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Stocks continue recent decline on AI rally fears, US yields drop

Investors worried about the sustainability and growth of artificial intelligence stocks, while U.S. Treasury rates continued to decline.

An index of semiconductors fell 4.5% on Friday.

The Nasdaq has dropped more than 4% this week, and is on course to have its largest weekly percentage decline since late March. Donald Trump, the U.S. president, announced his tariffs in April. Since then, the Nasdaq stock has gained over 50%.

After our comments, we're still seeing the AI market sell off.

The AI race is on. There's a recalibration in multiples, and that's the main weakness," said Michael O'Rourke. Chief market strategist at JonesTrading, Stamford, Connecticut.

You could also see it as profit taking. O'Rourke stated that this has been a great year for stocks, particularly in the group.

Financial Times reported this week that Nvidia's CEO Jensen Huang

Has warned

China will defeat the

In the AI race.

This year, the markets have reached new highs due to optimism around artificial intelligence.

Bitcoin has also declined for the week.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 345.04 points or 0.74% to 46,567.26, while the S&P 500 declined 75.65 points or 1.13% to 6,644.67, and the Nasdaq Composite lost 435.84 or 1.89% to 22,618.15.

The MSCI index of global stocks fell 9.31 points or 0.94% to 982.69.

The pan-European STOXX 600 Index fell by 0.55%. The Shanghai Composite Index and China's blue chip CSI300 Index had both closed Friday with a 0.3% decline. The fact that China's trade data was weaker than expected also shows how much Trump's tariffs are hurting.

Data showed that China's exports fell by 1.1% in October. This was the lowest performance since February. The data chills Asian markets, reminding them of China's dependence on American consumers.

Investors are looking forward to a busy auction week for government debt.

The yield on the benchmark U.S. 10 year notes dropped 2.4 basis points from 4,093% at late Thursday to 4.069%.

The U.S. Dollar was expected to finish the week relatively unchanged. The greenback has been mostly firmer since last week, when Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell acknowledged that further easing measures could be risky.

The U.S. government shutdown prevented the release key economic data. Data signals from surveys indicate a resilience which could support the argument for not cutting rates during the Federal Reserve's meeting in December.

The dollar index fell by 0.19% on the day to 99.50. Meanwhile, the euro rose 0.23% to $1.1574.

The dollar gained 0.03% against the Japanese yen to reach 153.11.

U.S. crude climbed 0.62%, to $59.80 per barrel. Brent rose to $63.68 a barrel, up by 0.47% for the day.

(source: Reuters)