Posts

Decoding RaymondsIndex: MAI — The Momentum Alignment Index Explained

This week delivered a textbook lesson in why reported results and market prices are two different languages. Broadcom announced record revenue, record operating profit, and record free cash flow, with Q2 AI semiconductor revenue of $10.8 billion growing 143% year over year. The stock fell roughly 15% anyway — because management reiterated, rather than raised, its $100 billion full-year AI revenue target. Investors were not reacting to the income statement. They were reacting to a momentum signal: the gap between how fast the story was supposed to accelerate and how fast management said it would. That gap is precisely what the fourth RaymondsIndex indicator is designed to measure. What MAI measures MAI — the Momentum Alignment Index — tracks the consistency between revenue growth and CAPEX growth. In a healthy company, the two move together: rising sales justify rising investment, and rising investment feeds future sales. When they decouple, something is being misrepresented. Revenue ac...

When the Network Becomes Destiny: How This Week's Hana Tour Stall Reveals the Commitment Trap

This week gave us a clean specimen of a pattern most investors only recognize in hindsight. IMM Private Equity quietly shelved its sale of Hana Tour, Korea's largest travel company (KOSPI: 039130), and terminated its lead advisor. The stated reasons were a gap between the price IMM wanted and the price the market would pay, compounded by fresh geopolitical risk out of the Middle East. The fund now says it will focus on growing Hana Tour as a "platform" — while it continues to draw dividends from the company it cannot yet sell. On the surface, this is an ordinary deal that didn't happen. Underneath, it is a textbook case of what we call the Commitment Trap — one of five paths through which relational risk becomes real. The structure. A private equity fund is not a passive owner. It is a hub bound by promises: to its limited partners, it has implicitly committed to return capital on a schedule. That promise is the fund's strength in good times and its cage in ba...

What Individual Investors Don't See Until It's Too Late

There is a quiet admission buried inside two regulatory updates this week — one in Seoul, one in Washington — and it changes how we should think about risk. Start with Korea. The Financial Supervisory Service set its 2026 audit-oversight direction around a single phrase: zero tolerance for accounting fraud. The mechanism is notable. Penalties no longer stop at the executive who signs off on a fraudulent statement; they now reach the person who directed it, with bans of up to five years from serving as an officer of any listed company. In parallel, the Korea Exchange is running an intensive delisting-management period from February 2026 through June 2027, and listing-maintenance thresholds are being ratcheted upward — toward 100 billion won in sales and 300 billion won in market cap by 2029. The message to weak issuers is blunt: shape up or exit. Now Washington. The SEC's 2026 enforcement priorities read predictably — offering fraud aimed at retail investors, accounting fraud, mark...

The Zombie Pattern: How Distressed Companies Drain Before They Fall

In private equity this year, a quiet crisis has a name: the zombie fund. These are vehicles that have lived ten, twelve, fifteen years past their intended maturity, still reporting net asset value but distributing almost nothing back to the investors who funded them. The numbers are no longer marginal. North America's zombie-fund AUM rose from $372 billion in 2021 to a record $441 billion in 2024, and more than 40% of limited partners now report exposure to at least one. By mid-2025, industry estimates put over $1 trillion of PE assets in a frozen, unsold state — capital that is technically "active" on paper but functionally dead in practice. To escape the freeze, sponsors have leaned on continuation vehicles: the GP-led secondary market grew to roughly $105 billion in 2025, with continuation funds making up about 84% of it. Europe-focused funds accounted for 29% of analyzed zombie exposure and Asia for 12%. Strip away the jargon and the structure is simple. A zombie doe...

Follow the Cash: When Raised Capital Doesn't Move

This week handed us the perfect teaching case in cash governance — and it came from the most transparent balance sheet on the planet. Berkshire Hathaway reported a record $397.4 billion in cash and equivalents in the first quarter of 2026, the largest hoard in its history and the first quarterly report under new CEO Greg Abel (Bloomberg, May 2, 2026). It is not alone. Alphabet holds roughly $127 billion, Amazon $126 billion, Microsoft $94.6 billion. Analysts will argue for months about whether Buffett's caution is wisdom or whether the cash is a drag. That argument is healthy — and it is only possible because the cash is disclosed, quarter after quarter, in plain sight. Now hold that image, and invert it. The concept: Cash Governance Index (CGI). In the RaymondsIndex framework, CGI carries 45% of the weight — the single largest component, tied with capital efficiency. It measures three things: the idle-cash ratio (how much cash simply sits), the short-term-instrument ratio (h...

The Capital Efficiency Signal: When ROIC Stops Making Sense

This week the clearest story in global markets wasn't a deal or a default. It was the slow sound of trapped money. Blackstone, alongside EQT and KKR, is openly racing to unlock the roughly $7 trillion of cash parked across Japanese households and balance sheets. Japanese listed companies alone hold around ¥110 trillion in cash and deposits — more than 10% of total assets, against 7–8% in Europe and roughly 6% in the United States. Return on equity has sat below 10% for years. In 2025, activist investors launched a record 56 campaigns in Japan, and they almost all pointed at the same target: capital that has stopped working. This is the signal at the heart of the Capital Efficiency Index, or CEI. CEI is not a measure of how much profit a company reports. It measures whether capital is actually being put to productive use: return on invested capital, asset turnover, and the gap between the cash a company raises and the cash it actually deploys. The distinction matters because cash i...

This Week's Risk Radar: What RaymondsIndex Is Watching

Every Monday, the same uncomfortable truth resurfaces: by the time a company's distress is legible in its financial statements, the people who needed to act already missed their window. This week's radar makes the point in two languages. The domestic signal. Korea Exchange's review of 2025 fiscal-year filings flagged 42 KOSDAQ companies with delisting triggers — and all 42 traced back to the same root cause: a failed or qualified audit opinion. Twenty-three hit a trigger for the first time this year; eleven failed for a second consecutive year; eight, for a third, and are now suspended pending liquidation trades. More telling than the headline number is a quieter one: newly designated "investment caution" issues rose to 43, a jump of 12 over the prior year. One flagged firm, Samyoung E&C, is simultaneously fighting a management-control lawsuit — a reminder that delisting risk and governance conflict tend to travel together. The global parallel. ...