Outrageous Predictions
Die Grüne Revolution der Schweiz: 30 Milliarden Franken-Initiative bis 2050
Katrin Wagner
Head of Investment Content Switzerland
Koen Hoorelbeke
Investment and Options Strategist
Markets spent last week repricing a single dominant theme: energy-driven inflation risk colliding with a less accommodative policy outlook. Early-week relief faded as oil volatility and the Fed’s higher-for-longer stance pushed investors back into defensive positioning.
By Friday, the shift was clear. Equities weakened, bond yields surged, and volatility remained elevated, with macro risks firmly back in control of cross-asset direction.
Market pulse: sentiment rotated from cautious optimism to inflation-driven defensiveness.
A fragile rebound gave way to a broad risk reset.
US equities opened stronger, with the S&P 500 up 1.0% (16 Mar) as oil eased and AI names supported sentiment. That strength faded quickly, with a 1.4% decline (18 Mar) after the Fed reinforced a limited easing path, followed by continued pressure into Friday as oil and yields climbed.
Europe and Asia were more exposed to the energy shock. The STOXX 600 fell 2.4% (19 Mar), while Japan and Korea posted sharp declines late in the week as higher energy costs raised concerns around growth and margins.
Market pulse: equities are no longer pricing growth— they’re pricing inflation risk.
Looking ahead
Focus shifts to whether macro pressure feeds into earnings expectations. GameStop and retail-linked names will test risk appetite, while housing (KB Home) and payroll-linked earnings (Paychex) offer insight into consumer resilience. If oil stabilises, equities may find footing; if not, downside risk remains skewed toward cyclicals and Europe.
A potential de-escalation in the Middle East adds a new layer to the outlook. The sharp rebound in equities on easing headlines highlights how sensitive markets remain to oil-driven inflation expectations; however, conflicting signals suggest any relief may remain headline-driven rather than durable.
Volatility remained elevated, driven by macro rather than panic.
The VIX dropped to 23.51 (16 Mar) before rising to 25.09 (18 Mar) as Fed uncertainty and energy risks intensified. Short-term measures confirmed persistent demand for protection around macro catalysts.
By Friday, volatility eased slightly after expiry-related flows, but the broader regime remains elevated, with options still pricing meaningful index moves and sensitivity to headlines.
Market pulse: volatility is stable, but structurally elevated and macro-driven.
Looking ahead
Key triggers shift from central banks to data. PMI, jobless claims, and consumer sentiment will determine whether realised volatility catches up with implied. If oil stabilises, vol could compress; if macro surprises persist, short-dated vol is likely to reprice higher first.
The sharp cross-asset reversal on de-escalation headlines reinforces that volatility remains event-driven. Short-dated measures are likely to stay sensitive to geopolitical news, with rapid repricing in either direction.
Protection remained dominant, but markets did not fully de-risk.
Across the week, options flow continued to favour downside protection, particularly in the largest growth names where confirmed-opening hedging structures dominated. That points more to ongoing risk management than outright bearish conviction, as investors maintained exposure while guarding against macro shocks. The shift was most visible mid-week, as oil and rate uncertainty intensified and demand for protection increased.
Outside of tech, positioning was more balanced. Energy and metals retained constructive flows, especially in selected equities and miners, but upside participation was consistently paired with hedging. Financials added a different dynamic, with flow skewed toward income strategies, suggesting expectations of range-bound conditions rather than strong directional moves.
Market pulse: investors stayed invested, but conviction remained selective and consistently hedged.
Looking ahead
Watch whether protection demand persists into a lighter macro week. A decline in hedging flow — especially in large-cap growth — would signal stabilisation, while continued put demand or short-dated hedging would confirm that macro risk is still dominating positioning.
A sustained easing in geopolitical risk could prompt partial unwinding of downside protection, but uncertainty around the durability of any de-escalation suggests investors may continue to favour hedged structures.
Crypto tracked macro, with bitcoin showing relative strength.
Bitcoin held near $74K early in the week before drifting toward the $67–70K range, outperforming Ethereum and altcoins, which showed clearer weakness. ETF flows turned from supportive to mixed-to-negative, reflecting more cautious institutional positioning.
Options activity confirmed this tone, with hedging in crypto-linked equities and ETF products limiting upside conviction.
Market pulse: bitcoin remains resilient, but broader crypto sentiment is fragile.
Looking ahead
Crypto direction will hinge on macro stability, not crypto-specific catalysts. Watch ETF flows closely—renewed inflows would signal re-risking, while continued outflows would confirm a defensive regime. Correlation with equities remains high.
Bond markets repriced sharply toward inflation risk.
Yields fell early in the week before reversing decisively. The US 10-year moved from around 4.23% (16 Mar) to above 4.40% by Friday, while the 2-year approached 3.90%, reflecting a shift toward higher-for-longer expectations.
European yields followed, with Bund yields above 3.00%, as markets reconsidered the ECB path amid energy-driven inflation concerns.
Market pulse: bonds have moved from pricing cuts to defending against inflation.
Looking ahead
Import price data and consumer sentiment will be critical. Any sign that energy costs are feeding into inflation expectations could push yields higher again. Conversely, softer data could stabilise rates, particularly at the long end.
Lower oil prices could ease inflation expectations and provide temporary relief for bond yields, but durability depends on whether energy markets stabilise.
Energy strength and metals weakness defined the week.
Oil remained elevated, with supply disruptions reinforcing inflation concerns despite intermittent pullbacks. Refined products continued to signal tightness, confirming that the shock is structural rather than headline-driven.
Metals moved in the opposite direction. Gold broke below key levels and saw a sharp decline, while copper and silver weakened on growth concerns and liquidation pressure.
Market pulse: commodities split—energy signals inflation, metals signal stress.
Looking ahead
The key variable remains Middle East developments and supply flows. Oil direction will dictate cross-asset sentiment. Watch refinery margins and diesel spreads—these remain the clearest indicators of real supply stress.
The recent sharp drop in oil on de-escalation signals shows how quickly supply risk can be repriced, but disrupted flows and tight product markets suggest volatility will remain elevated even if tensions ease.
FX markets reflected rates and commodities, not classic safe havens.
The US dollar weakened early in the week before recovering as yields rose. EURUSD traded in wide ranges, while USDJPY remained volatile amid yield shifts and central bank positioning.
Safe-haven behaviour was inconsistent. The Swiss franc failed to attract strong flows, while the Norwegian krone strengthened on energy exposure, highlighting the dominance of rate and commodity dynamics.
Market pulse: FX is driven by yield spreads and energy exposure, not risk aversion alone.
Looking ahead
Watch rate differentials and commodity moves. Energy-linked currencies remain sensitive to oil, while USD direction will depend on yields. Any stabilisation in rates could weaken the dollar again.
Last week confirmed that markets are no longer trading on isolated themes. Energy, inflation, and policy are now tightly linked, and that linkage is driving cross-asset behaviour.
The next phase depends less on central banks and more on whether macro data confirm that the energy shock is feeding into the real economy. Until then, markets are likely to remain reactive, selective, and structurally hedged.
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