Stock market sell-off continues, as Google boss warns ‘no company immune’ if AI bubble bursts – business live | Business

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Introduction: Market selloff continues

Good morning, and welcome to our rolling coverage of business, the financial markets and the world economy.

Global markets are racking up their fourth day of losses in a row, as concerns over technology valuations are worrying investors.

Asia-Pacific stocks have dipped to a one-month low today, amid signs that the enthusiasm that has driven stocks higher in recent months is fading, with shares, risky currencies and crypto assets all sliding

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan has lost 1.8%, slipping to its lowest level since mid-October. South Korea’s KOSPI has lost 3.5%, and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng is down 1.9%.

Japan’s Nikkei 225 is also having a very rough day, down over 3%, on concerns over an escalating dispute with China over Taiwan

Last night, the US stock market fell, with the S&P 500 share index closing at its lowest level in a month.

European stock markets are heading for losses when trading begins at 8am GMT too.

Various reasons are being cited for the mood change. Investors are fretting that US interest rates may not be cut as quickly as hoped, following hawkish commentary from some policymakers.

Jitters are building ahead of AI behemoth Nvidia’s results on Wednesday night.

The huge sums of money being committed by AI companies to fund their infrastructure is also raising eyebrows, especially as it is being increasingly funded by debt.

Last night, Amazon raised $15bn in its first US dollar bond offering in three years, adding to a spree of jumbo debt sales by technology firms as they race to fund artificial-intelligence infrastructure.

Michael Brown, senior research strategist at brokerage Pepperstone, explains:

Those Nvidia earnings, incidentally, once again stand as a major macro risk, as enthusiasm around the whole AI frenzy seems to ebb, with the market having shifted from an ‘all capex is good capex’ mood, to one where whether firms are actually able to monetise that expenditure has become the million (or more!) dollar question.

On that note, Amazon kicking-off a six-part bond sale didn’t help matters much yesterday, following hot on the heels of similar sales from Meta and Alphabet in recent weeks, and further fuelling concern that AI expansion is now being fuelled by debt, and not by free cash flow, in turn exacerbating jitters over the sustainability of all the spending that we currently see.

The agenda

  • 10am GMT: Treasury Committee hearing on risks and rewards of embracing crypto

  • 1pm GMT: Huw Pill, Bank of England’s chief economist, to give speech at Skinners Hall, London

  • 3pm GMT: US factory orders and durable goods data for August (delayed by lockdown)

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Key events

Cornwall Insight: Energy price cap to dip by 1% to £1,733 annual bill from January

The forecaster Cornwall Insight has issued new forecasts for the January energy price cap.

The energy regulator Ofgem’s price cap is expected to dip by 1%, taking it down by £22 to an average bill of £1,733 a year for a typical household from January.

But analysts at the specialist consultancy said they expect the price cap to tick higher again from April.

Jess Ralston, energy analyst at the Energy and Climate Intelligence Unit, said:

As temperatures drop, many will be worried about how they are going to pay their energy bills. Rumoured cuts to home insulation schemes at the budget next week could leave the most vulnerable households facing higher bills for years to come and exposed to the kind of price spikes we’ve seen over the past few years.

Low levels of investment into infrastructure like schools has been mirrored in our electricity system and that is now catching up with us. But an upgraded power grid will enable the UK to use more of its own renewable power, making it less reliant on foreign gas imports and less at the mercy of the kinds of foreign price swings that saw household bills soar.

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