QT_QuickTake

Market Quick Take - 19 June 2026

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


Market drivers and catalysts

  • Equities: US chips led, Europe was mixed, Asia rallied in Japan and Korea while China and Hong Kong were closed.
  • Volatility: VIX falls, geopolitical relief, hawkish Fed, institutional hedging
  • Digital Assets: Bitcoin below $63k, ETH near $1.7k, ETF put hedging, mixed institutional positioning
  • Commodities: Oil rebounds on US-Iran talks postponement; Gold remains on the defensive
  • Fixed Income: US treasury reaction to FOMC meeting holds, as market eyes August or September FOMC hike.
  • Currencies: USD surge extends post-FOMC. USDJPY to multi-year highs with no intervention threat yet in evidence.
  • Macro: US Juneteenth holiday – markets closed

Macro

  • US-Iran Deal: While shipping has begun returning to the Strait of Hormuz, easing global energy supply concerns and lifting risk sentiment across assets, the ink has barely dried on the MOU before the first challenge emerged. US Vice President Vance has delayed his planned trip to Switzerland for talks with Iran that were intended to mark the start of nuclear negotiations. Allegedly, the move follows Iran's cancellation of the same meeting and the proposed 60-day negotiation period with the US after Israel reportedly refused to withdraw from Lebanon and halt attacks, a move Tehran claims violates the MOU's first clause.
  • Philadelphia Fed Manufacturing: The June Philly Fed general business conditions index rose to 10.3, above the prior month's -0.4 and slightly ahead of the 10.0 consensus. New orders surged to 27.3 from -1.7, though the prices paid component climbed to 53.2 from 47.9, reinforcing inflation concerns.
  • Bank of England: The MPC voted 7-2 to hold rates at 3.75%, with two dissenters favouring a 25bp hike to 4.00%. The BoE noted the recent fall in oil prices was "encouraging" on inflation. UK unemployment came in at 4.9% for the three months to April, below the 5.0% consensus.
  • Swiss National Bank: The SNB held rates unchanged. Switzerland's Federal Expert Group revised its 2026 GDP growth forecast down to 0.9% from 1.0%, citing higher energy price headwinds.
  • Greater Manchester mayor Andy Burnham won a decisive victory for the ruling Labour party in a by-election that delivers him a seat in the UK parliament and with it a pathway to challenge Prime Minister Keir Starmer for his job. Burnham's victory is seen as a significant challenge to Starmer's leadership, with Burnham having made clear his designs on the prime minister's job and calling the win a "final chance to change" for the Labour party.

Macro calendar highlights (times in GMT)

  • 0600 – UK May Public Sector Net Borrowing
  • 0600 – UK May Retail Sales

Juneteenth US holiday: US cash equity and bond markets are closed with futures trading have moderated trading hours.

Earnings events

Next week

  • Monday: Alimentation Couche-Tard
  • Tuesday: FedEx, Carnival Corporation
  • Wednesday: Micron
  • Thursday: H&M Hennes & Mauritz, Darden Restaurants

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


Equities

  • USA: The S&P 500 rose 1.1% to 7,500.58 on Thursday, the Nasdaq 100 jumped 2.5%, and the Dow added 0.1%, as chipmakers powered the rebound. The Philadelphia Semiconductor Index surged 6.4% to a record high after Intel jumped 10.6% on a US chip-making partnership with Apple, while Nvidia gained 3.0% and Micron hit a record on AI memory strength. Accenture fell 18.0% after cutting the top end of its revenue outlook, and Kroger lost 8.4% after weaker profit guidance.
  • Europe: European equities closed mixed on Thursday, with the Stoxx 600 down 0.3%, the Euro Stoxx 50 up 0.4%, the DAX up 0.4%, the CAC up 0.4%, and the FTSE 100 down 1.0%. Lower oil prices helped inflation fears but hurt energy shares, with Shell, BP and TotalEnergies each down more than 2%. Capgemini fell 8.9% after Accenture’s warning raised questions over IT consulting demand in an AI world, while London Stock Exchange Group dropped 7.0%. Infineon rose 6.4% as Europe’s chip names joined the global semiconductor party.
  • Asia: Asian equities were firmer in Friday trading where markets were open, with Japan’s Nikkei 225 up 0.8% at a record high and South Korea’s Kospi up 3.1% as lower oil prices and AI chip optimism supported sentiment. The move extended a strong week for both markets, with Japanese exporters helped by a weaker yen and Korean chip leaders Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix remaining central to the rally. Mainland China, Hong Kong and Taiwan were closed for the Dragon Boat Festival, leaving Thursday’s 1.6% Hang Seng decline as the latest full session there. Markets now watch whether the oil relief lasts.

Volatility

  • Volatility eased into the US long weekend, with the VIX falling 11.1% to 16.40 on Thursday while the S&P 500 gained 1.08%. Short-term volatility measures fell even more sharply, with VIX1D down 24.2% and VIX9D down 25.2%, reflecting a market that has become more comfortable with the near-term outlook following the US-Iran memorandum of understanding and the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz. At the same time, investors continue to digest the Federal Reserve’s hawkish tone, with markets now pricing a higher probability that rates could remain elevated for longer. Looking ahead, the key question is whether improving geopolitical conditions can offset concerns about tighter monetary policy and a stronger US dollar.
  • Options flow suggests institutions were still actively hedging despite the market rally. Large SPX, SPY, IWM and QQQ put positions were opened across multiple expiries, while other investors simultaneously maintained upside exposure through call structures. In other words, investors are not abandoning risk assets, but they are increasingly paying for protection against unexpected setbacks. With US markets closed today for Juneteenth, liquidity will be thinner globally and there is no SPX expected move or daily expiry skew indicator to analyse for this session.

Digital Assets

  • Digital assets weakened despite calmer equity markets, highlighting that crypto remains highly sensitive to interest-rate expectations and broader risk appetite. Bitcoin traded around USD 62,750, while ether hovered near USD 1,700. Solana, XRP and most major altcoins also moved lower after Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh's first policy meeting reinforced expectations that US rates could stay higher for longer. While the US-Iran agreement helped reduce energy-market stress, it provided little support for cryptocurrencies, which continue to underperform technology and AI-related equities.
  • Crypto-related equities reflected the softer tone. IBIT fell 2.0% and ETHA lost 1.5%, while MicroStrategy declined 3.5%. At the same time, options activity points to a market that is repositioning rather than aggressively turning bearish. Large put activity appeared in both IBIT and ETHA, suggesting some investors are adding downside protection, while call activity in MicroStrategy, Coinbase, Core Scientific and other crypto-linked names indicates continued interest in upside participation. The overall picture is mixed: institutional investors appear to be managing risk more carefully, but there is little evidence of a broad capitulation from the sector.

Commodities

  • The Bloomberg Commodity Index is down 6% this month, reducing its year-to-date gain to 18%. Losses have been broad-based across most sectors, led by energy and precious metals, both down more than 8%, followed by grains at -4% and industrial metals at -2.5%. Over the past week, losses have been concentrated in energy amid expectations of a relatively swift recovery in supply from the Persian Gulf as the Strait of Hormuz looks set to reopen.
  • Brent crude has rebounded to USD 80 from Thursday's low near USD 77 following confirmation that US-Iran talks will not begin on Friday after Israel reportedly refused to withdraw from Lebanon and halt attacks, a move Tehran claims violates the MOU's first clause. While flows through the Strait appear set to resume following the lifting of blockades, the latest developments highlight how fragile the agreement remains. With that in mind, traders will need to balance the downside risk from a near-term mini tsunami of supply against lingering geopolitical risks and the possibility of a slower-than-expected recovery in Persian Gulf production and exports.
  • Gold remains on the defensive for a third day as traders continue to digest the FOMC's hawkish message, with the stronger dollar proving the main headwind. While the market initially welcomed the US-Iran MOU and the prospect of lower energy prices, attention has shifted back to the Fed and the possibility of another rate hike later this year. That said, much of the recent correction may already have priced in a more restrictive policy outlook and with crude oil and fuel prices falling sharply, inflation pressures are beginning to ease, potentially challenging the Fed's upgraded inflation forecasts. For now, gold remains stuck in technical limbo, trading around USD 230 below its 200-day moving average at USD 4,464, while key support remains the USD 4,000-4,100 area.
  • The return of El Niño: Weather is potentially once again emerging as a key commodity market driver after NOAA's recent confirmation that El Niño has developed in the tropical Pacific raising the risk of renewed weather-related volatility over the next 6 to 18 months. The result can be drought in some regions, excessive rainfall in others, and increased risks of flooding, heat stress and infrastructure disruptions across key agricultural, energy and mining regions.

Fixed Income

  • US Treasuries traded sideways Thursday after their strong reaction to the FOMC meeting, as front-end yields remained elevated on the anticipation of an incoming Fed rate hike as soon as the next meeting in August, but now almost fully priced for a September hike. The benchmark 2-year treasury yield closed Thursday almost unchanged near 4.18% and therefore at cycle highs.
  • Meanwhile, the significant US treasury yield curve flattening post-FOMC also held, with the benchmark 10-year treasury closing near 4.45%, only a few basis points from the recent range low. The 30-year yield slipped as low as 4.86% Thursday, but closed near 4.90%, down three basis points .

Currencies

  • The US dollar continued to strengthen across the board in the wake of the FOMC meeting as the market firms its anticipation of a first Fed rate hike since 2023 at one of the coming meetings. EURUSD fell close to the March low of 1.1411, posting its lowest level early Friday at 1.1418.
  • USDJPY traders bid the rate up above 161.00 for the first time since July of 2024 as no efforts at intervention to prevent JPY weakening from Japan’s Ministry of finance were in evidence after it intervened strongly at lower levels in April and May USDJPY traded as high as 161.46, with the 161.95 high from 2024 the highest level the exchange rate has traded since the 1980’s.
  • Sterling traded much weaker versus the strong US dollar, but sideways to slightly weaker versus the euro after an indifferent Bank of England meeting for UK rates as the bank looks ready to pause until at least September before possibly hiking rates, about what the market was expecting going into the meeting. GBP saw no reaction to Andy Burnham’s by-election win and his impending challenge of Keir Starmer to lead the Labour Party and become the UK’s next prime minister.

For a global look at markets – go to Inspiration.

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