|

Tech rotation deepens, BTC remains underwater, BoE and ECB decisions eyed

Another day, another bout of risk-off, with the tech sector remaining front and centre for markets. The Nasdaq 100 fell 447 points (1.8%) to 24,891, along with the S&P 500 dropping 35 points (0.5%) to 6,882 – despite market breadth showing more gainers than losers on the day – while the Dow caught a bid and rallied 260 points (0.5%) to 49,501. At the GICS sector level, tech bore the brunt of the losses, down around 1.9%, with underperformance also in consumer discretionary and communication services.

Tech selling drives rotation to value

The driver behind the recent downside is underwhelming earnings from Alphabet (GOOG), Qualcomm (QCOM), and Arm Holdings (ARM).

What caught the market's attention was guidance from Alphabet on capital expenditures, showing the company plans to spend as much as US$185 billion this year, considerably higher than the Street's expectation of approximately US$120 billion.

This has prompted another rotation out of tech as investors question potential ROI, triggering a move into value, which is why the Dow ended the session primarily in the green.

Crypto and precious metals extend downside

Elsewhere, the Crypto space continued to be hit yesterday; BTC closed down nearly 5.0% versus the USD, touching lows just north of US$72,000 – levels not seen since November 2024. Of note, BTC has shed more than 40% since BTC/USD clocked an all-time peak of around US$126,000.

With the April 2025 low at US$74,387 absorbed and sell-stops tripped, further underperformance could be on the table for BTC. I am not going to pretend to know all the ins and outs of the Crypto domain, but the downward bias seems to be stemming from markets viewing BTC as more of a macro asset rather than a narrative driven one.

Precious metals show Silver down 14.0% as of writing, with Gold also shedding 2.5% after failing to find acceptance above US$5,000. The USD bid is largely driving the move.

JPY on the back foot ahead of elections

Also noteworthy is the JPY continuing to soften against the USD ahead of Japan’s general election on Sunday, which Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi is tipped to win decisively. A victory would help cement her mandate for expansionary fiscal policy, naturally raising concerns about the country’s fiscal credibility – public debt-to-GDP is more than 200%.

This has seen JGBs rise and the JPY continue to soften, recently pushing to within touching distance of ¥157.00 versus the USD. Although a weak JPY benefits exporters, it makes imports more expensive, worsening Japan's cost-of-living crisis. Verbal signalling from Japanese officials has done little to support the weak JPY, with markets also remaining uncertain about how effective any future intervention will be, given that the Fed is nearing its neutral rate.

BoE and ECB call for attention

Updates from the BoE and ECB today are expected at 12:00 pm and 1:15 pm GMT, respectively.

As I noted in the week-ahead briefing, the BoE is in a tricky spot, balancing elevated inflationary pressures and a loosening jobs market, with the central bank expected to remain on hold at 3.75%. While comments from Governor Andrew Bailey expressed his openness to easing policy if there is evidence that inflation is moving towards their 2.0% target, we saw little evidence of that in the December report.

With the MPC remaining divided, and Bailey now often seen as the swing voter, I expect the Governor to opt for a pause today.  While softer jobs data should eventually justify rate cuts, money markets are pricing around -36 bps of easing by year-end, with the first rate cut expected in June (-24 bps) or July (-31 bps), with a possibility of an April meeting cut (-18 bps). As such, the focus will be on the vote split and guidance to help determine whether rates will be cut sooner than the market projects.

Meanwhile, for the ECB, I am not expecting much from the Governing Council today, with President Lagarde likely to maintain that policy is in a ‘good place’. Inflation is around the ECB’s target, unemployment is at historic lows, and GDP growth is offering a moderately resilient picture, indicating that there is no reason for the ECB to move. Markets are also pricing in that the central bank remains on hold for the year.

Author

Aaron Hill

Aaron Hill

FP Markets

After completing his Bachelor’s degree in English and Creative Writing in the UK, and subsequently spending a handful of years teaching English as a foreign language teacher around Asia, Aaron was introduced to financial trading,

More from Aaron Hill
Share:

Editor's Picks

EUR/USD treads water near 1.1800 ahead of ECB rate decision

EUR/USD is keeping its range at around 1.1800 in the European trading hours on Thursday. The pair awaits the European Central Bank interest rate decision for fresh impetus after the Eurozone inflation declined well below the central bank's 2% target. 

GBP/USD stays weak toward 1.3600 on BoE's 'Super Thursday'

GBP/USD holds its losses for the second successive session, directed toward 1.3600 in European trading on Thursday. The pair weakens as the Pound Sterling comes under pressure ahead of the Bank of England’s interest rate decision due later in the day.

Gold recovers major part of intraday losses to sub-$4,800 levels; down a little on firmer USD

Gold rebounds swiftly following the Asian session fall to sub-$4,800 levels and climbs back above the $4,900 mark in the last hour, though the upside potential seems limited. Wednesday's softer US ADP report pointed to labor market weakness and strengthened the case for interest rate cuts by the Federal Reserve, lending support to the non-yielding yellow metal.

BTC steadies as bears shift focus toward $70,000

Bitcoin price remains under pressure so far this week, with the Crypto King slipping below $73,000 on Tuesday for the first time since November 2024. The price dip in BTC was fueled as the news came in late Tuesday that the US military shot down an Iranian drone that “aggressively” approached the USS Abraham Lincoln aircraft carrier in the Arabian Sea. 

BoE expected to keep interest rate steady amid sticky inflation, cooling job market

The Bank of England (BoE) will deliver its first monetary policy decision of 2026 on Thursday. Most analysts think the ‘Old Lady’ will sit tight, keeping the base rate at 3.75% after the cut delivered back on December 18. Alongside the decision, the bank will also release the Minutes, which should shed a bit more light on how policymakers weighed the arguments around the table.

Top Crypto Losers: Zcash, Stacks, BNB drop further as Bitcoin weakens

Zcash, Stacks, and BNB (formerly Binance Coin) are among the biggest losers over the last 24 hours as Bitcoin approaches $72,000. The correction is driven by multiple factors, including massive, steady outflows from institutions and large-wallet investors, broader-market risk-off sentiment, and the delay in the Digital Asset Clarity Act.