The Asian session has delivered a brutal wake-up call to global markets. Tech shares across Tokyo, Seoul, and Shanghai have cratered, with the Nikkei sliding over 3% in afternoon trade. The trigger? A cocktail of rising US bond yields, a hawkish pivot from the Bank of Japan, and profit warnings from key semiconductor players. The MSCI Asia ex-Japan index is down 2.5%, its worst day in three months.
London is now staring down the barrel. The FTSE 100, already nursing a 1% loss this week, is set to open sharply lower. The index’s heavy weighting in miners and banks offers little shelter when tech sentiment sours globally. The question is whether the damage will be contained or escalate into a full-blown risk-off event.
The culprit is clear: inflation fears are back with a vengeance. The US 10-year Treasury yield has punched through 4.5%, and the dollar is strengthening. For the UK, this is a double-edged sword. A stronger dollar props up FTSE 100 exporters, but rising gilt yields threaten to choke off the fragile recovery in housing and consumer spending. The 10-year gilt yield has already crept up to 4.2%, and the Bank of England’s next move looks increasingly restrictive.
Capital is fleeing risk assets. The VIX, Wall Street’s fear gauge, has spiked 15%. The yen carry trade is unwinding, and emerging market currencies are taking a hit. The pound is holding up for now, but if the sell-off deepens, sterling could come under pressure as global investors retreat home.
So what does this mean for the FTSE? The index is not as exposed to high-growth tech as the S&P 500, but its commodity and financial sectors are not immune. Miners will suffer if the slowdown narrative gathers steam. Banks will face margin pressure if the yield curve inverts further. And if the sell-off triggers margin calls, we could see forced liquidation across the board.
Today’s session will be a test of nerve. The bears are circling, and the data calendar is light, so the momentum is with them. If the FTSE fails to hold support around 7,400, a retest of the March lows at 7,200 is on the cards. The one saving grace? Earnings season is mostly behind us, so there are no major corporate surprises to add fuel to the fire. But that’s cold comfort when the market is pricing in a global recession.
In the City, traders are already muttering about a “summer crash”. I’m not there yet, but the risk-reward is clearly skewed to the downside. Investors should brace for volatility and consider defensive plays. Gold is rallying above $2,400, and that’s not a good sign. It says people are scared.
The bottom line: Asian tech’s pain is London’s problem today. If the FTSE opens down 2%, don’t be surprised. And if it tries to bounce, ask yourself: is this a buying opportunity or a dead cat? My money is on the latter. The market has been too complacent about inflation, and this is the hangover.











