The City awoke to a sea of red this morning, with the FTSE 100 shedding over 3% in early trade as a perfect storm of tech sector jitters and escalating geopolitical tensions sent investors scurrying for cover. The sell-off, which began on Wall Street overnight, accelerated sharply after reports emerged of fresh airstrikes in the Middle East, reigniting fears of a prolonged conflict that could further disrupt global supply chains.
For weeks, I have warned that the frothy valuations in the tech sector were unsustainable. The NASDAQ, which had been propped up by a handful of mega-cap stocks, is now paying the price for its hubris. The catalyst? A string of disappointing earnings from key players, coupled with hawkish signals from the Federal Reserve that has poured cold water on hopes of imminent rate cuts. The result is a violent repricing of risk that has left portfolio managers nursing substantial losses.
But it is not just the tech bubble that is bursting. The Middle East strikes have injected a new layer of uncertainty. Oil prices have spiked, with Brent crude surging above $90 a barrel, adding to inflationary pressures that central banks are already struggling to contain. The gilt market, meanwhile, is signalling its own distress: the 10-year yield has jumped 15 basis points this morning, reflecting a flight from risk assets and a desperate scramble for safe havens.
This is precisely the sort of environment that triggers capital flight. Investors are pulling money out of equities and into gold, which is up 2% today, and the US dollar, which is strengthening against a basket of currencies. Sterling is taking a hit, trading below $1.25 for the first time in weeks. The Bank of England now faces a conundrum: raise rates to combat inflation and risk exacerbating the sell-off, or hold steady and watch the pound slide further?
Fiscal responsibility, once a cornerstone of UK policy, seems a distant memory. The new government's spending plans have already raised eyebrows, and this crisis will only embolden those who argue for more intervention. Yet markets abhor uncertainty. Every pound spent on stimulus is a pound that must be borrowed, and the bond vigilantes are already circling. I would not be surprised to see gilt yields test 5% before the week is out.
For the retail investor, the temptation to panic sell is strong. But I would counsel caution. Market corrections, however painful, are a necessary evil. They purge the excesses and reset valuations to more sustainable levels. The tech bubble needed pricking, and the geopolitical risk, while real, is often priced in more quickly than the headlines suggest. The question is: how deep will this correction go?
One thing is certain: the era of cheap money is over. The era of volatility is here to stay. Investors who have grown accustomed to double-digit annual returns will need to recalibrate their expectations. Cash, for now, is not trash. It is a hedge against a world that has suddenly become much more dangerous.
I will be watching the close of trading today with interest. If the sell-off continues into the European close, we could see a wave of stop-loss triggers that sends the indices even lower. But markets are emotional beasts. A ceasefire in the Middle East or a surprise dovish comment from a central banker could spark a rally just as violent as the crash. That is the nature of the beast.
For now, hold tight. Keep your powder dry. And remember: the bottom line is that markets do not forgive imprudence. They have a nasty habit of reminding us of that fact when we least expect it.








