Nvidia’s quarterly report: the burden of market expectations
Published in Svenska Dagbladet, 2024-08-29. Translated from Swedish.
Nvidia delivered strong quarterly figures but was met with mild scepticism from the market. The company now faces its biggest challenge yet: market expectations.
A small group of enthusiasts gathered at a sports bar in New York on Wednesday afternoon. But it was not a game on the screens — they were there to watch chipmaker Nvidia’s quarterly earnings report. The hottest tech stocks have been blazing this year, and the scene at the bar suggests we may be entering a phase where things are becoming slightly absurd. Quarterly earnings are not traditional entertainment — they tend to be dry as dust. But if you have watched your Nvidia shares rise more than 160 percent over the past year, they become considerably more exciting.
Given the company’s size and weighting in the S&P 500 index, Nvidia’s figures mattered to the entire market. The question everyone wanted answered was whether investment in AI appeared set to remain at record levels, or whether there were signs of a coming slowdown.
Nvidia delivered numbers that for any other company would have been extraordinary. Revenue grew 130 percent year-on-year. Gross margin expanded. Profit nearly tripled. On top of that, the company announced a share buyback programme worth around 509 billion kronor. These were figures that any CFO would dream of presenting.
But the stock market is not only about what you deliver — it is about how you deliver relative to market expectations. And for the first time in a long while, several analyst estimates exceeded even these strong figures. The stock fell around 5 percent in after-hours trading.
The concern likely stemmed from Nvidia’s revenue guidance. It came in at the lower end of market expectations, and the company indicated that its new chip — Blackwell — had some production issues. Despite this, Nvidia said it expected Blackwell to generate “billions of dollars” in revenue within just two quarters.
But when you have a stock that has already risen so extraordinarily quickly — around 500 percent over the past two years — the expectations are priced in accordingly. A perceived deceleration, even from a very elevated level, is enough to create anxiety.
Nvidia has effectively become a barometer for AI development as a whole. The tech giants’ investments in the sector flow largely into Nvidia’s pockets — companies like Amazon, Google and Microsoft invest billions in data centres where Nvidia chips are often a critical component. As long as the willingness to invest among the tech majors remains strong, Nvidia benefits.
On the horizon one can sense a concern about whether that investment appetite will prove as enduring as the market hopes. Goldman Sachs reports suggest AI’s contribution to GDP growth may be closer to 1 percent than the 6-plus percent previously forecast — and the payoff may lie considerably further into the future. If that is the case, will the tech companies’ shareholders tolerate such large investments without seeing revenues increase at the same pace? Any hint of doubt could hit Nvidia hard, priced as it is for continued extraordinary growth.
For every other chipmaker, the challenge is catching up with Nvidia — competitors’ products simply are not as good yet, and billions are being invested around the world to close that gap. Nvidia’s challenge is an entirely different one. It has the products, the customers and the momentum. Now it must live up to the expectations created by its phenomenal run.
It is no longer enough just to be good — Nvidia must essentially beat numbers that a year ago would have been unthinkable. The market’s reaction on Wednesday evening showed that the road ahead will not be as smooth as the road that got it here.
Pavel Durov’s relationship with Russia raises many questions
Published in Svenska Dagbladet, 2024-08-26. Translated from Swedish.
Drug trafficking and contract killings take place on the messaging app Telegram. But that is not the whole story behind the arrest of its founder Pavel Durov, whose relationship with the Russian state raises many questions.
When Sweden’s justice minister invited social media companies for talks about crime last week, one company name was absent: Telegram. It is a little like inviting representatives of the fast food industry and leaving out McDonald’s. The reason Telegram was not present likely has a simple explanation — its representatives would not have come anyway. The app has become known as a haven for both unwelcome political views and outright illegal activity. At the weekend, founder Pavel Durov was arrested at a Paris airport, reportedly for failing to take action against the criminal activity occurring on the platform.
The underlying question has existed since the internet was popularised: are internet platforms responsible for what happens on them? The answer is not clear-cut and varies by jurisdiction. In the United States it is governed by what is known as Section 230, a 1996 law that both political parties have tried to revise without success — leaving it rather toothless and poorly adapted to the modern era. In the EU the relatively new Digital Services Act governs, requiring services with more than 45 million monthly users in the EU to meet stricter rules on content moderation.
For services like Instagram and Pinterest that threshold is straightforward — they are listed companies that report user figures regularly. For Telegram it is considerably less clear. How many users does Telegram have within the EU? Fewer than 45 million, at least — if you believe the company itself. A spokesperson for the Belgian postal and telecoms authority — responsible for regulating Telegram in Europe — expressed scepticism, but diplomatically: “Depending on how you count the number of active users, you can arrive at different figures.”
Telegram has responded to its CEO’s arrest on X with the words: “It is absurd to claim that a platform or its owner is responsible for the misuse of that platform.” For a service run by an avowed libertarian, that reaction is understandable. But it is in the direction of greater platform accountability that legislation is inevitably moving — whatever one thinks of it. Even in Sweden, greater focus has been placed on the platforms that serve as marketplaces for crime, as gang-related shootings have increased.
An additional complexity with Telegram specifically is its connection to Russia. Arrested founder Pavel Durov is a Russian-born billionaire who made his name as the founder of VKontakte, often described as Russia’s Facebook. In 2014 a stake in VKontakte was sold to a company linked to oligarch Alisher Usmanov, and Durov became wealthy. Despite the outcome, Durov has described the sale as forced by the Russian state when he refused to hand over data on its users. The deal has also been described as the motivation behind his desire to start a new kind of service — one where Russia could not influence how it was run. Around this time Durov also became a French citizen, one of at least four nationalities he holds. The new service became Telegram, an app today formally based in Dubai.
Given that description it is easy to view Telegram as a resistance movement against Russian censorship and data collection — and that may have been the original intent. But there are indications that Telegram is now being used as a tool for the opposite. Reports in Wired magazine in early 2023 gave examples of Russian security services citing Telegram messages in police interrogations of dissidents — messages that senders and recipients believed were secure and encrypted.
For a long time Telegram was also blocked in Russia, but in June 2020 the app was permitted again. Today it is the most popular messaging service in the country. When announcing that Telegram would be allowed back, the Russian government cited an agreement touching on matters “in the context of terrorism.” Telegram denies any such agreement existed, but the circumstances have created unease among users.
Exactly what Pavel Durov has been arrested for is not fully established. What is known is that Telegram went from being banned in Russia to becoming a popular channel for Russian communication — particularly in relation to the war in Ukraine. What caused the Kremlin to change its position is unclear. But to view Telegram only as a bastion of free speech would be to underestimate how certain countries use platforms like Telegram for their own purposes. Whether Telegram is a useful tool or a deliberate actor in this remains to be seen.
Published in Svenska Dagbladet, 2024-08-17. Translated from Swedish.
After this spring’s stock market surge among tech companies, markets have started to doubt. Will AI deliver the economic explosion investors hoped for? Several influential voices are now expressing scepticism for the first time.
“I think it is insane.” Barton Briggs, strategist at investment bank Morgan Stanley, was speaking about Cisco in April 2000. The networking giant had been the star of the dotcom era, but some were beginning to wonder whether everything was as it seemed. “I cannot understand how you can make money on a stock trading at 150 times revenue, with a market cap of $500 billion,” Briggs continued, to the Wall Street Journal. He was right. A year later Cisco’s stock had fallen 80 percent. The dotcom bubble had burst.
After a turbulent summer for tech stocks, more experts are now asking whether we are facing a similar moment. Chipmaker Nvidia has fallen 15 percent from its summer peak. For the year as a whole the company is still up 145 percent, and looking back five years the gain is over 2,800 percent.
Attention is now turning to Nvidia’s next quarterly earnings, due within two weeks. Can the locomotive of the AI boom keep growing? One can sense some doubt, at least.
Much of the criticism centres on concern about how much is being invested in AI relative to the value companies are extracting from it. This summer Goldman Sachs published a report highlighting several critical voices. Daron Acemoglu, professor at MIT, is among the sceptics. He believes AI development is important, but that the major breakthroughs are further away — closer to ten years than one or two. While Goldman Sachs’ own economists believe AI could drive GDP growth of 6.1 percent, Acemoglu puts the equivalent figure closer to 1 percent. He is also sceptical that AI will deliver the cost savings many have hoped for.
Jim Covello, head of equity research at Goldman Sachs, argues that AI needs to be capable of solving very complex problems to justify today’s investments of around $1 trillion. That is something the technology currently cannot do. He also believes the savings being generated by AI today are too simple and too cheap to justify the enormous cost of building and maintaining these new services — and sees no reason to expect this to change in the near term.
There are naturally still enthusiasts in the market. The more optimistic camp sees a market that is still in its infancy. For them, AI development does not necessarily need to create wholly revolutionary products and services. Simply making existing things easier and faster may be entirely sufficient.
Looking back at the early dotcom period, the payback time on those investments was long too — particularly at the start. But as the technology matured, the pace accelerated. Eric Sheridan, a somewhat more optimistic equity analyst at Goldman Sachs, concedes that the paybacks need to be larger to justify the enormous investments now being made. But he does not believe that a somewhat extended build-out phase will deter the major companies from continuing to invest in AI.
For the large tech companies — Google, Amazon, Meta — the risk of investing too little and falling behind appears to feel considerably greater than the risk of wasting money on something that never materialises. Those with the most reason to be enthusiastic are those with large stakes in Nvidia, the company that has become the central node of AI development alongside OpenAI. Nvidia’s success is built largely on other tech companies’ investments in the sector — their capital expenditure becomes Nvidia’s revenue.
It comes down to patience, on several levels. How long will the tech giants be permitted to spend billions of dollars on bets that generate little in return? Will demands come from major shareholders wanting dividends or buybacks instead? Activist fund Elliott Management has taken a clear position, saying in a letter that Nvidia is in “bubble-land” — while adding that it would be “suicidal” to try to short the stock, given its trajectory.
As long as enthusiasm around AI remains high among the biggest tech companies, Nvidia should continue to do well. But for the first time in this cycle, at least some doubt is being heard. When Nvidia’s quarterly report is unveiled, we will see whether that doubt shows up in the numbers.
Published in Svenska Dagbladet, 2024-08-03. Translated from Swedish.
From a garage to becoming Latin America’s most important tech company. The Mercado Libre success story sounds like a cliché — but with near-perfect timing, Marcos Galperin has built a company that Silicon Valley cannot touch.
“He is now morbidly obese, a drug addict, has cancer, AIDS and is an alcoholic.” That is how Marcos Galperin describes Argentina’s economy to The Economist. As the founder of the e-commerce platform Mercado Libre — and thereby Argentina’s richest man — he has become someone people listen to. Galperin swings hard with his criticism of left-wing politics and his praise of capitalism.
His position is easy to understand given his background. Capitalism has created enormous wealth for him. His company, Mercado Libre, has become the hub of e-commerce across all of Latin America.
Galperin came from a privileged starting point. His family owned a leather goods empire in Argentina, and for a time he considered becoming a professional rugby player. Combining elite sport with business proved too difficult, and he chose the latter.
In the late 1990s he enrolled at Stanford Graduate School of Business — GSB — in Palo Alto, in the heart of Silicon Valley. Like many others who have passed through those doors — among them Reid Hoffman and Kevin Systrom, founders of LinkedIn and Instagram respectively — he spotted a market opportunity. Auction sites like eBay were growing rapidly. Why did nothing like this exist in Latin America?
He sensed a business opportunity. Galperin decided to start a company from a garage — exactly as the founding myth tends to go. The first seed of Mercado Libre was planted.
At the same time, on the American east coast, another would-be entrepreneur had the same idea. Argentine-born Alex Oxenford was studying at rival school Harvard Business School. He moved back home to set up his company, Deremate. Both launched in 1999, and neither knew a deep dotcom crisis was imminent. Oxenford took the fast, aggressive path — heavy venture capital, strong growth, quick execution. Galperin moved more cautiously, focusing on customer loyalty. When the crash came, Oxenford’s model became unsustainable. Risk capital dried up entirely.
After a few years of stagnation Oxenford’s side admitted defeat, and Deremate was sold to Mercado Libre. Dominance was established. It was time to expand.
The e-commerce giant we see today began to take shape. The platform is best described as a blend of Amazon, an online classifieds site, and PayPal all in one. It sells its own products and enables peer-to-peer commerce. Like Amazon, calling it a mere “website” is misleading — it is an ecosystem providing everything from logistics to payments and credit.
In 2007 it was time to scale seriously. Mercado Libre had expanded across Latin America and become a force in e-commerce that no one could ignore. The company decided to go public, listing on the American Nasdaq as the first Latin American company ever to do so.
Here too, timing proved decisive. On the very day of the IPO, what would become a global financial crisis began. Central banks injected liquidity into markets. A few months later Lehman Brothers collapsed. But Galperin managed to fund his company, got a strong start on the exchange, and navigated through the years that followed.
The third and final crisis was the pandemic. Galperin had just made a massive investment in a new logistics system capable of reaching customers across all of Latin America — infrastructure that enables commerce even in parts of the region where people have no bank account. When the pandemic hit, digital commerce became more important than ever. Galperin’s investment paid off immediately.
Today Mercado Libre has a market capitalisation of around $70 billion and is the region’s second-largest company, after an oil company. Galperin has moved the headquarters to Uruguay, but his engagement with Argentina continues. When Javier Milei became president in December 2023, Galperin posted an image on social media of birds breaking free from chains. The caption was short and clear: “free.”
Free trade has made Marcos Galperin personally worth around 63 billion kronor. He is one of the region’s largest employers and expects Mercado Libre to have 76,000 employees this year. Can anything stop them? It does not look that way today — and if history is any guide, timing has always been on Mercado Libre’s side.
How Flipkart won the battle against Amazon in India
Published in Svenska Dagbladet, 2024-07-28. Translated from Swedish.
They have been called India’s Amazon — but the road there was long and complicated. From nothing, Sachin and Binny Bansal built the e-commerce giant Flipkart in a country of nearly 1.5 billion people, most of whom had no internet access.
Entrepreneurial stories of founders who spotted an opportunity to do better than the competition are plentiful. Rarer are those who had to build their entire market from scratch before they could even begin.
That was the situation Sachin and Binny Bansal found themselves in 2007. The two friends — sharing a surname but unrelated — worked together as software engineers at Amazon in India. The e-commerce giant had staff in the country but no consumer-facing business. The reason was clear to anyone who looked at the macro picture: while Sweden had started getting broadband a decade earlier, only five percent of India’s population had internet access at all.
The Bansals sensed an opening. Why were there no price comparison sites in the Indian market? They quit Amazon and went independent. The analysis proved shallow — they quickly realised that price was the least of the problems with Indian e-commerce. Internet coverage among potential customers was poor, and the stores selling goods were not trustworthy. Would you even receive what you ordered? Could you trust that the payment would go through?
The company had to pivot immediately. Before customers started trusting e-commerce in general, there was no point trying to compare prices. Instead they set about improving online retail itself. They borrowed two things from their former employer Amazon: the idea of selling books and an obsessive customer focus. When the first real book order came in, they had to manually search through physical bookshops to find what the customer wanted. The system was rough, but the service mentality was strong.
Over time Flipkart expanded. In 2010 it started selling mobile phones, and a new set of challenges became clear. Shipping books is relatively straightforward — a slightly bent book is still readable. Mobile phones are another matter: nothing can be broken in transit, and at significantly higher price points customers were nervous. The perceived risk of losing money loomed large. To address fears of a damaged product, Flipkart offered full returns on everything — money back, no questions asked. And to ease anxiety about paying online, an unconventional solution emerged: pay the courier in cash. It felt like a normal purchase at the point of payment, but the order still happened online.
The system was now working, and Flipkart had solved some of the toughest barriers to Indian e-commerce. Competitors noticed. Domestic rival Snapdeal made a big push, but the hardest challenge came from the Bansals’ former employer. Amazon launched in India in 2013. To compete, Flipkart had taken in significant venture capital and become the country’s second unicorn — a company valued at over a billion dollars.
The investment enabled major spending on logistics and delivery infrastructure. In a country of nearly 1.5 billion people, the complexity is easy to underestimate. But because Flipkart had arrived first, it was also forced to build systems that actually worked for its home market. That infrastructure has since generated enormous value — and made it very difficult for new entrants to challenge.
The success drew attention from around the world. In 2018, American retailer Walmart bought 77 percent of Flipkart for 16 billion dollars — one of the largest tech acquisitions ever. Walmart is one of the few companies that has managed to challenge Amazon on its home turf, and the template was familiar: Flipkart was essentially Amazon, but for India. With the acquisition, Sachin Bansal stepped down; a few months later Binny Bansal departed as well.
Flipkart is today India’s largest e-commerce player — just ahead of Amazon — with around 22,000 employees and a 48 percent market share. India has also raised internet penetration to around 40 percent, which in rough terms gives a potential market of around 600 million people. The company’s next step is rumoured to be a stock market listing, perhaps as soon as 2025.
This column was first published in SvD Näringsliv, in Swedish, on June 22nd, 2024.
Many companies seized the opportunity to go public during a period of temporarily high valuations. However, the aftermath is severe, and the Swedish tech miracle is significantly shaken, as revealed by an extensive review conducted by SvD’s tech analyst Björn Jeffery.
A large bell, mounted on a two-meter-high stand. It was the solution to a problem we will likely never face again in our lifetime.
In the spring and summer of 2021, the tech stock market was hot. The list of companies eager to go public was long. Adam Kostyál, then the Swedish head of listings at Nasdaq, faced an unusual challenge. With corona restrictions still in place, filling Nasdaq’s office in Stockholm with people celebrating was not an option. At the same time, it seemed impossible to list a company without ringing the iconic bell.
If the companies couldn’t come to Nasdaq and the bell, the bell had to come to the companies instead.
Thus, the mobile Nasdaq bell was invented.
For a couple of years, it shuttled between the offices of hopeful tech companies ready to meet the stock market. Celebratory and relatively corona-safe.
From 2020 to 2022, about 35 tech companies were listed on Nasdaq Stockholm and First North. Interest rates were low, and risk appetite was high.
“The Swedish tech miracle” is a term often mentioned. It primarily refers to the number of startups and a handful of major successes, like Spotify and King.
Whether it is a miracle or not is debatable. But one thing is clear: on the Stockholm stock market, it is now more “tech crisis” than “tech miracle.”
The development since the many IPOs has been weak. The market deflated completely, and most companies have not recovered.
What happened?
First of all, there is currently no good way to even track the sector described as tech on the Swedish stock market. These are companies that exclusively operate and conduct business in a digital environment.
Nasdaq has a blunt categorization where companies end up in the “Data/IT,” “Finance,” or “Services” boxes. Nasdaq’s own index “OMX Stockholm Technology PI” is a mix of consulting firms, electric vehicle chargers, and various software. Essentially all major and newer tech companies on the stock market are missing from it.
Swedish tech funds like Robur Technology and TIN Ny Teknik do not only invest in Swedish tech companies, making them misleading as a guiding star. Investment banks often have private indices their clients can access, but they are rarely public or complete.
To try to grasp how Swedish listed tech companies are developing, SvD took matters into its own hands. Together with the American service Thematic, we built our own index to depict the development.
The index takes the 30 largest tech companies from Sweden, according to specific criteria, and compiles them into a unified picture. It is reweighted four times a year and includes Swedish companies that have chosen to list abroad – such as Spotify. The index is equally weighted to avoid small price movements in large companies overshadowing everything in the smaller ones.
The starting point is set to January 2022. Overall, the Swedish tech stock market has lost more than a third of its value since then – down around 39 percent. This can be compared to the broad index for the Stockholm Stock Exchange (which is weighted) that has declined by 4 percent in the same period.
The absolute best performer among the 30 in our index has been the gaming company Betsson, with an increase of 128 percent. The opposite can be found in Viaplay, where 99.4 percent of the value has been erased since January 2022.
Fortnox – long in the spotlight for its stock market success – saw its significant rise from 2018 to 2022 but has since had a more modest increase of around 13 percent.
The communications company Sinch – which reached its peak in September 2021 – has slid significantly since then. Since the index’s start, they have lost over 79 percent of their value.
Of the 30 largest tech companies on the stock market, only nine have increased in value since January 2022. And two of them – MTG and Lime – have only increased by single-digit percentages.
The global tech sector has also had a tough period. But compared to the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 index, which has risen nearly 20 percent in the same period, and the S&P 500, which has increased by over 17 percent, the Swedish tech sector’s performance is much worse.
The aforementioned Nasdaq 100 includes many tech companies but is not solely composed of them. Companies like PepsiCo, Marriott, and Starbucks are also among them.
For a more accurate comparison, we need to look at something with a more pronounced tech profile. One option is the exchange-traded fund First Trust Cloud Computing ETF (SKYY), which exclusively contains companies engaged in cloud services.
It includes 65 companies in total and includes some of the largest ones, such as Alphabet (Google) and Amazon. It is not a perfect comparison, but it is illustrative enough to show a picture.
Despite a sharp decline in SKYY from the beginning of 2022, American companies have recovered better. In total, it has fallen by around 8 percent, which is a weak development but significantly better than its Swedish counterparts, which have dropped over 36 percent in the same period.
That tech companies generally underperform on the stock market is not just a Swedish phenomenon. But our index and comparison with the U.S. also reveal something else: the enormous importance of size.
Of the nine tech companies that have increased in our Swedish tech index, only two belong to the lower, smaller half of the index (in terms of market value). Our index only looks at the 30 largest tech companies with Swedish ties, but if we made the list twice as long, the pattern would be the same. To be a successful tech company on the stock market, you need to be big.
On the American SKYY, the pattern is identical. Only four of those with positive development are among the smaller half of the index. The big winners are also very familiar names. Microsoft, Google, Amazon, Oracle, and Salesforce. With only a handful of exceptions, it is clear that smaller tech companies have performed significantly worse on the stock market than the larger ones.
This is largely due to the enormous advantage that tech giants have had over the past 10–20 years. Several have been de facto monopolies in their respective areas. This has created enormous value and an advantage that is nearly insurmountable.
Looking at the list known as the “magnificent seven” – the seven tech companies representing around a third of the value on the S&P 500 – several of them reappear: Apple, Meta (Facebook), Amazon, Alphabet (Google), Microsoft, Tesla, and Nvidia.
What SvD’s review shows is an extension of the development for these magnificent seven. The absolutely largest tech companies perform disproportionately well. The rest have had a much tougher development.
The tendency is also noticeable in our Swedish index, where Spotify is among the few in the positive table. They are also by far the largest – and their market value is higher than all the other 29 companies in our index combined.
One question to ask is whether many of the tech companies are small because they have performed poorly, or do they perform poorly because they are small?
It’s leaning towards the latter. In both our own index and SKYY, those who have performed best are many times larger than the rest. They are on the same lists, but are essentially entirely different kinds of companies.
Hemnet – which has performed incredibly well and increased by 73 percent – is today more than six times larger (in terms of market value) than Storytel, whose stock has fallen 65 percent.
Small companies have generally performed worse than the stock market as a whole since January 2022. Down 14 percent for Nasdaq’s Swedish Small Cap index during the period.
But the Swedish listed tech companies are much worse than that. Look at the gaming companies Stillfront and Embracer, for example. Down 70 and 72 percent, respectively, since our index started. Admittedly, they are still up compared to their listing, but the declines are brutal.
Tech investor VNV – which owns a large stake in Voi – is down 73 percent.
The acclaimed communications company Truecaller has also fallen by over 67 percent.
Has it always been the case that smaller tech companies have fared worse on the stock market? It’s possible. But why do tech companies continue to go public then?
It may be related to the reason they even considered the stock market in the first place.
Previously, companies went public to raise money. Historically, this has likely been the reason for most who chose that path. Access to capital and financing – in various forms – increases significantly.
Looking at the smaller tech companies on the stock markets, you also find several examples of the opposite.
Companies that go public so the owners can cash out instead.
Venture capital and private equity firms‘ business model is to sell for more than they bought for. It’s a well-known model that has generated significant value, especially in Sweden. When they take companies public, the purpose is often to create liquidity to sell off a large portion of their shares.
One example is the survey company Cint. At the IPO, funds linked to the venture capital firm Nordic Capital owned over 93 percent of the shares. The company had a good first year on the stock market, but has since seen very weak development. The stock price has fallen over 84 percent since the start. Nordic Capital’s share today is around 8 percent.
Another example is the e-commerce company Revolution Race. The major owners there are the venture capital fund Altor and the couple Pernilla and Niclas Nyrensten. Since the IPO, the major owners have reduced their ownership from around 61 and 34 percent to about 20 percent each.
They have followed their lock-up periods but have gradually reduced their ownership in the company. Revolution Race’s stock has also fallen over 34 percent since the IPO but has rebounded significantly since the worst dip in 2022.
Then there are companies that perhaps should never have gone public in the first place. Their development was boosted by consumer behavior during the pandemic that proved difficult to recreate.
The interior design company Desenio is one such example. When Sweden was indoors avoiding infection, they invested in posters and artwork for decoration. Desenio went public in February 2021.
Three years later, revenue has nearly halved, and the stock price has collapsed. At the IPO, the major owner Verdane sold shares for 72 SEK. Today, the price is just under 0,30 SEK. They are thus excluded from our stock index today.
The selling parties in all these companies have made good deals. The liquidity on the stock market has enabled trading for both funds and small investors. But the development of the stock price since they went public has often been stumbling. While in private ownership, they grew significantly.
A partial explanation for the pattern is that in all three cases, there are venture capital firms among the owners whose model is to exit their investments when favorable. Each company also has its unique situation and motivation behind the listing. Some, like Desenio, had enormous tailwinds that quickly subsided. Others, like Revolution Race, are working to recover from the drop after the introduction and owner sales.
But for many, the stock price collapses seem difficult to reverse. It’s hard not to think that many of these new, smaller listed tech companies may not fit so well on the stock market, after all.
Of course, there are also examples of a different type of journey. The slow company building, using the stock market as a method.
Friday, March 20, 2015. It is the first trading day for the gaming technology company Evolution Gaming on Nasdaq First North. The business press noted the event but had more important things to think about. The Riksbank had just cut interest rates between its regular meetings.
Founders Fredrik Österberg and Jens von Bahr, however, had a good start in the listed environment. They sold picks and shovels to the gold rush in online casinos. Somewhat in the background of the large companies, Evolution made strong progress on Nasdaq’s smaller exchange.
Just over two years later, they were admitted to the Nasdaq Stockholm’s main list. Gambing technology – this somewhat derided genre – had been socially accepted.
A visionary investor who invested in Evolution in 2015 has had an almost unbelievable development. The stock price has increased by nearly 6,500 percent since then. And it has also become a favorite among small investors with around 83,000 private shareholders.
Österberg and von Bahr have sold many shares along the way as well. Both in the IPO and most recently for billions in May 2021. But the difference is that the value of the company has continued to increase for the remaining shareholders since then as well.
The competitor Kindred Group (formerly Unibet) has had a similar development.
They went public in 2005 and have had a price development of over 320 percent since the start. But it has taken them almost 20 years to get there.
The journey that Evolution and Kindred have made is desirable but unusual. They were early, found an incredibly profitable business segment, and delivered quarter after quarter. A role model for new companies on the stock market. They grew and scaled up in the listed environment.
At the same time, it is a type of journey that does not resemble many others in the Swedish tech category – at least not yet.
Looking at the new Swedish tech companies on the stock market, they have lost 80–90 percent of their value since the introduction. Especially the smaller ones, as mentioned. The stocks will have difficulty recovering in the short term. And doing new share issues at such low prices would lead to a somewhat devastating dilution. If they do not manage to reverse the stock price development in time, there is a risk they will become zombie companies. They live, but are essentially dead on the stock market.
The opportunity to buy them out of there has thus rarely been better – or cheaper.
Can there be another Swedish tech miracle on the stock market in the future? It depends mostly on the quality of the companies that might consider going that route.
A number of larger companies – with a long business history, at least by tech standards – such as the shopping service Klarna, fintech company Trustly, and database company Neo4J, have all been mentioned as potential candidates within the near future. Likely before 2025 ends, unless new major macro crises occur.
For a miracle to happen, long-term owners are also needed. Those who use the stock market to develop and build these companies further over a long time.
The stock market is meant to be a trading place – not a final destination. The big values are usually built over a very long time horizon. But then one must survive an often winding road ahead.
Our index suggests that the stock market is not necessarily the best path for all tech companies. It is easy to be swept along by temporarily high valuations when going public. But for many, these valuations have created a new type of problem – and one that takes a long time to fix. They now need to rebuild trust from the stock market and show that they belong on the stock market – after all.
Here are all the companies that are included in SvD:s tech index, in June 2024
Spotify Technology SA (SPOT) Evolution AB (EVO) Fortnox AB (FNOX) Embracer Group AB (EMBRAC.B) Kinnevik AB (KINV.B) Hemnet Group AB (HEM) Kindred Group Plc (KIND) Sinch AB (SINCH) Vitec Software Group AB (VIT.B) Paradox Interactive AB (PDX) Better Collective A/S (BETCO) Betsson AB (BETS.B) Modern Times Group MTG AB (MTG.B) Truecaller AB (TRUE.B) Byggfakta Group (BFG) Boozt AB (BOOZT) VNV Global AB (VNV) Creades AB (CRED.A) RVRC Holding AB (RVRC) Stillfront Group AB (SF) Lime Technologies AB (LIME) Gaming Innovation Group, Inc. (GIGSEK) Storytel AB (STORY.B) Coinshares International Ltd. (CS) Viaplay Group AB (VPLAY.B) BHG Group AB (BHG) Kambi Group Plc (KAMBI) Cint Group AB (CINT) VEF AB (VEFFF) Acast AB (ACAST)*
* Disclosure:I’m on the board of Acast.
This column was first published in SvD Näringsliv, in Swedish, on June 22nd, 2024.
Published in Svenska Dagbladet, 2024-06-11. Translated from Swedish.
Apple’s AI debut revealed a crack in the facade of the tech giant. The desire to keep pace with the AI frenzy appears to be pushing the company to abandon the privacy-first strategy that made it so successful.
It was the worst-kept secret in the tech world. On Monday evening Apple made its entrance into artificial intelligence — though perhaps not as grandly as hoped, given that virtually every announcement had leaked days in advance. Bloomberg had published a piece the previous week listing almost everything Apple would present at its annual developer conference, WWDC.
Even without good journalistic sources the news was fairly predictable. How could one of the world’s largest companies stand without new AI products, in a moment like this? It could not. But it did things in its own way — in a way only Apple can.
Apple has mastered the art of packaging existing ideas as if it had just invented them. Most of the presentation showcased features that competitors have had for years. The Insight feature on Apple TV+, which shows which actors appear on screen in a TV series? Essentially identical to Amazon’s X-Ray. The ability to redesign your home screen? A feature Android has had for a long time.
But Apple speaks about its novelties as if they exist in a vacuum. It is an odd phenomenon that says something about the strong market position the company holds — it can afford to ignore the rest of the world in many cases. But there are questions where that attitude is harder to maintain, and AI — the single topic that has consumed all the oxygen in the tech world for the past eighteen months — is exactly one of them.
Apple is fine with not launching new product categories first, as long as it believes it will be better when the time comes. Look at the iPod or the iPhone — neither was first to market, but both quickly became best in class.
In keeping with that approach, Apple did not launch generative AI — it launched “personal intelligence.” In substance it was largely the same thing, but the services were woven into Apple’s products and operating systems. The company also appropriated the acronym by calling its version “Apple Intelligence.”
For many years Apple has positioned itself as the only tech company that genuinely cares about your privacy. Your data stays yours and is not shared with others. That Apple would lean into this framing for its AI push was therefore predictable. The “personal” element is that the system knows you and your data — but the data goes nowhere else. Apple’s vertical integration across hardware and software makes that promise harder for competitors to replicate.
So far, all fairly normal and predictable. But then the facade cracked.
Near the end of the presentation came what everyone had been waiting for — the much-discussed partnership with OpenAI. ChatGPT will be integrated directly into Apple’s operating system. Ask Siri a question and it will try to answer using its own capabilities, or with the help of services in what Apple called a “private cloud” — outside your device and on Apple’s servers. And beyond that, if Siri believes ChatGPT can give a better answer, you can, with a single tap of approval, choose to get that answer instead.
Apple’s long-standing argument about privacy and security — that your data stays on your device — can thus be bypassed with a simple button press. That is uncontroversial for most users, but not for Apple.
The solution points to the strategic dead end Apple has chosen. Your iPhone is not — at least not yet — powerful enough to offer the same quality of AI services as ChatGPT and similar tools. If users want this kind of functionality, more computing power is needed. Apple therefore faces a difficult choice: compromise on quality or compromise on privacy? The answer here is neither — it passes the question to the user instead.
In that choice one can glimpse an insight that many Apple executives probably do not want to acknowledge. Perhaps privacy around one’s data is not such a sensitive issue for users after all — at least not when the alternative is a service that can simplify both personal and professional life.
GameStop surges again as Keith Gill makes his Reddit comeback
Published in Svenska Dagbladet, 2024-06-03. Translated from Swedish.
Keith Gill had been silent on social media for more than three years. Then, on Sunday morning, he posted a screenshot on Reddit showing a position of five million GameStop shares — worth around 1.2 billion kronor — plus options worth another 691 million kronor. The GameStop era is apparently not over.
It is difficult to know what to call what Keith Gill did on Sunday. Technically it is not market manipulation, because he is not spreading false information about the company. What he is doing is using his own celebrity — built on a genuine investment thesis that turned into one of the most spectacular trading events in history — to move markets.
In mid-May he posted a series of cryptic images on X, including one of a person leaning forward in a gaming chair. That alone was enough to send GameStop’s stock up more than 70 percent before the New York Stock Exchange had even opened.
Then came Sunday’s Reddit post: a screenshot of a brokerage account showing five million GameStop shares worth roughly 1.2 billion kronor, plus options worth a further 691 million kronor. The stock surged again.
When Gill testified before Congress in 2021, he said: “The idea that I used social media to promote GameStop stock to unwitting investors is absurd.” That statement is now very hard to defend. It is difficult to argue he did not know how the market would react — the entire social media build-up looked, in hindsight, like a carefully orchestrated prelude.
What makes the situation genuinely complicated is that a significant part of the market actively wants to be manipulated in this way. GameStop trades like a lottery ticket, and everyone who buys it knows it trades like a lottery ticket. There is something almost philosophical about a market where the participants are fully aware they are speculating on the speculations of others.
Should Gill pull this off, he could go down in history for more reasons than having been the central figure of the meme-stock era. Nearly two billion kronor in notional value before the market had even opened — not bad for a financial adviser with an investment thesis posted on the internet.
This analysis was first published in SvD Näringsliv, in Swedish, on May 23rd, 2024. This piece was translated from Swedish by Claude. Some phrasing may differ from a human translation.
As the world invests in AI, the money flows heavily into Nvidia’s pockets. The world’s hottest company is now approaching a point where expectations become very hard to live up to — and the drop if they fall short is enormous.
Jensen Huang has the best problem a public company CEO can have. Since the start of the year, the share price has risen more than 98 percent — a performance few companies of that size can claim, and this after an already extraordinary run of several hundred percent the year before.
When the quarterly report came on Wednesday evening, Huang had to prove that the surge was deserved — and that it was merely the start of Nvidia’s journey. It proved to be no problem at all. Nvidia beat the high expectations and set new revenue records. Revenue tied to data centres rose by 427 percent compared with the previous year, while total sales grew 262 percent. The share crossed 1,000 dollars in after-hours trading for the first time ever, and Nvidia announced a 10-for-1 stock split.
It is unusual for something as technical and complex as a chip company to attract this level of attention. Other companies name-drop Nvidia’s products when describing their own businesses. Customers boast publicly about having managed to get hold of the chips at all. Jensen Huang should pinch himself. This does not normally happen.
Nvidia has become virtually synonymous with AI development. Talking about their products is a way of signalling that you take AI seriously and have the resources to invest. Like the verb “to Google,” Nvidia could have become the AI equivalent — if only its name were not so unfortunate (it derives from the Latin “invidia,” meaning envy). In an era when the market is searching for efficiency gains and new revenues via AI, Nvidia functions as a kind of alibi you can invoke. Nobody buys these expensive chips without intending to build AI services — and that makes you a company that is keeping pace.
This makes Nvidia’s revenues a kind of barometer for the entire AI development. Over 26 billion dollars — around 278 billion kronor — in revenue during the first quarter suggests the boom has no end in sight. When Alphabet reported its quarterly figures a month ago, CFO Ruth Porat said something telling: “The significant growth in capital expenditure (capex) over recent quarters reflects our confidence in the opportunities AI presents.” Alphabet is making enormous investments to build AI services — and the “capital expenditures” Porat refers to include Nvidia in large measure. Other companies’ investments are, in other words, Nvidia’s revenues. When the market looks ahead to a potential technology paradigm shift, this is a formidable strategic position to occupy.
Nvidia was last to report among what are usually called the “Magnificent Seven” — the seven major tech companies that have been the engine of the entire market. Apple and Tesla have been disappointments this year, but the remaining five — Alphabet, Meta, Amazon, and Microsoft — have all continued their climb. The other six are relatively independent of each other, competing in certain areas. Nvidia, however, supplies them all. Its customer list is formidable, including several of the world’s largest companies.
The challenge going forward resembles the one Huang faced on Wednesday evening. How much better can a company go when it is already going this well? And how far behind are competitors’ products, really? “The next industrial revolution has begun,” Huang said, sounding both triumphant and self-assured. With a share price that has risen more than 2,500 percent over the past five years, that is understandable. But with each quarter, expectations become a backpack that grows heavier to carry. It is not enough for Nvidia to deliver what it has promised — it must exceed expectations in the biggest tech frenzy in years.
Should the world’s appetite for investment cool — or if competitors catch up — the barometer could quickly swing to storm. In that scenario, Nvidia’s dramatic rise could become a fall from a height that is very hard to manage.
This analysis was first published in SvD Näringsliv, in Swedish, on May 20th, 2024. This piece was translated from Swedish by Claude. Some phrasing may differ from a human translation.
As the streaming market slows, unholy alliances are forming and everyone is returning to tried-and-tested plays. And the safest bet of all is sports. That is why the American entertainment giants are now fighting over the rights.
Nothing has shaped Swedish pay television more over the past decade than British football. The channels behind it have changed names, merged, and been separated — MTG became Nent and eventually Viaplay; Canal Plus was acquired by TV4 and became C More, then folded into TV4 Play. But they all had one thing in common: they bet that the Premier League would be the key to winning paying television subscribers.
In many respects, they were right. Viewers were considerably more loyal to their favourite club than to any particular TV service. Add in special events like the Champions League, and you have the backdrop for the inflated prices for sports rights in the Nordics over the past fifteen years.
But even when you won the bidding war for sports rights, you could still end up losing. Look at Viaplay, which has effectively erased its entire stock market value over the past year. And while it tries to rescue itself, vultures are circling. Large, American, well-funded vultures.
The media world was shaken when Disney+ in Sweden recently acquired the rights to the UEFA Europa League and Conference League. Viaplay had previously held them but lost them at renewal. Viaplay has also been forced to sell some Premier League matches to Swedish Amazon Prime Video to reduce its payment commitments. American tech giants are effectively profiting at Viaplay’s expense.
But this newly found appetite for sports rights is not happening only in Sweden. Globally, streaming services are opening up to this category. This week, Netflix announced that — for the first time ever — it will invest in live sport, having signed a deal with the NFL to broadcast selected games on Christmas Day. Last August, Apple TV+ signed a ten-year deal with Major League Soccer worth around 27 billion kronor. Amazon, like Netflix, has had an NFL deal for several years.
The reason for this broadening is a slowing streaming market that demands a wider offering. Customers no longer want to pay for all services simultaneously and are being more selective. Building a proposition that works for “the whole family” is therefore a strategy that virtually every streaming service is now pursuing.
The pressured market is also producing unexpected alliances. Arch-rivals Disney+ and Max (formerly HBO Max and Discovery+, now launching in Sweden) are already offering a bundled package in the US. Together with Hulu, partially owned by Disney, the three services can be purchased together at a discount — a structure that would have been entirely unthinkable two years ago. Back then, HBO Max and Disney+ were rivals; now they are trying to acquire customers together. It would be like SvD and Dagens Nyheter launching a joint subscription offer.
The winners in this development are the customers. Where you once had to buy many separate subscriptions from the streaming giants, the offers are now better and more competitive. New bundles are appearing. The structure is starting to resemble old cable television, where you bought large packages and got a little of everything. The trade-off is lower content quality than before — and in some cases for more money, as services like Viaplay have raised their prices sharply.
The big losers are the owners of sports rights and drama producers. Even though interest in sport is high, it is unlikely that prices will be driven back to the heights they once reached — at least not in the Nordics. When Amazon and Disney+ buy rights in Sweden, it is certainly at a steep discount. Sport matters — but the era of record prices is over. The same applies to drama. After a few golden years, it is the expensive productions that disappear first. Do not expect investments on the scale of Ronja Rövardotter for a couple of years.
Max is launching in Sweden imminently — the merger of Discovery+ and HBO Max. A broader, more popular service designed to have something for the whole family. That position is not unique to them. But their strategy is telling for what the pressured streaming market looks like in 2024: merged services, broad content — and a little sport to round it all off.
You must be logged in to post a comment.