Latest News

Tech stocks drop on a weekly basis due to a sour mood

Investors are uneasy with the pace of the artificial intelligence stock rally, and have shifted their focus to safer assets like bonds and the Japanese yen.

S&P 500 and Nasdaq futures firmed up a bit in Asia's morning. However, overnight the Nasdaq fell 1.9%.

The world's largest tech index has fallen 2.8% this week. If that trend continues, it would be the biggest drop in a single week since March. This is a shock for an juggernaut which had gained more than half its value from the lows reached when tariffs were first announced in April.

In morning trading, Japan's Nikkei dropped 1.8%, resulting in a loss of 4.7% for the week, the biggest since late march. Meanwhile, in Seoul, the Kospi declined 1.4%, resulting in a fall of 3.3% for the week, its worst weekly drop since late mars.

Softbank Group Corp, a tech investor, fell more than 20 percent this week. Chip and cable manufacturers were also among the worst performers. Bitcoin, which is sometimes used as a barometer for tech sentiments, has fallen 8% this week to $101,092.

MOOD SHIFT

The pullback of AI-related shares has not been triggered by any obvious event, but the reaction to recent results reveals that some fears are beginning to surface about the possibility of a bubble and profitability questions.

Meta's stock plunged late last month after it revealed large capital expenditures as the company builds data centres to support its AI push. Palantir Technologies, a data and AI company, has also seen its shares fall despite exceeding earnings expectations.

Herald van der Linde is the head of equity strategies for Asia Pacific, HSBC.

"And another one says it. Then a third. A fourth person says that these three are all selling. It's possible that I am selling, too. It's just a change in market sentiment. This could be happening now."

Overnight, the S&P 500 index closed down 1.1% and the Philadelphia SE Semiconductor Index fell 2.4%.

BONDS, YEN HIGHER

Bond markets rose on the back of a demand for safety, and as second-tier U.S. data indicated a wave layoffs which could support future rate cuts in the U.S.

The benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury rates fell 6.4 basis point overnight to 4.09%, after Challenger, Gray & Christmas, an outplacement firm, said that there was a spike in job cuts announced in October.

These private surveys have attracted attention on the market, while the prolonged U.S. shutdown has stopped official U.S. data publishing.

The dollar fell overnight by nearly 0.5% to $1.1546 a euro.

The dollar was last, at 153.17 Japanese yens and 0.8069 Swiss francs.

The pound soared after the Bank of England held interest rates, but the possibility of a rate cut in December limited gains. It traded at a slight discount to $1.3128 on the Asian market.

Gold held steady at just under $4,000 per ounce. Brent crude remained at $63.64 per barrel. (Editing by Shri Navaratnam).

(source: Reuters)