
"For the rest of the year, there could be a lot of opportunities in the macro space because there'll be different economic policies followed in different countries. The opportunities are extraordinary in this next phase of our global economy."The one weakest spot for hedge funds this year has been the macro managers," said Jeffrey B Klein, a managing director at Goldman Sachs External Investing Group, which invests in hedge funds. It may have begun in the manufacturing world where sensors and smart machines facilitated production, but it's now impacting nearly every industry, from healthcare to entertainment to energy and more.

The Fourth Industrial Revolution is all about cyber-physical systems and using technology to dramatically change our world. Every organization must now consider how they provide products and services equally as well and complementary, whether interacting online or in the physical world. For example, the Post Office Group must have a multi-faceted approach to creating a frictionless experience and the right systems and infrastructure to support the home businesses, remote working, and online shopping habits of its customers.

Every organization needs to consider how they offer physical and digital experiences that work seamlessly for those who interact with it. Our "new normal" will be a place where these worlds mix and mingle in our daily experience.
#Macro trend free#
Will you be the same identity based on who you're interacting with? Will our mental health suffer if we lean too far into our virtual selves and ignore the physical world? Given the tools at our disposal, smartphones, social media, and technology, we are free to create a digital narrative about who we are that might not match our physical world persona.ĭeep hybridity-a blend of the physical, biological, and digital worlds-is the final future trend you should be aware of. Virtual reality and augmented reality add another layer of possibilities for physical-world identities. Today we have the ability to represent ourselves as a "stack" of identities that account for various affiliations, situations, values, and more.
#Macro trend plus#
Who are you? The answer to that can be quite varied and complex with technology's digital representations of individuals plus the erosion of normative definitions of gender and social roles. Some are starting to consider Government as a Platform (Gaap) to provide better public services, more efficiency, digital public infrastructure, and more. As economies work to recover from COVID-19, discussions will continue regarding what should be included in the social contract between people, companies, and their governments. Discussions of a universal basic income increased in economies that were decimated with shutdowns from the pandemic. As our experience is digitized, workforces feel threatened by automation and don't feel valued or protected by either companies or the government, as was more common in the past. Societies have become divided between the haves and have nots, and any differences, whether religion, race, or sexual orientation, create chasms rather than common ground in the echo chamber of social media. What can we expect from our relationship with our governments and companies? Under intense pressure, our traditional social contract is no longer working for a wide swath of individuals. The shocks of our transitions are still reverberating and will continue as we shift to the next phase of our experience in all areas, including the economy, technology, healthcare, social development, and more. And the transition shocks experienced due to COVID as teachers scrambled to educate the next generation amid stay-at-home-orders and workforces were challenged to keep business running remotely while juggling all that came with the "new normal" caused tension and conflict. In the energy sector, decarbonization of power is underway to meet the emissions reduction targets agreed to as part of the Paris Agreement on climate change. From e-cars to autonomous vehicles, the transportation industry is in transition as well to develop the next generation transportation that is safe, reliable as well as good for the earth.

Since livestock production is cited as being responsible for 14.5% of greenhouse-gas emissions, there's been a groundswell of support for going vegan or vegetarian, as well as the food industry working to develop "fake" meat that is as convincing as the real thing to satisfy reticent carnivores. Spurned in part by the measurable climate change that can no longer be defended as a myth, these industries are working to reinvent themselves in this new reality. Some of our biggest societal systems and modern industries such as education, transportation, energy, food, and healthcare are in the midst of gargantuan changes.
