The City woke to a familiar knot in the stomach this morning. The FTSE 100 opened lower, tracking a brutal session on Wall Street where the tech-heavy Nasdaq suffered its worst single-day drop since September. The trigger? A double dose of bad news: a fresh wave of attacks in the Middle East and a spectacular rout in US technology stocks. For those of us who remember the dot-com bust and the 2008 financial crisis, the pattern is eerily reminiscent. When frothy valuations meet geopolitical reality, the market tends to demand a margin of safety. And right now, that margin looks razor thin.
The primary culprit is what I call the 'tech reckoning'. After a year of AI-driven euphoria, investors have suddenly realised that not every company with a chatbot is worth a fortune. The sell-off was led by the usual suspects: the Magnificent Seven, those mega-cap behemoths that propped up the S&P 500 for too long. When they sneeze, London catches a cold. Our own tech listings, from Sage to UK-based chip designers, have been caught in the downdraft. It is a classic case of contagion. Capital flight is the order of the day. Money is rotating out of equities and into government bonds, which is why you see gilt yields falling. But let's not kid ourselves: falling gilt yields are not a sign of safety. They are a sign of panic buying of safe havens. The 10-year yield dropped below 4% for the first time in two weeks. That is not an endorsement of UK fiscal policy; it is a flight to liquidity.
The Middle East escalation adds another layer of uncertainty. The attacks have pushed oil prices up by 2% this morning. That is a tax on consumers and businesses. It will feed through to inflation, which the Bank of England is already struggling to contain. The market is now pricing in a higher probability of a rate hike in November. Mark my words: if the MPC raises rates again, they risk breaking something. The housing market is already on its knees. The labour market is softening. We are walking a tightrope between stagflation and a hard landing.
What should investors do? The sensible approach is to reduce risk. I have long argued that the 'buy the dip' mentality is a trap. This is not a dip; it is a correction. Perhaps worse. Look at the VIX, the so-called fear index; it has spiked above 25. That is the level associated with genuine stress. My advice: trim your winners, hedge your positions, and keep cash on hand. The era of free money is over. The market is finally pricing in the real cost of capital. And for the UK, with its structural twin deficits and a government that seems allergic to fiscal discipline, the adjustment will be painful.
As I write, the London stock exchange is still open. But the mood is grim. Traders are watching the screens intently, waiting for the next headline from the Middle East or the next earnings miss from Silicon Valley. The bottom line is this: the market is repricing risk. And it is not done yet.










