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Markets on track for worst week since April as AI bubble fears mount; UK borrowing exceeds forecasts in October – business live | Business

FTSE 100 hits one-month low as AI bubble fears rise

Shares are falling faster than wickets in Perth at the start of trading in London, as fears of an AI bubble rip through markets again.

Following losses on Wall Street last night, the FTSE 100 share index has dropped by 104 points, or just over 1%, at the start of trading to 9423 points. That’s a one-month low.

Defence firm Babcock (-4.7%) is leading the followers, followed by technology investor Polar Capital, then precious metals producers Endeavour Mining (-4.1%) and Fresnillo (-4.5%).

This follows wild trading in the US yesterday, where stocks initially rallied but then fell back as investors digested forecast-beating results from Nvidia and a mixed US jobs report.

Despite Nvidia’s highly anticipated earnings exceeded expectations, concerns persist around the firms using those chips to invest in AI, spending heavily and driving that demand.

“The people who are selling the semiconductors to help power AI doesn’t alleviate the concerns that some of these hyper-scalers are spending way too much money on building the AI infrastructure,” said Robert Pavlik, senior portfolio manager at Dakota Wealth. “You have the company that’s benefiting it, but the others are still spending too much money.”

Jim Reid, market strategist at Deutsche Bank, says:

it’s been a truly remarkable 24 hours, with a sequence of moves that were almost impossible to predict….

After the world’s largest company reported spectacular results, the stock was up around +5% by 3pm London time. It closed down -3.15%. The broader market followed a similar pattern: the S&P 500 initially climbed +1.93%, only to fade and close down -1.56% as doubts about AI valuations crept back in. That marked the biggest intra-day swing for the S&P since the six days of extreme market turmoil that followed the Liberation Day tariffs in early April. Adding to the negative backdrop for crypto were lingering questions over the crypto market structure bill that’s being worked on in Congress.

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Caution is dominating trading across global markets today, reports Bob Savage, head of markets macro strategy at BNY.

He explains:

This is now the worst week for equities since April, and one that has contained the largest inter-day reversal in shares for the NASDAQ on record. Government spending isn’t turning sentiment. Japan’s new PM unveiled $112bn in stimulus, but the country’s equities still fell more than 2.4%. South Korea dropped even further, with the Kospi shedding 3.8%.

The MSCI rebalancing on Monday, with a shift toward tech, isn’t sufficient to redress the situation either. Budgets will remain a key consideration for the market, with the U.K.’s turn next week key for GBP and gilts. If there is to be a reversal of the reversal, rates will be key. Yesterday’s U.S. jobs report for September didn’t help clarify Fed easing expectations for December.

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