Newsquawk US Market Wrap: Risk off trade on more AI disruption fears

MARKET WRAP

It was a risk-off session on Thursday, with downside in equities seemingly driven by further AI disruption fears. Stocks sold off at the US opening bell and into the European closing bell. At the time, a lot of attention was on an update from AI penny stock Algorhythm Holdings (RIME) that its SemiCab platform is enabling customers to scale freight volumes by 300-400%, without an increase in headcount. This largely weighed on the logistics/industrials sector, but other sectors also exposed to AI disruption (software, gaming, financials) also slumped, while the sectors that are least exposed to AI disruption (consumer staples) outperformed. The risk-off trade sparked upside in T-Notes, with the curve bull flattening led by the long end, with peaks seen after a stellar 30-year auction which saw T-Notes settle at highs. Elsewhere, crude prices also tracked risk sentiment lower but settled just off troughs. On the geopolitical footing, Trump reiterated they have to make a deal with Iran, and could reach deal over the next month, but will be very traumatic for Iran if they do not agree to a deal. The weakness in equities also filtered through to gold, silver and crypto - all assets which have performed similarly in recent weeks, particularly in times of volatility. FX was a bit calmer, however, but havens did outperform (Yen, Franc and Dollar), while cyclicals lagged, particularly the Aussie. Attention largely turns to the US CPI report on Friday.

US

CLAIMS: Initial Jobless Claims in the week ending February 7th fell to 227k from 232k, but above the 222k forecast. This left the four-week average at 219.5k, up from the prior 212.25k. The unadjusted data saw initial claims decline by 4.5k to 248k, while seasonal factors expected a 1.1k increase. Continuing claims, for the preceding week, rose to 1.862mln from 1.844mln, above the 1.85mln forecast. Pantheon Macroeconomics write that the data suggests the labour market remains just as subdued as last year, casting further doubt over the sustainability of January's jump in payrolls. However, the desk acknowledges that heavy snow in late January has lifted claims marginally. Looking ahead, PM says layoffs look set to main relatively lower over coming months, but hiring will likely remain weak too.

EXISTING HOME SALES: Existing home sales for January fell to 3.91mln from 4.27mln, and much beneath the expected 4.18mln. Inventory of homes for sale was 1.22mln units, 3.7 months' worth (prev. 3.3 months' worth), with the national median home price for existing homes rising 0.9% Y/Y to USD 396,800. NAR Chief Economist Dr. Lawrence Yun remarked that, "The below-normal temperatures and above-normal precipitation this January make it harder than usual to assess the underlying driver of the decrease and determine if this month’s numbers are an aberration”. Yun added that affordability conditions are improving, due to wage gains outpacing home price growth and mortgage rates being lower than a year ago. However, supply has not kept pace and remains quite low.

FIXED INCOME

T-NOTE FUTURES (H6) SETTLED 16+ TICKS HIGHER AT 112-25+

T-Notes bid in risk-off trade amid more AI disruption concerns. At settlement, 2-year −4.4bps at 3.468%, 3-year −5.8bps at 3.511%, 5-year −7.1bps at 3.670%, 7-year −7.5bps at 3.873%, 10-year −7.7bps at 4.106%, 20-year −8.1bps at 4.676%, 30-year −8.3bps at 4.731%,

THE DAY: T-Notes traded within a 7 tick range throughout the Asian, European and early morning US session, with some upside seen as US players arrived, and some marginal downside seen after the jobless claims data, despite coming in above expectations. Nonetheless, T-Notes shot higher after the US equity opening bell with upside supported by risk-off trade. Equities were sold on more fears surrounding AI disruption, with the logistics/industrial sector seemingly the next victim of AI. T-Notes rose from the US opening bell to the close of European cash equity trade, before meandering ahead of the 30-year auction. The auction ultimately was very strong, and gave a further lift to Treasuries into settlement. The next scheduled risk event is US CPI on Friday, and how it shapes Fed rate cut expectations. The strong January jobs report saw several banks push back the Fed rate cut calls, with money markets now fully pricing in the next rate cut by July.

SUPPLY

Bills

Notes

STIRS/OPERATIONS

CRUDE

WTI (H6) SETTLED USD 1.79 LOWER AT 62.84/BBL; BRENT (J6) SETTLED USD 1.88 LOWER AT 67.52/BBL

The crude complex slumped amid the broad risk-off sentiment and recovery in the Dollar. The energy space was largely rangebound overnight and initially through the European morning as WTI and Brent hit peaks of USD 65.10/bbl and 69.85, respectively. Benchmarks then saw weakness which coincided with the latest IEA forecasts, whereby it cut 2026 global oil demand growth forecast to 850k BPD (prev. 930k BPD), and also cut the 2026 global oil supply growth forecast to 2.4mln BPD (prev. 2.5mln BPD). Following that, oil was edging lower before succumbing to the overall dramatic turn in risk sentiment and the recovery of the Dollar, to plunge to session lows and settle around those levels. There was little crude specific behind the drop, just broader AI concerns fuelling risk off trade, although as Axios reported that Israel PM Netanyahu said the conditions Trump is setting on Iran, combined with their understanding they made a mistake last time by not reaching a deal, could lead Iran to accept a good deal, did aid a few downticks. Recently, US President Trump said they have to make a deal with Iran, and could reach deal over the next month, but will be very traumatic for Iran if they do not agree to a deal. Ahead, US CPI on Friday is the highlight.

EQUITIES

CLOSES: SPX -1.55% at 6,834, NDX -2.04% at 24,688, DJI -1.34% at 49,452, RUT -2.15% at 2,612

SECTORS: Utilities +1.50%, Consumer Staples +1.28%, Real Estate +0.31%, Health -0.17%, Industrials -1.20%, Communication Services -1.46%, Materials -1.49%, Consumer Discretionary -1.58%, Financials -1.99%, Energy -2.17%, Technology -2.65%.

EUROPEAN CLOSES: Euro Stoxx 50 -0.27% at 6,019, Dax 40 -0.11% at 24,828, FTSE 100 -0.67% at 10,402, CAC 40 +0.33% at 8,341, FTSE MIB -0.62% at 46,223, IBEX 35 -0.82% at 17,897, PSI -0.49% at 9,026, SMI -0.21% at 13,543, AEX -2.02% at 989.

STOCK SPECIFICS:

FX

The Dollar Index only saw marginal strength on Thursday, but is well off the earlier lows. The buck saw a reversal as risk sentiment soured through the US afternoon. While moves in the FX space were more contained than the equity and precious metals space, the Dollar did reverse earlier losses as potential further AI disruption fears reared their head. As such, AUD, CAD, NZD succumbed, while the havens, Yen and CHF, outperformed, with USD/JPY falling to c. 152.35 from c. 153.75 before the AI-induced fallout. Back to Dollar-specific newsflow, initial jobless claims marginally fell to 227k from 231k, but above the expected 222k, although little move was seen in the Greenback. All participants await the US CPI on Friday, which will give a gauge on the inflationary side of the mandate, following the strong jobs market report on Wednesday. Given the latter, it has seen many banks push back their Fed calls for rate cuts to resume, with money markets now pricing in the first 25bps reduction by July, vs. June pre-NFP.

As mentioned, havens sat atop the G10 breakdown, and high-beta FX lagged as risk sentiment soured. This came as Algorhythm Holdings, which announced its SemiCab platform in live customer deployments, is enabling its customers' internal operations to scale freight volumes by 300-400% without an increase in headcount, which saw the Industrials sector the latest to suffer from AI disruption. More broadly, it seemed to ignite the concerns already there in other names, such as software, gaming and brokerage, on new AI platforms. Prior to this, the Kiwi led G10 gains while the Aussie lagged slightly, consolidating after recent outperformance as moves were Dollar-driven, with no major domestic catalysts for either currency. For the Yen, overall conditions remain supportive as markets continue to price faster BoJ normalisation.

EUR and GBP were flat in a choppy day, as the Pound saw a mixed reaction to the latest GDP data. Dec. M/M printed in line, while Y/Y and Q4 preliminary figures undershot expectations, briefly weighing on Cable before swiftly reversing.

12 Feb 2026 - 21:15- Fixed IncomeGeopolitical- Source: Newsquawk

DXYAIFederal ReserveBrentConsumer Price IndexTrumpUnited StatesEuropeTradeFixed IncomeEquitiesOilJPYUS OpeningGross Domestic ProductGoldInitial Jobless ClaimsBoJBanksMSI.USEQIX.USCSCO.USUS Market WrapAPP.USGOOGL.USTYL.USMCD.USIranMarket AnalysisUSD/JPYIndiaGermanyTamura CorpECBBoESafran SASilverContinuing ClaimsT-NoteYieldS&P 500 IndexNASDAQ 100 IndexStaples IncEURO STOXX 50FTSE 100 IndexAEX 25 IndexCisco Systems IncCSCOEquinix IncEQIXAAPLMUSTXMcDonald's CorpMCDMSITYLGoogle IncGOOGLMetalsCryptoGeopoliticalHighlightedAsian SessionUS SessionResearch SheetHighlightedFTSE 100CACAsian SessionSMIUS SessionResearch SheetIsraelGBPAustraliaEURChinaAUDCADNZDRussian FederationCHF

Subscribe Now to Newsquawk

Click here for a 1 week free trial

Newsquawk provides audio news and commentary for over 15,000professional traders and brokers worldwide. Services include: