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Stocks fall as AI concerns dominate the market

The global markets fell on Friday, as the stock market crash on Wall Street spread globally. Precious metals and cryptocurrency were impacted by volatility while AI concerns weighed heavily on stocks.

The MSCI All-Country World Index recovered from intra-session lows, to?trade at a flat rate, but it was still on course for its worst performance in a week since mid-November with a 1.6%?decline?.

The projected AI expenditure of $600-billion

Amazon, Microsoft and Meta in this year have fueled fears about the costs of artificial intelligence, while concerns about

Software and data services, among others, continued to be a major sector.

It's been a week that has almost split into two halves. Fiona Cincotta is a senior market analyst with City Index. She said that the AI software concerns were at the beginning of the week, and the AI spending concerns at the end.

"I think that combined, it just shows how sensitive the market is to AI."

The S&P?500 index fell for a third consecutive day on Thursday due to AI fears. Survey data revealed that layoffs by U.S. companies in January reached their highest level in 17 years. This fueled concerns about the?resilience of the U.S. economic system.

Investors and traders have dubbed "software-mageddon" the loss of $1 trillion since January 28 in value in the S&P 500 index for software and services.

Prashant Bhayani is the chief investment officer of Asia for?BNP Paribas Wealth Management. He said: "There's an enormous?rotation going on and Nasdaq clearly underperforms S&P, as well as boring consumer staples."

The market is beginning to say, "OK, AI is interesting." People are also asking "What is my return?"

The trend of decline has spread to global markets. The pan-European Stoxx 600 index last eased slightly while MSCI’s broadest Asia-Pacific share index outside Japan.

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> fell 0.7%, announcing a second consecutive day of losses.

S&P 500 e-mini futures

Nasdaq emini futures edged up 0.1% last while the Dow Jones Industrial Average ended 0.1% higher

We were always steady.

The Nikkei rose 0.8%, while the broader Nikkei was up 0.8%.

Sunday's elections

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After a massive selloff on Thursday, crypto currencies have managed to halt the market's decline for now. This is part of a bigger drop that has wiped out $2 trillion worth of value since October.

Bitcoin rose 2.9% to $64,916.60, after falling up to 4.9% earlier to a low $60,008.52, and ether last gained 1.64% to $1,877.51 to partially recover a 5.1% drop.

Silver, which had fallen as high as 10%, recovered 3.3% and reached $73.57. After a 2.4% decline, gold was up by 1.6% to $4,846.88.

Cincotta noted that cryptocurrency prices are often affected by this kind of sentiment.

She added: "I think it's interesting that assets like precious metals which were previously considered safe, but aren't really safe now, given the volatility we've experienced,"

Bets on FED Response

The market is betting on a greater likelihood that the Federal Reserve will cut rates at its next meeting. However, most still expect the Fed to hold the rate.

FedWatch, a tool of the CME Group, shows that Fed funds futures price a 20,7% chance of a 25 basis-point cut during the two-day session ending on March 18. This is compared to a 9,4% chance the day before.

The U.S. Dollar Index, which measures greenback strength against a basket six currencies, fell last by 0.1% to 97.836.

Brent crude rose 1% on the energy markets to $68.26. (Reporting and editing by Shri Navaratnam; Jacqueline Wong, Andrew Heavens, and Rae Wee)

(source: Reuters)