The collapse of global technological systems triggers a downturn in international share markets

A widespread IT disruption on Friday, which stemmed from an updated by cybersecurity firm CrowdStrike, caused a global interruption in many industries from airlines to banking, leading to a drop in worldwide stocks. Investors became uneasy as the glitch, predominantly affecting Windows systems, triggered disruptions throughout varied sectors. This resulted in a technology shares selloff, contributing to a disorderly week.

In Ireland, Friday saw a slight decrease in the share Index, mirroring losses across Europe as companies began to recuperate from the global outage. Despite minor decreases, the Euronext Dublin assured that trading had not been affacted significantly. Speaking broadly, the economy continues to exhibit strong growth. Property sales are experiencing a downward trend, even as prices escalate.

With regards to the banking sector, shares were mixed; AIB shares climbed almost 2%, while Bank of Ireland saw a decrease of 0.64%. Permanent TSB saw a increase of 3.1% by the end of day’s trading. Food companies Kerry and Glanbia both saw a drop, falling 1.25% and 1.14% respectively.

The IT disruption had a noticeable impact on Ryanair, disabling their online check-in system and causing a handful of flights to be cancelled, contributing to a 1.47% fall in stock value by the end of the day. Kingspan, an insulation specialist, was also down 1.8%.

Over in London, stocks ended the week on a lower note, as a byproduct of a drop in domestic retail sales in June and a fall in commodity-linked stocks which mirrored declines in metal prices. Blue-chip FTSE 100 dropped 0.6% and mid-cap FTSE 250 was down 0.8%, interrupting two weeks of sustained gains.

The London Stock Exchange operator, LSEG Group, noted that their news and data platform, Workspace, along with their regulatory news service and currency spot and forwarding prices were affected by the IT outage, attributing it to a “third-party global technical issue”.

By midday, London appeared to have resolved most issues, without any influence on the city’s Stock Exchange securities trading. Meanwhile, precious metal mining stocks took a 0.8 per cent tumble, while Fresnillo noted a decrease of 1.4 per cent in line with the reduction in spot gold prices.

A meeting between senior executives from UK defence companies, including BAE and Babcock, and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy, regarding an increase in military support against Russia led to a 0.7 per cent jump in aerospace and defence stocks, despite widespread falls.

Moving to Europe, the STOXX 600 index demonstrated a 0.8 per cent decline, falling to a two-week low and recording its most significant weekly drop of over 2 per cent so far this year.

Following a technology outage disrupting operations in financial firms and banks from London to Singapore, conditions were gradually returning to normal in the trading of oil, gas, power, stocks, bonds and currencies. However, residual data challenges persisted.

Italy’s stock exchange also communicated a recovery in the standard functioning of its FTSE MIB index after the IT outage, although it noted a decline of 0.9 per cent overall.

In connection with the Swedish company Evolution failing to meet quarterly top-line and earnings expectations, travel and leisure stocks were on a downward trend, with a 2.1 per cent decline. Tech stocks experienced a decrease of 1 per cent on the day, marking the week’s worst-performing sector with an almost 9 per cent fall.

Other impacted stocks included Sartorius, the pharmaceutical equipment supplier, which saw a 13.1 per cent drop after reducing its full-year guidance, and video game company Ubisoft, which dropped by 14 per cent following a disappointing rise in quarterly net bookings and forecasting below-analyst estimates for second-quarter bookings.

In New York, tech-related stocks presented mixed results following the IT outage. Cybersecurity company CrowdStrike saw a decrease of 8.2 per cent after updating one of their products, which appeared to trigger the outage. Meanwhile, Microsoft experienced a 0.3 per cent decrease following the cloud disruption. Nvidia was down about 1 per cent, while Apple and Alphabet managed to hold their ground overall.

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, listed in the US, underwent a further dip in stock value, amounting to a daily loss of roughly 3.5 per cent. On the same day, the Dow Jones Industrial Average experienced a descent of 337.37 points, equating to a decrease of 0.84 per cent, settling at 40,327.65. Similarly, the S&P 500 fell by 17.55 points (a 0.30 per cent deficit) to 5,527.04, and the Nasdaq Composite dropped 56.06 points (a loss of approximately 0.32 per cent), ending the day at 17,813.99. Additional source: Reuters.

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