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Stocks tumble as AI rout deepens, cryptos rebound

The global equities market extended its losses to a third consecutive day on Friday, as the selloff on Wall Street intensified. Precious metals and cryptocurrency were also gripped by a ferocious volatility.

MSCI's broadest?Asia-Pacific?"shares outside Japan fell 1%, marking a second consecutive day of losses. South Korea's Kospi plunged 5% and prompted a short trading halt just after the opening. S&P 500 futures dropped 0.2%, while Nasdaq futures were down 0.4%.

Tony Sycamore is a market analyst with IG Sydney. He said that investors are reevaluating their commitment to three pillars which have supported markets for the past six-months: AI, cryptocurrency, and precious metals. This raises the odds of a more serious unwind.

Stocks fell overnight amid fears that AI models could start eating into software firms' profits. The S&P 500 turned negative for the entire year, as concerns about the labour market increased.

A survey by global outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas on Thursday showed that the number of layoffs made by U.S. companies in January was at its highest level in 17 years.

Silver and gold both fell by as much as 10 percent before recovering. White metal fell 1.4% to $70.26.

Bitcoin surged 3.7% to $65,446.07, after falling 4.9% earlier to a low $60,008.52. Ether rose 4.4% to $1,928.12 after a 5.1% drop.

The S&P 500 Software and Services Index dropped 4.6%. It has lost about $1 trillion of market value since the 28th January, in a "software-mageddon" selloff.

Chris Weston is the head of research for Pepperstone Group in Melbourne. He added, "We could witness casualties later this year."

He said that capital markets might not be kind to certain businesses. "Mag7" is the term used for the seven mega-cap technology companies.

Amazon shares fell 11.5% on Thursday in after-hours trade after the company announced a capital expenditure increase of more than 50% this year.

Markets are now betting on a greater likelihood that the Federal Reserve will ease policy at its next meeting. However, most still expect it to stay on hold.

Fed funds futures price a 22,7% chance of a 25 basis-point cut? at the U.S. Central Bank's next 2-day meeting ending on March 18. This compares to a 9,4% chance the day before, according CME Group’s FedWatch tool.

Recently, the U.S. dollar index, which measures greenback strength in relation to a basket six currencies, was flat at 97.92. The yield of the 10-year Treasury bond in the United States was down 2.8 basis point at 4.18%.

Japanese government bonds were bought across the curve as the yen rose 0.3% to 156.58 per dollar.

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Brent crude oil was down 0.4% last time on the energy markets at $67.31. Reporting by Gregor Stuart Hunter, Tom Westbrook and Shri Navaratnam; Editing by Thomas Derpinghaus and Shri Navaratnam

(source: Reuters)