European stocks fall on AI-bill jitters; gold hovers near highs
The Euro Stoxx 50 slips as tech sells off, while gold trades near 4,090 dollars after weeks of decline.
European markets closed the week lower, and the culprit has a name: artificial intelligence. Not the technology itself, but the bill it’s running up. Investors have started eyeing the billions big tech is pouring into data centres and chips, and asking when the payback arrives.
The result: the Euro Stoxx 50 slid toward the 6,200 mark, down on the week, with the broader Stoxx 600 following suit. When tech sneezes, the rest of the market catches a cold.
Gold as the cushion
On the other end of the see-saw sits gold, which traded near 4,090 dollars an ounce. Even so, the metal logged its fourth straight weekly fall, held back by a strong dollar and a tougher tone from the US Federal Reserve. Pulling back or not, it’s still at historic levels.
For anyone with savings or a retirement plan, the message isn’t to panic. It’s to read the room: jittery markets, still-high rates, and close attention to every inflation print. Weeks like this tend to be a rollercoaster, not a straight line.
The read for Portugal is indirect but real: a good chunk of our savings and funds track these indices. When Europe drops, it’s felt here too.
See also: ECB raises rates to 2.25% as Euribor follows.
Imagem: Wikimedia Commons