QT_QuickTake

Market Quick Take - 30 April 2026

Macro 3 minutes to read
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Market Quick Take – 30 April 2026


Market drivers and catalysts

  • Equities: US tech held up, Europe slipped on Iran risks, while Asia rose on China policy and AI-memory strength.
  • Volatility: VIX ~18.8, event-heavy, Fed hawkish hold, oil/geopolitics cause volatility
  • Digital Assets: BTC <76k, ETH steady, IBIT/ETHA weaker, macro pressure
  • Fixed Income: US treasury yields jump with implications of crude oil spike and more hawkish FOMC turn than anticipated.
  • Currencies: USD firms moderately across the board on energy price spike and more hawkish FOMC. JPY weakest.
  • Commodities: Oil hits wartime high; gold finds fresh support despite oil, yield and dollar headwinds
  • Macro events: BOE and ECB Rate Decisions

Macro headlines

  • The Fed left rates unchanged amid growing internal dissent, with four officials opposing the decision, three of them favoring removing the easing bias from the official FOMC statement. Two-year Treasury yields jumped 11 basis points, the biggest Fed-day move since 2022. Jerome Powell said he will stay on the Board after his chair term ends and remain through the ongoing criminal investigation.
  • Oil hits wartime high after Axios reported that Trump is set to receive a briefing on new military options for action in Iran. He also said he won’t lift the naval blockade of Iranian ports until he secures a nuclear deal with Tehran, extending the standoff disrupting energy flows through the Strait of Hormuz.
  • Japan’s retail sales rose 1.7% YoY in March 2026, beating the 0.8% forecast and rebounding from a 0.1% drop, with autos and other goods leading gains. Month-on-month, sales grew 1.3% after falling 2.0% in February.
  • The BoC held its policy rate at 2.25% in April 2026, offering no clear guidance amid geopolitical uncertainty. Inflation rose on higher energy prices from Middle East tensions, but broader effects remain limited and expectations anchored. The BoC projects GDP growth of 1.2% in 2026 and 1.7% in 2027.
  • US durable goods orders rose 0.8% in March 2026 to $318.9 billion, beating the 0.5% forecast and rebounding from a 1.2% drop. Despite war-related energy and shipping disruptions, orders gained across computers and electronics (3.7%), machinery, primary metals, electrical equipment, and transportation.
  • Germany’s CPI rose to 2.9% YoY in April 2026, up from 2.7% and just below the 3% forecast, driven by a 10.1% jump in energy. Core inflation fell to 2.3%, the lowest since June 2021, and the EU-harmonized rate also hit 2.9%, above the ECB’s 2% target.

Macro calendar highlights (times in GMT)

0800 – Germany Q1 GDP estimate
0900 – Eurozone Q1 GDP
0900 – Eurozone flash April CPI
1100 – BOE Rate Decision
1215 – ECB Rate Decision
1230 – US Q1 GDP estimate
1230 – US Mar. PCE Inflation
1230 – US March Personal Spending
1230 – US Weekly Initial Jobless Claims
1230 – US Q1 Employment Cost Index
1345 – US Apr. Chicago PMI
1430 – EIA’s Weekly Natural Gas Storage Change
2330 – Japan Apr. Tokyo CPI

Earnings this week

  • Yesterday / Wednesday: Alphabet, Microsoft, Amazon.com, Meta, AbbVie, AstraZeneca, TotalEnergies, Amphenol, Carvana, General Dynamics, Adidas, Cadence Design Systems, Etsy, Domino’s Pizza, Ford Motor, DSV A/S, Deutsche Bank, UBS, Enskilda Banken, Sandoz Group
  • Today / Thursday: Apple, Samsung Electronics, Eli Lilly, Mastercard, Caterpillar, Merck, Amgen, Sandisk, Western Digital, Tokyo Electron, Royal Caribbean Cruises, DHL Group, Schneider Electric, Unilever, Societe Generale
  • Friday: ExxonMobil, Chevron, Linde, Mitsubishi, Aalberts NV, Pearson PLC

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


Equities

  • USA: The S&P 500 ended almost flat, down less than 0.1% to 7,135.95, while the Nasdaq 100 rose 0.6% and the Dow Jones fell 0.6%. The Federal Reserve kept rates steady, but a split vote and the Iran war kept investors cautious, with oil and inflation still refusing to behave. After the close, Alphabet rose 7.1% as cloud growth drove a stronger beat, while Microsoft was little changed despite strong Azure growth, as investors weighed demand against heavy AI spending. Amazon gained 2.7% after AWS sales rose 28%, while Meta fell 7.0% after raising its capital spending outlook.
  • Europe: The Stoxx 600 fell 0.6% to 602.96, the FTSE 100 dropped 1.2% to 10,213.11 and Germany’s DAX lost 0.3% to 23,954.56. Risk appetite weakened as the prospect of a longer blockade of Iranian ports kept energy and inflation worries in view, while earnings gave investors a mixed plate and not much dessert. GSK fell 5.4% and AstraZeneca lost 1.5% as UK healthcare weighed on London despite solid results. Konecranes dropped 13.3% after cautious sales guidance, while UBS gained 3.2% after trading helped it beat estimates and support payout plans.
  • Asia: Hong Kong led the region, with the Hang Seng up 1.7% to 26,111.84 as China policy signals and better earnings supported sentiment. Alibaba rose 3.2% and China Overseas Land gained 8.9%, helped by a rebound in Chinese internet and property names. South Korea’s Kospi rose 0.8% to a record 6,690.90 as Samsung Electronics gained 1.8% after its chip profit jumped almost 50-fold on artificial intelligence memory demand. Taiwan’s Taiex fell 0.6% to 39,303.50 as TSMC lost 1.6%, while DBS rose after Q1 profit beat estimates on strong wealth-management fees.

Volatility

  • Volatility is picking up, but remains contained for now. The VIX closed at 18.81 (+5.5%) on Wednesday, while very short-term measures such as VIX1D jumped sharply, highlighting how much event risk is concentrated in the next 24–48 hours. Markets are balancing several competing forces: strong but mixed reactions to major tech earnings, a Federal Reserve that held rates steady but signalled a more cautious, slightly hawkish stance, and a sharp rise in oil prices driven by escalating Middle East tensions. Today adds another layer, with key macro data including US GDP and core PCE, alongside ECB and BoE rate decisions and a heavy earnings calendar led by Apple.
  • SPX options are pricing an expected move of around 71 points, or 1.0%, into the 1 May expiry.
  • For today’s expiry, the options chain shows a clear downside skew, with near-the-money puts priced at roughly 40% implied volatility versus around 15–17% for calls, indicating that investors are actively paying for short-term protection rather than positioning for upside.

Digital Assets

  • Crypto markets are softer, reflecting the same macro pressures seen across broader risk assets. Bitcoin is holding just below USD 75,700 (-0.2%), while Ethereum trades near USD 2,245 (-0.4%), showing resilience but lacking strong upside momentum.
  • ETF-linked exposure is weaker, with IBIT (-1.2%) and ETHA (-3.0%) both declining, suggesting continued cooling in institutional demand. Crypto-related equities are under more pressure, with Coinbase (-6.8%) and MicroStrategy (-4.5%) extending recent weakness, even as options flow shows selective upside positioning ahead of Coinbase earnings next week. Among major altcoins, XRP, Solana and others are modestly lower, leaving the broader tone cautious but orderly rather than disorderly.
  • Overall, the market is not seeing aggressive selling, but investors are clearly more selective and increasingly focused on managing risk.

Fixed Income

  • The US treasury yields jump on the spike in crude oil prices and hawkish FOMC dissenters and Powell’s intent to stay on as Fed governor. The benchmark 2-year treasury rose over ten basis points at the highs late Wednesday near 3.95%, with the spike in crude oil prices providing more than half of yesterday’s rise in yields ahead of the Fed decision and FOMC policy statement and Fed Chair Powell presser. The price action settled later a bit below 3.94%. At the longer end of the curve, yields likewise lifted, if less sharply as the benchmark 10-year treasury yield closed near 4.43%, up eight basis points from Tuesday’s close.
  • Japanese government bond yields rise on spike in energy prices. At the front end of Japan’s government bond yield curve, the market still prices little BoJ tightening, with the benchmark 2-year JGB yield nudging less than a basis point higher from Tuesday’s close (markets were closed Wednesday in Japan), but at the longer end of the yield curve, yields surged as the benchmark 10-year JGB yield rose five basis points and posted a new high since 1997 near 2.53%.

Commodities

  • Crude oil hit a wartime high in Asia as the Strait remains closed, while reporting from Axios suggests Trump is considering fresh military options in Iran, raising the risk of renewed escalation in the Middle East. June Brent crude, which expires today, traded near USD 125, while the new front-month July contract rose above USD 113. With markets continuing to tighten, the near-term risk remains skewed toward higher prices until the Strait reopens.
  • The latest report from the U.S. Energy Information Administration was equally historic: US crude exports surged to a record 6.2 million b/d, while total petroleum exports, including refined fuels, climbed above 14 million b/d. Distillate inventories fell to their lowest seasonal level since 2005, while gasoline stocks dropped to a 2014 seasonal low amid strong exports and still robust implied domestic demand.
  • Gold trades higher as the risk of renewed US military action in Iran has allowed bullion to rise alongside oil, marking a shift from recent price action where higher energy prices reinforced inflation risks and a higher-for-longer rate outlook. It is also worth noting that gold has attracted fresh demand despite rising bond yields and a firmer dollar following Wednesday’s FOMC meeting, where rates were left unchanged, but several members signalled a desire to remove the easing bias as the Iran war continues to cloud the economic outlook.

Currencies

  • The US dollar firmed further on a fresh huge spike in crude oil prices and more hawkish than anticipated Fed meeting. The price action was measured relative to the volatility in US yields, with EURUSD dropping to a low of 1.1661 late Wednesday after a close the prior day near 1.1715. Early Thursday saw a choppy session, with the rate rallying back to 1.1690 before pushing back lower to marginal new lows below 1.1660. The ECB meets later today and is expected to guide for a rate hike at the June meeting.
  • USDJPY crossed above the key 160.00 threshold, trading at new highs early Thursday north of 160.60, in part as the Bank of Japan failed to wax sufficiently hawkish to raise rate tightening expectations on Tuesday, but chiefly on the fresh aggravated rise in oil prices and the rise in US Treasury yields. Japan is historically almost completely reliant on crude oil imports that are shipped via the Hormuz Strait. Given recent history, traders are on watch for verbal and actual intervention in the USDJPY rate at these levels. The modern high post-1980’s in USDJPY was posted in 2024 at 161.95.
  • USDCAD was one of the steadier USD pairs despite the indifferent Bank of Canada meeting and the more hawkish FOMC outcome than anticipated. Canada’s large and growing crude oil production is one driver of a resilient CAD, as is the natural correlation of the CAD with the USD in other crosses, given the Canadian economy’s exposure to a more resilient US economy, as both countries are far more insulated from the global spike in energy prices, particularly natural gas.
  • NOKSEK reached parity for the first time since November of 2024 as the Norwegian krone benefits from higher prices for Norway’s oil exports, while the outlook for Sweden’s heavily export-driven economy suffers with the outlook for Europe’s economy on higher energy prices crimping growth.

For a global look at markets – go to Inspiration.

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