Friday, October 10, 2025

Quants: "AQR’s Big Year: Funds Climb on Stock Picks and Macro Moves"

From Institutional Investor, October 6:

The firm’s multistrategy, trend-following, and other funds posted strong returns, lifting assets to $166 billion. 

A number of AQR Capital Management’s main hedge fund strategies posted strong results in September. As a result, all funds are up by mid- to high teens for the year to date.

Assets under management at the firm headed by Cliff Asness, who founded AQR with David Kabiller and John Liew, have rebounded sharply in recent years, to $166 billion as of the end of September. The firm’s assets under management had dropped to $95 billion in 2022 but grew to $99 billion by the end of 2023 and to $114 billion at the close of 2024.

The $5.3 billion AQR Apex strategy, the firm’s flagship offering, gained 4 percent in September and is now up 15.6 percent for the year, according to someone familiar with the results.

Stock selection has been the largest contributor all year for the multistrategy fund. In September, directional macro also made money, with increases from equities, fixed income, currencies, and commodities, the source says. Arbitrage produced gains from mergers, convertibles, and event-driven substrategies, whereas market-neutral macro was a moderate detractor for the month. Arbitrage also kicked in gains for the year, as did directional macro. Market-neutral macro has been close to flat for 2025.

AQR Helix, the firm’s $4.6 billion alternative trend-following strategy, climbed 6.3 percent in September and 13 percent for the year. The September rise was driven by trends in the equity factors component. Helix also saw gains from alternative commodities, volatility futures, interest rate swaps, and country-specific yield curves.

For the year, performance was boosted by trends in market-neutral equity factor portfolios and country-specific yield curves. It was also aided by favorable trends in volatility futures and emerging-markets interest rates. Trend reversals in alternative commodities, however, resulted in losses....

....MUCH MORE 

Although not all the funds are quantitatively based, Mr. Asness is one of the quantfathers.
Here's his Chicago Booth mini-bio
Previously on AQR

Jim Bianco Is Dropping Truth Bombs Left And Right

From Mr. Bianco's X feed:

Mr. Bianco's post continues

The retweet below triggered me, so here is a long rant about the institutional problems at the Fed and New York Fed President John Williams.
---
Congress amended the Federal Reserve Act in November 1977, adding the dual mandate of maximum employment and price stability. The point of mandates is forcing a "narrow understanding" of the role of monetary policy, not to expand it as Williams seems to be suggesting.

Furthermore, citing an example of monetary policy in the spring of 1932 overlooks the fact that Congress altered the Fed's role and operating procedures with both the Banking Act of 1933 (also known as the "Glass-Steagall Act") and the Banking Act of 1935. Glass-Steagall established the current FOMC voting structure. (Before 1933, monetary policy was set by representatives of the 12 district banks, not necessarily the President of the district bank.)

In other words, a lot has changed since 1932 to rein in the authority of the Fed, limit its tools, and force a "narrow understanding" of Fed policy. Williams is suggesting they continue to ignore this (as they have since 2008).
---
Let's cut to the chase. Williams is criticizing his new FOMC colleague, Stephen Miran, in a back-handed way to criticize the President. I have no problem with such criticism as long as it is applied evenly. So, unless I missed it, please show me where Williams also criticized:

* The limitation and failure of the current policy in seeing and responding to the post-COVID inflation surge. What has been corrected to prevent this from happening again?

* The limitation and failure of R* to properly set monetary policy.

* The limitation and failure of the Phillips Curve in setting policy.

* The need for his colleagues, who are banking regulators, to follow all banking regulations in their personal lives, including proper disclosure to banks regarding mortgage applications.

* Federal Reserve Vice-Chairman Lael Brainard, who was supporting and actively donating to the 2016 Hillary Campaign for President, and was "rewarded" by being on Clinton's short list to be Treasury Secretary.

* Criticism of then Fed Chairman Janet Yellen hiking rates one time by 25 basis points in December 2015, then waiting a year for the second hike in December 2016 (could that have been to sway the election against Trump?). Then, proceeding under Trump's first term, they hiked rates so aggressively that they "broke things" by December 2018. Additionally, what was Brainard's role in this policy, and how much did her attempt to secure the candidate who would appoint her as Treasury Secretary contribute to it?

* Staying silent as the immediate past NY Fed President, Bill Dudley, wrote an August 2019 Bloomberg op-ed openly suggesting that the Fed intentionally tank the economy to get Trump to lose the 2020 election.

* Current Fed Chairman Jay Powell calling then Senator Mitt Romney (a famous never Trumper) in December 2020 to get him to vote against and actively sink the confirmation of Trump-nominated Fed Governor Judy Shelton.

* Looking the other way when Fed Vice-Chairman Rich Clarida, Chairman Jay Powell, Richmond Fed President Barkin, and Atlanta Fed President Rafael Bostic engaged in several million dollars of stock and bond transactions in and around Fed meetings.  Yet, when Dallas Fed President Robert Kaplan and Boston Fed President Eric Rosengren did something similar, they were forced to resign. Why is the Fed allowed to selectively enforce such laws?
---
Getting blunt again ... the Fed seems to be relishing in its role as a victim of an administration that wants to force change, not unlike what the Roosevelt and Carter administrations did in the past.

NEC Chairman Keven Hassett said that the Fed—not Trump—has been the partisan actor.  Examples of such Fed partisanship.

* Williams' selective and directed criticism at one Fed Governor recently appointed by Trump, but ignoring all such criticism (detailed above) against anyone or anything else, sure looks like a partisan attack.

* Silence about a Governor accused of breaking banking law sure looks like a partisan act.

* Actively lobbying the Senate to vote against a Presidentially appointed nomination is a partisan act.

* Lack of criticism as Fed Vice-Chairman favored and donated to a Presidential candidate, while voting for Fed policy that was beneficial to that candidate winning (refraining from a second hike), sure looks like a partisan act.

* Staying silent when the previous New York Fed President wanted the Fed to purposely interfere in elections to favor a preferred candidate sure looks like a partisan act.

* Selectively enforcing a personal trading ban looks partisan.
---
Is the Fed under threat of losing some of its independence? Yes. Why? They have essentially done it to themselves and need to be reined in.

The problem is that the Fed wants the status quo to continue, but it cannot stand any more.  The Fed's partisanship, when it is supposed to be an independent organization, has become so severe that the Administration is being forced to intervene, which is not a good thing.  The pendulum could swing too hard in the other direction.

So, instead of the Fed acting like a victim of possible reforms and loss of independence, the Fed should reform itself and voluntarily clean house to show it can act responsibly as an independent actor.

To date, not only have they been unable to do this, but they also cannot responsibly oversee the remodeling of a couple of buildings.
---
Postscript: I have long said that I like Jay Powell and would reappoint him. I still stand by this seeming contradiction to what I wrote above.  (Note that this is a moot point because Powell is not staying as Chairman.)

The criticism above concerns the institutional problems at the Fed that appear to be so significant that no single Fed Chairman can address them alone.

If so, and the institution does not want to reform itself, including NY Fed President Williams, who does not seem to be a willing participant in any such reform, then the only remedy is for the President and Congress to step in and do it. 

And the so-called "Fed Whisperer", the Wall Street Journal's Nick Timiraos:

New York Fed President John Williams calls out what he sees as a false dichotomy in monetary policy discourse by dismissing efforts to cast the use of QE or forward guidance as "unconventional":

"This narrow understanding of monetary policy is alien to the history of monetary economics and central bank practice. A reading of Milton Friedman and Anna Schwartz’s pathbreaking history of the Federal Reserve during the Great Depression dispels the notion that monetary policy is limited to setting the short-term rate and instead emphasizes broader measures of liquidity and longer-term interest rates."

...MORE, highlighting a section of New York Fed Head Williams' October 3 speech:

https://www.newyorkfed.org/newsevents/speeches/2025/wil251003

"SoftBank Seeks $5 Billion Margin Loan Backed by Arm Stock"

We've seen this movie before.* 

From Bloomberg, October 9: 

SoftBank Group Corp. is in talks to borrow $5 billion from global banks, refilling its coffers at a time Masayoshi Son is accelerating the Japanese investment firm’s bets on artificial intelligence.

SoftBank is close to signing a deal with a handful of lenders for a margin loan secured by shares of its chip unit Arm Holdings Plc., people familiar with the matter said. The capital will fund additional investment in OpenAI this year, the people said, who asked not to be identified discussing private matters.

A margin loan is a type of facility where you borrow money using your investments — like stocks — as collateral. A representative for SoftBank declined to comment.

Softbank shares slid as much as 4.1% to 22,020 yen on Friday, the most since September 26, before pairing some losses to close down 3.1%, according to Bloomberg-compiled data. Meanwhile, the group’s dollar bond due in 2032 declined about 1 cent on the dollar to 102.7 on Friday, its biggest drop since the note was issued in July, the data showed.

Founder Son has embarked on a spending spree this year to try and position the firm as a linchpin in the global AI boom, most recently pledging as much as $30 billion toward OpenAI and buying ABB Ltd.’s robotics arm for $5.4 billion. Arm’s 38% rally this year has in turn granted SoftBank the confidence and leeway to grow its investment war chest.

SoftBank has raised a total of $13.5 billion in margin loans from Arm shares, with $5 billion still undrawn, as of March 2025, according to its earnings statement. The latest facility will increase the total to $18.5 billion.

The group had secured about $8 billion in margin loans ahead of Arm’s initial public offering in 2023. Eleven banks including JPMorgan Chase & Co., Barclays Plc, BNP Paribas SA, Credit Agricole Corporate and Investment Bank and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. provided the facilities by linking mandates for Arm’s IPO to the loans. Earlier this year, the group also raised a $15 billion one-year facility to help fund AI investments in the US, in what is among its largest borrowings raised....
*****
....Son’s insatiable appetite for deals has extended far and wide, centered on ideas to capitalize on the expected exponential growth of AI technologies.

His most ambitious projects include a $500 billion Stargate initiative that aims to build data centers across the US in partnership with OpenAI and Oracle Corp. SoftBank is also exploring the feasibility of a large-scale industrial manufacturing hub in the US, which could encompass production lines for AI-powered industrial robots, Bloomberg News has reported.

....What Bloomberg Intelligence Says

SoftBank Group’s $5.4 billion acquisition of ABB’s robotics arm demonstrates the company’s large M&A appetite, raising credit and bond-supply risks. The company may hit its 25% loan-to-value limit with this deal, along with a $22.5 billion second-tranche investment in OpenAI, the purchase of Ampere Computing and its investment in Stargate, though tech stock values may provide some offset. Funding needs may exceed $30 billion, but asset sales and asset-backed financing could lower reliance on bond markets.

- Sharon Chen, analyst

....MUCH MORE
*
April Fools Day, 2025:
"How Is SoftBank Funding Its Mega Investment in OpenAI? A Lot of Debt"
Leveraged beta, baby!

....As we noted introducing last week's "OpenAI Close to Finalizing A $40 Billion SoftBank-Led Funding At A $300 Billion Valuation"

SoftBank's Mr. Son's entire history, going back to the dot.com bust is leveraged beta.

He was very fortunate that the British didn't allow Nvidia to buy ARM Holdings, thus clearing the way for his bid. Otherwise his claim to fame would  be being the largest investor in WeWork....

And from November 2019:

SoftBank’s problems aren’t so surprising if you understand this one thing about the company

Throughout the manic phase of SoftBank and the Vision fund there was almost no mention of the fact that at the start of this century Masayoshi Son was the richest person in the word:
"But Son’s fairytale didn’t last long. After the dot-com bubble burst, his company Softbank’s shares plunged 75 percent in two months and was 93 percent lower by the end of 2000.
The business almost went bankrupt and Son ended up losing USD 70 billion, the highest ever recorded financial loss for a person in history."
MoneyControl, October 13, 2017
We had a couple posts around the time of the above that touched on the craziness but not the past history:
SoftBank In Talks To Acquire U.S. Treasury
Sprint, T-Mobile Plunge: SoftBank Calling Off Merger, Will Use Cash to Buy Canada

See also semi-variance, after the jump....
**** 
When the swings are as big as Son's are you need a bankroll that is gigantic. Even if you are right and have an edge, the natural variation can kill you and the last downturn will be the last downturn.
Some related links:....
And October 2024:
 SoftBank’s Masayoshi Son Sees AI Evolving To A Point Where Your Happiness Will Be its Greatest Reward

Having observed Mr. Son and his position in the parade—from Drum Majorette leading the way, to being the guy cleaning up after the elephants, and then back to the front— we had this introduction in February 2024:

Since the time he almost went broke after the dot.bomb bubble burst (he had briefly been the richest person in the world) I've come to realize this guy isn't some great visionary/grand strategist; he's just leveraged beta. Making big bets, all geared up, on whatever is at the head of the passing parade.

That said, he owns 90% of ARM Holdings and I don't.

Bastard.
 
Shades of another disruptor, Sam Insull, leverage at the holding company level, leverage at the operating company level, leverage all the way down

February 2020:
The First Time SoftBank's Masayoshi Son Went Broke
Leveraged beta.
It can work for a very long time, long enough that its practitioners start believing they are invincible when they aren't.....

....We had a couple posts around the time of the above that touched on the craziness but not the past history:
SoftBank In Talks To Acquire U.S. Treasury
Sprint, T-Mobile Plunge: SoftBank Calling Off Merger, Will Use Cash to Buy Canada

See also semi-variance, after the jump....

*****
....When the swings are as big as Son's are you need a bankroll that is gigantic. Even if you are right and have an edge, the natural variation can kill you and the last downturn will be the last downturn....

Capital Markets: "China Takes Dramatic Measures, While Japan's MOF Warns Against Excessive Yen Moves"

From Marc Chandler at Bannockburn Global Forex:

Overview: The US dollar has stabilized after yesterday's surge. Following words of caution by Japan's finance minister, the yen is the strongest of the G10 currencies today, with around a 0.15% gain. The slowest underlying inflation in Norway in four months has weighted on the krone, which is off about 0.35%. Excluding the krone, the G10 currencies are little changed. Emerging market currencies are in a wide range but also mixed. Since the end of tis long national holiday, China has announced several measures including broader export controls on rare earths EV battery technology, and a levy on US ships making port calls in China. 

Japanese and Chinese equities fell with the major indices off more than 1%. South Korea and Indian markets rallied, but most of the other large bourses in the region fell. Europe's Stoxx 600 is little changed and US index futures are slightly firmer. Benchmark 10-year yields are softer in Japan and Europe, mostly 1-2 bp lower. UK Gilts and French bonds are the best performers so far today. French President Macron is expected to name a new prime minister today and Belgium credit may be downgraded today. The 10-year Treasury yield is off nearly three basis points to 4.11%. The low for the week is closer to 4.09%. Gold held yesterday's low slightly below $3945 and has reemerged above $4000 today. The record high set Wednesday was almost $4060. November WTI was turned back after approaching $63 on Wednesday and Thursday and has tested the $61 area today. The week's low is near $60.70....

....CNY: ....China has taken three initiatives over the past 48 hours that are significant. First, it has tightened and extended export controls on rare earths and related technologies, doing in effect what the US has done with semiconductor chips/technology, including extraterritorial application of third-party sales. If enforced, China can demonstrate escalation domination in the semiconductor and AI space as processed rare earths and associated magnets of essential (effective December 1)  Second....

....MUCH MORE  

Thursday, October 9, 2025

With The UK's PM Starmer In India To Meet India's Prime Minister Modi, Here's A Brit - Indian Collaboration

First up, from India Today, October 9:

UK PM India Visit Highlights: Namaskar doston, says UK PM, thanks PM Modi and India for warm welcome 

https://akm-img-a-in.tosshub.com/indiatoday/images/breaking_news/202510/pm-modi-welcomes-britains-keir-starmer-at-raj-bhavan-in-mumbai-094924622-16x9_0.jpg?VersionId=peV2eEZUPZ74ByBypbxfp8vZuYXH6VNw&size=686:385 

British PM Keir Starmer India Visit Live: British Prime Minister Keir Starmer is on his first official visit to India from October 8 to 9. During the two-day visit, PM Starmer and PM Modi are expected to review progress under the India-UK Comprehensive Strategic Partnership through the ‘Vision 2035’ roadmap, a 10-year plan covering trade and investment, technology and innovation, defence and security, climate and energy, health, education, and people-to-people ties. Follow indiatoday.in for the latest updates....

....MUCH MORE 

And from Wembley Arena, London in 2007:

 
The fellow on the guitar is comedian/master musician Bill Bailey and the young gentleman playing the sarod is Mumbai-born Soumik Datta.  
Mr. Datta is currently on tour in India (Mumbai Oct. 10), London November 23 and will be in Singapore November 28.

"Without data centers, GDP growth was 0.1% in the first half of 2025, Harvard economist says"

From Fortune, October 7:

U.S. GDP growth in the first half of 2025 was almost entirely driven by investment in data centers and information processing technology, according to Harvard economist Jason Furman. Excluding these technology-related categories, Furman calculated in a Sept. 27 post on X.com GDP growth would have been just 0.1% on an annualized basis, a near standstill that underlines the increasingly pivotal role of high-tech infrastructure in shaping macroeconomic outcomes. 

Furman’s findings, shared online and echoed by financial analysts including Robert Armstrong of the Financial Times‘ Unhedged (the same writer who coined the term “TACO trade’), echo several months of observations on the remarkable surge in data-center infrastructure. In August, Renaissance Macro Research estimated, to date in 2025, the dollar value contributed to GDP growth by AI data-center buildout had surpassed U.S. consumer spending for the first time ever. That’s remarkable considering consumer spending is two-thirds of GDP.

Technically, as Furman notes, investment in information-processing equipment and software was only 4% of U.S. GDP for the first half of 2025, yet it also accounted for fully 92% of GDP growth over that period. Furman added it’s probably not the case the U.S. economy would have recorded almost no expansion at all absent this buildout, reasoning that “absent the AI boom we would probably have lower interest rates [and] electricity prices, thus some additional growth in other sectors. In very rough terms that could maybe make up about half of what we got from the AI boom.” But still, it’s big.

Tech giants such as Microsoft, Google, Amazon, Meta, and Nvidia have poured tens of billions of dollars into building and upgrading data centers, responding to explosive demand for artificial intelligence and large language models that require massive computing resources.

Lisa Shallet, chief investment officer for Morgan Stanley Wealth Management, flagged on Sept. 29 that spending was truly massive among the so-called “hyperscalers” who are striving for huge computing, storage and networking capacity.

“In recent years, hyperscaler capex on data center and related items has risen fourfold and is nearing $400 billion annually,” she wrote. “The speed of growth and size of the investment are skewing its aggregate economic impact, with the top 10 spenders accounting for nearly a third of all spending … For perspective, it’s estimated that data center-linked spending is adding roughly 100 basis points to U.S. real GDP growth.”....

....MUCH MORE 

"Scientists seek to turbocharge a natural process that cools the Earth"

A topic near and dear.

From the Washington Post, October 8:

Terradot, a carbon removal company, is using “enhanced rock weathering” to sequester carbon by spreading crushed volcanic rock over farmland. 

STATE OF SÃO PAULO, Brazil — Across vast stretches of farmland in southern Brazil, researchers at a carbon removal company are attempting to accelerate a natural process that normally unfolds over thousands or millions of years.

The company, Terradot, is spreading tons of volcanic rock crushed into a fine dust over land where soybeans, sugar cane and other crops are grown. As rain percolates through the soil, chemical reactions pull carbon from the air and convert it into bicarbonate ions that eventually wash into the ocean, where the carbon remains stored.

The technique, known as “enhanced rock weathering,” is emerging as a promising approach to lock away carbon on a massive scale. Some researchers estimate the method has the potential to sequester billions of tons of carbon, helping slow global climate trends. Other major projects are underway across the globe and have collectively raised over a quarter-billion dollars.

As governments around the world fall woefully short of their emissions reduction targets, there is a growing consensus that large-scale carbon removal will be necessary to avoid some of the worst effects of climate change. An analysis conducted by an international team of researchers estimated that the world may need to remove up to 10 gigatons of carbon dioxide a year by 2050 to limit warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius — an amount greater than the annual greenhouse gas emissions of the United States.

Shawn Benner, a hydrogeologist and geochemist who left Boise State University after more than two decades to join Terradot, said he made the decision by asking himself what his grandchildren would want him to do. “Not too many people have the opportunity to change the temperature of the planet,” he said.

Yet significant challenges remain for enhanced rock weathering to meaningfully contribute to reducing global emissions. A key question is whether companies like Terradot can accurately and cost-effectively measure how much carbon they remove. And scaling the process globally poses major logistical hurdles.

“It’s at an exciting juncture,” said David Beerling, director of the University of Sheffield’s Leverhulme Center for Climate Change Mitigation. “But there’s a need for caution in ensuring that we have rigorous, cost-effective [tracking and verification] so that people don’t make claims for carbon credits that aren’t substantiated.”

Geologic to human timescales

Terradot was founded in 2022 at Stanford, growing out of an independent study between James Kanoff, an undergraduate seeking large-scale carbon removal solutions, and Scott Fendorf, an Earth science professor. Terradot ran a pilot project across 250 hectares in Mexico and began operations in Brazil in late 2023.

Since then, the company has spread about 100,000 tons of rock over 4,500 hectares. It has signed contracts to remove about 300,000 tons of carbon dioxide and is backed by a who’s who of Silicon Valley. It expects to deliver its first carbon removal credit — representing one metric ton of verified carbon dioxide removed — by the end of this year and then scale up from there.

Rock weathering is well-studied by scientists. The process acts like a global thermostat. When temperatures are higher, weathering speeds up, pulling carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and helping cool the planet.

Terradot is working to accelerate this process, bringing it from a geological timescale to a human one. It does so by taking basalt, a rock that weathers easily, and grinding it to the texture of baby powder to increase its surface area. The rock is then placed in regions with hot, humid climates for rapid weathering.

Brazil offers an additional benefit: widespread agriculture and plenty of quarries....

....MUCH MORE 

Back in 2011 we posted "How They Harvest Soybeans in Brazil" which gives some idea of the scale the Brazilians work on:

Northern Brazil:
http://farmlandgrab.org/uploads/images/photos/1596/original_image-255493-galleryV9-qtao.jpg?1314891432

Western Brazil:



More Mato Grosso:
Here the corn planters are following immediately behind the combines.
This is no till farming on steroids.

And on rock weathering: 

June 2025 - Removing Carbon Dioxide From The Air: "A Review of Massively Scalable Enhanced Rock Weathering"

I wanted this on the blog as a personal bookmark, he goes deep.... 

...Previously:

November 7, 2007 - Engineered weathering process could mitigate global warming

May 9, 2025 - "XPRIZE Makes History, Awards $100M Prize for Groundbreaking Carbon Removal Solutions"

It's not enough just to capture the carbon, to prevent re-release you have to sequester it.
And do so in an affordable way. The rock weathering approach addresses both of those goals.
The next step will be to speed things up.

Some background from January 2021:

"Elon Musk to offer $100 million prize for 'best' carbon capture tech" 

Carbon capture is an approach the Norwegians among others are exploring but it is not easy. Because the concentrations of CO2 in air are so low, ~415 parts per million, you have to move a lot of air through your systems to get meaningful amounts of CO2 to sequester.

The other reasons are ideological. A lot of folks in the authoritarian crowd don't like it because it means that things don't have to change as much as they would like things to change. Wealth transferers don't like carbon capture because it directly attacks their rationalization for "climate reparations", always set with a starting point far enough back in time so that only Northern Hemisphere and in particular, western, countries owe x-number of trillions of dollars to southern and eastern countries. And then there are the....

Yeah, I've been doing this a long time.

Putting all that aside, prizes are good, a very efficient way to mobilize talent and creativity in a focused pursuit. I may even see if I can recruit a team of folks smarter than I to claim Elon's money....

There are a lot posts in between those two bookends. One from June 2024 reiterates the key question to ask about any policy proposal:

Oxford Uni.: "The outlook for CO2 removal"

It is still far too expensive to be more than just demonstration projects, now and for another decade minimum.

And as with all such conversations the promoters never, ever, speak of degrees of warming avoided. If interested see after the jump.

From Dialogue Earth, June 10:

More clarity needed on CO2 removal in national climate action plans, finds Oxford University report

A nascent industry removing carbon from the atmosphere and storing it in trees, rocks and the ocean will need to quadruple in size by 2050 if the world is to keep temperature rise to within the internationally agreed threshold of 1.5C, a new report has found.

“Carbon dioxide removal” is defined by the UN’s climate science body, the IPCC (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change), as human activity that captures CO2 from the atmosphere and stores it for decades to millennia in geological, land or ocean reservoirs, or in products.

Around two billion tonnes of carbon are currently removed in this way each year, mostly using conventional methods such as afforestation and reforestation, wetland restoration and soil improvement.

However, an industry in more novel techniques has seen rapid growth in recent years. Such methods include: storing carbon in products like construction materials or “biochar”, a carbon-rich material produced by heating biomass in an oxygen-limited environment; enhanced rock weathering, which involves spreading finely ground silicate rock onto surfaces to speed up chemical reactions between rocks, water, and air; and direct air carbon capture and storage (DACCS), where carbon is separated from the air using chemical processes and deposited underground.

Last month, the world’s largest commercial DACCS plant, dubbed Mammoth, began operating in Iceland. It will draw down 36,000 tonnes of CO2 from the air every year and store it permanently underground, says the company behind it, Climeworks. The company is planning to build “multiple megaton hubs” in the US, meaning several facilities that can remove a million or more tonnes of CO2 per year.

Today such novel methods remove just 1.3 million tonnes of carbon a year, less than 0.1% of total carbon removals, with conventional methods responsible for the remaining 99.9%, the analysis found. But the researchers behind the report are optimistic that both novel and conventional methods can be scaled up to reach the estimated required level of 7-9 billion tonnes of CO2 per year by 2050.

Taken together, the carbon removal capacity proposed by companies globally would be sufficient to reach this, the authors found. However, they did not assess the likelihood of individual plans or announcements coming to fruition.

Diverse methods
The report, which was led by academics at the University of Oxford’s Smith School of Enterprise and the Environment, but also involved more than 50 international experts, stresses that politicians, policymakers and business leaders should still be focussing on reducing emissions as the primary way to achieve net zero.

But they argue that carbon dioxide removal (CDR) will also be needed to address climate change. CDR is advocated by the IPCC, which cites its potential to reduce emissions in the near term, to counterbalance unavoidable emissions in the medium term, and to achieve net-negative emissions in the longer term....

....MUCH MORE

From the outro of "Reminder of A Reminder of What Net Zero Means":  

As always, the correct question to ask of each and every policy is how many degrees C will this proposal reduce the temperature. You don't want the airy-fairy answer in tons of CO₂ or number of automobile-equivalents, you want degrees.

The reason for this is: you have to do comparisons to judge the effectiveness of policy proposals and to do that you have to use the the tools of science (maths).

As we've said over the years - this version is from 2019 but there are many others:

In the last years of the last century there was an international agreement on global warming policy called the Kyoto Protocol. It was a pretty big deal.

It was going to be expensive for the developed economies but worth it.
You heard of it right? It was in all the papers.

And do you recall how much the Kyoto Protocol would cool the planet?
Of course not.

The U.N. and the NGO's and Enron* and the consultants and everybody involved elided right past that number.
The answer was (no, not 42), the answer to the question of how much would the Kyoto Protocol cool the earth was 0.07 degrees. But that's 0.07°C, which is more cooling than if it had been 0.07°F.
The answer was not from me, it's the analysis of the U.S. National Center for Atmospheric Research....

****

*The first step is to get honest.
Like this guy, Enron's top lobbyist, John Palmisano, senior director for environmental policy and compliance who emailed from Kyoto:

If implemented [the Kyoto Protocol] will do more to promote Enron’s business than will almost any other regulatory initiative outside of restructuring of the [electricity] and natural gas industries in Europe and the United States…. The endorsement of emissions trading was another victory for us…. This agreement will be good for Enron stock!!
It was time to turn deeds into dollars, he added:
Enron now has excellent credentials with many ‘green’ interests including Greenpeace, WWF [World Wildlife Fund], NRDC [Natural Resources Defense Council], GermanWatch, The US Climate Action Network, the European Climate Action Network, Ozone Action, WRI [World Resources Institute], and Worldwatch [Institute],” reported Palmisano. “This position should be increasingly cultivated and capitalized on (monetized).
 As gentle reader has surmised, we've been following this stuff for a long, long time.
....This has helped form my personal belief that carbon trading is not going to lower world temperature by even a half-a-degree.

For example, in an October 1998 article in Nature, Martin Parry (Co-chair of the IPCC's Working Group II) said the effect of the Kyoto Protocol (and it's associated carbon trading, CDM etc. [articles 6,12 and 17 of the protocol]) would be a reduction of –0.05°C by the year 2050.
Tom Wigley of the National Center for Atmospheric Research estimated that Kyoto would result in a reduction from baseline of 0.06°C to 0.21°C . (under one Kyoto scenario 0.06 to 0.11°C, under another 0.11 to 0.21)....Here's the U.S. NCAR 2006 estimate of Kyoto's effects.

 

"Capitalisn’t: How Profit and Politics Hijacked Scientific Inquiry"

The subject of this interview is John Ioannidis, MD, DSC. 
The author of this piece, John Ioannidis, MD, DSC, is one of the denizens of the tippy-top of the global thinking-about-medicine hierarchy. Here's part of his Stanford mini-bio:
John P.A. Ioannidis, MD, DSC, holds the C.F. Rehnborg Chair in Disease Prevention at Stanford University where he is professor of medicine, professor of health research and policy, and professor of statistics (by courtesy) at the School of Humanities and Sciences. From 1999 until 2010, Dr. Ioannidis chaired the Department of Hygiene and Epidemiology at the University of Ioannina School of Medicine in Greece. He trained at the University of Athens School of Medicine in Greece, Harvard and Tufts, and also held appointments at the U.S. National Institutes of Health, Johns Hopkins, Tufts, Harvard, and Imperial College London.

Dr. Ioannidis is one of the most-cited scientists of all times in the scientific literature. His current research at Stanford covers a wide agenda, including meta-research, large-scale evidence, population health sciences and predictive medicine and health....
And it just goes on and on. I hate him.

And from the Booth School of Business at the University of Chicago's Chicago Booth Review, September 26:

Modern capitalism and science have evolved together since the Enlightenment. Advances in ship building and navigation enabled the Age of Discovery, which opened up new trade routes and markets to European merchants. The United States’ Department of Defense research and development agency helped create the precursor to the internet. The internet now supports software and media industries worth trillions of dollars. On the flip side, some of America’s greatest capitalists and businesses, including Thomas Edison, Henry Ford, and Bell Labs, gave us everything from electricity production to the transistor. Neither science nor capitalism can succeed without the other.

However, science’s star is now dimming. Part of this is due to political intervention, but so too has capitalism played a hand in science’s struggles. While corporations sponsor a significant portion of funding for scientific research, this funding too often comes with undisclosed conflicts of interest. Or corporate pressure may influence results in other ways.

Stanford’s John Ioannidis studies the methodology and sociology of science itself: how the process and standards for empirical research influence findings in ways that some may find inaccurate. On this episode of Capitalisn’t, Ioannidis joins cohosts Bethany McLean and Luigi Zingales to discuss the future of the relationship between capitalism and science. 

Audio Transcript 

John Ioannidis: Wrong incentives, wrong financial incentives for scientists, even in democratic societies, can be problematic.

Bethany: I’m Bethany McLean.

Phil Donahue: Did you ever have a moment of doubt about capitalism and whether greed’s a good idea?

Luigi: And I’m Luigi Zingales.

Bernie Sanders: We have socialism for the very rich, rugged individualism for the poor.

Bethany: And this is Capitalisn’t, a podcast about what is working in capitalism.

Milton Friedman: First of all, tell me, is there some society you know that doesn’t run on greed?

Luigi: And, most importantly, what isn’t.

Warren Buffett: We ought to do better by the people that get left behind. I don’t think we should kill the capitalist system in the process.

Bethany: Today’s topic may seem a little bit different for us because we have a guest who is a scientist.

Luigi: Why does a podcast about capitalism want to talk about science? Because capitalism and science were born roughly at the same time, they share a common cultural foundation, and there is a mutual dependency between the two. Modern capitalism cannot exist without the fruits of science. And modern science is supported by capitalist institutions that finance laboratories, R&D, and universities.

Bethany: Their success is intermingled in complicated ways. If per-capita income today is 27 times what it was 250 years ago, and if life expectancy is twice as long as it was 250 years ago, is that due to the success of capitalism, or the success of science, or both?

Luigi: And the question is, if science is in a crisis, how does this affect capitalism as we know it? In fact, we can argue that maybe it’s capitalism itself or capitalist incentives that are responsible for the science crisis. If we think that science is guided by disinterested inquiry, capitalism is guided by profit. To what extent is this profit motive impacting science and, indirectly, the success of capitalism?

Bethany: Or to what extent is it politics that are impacting both?

To discuss this topic, we are delighted to have with us John Ioannidis, a physician-scientist who is a professor at Stanford University and one of the world’s most-cited scientists. He has more than 600,000 Google citations.

Luigi: His most famous paper is “Why Most Published Research Findings are False,” which actually started the field of metascience. In it, Ioannidis argued that a large number, if not the majority, of published medical-research papers contain results that cannot be replicated.

Bethany: He also, I think, has additional work showing that citations can themselves be bought. So, maybe we should be careful about citing his citations. Anyway, there is no better person to discuss with us the topic of a science crisis and why it matters.

John, I wanted to start with some of your history. What made you an unorthodox thinker? About 20 years ago, you published research showing that most published claims were false. What do you think it is about your personality that started you down this path?

John Ioannidis: I’m not sure it’s a personality issue. It’s just the natural evolution of what I was witnessing and the research that I was doing. It was just very common to see mistakes, flaws, difficult to replicate, implausible results, very weird claims. If anything, my interest was in rigorous methods. I am the kind of person who’s more interested in methodology rather than the results. The results are interesting no matter what. I think if you use rigorous methods, there’s no good result or bad result. They’re all results to be respected.

Luigi: May I suggest that the reason is that you had to spend, I think, six months in the military service in Greece after being a doctor? I had to do one year of military service in Italy after I got my undergraduate degree, and that made me an anarchist for the rest of my life.

John Ioannidis: That’s a very interesting possibility. I hadn’t really made the connection, but who knows? Obviously, the military is a crazy world, and any notion of rationality and reason probably disappears very quickly.

Bethany: I did not know that about you, Luigi. So, see, all these years into our podcast and I’m still learning something all the time.

Before we move on to more recent history, I’d love for you to talk a little bit about COVID and what happened to you in the pandemic when you voiced some unconventional views.

John Ioannidis: It’s what happened to many people who voiced any views, not conventional or unconventional. Even the definition of what is conventional or unconventional can be challenged depending on whom you ask.

I think that many scientists very quickly realized that they either had to completely silence themselves, distance themselves—"Don’t deal with that. It’s just a crazy world out there”—or if they continued to be engaged, they took sides. So, they said, “Wait, I need some protection.” But that probably led to some huge polarizing effect.

Personally, I didn’t feel that I should seek protection from anyone. I have always argued that politics and this type of forces should not subvert science. They should not affect scientific thinking and reasoning and evidence.

I was just reporting what I found, and that made some people very happy and some others very, very angry. But it’s sad that some people would just feel that numbers had a color, that they belong to political parties, that they belong to partisan groups, that you had to find one number in order to be a good Democrat or a good Republican, a good supporter of someone. That’s very sad, but—

Luigi: I think that one of the concerns was that, of course, COVID was extremely disruptive or potentially disruptive to economic activity. The economic incentives to minimize the effects of COVID were enormous. This is where trust in science came in big time. There was a fraction of the population that did not trust the science and did not trust the results. To be honest, I think that some scientists or pseudoscientists were claiming that the damages were much lower because they wanted to continue business as usual. I think that this created a fracture in the population about this topic.

John Ioannidis: I think it’s a very complex narrative, and I think what you point out is valid. There were not one or two voices. There were zillions of voices out there, some of them more rational than others, some of them just very heavily conspiratorial-theories oriented. But many people were dissatisfied with what they saw as science or what was being sold as science or followed the science to them. They felt that it was affecting them in multiple ways that were mostly negative.

After a certain point, I think that they generalized their negative response to anything that came out of science, that science is yet another conspiracy of the powerful, against me, against my life, against my family, against my world. It’s not for me. It’s not trying to help me. It’s just trying to make money, help some big tech, some big pharma, some powerful people. It’s exploiting me, it’s killing me, it’s harming me, not for me. Science is my enemy. Very sad. Extremely sad....

....MUCH MORE 

"China unveils sweeping new export rules on rare earths, batteries"

The Chinese seem to be pretty good negotiators.

Like the Indians and the Jews, having a five thousand year history of doing same seems to be an advantage.

From Nikkei Asia, October 9: 

Mining and processing technologies, companies outside country subject to licensing

China on Thursday announced a flurry of new export controls on rare earths, lithium-ion batteries, and synthetic diamonds to "safeguard national security and interests."

The Ministry of Commerce added five rare-earth elements to its control list, including holmium and erbium, which have diverse applications, including in laser technology. The items will be subject to export licensing requirements from Nov. 8, the ministry said, on top of seven elements placed under restrictions in April.

Various rare-earth production and processing equipment will also be subject to export controls, as well as lithium-ion batteries and cathode materials used to make them.

In a Q&A published on the ministry's website, an unnamed spokesperson said the measures "are not targeted at any country or region." The person added that it has "already notified the relevant countries and regions."

The same day, the commerce ministry announced new rules prohibiting unauthorized export of technologies related to rare-earth mining, processing and magnet manufacturing. These measures take effect immediately.

The ministry said "foreign organizations and individuals" must also obtain a license to export items manufactured abroad to a third country if they contain certain rare-earth elements, such as samarium and terbium, of Chinese origin or were made using Chinese technologies. This international expansion of Beijing's oversight takes effect Dec. 1.

Licenses will not be granted for exports to foreign militaries and entities on China's control or watch lists, the ministry said. Applications for research and development or production of certain types of semiconductors and AI technologies with potential military applications will be reviewed on a case-by-case basis.

It is unclear how the ministry plans to enforce export controls on companies operating beyond China's borders.

The measures, announced as China returned to business after a weeklong holiday, were revealed about three weeks before an anticipated meeting between U.S. President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in South Korea. Rare earths have been a focal point of trade negotiations between the superpowers, with Trump demanding access to the crucial materials....

....MUCH MORE 

"AI gets more 'meh' as you get to know it better, researchers discover"

Again, the current uses of AI, chatbots etc. are not what all the hubbub is about.

That said, here is The Register with a couple articles, October 8: 

Most scientists now use the tech in their work, but still question its usefulness

AI hype is colliding with reality yet again. Wiley's global survey of researchers finds more of them using the tech than ever, and fewer convinced it's up to the job.

Academic publisher Wiley noted a link between researchers' use of AI and their confidence in its ability to perform as well as a human in a preview of its second ExplanAItions study on researchers' use of the technology. There were also some signs that respondents are happy with AI's ability to assist their work, but plunging confidence is definitely the hot-ticket takeaway. 

Comparing this year's survey of researchers from around the globe, 2,430 of whom participated, Wiley found that 84 percent are using AI tools to aid their work, up from just 57 percent in 2024. Here's the kicker: 53 percent of respondents in 2024's ExplanAItions report [PDF] believed that AI was already exceeding human capabilities in the use cases Wiley tested. In 2025, that number dropped to less than a third. 

It's easy to look at those numbers and come to the conclusion that the AI enthusiasm of early adopters simply doesn't match reality for others who are now trying to use the tech to see if it lives up to the hype. This year's findings even suggest that's the case, as early adopters still think AI outperforms humans in 59 percent of use cases. 

Wiley tries to paint those findings differently, however. According to the report preview, researchers are "coming to a better understanding of [AI's] present limits and future potential" - not, as the data suggests, the larger research community simply realizing it's a bit useless for complex tasks....

....MUCH MORE 

And October 9:

McKinsey wonders how to sell AI apps with no measurable benefits

Paris Grape Harvest October 8 - 12

With the end of Oktoberfest, what's a boozehound to do?

Well...."Grape Harvest Festival in Montmartre (Fête des Vendanges)" comes to mind.

Le 18e éternellement jeune

Pour sa 92e édition, la Fête des vendanges de Montmartre célèbre la jeunesse. Une jeunesse qui rime avec élan, énergie, créativité, curiosité ou encore audace. La jeunesse comme un état d’esprit et non pas comme une simple question d’âge !

Dans le 18e arrondissement, elle est partout : dans l’effervescence des rues, la vitalité de ses cultures, la richesse de ses talents. Elle s’exprime à travers l’art, la musique, la danse, le sport, l’engagement, l’envie de créer et de réinventer sans cesse, ensemble.

En 2025, la Fête des Vendanges de Montmartre célèbre cette jeunesse qui unit toutes les générations, ce souffle qui traverse le temps et les quartiers. Que l’on ait 7 ou 77 ans, que l’on soit habitant de toujours, nouveau venu ou passant d’un jour, chacun est invité à se laisser porter par cette dynamique joyeuse et inspirante.

Pendant 5 jours et à travers tout l’arrondissement, avec un programme riche et diversifié mêlant de nombreuses propositions culturelles, artistiques, gustatives ou sportives, toujours festives, cette fête sera l’occasion de partager, de rêver et de redécouvrir ensemble ce qui nous anime : une jeunesse intemporelle, mêlant toutes les générations, une jeunesse créative, solidaire et engagée, résolument tournée vers l’avenir.

Bienvenue dans cette édition 2025, où l’âme du 18e se fête avec enthousiasme !

....MUCH MORE 

Although there aren't as many windmills as when Van Gogh was roaming around:

February 2021 - "An 1887 painting of Montmartre in Paris by Vincent Van Gogh is appearing on the market for the first time"

My first thought was "That's not Montmartre".

Then, "Oh" Things change....

https://cdn.sanity.io/images/cxgd3urn/production/a9350ab3be39ad8a5749c73970723f53559e22b8-1023x768.jpg?w=1200&h=901&q=85&fit=crop&auto=format 

Van Gogh's Scène de rue à Montmartre (Impasse des deux frères et le Moulin à Poivre) 
from 1887 will go on the block next month Courtesy of Sotheby’s and Mirabaud Mercier
 
— Via the Art Newspaper 

Follow-Up: "Van Gogh painting, hidden for a century, sells for $15 million" 

Many of the same activities that Renoir observed are still to be seen:

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/4/40/Auguste_Renoir_-_Dance_at_Le_Moulin_de_la_Galette_-_Mus%C3%A9e_d%27Orsay_RF_2739_%28derivative_work_-_AutoContrast_edit_in_LCH_space%29.jpg 

Bal du Moulin de la Galette a Montmartre by Pierre-Auguste Renoir

Art, Baron Haussmann, Paris, February 2024

With the deeply insightful comment "It's hard to beat Renoir." 

There's also one of my faves by Jean Béraud to make up for the commentary. 

So four more days of grapes in Paris:

https://www.solosophie.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/10/wine_handle_montmartre.jpg 

Detail of the door handle at the entrance to the Montmartre vineyard

"The most dangerous corner of a balance-sheet"

As has been said, probably since the day after Pacioli published: "Balance sheets don't matter until they do."

From The Economist, October 8:

Forget debt. Here is something to villainise 

Debt suffers from a bad reputation. In almost every culture, lending and borrowing are maligned, with unflattering idioms common. Yet credit is the lifeblood of capitalism: the ability to lend and borrow facilitates hundreds of billions of dollars of activity every day.

Those looking for a balance-sheet item to gripe about could be a little more inventive. An even less sexy budget line has played an understated role in many financial blow-ups. Receivables, a category of assets that represents the money a firm is owed by its customers but has not yet received, come up again and again, along with the practice of borrowing and lending against future payments. Most recently, a committee appointed by First Brands, an American car-parts firm which filed for bankruptcy on September 28th, said it would investigate if the company’s receivables were borrowed against multiple times over. Although the firm may turn out to have kept to the rules, plenty of others have not.

In their most mundane form, receivables record a simple form of credit. A clothing manufacturer might supply a new line of coats to a retailer without taking payment right away. At an agreed point down the line, the retailer will begin to pay the manufacturer for their stock. In the meantime, the manufacturer records the transaction as a receivable, allowing it to book the revenue.

Rising receivables can disguise a business model under strain, however. Carillion, a building firm, collapsed in 2018, becoming Britain’s largest ever liquidation. Hedge funds had short-sold its stock after noticing accounts receivable were climbing faster than revenues.

On other occasions, receivables are used for brazen fraud. Sunbeam, an American consumer-products firm, restated its results in 1998 after it was found to have inflated its revenue with sales it had not made yet, which were booked as accounts receivable. Satyam Computer Services, an Indian IT company, produced reams of fake invoices, designed to generate receivables and bolster tales of rapid expansion. When Enron, an energy-and-trading giant, crumbled in 2001, its receivables position proved to be illusory.

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. Barry Minkow, a businessman jailed twice for fraud, was at least honest: “Accounts receivable are a wonderful thing. They are a tool that is used by a fraudster like me, to ask to borrow money mainly, and to show earnings.”....

....MUCH MORE 

Wednesday, October 8, 2025

"SoftBank shares soar 10% after it agrees to buy ABB robotics unit for $5.4 billion"

The acquirer is trading higher. That's living the M&A dream. A dream come true.

From CNBC October 8:

  • SoftBank Group jumped 10% after it agreed to buy ABB’s robotic division.
  • Japan’s Nikkei 225 rose 1%.
  • Hong Kong markets were set to open higher.
  • South Korean markets were closed for a holiday.

Shares of SoftBank jumped over 10% Thursday after the Japanese giant announced Wednesday that it agreed to buy the robotics division of Swiss engineering firm ABB for $5.4 billion, further advancing SoftBank’s AI footprint.

The deal, which is subject to regulatory approval globally, means ABB will no longer look to spin off its robotics business as a separately listed company.

“SoftBank’s next frontier is Physical AI. Together with ABB Robotics, we will unite world-class technology and talent under our shared vision to fuse Artificial Super Intelligence and robotics — driving a groundbreaking evolution that will propel humanity forward,” Masayoshi Son, founder of SoftBank, said in a statement.

Artificial Super Intelligence, or ASI, is Son’s idea of AI that is 10,000 times smarter than humans.

Son has looked to position SoftBank at the center of the potential AI boom through investments and acquisitions in different areas of technology. SoftBank owns chip designer Arm, for example, and has a major stake in OpenAI.

SoftBank-owned British chip designer Graphcore is also planning to invest $1.3 billion in India, including a new research hub, Bloomberg reported early Thursday.

The plans are expected to be announced during British Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s visit to India this week. He will be accompanied by a business delegation, the report said, citing sources familiar with the matter....

....MORE 

ABB robotics, back in the day....
September 2017 
"Race to Make Robots for China Spurs ABB Plan to Double Capacity" (ABB) 
Well it's about time.
We were getting whispers of this five years ago. Some links below....
***** 

August 2012
Here's the Robot that Foxconn Will Use to Build Their Million-strong "Robot Kingdom" (ABB; AAPL)

November 2012
Foxconn Begins Installing First 10,000 Robots (AAPL)
These are simple robotic arms* not the anthropomorphized bots we mentioned in August's "Here's the Robot that Foxconn Will Use to Build Their Million-strong "Robot Kingdom" (ABB; AAPL)".
As speculated, Foxconn is building their own robots....

*Compare to the ABB FRIDA from our August post:
7-axis, dual arm, 720 degree 'wrist' spin, portable, and on and on:

abb industrial robot frida 







That's it. No more work for me.
Images and video: ABB 

January 2013
Another of ABB's Robots: Pancake Pickers and Packers/Stackers

October 2014
"Million Robot Revolution Delayed—iPhone Manufacturer Foxconn Hires More Humans"

“Hon Hai has a workforce of over one million worldwide and as human beings are also animals, to manage one million animals gives me a headache.”
- Foxconn CEO Terry Gou at an annual family day for staff at the Taipei Zoo.


November 2018
More Wallenberg Investing: "Robots to make robots at ABB's new $150 million factory in China"
As seen last week the Wallenberg clan has a 10.7% stake in ABB.
They are patient money which is a good thing because in this case, it has been six years since we posted "Here's the Robot that Foxconn Will Use to Build Their Million-strong "Robot Kingdom" (ABB; AAPL)".
It turned out the Chinese government preferred that Foxconn's Mr. Gou not fully automate the Shenzhen facility and put 500,000 people out of work.
So ABB has taken a slightly different approach....

Previously on Graphcore 

And on ARM 

That's A New All-Time High For Quanta Services (PWR)

And another for electrical cable giant Prysmian S.p.A, (PRY.MI).

From Investor's Business Daily:

Breakout Watch: Top Funds Fire Up This AI Infrastructure Stock 

The artificial intelligence revolution continues to drive demand far beyond the likes of Nvidia (NVDA), Palantir Technologies (PLTR) and Alphabet (GOOGL). AI infrastructure stocks like Quanta Services (PWR) and Emcor (EME) have also attracted big bets from Wall Street.

Showing unabated demand for AI stocks, Quanta Services and Emcor joined Nvidia, Alphabet, Palantir on the latest monthly report on new buys by the best mutual funds, As Quanta trades near a buy point and Emcor remains in buy range, they also join Alphabet on the Investor's Business Daily Breakout Stocks Index.

Quanta Services Rides AI Infrastructure Boom And Beyond

Based in Houston, Quanta Services provides specialized infrastructure solutions to the utility, renewable energy, technology, communications, pipeline and energy industries. With operations throughout the United States, Canada, Australia and other international markets, the company's services include designing, installing, repairing and maintaining energy and communications infrastructure.

Strong demand for AI data centers has also boosted demand for Quanta's electrical and other systems.

Top money managers scooped up over $414 million worth of Quanta Services in the latest list of new buys by top funds. They also poured over $649 million into Emcor.

In the second quarter, Quanta Services generated more than $6.73 billion in revenue, marking a 21% year-over-year gain. Earnings growth rose 31% to $2.48 per share.

When the company reports third-quarter numbers on Oct. 30, analysts forecast 14% sales growth to around $7.38 billion. Earnings are expected to grow 20% to $3.26 a share.

For the full year, Wall Street sees earnings rising 18% to $10.57 per share, followed by a 17% gain to $12.39 per share in 2026.

AI Demand Fuels Buy Zone 
With the tech-heavy Nasdaq notching new highs but now encountering some resistance, Nvidia — Tuesday's IBD Stock Of The Day — Palantir and fellow AI infrastructure play Emcor all trade in or near a buy zone.

Shares of Quanta Services stand near a record high after clearing a 424.94 buy point in a second-stage cup pattern. But on Tuesday, the stock retreated below that entry as the market got jittery. As investors wait to see how Quanta Services holds up and how it reports on Oct. 30, the latest chart pattern and positive technical signs remain intact.

At the beginning of the month, the 21-day exponential moving average climbed back above Quanta's 50-day line and it continues to rise. It is a telltale clue of improving technical strength when a shorter-term moving average retakes its longer-term cousin.

In a sign of market leadership, the relative strength line has turned higher, but remains shy of its 52-week high.

Its strong industry group provides another promising indicator for Quanta Services. With a 97 Composite Rating out of a best-possible 99, Quanta sits among the leaders in the Building-Heavy Construction group, which ranks a lofty No. 14 among the 197 industries IBD tracks. Stock market history shows that the top-performing stocks often hail from the top-ranked industry groups....

....MORE 

The stock is up $13.57 (+3.22%) at $435.08 after setting the new ATH at $435.85.

And Prysmian S.p.A,?

As we mentioned in October 2's "Electric Cable Giant, Prysmian S.p.A. Closes At All-Time High (PRY.MI)":

They are also big in optical fiber cabling but since they bought America's General Cable Prysmian is far-and-away the class of the field....
****
...88.00 euros last, It is often a positive indicator when a stock closes at its high for the day. Day's Range 84.28 - 88.00

For the year. 52 Week Range 38.57 - 88.00

Forever....

Today the stock is changing hands in Milan at 91.18 euros, up 3.72 (+4.25%) after trading as high as 91.50.