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
Iran’s grip on the Strait of Hormuz delivered a week of whiplash – and markets finished lower.
The Iran war entered its fourth week as the dominant force across every asset class. Monday’s 48-hour ultimatum triggered a broad selloff; Tuesday’s delayed-strike announcement sparked a one-day relief rally; Wednesday’s US 15-point peace proposal briefly lifted sentiment; and Iran’s formal rejection of those terms on Thursday sent equities sharply lower once more. The net result: S&P 500 down for the week, Brent crude near USD 110, global bond yields at cycle highs, the VIX at 27.44, and gold testing its 200-day moving average. Traditional safe-haven correlations broke down – gold fell, the yen weakened despite rising Japanese yields, and institutional options flow was defensively positioned without exception across all five sessions.
A week of two halves – brief diplomatic relief swallowed by fresh escalation.
Market pulse: Equities are geopolitics-led; any sustained recovery requires credible Iran de-escalation, not just a one-day diplomatic headline.
Nike earnings on Tuesday 31 March are the week’s key corporate event and an early consumer-demand test. Q1 ends Tuesday – expect rebalancing flows. The April 6 Iran deadline is the dominant binary for equity direction. NFP releases Good Friday to closed markets; the full equity reaction defers to Monday 6 April, the same morning the Iran deadline expires.
VIX holds above 27 – geopolitics, not earnings, runs this vol market.
Market pulse: Volatility stays elevated and range-bound until the Iran situation resolves; the April 6 deadline is the next hard event horizon.
Iran’s April 6 deadline creates a hard VIX event. Dealers’ short-put inventory from the week’s protection buying structurally reinforces downside pressure. A credible ceasefire signal could collapse implied vol rapidly; escalation pushes VIX toward 35+. The VIX term structure – front-month elevated but well below spot – is pricing a specific event window, not open-ended fear.
Protection first, conviction a distant second – across every segment.
All five sessions pointed in the same direction: investors leaned defensive. Index and broad-market hedging was consistent throughout, and the largest technology stocks attracted downside protection on every session from Tuesday onward. Selective long-horizon call buying was present in a handful of names, but it never came close to offsetting the protective tone.
The sector picture added nuance. Energy started the week with genuine upside appetite in selected names, but that eroded steadily and closed on a clearly defensive note. Precious metals swung sharply, with a constructive mid-week session sandwiched between bearish ones; the week still ended on the defensive side. Financials split the room: meaningful protection and genuine accumulation both appeared in size, with no clear sector consensus emerging.
Market pulse: Investors did not abandon exposure, but they consistently paid for insurance – in every segment, across every session.
April 17 is the dominant expiry horizon. The weight of accumulated downside hedging across indices and growth names creates a structural amplifier on any weak session. A credible Iran de-escalation is the clearest path to rapid protection unwinding and vol compression. Until that signal arrives, the defensive positioning bias is likely to persist.
Crypto tracked equities all week – no safe-haven function on offer.
Market pulse: Bitcoin shows relative strength within crypto, but institutional conviction remains absent until macro and geopolitical conditions stabilise.
April 6 is as binary for crypto as for equities – de-escalation could quickly restore risk appetite with Bitcoin as the first beneficiary. Monitor weekly IBIT and ETHA flows: a return to sustained positive IBIT inflows is the clearest signal of institutional re-engagement. Ethereum’s underperformance versus Bitcoin will persist until ETH ETF flows reverse.
Bond markets are pricing a rate hike – not a cut – for the first time this cycle.
Market pulse: Energy-driven inflation has reasserted itself as the dominant macro force, overriding every other central bank consideration globally.
Eurozone flash CPI Tuesday 31 March (consensus 2.5%) will confirm oil-shock pass-through; an upside surprise pushes Bund yields higher. Germany CPI Monday is the first read. NFP on Good Friday defers the full bond-market reaction to Monday 6 April. The BoJ’s late-April meeting is increasingly priced to deliver a 25bp hike.
Brent’s record monthly advance is reshaping every other asset class in its image.
Market pulse: The supply shock is structural – until Hormuz reopens meaningfully, energy prices and their inflationary knock-ons will continue to define the macro backdrop.
April 6 is the key catalyst: credible de-escalation could trigger a sharp Brent reversal and a gold recovery as the liquidity-selling dynamic reverses. OPEC+ spare capacity to offset Hormuz disruption is limited – watch Saudi Arabia and UAE for any output signals. Fertiliser shortages will increasingly feed into agricultural supply balances from April planting decisions onward.
Safe havens in disarray – neither the dollar nor the yen is offering clean shelter.
Market pulse: Currency safe-haven hierarchies are being rewritten by the Iran shock; USDJPY near 160 remains the most important technical level in G10 FX.
Any fresh USDJPY push toward 160 will re-trigger MoF intervention concern. Eurozone CPI Tuesday directly affects EUR positioning. NFP defers the full dollar reaction to Monday 6 April. AUDUSD has meaningful recovery potential in an Iran de-escalation scenario; further escalation targets early-February lows near 0.6944.
The week is shaped by one inescapable fact: Trump’s revised April 6 Iran deadline arrives next Monday with negotiations stalled. Markets will price de-escalation versus escalation probabilities throughout the week, keeping cross-asset correlations unstable.
Germany CPI on Monday 30 March provides the first G7 inflation read of the week; Eurozone flash CPI follows on Tuesday 31 March (consensus 2.5%) – an upside surprise could force ECB hawkishness back onto the table. Tuesday also marks Q1-end, with portfolio-rebalancing flows likely to amplify intraday moves. Nike reports earnings Tuesday as the week’s key corporate event. ISM Manufacturing on Wednesday 1 April (consensus 52.3 versus prior 52.4) will be the first April factory read; any deceleration alongside elevated input costs reinforces stagflation concerns.
The defining data point arrives Good Friday 4 April: US Nonfarm Payrolls (consensus +57,000 after February’s −92,000 shock; unemployment expected at 4.4%). Equity and bond markets are closed for Easter. The full reaction therefore compresses into Monday 6 April – the same morning the Iran deadline formally expires. Two binary events stacked on a single Monday open: keep liquidity available and position accordingly.
Mon 30 Mar – Germany CPI (Mar, prelim)
Tue 31 Mar – Eurozone flash CPI (Mar, consensus 2.5%); Q1-end; Nike earnings (NKE)
Wed 1 Apr – ISM Manufacturing (consensus 52.3)
Fri 4 Apr – US Nonfarm Payrolls (markets closed, Good Friday)
Mon 6 Apr – NFP market reaction + Trump Iran deadline expires
The week of 23 to 27 March confirmed that the Iran war has fractured traditional macro correlations: gold is selling off, the yen is weakening despite rising yields, and bond markets are pricing rate hikes in a slowing economy. The Hormuz supply shock is structural – stranded vessels, fertiliser shortages, and record refined-fuel margins are not temporary features. With the April 6 deadline approaching and talks stalled, the outcome range remains unusually wide. Maintaining diversification, keeping hedge costs in check, and preserving liquidity for a potentially historic Monday 6 April open is the most defensible posture heading into the Easter break.
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