QT_QuickTake

Market Quick Take - 19 March 2026

Macro 3 minutes to read
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Market Quick Take – 19 March 2026


Market drivers and catalysts

  • Equities: US and Europe fell on oil and rate fears, while Asia rose on chip strength and Korea reform hopes.
  • Volatility: VIX elevated, Fed uncertainty, oil-driven inflation risk, event-heavy calendar, protection demand high
  • Digital Assets: Crypto tracks macro, ETF flows mixed, IBIT relatively resilient
  • Fixed Income: US short treasury yield jump post-FOMC, yield curve flattens. JGB yields calmer awaiting BoJ Governor Ueda presser.
  • Currencies: US dollar rises on FOMC and as safe haven as war in Iran intensifies concerns. CHF not serving as a safe haven.
  • Commodities: Brent surges while gold, silver and copper slump as Middle East escalation and hawkish Fed unsettle markets
  • Macro events: Swiss National Bank, Sweden Riksbank, Bank of England, ECB Meetings

Macro headlines

  • The Fed maintained the federal funds rate at 3.5%–3.75% at the Wednesday FOMC meeting, citing solid economic activity and elevated inflation amid uncertainty from the Iran conflict. One rate cut is expected this year and another in 2027, no material change from the prior forecasts from December. GDP growth forecasts were raised for 2026 through 2028, while unemployment and inflation projections were slightly adjusted upward. The vote on the decision to keep the rate unchanged was 11-1, with only Stephen Miran dissenting in favour of a cut. Powell stated the Fed won't overlook energy-induced inflation and discussed future rate hikes, though they aren't the base case for most.
  • Middle Eastern energy attacks raised fears of global disruptions. Iran targeted a Qatari LNG plant after Israel struck Iran's South Pars field and Qatari authorities cited “extensive damage” after at least one missile was not intercepted. Trump, aware of the Israeli attack, advised against further strikes and waived the Jones Act for 60 days to lower US transport costs.
  • The Bank of Japan left its policy rate unchanged at 0.75% as expected, with one hawk dissenting in favour of a 25-bp hike. The statement guided for further tightening if inflation develops as expected and did not change its price forecasts despite the uncertainty from the war in Iran. Short Japanese yields were steady to a basis point higher, suggesting that forward expectations for Bank of Japan tightening remain for a possible hike in either at the April or June meeting followed by a likely further hike later this year. Governor Ueda is out speaking in late Tokyo trading hours Wednesday as this report is being compiled.
  • Japan's core machinery orders fell 5.5% to ¥982.4 billion in January 2026, better than the expected 9.6% drop. Manufacturing orders fell 12.5%, while non-manufacturing rose 6.8%. Private-sector orders rose 13.7% annually, exceeding forecasts. These orders are a key indicator of future capital expenditure.
  • US producer prices rose 0.7% in February 2026, the largest increase in seven months, surpassing forecasts. Goods prices increased 1.1%, led by a 48.9% rise in vegetable prices. Service prices rose 0.5%, with traveller accommodation up 5.7%. Core PPI rose 0.5%. Annual headline producer inflation hit 3.4%, with core inflation at 3.9%.
  • The Bank of Canada kept its overnight rate at 2.25% in March 2026, citing suitable policy amid Middle East conflict-induced energy price volatility. GDP contracted 0.6% in Q4 last year, and CPI inflation is expected to rise due to trade costs and higher energy prices, despite February's 1.8% inflation.

Macro calendar highlights (times in GMT)

0700 – UK Jan. Unemployment Rate / Average Hourely Earnings
0700 – UK Feb. Jobless Claims Change / Claimant Count Rate
0830 – Switzerland Swiss National Bank announcement
0830 – Sweden Riksbank announcement
1200 – UK Bank of England announcement
1230 – US Weekly Initial Jobless Claims
1230 – US Mar. Philadelphia Fed survey
1315 – ECB announcement
1400 – US Jan. New Home Sales
1430 – EIA's Natural Gas Storage Change

Earnings this week

  • Today: Accenture, Enel, Fedex, Darden Restaurants, Alibaba Group, Accenture, FedEx, PlanetLabs
  • Friday: Carnival, Xpeng

For all macro, earnings, and dividend events check Saxo’s calendar.


Equities

  • USA: The S&P 500 fell 1.4% to 6,624.70, the Nasdaq lost 1.5% to 22,152.42, and the Dow dropped 1.6% to 46,225.15, as the Federal Reserve kept rates unchanged, signalled only one cut this year, and faced a hotter producer inflation reading while oil jumped after strikes on Iranian gas facilities. AMD rose 1.6% on a Samsung memory partnership for AI infrastructure, while Nvidia slipped 0.8% despite a China chip-sales approval and Macy’s gained 4.7% on better profit and a softer tariff hit. Micron then fell 4% after hours because a $5 billion increase in fiscal 2026 capital spending overshadowed a strong quarter and upbeat guidance.
  • Europe: Europe stayed under pressure as the Euro STOXX 50 fell 0.6% to 5,736.85 and the STOXX 600 slipped 0.7% to 598.25, after another jump in oil and gas prices revived inflation worries and ended a two-day rebound. Consumer staples and healthcare led the retreat, while banks held up better as higher energy prices pushed yields higher and kept the higher-rate theme alive. Among stock movers, Prosus dropped 7.4% as Tencent’s heavier AI spending unsettled sentiment around China tech, Logitech fell 6.1% after a UBS downgrade, and Diploma jumped 17.8% to a record after raising full-year guidance. Markets now watch whether takeover talk around UniCredit and Commerzbank can keep financials firmer if energy stress persists.
  • Asia: Asia’s last full session was much stronger, led by South Korea, where the KOSPI surged 5.0% to 5,925.03 on shareholder-friendly reform hopes and chip strength, while Japan’s Nikkei 225 climbed 2.9% to 55,239.40. Gains were calmer elsewhere, with Hong Kong’s Hang Seng up 0.6% to 26,117.95, China’s CSI 300 rising 0.5% to 4,658.33, and Australia’s ASX 200 edging 0.3% higher to 8,640.60. Samsung Electronics jumped 7.5% after stressing strong AI chip demand and highlighting multi-year supply agreements, while SK Hynix rose 8.9% as investors kept backing the memory story. In Australia, NextDC gained about 3.6% as data-centre names rode the same theme. The question for Thursday was whether that optimism could survive the Fed’s tougher tone and another oil spike.

Volatility

  • Volatility remains elevated and is still being driven by macro uncertainty rather than technical factors. The VIX closed at 25.09 (+12.16%), with short-term measures even higher (VIX1D 22.13, VIX9D 26.03), reflecting increased demand for near-term protection around central bank decisions and geopolitical risks. The Federal Reserve kept rates unchanged at 3.50%–3.75%, but highlighted elevated uncertainty, particularly around inflation and the impact of rising energy prices linked to tensions in the Middle East. With Brent crude briefly moving above $112, investors are now balancing two risks: persistent inflation that delays rate cuts, and weaker growth if energy costs remain high.
  • Today remains event-heavy, with ECB and BoE decisions, US data, and key earnings all potential catalysts, meaning volatility is likely to stay elevated in the near term rather than quickly fading.
  • SPX expected move: Options pricing suggests the S&P 500 is implying roughly a ±99-point move (±1.5%) into Friday, while today’s expiry alone implies around ±68 points (±1.0%), reflecting a market that is cautious but not pricing extreme stress.
  • Skew indicator: Short-term positioning remains defensive. In today’s expiry, downside puts around the 6,625 level continue to trade richer than equivalent calls, indicating investors are still willing to pay more for protection than for upside exposure.

Digital Assets

  • Digital assets are trading in line with broader macro sentiment, with pressure following the Fed’s cautious tone and the rise in oil prices. Bitcoin is trading around $70,600, Ethereum near $2,180, while Solana and XRP are also slightly lower. The key takeaway for investors is that crypto is once again behaving like a macro-sensitive asset, reacting to interest rate expectations, dollar strength, and geopolitical developments rather than purely crypto-specific drivers.
  • Crypto-linked equities such as COIN, MSTR, MARA, RIOT and CLSK are also under pressure, reinforcing the broader risk-off tone across the digital asset ecosystem.
  • Flows into crypto ETFs remain mixed. Recent data shows net outflows from US-listed bitcoin and ether ETFs on 18 March, suggesting a pause in institutional demand. However, the previous session still saw solid inflows into IBIT and ETHA, indicating that longer-term interest remains intact but more selective. For investors, this points to consolidation rather than a structural reversal, with flows increasingly dependent on macro stability.

Fixed Income

  • US Treasuries sold off hard Wednesday and the yield curve flattened, with much of the move in the wake of the FOMC meeting, but likely inspired as well by the further dramatic pressure higher on global energy prices from the latest escalation in the war in Iran. The benchmark 2-year yield rushed higher to 3.80% after trading near 3.73% before the Fed meeting and closing Tuesday at 3.67%, while the benchmark 10-year yield rose less sharply, up more than six basis points Wednesday and adding less than a basis point in Asian trading hours Wednesday, trading below 4.28% as of this writing and below the cycle high of 4.30% from late January.
  • Japan’s government bond yield curve steepened, with the benchmark 2-year JGB yield nudging a basis point higher to 1.27% before Bank of Japan governor Ueda’s press conference and the benchmark 10-year JGB yields absorbing the jump in US treasury yields and inflation concerns from the rush higher in global energy prices stemming from the war in Iran as it rose four basis points to 2.26%.

Commodities

  • Brent crude surged to USD 113 after Iran carried out attacks on a major LNG facility in Qatar, reportedly causing “extensive damage.” The strike is one of several targeting energy infrastructure following Israeli attacks on Iran’s giant South Pars gas field, marking a clear escalation with direct implications for global energy supply. The six-month Brent spread surged to a fresh record near USD 25 highlighting the acute tightness.
  • Meanwhile, WTI continues to trade below USD 100, with the discount to Brent widening to USD 16.5. This divergence reflects both regional dislocations and rising speculation that the Trump administration may consider measures such as an export ban to curb domestic fuel prices or potentially intervene more directly in oil markets.
  • Natural gas prices in Europe and Asia look set to extend gains after Qatar confirmed significant damage at the Ras Laffan complex, the world’s largest LNG export hub. The site—already effectively cut off since the start of hostilities—may face a prolonged restart timeline even in the event of a ceasefire. The EU gas benchmark jumps 35% on the opening, up 128% month-to-date, underscoring the market’s sensitivity to supply disruptions from the Gulf.
  • Copper slumped to a December low of USD 5.44 per pound as surging energy costs raise concerns about global growth and, by extension, demand for industrial metals. The decline follows weeks of rising exchange-monitored inventories, which reached a multi-decade high and eroded investor appetite. The combination of weak fundamentals and a technical breakdown have triggered an acceleration in long liquidation.
  • Gold fell sharply for a second day after breaking key support below USD 5,000, with profit-taking accelerating amid a stronger dollar and a more hawkish tone from Fed Chair Jerome Powell following the latest FOMC meeting. Silver tracked the move lower but underperformed, reflecting its higher beta to both gold and the economic cycle. Concerns that elevated energy costs may weigh on global activity add further pressure, while its sensitivity to speculative positioning continues to amplify downside moves during corrections. In the current environment of extreme uncertainty, recent popular trades suffer the most, no matter what one may otherwise think about the longer-term outlook.

Currencies

  • The US dollar strengthened on the back of the FOMC meeting, perhaps in part on the meeting outcome, but likely more so on safe haven seeking on the fresh spike in world energy prices on the escalation of attacks on energy infrastructure in the Gulf region as the war in Iran continues. For whatever reason, US treasury yields surged as the Fed predicted higher growth and slightly higher inflation in its forecasts and this fresh pressure higher in energy prices suggests at least near-term inflation risks have risen further. EURUSD dropped back below 1.1500 to near 1.1470 after a 1.1450 low, with the price action relatively calm when noting that global oil prices posted their highest daily closing levels since the conflict started and major equity indices are back near the lows at the start of the week, when EURUSD traded a 1.1411 low.
  • USDJPY failed to take out 160.00 after testing just above the recent 159.75 high and even hitting 159.90 amidst broad USD strength, with the Bank of Japan maintaining a tightening posture and not surprising either way in the monetary policy statement. Bank of Japan governor Ueda is out speaking as this report is being compiled.
  • EURCHF rose to local more than two-week highs and briefly touched 0.9100 ahead of the SNB and ECB meetings today, perhaps as gold prices retreated sharply yesterday, but in any case a notable shift in the CHF behavior as it weakened despite risk sentiment cratering elsewhere.

For a global look at markets – go to Inspiration.

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