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The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) recently announced that an AI algorithm piloting an F-16 Fighting Falcon in a simulated dogfight against a seasoned US AIR Force pilot achieved a flawless 5-0 win, with the human pilot never scoring a single hit. 


Regardless of how realistic “Computer vs. Human simulations” can be in such a complex environment, the most significant aspect is the fact that the specific AI system was developed less than one year ago using so-called “deep reinforcement learning”: starting with a complete lack of understanding about basic flight, the AI software autonomously learned fast, gaining the equivalent of 12 years of experience over the course of 4 billion simulations.


This AI revolution has been decades in the making, but only in the last decade have advances in computing power enabled a new era of AI training. The most recent technological disruption is enabled and accelerated by “Deep Learning”, the most advanced AI state in which machines can learn autonomously by analyzing vast amounts of unstructured data. 


As the cost of memory and compute came down dramatically, Deep Learning breakthroughs enabled computers to process a wide range of information across different and complicated data-driven applications, as in image recognition tools, speech recognition (NLP), image recognition (GPU), data discovery, and extraction. 


The era of Deep Learning, source Nvidia and JP Morgan


One of the most impressive examples of advances in machine learning is Alpha Zero, developed within the DeepMind division of Alphabet, which obliterated the highest-ranked chess program in the world (Stockfish). Given only the rules of the game, Alpha Zero learned how to play chess within four hours learning from playing against itself. The crucial advancement of this technology is the capacity for life-long learning: this AI system can acquire new information and keep in mind those already experienced to solve progressively more tasks, without losing information previously learned, a hurdle known as “catastrophic forgetting”.


The exponential advancements in AI models are supported by ever larger AI chips which are embedded with significant amounts of fast memory to handle the demands of AI algorithms. The race for manufacturing the largest AI chips includes both public and private companies: while Xilinx has announced the chip with the highest logic density on a single device ever bult, featuring 35bn transistors, private startup Cerebras has recently showcased the largest chip ever built, with 1.2 trillion transistors and 3000x more in-chip memory. Finally, Alphabet announced a major breakthrough in quantum computing, whereas their processor “Sycamore” took about 200 seconds to complete a task that would take a state-of-the art supercomputer approximately 10’000 years.


Regardless of potential winners and losers, technologic advancements are attracting large amount of investments. According to MarketsandMarkets, the overall Deep Learning market is estimated to reach $18.16B by 2023 from $3.18B in 2018, at a CAGR of 41.7% over this period. 


The investment implications are staggering and long-term in nature since companies are increasing technology investments to survive the rapidly changing landscape of the Fully Connected Economy. As a result, AI spending is projected to grow 28% annually from $19bn in 2018 to almost $100bn in 2023.


 

The information in this article should not be regarded as a description of services provided by Delian Partners SA. The opinions expressed in this article are for general informational purposes only and are not intended to provide specific advice or recommendations for any individual or on any specific security or investment product.  It is only intended to provide education about the financial industry. The views reflected in this article are subject to change at any time without notice.

The lockdown has been a boon for online shopping and many companies have been forced to implement e-commerce solutions to avoid the closure of their activities. The shift towards online sales also enabled companies to improve their customers’ experience and even to make their businesses more efficient. In many cases, businesses have benefited from the competitive advantage given by an omnichannel presence and a reduction in operative costs.


As Microsoft’s CEO Satya Nadella said, “we have seen two years’ worth of digital transformation in two months”. This massive acceleration is evident in the US, where e-commerce penetration rose to 23.3% in 2020 compared with 18% in 2019. But a similar permanent step-up is also evident in other parts of the world: In Brazil, e-commerce penetration rose from 7.2% to an estimated 10.3% YoY, and Europe saw the YoY increase in online penetration rise from 1.4% to 5.5%.


In this environment, a major winner has obviously been Amazon, which in 2Q 2020 reported an increase of 40% in net sales compared to the year before. But Amazon is not the only player in this global game. Shopify, a cloud-based commerce platform, has gained almost 20% market share with more than 500K active stores in 175 Countries. The largest Latin American e-commerce marketplace, Mercado Libre, registered 1.7M new customers from February to March 2020, up about 28% compared to the same period in 2019.


The US food service industry also experienced a dramatic demand “pull-forward” effect, with the percentage of food delivery as a percentage of sales tripling YoY from 7% to 21%.

Globally, the e-commerce market is expected to reach $6.07T in 2024, growing at a CAGR rate of 11.34% over the period 2020-2024. This trend has been boosted by changes in customers' habits due to the recent health crisis, but at the heart of this secular change, there is a broader generational shift spearheaded by Millennials.


Today, Millennials represent the largest population cohort ever, with a positive impact on online shopping and digital payments because they represent the first truly all-digital generation on the consumer side. On the supply side, e-commerce platforms are supporting thousands of companies to meet the request for online and mobile shopping in a quick and efficient way.


It is becoming increasingly evident that the upcoming cycle of technological innovation and associated disruption is likely to affect many sectors of the economy, supporting the view of a highly favorable environment for stock picking and highlighting the need for investors to remain exceedingly selective.



 

The information in this article should not be regarded as a description of services provided by Delian Partners SA. The opinions expressed in this article are for general informational purposes only and are not intended to provide specific advice or recommendations for any individual or on any specific security or investment product.  It is only intended to provide education about the financial industry. The views reflected in this article are subject to change at any time without notice.

From the initial launch of 1G in late 1980 to analogically support basic voice communication, connectivity standards have gradually evolved towards digital, wireless technology. The advancements in spectrum usage have massively increased capacity of wireless data usage, leading to the launch of 5G in 2018/2019. This type of next-gen broadband mobility is a critical component of the upcoming cycle of technology innovation which includes Internet of Things, Advanced Display Technologies (including VR), Artificial Intelligence and Autonomous Driving.


5G is a critical component of the innovation wave because it is the most critical block of full connectivity, and a significant advancement compared to the current 4G technology. As the network performance improves dramatically over time, data users will benefit from 10 to 100 times faster speed, lower latency, higher density of connected devices, more broadband capacity, and less energy consumption.


The result is the emergence of a wide variety of potential applications, including smart cities, smart homes, industrial automation, and self-driving cars. For example, one fully connected car is essentially a “server on wheels” expected to generate about 25B of data from its sensors. For comparison, one hour of HD video streaming currently generates less than 1GB of data.


Considering that globally, the total amount of people connected to internet is also expected to grow from 3.9Billion in 2018 to 5.3Billion by 2023, the increase in data usage from connected devices is expected to surpass the network’s maximum capacity around 2028, when a more powerful 6G network will be necessary.


These findings evidence the requirement for data-centric Companies to stay aligned with the current wave of opportunities provided by the Connected Economy. 5G is creating a virtuous cycle where the increase of connection is enabling the use of software which, in turn, require more and more hardware to accommodate more advanced software applications. Therefore, the potential of these innovations cannot be ignored by investors who are focused on long-term growth opportunities, like those offered by the widespread applications depending on 5G innovation.


The 5G network upgrade is still in its initial phase, creating an exciting, multi-year, secular investment cycle that will be largely independent from the economic cycle. The synergies between augmented connectivity, IoT (Internet of Things), and advances in Artificial Intelligence represent a massive opportunity for the Connected Economy, due to the variety of advanced commercial applications which stretch beyond communication services such as mobile video applications.


 


The information in this article should not be regarded as a description of services provided by Delian Partners SA. The opinions expressed in this article are for general informational purposes only and are not intended to provide specific advice or recommendations for any individual or on any specific security or investment product.  It is only intended to provide education about the financial industry. The views reflected in this article are subject to change at any time without notice.

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