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Stocks are impacted by fears of an AI rally and China's trade woes

Investors worried about the sustainability of an artificial intelligence rally led to a fall on Friday in tech-heavy markets.

The fact that China's trade data was weaker than expected also shows how much President Donald Trump has been hit by his tariffs.

STOXX, a benchmark index of 600 large European companies, fell 0.17% early Friday morning. Meanwhile U.S. stocks were set to open brighter with S&P futures and Nasdaq futures both up 0.3% after a Nasdaq drop of 1.9% on Thursday.

The world's largest tech index has fallen 2.8% this week, and if that trend continues, it will be the biggest drop in a single week since April when tariffs were first announced. Since then, the Nasdaq index has increased by more than 50%.

China's exports fell by 1.1% in October. This is the lowest performance since February. It has chilling effects on Asian markets, as it reminds them of China's dependence on American consumers.

Both the Shanghai Composite Index and China's blue chip CSI300 Index finished Friday 0.3% lower.

Japan's Nikkei dropped 1.2%, resulting in a loss of 4.1% per week, the biggest since April. In Seoul, the KOSPI declined 1.8%, resulting in a weekly drop of 3.7%, the biggest since February.

Softbank Group Corp, a tech investor, fell nearly 20% in the past week. Chip and cable manufacturers were also amongst the worst performers. Bitcoin, which is often a bellwether of tech sentiment, has fallen 8% this week to $101,525.

Fears over bubbles in AI stocks

The pullback of AI-related shares has not been triggered by any obvious event, but the reaction of the market to recent results indicates 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."

BONDS AND GOLD SHINE as SAFETY is Sought

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 to 4.09% Thursday, after Challenger, Gray & Christmas, a firm that specializes in outplacement, said that there was a spike in the number of announced job cuts for October. On Friday, the yields remained unchanged.

These private surveys gained market attention during the prolonged U.S. shutdown, which has stopped official U.S. statistics publication.

The dollar index (which measures a currency's strength in comparison to a basket of six other currencies) rose 0.2%, reaching 99.845, whereas the euro remained largely unchanged at $1.1535.

The safe-haven Japanese yen is expected to rise modestly by 0.3% per week, last trading at 153.46 yen for every dollar.

Gold was trading above $4,000 per ounce, as the government shutdown boosted demand for safe-haven assets. However, the precious metal is still some distance from its record high of $4381.21 set on October 20,

Brent crude futures rose 69 cents or 1.09% to $64.05 per barrel after three days of declines. This was due to concerns about an excess supply in the U.S. and a slowing demand.

The price of soybeans is expected to drop by a week, but there are no signs yet that China will be buying 12 million tons before the year's end. (Editing by Lincoln Feast Jacqueline Wong Sharon Singleton

(source: Reuters)