The Black Swans of 2022

Conventional logic is that black swan events are rare and infrequent, cannot be predicted (although they seem obvious in hindsight), and affect markets severely.

2022 seems to have delivered its fair share of rare, hard-to-predict and disruptive events. Whether or not they were black swan events, the cumulative effect has been devastating to many.

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From Crisis Comes Opportunity - Supply Chain & Logistics Tech is on the Rise

COVID, the war in Europe, threats of war on Taiwan and longer-term structural changes such as the shift to e-commerce and the drive to build more sustainable and digitised supply chains have created challenges for logistics providers around the world.

But it has also created the opportunity for entrepreneurs to use technology to tackle these problems bringing an influx of investment into the sector.

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How Companies in APAC are Digitising the Supply Chain

Investments in logistics businesses have grown sharply during the pandemic years, with McKinsey and Co for instance, saying funding for startups in the sector almost doubled between 2020 and 2021.

Some of those investments have been huge, such as the US$935 million secured by US based Flexport, at the start of this year. Others, such as the seed funding for visual logistics business SpaceDraft reflect the nascent aspect of the opportunity they are chasing.

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October Tech Round-Up: Building a Tech Ecosystem

Mountain towns around the world transformed into hot beds of tech during the pandemic, as distributed workforces found their way there in search of fresh air and a healthier environment. At North Ridge Partners we’ve been studying successful tech mountain towns like Boulder, Colorado and Bend, Oregon in our quest to help Queenstown - our spiritual home in the Southern Alps of New Zealand - to build out its own tech ecosystem.

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Technology Will Add $2.8 Trillion to Indonesian Economy By 2040

With 17,000 islands strung out across thousands of kilometres, Indonesia spans a vast arc of the planet's surface and at least 17,000 potential points of pain as climate change accelerates sea level rise and the chaotic disintegration of long-established weather patterns. But with more than 270 million people scattered through that island chain, working and living in one of the world's largest, rapidly developing economies, the huge republic is destined to drive technological and economic adaptation to change, both locally and at global scale.

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