QT_QuickTake

Market Quick Take - Oil drives the narrative - 9 July 2026

Macro 3 minutes to read

Market drivers and catalysts

  • Equities: US and Europe fell on oil and policy risk, Asia was mixed as chip optimism returned but China lagged.
  • Volatility: Renewed US-Iran strikes lifted oil and bond yields on earlier Fed-hike bets, volatility firmed but stayed low
  • Digital Assets: Crypto equities were mixed as ETFs slipped and miners diverged, while the CLARITY Act gained law-enforcement backing
  • Commodities: Diesel outperforms surging oil as inflation fears hit hard assets again
  • Fixed Income: US Treasury yields rise on higher oil and hawkish Fed minutes
  • Currencies: The USD trades broadly flat despite higher oil prices and rising yields
  • Macro: June Existing Home Sales & US 30-year Bond auction

Macro

  • The US struck Iran for a second day to curb threats to shipping in the Strait of Hormuz, revoking Iran’s oil export waiver and threatening further escalation. Iran vowed immediate retaliation and claims to have hit US-linked bases. Both sides accuse each other of violating a fragile truce, jeopardizing stalled peace talks. Fuel prices led by diesel surged higher, gaining more than oil, after Russia announced a ban on diesel further squeezing an already tight global market.
  • Fed minutes from the June meeting, released Wednesday, showed support among some members for interest rate hikes, adding to hawkish repricing across the front end of the curve. Fed Chair Kevin Warsh is scheduled to testify before the Senate Banking Panel on July 15 on the semiannual monetary policy report.
  • The IMF keeps 2026 global growth at 3% and lifts 2027 to 3.4%, citing resilience to the Iran war and strong AI investment but warning of downside risks. It sees global inflation at 4.7% in 2026, easing to 3.9% in 2027.
  • More in our Macro Analysis & Macroeconomic News

Macro calendar highlights (times in GMT)

  • 1230 – US Initial Jobless Claims
  • 1400 – US June Existing Home Sales
  • 1700 – US to Sell USD 22 Billion 30-year Bonds

Earnings events

  • Thursday: Pepsico, Fast Retailing, Progressive, Cintas, Seven and I Holdings
  • Friday: Delta Airlines

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


Equities

  • USA: The S&P 500 fell 0.3% to 7,482.71 and the Dow lost 1.1% to 52,348.39, while the Nasdaq rose 0.2%, as renewed Iran tension lifted oil and hurt broader risk appetite. Energy was the clear shelter, with Valero and Marathon Petroleum hitting records as refining shares rode the oil move, while financials fell 1.9%. Synchrony Financial dropped 9.6% as lenders weakened, and Microsoft lost 1.4%, making it the largest S&P 500 drag. After the close, Levi Strauss fell 5.8% on softer-than-hoped profit guidance, while Costco slipped 0.5% after June comparable sales missed estimates.
  • Europe: European equities sold off sharply, with the Stoxx 600 down 1.6%, the DAX and CAC 40 both falling 2.2%, the Euro Stoxx 50 losing 1.8%, and the FTSE 100 dropping 1.7%. The decline followed Trump’s Iran ceasefire comments and fresh trade threats against Spain, while energy was the only sector in positive territory. Banks led the weakness as the Stoxx 600 Banks Index fell almost 3.0%, with HSBC down 2.2%, Santander off 5.0%, and IAG also falling more than 4.0%. Vonovia dropped 5.9% in Germany, while the DAX VIX jumped 20.0%, showing investors had rediscovered volatility.
  • Asia: Asian equities were mixed, as chip optimism partly offset the oil shock and renewed geopolitical risk. Japan’s rally broadened beyond artificial intelligence, with investors rotating toward defence and infrastructure names linked to Prime Minister Takaichi’s latest economic policy plan, while Tokyo Electron gained attention after reports it plans to halve chip equipment delivery times. Korea rebounded after heavy chip selling, with KOSPI 200 futures up 4.1% and SK Hynix’s US listing reportedly more than seven times oversubscribed. China-related sentiment improved after reports that top AI firms may buy Nvidia H200 chips, while Singapore’s Del Monte Pacific flagged going concern risks.
  • More in our Equity Trading - Stock Market Analysis & News

Volatility

VIX 16.90 | VIX FUTURES: 17.85 | TERM: CONTANGO | SKEW: ELEVATED (149.79) | REGIME: LOW-VOLATILITY BULL

  • Volatility firmed across the board as renewed US-Iran strikes lifted hedging demand. VIX rose 4.8% to 16.90, the short-dated VIX1D jumped 19% to 12.68, and VVIX climbed to 91.38, signalling firmer demand for optionality. Cross-asset vol rose: oil vol OVX above 50 and gold vol GVZ to 27.60, though equity vol stayed historically low.
  • The term structure held its upward contango, from VIX9D 14.41 to VIX3M 19.46, while SKEW rose to 149.79 and bond vol MOVE firmed to 72.41. SPXW implies a weekly expected move of about 61 points (0.82%) into Friday's expiry, with jobless claims the catalyst.
  • For a more detailed view on volatility, check our Options Briefs in the Options Insights

Digital Assets

BITCOIN ~62,200 flat | ETHEREUM ~1,737 -0.3% | IBIT 35.23 -2.5% | ETHA 13.11 -3.0%

  • Digital assets were mixed as the risk-off tone from the Middle East escalation weighed on crypto equities. Spot Bitcoin held near flat and the ETFs slipped, but the miners diverged sharply, with Iren up 8.0% and Cipher up 6.7% while Coinbase and Strategy fell about 3%.
  • On the regulatory front, the National Organization of Black Law Enforcement Executives endorsed the CLARITY Act, the first major law-enforcement group to back the crypto market-structure bill, easing one obstacle as senators press for a vote.

Commodities

  • Brent trades near USD 79 after jumping on renewed US strikes on Iran, raising fresh concerns about energy supplies from the Middle East. Traffic through the Strait of Hormuz slowed to a crawl, with most movements occurring along an Iran-approved route closer to the waterway’s northern side, while the US-backed Omani corridor where recent Iranian attacks occurred remained quiet. The disruption is a reminder that the Strait never fully reopened and that the recent removal of the geopolitical risk premium may have been premature.
  • The escalation followed US strikes on Iranian targets for a second consecutive day and Washington’s decision to revoke a waiver allowing new sales of Iranian oil, in retaliation for attacks on commercial shipping. The developments threaten fragile negotiations aimed at securing a permanent peace, with both sides accusing the other of violating the ceasefire. With hedge funds holding unusually low bullish exposure and elevated short positions, the renewed rally has in part been driven by short covering.
  • Diesel futures in London and New York are up more than 12% this week, surging after Russia banned diesel exports to prevent domestic shortages following Ukrainian attacks on the country’s refineries. The decision comes at a time when global inventories are already tight amid disrupted supplies from Middle Eastern refiners, further squeezing fuel markets and boosting refinery margins. Adding to the pressure, US distillate inventories fell by 5 million barrels last week, while gasoline stocks dropped to their lowest seasonal level since 2012.
  • Hard assets, from gold and silver to copper, sold off on Wednesday as crude oil reclaimed its role as a central driver of cross-asset pricing amid renewed US-Iran tensions. Higher oil prices revived inflation and rate concerns, lifting yields and reinforcing pressure on non-yielding metals. Gold slumped below USD 4,100 before attracting bids near USD 4,050, while silver tumbled back below USD 60. Copper also weakened, although the price action continues to suggest rangebound consolidation rather than a decisive technical breakdown.
  • More in our Commodity News, Analysis & Commentary

Fixed Income

  • US Treasuries weakened on Wednesday as higher oil prices and hawkish signals from the Fed minutes revived inflation and rate-hike concerns. The 2-year yield reached 4.23% intraday, close to its June peak and the highest since February 2025, before easing slightly in early trading today.
  • A 10-year Treasury auction tailed the when-issued yield by 0.6 basis points at 4.58% - the highest auction yield since February 2025 - while dealers took their smallest share since January, pointing to solid indirect demand despite elevated yields.
  • Ahead of today’s long-bond auction, the 30-year yield trades near 5.07%, an eight-week high. Meanwhile, the selloff in JGBs continued, with 10- and 30-year yields rising to 2.89% and 4.03%, respectively. Oil-driven inflation concerns are pressuring global duration at a time when growing AI-related bond issuance is adding a structural upward bias to long-end yields.

Currencies

  • USDJPY rose to 162.61, a fresh 52-week high and its fourth consecutive daily gain, leaving markets increasingly alert to the risk of Japanese intervention as JGB yields continue to climb.
  • Despite the sharp rise in oil prices over the past two days, the dollar has traded broadly flat against its major peers. Further yen weakness has been offset by gains elsewhere, led by the NZD following the RBNZ rate hike, while the NOK and CAD have benefited from higher commodity prices. Sterling has also strengthened, pushing EURGBP to a one-year low.
  • More on currencies in our dedicated section: Forex Trading News & Analysis
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