The FTSE 100 slipped a further 3.66% this week, extending a losing streak that began in mid-April 2026. The leading index for UK shares is now down almost 5% from its 52-week high, hinting at a potentially prolonged downturn.
This decline is primarily driven by heightened geopolitical instability in the Middle East and concerns over its impact on global energy infrastructure. That means investors are getting extra jittery about the UK economic situation – in particular, sticky inflation and a weaker labour market.
While nobody likes to sell at a loss, holding on to shares that face structural challenges might do more damage in the long run.
So in this tempremental environment, here are two shares I’d consider avoiding for now.
Associated British Foods
Associated British Foods (LSE: ABF) is a well-established supplier of everyday goods, giving it defensive credentials. Prior to Covid, it enjoyed 20 years of unbroken dividend increases, making it attractive to income investors.
But disappointing festive trading in 2025 led to a profit warning, putting the share price under severe pressure.
Recent earnings reports reflect a struggle to maintain volume growth in a cost-cutting environment. So even with a decent dividend history, sustainability is now questionable. Not ideal for for those eyeing long-term dividend returns.
Of course, this means the valuation is weakening as analysts downgrade profit forecasts, which could offer a cheap entry point for value hunters.
The primary risk is its heavy reliance on consumer discretionary spending. With inflation still tightening consumer’s wallets, traditional retail faces a difficult road to recovery.
Endeavour Mining
Mining stocks are often treated as safe havens, but Endeavour Mining (LSE:EDV) tells a different story. Its fortunes (and share price) exploded recently inline with a rallying gold price. So long as gold remains strong, it could keep growing.
But the firm has seen high volatility as geopolitical instability ripples through the commodity markets.
From a financial standpoint, it’s doing well but rising costs are a concern. Subsequently, the market has responded with caution, which naturally has hit the share price.
On top of that, the dividend story has been erratic, largely because management is currently prioritising capital preservation and debt reduction over shareholder payouts.
So now we have a company that relies heavily on operational stability in politically sensitive regions. That’s not exactly a low-risk investment. If gold demand softens, it could all come tumbling down like a house of cards.

