A dive in high-flying U.S. tech stocks on worries their boom may have
peaked left investors wondering on Thursday whether the longest global
equity bull run in living memory might be starting to splutter.
Possibly
weighing on tech were concerns, sparked by a Morgan Stanley report
earlier this week, that the “super-cycle” in memory chip demand looks
likely to peak soon.
The caution was sparked by an overnight Wall Street
wobble involving a rotation from tech to financials and came just as
the near 9-year global rally notched up another impressive milestone.
The
world’s broadest equity gauge – the MSCI all-country index – was on
course to finish November with its 13th straight monthly gain – the
longest such winning streak in the index’s 30-year history. Lucky for
some.
Though the celebrations were muffled
slightly by the tech problems - China stocks had also taken another
tumble in Asian trading - the mood seemed to be improving again in
Europe.
Germany’s Dax and France’s CAC 40 both
inched up for a third day, though London’s FTSE was back in the red as
hopes of a breakthrough in Brexit negotiations pushed the pound higher
again.
“I‘m not sure one would say it’s a
bubble (in tech stocks),” said Andrew Milligan, head of investment
strategy at Standard Life. “By and large the companies are generating
either good profits or the potential for good profit growth”.
Shares of Amazon.com, Apple, Google parent Alphabet
and Facebook fell between 2 percent and 4 percent. Among the year’s
other high fliers, Netflix slid 5.5 percent while Asia’s bellwether
Samsung slumped 4.3 percent to two-month lows.
The Nasdaq index is still up 26.8 percent so far this year, roughly 7 percentage points above gains in the MSCI world.
The tech nerves were not just confined to stocks. Rocketing
cryptocurrency Bitcoin dropped a cool $1,000 to a low of $9,250 before
clawing back nearly 3 percent in Asia and Europe to around $10,100.

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