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Stocks pause as AI concerns simmer; the yen surges higher

European stocks were little altered on Wednesday, as fears about disruptions caused by?artificial intelligent' persisted. S&P futures also edged up as investors awaited U.S. employment data to be released later that day.

The?U.S. The dollar dropped for the fourth straight session, and the yen continued its rally. This could be a sign of a shift in investor sentiment following Sunday's election win by Japan's Prime Minster Sanae Takaichi.

The benchmark STOXX 600 Index in Europe was roughly flat last week. The tech stocks were hurt by the fall of French software company Dassault Systemes, amid growing fears that artificial intelligence could disrupt companies from software makers and insurers to wealth managers.

Aneeka Gupta is an equity and commodity analyst at WisdomTree.

The DAX in Germany fell 0.14% while the FTSE 100 in Britain rose 0.72%.

Futures for the U.S. S&P500 rose by 0.15%, while those for Nasdaq's tech-dominated index were up 0.1%.

INVESTORS WEIGH AI'S IMPACT

Investors are shifting their focus to companies that they believe will be less negatively affected by AI.

The S&P 500 finished Tuesday less than 1% from its January high, falling 0.3%. Wealth management firms also suffered a decline due to renewed concerns that new AI models might shake up the sector.

Both the STOXX Europe 600 and the FTSE 100 in Britain reached record highs this month.

Derren Nathan is the head of equity research for Hargreaves Lansdown. The soaring demand for rare earths and energy can be viewed as a positive by some industries.

KEY US JOBS DATA LOOMING

Data is due at 8:30 am. The non-farm payrolls in the United States are expected to have increased by 70,000 during January after increasing by 50,000 last month.

Analysts say that the annual revision of benchmark payrolls could reduce job growth in the past year by between 750,000 and 900,000. The report, which was originally due on Friday, was delayed because of the government shutdown.

Data released on Tuesday revealed that U.S. retails sales were?unexpectedly flat in December. This caused traders to increase their bets for Federal Reserve rate reductions this year.

The benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury rate fell to 4.129%, a new low for the month. It had fallen 5 basis points Tuesday.

DOLLAR WILTS as YEN SHINES

On Wednesday, a potentially weaker economy and a resurgent Japanese yen put pressure on the dollar. The key index that tracks the?U.S. Currency fell 0.34%, to?96.58. This is a new two-week low.

The holiday in Japan slowed trade in Asia, but the yen gained for a third consecutive session and was trading at 153.13 to the dollar. This got traders talking about whether or not it was riding high due to dollar weakness.

The dollar is now up about?2.5% since Takaichi's sweeping victory Sunday. This has surprised some who thought that concerns about her stimulus plan would continue to put pressure on the currency.

"The fact she has had such a landslide win in a way gives a lot of policy clarity to investors," said Gupta. He added that the threat that government intervention would be used to boost the yen loomed over the background.

Nikkei Futures rose Wednesday, as Asian stocks rose, even though the cash markets were closed for a holiday.

Bitcoin fell 2%, to about $67,000. Gold was back at $5,000 per ounce.

(source: Reuters)