Macro

Saxo Market Compass - 27 April 2026

Koen Hoorelbeke
Investment and Options Strategist

Saxo Weekly Market Compass – 27 April 2026

Recap of last week (20 to 24 April 2026)


Oil shocks meet resilient risk appetite.

Markets balanced rising geopolitical tension and higher oil prices against steady earnings and AI-driven momentum. US equities extended gains, while Europe lagged under energy pressure. Volatility stayed contained but elevated, signalling caution rather than stress, while bonds and commodities reflected a renewed inflation impulse.

Market pulse: Resilience persists, but the macro backdrop is becoming less forgiving.


Equities

Narrow leadership continues; regional performance diverges along energy exposure lines.

  • US equities: Narrow leadership continues to carry the market. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 pushed higher through the week (April 23–24), supported by strong earnings and semiconductor momentum. Intel’s +23.6% surge (April 24) and gains in AMD and Arm reinforced AI-led strength, while weaker prints such as ServiceNow (–17.8%) exposed fragility beneath the surface. Oil-driven inflation concerns capped broader participation, keeping the rally concentrated. Market pulse: Strong at the top, but increasingly dependent on a narrow group.
  • Europe and Asia: Energy divergence defines regional performance. European equities declined, with the STOXX 600 down through the week as rising oil prices pressured margins, particularly in transport and industrials. Energy majors provided partial support, while selective earnings (Nestlé, ASM International) offered pockets of strength. In Asia, Japan and Korea outperformed on chip demand, while oil-importing economies showed strain. Market pulse: Global equities are diverging along energy exposure lines.

Looking ahead – equities

Focus shifts to earnings concentration risk. Results from Microsoft, Amazon, Meta Platforms, Alphabet, and Apple will test whether AI-led leadership can broaden. Any disappointment could expose the market’s narrow base, especially with oil still elevated.


Volatility

Elevated but orderly: hedging persists without panic.

  • VIX and implied moves: The VIX held between 18 and 19 throughout the week, with spikes tied to Strait of Hormuz developments fading quickly. Options pricing reflected controlled risk, with implied weekly moves tightening from around 1.4% early in the week to below 1% mid-week before re-expanding. Skew remained defensive at times, with downside protection demand reappearing despite strong equity performance.

Market pulse: Markets are hedged, not stressed.

Looking ahead – volatility

With the Federal Reserve decision and heavy earnings calendar, implied moves have widened again toward roughly 1.6% to 1.7%. Volatility is likely to be event-driven rather than trend-driven, with skew direction offering the clearest signal of sentiment shifts.


Options sentiment

Hedged participation dominates: engagement without conviction.

Options flow showed consistent demand for downside protection across indices and cyclical sectors, particularly early in the week. Investors remained active but cautious, maintaining hedges rather than expressing outright bearish views.

Selective upside participation appeared in large-cap technology, energy, and financials, but rarely in isolation. Call buying was typically paired with protective structures, including collars and two-sided volatility trades, especially around earnings and macro catalysts. By week’s end, positioning evolved into more balanced setups, with increased use of paired strategies.

Market pulse: Investors are participating, but always with protection attached.

Looking ahead – options sentiment

Expect continued preference for structured exposure into major earnings and the Fed. If realised volatility exceeds implied levels, positioning may shift toward more directional trades; otherwise, two-sided strategies are likely to dominate. Watch skew and short-dated flows for early signals of conviction returning.


Digital assets

Stable but selective: institutional flows drive the narrative.

  • Bitcoin and Ethereum: Bitcoin held in the 75,000 to 78,000 range, while Ethereum remained softer near 2,300. Institutional flows remained the key driver, with IBIT seeing steady inflows, while ETHA showed mixed demand. Crypto equities reflected selective risk appetite, and altcoins remained secondary to broader sentiment.

Market pulse: Stability holds, but conviction is uneven and flow-dependent.

Looking ahead – digital assets

Crypto will continue to track macro risk sentiment, particularly equity volatility and rates. Sustained inflows into IBIT versus mixed ETHA flows suggest leadership remains concentrated in Bitcoin unless broader risk appetite strengthens.


Fixed income

Yields rise as inflation concerns return via energy.

  • US Treasuries and European yields: US Treasury yields moved higher, with the 10-year near 4.30 to 4.35% during the week, driven by oil-linked inflation expectations. The 2-year fluctuated between roughly 3.72% and 3.84%, reflecting uncertainty around policy direction. European yields followed, pressured by similar inflation dynamics.

Market pulse: Bonds are repricing inflation risk, not growth optimism.

Looking ahead – fixed income

The Federal Reserve decision and forward guidance will be key. Any shift in tone toward persistent inflation could push yields higher, while a more cautious stance may stabilise the front end. Oil remains the critical input variable.


Commodities

Energy leads: supply disruption drives the complex.

  • Oil and energy: Oil moved above 100 mid-week as supply disruptions intensified, lifting broader commodity indices. Fuel products led gains, while natural gas diverged lower on oversupply. Agricultural markets began pricing fertiliser shortages and weather risks, while metals remained mixed.

Market pulse: Commodities are being driven by supply shocks, not demand strength.

Looking ahead – commodities

Oil remains the dominant driver. Any progress in negotiations could ease prices quickly, while continued disruption may extend inflationary pressure across the complex. Watch agricultural markets for second-round effects from fertiliser constraints and weather patterns.


Currencies

Dollar mixed as traditional correlations weaken.

  • US dollar and majors: The US dollar showed mixed performance, firming early in the week before softening. EURUSD traded around 1.17, while USDJPY hovered near 159 to 160, raising intervention risks. Commodity-linked currencies strengthened alongside oil, reflecting selective macro alignment.

Market pulse: FX markets are driven more by rates than risk sentiment.

Looking ahead – currencies

Central bank divergence will be the key driver, with Fed guidance and global policy signals shaping flows. USD direction will depend more on rate expectations than oil unless volatility spikes.


Key takeaways

  • The S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 extended gains through the week of April 20–24, led by Intel at +23.6% and broader AI semiconductor momentum; European equities declined with the STOXX 600 under oil-related margin pressure.
  • The VIX held between 18 and 19 throughout the week, with intraday spikes tied to geopolitical developments fading quickly – elevated but orderly.
  • Options flow showed a consistent preference for hedged participation: downside protection across indices and cyclicals, with selective upside in technology, energy, and financials paired with collars and two-sided structures.
  • Bitcoin held in the 75,000–78,000 range, supported by steady IBIT inflows; Ethereum remained softer near 2,300 with mixed ETF demand.
  • US 10-year Treasury yields moved to 4.30–4.35% and the 2-year fluctuated between 3.72% and 3.84%, driven by oil-linked inflation expectations rather than growth signals.
  • Oil moved above 100 mid-week on Strait of Hormuz supply disruptions, lifting broader commodity indices; natural gas diverged lower on oversupply.
  • EURUSD traded around 1.17; USDJPY hovered near 159–160, raising intervention concerns as FX markets tracked rate differentials more than risk sentiment.
  • Cross-asset positioning reflected caution beneath resilient surfaces: equities higher but narrow; volatility contained but skewed defensively; bonds repricing inflation, not growth.

Looking ahead – week of 27 April to 1 May 2026

The coming week is structurally complex. The Federal Reserve’s rate decision arrives against a backdrop of oil-driven inflation risk that markets have already begun pricing, leaving guidance tone as the dominant variable. At the same time, concentrated earnings from the five largest US technology companies will determine whether the current AI-led equity rally can broaden or sustain its current pace.

The macro calendar is dense. Consumer confidence data and the start of big tech earnings set the tone early in the week, followed by the FOMC decision mid-week alongside earnings from Microsoft and Amazon. Apple reports toward the end of the week, with the US employment report rounding out a period that could reset risk appetite across asset classes.

The Fed decision is the single most binary risk event. Any shift in forward guidance toward sustained higher rates – in response to oil-driven inflation – could meaningfully reprice the front end of the yield curve and disrupt the equity rally’s narrow foundation. A more neutral or data-dependent tone may provide relief for bonds and extend the equity bid, though oil remains an independent variable capable of overriding either scenario.

Calendar highlights (times in GMT)

Mon 27 Apr – China PMI; Asian market open sentiment
Tue 28 Apr – US consumer confidence; Alphabet Q1 earnings after close; Meta Platforms Q1 earnings after close
Wed 29 Apr – FOMC rate decision (20:00 GMT); Fed Chair press conference; Microsoft Q1 earnings after close; Amazon Q1 earnings after close
Thu 30 Apr – Apple Q1 earnings after close; US initial jobless claims
Fri 1 May – US non-farm payrolls (April); US unemployment rate


Concluding remarks

Markets remain resilient, but the balance is becoming more delicate. Strong earnings and AI-driven momentum continue to support equities, yet rising energy costs are feeding into inflation expectations across asset classes. Volatility remains contained, but positioning shows clear caution beneath the surface.

The coming week will be decisive. Central bank guidance and concentrated earnings will determine whether markets can sustain their current trajectory or begin to reflect a more challenging macro environment.


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