top of page



What Smart Generalists Should Pay Attention to Today
If you follow a lot of news, you know the feeling: endless headlines, little clarity on what truly matters. This daily intelligence brief is designed for a smart generalist—curious, busy, and allergic to jargon. We organize the day's biggest developments into four simple tracks: rule‑changing moves, viral narratives, real‑life impacts, and early signals. The goal is to show, in plain language, what changed today, who it affects, and how it might shape the next few years. Big
Structural Forces
Feb 74 min read


US Shutdown & Europe's Growth Crisis: What Leaders Must Know in 2026
The first week of February 2026 has exposed three interconnected pressure points that will shape global markets and policy through the rest of the year: a US government shutdown tied to immigration enforcement demands, Europe's near-trillion-dollar recovery fund struggling to deliver promised transformation, and a hardening China-Russia security axis that is forcing Asian economies to choose sides. For finance professionals, corporate strategists, and policy analysts, these a
Structural Forces
Feb 73 min read


Technology is fundamentally restructuring dealmaking, value discovery, and transaction execution
On a Tuesday morning in March 2024, an artificial intelligence system at a mid-sized growth equity firm flagged an unusual pattern. A B2B software company in Austin, Texas—barely three years old, 127 employees, $47 million in revenue—had characteristics that matched the firm's "hidden unicorn" model with 94% confidence. The company wasn't actively seeking investors. It had no investment banker. Most conventional deal-sourcing methods would have missed it entirely. Within six
Structural Forces
Jan 2624 min read


How AI's Rapid Evolution Threatens Jobs, Democracy, and Human Agency—And What Southeast Asia Must Do Now
A Special Report for Policymakers and Institutional Investors Between May and December 2025, a rare and disturbing consensus emerged among the scientific architects of the artificial intelligence revolution. Four of the world’s most influential researchers—Geoffrey Hinton, Stuart Russell, Yoshua Bengio, and Tristan Harris—issued independent but converging warnings: artificial intelligence systems are approaching a capability threshold that could render millions of jobs obsole
Structural Forces
Jan 1218 min read
bottom of page