QT_QuickTake

Market Quick Take - 4 June 2026

Macro 3 minutes to read
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Market Quick Take – 4 June 2026


Market drivers and catalysts

  • Equities: US and Europe slipped on oil and geopolitics, Asia followed lower as investors trimmed risk after an artificial intelligence-led rally
  • Volatility: VIX rises, payrolls in focus, Middle East tensions, Broadcom disappoints
  • Digital Assets: Bitcoin near three-month lows, ETF outflows persist, crypto proxies weaker, hedging activity increases
  • Commodities: Gold bounces from key support (again), oil fluctuates on mixed Middle East signals
  • Fixed Income: Treasuries fall on strong ADP numbers
  • Currencies: Dollar stays firm on Middle East tensions; USDJPY near 160 again
  • Macro: Eurozone April Retail Sales & US Weekly Initial Jobless Claims

Macro

  • The Middle East crisis remains fluid. Following Wednesday's escalation, which saw US forces strike an Iran-bound tanker and Iran retaliate with attacks against US bases in Bahrain and Kuwait as well as commercial shipping, Israel and Lebanon have agreed to a conditional ceasefire. However, the broader regional conflict remains unresolved and risks to energy supplies persist. Traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, a vital waterway that normally handles around one-fifth of global oil and LNG shipments, has recovered modestly but remains well below pre-conflict levels, continuing to support a significant geopolitical risk premium across energy markets.
  • The Republican-led House voted to curb US military involvement in Iran, marking a rare rebuke of President Trump and highlighting growing concerns within his own party about the economic and political costs of the conflict. While the resolution is unlikely to immediately affect military operations, as it still requires Senate approval, the vote underscores rising opposition to a prolonged war.
  • ISM Services PMI rose to 54.5 in May from 53.6 in April, beating expectations and marking a three-month high. Business activity, new orders, and inventories strengthened, while employment contracted for a third month amid hiring freezes. Price pressures hit their highest since August 2022, driven by fuel and petroleum-related products, as backlog growth slowed and supplier delivery performance weakened further.
  • US private payrolls rose by 122,000 in May, the strongest gain since January 2025 and above expectations. Hiring was broad-based, led by education and health services and trade/transportation/utilities. Pay growth held at 4.4% for job-stayers and rose to 6.6% for job-switchers.
  • The US administration vowed to impose 10%–12.5% tariffs on major trading partners, including the EU and UK, over alleged links to goods produced with forced labor.
  • US factory orders rose 4.8% in April to $662.7 billion, the strongest gain in 11 months and above expectations. Durable goods jumped 8%, led by a surge in nondefense aircraft and transportation, with gains in fabricated and primary metals, while computers and electronics slipped 0.7%. Nondurable goods orders increased 1.4%.

Macro calendar highlights (times in GMT)

0730 – Germany May Construction PM
0900 – Eurozone April Retail Sales
1230 – US Weekly Initial Jobless Claims
1430 – EIAs Weekly Natural Gas Storage Change

Fed speakers: Barkin (1230), Bowman (1400), Daly (1540), Schmid (1700)-

Earnings events

  • Wednesday (yesterday): Broadcom, Inditex, CrowdStrike, Medtronic, Veeva Systems
  • Thursday (today): Ciena, Lululemon Athletica

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


Equities

  • USA: The S&P 500 fell 0.7% to 7,553.68, the Dow lost 1.2% to 50,687.07, and the Nasdaq Composite dropped 0.9% to 26,853.98, snapping Wall Street’s nine-day winning streak as renewed US-Iran fighting lifted oil and bond yields. Broadcom fell about 13% after hours despite record revenue, as its artificial intelligence chip outlook missed very high expectations. CrowdStrike dropped almost 11% after costs rose with artificial intelligence investment, while PVH fell after cutting its outlook. Costco showed consumer resilience with May comparable sales up 12.5%. Markets now watch whether geopolitics starts to bite earnings expectations.
  • Europe: The Stoxx 600 fell 0.7% to 621.19, the DAX dropped 1.3%, the FTSE 100 lost 0.4%, and the Euro Stoxx 50 declined 0.9% to 6,053.57 as Middle East risk, higher oil and private-market worries hit sentiment. Akzo Nobel plunged 17.2% after Sherwin-Williams and Nippon Paint dropped a possible takeover bid, while SAP fell 4.3% as software remained under pressure after a recent bounce. Inditex rose after stronger early summer sales reassured investors that Zara’s owner still has pricing and execution power. Markets now look to oil, inflation signals and whether defensive retail can keep carrying its small umbrella.
  • Asia: Asian equities traded lower on Thursday, with the MSCI Asia Pacific down 1.5%, Japan’s Nikkei 225 down 1.9%, and Korea’s Kospi down 2.6%, as Wall Street’s pullback and renewed US-Iran tension pushed investors into risk control mode. Hong Kong also stayed under pressure after the Hang Seng fell around 1.6% on Wednesday, while Taiwan’s Taiex had risen 2.0% after Goldman Sachs upgraded Taiwan to overweight. SoftBank lost 5.8% and Fujikura fell 6.7% as Japanese technology and metals names took profits. Asia now watches oil, geopolitics and whether the artificial intelligence trade pauses without breaking.

Volatility

  • Volatility picked up on Wednesday, but the broader message from the options market remains one of caution rather than stress. The VIX closed at 16.06 (+1.84%), while the 1-day VIX jumped 29.3% to 11.48, reflecting increased demand for short-term protection ahead of today’s US jobless claims report and Friday’s closely watched nonfarm payrolls release. Investors are also monitoring developments in the Middle East after renewed US-Iran tensions lifted oil prices and weighed on risk sentiment. Adding to the cautious tone, Broadcom’s weaker-than-expected outlook has raised fresh questions about whether the AI-driven rally can maintain its recent momentum.
  • Based on current SPX options pricing, the market is implying a move of approximately ±55.6 points, or ±0.74%, through Friday’s close.
  • Today’s SPX expiration continues to show a moderate downside skew, with investors paying higher premiums for protective puts than for comparable upside calls. While that suggests continued demand for portfolio insurance, the skew remains well below levels typically associated with market stress, indicating investors are hedging risks rather than preparing for a major correction.

Digital Assets

  • Digital assets remained under pressure as investors reduced risk exposure amid rising geopolitical tensions, persistent ETF outflows and a stronger focus on macroeconomic risks. Bitcoin traded near $64,000, hovering around its lowest level since late February, while Ethereum slipped below $1,800. Among major altcoins, Solana fell 1.7%, XRP lost 0.8%, and Ethereum continued to underperform Bitcoin as investors favoured relative safety within the crypto market.
  • Crypto-related equities reflected the same cautious mood. IBIT fell 2.8%, while ETHA declined 5.6%, highlighting the recent weakness in Ethereum-linked assets. More leveraged crypto proxies experienced larger losses, including Coinbase (-6.2%), MicroStrategy (-7.0%), and Circle (-10.6%). The main headwinds remain ongoing Bitcoin ETF outflows, heightened geopolitical uncertainty and concerns that resilient US economic data could keep interest rates higher for longer.
  • Despite the weakness in prices, options activity suggests investors are not abandoning the asset class. Significant downside protection appeared in MicroStrategy, Coinbase and Circle, while selective upside exposure remained visible through call buying in IBIT and ETHA. The overall picture points to a market that remains constructive on the long-term outlook for digital assets, but is becoming more selective and defensive in the near term.

Commodities

  • Gold fell to test its 200-day moving average once again on Wednesday as higher oil prices kept inflation concerns elevated following renewed tensions in the Middle East. Those losses were reversed in early trading on Thursday after Israel and Lebanon announced a conditional ceasefire. Overall, gold remains rangebound, with steady central bank demand being offset by ETF outflows and short-term momentum traders positioning for a deeper correction. Key focus remains on support around USD 4,425, developments in the Middle East and oil market, as well as incoming US data following the recent hawkish shift in Fed rate expectations.
  • Crude oil trades softer but remains near the upper end of Brent's recent USD 90–100 range after the Israel-Lebanon ceasefire announcement. The move follows another day of US and Iranian military action across the region. While flows through the Strait of Hormuz remain severely disrupted, global supply buffers continue to shrink. In the US, a sixth consecutive weekly inventory draw saw stockpiles at Cushing, the delivery hub for WTI futures, fall to 22.4 million barrels, edging closer to levels widely considered near the operational minimum. It’s helping to keep the prompt spread elevated with the July futures contract trading USD 3.25 above August.

Fixed Income

  • The US Treasury yield curve shifted higher, with the 10-year yield rising 4.6 basis points to 4.491% — its largest single-day increase since 19 May — and the 30-year yield climbing 3.4 basis points to 4.989%. The move was driven by stronger-than-expected ADP payrolls data and rising oil prices stoking inflation concerns, reinforcing expectations the Fed could hike rates at the June 16–17 meeting.
  • Around six companies were eyeing new bond sales in the US investment-grade primary market on Wednesday, following a busy week that saw 24 deals raise over $36 billion. Bank of New Zealand announced a new benchmark two-tranche yankee offering.

Currencies

  • FX moves are being driven by renewed demand for the USD as escalating Middle East tensions and Strait of Hormuz risks prompt a flight to safety, reinforced by hawkish Fed commentary. Dollar Index rose 0.33% to 96.12, its biggest daily gain since May 19 and a third straight advance.
  • EURUSD saw its largest drop since May 19, falling to $1.1598 (lowest 5pm NY since early April) before stabilising around 1.1611.
  • USDJPY briefly dipped to 159.83 after headlines that Israel and Lebanon agreed to a ceasefire, but is trading just under 160, last near 159.92.
  • AUDUSD tumbled on the Hormuz-driven USD spike but is now around 0.7137, up slightly from 0.7129.
  • NZDUSD plunged on hawkish Fed remarks and is trading near 0.5930.
  • USDMXN rose 0.30% to 17.3411, while USDCAD gained 0.41% to 1.3897, both their largest one-day advances in weeks.
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