The Footsie is once again caught in the crosshairs of a perfect storm. Investors, already nursing losses from the recent tech sell-off, are now grappling with the spectre of escalating violence in the Middle East. The index opened lower this morning, with defensive stocks providing scant comfort as gilt yields crept higher on renewed inflation jitters.
The tech sector, a bellwether for market sentiment, continues to haemorrhage value. The Nasdaq’s overnight plunge has rippled across the Atlantic, hitting London-listed tech names like Sage and Rightmove. One might call it a correction, but the velocity of the sell-off suggests something more visceral: a panic.
Meanwhile, the geopolitical premium is being priced in with brutal efficiency. Oil prices have spiked on fears of supply disruptions from the Strait of Hormuz. BP and Shell are benefiting, but the broader index is suffering as transport and consumer discretionary stocks take a beating. British Airways owner IAG is down 3%, reflecting fears of higher fuel costs and reduced travel demand.
The bond market, as ever, tells the real story. The 10-year gilt yield is pushing 4.5%, its highest since the Liz Truss mini-budget fiasco. The Bank of England looks increasingly impotent: it can’t cut rates to soothe markets without risking a sterling crisis, but higher rates only exacerbate the pain in housing and investment.
Capital flight is the quiet terror. The pound is hovering near multi-month lows against the dollar, a clear vote of no confidence in the UK’s fiscal trajectory. The Treasury’s promise of ‘fiscal discipline’ rings hollow when public borrowing is still running at 4% of GDP. Investors are asking: who will buy our debt if the government won’t balance its books?
This is not a time for the faint-hearted. The volatility index (VIX) is flashing red, and the FTSE 100’s dividend yield, once a safe haven, now looks like a trap if earnings collapse. The only solace is that the index is cheap relative to its American peers. But cheap can get cheaper.
My advice to the retail investor: reduce exposure to growth stocks, hedge against inflation with index-linked gilts, and keep a powder dry for the inevitable dip buying opportunity when the dust settles. The market is a voting machine in the short term, but a weighing machine in the long run. Right now, the votes are for fear.








