From the Nasdaq’s remarkable long-term resilience to growing concentration in emerging markets, Russia’s forced gold sell-off, and China’s capital allocation challenge, this week’s 7 charts map’s the fault lines shaping the global investment landscape.What a Journey for the Nasdaq 100...If you had put $10,000 into the Nasdaq 100 ETF (QQQ) right at the dot-com bubble’s worst moment in March 2000, that money would have grown to roughly $61,650 today, a return of +516%, or about +7.2% per year.This is despite enduring 9/11, the recession of 2001–2002, the Global Financial Crisis, the COVID-19 pandemic, and major geopolitical upheaval like the Russia-Ukraine war and ongoing Middle East tensions.It recalls one of Warren Buffett’s most iconic lines: "Never bet against America."Source: Rand GroupThe MSCI Emerging Markets Index Is Becoming Very ConcentratedSamsung and SK Hynix together make up roughly 13% of the MSCI Emerging Markets Index, a benchmark that guides over $1 trillion in managed assets. SK Hynix on its own now carries a weighting that rivals Tencent and Alibaba combined, after more than doubling in market value this year alone. Add TSMC to the mix, and these three chipmakers represent over a quarter of the entire index, having driven more than 70% of its gains so far in 2026.It is a situation that echoes late 2020, when Chinese stocks ballooned to over 40% of the same index. When that trade unraveled, Chinese equities peaked in February 2021 and then cratered, the broader emerging markets index was dragged into a 15–16-month bear market, shedding roughly half its value from top to bottom. Even supposedly diversified emerging market indexes can carry surprisingly dangerous levels of concentration.Source: Global markets Investors, Bloomberg OpinionMassive Liquidation of US Treasuries by Turkey in MarchIn March, Turkey offloaded nearly all its U.S. Treasury holdings, slashing them from roughly $16 billion to just $1.8 billion, a reduction of close to 89, as authorities scrambled to prop up the lira as a severe external shock took hold.What drove it:This was a classic emerging-market balance-of-payments and currency-defense dynamic, liquidating reserve assets to get dollars fast, not a philosophical break from the dollar system. It matters as a stress signal for Turkey, but not as a broader market event. Total foreign Treasury holdings fell only about 1.5% in March, with Japan and China leading that decline.Source: HedgeyeRussia Is Dumping Its GoldRussia, once one of the largest sovereign accumulators of gold, has sold more than $4 billion of its reserves this year, bringing its holdings down to the lowest level since the invasion of Ukraine began. This move is largely explained by fiscal pressure: energy revenues are no longer sufficient to cover war-related expenditures, forcing the government to tap into its reserves. The sales are occurring at historically high gold prices, which softens the financial impact, although it also highlights the urgency of the budget gap.Source: Bank of Russia, BloombergIf China Wants to Surpass the US, It Needs to Become Far Better in Capital AllocationOver the past four decades, China has consistently invested around 40% of its GDP annually, largely through state-owned enterprises and local government projects. This level of investment far exceeds historical benchmarks, including even the Soviet Union during its most intensive industrial periods.However, the efficiency of these investments appears to have declined over time. Whereas such spending generated around 10% annual growth two decades ago, it now produces closer to 4%, with projections suggesting around 3% by 2030.Source: Bank of International SettlementsWhat Is Happening in China?April data point to a broad slowdown in Chinese domestic demand. According to China’s National Bureau of Statistics, car retail sales fell 15% YoY, the sharpest decline since mid-2022. The weakness extended beyond autos: home appliances and furniture purchases declined at a double-digit pace, while gold, silver and jewelry sales dropped 21% YoY.Overall retail sales rose by just 0.2% YoY in April, the weakest reading since December 2022. Fixed-asset investment also fell 1.6% over the first four months of 2026, moving back into contraction territory. This suggests China’s GDP growth could slow to around 4.1% YoY in Q2 2026, below Beijing’s official 4.5%–5.0% growth target. In short, China’s economy is losing momentum, with consumer demand and investment both under pressure.Source: Global Markets Investor1 in 8 People in Switzerland Is a US Dollar MillionaireAccording to the UBS Millionaire Index, Switzerland ranks first by the estimated share of the population holding at least USD 1 million in wealth.• Switzerland: 12.4%• Hong Kong: 8.6%• United States: 7.1%• Netherlands: 7.0%• Singapore: 5.5%• United Kingdom: 3.9%• Germany: 3.2%• Japan: 2.2%• China: 0.4%• India: 0.06%Source: UBS