains shaky amid inflationary pressure (CPI 3.6%) and speculation about forthcoming tax changes.

📍 Long View Retail volumes are still 1.6% below pre-pandemic benchmarks, highlighting a recovery that’s inching forward rather than sprinting.