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CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 63% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading CFDs with this provider.
CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 63% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading CFDs with this provider. You should consider whether you understand how CFDs work and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money.
Commodities: Precious metals slump deepens as rate hike fears take hold; oil shrugs off renewed Middle East escalation
Fixed Income: US treasury yields quiet ahead of May US CPI release.
Currencies: AUD weakness continues as USD unreactive to wild volatility in US stocks. EURCHF hits new local high.
Macro: US May CPI, Bank of Canada Rate Announcement, US Treasury to auction 10-year notes
Macro
The US launched new strikes against Iran after an American helicopter was downed, heightening concerns over a fragile ceasefire and longer-term peace prospects. Trump ordered the “self-defense” strikes, while Iran warned it would not leave any attack unanswered, saying it had targeted 21 US arial and navel targets across the region.
US existing home sales rose 3.2% to 4.17 million annualized, beating expectations despite high mortgage rates. Gains were strongest in the Midwest and South, modest in the Northeast, and flat in the West. Inventory rose 3.3% to a 10-month high, reaching 4.5 months of supply.
The US trade deficit narrowed to $55.9 billion in April from $56.6 billion, beating expectations. Exports rose 2.6% to a record $327.1 billion, led by capital goods, industrial supplies, and consumer goods, while services slipped. Imports increased 2.0% to $383.0 billion, driven by higher capital goods and service purchases.
Japan’s producer prices rose 6.3% yoy in May, up from 5.3% and above the 5.5% forecast, the fastest since March 2023 amid higher energy costs. Month-on-month, prices rose 0.9%, down from April’s revised 2.8%.
US private employers added an average of 29,000 jobs per week in the four weeks to May 23, down from 30,500 and marking a third week of easing growth. Still, ADP’s May report showed a solid 122,000 net job gain, with hiring more broad-based and momentum intact into summer.
The combination of stronger payrolls and uncomfortably elevated inflation has led bond traders to rush into positions targeting multiple Fed interest-rate hikes in the coming months, with some looking for a move as early as the September policy meeting. Ahead of Friday’s strong payroll print hedge funds held a record net short positions in SOFR futures.
Macro calendar highlights (times in GMT)
0600 – Norway May CPI
1100 – US MBA Mortgage Applications
1230 – US May CPI
1345 – Bank of Canada Rate Decision
1430 – EIAs Weekly Crude and Fuel Stock Report
1700 – US Treasury to auction 10-year Notes
Earnings events
Wednesday: Oracle
Thursday: Adobe, Dollarama
For all macro, earnings, and dividend events check Saxo’s calendar.
Equities
USA: The S&P 500 fell 0.3% and the Nasdaq Composite dropped 1.0%, while the Dow rose 0.2% as Wall Street recovered from deeper intraday losses. The session was another reminder that a concentrated AI trade can wobble the whole table when sentiment turns. Apple fell 3.6% after investors questioned its AI update, Tesla lost 3.0% as high-valuation growth stocks came under pressure, Microsoft dropped 2% on broader tech weakness, while Nvidia ended only 0.2% lower after a sharp intraday reversal. Financials were the bright spot, with bank shares supported by rotation into value ahead of US inflation data.
Europe: European equities also lost ground, with the Stoxx 600 down 0.5%, the DAX off 0.7%, and the FTSE 100 falling 1.4% to its weakest close since 15 May. The UK market was hit by banks and energy, as HSBC dropped 4.4% and Standard Chartered fell 6.3%, while lower oil weighed on energy names. Telecom equipment makers also came under pressure, with Ericsson down 6.3% and Nokia off 7.0% on concerns that Nvidia could become a stronger competitor in telecom chips. Givaudan was a rare bright spot, jumping 7.5% after analyst upgrades.
Asia: Asian equities traded lower on Wednesday, with the MSCI Asia Pacific Index down around 0.6%, Japan’s Nikkei off 0.9%, and South Korea’s Kospi down about 2.0% as tech selling resumed and US-Iran tensions lifted risk aversion. The move followed Tuesday’s sharp rebound, when the Kospi surged 8.2% after Monday’s steep AI-led selloff. SK Hynix jumped 15.9% and Samsung Electronics rose 9.0% on Tuesday as investors bought back into the AI memory trade. South Korea’s authorities also inspected major foreign-exchange banks to curb destabilising trading activity, which adds another moving part to a market that already has plenty.
Volatility
Volatility moved higher ahead of today’s US CPI report, but markets have not yet reached panic levels. The VIX closed at 19.87(+5.0%), while short-term measures rose more sharply, with VIX1D at 20.60 (+28.6%) and VIX9D at 22.14 (+12.4%), highlighting investor demand for protection around today’s inflation data and renewed geopolitical tensions involving Iran. With oil prices remaining elevated, markets are increasingly sensitive to inflation surprises that could reinforce expectations of higher-for-longer interest rates.
SPX options imply a move of approximately 109 points, or 1.48%, into Friday’s 12 June expiration, while today’s expiration is pricing a move of roughly 63 points, or 0.85%. In other words, options markets expect a potentially meaningful reaction to today’s CPI release, making inflation the key near-term catalyst for equities, bonds and risk assets.
Daily skew indicator: downside protection remains noticeably more expensive than upside exposure. Near-term SPX puts are carrying implied volatility around 30%-31%, compared with roughly 23% for comparable calls, indicating investors remain more focused on hedging downside risks than positioning for a breakout higher. Options flow told a similar story, with significant institutional demand for SPX, SPY and QQQ protection, although sizeable call buying in NVDA and TSM suggests investors continue to maintain exposure to AI-related upside.
Digital Assets
Digital assets traded cautiously as investors reduced risk ahead of CPI and monitored developments in the Middle East.Bitcoin hovered around $61,200, while Ethereum traded near $1,624, both remaining under pressure following last week’s sharp selloff. Major altcoins including Solana and XRP also weakened, reflecting a broader risk-off tone across speculative assets.
Listed crypto exposure followed the same pattern. IBIT fell 2.1% to $35.14, while ETHA declined 1.9% to $12.48. Although US spot Bitcoin ETFs continue to experience net outflows, redemption volumes have slowed considerably from last week's extreme levels, suggesting that institutional selling pressure may be stabilising rather than accelerating.
Options activity in crypto-linked equities remained defensive. Large opening put positions appeared in MSTR, COIN and IBIT, with long-dated IBIT put buying pointing to continued demand for portfolio protection. At the same time, call buying in COIN, IBIT and several crypto miners suggests investors are positioning for volatility rather than uniformly betting on further declines. For now, crypto continues to behave like a high-beta extension of the broader equity market, leaving today’s CPI report as the most important near-term catalyst.
Commodities
A slump in precious metals gathered momentum on Tuesday, with gold and silver falling below USD 4,200 and USD 64, respectively, as rising US inflation concerns and growing expectations of Federal Reserve rate hikes continued to pressure sentiment. The move is forcing investors with long-held bullish positions to reassess the outlook, particularly as higher inflation and tighter monetary policy create a less supportive environment for non-yielding assets. In gold, attention now turns to the March low and 38.2% retracement of the 2022 to 2026 rally in the USD 4,075 to USD 4,100 area.
Silver once again led the weakness, driving the gold-silver ratio to a two-month high of 65.5 and highlighting a broader deterioration across the precious metals complex. Bond and short-term interest rate traders continue to add positions targeting multiple Fed rate hikes in the coming months, with some now pricing the possibility of a move as early as September. Attention today turns to the US CPI report, where headline inflation is expected to rise above 4% for the first time in three years.
Brent crude only trades slightly higher after sliding to USD 90 per barrel in the previous session. Traders appear increasingly reluctant to chase prices higher despite the ongoing Middle East conflict, mindful that any reopening of the Strait of Hormuz could trigger a temporary flood of crude oil and fuel exports. The prospect of a sudden release of pent-up supply has tempered bullish sentiment and reduced the market's sensitivity to geopolitical headlines.
The latest modest rebound was triggered by renewed US and Iranian attacks that once again challenged an already fragile ceasefire. Meanwhile, US crude inventories reportedly recorded their largest decline since September according to the API ahead of today's official EIA report. The market will scrutinize the data for signs that the United States is nearing the limits of its ability to offset global supply disruptions through elevated exports of crude oil and refined products.
Fixed Income
US Treasury yields rebounded early Wednesday after a Tuesday dip and ahead of today’s US May CPI data. The benchmark US 2-year treasury yield traded 4.14% after a low just below 4.12% Tuesday and relative to the Monday cycle high since early 2025 just shy of 4.20. Demand for 3-year notes at Tuesday’s auction improved after a weak prior auction that saw the weakest demand in nine months. The benchmark 10-year yield traded just below 4.54% early Wednesday, up two basis points from Tuesday’s close and ahead of today’s auction of 10-year treasury notes.
Wobbly risk sentiment in equity markets finally showed up in the US high yield bond market, as the Bloomberg measure we track of the high yield bond spread to US treasuries widened ten basis points to 273 basis points, the largest single day widening since March in the first weeks of the Iran war.
Ahead of Thursday’s ECB meeting and nearly universal expectations for a 25 basis point rate hike, Eurozone government bond rates are little changed, with the benchmark 2-year German Schatz closing down almost four basis points at 2.67% Tuesday, near the middle of the range of the last several weeks. The market will look for guidance for additional hikes later this year, with just over one and half additional hikes priced into forward expectations.
Currencies
The US dollar tracked wobbly risk sentiment with a negative correlation Tuesday with very little energy ahead of Wednesday’s US May CPI release. EURUSD found resistance in the 1.1575 area Tuesday before dropping back below 1.1540 and then rebounding above 1.1550 early Wednesday. USDJPY continues to test Japan’s Ministry of Finance intent to prevent JPY weakening as it dribbled to new local highs above the 160.00 level, hitting a new high of 160.45 before easing back.
EURCHF hit a new local high since late April, trading as high as 0.9229 and perhaps taking its lead from the tumbling gold price, which posted its lowest daily close of 2026 on Tuesday and fell further early Wednesday.
USDCAD trades near the top of its trading range of the last several months near 1.3950 ahead of today’s Bank of Canada, with no expectation that the BoC will express any urgency for moving the current 2.25% policy rate.
The Australian dollar remained weak and AUDUSD fell almost all the way to 0.7000 on Tuesday, posting a 0.7005 low after falling from an intrasession high above 0.7050. Weaker risk sentiment has also weighed on industrial metals prices this week in addition to prior falls in prices. Precious metals prices also traded weaker. AUDNZD hit a seven-trading day low below 1.2065 early Wednesday. Forward expectations for further RBA hikes hit a new low Wednesday, with odds for any additional policy tightening this year dropping below 66%.
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