Markets still focus on companies, but the next decade will be shaped by systems. As AI, energy and supply chains converge, value shifts toward infrastructure layers that economies cannot function without, redefining how investors should think about risk and opportunity.
Financial Markets
Market structures and financial systems determining liquidity, pricing and the stability of modern economies.
Infrastructure is no longer a sector — it is the underlying system of the economy. As energy, data and logistics converge, value shifts from companies to the networks they depend on, redefining how power and capital are structured.
OpenAI’s $100B+ capital raise is not funding a company—it is financing the industrialization of intelligence. As AI shifts from software to production, the real battle moves to compute, energy and infrastructure, redefining how value is created and controlled.
Berkshire Hathaway is often seen as a collection of companies. In reality, it operates as a system of infrastructure assets — railroads, energy grids and networks that form the invisible backbone of the economy and enable long-term capital compounding.
A leadership transition at Berkshire Hathaway signals something deeper. As Greg Abel steps forward, capital allocation is shifting from individual judgment to system design — where infrastructure, energy and networks increasingly define how long-term economic value is created.






