The London market is nursing a sharp hangover this morning as a perfect storm of tech rout and Middle East tensions sends the FTSE 100 reeling. The sell-off, which began on Wall Street with a brutal repricing of technology stocks, has crossed the Atlantic with a vengeance. The tech-heavy Nasdaq's 3% plunge has dragged down London's own darling of the sector, with shares in companies like Sage and Aveva taking a beating. But it is the geopolitical overlay that has spooked investors most. The escalation in the Middle East, with Israel striking targets in Syria and Iran threatening reprisals, has sent crude oil prices soaring above $90 a barrel. That is a double-edged sword for the UK economy: higher petrol prices at the pump and a fresh spike in inflation expectations. The gilt market is already pricing in a longer period of elevated interest rates, with the 10-year yield jumping 12 basis points to 4.45%.
This is a classic 'risk-off' day. Capital is fleeing equities for the safety of government bonds, but even those are not offering much comfort given the inflationary backdrop. The market is also grappling with the fallout from yesterday's disappointing UK GDP data, which showed the economy stagnated in August. That combination of low growth and high inflation is a stagflationary nightmare for the Bank of England. Threadneedle Street now faces a Hobson's choice: raise rates further to fight inflation and risk tipping the economy into recession, or hold tight and watch the pound get hammered.
The pound has already fallen 1.5% against the dollar today, trading below $1.21. That will only add to inflationary pressures by making imports more expensive. Currency depreciation is a tax on consumers, pure and simple. And with household budgets already squeezed by rising mortgage costs and stagnant wages, the outlook for retail spending is grim.
What we are witnessing is a classic capital flight from risk assets. Investors are fleeing to the sidelines, and that is indiscriminate selling. The tech sell-off has been exacerbated by a reassessment of the 'growth at any cost' narrative that has powered markets for years. Higher interest rates meant the present value of future earnings was always going to be discounted. Now the music has stopped.
The Middle East component adds a layer of unpredictability. Any further escalation could send oil to $100 a barrel, a level that historically triggers recessions. The UK is particularly vulnerable given its dependence on imported energy. The last time oil was this high, the government was forced to introduce a windfall tax on energy companies. Expect that debate to resurface with a vengeance.
For now, the advice from the trading floor is simple: batten down the hatches. Volatility is back with a vengeance, and the safe havens of cash and short-dated gilts are looking increasingly attractive. The days of easy money are over. Welcome to the age of the bottom line.









