QT_QuickTake

Market Quick Take - 20 May 2026

Macro 3 minutes to read
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Market Quick Take – 20 May 2026


Market drivers and catalysts

  • Equities: Equities slipped in the US and Asia as yields rose, while Europe held firmer on company-specific gains.
  • Volatility: Bond rout, Nvidia earnings, higher yields pressure tech
  • Digital Assets: Bitcoin stabilises, ETF flows soften
  • Fixed Income: US treasury yields remain elevated after Tuesday surge. Japan’s yield curve flattens on strong demand for longest dated JGBs.
  • Currencies: US dollar remains on strong side, Japanese yen trying to keep up with greenback
  • Commodities: Brent holds above USD 110 as rising yields pressure gold, sugar gains on weather risks and ethanol demand
  • Macro events: UK Apr. CPI, US FOMC Minutes

Macro headlines

  • US 30-year yield hits highest since 2007 as investor concerns mount that accelerating inflation will force central bankers to raise interest rates, threatening to slow the US economy and lift borrowing costs for US home buyers and corporations.
  • Trump warned US strikes on Iran could resume within days if talks with Gulf nations fail, adding to market volatility.
  • US pending home sales rose 1.4% in April, a third straight gain and above the 1% forecast. Sales were up 3.2% year-over-year, with increases in the Northeast, Midwest, and West. NAR’s Lawrence Yun said buyers are cautiously returning despite higher mortgage rates and warned that without more housing supply, prices could outpace wages and hurt homeownership.
  • Canada’s headline inflation rose to 2.8% in April from 2.4%, a two-year high but below the 3.1% forecast, mainly on a 19.2% jump in energy that lifted transportation inflation to 7.6%. BoC’s trimmed-mean and median core measures fell to 2.0% and 2.1%, their lowest in five years. Food inflation eased to 3.5%, and shelter edged up to 1.8%.
  • The UN cut its 2026 global growth forecast to 2.5%, 0.2 ppts below January’s view and under the estimated 3.0% in 2025, citing inflation from the Middle East conflict. Strong labor markets, resilient demand, and AI-driven trade and investment provide some support, but the outlook stays weak. Energy price gains are boosting producers while pressuring households and firms. The US is seen growing 2.0% in 2026.

Macro calendar highlights (times in GMT)

· 0600 – UK Apr. CPI and PPI
· 0600 – Germany Apr. PPI
· 0900 – Eurozone Apr. Final CPI
· 1315 – UK Bank of England Governor Bailey and MPC to testify to lawmakers
· 1430 – EIAs Weekly Crude and Fuel Stock Report
· 1700 – US Treasury to auction 20-year notes
· 1800 – US FOMC Minutes
· 2300 – Australia Flash May Manufacturing and Services PMI
· 0030 – Japan Flash May Manufacturing and Services PMI
· 0130 – Australia Apr. Employment Data

G-7 finance ministers and central bankers meet in Paris

Earnings events

  • Tuesday (yesterday): The Home Depot, Keysight Technologies
  • Wednesday (today): Nvidia, Analog Devices, TJX Companies, Lowe’s, Intuit, Tokio Marine Holdings, Target
  • Thursday: Walmart, Deere, Ross Stores

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


Equities

  • USA: The Nasdaq Composite fell 0.8%, while the S&P 500 and Dow Jones Industrial Average both lost 0.7% as the 30-year Treasury yield reached its highest level in nearly two decades. Higher yields hit growth stocks and rate-sensitive sectors, with materials, communication services and consumer discretionary leading declines. Alphabet fell 2.3% and weighed heavily on the S&P 500, while Vertiv dropped 5% as investors trimmed exposure to AI infrastructure names. Home Depot rose 0.9% after better first-quarter earnings, helped by 4.8% revenue growth, showing the US consumer is not fully hiding under the sofa yet.
  • Europe: European equities rose for a second session, with the Stoxx 600 up 0.2% and Germany’s DAX gaining 0.4%, as company news helped offset pressure from higher US yields. SAP rallied 6.0% and led gains, while Evolution jumped 7.3% after approving a €2 billion share buyback. Currys surged 14.5% after raising full-year profit guidance, and IG Group gained 10.5% after beating expectations and lifting its outlook. Mining stocks were weaker as higher yields pressured precious metals, with KGHM down 5.6%. Markets now watch whether earnings momentum can keep cushioning the bond-yield shock.
  • Asia: Asian equities fell for a third session as uncertainty around an Iran peace deal and higher global bond yields weighed on risk appetite. South Korea led the weakness, with the Kospi down 3.3% and the Kosdaq falling 2.4%, as rising yields hurt growth and chip stocks. SK Hynix fell 5.2% and Samsung Electronics lost 2.0%, while Hyundai Motor dropped 8.9% and LG Electronics declined 11.7% in a broader Korean selloff. Japan’s Nikkei 225 slipped 0.4%, erasing early gains despite better consumer spending data. Investors now look to Nvidia earnings as the next test for the AI trade.

Volatility

  • Volatility remained elevated ahead of Nvidia earnings, as investors balanced AI optimism against a renewed surge in global bond yields. The VIX closed at 18.06 on Tuesday, while the S&P 500 fell 0.7% to 7,353.61 after the US 30-year Treasury yield briefly touched 5.20%, its highest level since before the 2008 financial crisis. Higher oil prices and inflation concerns linked to Middle East tensions are also increasing worries that central banks may keep rates higher for longer.
  • For investors, the key issue is valuation sensitivity rather than panic. Markets are still supported by AI expectations, but higher yields are putting pressure on expensive growth stocks, making Nvidia’s earnings later today one of the week’s most important catalysts for the broader technology sector.
  • Based on SPX options pricing, the market currently implies a move of about 91 points, or 1.23%, through Friday. For today’s expiry, the 0DTE options positioning showed a mildly defensive skew, with downside puts modestly richer than comparable upside calls further away from spot, while the at-the-money straddle remained broadly balanced. In simple terms: investors are still paying slightly more for short-term downside protection than upside exposure.

Digital Assets

  • Digital assets steadied after several weaker sessions, although the broader tone remained cautious as rising bond yields and geopolitical uncertainty continued to weigh on risk appetite. Bitcoin traded near USD 77,100, while Ethereum held around USD 2,125, both stabilising after recent declines linked to the global bond sell-off and Middle East tensions. Crypto markets are increasingly trading like broader risk assets again, meaning higher yields remain an important headwind.
  • IBIT traded around USD 43.50 and ETHA near USD 15.93, with both ETFs relatively stable despite softer spot Bitcoin ETF flows earlier this week. Recent outflows suggest institutional demand has cooled somewhat compared with the stronger momentum seen earlier this month, although the market has so far avoided a deeper breakdown.
  • Among major altcoins, XRP traded near USD 1.37, Solana around USD 84.8, and Dogecoin close to USD 0.19. Options flow still showed selective optimism in names such as Strategy, IBIT and Coinbase, although sizeable downside hedging activity in Coinbase and crypto miners highlighted that positioning remains cautious rather than aggressively bullish.

Commodities

  • Gold trades lower on Fed hike anxiety as the dollar, and not least bond yields, continue to rise amid inflation concerns driven by the Middle East conflict and prolonged disruption to the supply of key commodities moving from the Persian Gulf through the almost closed Strait of Hormuz. Silver, meanwhile, slumped below USD 74 following last week’s false breakout that briefly pushed prices above USD 89. While the recent surge in US yields, if sustained, would materially increase the US government’s interest burden and debt servicing costs – lifting fiscal debt concerns - the near-term focus remains on a precious-metal-unfriendly environment. Gold is currently trading between two moving averages, the 200-day at USD 4,360 and the 50-day at USD 4,690.
  • Brent crude holds above USD 110 for a second consecutive day, with hopes for a reopening of the Strait of Hormuz remaining elusive as Trump threatens renewed strikes on Iran. Ahead of the EIA’s weekly inventory report, the API reported another substantial draw in crude and fuel stockpiles. In addition, a record 9.9 million barrels was withdrawn from SPR in the week to 15 May.
  • Sugar futures climbed back above 15 cents per pound on expectations that Brazilian mills may divert more cane toward ethanol production as gasoline prices rise. Markets are also increasingly concerned that El Niño-driven dry weather could reduce rainfall across India and Thailand, weighing on yields. Adding further support, India has extended restrictions on sugar exports until October to contain domestic prices.

Fixed Income

  • US Treasuries are under pressure, with yields pulling sharply to new cycle highs Tuesday, with the longest yields touching levels not seen since prior to the global financial crisis – the 30-year benchmark T-bond yield peaked out just shy of 5.20%, up seven basis points from the prior close, before the yield rolled back to 5.18% early Wednesday. Elsewhere, the benchmark 10-year yield rose as high as 4.685% before easing back to 4.66% and the two-year benchmark rose as high as 4.137% before pulling back to 4.105% ahead of today’s FOMC Minutes and after the market has been slowly dragged into pricing the potential that the next Fed move could be a hike, perhaps somewhere late this year.
  • Japan’s longest government bonds found strong support Wednesday as Japan’s yield curve flattened. Strong demand and bid-to-cover ratio just over 4 times were noted at an auction of 20-year JGB’s. The benchmark 30-year JGB yield fell back nine basis points, more than erasing the prior day’s advance, trading near 4.07% in late trading hours in Tokyo Wednesday. The benchmark 10-year JGB saw less of a swing lower, almost steady near 2.79% and serving nearly as the fulcrum of the overall yield curve flattening as the benchmark 2-year JGB yield rose just over a basis point to 1.45% as expectations for further BoJ tightening rise. Odds of a mid-June BoJ rate hike have now risen to over 80% for the first time.

Currencies

  • The US dollar rally reasserted Tuesday as US treasury yields lifted to new cycle highs. EURUSD fell below 1.1600 for the first time since early April, though the round level proved sticky in price action late Tuesday and early Wednesday. Elsewhere, USDJPY was less impacted by USD strength, perhaps in part by the strong demand for the longest dated JGB’s Wednesday, which push back against concerns of instability in Japan’s bond markets. The 159.00 area in USDJPY is serving as resistance, perhaps as traders are wary of the risk of Japanese intervention if the price action pushes toward the 160.00 level, as the Ministry of Finance has pushed back against JPY weakness on multiple occasions, first from above 160.00 and later appeared to intervene at levels between 157.00 and 158.00.
  • The Australian dollar continues to trade heavily, perhaps weighed down by heavy action in metals, but also by heavy long positioning, if we are to consider the most recent positioning reports in US futures. There, the CFTC reported a net non-commercial long of almost 85 thousand contracts. It’s the most stretched long position since 2012. Australia reports its April employment figures and flash May manufacturing and services PMI early Thursday. AUDUSD has tested just below the 0.7100 level, its lowest level since mid-April.

For a global look at markets – go to Inspiration.

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