Complete Intelligence

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What is Complete Intelligence?

Tony Nash, CEO and founder of Complete Intelligence, explains what the company’s platforms do. This video is produced by Real Vision. For more information, visit our website at https://completeintel.com/

 

Complete Intelligence is an artificial intelligence platform that forecasts assets, currencies, commodities, equity indices, and also does advanced procurement and revenue for corporate clients.

 

What we’re doing is we’re using reinforcement learning, which is effectively a number of neural networks. We use right now about 21 different neural networks to test every single asset.

 

Let’s say you have a bill of material for a mobile phone and you’ve got 7,000 items in that mobile phone. We’re integrating with an ERP system to put all of that data out of the ERP system for that mobile phone and we’re telling that manufacturer exactly how much every element is going to cost them for the next year.

 

If you look at everything as a bill of material, a portfolio is effectively a bill of material. We do the same thing for portfolios. We do the same thing for product revenue forecast.

 

We look at the world as a math problem. It doesn’t matter if it’s gold, or a diode or plastic or crude oil, or Japanese yen. It’s a number that behaves a certain way.

 

And there are anomalies, there are inflections, there are any number of things. But we don’t have any causal conviction on any asset the way it trades. Whether that’s traded through a procurement team, or whether that’s traded through an exchange, it doesn’t really matter to us. We’re looking at the behavior of numbers.

 

We have billions of data items in our platform. We’re running billions of calculations within our platform, and we’re testing more than a million different potential drivers for that element.

 

We’re not enforcing any causality or any driver environment on anything.

 

The underlying hypothesis of what we’re doing is very simple. The world is a closed system. And when we say that to people, they say, “Well, of course it is.” But the way they think of the world doesn’t necessarily align with that.

 

From day one, the way we built our approach, the way we built our platform, all has the underlying assumption that the world is a closed system, and everything is a tradeoff.

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News Articles

New AI Planning Tool Is a First in FinTech, Modernizes Procure-to-Pay Process

This article is originally published at https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20190924005671/en/

 

HOUSTON–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Houston-based FinTech firm Complete Intelligence is turning heads in the industry with its new Artificial Intelligence offering. The revolutionary system allows companies to visualize their product lines, analyze their cost centers and forecast changes in costs, all in one platform.

 

“Based on feedback from our clients, we’ve been astonished to learn that typical industry forecasts have error rates over 20%. This makes it difficult for companies to plan effectively,” said CEO and Founder Tony Nash. “We set out to reduce that error rate and are thrilled to demonstrate that we can dramatically reduce client forecasting risk by 5 – 10x – bringing error from 20-30% down to 2-5%. That can help our clients find millions in cost savings. This platform has created tremendous excitement because the business impact is meaningful and there isn’t another machine learning technology like this in the industry.”

 

CostFlow offers comprehensive procurement data analysis coupled with cost forecasting, so companies can reduce risk for more intelligent proactive planning. Users can easily identify exactly how costs will change within the supply chain and procurement process. Additionally, the tool can forecast a product substitution to see how a change in supplier or raw material may affect overall cost and performance.

 

Companies most set to benefit from the new technology are those in the food and beverage, natural resources, technology hardware, consumer goods, and industrial manufacturing sectors.

 

“It encourages me to see Houston-based Complete Intelligence leading the charge in FinTech innovation. It’s proof that Houston has the talent, expertise and client base to support a thriving tech market,” said Gina Luna, Complete Intelligence Board Member and CEO of Luna Strategies.

 

CostFlowTM is the first of four planning modules the company has slated for launch between Third Quarter 2019 and Second Quarter 2020.

 

About Complete Intelligence

 

Using advanced Artificial Intelligence, Complete Intelligence provides highly accurate cost and revenue forecasts fueled by billions of enterprise and public data points. Its innovative cloud platform gives companies insight into their future, so they can plan for success. Complete Intelligence helps companies to stop guessing, start proactive planning and succeed. Find out more at www.completeintel.com.

 

Contacts
Jacqueline Voss
jv@completeintel.com
(713) 710-9131 x707
www.completeintel.com

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News Articles

China’s jump in exports soothes growth fears, boosts markets

This article is originally published at https://www.reuters.com/article/us-china-economy-trade/chinas-jump-in-exports-soothes-growth-fears-boosts-markets-idUSKCN0XA07D

BEIJING (Reuters) – China’s exports in March returned to growth for the first time in nine months, adding to further signs of stabilisation in the world’s second-largest economy that cheered regional investors.

 

March exports rose a blistering 11.5 percent from a year earlier, the first increase since June and the largest percentage rise since February 2015.

 

Fears of a hard landing in China even as policymakers press on with tough reforms to rebalance the economy have rattled financial markets, with investors eagerly hunting for tentative signs the economic slump may be bottoming.

 

Economists, however, warned that Wednesday’s data was not evidence of stronger global demand as it was heavily skewed by base effects and seasonal distortions from the Lunar New Year.

 

And despite signs of green shoots for China, first quarter GDP data on Friday is expected to show the economy growing at its slowest pace since the financial crisis. Combined with tepid inflation, that is likely to keep Chinese monetary policy loose for some time yet.

 

Investors celebrated, nevertheless, with key Chinese stock indexes hitting three-month highs and the yuan firming, while regional stock markets and the Australian dollar AUD=, which often trades as a proxy to Chinese growth, also firmed.

 

“China’s foreign trade sector will likely improve from last year due to low comparables, but the improvement will not be dramatic, as the trends in external markets are not great,” said Wang Tie Shi, economist with Industrial Securities.

 

The upside surprise comes after other March economic indicators hinted of slight improvements in the broader economy, although other surveys have shown intensifying downward pressure on wages and employment.

 

Imports continued to fall but less than expected, declining by 7.6 percent in dollar denominated terms and volumes of most major commodities, notably copper and iron ore, rose strongly.

 

That left the country with a trade surplus of $29.86 billion for the month, data from the General Administration of Customs showed, versus a forecast of $30.85 billion.

 

“I think we should focus on the better-than-expected imports growth rate, which means domestic demand is also recovering, driven by infrastructure investment and also the real estate sector recovery,” said Ma Xiaoping, analyst at HSBC.

 

MOMENTOUS SHIFT

China’s slowdown might not be quite as severe as first feared but its “momentous” shift from investment-led growth is still having a chilling effect on trade globally, the International Monetary Fund said on Tuesday.

 

The IMF estimates every 1 percentage point investment-driven drop in China’s GDP, cut growth for the entire Group of 20 nations by 0.25 percentage points.

 

“Even countries that have few direct trade linkages with China are being affected through the Chinese slowdown’s impact on prices of commodities and manufactured goods, and on global confidence and risk sentiment,” the Fund said.

 

Regardless, overseas investors also appeared inspired by the trade data. MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan .MIAPJ0000PUS added 1.7 percent and Japanese shares .N225 gained 2.8 percent.

 

Tony Nash, managing partner at advisory firm Complete Intelligence, which focuses on global trade flows, sees China’s exports and imports stabilising over the next six months.

 

“As we close out Q2 and enter Q3, we’ll see more stable trade data before starting to see sustainable, small rises in both sides,” Nash said, adding data should be much less volatile in the second half as currencies and commodities stabilise.

 

NOT OUT OF WOODS YET

Economists polled by Reuters had expected March exports to rise 2.5 percent, after tumbling 25.4 percent in February – the worst showing since May 2009, and expected imports to fall 10.2 percent, based on weakness in global demand.

 

“Data across other Asian economies suggest that the headwinds in the trade sector remain,” Zhou Hao, economist at Commerzbank in Singapore, said in a research note.

 

Still, markets were relieved to see a surge in China’s demand for commodities, with copper arrivals hitting a record in March and pushing up first quarter imports by 30 percent from a year earlier. Exports to key markets such as the United States and Europe also posted double digit month-on-month gains.

 

China’s rising exports are also due in some part to a successful move up the value chain by mid-tier manufacturers.

 

“China’s export sector is not losing competitiveness. In fact, China is increasing its share of other countries’ imports, even though the global volume of trade has been sadly stagnant in recent years,” HSBC wrote in a research note.

 

Even as Chinese factories have learned to build more expensive car components and wind turbines, they have been shedding capacity in lower-end sectors like textiles and outsourcing such production to neighboring countries.

 

Premier Li Keqiang said last week that China’s economic indicators showed signs of improvement in the first quarter but a sluggish world economy and volatile markets were undermining gains.

 

The government is aiming for economic growth of 6.5 to 7 percent this year, following 6.9 percent growth last year – the weakest pace in a quarter of a century.