Friday, July 17, 2026

This week's interesting finds

 

A few charts worth discussing


“Large performance dispersion can create opportunities for those trying to buy growth for free – looking beyond what everyone is chasing today.” 

- Tye Bousada



“Technology (hyperscalers) are now a larger portion of the U.S. corporate investment grade index than banks.”

- Derek Skomorowski



Other charts worth pointing out

The effect of hyperscalers on investment grade index spread

U.S. consumer spending by income

U.S. IPO & SEO capital raised by year (adjusted for 2026 inflation)

S&P 500 Index momentum stocks vs. total index – market volume

Average S&P 500 Index stock vs. broad index price correlation

Hyperscalers & megacap Technology/Media/Telecoms – fund ownership

U.S. food prices

Crude prices

Credit spreads relative to historical levels by category

China-to-U.S. shipping container prices

‘A casino for retail investors’: how leverage is driving world’s best-performing market

Extreme volatility in South Korea’s world-beating stock market is alarming policymakers, who fear trading is being driven more by leverage than fundamentals after a rushed launch of single-stock derivative products tied to chipmakers Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix.

The unusually sharp swings in the world’s two largest memory chipmakers, which together account for half of the Kospi, prompted President Lee Jae Myung this week to order swift measures to curb what he called the products’ destabilising effects.

“Our domestic stock market is quite unstable,” Lee said at a policy meeting with top government officials in Seoul on Wednesday. “In fact, since it experienced a historically unprecedented massive surge in such a short period, it would require time and fluctuation to stabilise.”

The Kospi is on track to be the world’s best-performing major equity market for a second year, fuelled by demand for Samsung and SK Hynix’s AI chips. But doubts over the durability of AI spending have triggered a sharp correction, with the index falling 25 per cent from its June peak.

Leveraged exchange traded funds tied to Samsung and SK Hynix — which offer two times the stocks’ average daily return — have magnified the selling, with hedging and margin calls inflicting heavy losses on retail investors.

The Kospi whipsawed this week, plunging 16 per cent on Monday before rebounding more than 6 per cent on Wednesday and then falling another 6 per cent on Thursday.

Volatility has been so high that the stock exchange has paused trading 37 times this year, compared with just three during all of last year. More than half of the halts came after the debut of single-stock leveraged products in May.

“This is abnormal,” said Namuh Rhee, chair of the Korea Corporate Governance Forum. “Memory chips are a highly cyclical business with unpredictable demand. Allowing two-times leverage for retail investors in this sector is a serious policy blunder.”

While similar products exist in the US and other major markets, South Korea is unusual in the scale of its retail participation and the speed at which regulators approved the single-stock derivatives. 

Brokerages rolled out 16 leveraged and inverse ETFs in late May after regulators gave them the green light. By then, shares of Samsung and SK Hynix had more than quadrupled in value in one year.

“It’s hard to see why regulators approved these products after the market had already risen so much,” said Kim Hyung-kyoon, executive director at Tcha Partners. “They’ve effectively created a casino for retail investors.”

Rhee said South Korea’s ETF market had become “distorted”, with brokerages and asset managers favouring higher-margin sector ETFs over broad-based products more common in the US. Single-stock products now manage about $8bn in assets, making up nearly half of all leveraged ETFs in South Korea. 

Financial Supervisory Service governor Lee Chan-jin last month expressed regret over the single-stock products’ launch. “Looking back, I regret not doing everything I could to stop it,” he said.

In response to growing calls to curb volatility in its $4.1tn equity market, the government on Thursday said it would suspend new listings of single-stock leveraged ETFs.

It will also require retail investors to attend additional courses on risk management after rolling out training videos last year, and it will triple the minimum deposit for such products to Won30mn ($20,300) from 5 August.

Regulators blame the single-stock ETFs’ “short gamma” dynamics for the volatility. To maintain their target returns, fund managers and liquidity providers must aggressively buy shares as prices rise and sell quickly as they fall, exacerbating rallies and declines.

Goldman Sachs estimated SK Hynix’s double-digit fall on Monday forced leveraged funds to sell roughly $5bn of the stock to rebalance their portfolios, equivalent to about 18 per cent of combined trading in SK Hynix shares and futures that day.

The company’s $26.5bn US listing last week has raised concerns that South Korea’s leverage-driven swings could spill over into global markets. Several leveraged ETFs tracking the chipmaker’s American depositary receipts launched days after the US listing.


This week’s fun finds

The Grate Cheese Robbery

For a cheese lover, Neal’s Yard may be heaven on earth. Enter the Covent Garden branch through its distinctively inky blue front, and you can be in no doubt as to what awaits. An enormous picture-frame window shows off at least a dozen truckles and wheels of cheese. Inside, low-hanging orb lamps glow softly, illuminating the startling array. Huge wheels of Stichelton and Stilton stand stacked on top of one another, their steel-blue veins facing out. Baron Bigod—the British Brie de Meaux (and, whisper it, better than the French equivalent)—oozes suggestively. Yorkshire Pecorino gleams pale, smooth, and yogurty. Wrinkly little Yr Afr, a raw-milk goat’s cheese, fresh from the foothills of Snowdonia, sits alongside bright orange pucks of Yarlington, its cider-washed rind sticky to the touch. Neat writing on large and small blackboards displays the cheese names, origins, and prices.

Randolph Hodgson, a food scientist, and Nicholas Saunders, an activist and entrepreneur, founded the Neal’s Yard dairy in 1979. In the earliest of days, it just produced Greek yogurt, the only thing they’d truly gotten the hang of. British cheese wasn’t really known in the UK, let alone on the world stage, and raw-milk cheeses were viewed with a healthy dose of skepticism—not least by those in charge of environmental health. But Neal’s Yard persevered.

Now there are five brick-and-mortar stores, each nestled in a different buzzy, food-loving part of London. Underneath the railway arches in Bermondsey, the cheeses of Neal’s Yard sit maturing in a beloved institution that has nurtured, connected, championed, educated, and sold around 550 tons of British cheese a year in every corner of the cheese world.

So it wasn’t beyond the realms of belief when a big, fat order came in for artisanal cheddar in 2024. A French supermarket wanted to purchase 950 truckles of the stuff, an order worth around $400,000. Three different dairies were called upon to help fulfil the massive request: Westcombe Dairy, making their eponymous cheddar in Somerset; the Trethowan Brothers, making Pitchfork Cheddar, also in Somerset; and Holden Farm Dairy, making Hafod Cheddar in West Wales. “British cheese has had a massive revival over the past 30 years, but unfortunately, it does feel like that has plateaued off a little bit,” Tom Calver, head cheesemaker at Westcombe Dairy, says. “To keep going, keep surviving, all throughout the whole chain, when an offer like that comes on, you jump on it.”

Twenty-two tons of artisanal British cheese, some of the most expensive cheese made in the UK. A huge order for Neal’s Yard. It seemed too good to be true.

Friday, July 10, 2026

This week's interesting finds

A few charts worth discussing


“Short-term price moves for semiconductor (SMH) and software (IVG) companies have been extreme. These violent rotations are creating opportunities for those who know the value of a business.”

- Greg Sinclair



“Consumer spending increased in World Cup host cities.”

- Jason Liu



Other charts worth pointing out

After-tax wage growth by household income

Semiconductors vs. hyperscalers – Free cash flow

Semiconductors vs. software – total returns ratio

Market cap of largest memory companies

Intel share price

S&P 500 Index – top 5 weight

Market cap concentration of the top 10% of large U.S. stocks

Large Language Model visits by month

Length of U.S. business cycle expansions

U.S. dollar to Japanese yen exchange rate

Japan finance minister urges giant pension fund to invest more at home

Japanese stocks surged almost 2 per cent and the yen rose from a multi-decade low after the country’s finance minister called on domestic pension funds and the public to shift more assets into domestic markets.

Traders in Tokyo described Satsuki Katayama’s comments on Friday as a form of “stealth intervention” in currency and bond markets.

Greater support from domestic investors would ease pressure on Japan’s currency and sovereign debt. The yen strengthened 0.6 per cent to ¥161.36, while yields on 10-year Japanese government bonds dropped 0.1 percentage points to 2.77 per cent.

Katayama said in a press conference that encouraging Japanese pension funds and households “to invest more in Japanese financial assets” was a policy measure that the administration wanted to pursue. She explicitly included the Government Pension Investment Fund, which manages a global portfolio of roughly $1.8tn.

Katayama herself cautioned that changing the asset allocation policy of the GPIF was not something she could do alone and that further discussions across the government would be necessary.

The prospect of a sustained repatriation of Japanese assets led by pension funds has long been seen by analysts and traders as a missing ingredient for a full revival of Japan’s capital markets.

Abbas Keshvani, Asia macro strategy director at RBC Capital Markets, said a rotation by Japanese investors from foreign to domestic assets would be “the impulse the yen needs to strengthen”.

“[The] GPIF is the largest investor. When they start to move it influences smaller asset managers to follow suit,” he said. But he cautioned: “I think this kind of verbal announcement will be very short-lived if it is not followed through with actual asset allocation changes.”

The Nikkei 225 index has climbed 73 per cent in the past 12 months and rallied a further 1.8 per cent on Friday with AI-related stocks following gains for US technology shares a day earlier, as well as getting a boost from Katayama’s comments.

Other strategists noted that the move by Katayama appeared to be a shift in approach to strengthen the yen instead of direct intervention in the foreign-exchange market.

Masahiko Loo, senior fixed-income strategist at State Street Investment Management, called it a “smart policy signal” when markets had increasingly questioned how much firepower the finance ministry had left for interventions.


This week’s fun finds 

Christine from the Operations Team hosted a fantastic moai featuring authentic Filipino cuisine. Vibrant, flavourful and a great way to bring the team together at the end of the week.

Plein Air — A painting for right now, wherever you are

Plein air — French for in the open air — was the discipline of painting outdoors, in front of the weather, the way Constable studied clouds in Suffolk meadows and Monet painted the same haystacks at every hour of every season. The painters took the canvas outside because the light couldn't be remembered later, only stood inside as you painted. Plein Air stands you next to one of those paintings. The sky over your head and the sky in the painting share the same kind of hour — the same long afternoon, the same threatening storm, the same fog clinging to the river. One painting, chosen for right now. Tap the title to see why it was picked.

Friday, July 3, 2026

This week's interesting finds

A few charts worth discussing



“Money growth accelerating. Inflation.”

- Derek Skomorowski



“Déjà vu all over again.”

- Derek Skomorowski



“Two sides to China’s energy transition.”

- Claire Thornhill




Other charts worth pointing out

S&P 500 Index – 2026 YTD return bridge

Russell 2000 Index vs. S&P 500 Index – sector weights and 2026 YTD returns

Russell 2000 vs. Goldman Sachs AI basket – return correlation

S&P 500 Index – Top 10 constituent weight

S&P 500 Index – semiconductor weight

Equity and mutual fund holdings by wealth cohort

ETF net inflows in the first six months by year

Retail options – average daily premium by investment theme

Leveraged ETF AUM by market segment

S&P 500 Index – historical performance in real terms

U.S. 10-year Treasury yields

Corporate bond refinancing by borrowing cost

Magnificent 7 vs. broader market – profit margins

Trump Accounts create new generation of 6 million US ETF investors
Chris Flood, chief correspondent, ETF Stream | 3 July 2026

Trump Accounts go live on July 4 with more than 6 million American kids already signed on to the new tax-advantaged investment scheme for US-born children with the $1,000 contribution of “free” government money providing a powerful draw for the new programme.

All of the contributions will be invested in ETFs tracking the US stock market, another clear vote of confidence in ETFs as trustworthy investment vehicles. Prior to the 2008 financial crisis, passive index-tracking ETFs would not have been considered for this role, a testament to how ETFs now act as a cornerstone in America’s financial system.

Trump Accounts will “reinforce the role of ETFs as mainstream long-term investment vehicles for retail investors and potentially create a significant new source of ETF assets over time,” says Debbie Fuhr, the ETF industry’s global ambassador.

State Street Investment Management stands to be the immediate winner after the US Treasury Department announced this week that all contributions to Trump Accounts would initially be invested in the State Street SPDR Portfolio S&P 500 ETF (SPYM). Assets in SPYM stood at just under $155bn on July 1 so it should be possible to see early next week just how much the Trump Accounts programme has initially gathered.

Parents and guardians will be allowed at a later date to switch some or all of the contributions into four other ETFs that also provide broad exposure to the US stock market: BlackRock’s iShares Core S&P 500 ETF (IVV), Vanguard’s Total Stock Market ETF (VTI), State Street’s SPDR Portfolio S&P 1500 Composite Stock Market ETF (SPTM) and BlackRock’s iShares Core S&P Total US Stock Market ETF (ITOT).

The “choice” of ETFs available feels somewhat akin to Henry Ford's famous comment that customers could have a Model T car painted in any colour that they wanted “so long as it is black.”

The main difference between these ETFs is that VTI (3,484 constituents), ITOT (2,497 constituents) and SPTM (1,510 constituents) own mid-sized and small US companies that have contributed to a modest drag on returns over the past decade compared with the outstanding performance of the larger companies that make up the S&P 500 which are held by SPYM and IVV.

The top management at Vanguard and BlackRock might feel aggrieved that Trump Account contributions will not flow immediately into their ETFs as some of the money is likely to prove “sticky” after landing in SPYM.

Rival financial players - such as Fidelity, Charles Schwab, JP Morgan, Bank of America, UBS, Wells Fargo and Morgan Stanley - will also be disappointed not to be included in the creation of future generations of younger investors through Trump Accounts.

The big selling point of Trump Accounts is undoubtedly the $1,000 seed contribution - free money - provided by the federal government for every eligible child born between 2025 and 2028. This will not count towards the $5,000 annual contribution limit for each Trump Account.

Almost anyone will be able to make contributions to Trump Accounts, including parents, family members or other individuals as well as employers, charities and state governments.


This week’s fun finds

‘The greatest cosmic movie ever made’: Historic telescope kicks off an unprecedented survey

Every 40 seconds of nighttime for the next 10 years, a camera the size of a small car will capture strikingly detailed images of the southern sky, stitching together a time-lapse panorama of intergalactic evolution that could help unlock some of the universe’s lingering mysteries.

The historic effort, called the Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST), began on Tuesday, according to the Vera C. Rubin Observatory, the state-of-the-art facility in Chile that houses the world’s largest digital camera weighing 6,600 pounds.

During its decade-long study, a series of colored filters will give the camera superhuman vision as it scans the sky each night and creates a living image of how celestial objects — from asteroids to supernovae — morph and move.

The project has several goals, including creating a new inventory of our solar system and the Milky Way, as well as chipping away at the mystery of dark matter by observing the distorted light of distant galaxies.

Friday, June 26, 2026

This week's interesting finds

EdgePoint reading and listening list

Summer's almost here and so is our annual summer reading (and listening) list. The Investment Team shared some of their top recent reads and podcasts, including deep dives into some of the largest companies in the world today.


A few charts worth discussing


“Canada is falling behind on business investment per worker. Both the numerator and denominator are impacting this trend – Canada has combined liberal immigration with regulations and policies that have made business investment more difficult and less attractive.”

- Sydney Van Vierzen


Submitted by Jason Liu:



Other charts worth pointing out

Chinese vs. U.S. AI model usage

Top AI models by price

Chinese solar panel export revenue

Solar panel installation in China

Chinese clean-tech exports

2-year Treasury yields vs. Brent crude oil prices

U.S. equity market capitalization vs. global GDP

U.S. corporate bond index duration

AI sector corporate bond supply

MSCI US Momentum Index vs. S&P 500 Index (equal weight) – relative returns

MSCI US Momentum Index vs. S&P 500 Index (equal weight) – relative 3-month performance

Russell 2000 Index vs. Russell 1000 Index – YTD performance by sector

MAG7 vs. Semiconductor index performance

Apollo’s flagship private credit fund hit by 17% redemption requests

Investor redemption requests at Apollo’s flagship retail private credit fund surged to 17 per cent of the vehicle’s value in the second quarter, underscoring fears of falling returns and rising stress in debt markets.

The firm’s $15bn Apollo Debt Solutions fund pitched to wealthy individual investors reported roughly $2.4bn of withdrawal requests in the most recent period. The fund met less than 30 per cent of the withdrawals it faced in the quarter, capping redemptions at 5 per cent of the value of the vehicle.

The Apollo fund, which has an investment portfolio worth nearly $26bn, had been hit with withdrawal requests of 11 per cent in the first quarter.

The rising withdrawal requests at the fund signal that the broader investor exodus from private credit has not abated, even as public markets have rallied and a sell-off in loans to private equity-backed software companies has moderated.

The funds have been a significant fundraising source for private investment groups, offering lucrative fees for the asset managers. However, private credit has faced scrutiny over its lending to the software industry, given the risks companies face from advances in AI.

Investors have sought to pull nearly $15bn from nine major funds tracked by the FT in the second quarter. The funds, which manage roughly $200bn across their investment portfolios, have met less than 40 per cent of the withdrawal requests.

Apollo said it recorded $300mn of new commitments to the fund, which it said would limit net outflows to $400mn in the quarter. It also noted that redemption requests were concentrated from investors in its offshore funds, typically pitched to non-US investors.


This week’s fun finds

Devin (left) from the Compliance Team organized a fun build-your-own-taco moai. It was a fun way to bring everyone together for delicious bites and great company. 

In This Polish Village, All 5,600 Residents Live on the Same Street

When a drone captured a bird’s-eye view photo of a sleepy Polish town, one feature stood out, taking the village from a relatively unknown dot on a map to a social media phenomenon.

That wow-worthy feature? Everyone in Suloszowa — with a population of 5,672 in 2023 — lives on one single street. What impresses in the aerial picture is not only the 5.6-mile road with homes dotted on either side of it, but the billowing ribbons of yellow, green, and gold fields stretching out from behind them, forming living art in the surrounding countryside.

Suloszowa is located about 21 miles northwest of Krakow, in a rural pocket of southern Poland. The main industry is farming, with residents raising livestock and growing crops like wheat, oats, and rapeseed. Local life tends to revolve around agriculture, and annual harvest festivals with names like Strawberry Days and Potato Days bring the villagers together to celebrate the seasons’ bounties.