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CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 59% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading CFDs with this provider.
CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 59% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading CFDs with this provider. You should consider whether you understand how CFDs work and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money.
Digital Assets: Bitcoin rebounds, ETF inflows return, Fed meeting in focus, hedging remains elevated
Commodities: Oil tumbles and hard assets rally on interim peace deal; weeks of fund selling leave positioning lean
FixedIncome: Global bonds rally on hopes for durable Iran war ceasefire as crude oil prices retreat.
Currencies: USD sells off on hopes for durable Iran war ceasefire.
Macro: US June Empire Manufacturing
Macro
US and Iran have reached an interim accord to halt the war and reopen the Strait of Hormuz – where nearly 600 vessels arewaiting to exit - paving the way for 60 days of talks on Tehran’s nuclear program. The agreement includes a ceasefire and relief from sanctions targeting Iran's overseas oil sales, but details such as financial incentives and the removal of sanctions remain unclear. Officials from the two countries will meet in Switzerland on Friday to formally sign the agreement, with key sticking points left for the next stage of talks, including the removal of sanctions and financial incentives for Iran.
The US Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index rose to 48.9 in early June 2026 from 44.8 in May, beating expectations of 46, with the rebound helped by easing gasoline prices and strongest among lower-income consumers. Views on personal finances and business conditions improved but remain well below January and year-ago levels. Year-ahead inflation expectations slipped to 4.6% and long-run expectations to 3.4%, though inflation concerns remain elevated.
US year-ahead inflation expectations fell to 4.6% in June 2026 from 4.8% in May, while the five-year outlook dropped to 3.4% from 3.9%, according to preliminary University of Michigan data.
Macro calendar highlights (times in GMT)
0900 – Eurozone April Industrial Production
1230 – US June Empire Manufacturing
1315 – US May Industrial Production
G7 leaders' summit in France through Wednesday.
Earnings events
Wednesday: Jabil
Thursday: Accenture, Kroger
For all macro, earnings, and dividend events check Saxo’s calendar.
Equities
USA: The S&P 500 rose 0.5% on Friday, the Dow gained 0.7%, and the Nasdaq Composite added 0.3%, as peace hopes, lower oil and a calmer volatility backdrop helped sentiment. SpaceX surged 19.2% on its Nasdaq debut after the largest initial public offering in history, while Goldman Sachs gained 2.6% as lead underwriter and JPMorgan rose 2.3% with banks. Rocket Lab fell 10.8% as space peers saw profit-taking after the big launch. Markets now turn to the Federal Reserve meeting and the details behind the US-Iran deal.
Europe: The Stoxx 600 rose 1.9% to 633.21 on Friday, while the DAX gained 1.8% and the FTSE 100 advanced 1.6%, as lower oil and Middle East peace hopes outweighed the ECB rate hike. Banks and travel stocks led the move, with Deutsche Bank up 6.6%, HSBC up 3.9% and IAG rising 7.1% as lower fuel costs improved the airline mood. Nokia gained 5.0% after JPMorgan lifted its price target on AI and cloud demand. Investors will watch whether cheaper energy can keep the rally from becoming another one-day sugar rush.
Asia: Asia traded sharply higher on Monday, with the Nikkei 225 up around 5% and South Korea’s Kospi near 6.0% higher, while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng gained more modestly. The rally followed the US-Iran peace deal and a fall in oil, which helped import-heavy markets and revived demand for AI-linked stocks. In Korea, SK Hynix rose 6.1% and Samsung Electronics gained 4.7%, while Japan’s SoftBank jumped 10% and Tokyo Electron climbed 7.5%. The next test is whether flows broaden beyond chips, because even great rallies need more than one engine.
Volatility
Volatility eased sharply into the weekend as investors welcomed reports that the US and Iran may be close to a formal agreement that would reopen the Strait of Hormuz and reduce the geopolitical risk premium embedded across markets. The VIX closed at 17.68 (-9.1%), while shorter-term gauges also moved lower, with VIX1D at 19.12 (-9.3%) and VIX9D at 17.26 (-16.5%). Equity futures rallied, bond yields declined and oil prices fell as investors reassessed inflation risks and the likelihood of further disruptions to global energy supplies.
While the market is embracing the prospect of a peace deal, uncertainty has not disappeared. Iran has yet to formally confirm the agreement, and President Trump indicated military action could resume if nuclear negotiations fail. Attention now turns to this week's Federal Reserve meeting, where investors will focus on Wednesday's rate decision, updated economic projections and Chair Kevin Warsh's first post-meeting press conference. Retail sales data and inflation readings from both the UK and eurozone could also influence sentiment.
SPX expected move: Options markets imply a move of approximately ±118 points (±1.59%) into Thursday's 18 June expiration, suggesting an indicative range of roughly 7,313 to 7,549 around Friday's close of 7,431.
Today's expiry indicator: Same-day SPX options imply a move of approximately ±62 points (±0.83%). Downside protection remains modestly more expensive than upside exposure, with the 7,375 put carrying higher implied volatility than a similarly distant call. The message from the options market is clear: investors are becoming more optimistic, but they are not abandoning their hedges ahead of a week packed with central-bank and macroeconomic catalysts.
Digital Assets
Digital assets began the week on a stronger footing as improving geopolitical sentiment, lower oil prices and renewed ETF demand helped support risk appetite. Bitcoin traded near $65,700, extending its recovery from this month's lows below $60,000, while Ethereum climbed back toward $1,716. Solana held near $71, XRP traded around $1.18, and most major altcoins moved higher as investors rotated back into risk assets.
Institutional demand also showed signs of improvement. US spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded $85.9 million of net inflows on Friday, the strongest daily intake in several weeks, with IBIT attracting $57.7 million. That marked a notable shift after a prolonged period of outflows and suggests institutional investors may be rebuilding exposure as geopolitical tensions ease. ETHA, by contrast, recorded modest outflows and continues to trail bitcoin-focused products in terms of investor demand.
Options activity suggests investors remain cautious beneath the surface. Several large protective structures appeared across IBIT, RIOT, CIFR and IREN, indicating continued demand for downside protection ahead of this week's Federal Reserve meeting. However, the broader picture looked more like event-risk hedging than a bearish call on the sector. If ETF inflows continue to improve and a formal US-Iran agreement is signed, the crypto market could receive an additional boost from improving risk sentiment and easing energy-market concerns.
Commodities
Oil prices slumped further after the US and Iran agreed to an interim deal aimed at ending the war, paving the way for the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz and easing a month-long supply crunch. Brent crude traded near USD 83.50 per barrel as traders braced for a surge in supply from tankers stranded in the Persian Gulf and now preparing to transit the Strait.
Whether prices, currently around USD 13 above pre-war levels, can fall further will depend on several factors, including the pace at which commercial and strategic stockpiles are replenished, how quickly shut-in production can be brought back online, and the extent of any lasting demand destruction caused by a prolonged period of elevated energy prices. The speed at which supply chains normalise and export flows recover will also play a key role in determining how much of the geopolitical risk premium remains embedded in the market.
Gold and other hard assets rallied strongly after the announcement of an interim peace deal, as easing concerns over energy prices helped reduce the inflation threat that has weighed heavily on the sector throughout the Middle East conflict. Lower oil prices have also prompted traders to scale back expectations for further interest-rate hikes, providing an additional tailwind for precious metals. Following last week's capitulation-style sell-off in both gold and silver, positioning has become considerably cleaner, leaving traders better placed to respond to shifts in either the technical or fundamental outlook. For gold, the key upside hurdle remains the 200-day moving average, currently near USD 4,450, a level that may determine whether the latest rebound develops into a more sustained recovery.
A month-long correction in commodities triggered a third consecutive week of heavy fund liquidation according to the latest COT report covering the week to 9 June. Hedge funds were net sellers of all but a few of the major commodities, with notable selling in Brent crude, gold and major grain contracts. Importantly, positioning across several sectors has now been substantially reduced, with the Brent crude net long falling to a five-month low and the gold net long dropping to its lowest level in more than a year. Agriculture has seen the most dramatic adjustment, with the combined net long across major crop futures collapsing by 83% from last month's four-year high. The scale of this liquidation leaves positioning considerably cleaner, leaving traders better placed to respond to shifts in either the technical or fundamental outlook.
Fixed Income
US Treasury yields retreated in early trading Monday on the lager new drop in oil prices as marketsare more convinced now that a new Iran War ceasefire will hold. The benchmark 2-year treasury yield gapped lower, trading some five basis points below Friday’s close and below 4.03% as traders eye the key round 4.00% level that the yield rose above in mid-May. The benchmark 10-year treasury yield hovered some five basis points lower from Friday’s close as well’, dipping below 4.43% and therefore just below the range lows of earlier this month.
Japan’s government bond yields dipped to start the week on the large drop in crude oil prices. The benchmark 2-year JGB yield dipped 1.5 basis points and below 1.40% as the Bank of Japan is widely expected to hike its policy rate 25 basis points to 1.00% at its meeting Tuesday, taking it to the highest level since 1995. At the longer end of the yield curve, the benchmark 10-year JGB yield fell more than five basis points at one point to 2.56% before stabilizing near 2.58%.
Currencies
The US dollarsold off as hopes for a durable Iran war ceasefire washed over global markets, driving crude oil prices and US treasury yields lower. EURUSD pulled back above the key 1.1575-1.1600 resistance and traded near 1.1620 by early European hours Monday. AUDUSD rose clear of 0.7085, up from its Friday close below 0.7050.
USDJPY fell back below the 160.00 level briefly early Monday, but then remained near that level even as the USD was weaker elsewhere ahead of Tuesday’s Bank of Japan meeting, which is expected to deliver a 25 basis point hike to take the BoJ policy rate to its highest since 1995 at 1.00%. But the market may wonder how strongly the Bank will guide for further policy tightening, given Japan’s recently softening inflation data.
The pro-cyclical Swedish krone rose sharplyas oil prices plummeted early Monday, pushing NOKSEK to new lows since May, down over 0.75% to near 0.9860 while EURSEK fell a similar amount, to below 10.86. Sweden’s Riksbank meets early Wednesday and is expected to leave its rate at 1.75% for now.
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