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Stocks in the world are falling as a tech sell-off drags down markets

The global equities markets fell on Friday, and are set to decline for the week, as profit-taking drove a saleoff in chip stocks and technology companies, while crude oil dropped?as more tankers left Strait of Hormuz.

Wall Street saw all three indexes trade higher, despite choppy trading, as gains in consumer discretionary and healthcare stocks were offset by losses in technology, industrials and energy.

S&P 500, Nasdaq and Dow were all on course for weekly losses, while Nasdaq was heading for a gain.

The chip stocks fell 4.5%, and they were expected to lose 7% this week. This is the biggest weekly drop since March.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 0.31%. The S&P 500 rose by 0.28%. And the Nasdaq Composite grew by 0.24%.

Mark Hackett is the chief market strategist for Nationwide. He said, "It is a combination between a necessary and healthy period after the historic run since March and a drastic rotation away from tech and other things."

"Overall, this selloff is modest in the context of things, and I expect that we will resume higher once consolidation ends, since investors are still buying dips, and fundamentals remain strong." Apple's price hikes fueled fears of structural inflation due to AI giants' massive spending and the limited availability of key components.

European stocks dropped by nearly 0.9% and technology stocks by 1.54%. MSCI's Asian stock index outside Japan dropped by almost 3%. South Korea's KOSPI dropped as much as 5,8%.

The MSCI index of global stocks fell by 0.34%, and the loss was expected to be 2% for the week.

OIL PRICES DROP SHARPLY Oil?prices fell sharply on Friday as supply concerns eased. This was despite a cargo ship being hit in Oman, on Thursday. Shipping data from LSEG shows that Saudi Aramco, the world's largest refiner, resumed oil -loading at its Ras Tanura Terminal in the Gulf on Friday after a nearly 4-month pause.

Brent crude futures dropped 4.24% to 72.07 per barrel.

WEAKNESS OF THE YEN

The yen was near its lowest level in 40 years against the dollar at 161.62. This is above the 160?level, which many consider to be a line drawn in the sand by Japanese authorities.

The euro rose 0.33% to $1.1407, but it was on track for its second consecutive loss against the US dollar.

The dollar index slowed but was on track for a second consecutive weekly gain versus peers. The index dropped?0.3% at 101.20.

Bond yields were lower in Europe than the U.S. The yield of benchmark U.S. 10 year notes dropped 1.75 basis points, to 4.375%. Meanwhile, the yield of benchmark German Bunds 10-years fell by 0.76 basis point to 2.852%.

Spot gold increased 1.5%, to $4.086.29 per ounce. Reporting by Chibuike OGOH in New York, editing by Chizu OMIYA

(source: Reuters)