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Sterling rises as BoE rates remain unchanged, but stocks drop due to tech shares

The major stock indexes dropped sharply Thursday. Consumer discretionary and technology shares led the losses in the S&P 500. Meanwhile, the British pound strengthened after the Bank of England decided against a rate cut.

The shares of U.S.-based chipmaker Qualcomm fell more than 4% following

Warning

Samsung's future gadgets may not have as many chips as they used to.

Shares

Legrand's stock dropped after the French data center equipment company reported sales growth in the first nine month of the year of 11.9%, which was slightly below expectations and hit by U.S. Tariffs.

The last change in the sterling was 0.37%, at $1.3097. The BoE Monetary Policy Committee, in anticipation of possible tax increases in UK Chancellor Rachel Reeves budget due later this month (later this month), voted by 5 to 4 to maintain the Bank Rate benchmark at 4.0%. The vote was close, but expectations of a reduction before the end of the year were not affected.

Investors on Wall Street continue to focus their attention on the U.S. shutdown, the trade tariff rulings and the slew corporate earnings.

This earnings season will not be defined by the past. "The market is looking for guidance, and with tariffs, shutdown, and possible peak AI (artificial Intelligence), the future may be bleak," stated Jake Dollarhide. He is the chief executive officer at Longbow Asset Management, located in Tulsa.

Some U.S. Bank Chief Executives spoke out against the proposed tax on financial services.

You can also read about the warnings below.

What to expect from a possible market decline.

Investors digested a Challenger, Gray & Christmas report that revealed employers in the United States cut more than 150.000 jobs in October, marking this month's largest reduction in over 20 years.

Investors have been attracted to private economic data in the absence of official statistics during the longest government shutdown ever experienced by the United States.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 373.08 or 0.79% to 46,937.92. The S&P 500 fell 63.56 or 0.94% to 6,732.73, and the Nasdaq Composite declined 363.84 or 1.56% to 23,135.95.

The MSCI index of global stocks fell by 4.87 points or 0.49% to 903.02.

The STOXX 600 Index fell by 0.73%.

Overnight, Japan's Nikkei rebounded 1.4% after sliding 2.5% on Wednesday. Shanghai's benchmark index, which is a psychologically significant level of 4,000, regained the level after optimism about tech self-sufficiency drove its semiconductor and AI related shares.

The dollar dropped after weak U.S. employment data raised market expectations that the Federal Reserve would cut rates again this year.

The dollar index (which measures the greenback in relation to a basket of currencies, including the yen, the euro and others) fell by 0.28%, while the euro rose 0.36%, reaching $1.1532. The dollar fell 0.64% against the yen to 153.12.

After the BoE's decision, yields on euro zone benchmark Bunds fell from their previous four-week high. Germany's 10-year bond yields are down by 2 basis points at 2.65%, after reaching 2.676% in the early session. This is the highest level seen since October 10. Investors are concerned about the U.S. labor market, and the uncertainty caused by the government shutdown. The yield on the benchmark 10-year U.S. note fell by 6.4 basis points, to 4.093% from 4.157% at late Wednesday. U.S. crude fell 0.69% to $59.18 per barrel while Brent dropped to $63.19 a barrel, down by 0.52% for the day.

(source: Reuters)