The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Global equity sell-off hits FTSE 100

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Nearly £50 billion was wiped off the FTSE 100 as the London market fell prey to a global stock sell-off sparked by fears that rising inflation could force central banks to hike interest rates.

London’s blue chip index ended the day down 2.6% or 193.58 points at 7,414.4 points – marking its lowest close since April 2017 – a decline mirrored by both the German Dax and French Cac 40 – which each dropped 2.3%.

It adds to deep losses during Monday’s session when more than £27bn was wiped off the value of London’s blue-chip stocks and followed a brutal overnight sell-off in Asia and on Wall Street, where the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the S&P 500 dropped 4.6% and 4.1% respective­ly on Monday.

Tokyo’s Nikkei 225 Day closed down 4.7%, while the Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index plunged 5% lower.

US stocks continued their descent after markets opened yesterday.

The global equity sell-off has been building since last Friday when traders became spooked by the prospect of tighter monetary policy after the US posted strong average earnings data.

Connor Campbell, financial analyst at Spreadex, said: “The only hope for the markets at the moment is that investors suddenly decide that the sell-off has been a bit overdone – though in a way it is fitting, matching the astonishin­g, record-breaking recent rise of the global indices with an equally astounding, heart-stopping drop.”

Away from the top tier, the FTSE 250 Index suffered a drop of more than 2.1% or 427.93 points to 19,262.56 points.

On the currency markets, the pound was flat at 1.395 against the US dollar and was 0.1% lower versus the euro at 1.127.

Brent crude prices were bucking the market trend, trading around 0.3% higher at 67 US dollars per barrel.

 ??  ?? The pound was flat against the US dollar and down against the euro.
The pound was flat against the US dollar and down against the euro.

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