Market Drop as Meta, Microsoft Warnings Weigh Heavy on Nasdaq; Dollar Softens Post U.S. Data
Global stock markets took a downturn on Thursday, led by a 2% drop in the Nasdaq index following cost warnings from Meta Platforms and Microsoft over artificial intelligence investments. Meta and Microsoft shares slid 3.2% and 5.6%, respectively, raising investor concerns over the time it will take to see returns on AI expenses. Both companies’ declines contributed to negative momentum on the Nasdaq and S&P 500. Attention now shifts to Amazon and Apple, which are set to release their results later.
U.S. consumer spending data showed a slight uptick in September, pushing the economy onto a stronger growth path for Q4. However, the increase is largely attributed to essential spending areas such as healthcare and housing. The dollar saw minor weakening, with notable losses against the yen after the Bank of Japan’s unexpectedly less dovish stance, and the euro gained ground due to unexpectedly high inflation figures in the Eurozone for October.
The dollar index remained steady at 104.13, while the euro inched up to $1.0866, and the dollar slipped 0.53% to 152.59 yen. As the November Fed meeting approaches, market sentiment sees a 25-basis-point rate reduction as likely, but a double cut in November and December stands at a 70% probability per the CME FedWatch Tool. Key upcoming data include the U.S. October jobs report and next week’s presidential election, where polling shows tight competition between Republican Donald Trump and Democratic VP Kamala Harris.
On Wall Street, the Dow dropped 362.70 points (0.86%) to 41,778.84, the S&P 500 shed 84.93 points (1.46%) to 5,728.74, and the Nasdaq Composite slid 425.71 points (2.29%) to 18,182.22. MSCI’s global index (.MIWD00000PUS) dropped 1.27%, while Europe’s STOXX 600 fell 1.5%, reaching a seven-week low amid a busy earnings period.
In U.S. Treasuries, yields edged higher with the 10-year benchmark up 4.4 basis points at 4.309%, following reports of declining wage inflation coupled with robust consumer spending.
Cryptocurrencies followed the downward trend, with Bitcoin declining 3.02% to $70,640.00 and Ethereum dropping 4.98% to $2,545.70. Gold prices retreated from record highs but stayed on track for a fourth consecutive monthly increase, down 0.7% to $2,766.59 per ounce after peaking at $2,790.15 earlier. Oil prices saw gains, with U.S. crude rising 1.33% to $69.52 per barrel and Brent climbing 0.94% to $73.23 per barrel.