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Market Review 9th February 2026

Everything you need to know, Simplified!


Bull and Bear Financial Markets

Summary


  • Software stocks suffered a historic sell-off as investors reassessed the impact of Artificial Intelligence (AI) on the sector

  • The sell-off has been broad and indiscriminate so far, but differentiation between winners and losers is likely to emerge

  • Despite this, global equities showed resilience, finishing the week higher as investors rotated toward defensives, cyclicals and smaller companies

  • US manufacturing data surprised sharply to the upside, with the ISM Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) returning to expansion territory for the first time in a year

  • This rebound appears closely linked to the reopening of 100% bonus depreciation, which is encouraging firms to pull forward capital spending and could soon feed into the hard data

  • In contrast, labour market signals deteriorated, with job cut announcements at their highest January level since the Global Financial Crisis and hiring intentions weakening

  • While private datasets are noisy, they raise the risk that labour market momentum is softening beneath an otherwise resilient growth backdrop

  • The week ahead centres on key macro tests: official US labour data will be closely watched to validate or dismiss recent weakness in private surveys; UK Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is expected to remain modest; and US inflation is forecast to ease, though conflicting signals from alternative price measures highlight continued uncertainty beneath the headline trend.



Market Review


AI comes for software stocks


The defining story of the week was a historic rout in software stocks, triggered by fears that AI will disrupt rather than enhance the sector. The software industry suffered its worst week since April last year and its worst relative performance since the tech bubble burst 25 years ago.


Many leading software stocks were punished as though they are no longer relevant in the AI age. The catalyst was AI startup Anthropic’s release of new tools designed to automate work tasks across industries, from legal and data services to financial research. This reignited concerns that AI could bypass traditional software altogether.


The key risks are twofold. First, AI-driven efficiency threatens the user-based pricing models that underpin much of the sector if fewer employees are required. Second, AI makes it easier for firms to build their own internal workflows, potentially reducing reliance on third-party software. While there will inevitably be winners and losers, particularly where specialised software and deep data moats exist, the current sell-off has been widespread and indiscriminate. That is unlikely to persist as the market begins to differentiate.


AI-related concerns erased approximately $300bn of market value from software firms on Tuesday alone. The contagion spread beyond pure software into the broader tech complex and even into private credit stocks that lend heavily to software companies.


Despite this, broader equity markets proved resilient. Global equities closed the week up 0.7%, with defensive and cyclical sectors, as well as smaller companies, performing well. Consumer staples led the way, rising 6.5%, as investors rotated toward steadier cash flows and more attractive valuations. 


US manufacturing gets a boost while labour market concerns rise


The January ISM Manufacturing PMI smashed expectations, rebounding sharply to 52.6 from 47.9 in December and marking the first expansion in a year. The scale of the surprise coincides with a major fiscal shift: the reopening of the 100% bonus depreciation window under the “One Big Beautiful Bill”.


Immediate full expensing has materially improved the economics of capital investment, encouraging manufacturers to pull forward spending plans. This fiscal impulse is now feeding through to the survey data and raises the likelihood that stronger activity will begin to appear in the hard data over coming months.


In contrast, the labour market painted a far less reassuring picture. Challenger, Gray & Christmas reported that US employers announced over 108k job cuts in January, the highest figure for the month since the Global Financial Crisis. This represents a 118% year-on-year increase and a 205% rise from December. Hiring intentions also fell 13% from a year earlier, the weakest January reading since 2009.


ADP employment data was also softer than expected. Both series are volatile, and attention now turns to the official Bureau of Labor Statistics release later this week.


Commodities and currencies


Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent cited Chinese traders as a key driver of recent volatility in precious metals, describing the moves as a “classical, speculative blow-off”. In another volatile week, gold ended slightly below $5000, up 1.4%, while silver finished at $78/oz, a return of -1.8% for the week.


The dollar posted its first weekly gain since early January, supported by haven demand amid the software-led turmoil. The yen, typically another haven currency, fell sharply, touching 157 versus the dollar as markets priced in a decisive election victory for Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi. Her win delivers a two-thirds majority and grants her mandate for an expansionary policy agenda. Japanese equities have rallied in response, while the yen’s reaction has so far been relatively muted.


The week ahead


Wednesday: US labour market data


This is a crucial report given the weakness shown in the private data last week. It will be a difficult report to decipher given the technical adjustments being made this month however expect job growth at 69k for January with the unemployment rate remaining at 4.4%.


Thursday: UK GDP


Economists expect growth to remain tepid but steady at 0.2% in the fourth quarter. With the budget now behind us and the Bank of England having cut rates there is a good chance that activity picks up a little this year. That said it’s hard to get too excited about the UK which still faces a long-term productivity challenge.


Friday: US Consumer Price Index inflation


US inflation is expected to slow to 2.5% although there are conflicting pressures under the bonnet. Truflation, a private data set that tracks over a million real prices, sees inflation falling below 1% while the Adobe Digital Price Index is expected to show particularly high goods inflation.



Your weekly market review was powered by Canaccord Wealth



Investment involves risk. The value of investments and the income from them can go down as well as up and you may not get back the amount originally invested. The information provided is not to be treated as specific advice. It has no regard for the specific investment objectives, financial situation or needs of any specific person or entity. Where investment is made in currencies other than the investor’s base currency, the value of those investments, and any income from them, will be affected by movements in exchange rates. This effect may be unfavourable as well as favourable. Past performance and future forecasts figures are not a reliable indicator of future results.



 
 
 

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