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Big Tech delivers the loudest earnings week of the year
Wall Street ended the week with the question it had been asking for a month finally answered, and another one immediately taking its place.
Wall Street ended the week with the question it had been asking for a month finally answered, and another one immediately taking its place. Mega-cap technology earnings carried the market through a stretch loaded with macro pressure — an ongoing war, oil near recent war-driven highs, and the Federal Reserve leaving rates on hold again — and delivered enough to push major US benchmarks to fresh records. The unresolved part is what comes next, because the price of those beats is a capital spending bill that keeps growing.
What the Mag 7 actually delivered
Five mega-cap names reported inside 48 hours, and each came in ahead of consensus on the metric the market was watching most closely.
Microsoft posted fiscal third-quarter revenue of $82.9 billion against expectations near $81.3 billion, with earnings of $4.27 per share and revenue growth of 18%. Azure and other cloud services grew 40% year-on-year, or 39% in constant currency, accelerating from prior quarters. The company also signalled that capital expenditure will rise further in the year ahead as it continues to build out AI infrastructure capacity.
Alphabet reported revenue of $109.9 billion against expectations near $107.2 billion, with Google Cloud the standout. Cloud revenue rose 63% to $20 billion, and management pointed to a Cloud segment backlog now running in the hundreds of billions of dollars. Alphabet raised its 2026 capital expenditure outlook to as much as $190 billion. Search revenue grew at a high-teens pace.
Meta delivered the fastest revenue growth since 2021, with first-quarter sales of $56.3 billion against expectations near $55.5 billion, up 33% year-on-year. Advertising velocity strengthened on both volume and pricing. Management flagged that internet disruptions in Iran and access restrictions on WhatsApp weighed on user metrics during the quarter — a relatively rare direct connection between the Middle East war and a mega-cap's reported fundamentals.
Amazon reported revenue of $181.5 billion against expectations near $177.3 billion. AWS grew 28% to $37.6 billion, the segment's fastest growth in roughly 15 quarters. Advertising revenue rose 24% to around $17.2 billion.
Apple closed the week. Fiscal second-quarter revenue of $111.2 billion topped consensus near $109.7 billion, services revenue hit a record near $31 billion, and Greater China sales rose 28%. Shares climbed roughly 3% on Friday, helping the Nasdaq close at a fresh record of 25,114 — its first close above 25,000 — and the broad US benchmark settle at a record 7,230.
The capex bill keeps growing
The pattern across the group was clear: cloud and advertising revenue accelerated, AI workloads continued to scale, and the spending required to deliver them got larger. Alphabet's $190 billion 2026 capex guide was the most explicit signal, with Microsoft and Amazon both pointing to record infrastructure investment alongside their results. Combined hyperscaler outlays look set to run well into the hundreds of billions of dollars across the group this year.
Markets rewarded names where AI revenue is visibly catching up to AI spending. Where monetisation looked further out, share price reactions were sharper. The asymmetry traders are now pricing is straightforward. As long as cloud bookings, AI-linked services and advertising volumes keep absorbing the spend, the multiples on the group can stretch further. If any of those revenue streams soften while capex commitments stay locked in, the operating leverage that has powered the group reverses quickly.
What May opens with
The earnings calendar does not let up. Palantir, Advanced Micro Devices and Arm Holdings are scheduled to report next week, keeping the AI infrastructure narrative directly in front of traders. Several strategists suggest these names matter more for the rotation question than the headline question — whether the rally can broaden beyond the largest hyperscalers into the chip designers, software platforms and infrastructure suppliers riding the same capex wave.
Friday also delivered a fresh oil headline. WTI crude eased around 2–3% on reports that Iran had sent a peace proposal through Pakistani mediators, although a naval blockade of Iranian ports announced earlier in the standoff by the US administration remains in place and Brent stayed elevated for the week. Next week brings the April US jobs report, ISM manufacturing data and a wave of Federal Reserve speeches. Each carries the potential to shift rate expectations, which for now have largely settled into a hold-through-2027 base case among many traders.
For mega-cap technology, the immediate hurdle has been cleared. The harder question — whether AI monetisation can keep pace with a spending bill that gets larger every quarter — is the one the next earnings cycle will be asked to answer. For now, the group has bought itself another quarter of benefit of the doubt.

Nasdaq faces its biggest AI capex test yet
The Nasdaq 100 is sitting at a fresh record going into the most concentrated 48-hour earnings window of the cycle — and the question is whether the AI infrastructure trade can survive its own success.
The Nasdaq 100 is sitting at a fresh record going into the most concentrated 48-hour earnings window of the cycle — and the question traders cannot yet answer is whether the AI infrastructure trade can survive its own success. Four hyperscalers report on Wednesday. Street estimates based on company guidance now put their combined 2026 capital expenditure at roughly $635–665 billion, up from about $381 billion in 2025. Free cash flow at several of them is projected to compress sharply as a result.
That is the contradiction the index is being asked to price in real time. The rally has been built on the assumption that AI revenue will eventually justify the spend. The verdict starts arriving in 48 hours.
What the index is pricing in
The Nasdaq 100 closed at 27,305.68 on Monday. The Nasdaq Composite finished at a record 24,887.10. The S&P 500 closed at a record 7,173.91. The Dow slipped 0.13%.
Beneath those flat headline moves is positioning that is anything but flat. Alphabet, Amazon, Meta and Microsoft are each up more than 10% this month going into earnings. Apple has gained more than 6%. Five of the Magnificent Seven account for roughly a quarter of S&P 500 market capitalisation, which means any guidance shift travels straight into the broader index, not just the tech wrapper.
Why the capex number matters more than the headline beat
Hyperscaler capex guidance has become the single most-watched line item of this cycle. Amazon has guided to roughly $200 billion in 2026 capex. Alphabet has guided to $175–185 billion. Meta has guided to $115–135 billion. Microsoft is tracking towards roughly $140–$150 billion in fiscal 2026.
The cash flow consequences are the part that is starting to attract attention. Barclays analysts see Meta's free cash flow falling by close to 90% in 2026. Morgan Stanley analysts project Amazon's free cash flow turning negative by around the high‑teens billions, while Bank of America analysts model a deeper deficit closer to the high‑20s billions. Alphabet held a $25 billion bond sale in November, adding to its long-term debt over 2025.
The implication for traders is that earnings beats alone may not move the index this week. What moves the index is whether management commentary signals a willingness to pause, slow, or extend the spend cycle — and whether they can point to monetisation evidence that justifies continuing it.
How this week could reshape the trade
Microsoft, Alphabet, Meta and Amazon all report over a concentrated mid‑week window, with Apple following shortly after. The Fed delivers its policy decision in the same mid‑week window. Traders are pricing close to a 100% probability that the federal funds target stays at 3.50–3.75%, with attention on how Jerome Powell characterises inflation risks, including the impact of higher energy prices.
That stacks four hyperscaler reports, a Fed decision and a Powell appearance into a single trading session. Implied volatility on individual mega-cap names tends to be elevated into earnings, but the index-level volatility setup is what matters for Nasdaq 100 traders. With four names that combined represent a meaningful share of the index reporting after the close, overnight gap risk into Thursday's open is structurally larger than a typical earnings night.
The cleanest read for the index will come from cloud growth and capex commentary. Some strategists suggest cloud revenue growth at Alphabet and Microsoft needs to either accelerate or hold its recent pace to justify the 2026 spend. Any signal that AI workload demand is failing to absorb new capacity — or that hyperscalers themselves are growing more cautious on the build-out — could reset the multiple the market is willing to pay.
What the index has to defend
Technically, the Nasdaq 100 is trading above its 200-day moving average and well above its early-April lows. That gives the index a cushion, but it also means a disappointing earnings response has more room to mean-revert before finding meaningful support. The October 2025 highs sit just below current levels and are likely to act as a near-term reference for traders watching for follow-through after Wednesday's reports.
Sector breadth is the second variable to watch. Much of the April rally has been concentrated in the same hyperscaler complex that reports this week. If results trigger rotation rather than a broad rally, the index can hold up while internal leadership shifts — a dynamic some strategists describe as a typical late-cycle handover rather than a top.
What traders are watching next
Wednesday's reports and the Fed decision are the immediate catalysts. Apple's results on Thursday close out the Mag 7 cycle. Beyond that, traders are watching for whether any of the four hyperscalers revises its full-year capex range — up or down — and whether monetisation commentary supports the spend curve through 2027. Until those answers arrive, the Nasdaq 100 is trading at record levels on a thesis that is about to be tested in real time.

Bitcoin rally faces its first real test of conviction
The ETF bid that carried Bitcoin back above $77,000 this week is running straight into the sellers it was supposed to absorb.
The ETF bid that carried Bitcoin back above $77,000 this week is running straight into the sellers it was supposed to absorb. Eight consecutive sessions of spot ETF inflows, totalling $2.1 billion, have lifted Bitcoin roughly 12% off its April lows — and delivered it to a price zone where on-chain data suggests short-term holders have historically taken profit rather than add.
That is the question under this rally. Not whether institutional demand is back — the flows answer that — but whether it is showing up early enough to absorb the distribution, or late enough to provide exit liquidity for traders who bought lower.
The eight-day streak that changed the tape
Spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded a net $223 million inflow on 23 April, extending the longest inflow run since the nine-day streak in October 2025 that carried Bitcoin to its $126,000 all-time high. Cumulative net inflows since launch now sit above $58 billion, with total assets at roughly $102 billion — about 6.5% of Bitcoin's market capitalisation.
BlackRock's IBIT has dominated the recent bid, pulling in close to 75% of Thursday's flow. Fidelity's FBTC was the one meaningful outflow. Bitcoin has climbed from around $68,000 to $77,650 during the streak, a move that has almost perfectly tracked the return of ETF demand after weeks of uneven momentum earlier in April.
That concentration matters. When flow is this heavy in one vehicle, the marginal buyer is narrow, and any slowdown from that single source can shift sentiment quickly.
Why $78,100 is the level traders are watching
Glassnode data shows Bitcoin has reclaimed its True Market Mean at $78,100 — the average cost basis of actively transacted supply. That level had not been reclaimed since mid-January, and historically separates phases where short-term holders sit on losses from phases where they sit on profits.
A second on-chain cluster sits near $80,100, which Glassnode identifies as the short-term holder cost basis for this cycle. Analysts have flagged both as zones where previous 2026 rallies have been capped. The implication: the next 3–5% carries disproportionate technical weight, because it determines whether the cohort that bought above $80,000 earlier this year is returning to breakeven — and whether they sell when they get there.
Some analysts suggest the ETF bid may be functioning as exit liquidity for short-term holders rather than net new demand. Others argue the flow profile looks structurally different from previous retail-led rallies, with the dominance of IBIT reflecting allocator-driven positioning that may be less reactive to short-term price action.
The Ethereum divergence
While Bitcoin ETFs extended their run, spot Ethereum ETFs broke a 10-day inflow streak on 23 April with a $75.9 million outflow. Ether has underperformed in the same window, slipping to around $2,317 after opening the Asian session near $2,375.
Bitcoin dominance has climbed back to roughly 60%. That is the cleanest signal traders have that capital is rotating into BTC specifically, not into crypto broadly. Previous cycles have seen similar dominance spikes at both the start and the end of major BTC legs higher, which is why the reading is contested rather than directional.
Options expiry and the macro overlay
Nearly $10 billion in BTC and ETH options notional is set to expire on 24 April, including about $8.5 billion tied to BTC and $1.3 billion to ETH. Expiries of this size tend to compress volatility into the event and release it shortly after, giving traders a near-term volatility catalyst separate from the fundamental flow story.
The macro backdrop remains unresolved. US–Iran talks have made little progress, shipping through the Strait of Hormuz remains heavily disrupted, and oil is trading near $100 after a sharp run-up. Bitcoin’s current strength is unusual in that context — safe-haven flows have largely gone into gold and the dollar, while BTC is being bid on a narrative that has little to do with geopolitics. That decoupling is either a sign of maturing institutional participation or a warning that the ETF flow is insensitive to macro risks that should matter.
What traders are watching next
The near-term test is whether Bitcoin can close decisively above $80,100 and hold. A clean break would signal that the short-term holder cohort has been absorbed rather than triggered into selling. A rejection would suggest the ETF bid, however persistent, is not yet large enough to clear overhead supply.
Beyond that, the ninth consecutive day of ETF inflows would match the October 2025 streak — a symbolic marker that traders will be watching for continuation or exhaustion. Ethereum flow stabilisation, or a further widening of the BTC/ETH divergence, may shape whether this is read as a Bitcoin-specific event or the start of a broader crypto rotation.
What the tape cannot yet answer is whether the institutional bid is early or late to this move — and that is the question the next few sessions will price in.

S&P 500’s record rally rests on narrow foundations
The S&P 500 has pushed back into record territory above 7,100, but the latest advance looks more fragile than the headline level suggests.
The S&P 500 has pushed back into record territory above 7,100, but the latest advance looks more fragile than the headline level suggests. Beneath the surface, strategists point to concentrated leadership, subdued participation, and a heavy reliance on shifting Middle East headlines, all of which leave the market exposed if the news flow deteriorates.
The benchmark index has staged a powerful rebound since the late‑March low. One major newswire notes that it is up almost 9% in April, making this one of the strongest monthly gains in recent years. Another reports that the S&P 500 first breached 7,000 points in late January, propelled by enthusiasm around artificial‑intelligence‑related shares, and later went on to close above 7,000 for the first time in mid‑April as it set a series of new all‑time highs. The latest leg higher has come even as the ongoing war involving Iran initially sent oil prices surging and briefly pushed US stocks into a correction earlier in the year.
Weekend setback after Hormuz tensions resurface
The recent optimism was jolted over the latest weekend, when tensions between Washington and Tehran flared again around the Strait of Hormuz, a vital route for global oil shipments. According to a widely cited wire report, US forces seized an Iranian‑flagged cargo vessel, and Iran responded with new threats that raised the risk of renewed restrictions on tanker traffic through the waterway. That revived concerns that the strait, which had recently reopened to commercial shipping, could be disrupted again.
On Monday, 20 April, US stocks gave back a small part of their record‑breaking rally. The S&P 500 slipped by around 0.2%–0.3%, the Nasdaq Composite fell by a similar margin, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average ended slightly lower, as a jump in oil prices and fresh geopolitical uncertainty prompted some investors to lock in gains.
Brent crude rose sharply on the latest headlines, climbing by around 5%–6% to the mid‑US$90s per barrel, while US oil benchmarks also advanced. That left prices still below the triple‑digit peaks seen at the height of earlier disruptions, but the move underscored that the energy channel into inflation remains an active risk for markets.
A record run powered by a few giants
What worries market specialists is not a single day’s pullback but the structure of the advance that preceded it. One major financial news outlet describes the latest record‑breaking run as having many of the hallmarks of an “unloved” rally, citing narrow leadership, low trading volumes, and muted investor sentiment even as the S&P 500 posts fresh highs.
Its analysis shows that roughly 45% of the rebound from the late‑March low has been driven by just five large‑cap stocks, highlighting how much of the market’s progress has been concentrated in a small group of winners. Measures of market breadth indicate that less than half of S&P 500 constituents are trading above their 200‑day moving averages, a profile more typical of a mid‑correction bounce than the early stages of a broad‑based bull market, according to strategists quoted in these reports.
The technology and AI complex has done much of the heavy lifting. An index tracking a basket of the largest US technology names has gained roughly 20% from its late‑March trough, reversing a sizeable drawdown from the peak reached last year. That rebound has been a key driver of the S&P 500’s move to new highs. Within that group, individual bellwethers have become emblematic of the turnaround, recovering strongly after earlier declines.
Analysts caution that when a small cluster of megacaps accounts for such a large share of index gains, the durability of the rally depends heavily on those companies continuing to beat earnings expectations and sustain elevated valuations. If any of the leading names stumbles, the lack of broad participation beneath them could amplify the downside.
Earnings and valuations: support with caveats
Early signs from the first‑quarter reporting season have helped to underpin the bull case. Major newswires report that US corporate profits are expected to grow solidly this year, with technology and related sectors playing a leading role, and that the subset of S&P 500 companies that has reported so far has largely exceeded analysts’ forecasts. Several large US banks have delivered better‑than‑expected results and highlighted resilient consumer spending, even after months of higher interest rates and elevated geopolitical risks.
At the same time, valuation metrics suggest that there is limited room for disappointment. With the S&P 500 back at all‑time highs, forward price‑to‑earnings ratios have climbed back towards their peaks from earlier in the year, leaving stocks trading at a premium to long‑term averages, according to strategists cited in recent reports. Some research highlighted in the financial press also notes that upward revisions to earnings estimates since the start of the Iran conflict have been concentrated in a relatively small group of companies, rather than being distributed broadly across the index.
For investors, that combination—high valuations, concentrated earnings leadership and geopolitical uncertainty—means that even modest disappointments on earnings or guidance, particularly from large technology and AI‑linked names, could trigger a more pronounced pullback.
What markets are watching next
The path of the conflict and the status of the Strait of Hormuz remain central to the near‑term outlook for risk assets. Recent market coverage emphasises how sensitive stocks have become to each twist in the Hormuz story, with Wall Street rallying when Iran moved to reopen the strait and oil prices dropped, only to give back some gains when fresh tensions raised the risk of renewed disruption.
If the standoff eases again and tanker traffic through Hormuz continues to flow, that would ease pressure on energy prices, inflation expectations, and central‑bank policy, potentially giving equity bulls more room to run. A breakdown in talks or further escalation, on the other hand, could push crude back towards recent highs and force investors to revisit their assumptions about growth, profits, and interest‑rate policy.
Meanwhile, breadth indicators and leadership trends will be watched closely. If gains start to broaden beyond a handful of megacaps—with more S&P 500 members reclaiming key moving averages and sectors outside technology contributing more to returns—strategists say that would strengthen the case for a more durable bull market. If, instead, new highs continue to rest on narrow foundations while geopolitical risks remain elevated, the 7,000–7,100 range could act more as a ceiling than a new floor for the index.

Q1 2026 earnings season: What traders are watching
The question traders are navigating is not whether Q1 numbers were good, but whether company guidance can hold up under conditions that no forecast model anticipated three months ago.
The S&P 500 has clawed back to within reach of its pre-war highs. The Nasdaq has posted nine consecutive daily gains. Goldman Sachs just delivered one of its strongest quarters on record. On the surface, Q1 2026 earnings season reads as a story of corporate resilience. The contradiction is that every one of those results landed into a market where oil is trading above $100, headline inflation re-accelerated to 3.3% in March, the Federal Reserve is on hold, and a US naval blockade of Iranian ports was ordered on 13 April. The question traders are navigating is not whether Q1 numbers were good — early indications suggest they were — but whether company guidance can hold up under conditions that no forecast model anticipated three months ago.
US earnings season for Q1 2026 is running on its standard schedule. Banks report first, followed by technology and semiconductors mid-week, then big tech in the final week of April. Here is the reporting cadence traders are tracking:
Financials: What the bank results actually signal
Goldman Sachs opened the season on 13 April with earnings per share of $17.55 against a consensus of $16.47, on revenue of $17.23 billion. Equities trading revenue reached $5.33 billion — a record for the firm — driven by prime brokerage activity and elevated market volatility. Investment banking fees surged 48% year-over-year. By headline metrics, the quarter was strong. Yet the stock fell on the day, a reminder that in this earnings season the beat matters less than the guidance and the macro context it arrives in.
The more consequential bank read comes from JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, and Citigroup, all reporting 14 April. JPMorgan's results carry the most interpretive weight. CEO Jamie Dimon's commentary on consumer health, credit conditions, and the economic outlook functions as a de facto proxy for the Wall Street read on the US economy. On the earnings call, JPMorgan pointed to low‑single‑digit growth in discretionary card spending year-to-date — the consumer is intact, but not accelerating. Options markets were pricing a clearly larger‑than‑usual move in JPMorgan shares into earnings, reflecting the degree of uncertainty around both the results and the macro commentary.
The signal traders should watch beyond the headline beat: loan loss provisions and net interest income guidance for the second half. With the 10-year Treasury yield near 4.30% — above where most bank models assumed rates would be by mid-2026 — net interest margins remain elevated. But if bank CEOs signal deteriorating credit quality or pull NII guidance for H2, it would suggest the weight of persistent inflation and elevated energy costs is beginning to reach the consumer balance sheet.
Technology and semiconductors: The AI capex stress test
TSMC reports Thursday 16 April, and its call is the most consequential single data point of the week for technology traders. The top line is already known — the company disclosed Q1 revenue of $35.71 billion, up 35% year-over-year, beating the top end of its guided range. What the market does not yet know is whether management will maintain, raise, or trim the US$52–56 billion capital expenditure range it has outlined for 2026 — a scale of spending that underpins much of the current AI infrastructure build-out narrative across Nasdaq-listed names.
The underlying concern some strategists have raised is straightforward. Analysts project that the four major US hyperscalers — Microsoft, Alphabet, Amazon, and Meta — could collectively spend around US$635–665 billion on AI infrastructure in 2026, nearly double their estimated 2025 outlays. Several of those forecasts also point to meaningful free cash flow compression as a consequence of that capex surge. If any of them signals a capex pause or reduction when they report in late April, TSMC's demand outlook changes — and so does the valuation case for the Nasdaq 100, which has been trading above its 200-day moving average near 24,400 on the assumption that AI revenue will eventually justify the spend.
Netflix reports the same day, after the US market close. The company has guided to Q1 revenue of roughly US$12.2 billion, about 15% year-over-year growth, with Street forecasts putting operating margins in the high‑20s. The key variable is the ad-supported tier, which some analyst estimates suggest now accounts for roughly 30% of new sign‑ups and could roughly double its revenue contribution over the course of 2026 if current trends hold. If ad revenue momentum shows signs of slowing, it would be an early warning signal ahead of Meta and Alphabet — both heavily dependent on digital advertising — reporting the following week.
Cross-asset context: How earnings interact with the macro environment
Earnings season does not exist in isolation. The multi-asset landscape surrounding it is shaping how results are being interpreted in real time.
The dollar index has pulled back from its 2026 peak but remains above 98, supported by safe-haven demand from the Iran conflict and the rate differential created by the Fed's pause at 3.50–3.75%. A strong earnings season that reinforces US growth outperformance may push the dollar higher — which would apply pressure to commodities priced in USD. Gold has already fallen more than 10% from its January peak in the mid‑US$4,000s per ounce, a counterintuitive move during a geopolitical conflict explained by the inflation channel: oil above US$100 drives real yield expectations higher and strengthens the dollar, both of which work against gold.
The 10-year Treasury yield near 4.30% is the variable with the widest cross-asset reach. If big tech guidance in late April suggests AI revenue is beginning to materialise at scale — validating the capex cycle — it could prompt a reassessment of both growth and inflation expectations simultaneously, pushing yields higher and compressing growth equity valuations. Conversely, if guidance is cautious or withdrawn, the market may begin pricing a sharper growth slowdown, which would support Treasuries and weigh on the dollar.
What remains unresolved
Analysts estimated S&P 500 earnings growth of approximately 13% for Q1 2026 heading into this season. If early beat patterns hold — with roughly 73% of early reporters clearing estimates — some strategists see a path for actual growth to finish closer to the high‑teens, potentially around 19–20%. That would be a meaningful positive for equity sentiment. But strong Q1 numbers do not resolve the Iran conflict, reset oil prices, or clarify the tariff trajectory. Several consumer-facing companies have already signalled difficulty providing reliable forward guidance, citing tariff volatility and energy cost uncertainty. If that pattern spreads to large-cap technology in late April, it would weigh on equity markets regardless of what the Q1 numbers ultimately show.
Tesla on approximately 20 April and the big tech cohort from 28 April will determine whether the current equity rally is justified by fundamentals or running ahead of them.

USD/JPY nears 160 as oil shock traps the BOJ
The Hormuz blockade has placed the Bank of Japan in one of its sharpest policy binds in recent memory.
The Hormuz blockade has placed the Bank of Japan in one of its sharpest policy binds in recent memory. The same energy shock that is strengthening the dollar and pushing USD/JPY toward 160 is also stoking the inflation that may compel the BOJ to raise rates — yet tightening into a growth shock carries its own risks for an economy heavily reliant on fuel imports.
USD/JPY traded around 159.30 on Monday, near the top of its 52‑week range just below the 160.00 level. The dollar extended its recent gains against a basket of peers as Washington moved ahead with plans for a naval blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, helping to drive crude oil back above 100 dollars a barrel and lifting safe‑haven demand for the greenback.
The inflation trap
Japan's wholesale price data, released on 10 April, laid bare the scale of the problem facing policymakers. The corporate goods price index rose more than expected in March, accelerating from February’s pace and underscoring persistent wholesale price pressures. Yen‑based import prices also jumped sharply from a month earlier, as higher energy, metals, and chemical costs broadened across the economy.
The data arrived days before the blockade was confirmed. With Brent now trading back above 100 dollars a barrel, analysts expect those import cost pressures to deepen further in April. Japan imports the vast majority of its energy needs and has no domestic oil production of significance, leaving its economy unusually exposed to supply disruptions in the Persian Gulf.
BOJ Deputy Governor Ryozo Himino told parliament last Friday that Japan was not in stagflation, while warning that a prolonged Middle East shock pushing prices up and growth down would pose a ‘dilemma and difficult problem’. If the Middle East conflict persists and simultaneously pushes inflation higher while weighing on growth, he said, it "would pose a dilemma and difficult problem." That careful framing from a senior central bank official was widely read by markets as a signal that the April 27-28 meeting remains live.
Rate hike odds and the 60% question
By 10 April, markets were already pricing in around a 60% probability of a BOJ rate hike at the April meeting, even before the latest escalation in the Hormuz crisis. The five-year Japanese government bond yield touched a record high on 10 April, reflecting expectations that tightening could come sooner than previously anticipated.
The BOJ held its policy rate at 0.75% at the March meeting in an 8–1 vote. At an earlier meeting in January, board member Hajime Takata had already dissented in favour of raising the policy rate to 1.0%, underscoring his push for a faster pace of tightening. His position was notable: even before the latest escalation, one BOJ member judged that the balance of risks warranted faster action. In a recent interview, former BOJ board member Seiji Adachi said he sees the central bank as more likely to raise rates in April, once it has a fuller set of inflation data.
Japan’s trade minister said on 12 April that BOJ policy to ‘boost the yen could be an option’ to curb inflation, a remark investors read as softening official resistance to using tighter monetary policy as a currency‑defence tool.
The 160 threshold and intervention risk
The 160 level carries particular weight. The pair has approached this area during past episodes of yen weakness that prompted intervention by Japanese authorities, reinforcing 160.00 as a level traders watch closely. At 159.30, USD/JPY sits close enough to that zone for traders to factor intervention risk into positioning.
Analysts at major global banks have warned that persistently wide US–Japan yield differentials, negative real rates in Japan, and structural capital outflows could keep upward pressure on USD/JPY and make a test of the 160 area over time hard to rule out. With the Fed funds rate still well above 3.5% and the BOJ at 0.75%, that yield gap remains one of the widest among major economies — a structural anchor keeping yen weakness in place even if the BOJ delivers one or two additional hikes.
There is a further technical dynamic. Some strategists argue that episodes of Brent trading above 100 dollars a barrel tend to be broadly supportive for USD/JPY, given Japan’s heavy reliance on imported energy. The return of oil to triple digits may therefore act as a floor for the pair in the near term, regardless of what the BOJ signals.
Consumer confidence and the growth risk
The case for caution at the BOJ is not without substance. Consumer confidence in Japan deteriorated noticeably in March, according to government survey data, highlighting the strain that higher fuel costs are placing on households. Soaring fuel costs are squeezing household purchasing power, while corporate margins face pressure from rising input costs that cannot fully be passed on.
This is the dilemma in its starkest form. Hiking rates to fight inflation and defend the yen could raise borrowing costs on an economy already under strain from the energy shock. Holding rates could allow yen weakness to compound, driving import prices still higher and adding to the very inflation the BOJ is trying to contain.
What traders are watching
The April 27-28 meeting is the primary near-term catalyst. BOJ Governor Kazuo Ueda's pre-meeting communications will be closely monitored — analysts have drawn parallels with the guidance he provided in December ahead of the last rate increase. Any signal of the BOJ's intent, in either direction, may move USD/JPY sharply.
Beyond the meeting itself, the trajectory of the conflict matters directly. If the blockade holds and crude oil remains above $100 into late April, the import price channel could intensify the BOJ's inflation concern and strengthen the case for action. If diplomacy produces a ceasefire — as briefly appeared possible during talks last week — the yen could recover rapidly as the safe‑haven dollar bid unwinds and oil prices fall back.
For now, USD/JPY sits at a level where the next 48 hours of geopolitical news and the next 14 days of central bank communication may prove more consequential than any single data release.

Gold climbs as ceasefire reshapes the bull case
Gold prices have rebounded to their highest levels in nearly three weeks after the United States and Iran agreed to a two‑week ceasefire.
Gold prices have rebounded to their highest levels in nearly three weeks after the United States and Iran agreed to a two‑week ceasefire, even as the prospect of de‑escalation would normally be expected to cool safe‑haven demand. Spot bullion rose more than 2% on Wednesday to trade around the mid‑4,700s per ounce, having earlier jumped by over 3% to its strongest level since 19 March, while US gold futures for June delivery also advanced.
The move comes on the heels of a sharp sell‑off in March, when gold fell by around 10% as rising oil prices, persistent inflation and firm US economic data led investors to dial back expectations for Federal Reserve rate cuts. Higher Treasury yields and a stronger dollar weighed on the non‑yielding metal, even as the conflict in Iran intensified. Wednesday’s rally suggests that, for now, shifts in the interest‑rate and currency outlook are exerting more influence on gold than headline swings in geopolitical risk alone.
Ceasefire, oil, and the macro backdrop
The ceasefire, announced after US President Donald Trump agreed to suspend strikes for two weeks in return for Iran reopening the Strait of Hormuz to energy shipments, sparked a broad relief rally across global markets. Oil prices dropped sharply, with key benchmarks sliding back below the 100‑dollar mark as traders reassessed the risk of prolonged supply disruption. At the same time, the US dollar eased from recent highs and bond markets strengthened, taking some pressure off real yields.
Analysts quoted by major outlets say this combination of a weaker dollar, lower oil prices and reduced near‑term inflation fears has helped revive interest in gold, even as the immediate war premium fades. Some also note that the fragile nature of the ceasefire continues to underpin demand for hedges against further volatility.
Rates, inflation and what comes next
For the Fed, the Middle East shock has complicated an already uncertain rate path. Minutes from the central bank’s March meeting, released on Wednesday, showed officials remaining concerned that inflation could stay above target for longer, in part because of earlier oil price increases. While many policymakers still see scope to cut rates over time, the minutes also highlighted a willingness to keep open the option of further tightening if price pressures do not ease.
Traders will now look to upcoming US inflation data to gauge whether the recent pullback in oil translates into any relief for headline price growth. A stronger‑than‑expected reading would risk reinforcing the higher‑for‑longer narrative on interest rates, a backdrop that tends to cap rallies in gold by lifting yields and the dollar. Softer data, by contrast, could support the view that the Fed will eventually be able to ease policy, which would be more supportive for the metal.
A fragile equilibrium
The ceasefire itself remains temporary and conditional, with negotiations expected to continue in Pakistan later this week and all sides acknowledging significant unresolved issues. Any breakdown in talks that pushed oil prices higher again or reignited fears of a wider conflict could quickly alter the balance of drivers for gold, potentially re‑introducing a stronger safe‑haven bid even as it tightened financial conditions.
For now, gold is being pulled between two forces: relief that has lowered energy prices and supported a weaker dollar, and lingering uncertainty over both the conflict’s trajectory and the Fed’s reaction to stubborn inflation. How that tension resolves — through incoming data, central‑bank communication, or developments on the ground — will likely dictate whether the latest bounce marks the start of a more durable uptrend or just a pause in a still‑fragile market.

Oil caught between peace hopes and supply shock
Oil prices eased on 6 April as investors weighed a proposed plan to end hostilities between the United States and Iran against ongoing risks to supply through the Strait of Hormuz.
Oil prices eased on 6 April as investors weighed a proposed plan to end hostilities between the United States and Iran against ongoing risks to supply through the Strait of Hormuz. Brent crude fell to around 107 USD a barrel in volatile trade, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) moved toward the low-100s. Both benchmarks remain well above levels seen before the conflict.
According to Reuters, Pakistan has presented a two-stage proposal to Washington and Tehran. It would begin with an immediate ceasefire and the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, followed by 15 to 20 days of talks to finalise a broader agreement, tentatively called the “Islamabad Accord.” Separate reports from Axios suggest mediators are also discussing a possible 45-day ceasefire, highlighting the range of outcomes still under consideration.
A major supply disruption at a key chokepoint
The conflict has severely disrupted flows through the Strait of Hormuz, which typically carries about one-fifth of global crude and liquefied natural gas supply. The U.S. Energy Information Administration describes it as the world’s most important oil transit chokepoint, handling roughly 20% of global petroleum liquids consumption.
Restrictions on traffic have forced many tanker operators to suspend voyages, sharply reducing exports from Gulf producers. While some shipments continue, flows remain significantly constrained, keeping supply concerns at the centre of market pricing.
Recent price swings reflect this uncertainty. Reuters reports that U.S. crude has risen more than 11% in a single session at times, with Brent also recording sharp gains during periods of escalation. The International Energy Agency has warned that the conflict has created an exceptionally large oil supply shock, with very large volumes temporarily removed from the market.
Escalation risks keep markets on edge
U.S. President Donald Trump has warned that the United States could target Iran’s energy infrastructure if the strait is not reopened, while also signalling that a deal remains possible. According to Reuters, both sides are assessing the Pakistan-mediated proposal, though no official response has been confirmed.
This mix of diplomatic progress and escalation risk has kept oil markets highly reactive. Prices have swung sharply in response to headlines on negotiations, proposals, and geopolitical tensions, underscoring how sentiment is shifting alongside developments on the ground.
Price scenarios remain wide
Analysts cited by Reuters suggest oil prices could stay elevated across most conflict scenarios. Options market pricing indicates that Brent could move toward 150 USD a barrel if disruptions persist, particularly if infrastructure damage increases.
At the same time, a sustained ceasefire and reopening of Hormuz could ease prices as supply returns and the geopolitical risk premium fades. Some institutions note that this could reverse part of the recent rally, depending on how quickly flows normalise.
The wide range of potential outcomes reflects the level of uncertainty. With a significant share of global supply affected, markets are balancing between prolonged disruption and a negotiated return to more stable conditions.
What traders are watching next
Market structure continues to signal tight conditions. Futures curves remain in steep backwardation, with near-term contracts trading above longer-dated ones, indicating strong demand for immediate supply. Volatility has also surged, with sharp daily swings driven by rapid shifts in expectations.
Traders are now focused on whether diplomatic efforts translate into a ceasefire and a reopening of Hormuz, or whether negotiations stall. Attention is also turning to U.S. inflation data. Bloomberg reports that economists expect the March consumer price index to rise around 1% month-on-month, which could offer an early indication of how higher energy prices are feeding into broader inflation.

EUR/USD rebounds as dollar safe-haven bid fades
The euro is gaining ground, but the question hanging over currency markets is whether this is a genuine turning point or a relief rally built on fragile foundations.
The euro is gaining ground on 1 April, but the question hanging over currency markets is whether this is a genuine turning point or a relief rally built on fragile foundations. A single report — that President Trump has indicated the campaign against Iran could end sooner than previously suggested — has unwound weeks of safe-haven dollar demand, yet the structural forces that drove EUR/USD to a three-month low remain firmly in place.
The pair gained around half a percent to trade back in the mid‑$1.15s, partially reversing a March that ranks among the worst months for the euro in nearly a year.
A brutal quarter for the euro
The euro fell roughly around 2.5% against the dollar in March, its steepest monthly decline since July, and shed close to 2% over the first quarter — the worst quarterly performance since Q3 2024. That erosion came almost entirely from a single source: Europe's acute vulnerability to elevated oil prices.
When US and Israeli strikes on Iran triggered a surge in Brent crude in late February, the euro became one of the hardest-hit major currencies. Unlike the United States, which has been a net energy exporter for nearly a decade, the eurozone is heavily dependent on crude imports. Every dollar added to the oil price functions as a tax on European growth, and with Brent pushing above $100 per barrel for much of March, traders aggressively reduced euro exposure. The dollar, simultaneously benefiting from safe-haven flows and its relative insulation from energy disruption, posted a gain of around 2.5% over the month — also its best since July.
The ECB's impossible position
The European Central Bank's stance has added another layer of complexity. The ECB held its deposit rate at 2.0% at its February meeting, marking the fifth consecutive hold, and March projections reinforced a data-dependent, meeting-by-meeting approach. Analysts note that ECB staff projections leave limited room for further euro strength without risking inflation undershooting the 2% goal, while a prolonged oil shock could simultaneously weaken growth.
That stagflationary bind left the ECB with limited room to manoeuvre. Futures markets had, at points in March, begun pricing the possibility of ECB rate hikes as early as July — a dramatic reversal from the rate-cut expectations that opened the year. Analysts at JPMorgan noted that currency moves to date had not yet reached levels the ECB would consider alarming, but cautioned that deteriorating growth data or a sharper euro decline could change that assessment quickly.
Technical picture: a bounce from damage
From a technical standpoint, EUR/USD had approached support near $1.1505 — a more than three-month low — before de-escalation reports triggered the current recovery. The bounce toward $1.1532–1.1543 has brought the pair closer to near-term resistance. The dollar index, holding near 99.96–100.00, remains elevated relative to its pre-conflict levels, suggesting the market has not fully abandoned its preference for the greenback.
The yen staged a parallel recovery alongside the euro, with USD/JPY easing back from recent highs in the high‑150s after Japanese officials repeated warnings against speculative yen selling and hinted they were watching markets closely.
Contradictory signals cloud the outlook
Strategists note that the pair has tracked oil prices with unusual sensitivity throughout the conflict, and any renewed escalation could rapidly reverse today's gains. That risk appeared live on 1 April itself: senior U.S. officials warned that the next few days would be decisive and threatened intensified strikes if Tehran did not stand down — comments that landed on the same day as reports of Trump’s willingness to wind down operations. Iranian forces were also reported to have attacked an oil tanker in Gulf waters, a reminder that physical disruption to shipping has not abated.
Analysts have described EUR/USD as caught between two forces. The dollar's safe-haven premium built during the Iran conflict is beginning to deflate. But Europe's energy import dependence means that even a partial Strait of Hormuz reopening may not be sufficient to fully restore confidence in eurozone growth.
What traders are watching next
The March US non-farm payrolls report, due 3 April, will be the first major read on how labour markets have absorbed the oil shock. March CPI, scheduled for 10 April, will clarify whether energy prices have fed through to core inflation. The ECB's late-April policy meeting could shift the Governing Council's tone on inflation risks and set the trajectory for EUR/USD through Q2.
Beyond data, any development in the Iran conflict — ceasefire progress or renewed escalation — may prove the single most decisive factor for the pair. For now, the euro's recovery reflects hope rather than resolution. The conditions that drove it to recent lows have not materially changed. What has changed is the narrative — and in currency markets, that can be enough, until it is not.
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