The US microchip giant Nvidia has gained the entire value of Britain’s biggest listed company in a single day as the artificial intelligence (AI) boom sent shares to a fresh record high.

Nvidia’s shares rose by 10.5pc in early trading on Thursday, adding $245bn (£193bn) to its market value. It came after the company said on Wednesday night that sales had more than trebled in a year.

The one-day gain is more than the entire market value of AstraZeneca, the FTSE 100’s most valuable constituent, which is worth around £192bn.

Nvidia’s shares have risen by 240pc in the last year as its advanced computer processors have become the bedrock of AI systems such as ChatGPT.

Its market value of $2.58 trillion now puts it within touching distance of the size of the entire FTSE 100, which is around $2.77 trillion.

The growth of Nvidia and other so-called “magnificent seven” stocks have propelled US stock markets in the last year, and created an uncomfortable parallel with the London Stock Exchange, which fast-growing technology companies are largely avoiding.

US stock indices jumped to a fresh record high on Thursday after they were boosted by Nvidia’s results and optimism surrounding future demand for AI.

Nvidia said on Wednesday night that revenues in its fiscal first quarter had risen to $26bn, up 262pc against a year earlier. Profits rose by 462pc to $15.2bn.

The company said it would carry out a stock split, in which existing shares are divided into multiple shares, which makes it cheaper to buy individual stock. Jensen Huang, its chief executive, also predicted that the company’s momentum would continue as it introduces more advanced chips.

Mr Huang, who founded Nvidia in 1993, is now worth more than $90bn.

The company has spent most of its life designing microchips for video game graphics, but the processors have proven to be adept at handling artificial intelligence tasks, leading demand for the chips to outstrip supply.

The company is now seen as a bellwether for AI spending, and its results on Wednesday night had been nervously anticipated by traders.

Read the latest updates below.

Thanks for joining us today. We’ll be back in the morning to cover the latest markets news, but in the meantime I’ll leave you with news that Elon Musk has attacked President Biden’s tariffs on Chinese electric cars:

Read the full story…

Thanks for joining us today. We’ll be back in the morning to cover the latest markets news, but in the meantime I’ll leave you with news that Elon Musk has attacked President Biden’s tariffs on Chinese electric cars:

Read the full story…

German carmaker Volkswagen is not a fan of the idea of hiking tariffs on Chinese cars, suggesting that a bigger tax would only provide a short-term respite.

Bloomberg reported that the car giant’s finance chief Arno Antlitz said that a higher tariff would have limited effect because Chinese manufacturers plan to establish factories in Europe.

Mr Antlitz said:

Britain’s top utility companies took a hit today after National Grid announced a rights issue to pay for infrastructure investment plans.

Shares in the power giant plunged 6pc, prompting falls in United Utilities, Severn Trent and Drax as investors worried about the health of the utility sector.

Danni Hewson, head of financial analysis at AJ Bell, said:

UK lender Investec has set aside £30m for a car finance mis-selling scandal, the latest bank to book a provision over the review. Michael Bow reports:

The US microchip giant Nvidia has gained the entire value of Britain’s most valuable listed company in a single day as the artificial intelligence boom sent its shares to another record high. James Titcomb reports:

The FTSE 100 dropped 0.4pc today.

The biggest riser was St James’s Place, up 4.8pc, followed by investment trust Scottish Mortgage, up 3.5pc. The biggest faller was National Grid, down 10.9pc, followed by RS Group, 6.5pc.

Meanwhile, the FTSE 250 similarly dropped 0.4pc.

The top riser was takeover target Hargreaves Lansdown, up 14.4pc, followed by defence company QinetiQ. The biggest faller was energy producer Drax, down 8.6pc, followed by National Express owner Mobico, down 7.6pc.

The chairman of Morgan Stanley said on Thursday he will step down at the end of the year as investors mull whether the bank can keep generating bumper profits amid fierce competition with Goldman Sachs.

James Gorman, who announced his plan at the bank’s annual shareholder meeting on Thursday, helped rescue the lender from the brink of failure following the global financial crisis.

He is credited with transforming the bank into a wealth management powerhouse.

The announcement came after giving up the chief executive position to Ted Pick in January, which he said on Thursday had been a “successful transition”.

Mr Pick has predicted a boom in mergers and acquisitions that he said would last 3 to 5 years.

Shares dropped more than 1pc in trading yesterday.

Goldman Sachs is preparing to put its Middle Eastern headquarters in Saudi Arabia after the kingdom introduced rules requiring multinational companies to put their regional HQs there – if they want a reasonable chance of winning government contracts.

The Saudi government is also offering multinationals who comply with a 30-year exemption from corporation tax and easier access to visas.

Goldman is the first Wall Street bank to take a step toward complying with Saudi Arabia’s ultimatum for foreign firms to set up their Middle Eastern base there, Bloomberg reported.

The measure is part of Saudi’s national investment strategy, which aims to make the country one of the top 15 economies and diversify away from oil. The country has pledged to increase private sector participation in the economy to 65pc of GDP.

The US Department of Justice Department filed a sweeping competition lawsuit against online ticketing giant Ticketmaster and its parent company today, accusing them of running an illegal monopoly over live events.

The lawsuit seeks to break up a monopoly it claims is squeezing out smaller event promoters and hurting artists.

The Justice Department accuses Live Nation, the parent company, of a slew of practices that allow it to maintain a stronghold over the live music scene, including using long-term contracts to keep venues from choosing rival ticketers, blocking venues from using multiple ticket sellers and threatening venues that they could lose money and fans if they don’t choose Ticketmaster.

Live Nation has denied that it engages in practices that violate antitrust laws. When it was reported that the company was under federal investigation in 2022, the concert promoter said that Ticketmaster enjoys such a large share of the market because of “the large gap that exists between the quality of the Ticketmaster system and the next best primary ticketing system.”

A spokesman for LiveNation said: “We will defend against these baseless allegations, use this opportunity to shed light on the industry, and continue to push for reforms that truly protect consumers and artists.”

The lawsuit is the latest example of the Biden administration’s aggressive approach targeting companies accused of engaging in illegal monopolies that drive up prices.

Ticketmaster, which merged with Live Nation in 2010, is the world’s largest ticket seller, processing 500m tickets each year in more than 30 countries, including the UK.

It provides the ticketing for some of the most-sought events, including Taylor Swift’s worldwide The Eras Tour, which has reportedly become the highest-grossing tour of all time with over $1bn in revenue.

Wizz Air shares have jumped 7pc in trading today after the low-cost airline revealed bumper demand for its flights.

Revenue for the year to the end of March jumped 30pc to €5bn (£4.3bn) as passenger numbers rose 21pc to 62m.

The company swing from a €535.1m loss to a €365.9m profit.

The rise in profits came despite the airline grounding 45 jets after the manufacturer of the engines issued a product recall.

Mark Crouch, analyst at investment platform eToro, said:

I will pass the baton to Alex Singleton at this point, who will be with you for the rest of the day, but not before a quick look at the markets.

Technology stocks on Wall Street have surged after another blowout earnings report from chip maker Nvidia, which is up 8.7pc.

The FTSE 100 was down 0.2pc as campaigning gets underway for the snap election called by Rishi Sunak. The pound is down 0.1pc against the dollar to $1.272.

In commodities, oil is up 0.6pc at more than $82 a barrel.

The owner of Cadbury has been fined €337m (£287m) after it admitted restricting the movement of chocolate, coffee and biscuits within the EU to push up prices.

Our retail editor Hannah Boland has the details:

Read how the fine comes at a delicate time for Mondelez, which has faced a shareholder backlash over its decision to keep operating in Russia.

US private sector output grew at its fastest pace in more than two years in May, a closely-watched survey showed, raising doubts about how quickly the Federal Reserve can begin cutting interest rates.

The headline S&P Global Flash US PMI Composite Output Index rose sharply from 51.3 in April to 54.4 in May, its

highest since April 2022.

Output has risen for 16 consecutive months, with the service sector leading the latest upturn, but business confidence was hit by concerns that strong economic growth will force the Fed to keep rates high to avoid an uptick in inflation.

Chris Williamson, chief business economist at S&P Global, said:

Thames Water’s parent company has reportedly put debt talks with its creditors on ice after Rishi Sunak called a general election.

Ofwat had been due to announce its draft decision about the business plan put forward by Britain’s biggest water supplier on June 12.

The company is hoping to raise bills by 45pc to up to £627 a year by 2030 as it grapples with an £18bn debt pile.

Creditors to Thames Water Kemble Finance, the holding company of Britain’s largest supplier, had appointed advisers to manage the debt talks, Bloomberg reported, but Ofwat’s decision is expected to be delayed until after the July 4 general election under purdah rules.

An activist investor has urged Rio Tinto to quit the London Stock Exchange in a move that could deal a further blow to the UK’s struggling market.

Our employment editor Lucy Burton has the details:

The tech-heavy Nasdaq and the benchmark S&P 500 opened higher after Nvidia’s strong results boosted excitement in artificial intelligence technology stocks.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 23.91 points, or 0.1pc, at the open to 39,694.95.

The S&P 500 opened higher by 33.25 points, or 0.6pc, at 5,340.26, while the Nasdaq Composite gained 194.84 points, or 1.2pc, to 16,996.39 at the opening bell.

Volkswagen is debating whether to scale back the speed with which it launches its battery factories in Europe amid waning demand for electric vehicles.

Chief financial officer Arno Antlitz said the German carmaker may take longer to scale up production at the sites to full capacity, although it still plans to launch them next year.

Under its current €20bn (£17bn) plan, it aims supply cells for about three million electric vehicles by 2030, supporting 20,000 workers.

However, Mr Antlitz told Bloomberg in Munich that VW remains fully committed to its investment, dubbed PowerCo.

The chairman of Morgan Stanley will step down at the end of the year after nearly two decades at the Wall Street titan.

James Gorman, who announced his plan at the bank’s annual shareholder meeting, helped rescue the lender from the brink of failure following the global financial crisis.

He will step down after giving up the chief executive position to Ted Pick in January.

The Australia-born banker jumped from Merrill Lynch in 2006 to help rejuvenate Morgan Stanley’s wealth-management business and took over as boss in 2010 as it was grappling with the scars of the global financial crisis which began in 2008.

The publisher behind Harry Potter has posted record profits after a jump in demand for “romantasy” novels.

Our reporter James Warrington has the details:

Boohoo has claimed its top bosses deserve £1m bonuses despite missing performance targets as it plunged to a £160m loss.

Our retail editor Hannah Boland has the details:

The number of people claiming for unemployment benefits in the US decreased slightly, official figures show, in a sign its jobs market remains robust.

Initial claims – which are seen as an indicator of lay offs – fell by 8,000 to 215,000 in the week ending May 18.

The four-week moving average was broadly steady, rising by 1,750 to 219,750.

Insurance giant Aviva has seen UK general insurance premiums surge by nearly a fifth at the start of 2024 as it hiked the cost of cover.

The group reported a 19pc jump in UK general insurance premiums to £1.7bn for the three months to March 31, with personal lines up 27pc.

Aviva said this reflected “continued strong rate discipline in the high inflationary environment” as well as new business growth.

Overall, group wide general insurance premiums lifted 16pc to £2.7bn.

The insurance sector has been increasing the cost of cover in response to the soaring cost of repairs and labour.

Recent figures from the Association of British Insurers (ABI) showed that the average home insurance policy cost 19pc more – up £60 – year-on-year in the first quarter of 2024, while comprehensive motor cover was about a third, or £157, higher.

Aviva said it remains focused on “pricing appropriately” in its general insurance business over the remainder of the year.

The owner of Royal Mail has failed to publish its annual trading update, which had been scheduled for early this morning, as the group heads towards a potential overseas takeover.

London-listed International Distribution Services told markets it would publish its full-year financial results at 7am on Thursday, but by 1pm nothing had been released.

It comes a week after the company said it was “minded” to agree to a takeover by Czech billionaire Daniel Kretinsky.

Mr Kretinsky, whose EP Group owns a 27.5pc stake in the company, put forward a proposed bid worth about £3.5bn on May 15.

There have been no further announcements on the deal in the last week, but Business Secretary Kemi Badenoch said the Royal Mail’s universal service obligation will need to be protected in any sale of the company.

Shares in International Distributions Services have fallen 1.3pc.

Turkey’s central bank today kept its key interest rate stable at 50pc for the second month in a row even as the country is struggling with soaring inflation.

The bank’s monetary policy committee said it had decided to keep the policy rate constant but that it remains highly attentive to inflation risks.

Ahead of the March 31 local elections, the central bank hiked its rate 45pc to 50pc as the inflation had become a constant headache for President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s government.

Inflation reached 69.8pc year-on-year in April – up from 68.5 percent in March, according to official data published in early May.

The central bank said on Thursday that its monetary policy stance would “be tightened in case a significant and persistent deterioration in inflation is foreseen.”

Across the Pond, Wall Street is expecting a rally after Nvidia’s upbeat revenue forecast after markets closed on Thursday.

The AI chip leader jumped 6.8pc in premarket trading, breaching the $1,000 mark for the first time, as its net income rose more than sevenfold compared to a year earlier, jumping to $14.9bn in its first quarter.

Revenue more than tripled, rising to $26bn from $7.19bn in the previous year, putting it on track to add about $155bn (£121bn) in market value if premarket gains hold.

The semiconductor bellwether also announced a stock split, following an over 90pc surge in its shares this year that havs made it the third-most valuable US stock and a key driver of optimism on markets.

Mark Haefele, chief investment officer at UBS Global Wealth Management, said:

In premarket trading, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was up 0.1pc, the S&P 500 was higher by 0.6pc and the Nasdaq 100 was up nearly 1pc.

The impending general election has killed any chance of an interest rate cut in June, according to a former Bank of England policymaker.

Michael Saunders, a senior adviser to Oxford Economics, said higher than expected inflation meant officials were unlikely to reduce borrowing costs next month, with the election reduced those chances even further.

He told Bloomberg TV:

Your getaway plans for the bank holiday weekend may have been scuppered after union bosses announced that workers at Northern Rail are to stage two strikes in a dispute over pay and conditions.

Members of the Rail, Maritime and Transport union (RMT), who work at Northern Rail gate lines, will walk out on Friday and again on Saturday June 8.

The union said its members, who are employed by a private contractor, are paid less than directly employed staff and do not receive other benefits.

RMT general secretary Mick Lynch said:

A sale of shares in NatWest to the general public could be in jeopardy after the Prime Minister called a general election, analysts have warned.

Shares in NatWest were down 2pc following reports that the timing of the election, set for July 4, could put the retail share offer on ice.

The Government is hoping to fully offload its ownership of the taxpayer-backed bank, which it bailed out during the 2008 financial crisis, by 2025 to 2026.

Chancellor Jeremy Hunt revealed plans to start selling its stake to ordinary investors as early as the summer.

It currently has a shareholding of about 27pc in the bank and has recently accelerated the process of whittling down its stake.

Analysts said this could prevent the Government from launching the highly-anticipated sale this summer, which was expected to offer NatWest’s shares at a discounted price.

Robert Sage and Stuart Duncan, analysts for investment bank Peel Hunt, said: “This share sale cannot take place before the General Election and the new government, which polls are currently suggesting is likely to be formed by the Labour Party, may or may not proceed with this initiative.”

Gary Greenwood, an analyst for Shore Capital Markets, said that in the event of a Labour victory “such plans are likely to be revisited and possibly amended”.

HSBC has been fined for failures in its treatment of customers who were in arrears or experiencing financial difficulty, the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) said.

The regulator has fined the bank £6.3m after it failed to properly consider people’s circumstances when they had missed payments between June 2017 and October 2018.

This meant it did not always do the right affordability assessments when entering arrangements with people to reduce or clear their arrears.

Sometimes it took disproportionate action when people fell behind with payments, which risked people getting into greater financial difficulty.

The failings were caused by deficiencies in HSBC’s policies and procedures and the training of their staff, as well as inadequate measures to identify and address instances of unfair customer treatment, the regulator said.

Confidence in the markets may take a temporary hit as a result of the general election, economists have warned.

Markets have remained static despite the latest PMI figures showed a slowdown in Britain’s services sector.

The pound remains little changed while the FTSE 100 has recovered from a fall of 0.3pc to be flat on the day amid hopes that a slowdown in services could yet support the case for a summer interest rate cut.

Thomas Pugh, economist at RSM UK, said:

Energy prices have been a major focus of political attention since Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine sparked a surge in inflation.

As he launches his election campaign, Rishi Sunak may be glancing nervously at rising wholesale gas prices.

European natural gas has rallied higher for an eighth consecutive day, with the latest move triggered by an unplanned outage at Norway’s Kollsnes processing plant.

It comes after Austria warned on Wednesday of potential disruption to supplies from Russia, after an undisclosed European company won a court decision that halts payments to Kremlin-backed energy company Gazprom.

Dutch front-month futures, Europe’s benchmark contract, have risen as much as 4.4pc to nearly €36 per megawatt hour – and have climbed by 56pc since the end of February.

The UK-equivalent contract has risen by as much as 6.4pc today.

Aldo Spanjer, senior commodities strategist at BNP Paribas, said that if the Norwegian maintenance is delayed, it will be “bullish”, meaning prices would likely rise further.

He added: “The market is very sensitive to Norwegian maintenance or any other supply issue.”

While the Prime Minister may not be over the moon, the latest slowdown in the services sector will provide some comfort to the Bank of England, according to economists.

Traders delayed bets on the first interest rate cut from June to as late as November after figures on Wednesday showed services inflation fell much less than expected in April from 6pc to 5.9pc.

Andrew Wishart, senior UK economist at Capital Economics, said the further fall in the services output “suggests that services inflation will continue to drop”. He added:

Britain’s dominant services sector suffered its weakest growth in output in six months in a blow to Rishi Sunak as he launches his election campaign.

The closely-watched S&P Global Flash UK PMI showed that the largest sector in Britain’s economy slowed down in May.

However, the figures also showed the manufacturing sector enjoyed its fastest growth in more than two years.

The Prime Minister began his election campaign by highlighting that the economy “is growing faster than our major competitors”, saying “we have turned a corner and brought economic stability back”.

He pointed to inflation falling “back down to normal” after dropping to 2.3pc in April, although high inflation in the services sector prompted traders to push back bets on interest rate cuts from as early as June to as late as November.

Chris Williamson, chief business economist at S&P Global, suggested the figures indicated that Britain “continues to recover from the mild recession seen late last year”. He added:

Strong growth by private sector businesses may force the European Central Bank to cut interest rates at a slower pace, economists have said.

The latest HCOB Flash Eurozone PMI showed a fifth consecutive months of increasing output from the private sector in May.

The European Central Bank is expected to cut interest rates from their record highs of 4pc in June.

Franziska Palmas, senior Europe economist at Capital Economics, said:

Private sector companies in the eurozone said they were their most confident in more than two years, according to a closely-watched survey, ahead of expected interest rate cuts in June.

The HCOB Flash Eurozone PMI hit 52.3 in May as business reported their strongest growth in a year, with faster increases in activity, new orders and employment.

Business confidence in the single-currency bloc has hit its highest level in 27 months, with the European Central Bank widely expected to begin cutting interest rates from their record highs of 4pc in June.

Dr Cyrus de la Rubia, chief economist at Hamburg Commercial Bank, said:

French private sector businesses suffered a fresh contraction in output in May amid a downturn in its services activity, according to a closely-watched survey.

The HCOB Flash France PMI fell to 49.1, indicating that production shrank for the first time this year, as the rate of input cost inflation quickened fractionally to a six-month high.

A reading below 50 signals a contraction in output.

Meanwhile, business activity rose in Germany for the second month running and at a faster rate.

The HCOB Flash Germany PMI hit 52.2 in May, which was its highest in a year.

UK stock markets were mixed as political parties kicked off their general election campaigns.

The blue-chip FTSE 100 index was down 0.2pc, while the FTSE 250 edged up by 0.1pc.

The pound strengthened by 0.1pc against the dollar to $1.273.

The main focus for markets today will be the S&P Global purchasing managers’ index (PMI) figures, which will give an indication of how the economy is performing.

Among corporate news, National Grid slumped 8.9pc to the bottom of the FTSE 100 after it said would raise about £7bn through new shares.

Rolls-Royce was last down 0.2pc after the engineering company kept its annual forecast unchanged.

Wizz Air jumped as much as 6.8pc after the European low-cost airline forecast a higher annual profit.

Hargreaves Lansdown surged 14.9pc to the top of the FTSE 250 after the investment platform rejected a £4.7bn takeover proposal.

AJ Bell gained 12pc after the investment platform reported its interim results.

A fascinating chart from Simon French, chief economist at Panmure Gordon, about the difference in economic growth in Britain under Conservative and Labour governments:

The Prime Minister said he has launched his general election campaign now because his record shows he has a clear plan for the country.

Speaking on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme, he said that when he became Prime Minister “inflation was running at close to 11pc” while “the cost of living was a major challenge”.

He said inflation is now “back down to normal” after official figures showed it had dropped to 2.3pc in April.

He said: “The economy is growing faster than our major competitors, wages have been rising sustainably, so I think it is clear that whilst there’s more work to do, of course, and people are only just starting to feel the benefits, we have turned a corner and brought economic stability back.”

He added:

The pound held steady near two-month highs a day after Rishi Sunak called a snap general election.

Sterling was flat on the dollar at $1.272 after rising by 0.3pc on Wednesday after data showed inflation did not slow as much as expected in April.

It was also steady versus the euro, which is worth a little over 85p, which is close to the pound’s strongest since February.

The start of the election campaign is unlikely to have a major effect on markets, according to analysts.

Francesco Pesole, FX strategist at ING, said:

Sunak’s predecessor Liz Truss’s short lived premiership in 2022 was derailed by a programme of unfunded tax cuts which caused a sell off in UK government bonds, and also hit the pound.

The FTSE 100 has been given its first chance to react to the Prime Minister’s decision to call a snap election on July 4.

The UK’s flagship stock market has edged up 0.1pc to 8,375.41 while the midcap FTSE 250 was flat at 20,701.11.

Nationwide Building Society has revealed lower earnings over the past year but said it handed out a record amount of cash to its members – and plans to keep up a new loyalty scheme.

The building society reported a statutory pre-tax profit of £1.8bn for the year to April 4, down about a fifth from the £2.2bn reported this time last year.

The lender said the decline was largely due the £344m handed out to eligible members in June last year through its fairer share loyalty scheme – and it would be making a second payment this year.

It will also offer a member-only £200 incentive to encourage more people to switch their main current account to the lender.

But the society, like rival high street banks, also revealed that the benefits of higher interest rates were largely offset by a fiercely competitive mortgage market throughout the year.

National Grid is to spend £30bn building new pylons and transmission systems across the UK countryside as it “rewires the nation” to accelerate decarbonisation, the company has pledged.

Our energy editor Jonathan Leake has the latest:

The veterinary industry faces a formal investigation from the competition regulator to examine whether pet owners are being ripped off.

The Competition and Markets Authority said it would examine whether profits made by vets are competitive, whether consumers are getting the right information, and whether the limited choice of vets in some local areas was impacting customers.

It said an inquiry group made up of independent experts and chaired by Martin Coleman will now oversee an investigation.

It comes after it launched a consultation in March on the veterinary sector, which received 56,000 responses.

CMA chief executive Sarah Cardell said:

An election victory “is not in the bag” for Labour, the head of Britain’s largest small business lobby group has said, after Rishi Sunak called a snap general election.

Federation of Small Businesses (FSB) national chairman Martin McTague said each party “needs to win the votes of these business owners” if they are to secure victory on July 4.

Mr Sunak called the election on the day official figures showed inflation returning to its normal range from the Bank of England’s target, from 3.2pc to 2.3pc in April.

Thanks for joining me. We begin the day with the outlook on the impending general election from business leaders.

The head of the Federation of Small Businesses, which represents more than 500,000 small enterprises and traders, said victory is not in the bag for either party, although they are starting to feel more confident.

1) Traders bet against summer rate cut despite fall in inflation | Looming election and higher-than-predicted price rises push expectations back to November

2) CVC and Abu Dhabi mount £5bn bid for Hargreaves Lansdown | Cheerleader for UK stock market at risk of being taken private

3) Barclay family launches forced sale of Very Group | Dwindling business empire to offload retailer in bid to tackle mounting debts

4) Anglo American agrees to takeover talks with BHP | FTSE mining giant to begin negotiations with rival to find a simpler deal

5) Jeremy Warner: The economic stars aligned for an early election. The Tories had nothing left to lose | Sunak knows all too well that the break in the clouds won’t last forever

Several Asian share benchmarks fell as markets digested the implications of policymakers in major economies preferring to take a patient approach to cutting interest rates.

Geopolitical tensions were also at the forefront of investors’ minds as China’s military started two days of “punishment” drills held in five areas around Taiwan just days after new Taiwan President Lai Ching-te took office.

That sent Chinese blue chips falling 0.9pc, while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index similarly slid 1.4pc.

In the broader market, MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan eased 0.3pc, while Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 index lost 0.5pc, also hurt by a pullback in some commodity prices.

More hawkish-than-expected minutes of the Federal Reserve’s latest policy meeting, higher than expected UK inflationand a sobering assessment of New Zealand’s inflation problems from the country’s central bank have caused investors to reduce their bets of the pace and scale of global rate cuts expected this year.

In America, the S&P 500 dropped 0.3pc to 5,307.01, while the tech-rich Nasdaq Composite index declined 0.2pc to 16,801.54. The Dow Jones Industrial Average of 30 leading US companies finished down 0.5pc at 39,671.04.

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