Amillex Daily Market Commentary: “Black Tuesday” Hits Risk Assets — Nasdaq Futures Drop Over 1.5%, Bitcoin Falls Below $104,000, U.S. Dollar Index Reclaims the 100 Level
November 5, 2025 — U.S. equity futures led a global market selloff yesterday, with Nasdaq 100 futures sliding over 1.5%. The U.S. dollar index surged past the 100 mark, reaching a three-month high. Cryptocurrencies were hit hard — Bitcoin plunged to $103,600, the lowest level since June. Even safe-haven assets failed to hold up: spot gold fell below $3,980, and crude oil dropped more than 1%. Market sentiment is now dominated by the fierce tug-of-war between “valuation bubble deflation” and “policy path reconstruction.”
U.S. and Global Equities: Tech Valuation Panic Spreads Across Regions
European stocks slumped — Germany’s DAX dropped 1.8%, France’s CAC 40 lost 1.7%.
In Asia-Pacific, markets tumbled — Japan’s Nikkei 225 retreated 1.7% from record highs, while South Korea’s KOSPI fell 2.4%.
Stock Highlights:
AI stocks plunged: Palantir fell 6% after earnings (despite record revenue); Nvidia and TSMC each lost about 1%.
Chinese ADRs under pressure: Alibaba and NIO dropped more than 2%, as tightening liquidity weighed on risk appetite.
Key Drivers:
Valuation bubble concerns: CEOs of Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley warned that tech stocks are overvalued and could face a 10–20% correction.
Policy uncertainty: Fed officials sent mixed messages — Goolsbee sounded hawkish, while Milan struck a dovish tone — cutting the odds of a December rate cut to below 65%.
FX Market: Dollar Index Breaks 100, Yen Weakens to 154.48
Strong dollar: The U.S. Dollar Index rose 0.03% to 99.90, intraday topping 100 for the first time in three months.
Yen weakness: USD/JPY hit 154.48, the weakest since February 13, as widening rate differentials persisted.
Euro softness: EUR/USD slid to 1.1498, its lowest since August 1, as expectations strengthened for the ECB to remain on hold.
Underlying logic: Solid U.S. economic resilience (manufacturing PMI contracted but beat expectations) and hawkish Fed rhetoric continue to support the dollar.
Commodities: Gold Slips Below $3,980, Oil Weakens on Supply-Demand Worries
Precious metals: Spot gold fell 0.3% to $3,980, marking a third consecutive daily loss; silver dropped 1% to $47.56.
Headwinds: A stronger dollar and rising real yields offset demand from geopolitical risk.