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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.

S&P 500 slides as recession odds near tipping point
Wall Street's best bull market narrative — resilient earnings, AI-led growth, consumer strength — is colliding head-on with its worst macro backdrop in years.
Wall Street's best bull market narrative — resilient earnings, AI-led growth, consumer strength — is colliding head-on with its worst macro backdrop in years. The S&P 500 has now fallen for five consecutive weeks, its longest losing streak since Russia's invasion of Ukraine in 2022, yet strategists remain split on whether this is a dip worth buying or the opening chapter of something worse.
That question has no clean answer yet. And the data arriving this week may only sharpen the contradiction.
A market under siege
The index closed Friday at a seven-month low, shedding 1.7% on the session. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell by the same margin and entered correction territory, down more than 10% from its February peak. The Nasdaq 100 slid 1.9% and crossed into correction as well, now more than 10% below its October peak. The broader damage runs deeper than index-level moves suggest: many Nasdaq members are down 30% or more from their highs. The CBOE Volatility Index has surged back into the 30s, signalling that options traders are paying elevated premiums to hedge against further downside.
The sell-off is rooted in a trio of compounding pressures. Brent crude has surged sharply since the Iran conflict began on 28 February, straining corporate cost structures and reviving inflation risks that most investors had considered contained. The Federal Reserve, which held its policy rate at 3.50–3.75% on 18 March, finds itself with diminishing room to manoeuvre: rate cuts could risk stoking inflation further, while rate hikes — which traders in the futures market are now assigning a meaningful probability, according to CME data — would apply additional pressure to already-stressed valuations. February nonfarm payrolls contracted by 92,000 jobs — well below prior expectations — pushing the unemployment rate to 4.4%.
Economists are increasingly flagging that the combination of rising energy costs and a weakening labour market has begun to resemble a stagflationary dynamic.
The technical picture
Technically, the picture is deteriorating. The S&P 500 is trading well below its 200-day moving average. Analysts identify near-term support just below current levels, with some citing a deeper Fibonacci retracement near 5,980 as the next meaningful floor if selling accelerates. Market breadth confirms the weakness: only a minority of large‑cap stocks are trading above their 200‑day moving averages. The 10-year Treasury yield climbed toward the mid‑4% range during Friday's session before easing slightly. The 30-year yield briefly approached the 5% threshold — a psychologically significant level — before pulling back.
Bulls versus bears
The divide on Wall Street is sharp. Morgan Stanley strategists, in a note published Monday, argued that the correction may be nearing its final stage, citing historical comparisons with previous growth scares that did not develop into recessions or rate-hike cycles.
JPMorgan, however, has trimmed its year-end S&P 500 target, flagging that oil-driven inflation and Strait of Hormuz disruptions could drag global growth and corporate earnings simultaneously. In a stress scenario, JPMorgan analysts have modelled the potential for a significantly deeper slide from current levels.
Other major houses have also turned more defensive on US equities, citing elevated macro and geopolitical risks. Energy remains one of the few S&P 500 sectors in positive territory since the war began.
What traders are watching
The week ahead carries several catalysts that may resolve — or deepen — the uncertainty. Consumer confidence data and JOLTS job openings are due Tuesday. ISM Manufacturing PMI and ADP employment data arrive mid-week.
Most consequentially, the March nonfarm payrolls report lands on Good Friday, when US stock markets are closed. Economists expect a modest rebound in job growth from February's contraction, but the data will not be tradeable until the following Monday. That session also follows Trump's 6 April deadline for Iran to negotiate, bringing two major event risks uncomfortably close together in a single trading day. Options traders are increasingly positioning for potential gap moves.
Whether the S&P 500's five-week slide represents a late-cycle correction or the front edge of a deeper downturn may not be answerable until those events provide clearer signals. For now, the index sits in genuine tension between its structural earnings resilience and a macro environment that strategists have largely stopped calling transitory.

Tech stocks slide as legal shock adds to rate pressure
Technology stocks came under renewed pressure after a US jury verdict against major social media platforms added a fresh layer of risk to an already fragile macro backdrop.
Technology stocks came under renewed pressure after a US jury verdict against major social media platforms added a fresh layer of risk to an already fragile macro backdrop. The ruling has added to a broader pullback in growth stocks, with the Nasdaq Composite now in correction territory as investors reassess valuations, interest rate expectations, and geopolitical risks.
A legal setback introduces a new risk factor
A US jury found Meta Platforms and Google’s YouTube liable in a high-profile case centred on social media addiction and alleged harm to younger users. While the decision is expected to be challenged, legal analysts suggest it could encourage further lawsuits and increase regulatory scrutiny across the sector.
For investors, the concern is less about the immediate financial impact and more about what the verdict signals. Analysts worry that the possibility of higher compliance costs, stricter content controls, and increased legal exposure introduces a new uncertainty for business models that rely heavily on user engagement and targeted advertising.
This comes at a time when expectations for large technology companies are already under pressure, making the sector more sensitive to additional risks.
Tech weakness reflects a broader repricing
Shares of Meta and Alphabet declined following the ruling, contributing to a wider pullback across mega-cap technology names. The move reflects more than a reaction to legal headlines. It is part of a broader reassessment of positioning in a sector that had led equity markets for much of the recent rally.
Elevated valuations, combined with rising funding costs, are prompting investors to reconsider exposure to long-duration growth stocks. Market participants say investors have been rotating away from crowded positions, with flows shifting toward sectors linked to commodities, cash flow, and defence spending.
Options markets indicate stronger demand for downside protection, and gauges of volatility in technology stocks have risen, pointing to a more cautious stance rather than a disorderly selloff.
Interest rates remain the dominant driver
At the centre of this adjustment is the ongoing repricing of interest rate expectations. US Treasury yields have moved higher from recent lows as investors scale back expectations for aggressive monetary easing.
Higher yields increase the discount rate applied to future earnings, which disproportionately affects growth-oriented sectors like technology. As a result, even modest shifts in rate expectations can have an outsized impact on valuations.
This dynamic has been a key driver behind the Nasdaq’s move into correction territory, with declines in heavily weighted mega-cap stocks amplifying the index’s overall performance.
Oil and geopolitics add to the pressure
The legal shock has landed against a backdrop of continued geopolitical tension and elevated energy prices. Concerns around potential disruptions to key Middle East shipping routes have kept oil prices supported, reinforcing inflation risks.
Higher energy costs can slow the pace of disinflation and complicate central bank decision-making. If inflation remains persistent, policymakers may be more cautious about cutting rates, which would maintain tighter financial conditions for longer.
For equity markets, this creates a challenging environment where multiple headwinds — rates, inflation, and now legal risk — are interacting at the same time.
A shift in market leadership
Recent price action suggests that investors are not moving away from equities entirely, but are reallocating within them. While technology stocks have come under pressure, other sectors have shown relative resilience.
Energy-related shares continue to benefit from higher commodity prices, while defence and value-oriented sectors are attracting interest as investors look for more stable earnings profiles. This rotation highlights a shift away from growth-driven narratives toward areas perceived as more closely tied to current economic conditions.
Focus turns to durability of the selloff
The key question for markets is whether the current pullback in technology stocks reflects a temporary adjustment or the start of a more sustained shift in positioning.
Investors are likely to watch how Meta and Alphabet respond to the verdict, including any indications of legal strategy, cost implications, or changes to product design and user safeguards. At the same time, broader market direction will continue to depend on incoming inflation data, labour market conditions, and signals from central banks.
Geopolitical developments and movements in oil prices remain important swing factors, particularly for their impact on inflation expectations and risk sentiment.
For now, the combination of legal uncertainty and macro pressure suggests that volatility in technology stocks may remain elevated, with market participants continuing to reassess how these overlapping risks should be reflected in valuations.

Bitcoin volatility rises as oil shock fades
Bitcoin is seeing renewed volatility as easing oil prices shift the market narrative away from immediate geopolitical panic and back toward broader risk sentiment.
Bitcoin is seeing renewed volatility as easing oil prices shift the market narrative away from immediate geopolitical panic and back toward broader risk sentiment. With crude retreating from recent highs linked to the US–Iran conflict, investors are reassessing inflation risks and central bank expectations — and crypto is once again moving in step with those shifts rather than acting as a clear safe haven.
Oil retreat reshapes the inflation narrative
Crude prices have started to pull back after signs of potential de-escalation and growing diplomatic pressure surrounding the conflict. The earlier surge, which briefly pushed prices toward triple-digit levels, had intensified concerns that energy-driven inflation could delay interest rate cuts.
That immediate pressure is now easing. However, the situation remains unresolved, and risks to key shipping routes continue to support a geopolitical premium in oil. This leaves inflation expectations sensitive to further developments, with markets still vulnerable to sudden shifts in sentiment.
Bitcoin reacts as a macro-sensitive asset
Bitcoin’s recent price action reflects that changing backdrop. Rather than following a distinct crypto narrative, the asset is trading more like a macro-sensitive instrument, responding to the same drivers influencing equities and commodities.
As oil prices stabilised and equity futures found some footing, Bitcoin moved within a volatile range, with intraday swings closely tied to changes in risk appetite. Earlier gains linked to geopolitical uncertainty have given way to more uneven trading, as participants reassess how persistent the oil shock and its inflationary effects might be.
This behaviour highlights a broader shift. Instead of acting as a consistent hedge, Bitcoin is currently reflecting the balance between easing inflation concerns and lingering geopolitical uncertainty.
Altcoins follow, but risk appetite is uneven
Across the crypto market, performance remains mixed. Larger altcoins are broadly tracking Bitcoin’s movements, while smaller tokens are seeing more cautious participation.
This pattern is typical during periods of macro uncertainty. Liquidity tends to concentrate in the most established assets, where market participants can adjust positions quickly in response to fast-moving headlines. As a result, price action across the wider crypto space appears more selective, with less uniform momentum than during clearer directional phases.
At the same time, crypto’s continuous trading cycle continues to attract attention. Unlike traditional markets, which operate within fixed hours, digital assets provide a constant outlet for reacting to geopolitical and macro developments as they unfold.
Traditional markets stabilise as haven demand pauses
Beyond crypto, global markets are showing signs of stabilisation. Equity indices are balancing relief from softer oil prices against ongoing uncertainty around the conflict’s trajectory. Energy stocks are consolidating after recent gains, while rate-sensitive sectors continue to respond to shifts in interest rate expectations.
Traditional safe-haven assets are comparatively subdued. Gold has paused after its recent advance, with much of the demand for inflation and geopolitical hedging already reflected in prices. The US dollar is also moving more gradually, as traders weigh softer energy prices against an uncertain outlook for growth and monetary policy.
Volatility reflects a market in transition
Recent price action across asset classes points to a market in transition rather than one with a clear directional bias. The initial phase of the shock was defined by a sharp move in oil and a rapid repricing of inflation risks. As that pressure eases, attention is shifting toward how durable those risks are — and how central banks may respond.
In this environment, Bitcoin’s volatility appears less about a single narrative and more about its role as a fast-moving expression of broader sentiment. Its swings continue to reflect how traders are weighing the fading oil shock against unresolved geopolitical risks and the evolving outlook for inflation and interest rates.

Gold eases from record highs as rate outlook shifts
After a strong run into January, the metal is now facing a more challenging macro backdrop.
Gold is easing off its highs as markets reassess the path of US interest rates. After a strong run into January, the metal is now facing a more challenging macro backdrop.
On 20 March, spot prices are trading in the mid-$4,600 to low-$4,700 range. That’s a clear step down from the late-January peak above $5,500. Even so, prices remain elevated compared to levels seen just a few years ago.
The recent move is less about long-term narratives and more about a shift in macro conditions. Stronger US data, rising yields, and a firmer dollar are prompting investors to rethink the appeal of a non-yielding safe haven.
Stronger data shifts the rate narrative
The turning point came with a series of stronger-than-expected US releases.
Inflation data surprised to the upside, while labour market figures continued to show resilience. Together, this has challenged earlier expectations that the Federal Reserve would cut rates multiple times in 2026.
Market participants have since adjusted their outlook. Rate-cut expectations have been scaled back, and the idea of a higher-for-longer environment has gained traction.
That shift has fed directly into markets. US Treasury yields have moved higher, and the dollar has strengthened alongside them.
Yields and the dollar pressure gold
For gold, these moves matter.
Higher yields increase the opportunity cost of holding bullion. Investors can earn more from relatively low-risk fixed-income assets, which makes gold less attractive at the margin.
At the same time, a stronger dollar tends to weigh on commodities priced in dollars. For international buyers, gold becomes more expensive, which can dampen demand.
The combination has created a clear headwind. It has also encouraged some investors to lock in profits after the metal’s sharp rally earlier in the year.
Positioning adds to the pullback
The move lower has not been purely macro-driven. Positioning has played a role as well.
Gold’s rally through $4,000 and $5,000 drew in momentum-driven flows. Short-term traders and leveraged positions added to the upside, reinforcing the trend.
However, as rate expectations shifted, that positioning became more vulnerable. The trade was increasingly crowded on the long side.
Once yields began to rise, the unwind followed. Stops were triggered, and leveraged positions were reduced, contributing to a sharper pullback.
Structural support still in place
Despite the recent decline, gold remains in a very different regime from earlier cycles.
Prices are still well above the $1,800–$2,000 range that defined much of the early 2020s. The broader drivers behind the rally have not disappeared.
Global debt levels remain elevated. Central banks are still navigating the aftermath of years of ultra-loose policy. Geopolitical risks continue to create uncertainty across regions.
Central bank demand is another layer of support. Several emerging-market institutions have increased gold reserves in recent years as part of diversification strategies. This has helped underpin the market during periods of volatility.
Key levels now in focus
With the pullback underway, attention is turning to key levels.
The area around $4,600 is being closely watched by market participants. It aligns with recent trading ranges and commonly referenced technical indicators.
A sustained move below this level could open the way to a deeper retracement, potentially towards earlier consolidation zones. On the other hand, a recovery towards $4,900–$5,000 would suggest that the market is attempting to stabilise after the January peak.
What could drive the next move
Looking ahead, macro data will be critical.
Upcoming US inflation releases are likely to shape expectations around the Fed’s next steps. If price pressures remain firm, yields could stay elevated, continuing to weigh on gold.
If inflation shows signs of easing, expectations for rate cuts could return later in the year. That, in turn, may provide some support to prices.
Central bank communication will also be key. Any shift in tone from Federal Reserve officials could quickly influence how markets price the policy outlook.
A market caught between macro pressure and structural support
Geopolitics remains an important swing factor.
Periods of escalation tend to support safe-haven demand, while signs of de-escalation can reduce that premium, even if underlying risks persist.
For now, gold is caught between two forces. Medium-term uncertainty continues to support the asset, while near-term macro conditions — particularly yields and the dollar — are acting as a constraint.
The result is not a clear breakdown, but a period of adjustment. Prices are pulling back from extreme highs, yet the broader backdrop still supports a higher trading range than in previous cycles.
The key question for market participants is whether this correction deepens — or proves to be another pause within a longer-term trend.
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