Market Froth Gauge Flashes Red
Investors are tracking five bubble signals—soaring price-to-sales ratios, record margin-loan balances, and retail call-option volume up 73 % year-on-year—that rhyme uncomfortably with late-1999 peaks (WSJ, Reuters). The S&P 500 now trades at 25 times forward earnings, versus its 30-year mean of 16, implying that every €1 of expected profit costs households €9 more than usual to own. My take: loose money and AI enthusiasm are inflating expectations faster than productivity can catch up.
Lean-and-AI Corporate Model
Blue-chip CEOs from IBM to Unilever are openly touting “head-count discipline.” US-listed firms announced 263,000 layoffs in H1 ’25, yet posted a 9 % EPS rise—a cocktail credited to generative-AI cost cuts (WSJ, FT). Good for margins, bad for wage growth: each percentage-point fall in payrolls trims about €6 bn in consumer spending across the OECD, crimping near-term demand.
EU Budget Stasis Risks Global Relevance
Brussels’ 2028-34 draft keeps spending capped at 1.1 % of EU gross national income, barely half Washington’s federal outlays as a share of GDP (FT). With only €2 bn earmarked annually for defence R&D, the bloc risks strategic free-riding on NATO and missing the green-tech race—an outcome that would weaken both sovereignty and the single market’s allure.
UPI: India’s Teachable Moment
India’s Unified Payments Interface processed 11 bn transactions in June—up 45 % y/y—at near-zero cost (FT). If the UK grafted a similar open-API rail onto its Faster Payments system, Treasury models suggest SMEs could save £1.5 bn in card fees annually, money that could fund new hires or R&D rather than intermediaries.
Stay tuned for the next Gist—your edge in a shifting world.
Leave a Reply