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Not doomsday, AI will ring in modernisation: C S Venkatakrishnan, Barclays

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Not doomsday, AI will ring in modernisation: C S Venkatakrishnan, Barclays
India’s political stability, strong growth and rapid digital transformation have fundamentally reshaped the country’s position among major economies, Barclays global chief executive C S Venkatakrishnan said. In an exclusive interview with Joel Rebello and Sangita Mehta, the head of the UK’s second-largest bank with $2 trillion in assets, also said AI will modernise decades-old systems rather than destroy jobs and explained why the world is entering a sensitive point in the credit cycle after years of cheap borrowing. Edited excerpts:

In a matter of days, the world seems to have changed dramatically because of Anthropic’s recent AI update. How disruptive could this become?

The global AI ecosystem outside China is being driven by large US tech firms. Hyperscalers such as Amazon, Microsoft and Google provide cloud and computing capacity, supported by chipmakers like Nvidia and major data centre infrastructure. But the real transformation will come only when companies rebuild their processes end-to-end to integrate these tools. AI will make interactions more natural, reduce the need for coding expertise, and eventually reshape core functions such as customer service, fraud detection and wealth advisory. For this to work, companies must overhaul decades-old systems – a difficult and slow process.
What about the doomsday forecast?


No. We are far from that. Much of the work in large, traditional companies still depends on existing systems, and they continue to own customer relationships and products. The employment challenge is more relevant in certain functions, but AI can free up capacity which means existing people can do other things better. Companies are operating on technology infrastructure that is 30-40 years old, and there is a lot to fix. So I don’t see a doomsday scenario.
Apart from AI, we have geopolitical tensions and supply-chain realignments…

The world today resembles the 1970s-80s. The era of hyper-globalisation from 1990 to 2020 is over. Covid broke supply-chain trust, forcing large countries to secure medical supplies, drugs and other essentials domestically, while smaller countries aligned with bigger nations for vaccine access. We now see greater trade friction and a shift from global agreements to bilateral ones, including India’s deal with the European Union. Major economies, including India, are securing their own supply chains, especially for critical inputs like rare earths.

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Will the dollar’s supremacy change?

The dollar will retain its supremacy as the world’s reserve currency for a long time. The US remains the hub of global trade and is a large manufacturing, services and digital economy. Key global commodities – oil, gold – are priced in dollars, giving it enormous standing. About 80% of all foreign-exchange trades have the dollar on one side. Reserve-currency status requires economic strength and trust, and replacing the dollar will be very hard.

Where does India fit into the scheme of things for Barclays?

We are headquartered in the UK but have a substantial presence in the US. India is our second-largest employee base with 30,000 people out of 90,000, so it’s very clear where we’re making our bets. India is a very important part of our global strategy and serves as the hub from which we run our Asian operations, including Hong Kong, Singapore and Japan. That reflects our long-term view on India. It was true before an Indian CEO, and I hope it remains true after, because it’s driven by economic logic, not anything else.

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What will change after India’s trade deals with the EU and US?

Indian companies will continue expanding in the UK, US and Europe, and we help them do that – whether financing acquisitions, finding partners or identifying targets. After the India-US trade deal, we expect more FDI from US companies, and we support them in entering the Indian market. We do not intend to enter retail banking in India, but we have a private banking business and remain a strong partner to Indian firms expanding into the Middle East and Southeast Asia.

What are the strengths of the Indian market?

Barclays has a significant presence in only a few emerging markets, and India is one of them. A long period of political stability and strong economic growth has made India a very different prospect in 2026 versus 2010, compared to traditional emerging markets. There have been ups and downs in Argentina, and some of the bigger emerging markets. But India has held out. India is different from China. That’s why it’s a category of its own.

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India may be a growth story, but do you think it’s not easy to do business here?

India’s operating environment has improved with world-class digital infrastructure – digital ID, seamless payments and modern commerce – and steady liberalisation of the financial and economic system. GST and tax rationalisation have strengthened efficiency. But India still needs a deeper domestic capital market that matches its scale, with more corporate credit flowing into insurance, securitisation and fixed-income markets. Improving ease of doing business – labour laws, PF rules, approvals – helps our clients and therefore us. The market which has done well in spite of the problems is real estate. It has done well because of scarcity of land, not because of transparency. Not because of the cleanness of title and ability to, correct rents or evict and so on. Those things are still weak. And if those were freed up, it would do even better.

From your vantage point, is there something you worry about?

Two things. First, the credit cycle: it has been long, and borrowing costs were low. A shock could unsettle it. Second, the implications of AI: how to use this technology to transform our business and deliver better products faster. We don’t want to be surprised again the way big banks were by fintechs. We run a risk-managed company with clear visibility of exposures and limits. I hope we are equipped to absorb a severe fall in asset prices, but when shocks happen, they come in ways you cannot predict – and they test you.

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How will the era of higher interest rates affect global markets?

Two major forces kept inflation low over the last 30 years: global supply-chain shifts, especially manufacturing moving to China, and generally low interest rates that allowed companies to borrow and grow without triggering inflation. Now the impact will show up in credit. Borrowers who relied on cheap funding could face rising default risks. If I had to worry about something, it would be that changes in interest rates and weaker economic growth will pressure companies, weaken corporate balance sheets, and create risks in financial markets.

Is the private-equity model under strain?

The core PE model of buy, fix and sell still works, but firms are struggling to sell companies at expected valuations. IPO markets have slowed, and strategic or PE-to-PE sales have become harder. The rise of continuation funds signals pressure in the model. Large players remain resilient, but prolonged stress will make raising new capital more difficult.

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How do you view the continued strength of China despite sanctions?

China’s 35-year growth story is nothing short of a miracle. Its trade surplus remains strong partly because global tariff adjustments take time, and partly because domestic demand is weakening, pushing more exports. These challenges do not take away from China’s broader economic achievements.

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Wall Street Week Ahead: Inflation in focus for markets jostled by Middle East war signals

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Wall Street Week Ahead: Inflation in focus for markets jostled by Middle East war signals
A fresh read on inflation and initial company results next week could start to show the Middle East war’s effects on the U.S. economy and corporate America, as investors hope to start moving past a conflict that has consumed markets.

Traders were wrestling with conflicting signals about a potential winding down of the war that began over a month ago, with the U.S.-Israeli military strikes on Iran.

The S&P 500 posted a gain in the holiday-shortened week, snapping a five-week streak of losses. The benchmark index earlier in the week closed ‌its worst-performing quarter since 2022, ⁠weighed down ⁠since late February by the war and the resulting surge in energy prices.

“It’s going to be hard to get the market’s attention off the Middle East, oil prices and the risks that have emerged,” said Matthew Miskin, co-chief investment strategist at Manulife John Hancock Investments. “The markets have been so myopically focused on geopolitical risk and … how all this is going to shake out.”

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Stocks have stumbled this year, with concerns about artificial-intelligence disruption and private credit weakness compounding uncertainty over the Middle East conflict. The S&P 500 was last down nearly 6% from its late-January all-time high.


The war’s impact on oil supplies and energy prices remained the focal point for investors, especially the status of the Strait of Hormuz, a critical Middle East oil-shipping channel where traffic has stalled. U.S. crude topped $110 a barrel on Thursday after the commodity earlier in the week settled above $100 a barrel for the first ⁠time since ‌2022.
“The market is pricing off oil,” said Doug Huber, deputy chief investment officer at Wealth Enhancement Group. “Inflation expectations, bond markets — everything is stuck to this concept of what oil is doing.”

CPI TO JUMP, HIGH PRICES AT THE PUMP

Next week’s consumer price index, a closely watched inflation gauge, stands as an ⁠early test of the war’s energy shock. With U.S. crude jumping some 90% since the start of the year, the U.S. average gasoline price rose above $4 a gallon this week for the first time in more than three years.

“We think the first stage of oil price pass-through will have arrived in March via motor fuel,” BNP Paribas said in a note previewing the CPI report.

The March CPI report, due on April 10, is expected to have climbed 0.9% on a monthly basis, according to a Reuters poll as of Thursday. Excluding energy as well as food prices, the “core” CPI level is expected to have risen 0.3%.

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Miskin said he would look for “ripple effects” across other goods and services stemming from the war and energy-price surge, while adding that the March report may be too soon to see any broader inflationary impact.

“You’re just trying to get as much real-time data as you can to formulate where the ‌inflation and economic growth trends are going,” Miskin said.

Q1 RESULTS LOOM, WITH BIG PROFIT HOPES

War-driven inflation worries have led markets to largely rule out interest rate cuts this year, after such cuts had been a key underpinning for many bullish stock outlooks.

“The market already has inflation on the brain,” said Patrick Ryan, chief investment strategist at Madison Investments. If CPI ⁠were to “surprise with a much higher print, that could also be something that the market would take negatively.”

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Next week also brings the release of another inflation measure, the personal consumption expenditures price index, but that PCE data will cover February, a period largely before the war took hold. An updated read of fourth-quarter U.S. economic growth is also due, while investors will also analyze Wednesday’s release of the minutes from the Federal Reserve’s March meeting for any clues about the future path of rates.

The start of earnings season also will start grabbing Wall Street’s attention, with investors counting on a broadly strong corporate profit outlook to support U.S. stocks this year. Delta Air Lines and beverage maker Constellation Brands are among those due to report next week.

Those reports will offer a taste of the first-quarter reporting season, which kicks off the following week. S&P 500 companies overall are expected to post a 14.4% rise in first-quarter earnings from the year-earlier period, according to LSEG IBES.

“The Q1 earnings season beginning in mid-April should show that underlying earnings growth is still strengthening and broadening,” Deutsche Bank equity strategists said in a note.

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KKR: Still A Growth Story Despite Credit Fears

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Apollo Global: Overdone Credit Fears Create A Buying Opportunity (Upgrade)

KKR: Still A Growth Story Despite Credit Fears

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DoubleVerify Stock: Strong Retention, Attractive Valuation (NYSE:DV)

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DoubleVerify Stock: Strong Retention, Attractive Valuation (NYSE:DV)

This article was written by

With combined experience of covering technology companies on Wall Street and working in Silicon Valley, and serving as an outside adviser to several seed-round startups, Gary Alexander has exposure to many of the themes shaping the industry today. He has been a regular contributor on Seeking Alpha since 2017. He has been quoted in many web publications and his articles are syndicated to company pages in popular trading apps like Robinhood.

Analyst’s Disclosure: I/we have a beneficial long position in the shares of DV either through stock ownership, options, or other derivatives. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

Seeking Alpha’s Disclosure: Past performance is no guarantee of future results. No recommendation or advice is being given as to whether any investment is suitable for a particular investor. Any views or opinions expressed above may not reflect those of Seeking Alpha as a whole. Seeking Alpha is not a licensed securities dealer, broker or US investment adviser or investment bank. Our analysts are third party authors that include both professional investors and individual investors who may not be licensed or certified by any institute or regulatory body.

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Form 13D/A TripAdvisor For: 3 April

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Form 13D/A TripAdvisor For: 3 April

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Vietnam’s Q1 growth cools as Middle East energy shock drives $3.6B trade deficit

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Vietnam’s Q1 growth cools as Middle East energy shock drives $3.6B trade deficit

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Progress Remains Elusive For Citizens & Northern Stock (NASDAQ:CZNC)

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Progress Remains Elusive For Citizens & Northern Stock (NASDAQ:CZNC)

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I have been involved in the financial world for over 25 years with experience as an advisor, teacher, and writer. I am a full believer in the free-market system and that financial markets are efficient with most stocks reflecting their real current value. The best opportunities for profits on individual stocks come from stocks that are less-widely followed by the average investor or from stocks that may not accurately reflect the opportunities that currently exist in their markets.

Analyst’s Disclosure: I/we have no stock, option or similar derivative position in any of the companies mentioned, and no plans to initiate any such positions within the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

Seeking Alpha’s Disclosure: Past performance is no guarantee of future results. No recommendation or advice is being given as to whether any investment is suitable for a particular investor. Any views or opinions expressed above may not reflect those of Seeking Alpha as a whole. Seeking Alpha is not a licensed securities dealer, broker or US investment adviser or investment bank. Our analysts are third party authors that include both professional investors and individual investors who may not be licensed or certified by any institute or regulatory body.

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Q2 Update: Iran War, Depleting Munitions, And Market Outlook

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iShares 10-20 Year Treasury Bond ETF: Thinking Long Term (NYSEARCA:TLH)

Cited by Barron’s as one of the top financial websites to visit on the weekend, Financial Sense (www.financialsense.com) provides educational resources to the broad public audience through a daily podcast, editorials, current news and resource links on salient financial market issues. Begun in 1985 as a local talk radio program, Financial Sense Newshour (www.financialsense.com/financial-sense-newshour) is a weekly webcast with host Jim Puplava and top financial thinkers. Writing staff of Financial Sense includes: Jim Puplava, Chris Puplava, Ryan Puplava, and Cris Sheridan.

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Jobs Growth Remains Modest

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Job Openings Rise More Than Expected In January

Jobs Growth Remains Modest

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Why the eurozone growth hit may be more severe this time

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Why the eurozone growth hit may be more severe this time

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Trump administration can’t make colleges provide race-related data, judge rules

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Trump administration can’t make colleges provide race-related data, judge rules


Trump administration can’t make colleges provide race-related data, judge rules

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