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FTSE 100 hits lowest level since January as sell-off continues

The London stock market is open…. and shares are falling again.

The FTSE 100 index, which tracks blue-chip shares in London, has fallen by 59 points, or 0.7%, to 8415 points.

That’s its lowest level since 17 January, adding to Thursday’s 1.5% tumble (which was the biggest one-day fall since last August).

City investors are gloomy again, having watched Wall Street rack up its biggest losses in five years yesterday.

Derren Nathan, head of equity research Hargreaves Lansdown, says:

“Despite months of sabre-rattling by Donald Trump, markets appear to have been unprepared for the depth and breadth of tariffs announced by the White House.

The tech-heavy Nasdaq saw the worst of it, falling nearly 6%, but there were hefty drops amongst the banks, industrials and energy sectors. Traditional defensive havens offered some refuge with gains seen in consumer staples and utilities.

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Investors are piling into government bonds again today, pushing up prices and thus lowering yields (the rate of return on the debt).

The yield on US Treasury bills is dropping again today, with 10-year Treasury yields down 10 basis points at 3.95%.

UK government debt is strengthening too, which is lowering the yield on 10-year gilts by 10 basis points to 4.41%.

Falling bond yields are a sign that investors are expecting weaker growth and lower interest rates.

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