uropean shares slid on Monday as the technology sector joined the retreat in other markets after China’s upgraded low-cost, low-power artificial intelligence (AI) model sparked worries about the profits of rivals and the need for costly chips.
The pan-European STOXX 600 was down 0.6 percent as of 0941 GMT, tracking a move lower in global equities. Futures tracking the tech-heavy US Nasdaq Composite tumbled 3.1 percent.
Chinese startup DeepSeek has rolled out a free assistant that it says uses lower-cost chips and less data, seemingly challenging a widespread bet in financial markets that AI will drive demand along a supply chain from chipmakers to data centers.
The news rattled European tech index, which slid 5.8 percent and was on track for its worst day since Oct. 15.
Chip equipment maker ASML slid 11.5 percent to a near nine-week low, while ASM International slumped over 15 percent.
Siemens Energy, which provides electric hardware for AI infrastructure, sank 17.4 percent to the bottom of STOXX 600, while other AI-exposed firms such as Schneider Electric dropped 8.1 percent.
“This idea of a low-cost Chinese version hasn’t necessarily been forefront, so it’s taken the market a little bit by surprise,” said Fiona Cincotta, senior market analyst at City Index.
“So if you suddenly get this low-cost AI model, then that’s going to raise concerns over the profits of rivals, particularly given the amount that they’ve already invested in more expensive AI infrastructure.”
The selloff also comes ahead of major tech earnings on Wall Street, with trillion-dollar firms like Apple, Meta, Microsoft and Tesla expected to post their quarterly earnings this week that should justify their overblown valuations.
With only a few days remaining before the US President Trump’s Feb. 1 deadline for imposing significant trade tariffs on key trading partners, market uncertainty has intensified, adding to an already turbulent week for investors.
The week ahead is also packed with key interest rate decisions by central banks around the globe, particularly the policy verdicts from US Federal Reserve and European Central Bank.
For the ECB, market participants have already priced in a quarter point cut, while they expect the Fed to keep rates on hold.
Fourth-quarter gross domestic product numbers for the euro zone and Germany, along with inflation data for major European economies, are also part of a data-loaded week.
On the day, German business morale unexpectedly improved in January thanks to a more positive assessment of the current economic situation.
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