The London stock market is bracing for a turbulent session today as a brutal sell-off in global technology shares sends shockwaves through the City. The FTSE 100 is poised to open sharply lower, tracking a rout that wiped billions from Wall Street and Asian bourses overnight. The trigger? A sudden loss of faith in the artificial intelligence trade that has been the market's golden goose for much of the past year.
Investors are fleeing risk assets after a disappointing earnings report from a US tech bellwether reignited fears that the AI boom is running on hype rather than substance. The so-called 'Magnificent Seven' stocks—Apple, Microsoft, Alphabet, Amazon, Nvidia, Tesla, and Meta—have collectively shed nearly $1 trillion in market capitalisation over the past 48 hours. The contagion has spread to London, where tech-heavy growth stocks are bearing the brunt of the sell-off.
'This is a classic case of the market falling out of love with a narrative,' said one fund manager I spoke to this morning. 'For months, any stock with AI in its name was bid up to the heavens. Now the market is sobering up and asking: where are the profits?'
The FTSE 100's relative lack of tech exposure has historically been a shield during such routs, but the index is not immune. Mining stocks are also under pressure amid fears that a tech slowdown will hit demand for commodities. Meanwhile, the banking sector is feeling the pinch as falling bond yields squeeze net interest margins.
Gilt yields have tumbled as investors seek safe havens, with the 10-year yield dropping 10 basis points to 3.85%. This flight to safety is a double-edged sword for the UK economy. While lower borrowing costs may provide some relief to the Chancellor, they also signal a deteriorating growth outlook. The pound has weakened against the dollar, trading at $1.24, as the market prices in a more dovish Bank of England.
'This is not a buying opportunity,' cautioned a senior trader at a leading London brokerage. 'The volatility is going to persist until we get clarity on whether the AI sell-off comes from genuine valuation concerns or a more systemic liquidity crunch.'
The sell-off has revived memories of the dot-com crash, though many analysts argue that today's tech giants are far more profitable. Yet the parallels are unsettling: a narrow group of stocks driving market gains, frothy valuations, and a sudden reversal of sentiment.
For the UK equity market, the pain may be compounded by capital flight. International investors, who have been piling into London stocks this year on the back of a stabilising economy, are now reconsidering their positions. 'If the US market is taking a hit, it's only natural for global investors to pull money back home,' said a currency strategist.
So what does this mean for the average investor? Patience is a virtue, but hedge funds are not known for it. For now, the City's advice is to buckle up. The FTSE 100 may be more resilient than its tech-heavy peers, but in a global market, no index is an island. The only certainty is volatility.
As the opening bell approaches, the mood in Canary Wharf is one of caution and calculation. The market gods are demanding a sacrifice, and tech stocks are offering themselves up. The question is: how much more blood will they shed before the bulls return?









