Quarterly Outlook
Upending the global order at blinding speed
John J. Hardy
Global Head of Macro Strategy
Investment and Options Strategist
Markets faced a volatile week as the US Federal Reserve held rates steady and geopolitical tensions surged after the US launched strikes on Iranian nuclear sites. Equities and digital assets were pressured by risk-off sentiment, while volatility spiked on options expiry and war headlines. Central bank policy, macro data, and sector rotation drove sharp moves across asset classes.
Markets were shaken by war risks and mixed policy signals.
Markets swung on Fed policy and US-Iran tensions. Early-week gains faded as Trump’s threats and weak US retail sales weighed on sentiment. The S&P 500 lost 0.8% Tuesday, while tech and energy diverged—AMD soared 9% on an analyst upgrade; Exxon and Chevron led on oil gains. Europe fell midweek (DAX -1.1% Tuesday) but rebounded Friday as hopes for diplomacy returned. UK’s FTSE 100 slid 0.9% for the week. Asia was mixed, with the Nikkei down 0.5% Friday, as risk appetite remained weak on war headlines and policy uncertainty. Defensive and energy stocks outperformed by week’s end.
Tensions and data swings drove investors toward safer sectors.
The VIX moved sharply, peaking above 21.6 on Tuesday as war risks and Fed anxiety surged. Volatility remained elevated into Friday's triple witching expiry (VIX > 20), before easing below recent highs (20.62 at Friday’s close). Short-term swings and options activity were pronounced but are expected to fade as expiry effects roll off.
Volatility stayed high but could ease as expiry noise fades.
Bitcoin held above $104,500 midweek but dropped below $101,000 into the weekend as war risks and Fed uncertainty hit sentiment. Ether followed, sliding to $2,250 by Friday. IBIT and ETHA spot ETFs saw outflows late in the week, though quarter-to-date inflows signal ongoing institutional adoption. Crypto stocks were mixed, with Coinbase surging on regulatory optimism, while MicroStrategy slipped. Markets remain highly sensitive to macro headlines.
Crypto tracked macro jitters, despite steady institutional demand.
US Treasury yields were rangebound, with the 10-year near 4.39% and 2-year at 3.92% by Friday, little changed despite bombings in Iran. The Fed projected just two cuts in 2025, keeping yields anchored.
Japanese government bonds shrugged off hot May CPI, with the 10-year yield edging down to ~1.40%. SNB and Norges Bank cut rates; BoE held steady. High yield US credit spreads tightened slightly even as risk sentiment soured.
Yields stayed steady as central banks signalled caution.
Crude oil spiked after the US struck Iranian nuclear sites, with Brent touching a five-month high near $80 before easing as fears of immediate escalation faded. A ten-dollar risk premium is now priced in but could unwind rapidly.
Gold rallied towards $3,400 on safe-haven flows, but profit-taking set in post-FOMC. Silver and platinum also retreated after multi-year highs.
Copper saw a dramatic squeeze in London on low inventories and tariff-driven shipping, with cash-to-3’s spread hitting the highest since 2021.
Oil, metals and gold swung wildly on war and supply fears.
The US dollar strengthened broadly on risk aversion, with EURUSD rebounding above 1.1500 and USDJPY above 147 after the US strikes. JPY weakened sharply on Japan’s new bond issuance plans.
The Swiss franc reversed losses after the SNB cut rates but hinted at more to come. AUD and NZD were the weakest G10 currencies, falling on global growth fears.
The dollar gained ground as investors sought safety.
This past week’s market action was dominated by geopolitics, central bank caution, and a surge in volatility tied to war risks and options expiry. While sentiment improved on brief diplomatic signals, risks remain high for all asset classes. Investors should stay alert to further developments in the Middle East and shifting Fed signals.
More from the author |
---|