The City is feeling the tremors this morning, and it is not just the usual post-weekend indigestion. Two forces are colliding to rattle the cages of global investors: a renewed sell-off in technology stocks on both sides of the Atlantic and a fresh escalation in Middle Eastern hostilities that has sent the price of Brent crude above $90 a barrel. The FTSE 100 is holding up better than its counterparts in New York and Frankfurt, but that is more a reflection of its defensive composition than any genuine optimism.
The index is currently trading flat, supported by a bid for the usual suspects: BP and Shell are up on the oil price spike, while GlaxoSmithKline and Unilever provide a safe harbour for those seeking refuge from the storm. But beneath the surface, the rotational pressure is intense. The growth stocks that have driven the bull market for the past 18 months are being hammered.
The Nasdaq 100 futures are pointing to a sharply lower open on Wall Street, with the 'Magnificent Seven' particularly vulnerable after disappointing guidance from a leading AI chipmaker sent shockwaves through the sector. This is a classic de-risking event. Fund managers are trimming positions in high-beta names and rotating into value, defensives, and cash.
The yield on the 10-year gilt has fallen 5 basis points to 4.12 per cent as investors flock to safe-haven government debt. Meanwhile, the pound is taking a beating, sliding below $1.
27 against the dollar, as the market prices in both a flight from risk and the lingering risk of stagflation. The Bank of England is caught between a rock and a hard place: inflation remains sticky at 4.0 per cent, but rate cuts now seem off the table given the geopolitical premium on energy.
The government's fiscal headroom is evaporating as borrowing costs rise, and the Chancellor will be watching the gilt market nervously. Capital flight is a concern, but so far the UK's chunky current account deficit means sterling weakness is more a symptom than a cause. The real question is whether this is a correction or the start of something nastier.
My bet is that central banks will be forced to choose between fighting inflation and preventing a credit event. They will likely choose the latter, which means rate cuts later this year, but only after a significant sell-off. For now, the advice is simple: batten down the hatches and stick to British blue-chips.
They may not offer much excitement, but they pay dividends. And in this climate, cash flow is king.









