London’s FTSE 100 dipped again this morning as a global tech rout and fresh strikes in the Middle East spooked investors. The index fell 0.7% in early trading, dragged down by heavyweight miners and oil majors despite a brief rally in crude prices. The tech-heavy NASDAQ’s overnight slide of 2.3% set the tone, with London’s own tech stocks like Sage Group and Rightmove losing ground. The selling pressure is a stark reminder that the market’s recent optimism was built on sand: central bank rate cuts may be coming, but the underlying economy is far from stable.
Brent crude briefly spiked above $78 a barrel after reports of an Israeli airstrike on a Syrian military facility, but the gains evaporated as traders questioned the sustainability of any supply disruption. I have seen this pattern before. The market treats each geopolitical event as a temporary shock, but the cumulative effect is a slow bleed. Investors are pricing in a risk premium that is already eroding corporate margins. The fallout from the tech sell-off is particularly corrosive. London’s tech sector is not Silicon Valley, but it is exposed to the same frothy valuations and shaky sentiment. The lack of a domestic technology champion means we import volatility without the upside.
Meanwhile, the gilt market is sending its own warnings. The 10-year yield crept up to 4.2%, reflecting fears of sticky inflation and a fiscal deficit that the government seems unwilling to address properly. Chancellor Hunt’s recent budget was a political exercise in smoke and mirrors, not a serious plan for fiscal consolidation. Capital is beginning to flee. The pound is down 1.5% against the dollar this week, and I suspect the Bank of England will be forced to keep rates higher for longer. That will hurt the housing market and consumer spending, which are already on life support.
The question now is whether this is a correction or the start of something uglier. My instincts say the latter. The tech sell-off is a symptom of a broader reckoning: easy money has gone, and valuations are adjusting to a higher cost of capital. London’s market is particularly vulnerable because it is thin in growth stocks and heavy in sectors like energy and mining, which are hostage to global demand fears. The strikes in the Middle East add a layer of uncertainty that the market hates. Investors hate uncertainty even more than they hate bad news.
I spoke with a trader on the floor of the London Stock Exchange this morning, and his assessment was characteristically blunt: “It’s a shambles. No one knows where the bottom is.” He is not wrong. The FTSE 100 has now given back all its gains from April, and the trajectory is pointing south.
For the retail investor, the advice is simple: sit on your hands. Do not try to catch falling knives. The volatility will persist until there is a clear signal on inflation, interest rates, or a de-escalation in the Middle East. None of those are likely in the near term. The market is a machine for transferring wealth from the impatient to the patient. Be patient.








