Global Stocks

Global stocks | London’s FTSE indexes subdued as investors assess AI concerns; defence stocks gain

Britain’s FTSE indexes were subdued on Friday, tracking a sombre mood globally in a week that was marked by ‌AI-disruption worries, while ⁠defence ⁠stocks got a lift as investors priced in greater European cooperation that could boost the sector.

The blue-chip FTSE 100 and the mid-cap FTSE 250 slipped 0.1% each at 1140 GMT. Still, the indexes were on track for small weekly gains.

A wave of artificial intelligence tool releases since late January has triggered bouts of volatility in global markets, as investors tried to weigh ​the impact of newer models on traditional businesses.

In the ⁠UK, much ‌of the declines were seen in the technology sector, life insurers ​and banks . ​The sectors are on track for weekly losses of over 4% ⁠each.

On Friday, however, tech stocks rebounded with a 3.8% ​gain, with RELX gaining 5.4%, while other stocks that took ​a hit in the selloff such as credit analytics firm Experian added 4.3%.


Defence stocks also got a lift, adding 2% as investors assessed a report that said Prime Minister Keir Starmer plans to push a multinational defence initiative at the Munich Security Conference this weekend.
Weighing on the FTSE 100 were miners such as Rio Tinto and ‌Antofagasta that lost over 2% each, tracking lower copper prices.On the earnings front, NatWest reported a 24% jump in annual profit and set ​more ambitious performance ​targets as it steps ⁠up investment in Britain’s costly but potentially lucrative wealth-management market.

The British bank’s shares, however, fell 3.3% as analysts said much of the upgraded targets were priced in.

The week also ​brought data that showed Britain’s economy grew just 0.1% in the fourth quarter, matching the previous quarter’s pace and partly reflecting uncertainty in the run-up to finance minister Rachel Reeves’ November budget.

Investors are pricing in a 63.4% chance that the Bank of England will lower borrowing costs by 25 basis points when it meets in March.

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