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Stocks struggle after Broadcom dive; oil drops off highs

The world stock market fell for a second day in a row on Thursday, as a glitch with the AI rally and renewed fighting involving the U.S.A. and Iran dampened sentiment. Oil prices also eased after Israel and Lebanon reached a ceasefire.

Europe's stock exchanges were mostly sideways, as crude oil and bond yields fell. But Wall Street futures pointed lower following a plunge in AI chipmaker Broadcom shares and a bad day for other tech heavy indexes.

After Wednesday's after hours 13% drop in Broadcom stock, South Korea's stock fell as much as 2,6%, and Japan's Nikkei225, Hong Kong, and Taiwan ended with losses between 1,4% and 1,7%. The company's revenue for the second quarter was below expectations and its long-range forecast remained unchanged. This disappointed traders who saw it as an indication that a major AI chipset maker may be losing momentum.

"There has been some softness on the equity markets after Broadcom. This suggests that we need to take a little time to consolidate this very strong rally," stated James?Athey, fund manager at Marlborough.

It wasn't just about hoping and expecting, but it also raised the idea that the demand for chips will not continue to grow exponentially in the future. Brent crude prices fell 3.5% to below $95 per barrel after Lebanon and Israel agreed on a ceasefire conditional upon a complete cessation in fire by the Iran-aligned Hezbollah.

There was some hope that the U.S. and Israel war against Iran would be ended, but it is still unclear how or when this will happen. U.S. president Donald Trump said Wednesday that progress could be made by the weekend. However, Bahrain reported intercepting three'missiles' and several drones. Kuwait temporarily suspended air traffic at its main airport following an attack.

Abbas Araghchi, Iran's Foreign Minister, said there had been no progress in the talks with the U.S. He also posted that any hostile act would be met with a swift and decisive response.

COORDINATED MOVEMENTS

In pre-market Wall Street trading, the Broadcom disappointment led to a drop of between 4% and 7,5% for other leading chipmakers Micron Technology, Advanced Micro Devices, Marvell Technology, and Qualcomm.

The S&P 500 is expected to stop its impressive nine-week streak of weekly gains that have not been interrupted. However, with the index up over 10% this year so far, the 'bulls' won't worry too much.

On the currency market, the yen climbed to 159.8 dollars, giving the Bank of Japan a bit of breathing space from its current FX intervention threshold of 160. Minoru Kihara, the Chief Cabinet Secretary in Tokyo, said that he expected the central bank to coordinate with the government following the recent comments by BOJ Governor Kazuo ueda that an interest rate increase is imminent. The?U.S. The dollar index, which measures greenback strength against six major currencies, fell 0.3% on Wednesday from its two-month-high, following better than expected data for the U.S. services sector PMI.

The figures showed that businesses had preemptively placed orders and built up inventories in anticipation of shortages or higher prices following the Iran 'war. The Republican-led U.S. House of Representatives approved a resolution on war powers to prevent Donald Trump from continuing his conflict against Iran.

It is only symbolic as the measure must still be approved by the Senate. Also, it would require a two-thirds vote in both chambers of Congress to overturn a veto that was almost certain.

The decline in oil prices helped push 10-year Treasury 'yields' - which are the main drivers of global borrowing costs – down to 4.45%. Germany's Bund was still trying to return to under 3% despite a rate hike expected by the ECB next week. Gold and the Aussie dollar also saw modest gains after a recovery in Australia's exports of resources helped to swing its trade balance into the positive.

Bitcoin dropped 2.2%, to $64,000. It has now fallen by almost 25% over the past few weeks.

(source: Reuters)