The City has woken to another bloodbath on the exchanges. The FTSE 100 opened sharply lower, following a brutal session on Wall Street where the Nasdaq suffered its worst single-day drop since 2022. Tech darlings are being sold off with a ferocity not seen since the dot-com bust.
Apple, Microsoft, and Nvidia all shed billions in market capitalisation as investors fled risk assets. The catalyst? A one-two punch of disappointing earnings from the semiconductor sector and an escalating crisis in the Middle East.
Reports of renewed missile attacks on Israeli shipping lanes have sent oil prices spiking, adding fuel to the inflationary fire. The bond market is not far behind: the 10-year gilt yield has risen above 4.5 per cent for the first time in six months, a clear signal that fixed-income investors are demanding a premium for uncertainty.
The Bank of England, already wrestling with sticky service-sector inflation, now faces the nightmare scenario of supply-side shocks just as it tries to chart a path toward rate cuts. The 'transitory inflation' narrative has been dead for two years; this latest convulsion will serve as a reminder that central bankers are not in control. Capital is fleeing to the dollar, pushing sterling below $1.
24. For the Chancellor, this is a fiscal headache: higher borrowing costs mean less room for pre-election giveaways. The real question is whether this is a correction or the beginning of something uglier.
Corporate balance sheets are healthy, but confidence is brittle. When tech giants miss estimates and missiles fly, the market's only logical response is to go to ground. Watch for the VIX to spike above 30; that will tell you the smart money is panicking.
In the meantime, brace for more volatility. The bottom line: fear has the upper hand, and it will take a 'nuclear' peace deal or a dramatic dovish pivot from the Fed to restore calm.











