Macro

Saxo Market Compass - 20 April 2026

Koen Hoorelbeke
Investment and Options Strategist

Saxo Weekly Market Compass – 20 April 2026


Gains without full conviction – markets climbed on easing oil fears and earnings momentum, but the hedging never stopped.

Markets navigated a week dominated by shifting US–Iran dynamics, with oil volatility driving cross-asset moves while equities pushed to record highs. Investors increasingly looked through geopolitical noise, supported by resilient earnings and easing inflation signals, though sentiment remained fragile beneath the surface. By week's end, optimism around diplomacy briefly boosted risk appetite before renewed tensions reintroduced uncertainty. It was a week of gains, but not of full conviction.


Equities

Record highs driven by tech strength and easing oil fears.

  • United States: Wall Street extended its rally, with the S&P 500 moving from 6,886 early in the week to above 7,100 by Friday. Gains were led by AI-linked names and financials, as markets repeatedly treated geopolitical shocks as temporary. Oil pullbacks acted as a key trigger for renewed risk-taking, while earnings provided confirmation.
  • Europe & Asia: Europe remained more sensitive to oil and inflation, with selective strength in banks and travel as crude eased, while luxury and industrials lagged on earnings. Asia stayed supported by the AI cycle, led by semiconductor demand, though profit-taking emerged late in the week.

Market pulse: Equities are trending higher, but leadership is narrow and macro-dependent.

Looking ahead – equities

Earnings now take centre stage. Tesla and Intel will test whether AI-driven optimism can justify current valuations, while airline results will offer insight into demand versus cost pressures. If earnings confirm resilience, equities can hold levels; if not, the market loses its main pillar.


Volatility

Volatility compresses despite persistent geopolitical risk.

  • VIX: The VIX declined through the week into the high-teens, signalling calmer conditions even as Hormuz tensions persisted. Implied moves narrowed, but consistent downside skew showed investors continued to pay for protection. The surface calm masks a market still hedging tail risks.

Market pulse: Volatility is low, but not trusted.

Looking ahead – volatility

Focus shifts to earnings-driven volatility. Index volatility may stay contained, but single-stock volatility is likely to rise. Any renewed escalation in oil or geopolitics would quickly reprice index volatility from these compressed levels.


Options sentiment

Positioning shows participation with protection, not conviction.

Options flow reflected a market staying invested while actively managing risk. Upside exposure was present but largely expressed through defined-risk structures such as call spreads, while downside hedging remained persistent. Large-cap equities and financials showed the most caution, reflecting earnings uncertainty.

Sector dispersion stood out: metals saw constructive upside interest, energy flows were selective, and broader equity positioning avoided outright directional bets.

Market pulse: Investors kept risk on, but consistently paid to hedge it.

Looking ahead – options sentiment

This positioning creates asymmetry. If earnings surprise positively, positioning may need to chase upside. If not, existing hedge demand suggests limited downside panic but continued grind rather than breakout.


Digital assets

Crypto stable but conviction remains uneven.

  • Bitcoin & Ethereum: Bitcoin held broadly stable in the mid-$70k range, while Ethereum lagged slightly, highlighting uneven demand. Institutional flows remained supportive, with IBIT leading and ETHA seeing smaller but steady inflows. Crypto-linked equities outperformed at times, reflecting leveraged exposure to sentiment.

Market pulse: Crypto is stable, but still macro-driven rather than independent.

Looking ahead – digital assets

Crypto direction remains tied to broader risk sentiment. If equities extend gains and volatility stays low, flows should remain supportive. A macro shock – especially via oil or rates – would likely pull crypto back in line with risk assets.


Fixed income

Yields ease, then stabilise as macro signals balance out.

  • US yields: US yields declined through mid-week on softer inflation and lower oil, before stabilising as markets reassessed growth resilience. Central banks maintained a cautious stance, signalling no urgency to tighten despite energy-related inflation risks.

Market pulse: Bond markets reflect balance, not stress.

Looking ahead – fixed income

Retail sales data becomes key for validating consumer strength. Strong data could push yields higher again, while weaker numbers would reinforce the current steady-rate narrative.


Commodities

Oil volatility dominates, metals follow macro cues.

  • Oil: Oil moved sharply through the week, falling from elevated levels before rebounding as geopolitical headlines shifted. This volatility shaped broader market sentiment and inflation expectations.
  • Metals: Gold traded in a wide range, while copper gained on supply constraints and improving growth expectations.

Market pulse: Oil remains the macro anchor for all assets.

Looking ahead – commodities

Geopolitics remains the primary driver. Any clarity on Hormuz or US–Iran talks will directly impact inflation expectations and risk sentiment. Commodities are likely to stay reactive rather than trend-driven.


Currencies

Dollar weakens, then stabilises as risk sentiment shifts.

  • US dollar: The US dollar declined through most of the week before stabilising as oil rebounded and uncertainty returned.
  • Japanese yen: The yen remained weak despite lower yields, reflecting carry dynamics and policy uncertainty.

Market pulse: FX remains driven by rate expectations and risk sentiment.

Looking ahead – currencies

Currency direction hinges on rate expectations. Strong US data could support the dollar, while continued risk-on sentiment would favour cyclical currencies.


Key takeaways

  • The S&P 500 advanced from 6,886 to above 7,100 over the week, led by AI-linked names and financials as markets treated geopolitical shocks as temporary.
  • European indices showed selective gains, with banks and travel outperforming as crude eased, while luxury and industrials lagged; Asia was supported by semiconductor demand but saw profit-taking late in the week.
  • The VIX declined into the high-teens, compressing despite persistent Hormuz tensions, though elevated downside skew signalled ongoing demand for tail protection.
  • Options flow favoured defined-risk structures – call spreads over outright calls – with persistent downside hedging across large-cap equities and financials reflecting earnings uncertainty.
  • Bitcoin held broadly stable in the mid-$70k range while Ethereum lagged; institutional flows via IBIT remained supportive, with crypto direction remaining macro-dependent.
  • US Treasury yields declined mid-week on softer inflation and lower oil before stabilising as markets reassessed growth resilience; central banks signalled no urgency to tighten.
  • Oil moved sharply lower then rebounded as geopolitical headlines shifted, remaining the primary cross-asset anchor shaping sentiment and inflation expectations through the week.
  • Gold traded in a wide range; copper gained on supply constraints and improving growth expectations; the US dollar declined through most of the week before stabilising on oil's rebound.

Looking ahead – week of 20 April to 24 April 2026

Earnings season moves into its most consequential stretch, making the coming week structurally more binary than the one just passed. With geopolitical risk still unresolved and volatility compressed, a single earnings miss from a high-profile AI name could reprice both single-stock and index volatility simultaneously.

The key focus areas are equity earnings and macro data validation. Tesla and Intel are the headline tests for whether AI-driven equity valuations can hold at current levels. Airline results will offer a read on consumer demand versus cost pressures. US retail sales data is the pivotal macro release, capable of either reinforcing the soft-landing narrative or raising fresh concerns about consumer resilience.

The single biggest risk event is the combination of tech earnings and retail sales landing in the same week. A positive earnings surprise without macro confirmation could create a narrow, fragile rally. A miss in either would likely trigger the repricing that compressed volatility has so far avoided.

Calendar highlights (times in GMT)

Mon 20 Apr – Markets reopen; geopolitical monitoring continues (Hormuz / US–Iran)
Tue 21 Apr – Tesla earnings (after US close); early airline sector results
Wed 22 Apr – Ongoing large-cap earnings; US macro data releases
Thu 23 Apr – Intel earnings; US retail sales data
Fri 24 Apr – End-of-week positioning; options expiry considerations


Concluding remarks

Markets delivered another week of gains, supported by easing oil fears and strong earnings momentum, but conviction remains conditional. Volatility is low, positioning is hedged, and leadership is narrow. With earnings accelerating and macro data in focus, the coming week will determine whether this rally broadens or stalls under its own expectations. Staying selective and flexible remains key.


For a global look at markets – go to Inspiration.


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