Stocks slide as AI-driven selloff deepens, while crypto rebounds

Global equities fell for a third straight session on Friday as the selloff on Wall Street intensified, while precious metals and cryptocurrencies were swept up in sharp volatility.

MSCI’s broad Asia-Pacific index excluding Japan dropped 1%, extending losses for a second day, led by a 5% plunge in South Korea’s Kospi that triggered a brief trading halt shortly after the open. S&P 500 e-mini futures declined 0.2%, while Nasdaq e-mini futures slid 0.4%. IG market analyst Tony Sycamore said investors were increasingly questioning their exposure to assets that have driven markets over the past six months—namely AI, cryptocurrencies and precious metals—raising the risk of a deeper unwinding. U.S. stocks sold off overnight on fears that new AI models could erode software-sector profitability, with the S&P 500 turning negative for the year amid growing labor market concerns.

U.S. employers announced a surge in layoffs in January, marking the highest level for the month in 17 years, according to data released Thursday by Challenger, Gray & Christmas.

Precious metals rebounded from session lows but remained weaker on the day. Gold slipped 0.1% to $4,764.43, while silver plunged as much as 10% before paring losses, last down 1.4% at $70.26.

Cryptocurrencies staged a rebound after suffering a $2 trillion market wipeout on Thursday. Bitcoin jumped 3.7% to $65,446.07 after earlier falling nearly 5% to a low of $60,008.52, while ether climbed 4.4% to $1,928.12 after reversing a prior 5.1% decline.

The S&P 500 software and services index sank 4.6%, shedding roughly $1 trillion in market capitalization since January 28 in a selloff dubbed “software-mageddon.” Pepperstone’s head of research Chris Weston said aggressive unwinding of crowded positions had driven large capital flows, warning that some companies—particularly outside the so-called Magnificent Seven—could face difficulties later this year as capital markets become less accommodating.

Amazon shares slid 11.5% in after-hours trading after the company projected capital spending to surge by more than 50% this year.

Markets have also begun to price in a higher probability of Federal Reserve policy easing, though expectations still favor no change at the next meeting. Fed funds futures imply a 22.7% chance of a 25-basis-point rate cut at the Fed’s March 18 meeting, up from 9.4% the previous day, according to CME Group’s FedWatch tool.

The U.S. dollar index was flat at 97.92, while the yield on the 10-year Treasury note fell 2.8 basis points to 4.18%. The yen strengthened 0.3% to 156.58 per dollar, and Japanese government bonds attracted buying ahead of Sunday’s election.

In energy markets, Brent crude slipped 0.4% to $67.31.

Sources: Reuters

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