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Morning bid Europe-Skeptic investors haunted with tech sell-off

Morning bid Europe-Skeptic investors haunted with tech sell-off
Morning bid Europe-Skeptic investors haunted with tech sell-off

Stella Qiu gives us a look at what the future holds for European and Global markets on February 5th:

Investors were confident that the major U.S. tech firms would deliver a strong quarter with rosy forecasts. They increased their exposures ahead of this earnings season. This has proven to be a costly error.

Google Alphabet

Released

It delivered solid results, but also surprised analysts when it announced that capital expenditures would be between $175 billion and $185 billion in this year - far above Wall Street's expectations.

This only fueled fears about the?explosion of artificial intelligence investment. The valuations of artificial intelligence are already high and there are signs that many jobs in software or data analytics are being automated.

There seems to be only one direction to go: down.

Alphabet's shares fluctuated wildly in the hours after closing - dropping over 6% once - before settling at 0.4% lower. You would think that the increasing AI spending would benefit a chip manufacturer like?Nvidia.

Nvidia's shares rose 2% following the bell. However, equipment suppliers in Asia have been hit hard by the recession, with South Korea down a staggering 3.5%, and Taiwan down 1%.

Wall Street futures tried to recover but lost momentum quickly as the selling spread to precious materials, with gold and silver both falling below $5,000 an ounce.

European futures indicate a lower opening ahead of the policy decisions of the European Central Bank and the Bank of England. Both are expected keep rates the same.

The ECB will likely indicate that no policy moves are imminent, even if recent euro-dollar surges fuel concerns that inflation could undershoot target.

BoE is expected to keep its options open as to when it will reduce rates again, waiting to see if a weakened jobs market will help to lower inflation pressures.

The following are key developments that may influence the markets on Thursday.

ECB-BoE Policy Meeting, January PMI Data for Euro Zone, Germany and France

(source: Reuters)