QT_QuickTake

Market Quick Take - 11 June 2026

Macro 3 minutes to read
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Market Quick Take – 11 June 2026


Market drivers and catalysts

  • Equities: US tech sold off sharply, Europe was mixed, and Asia extended losses as oil and geopolitical risk rose.
  • Volatility: CPI, US-Iran tensions, oil above $94, VIX 22, ECB, PPI, downside skew
  • Digital Assets: Bitcoin above $62.5k, Ethereum rebound, Fed focus
  • Commodities: Gold nears USD 4,000 amid continued liquidation; oil edges higher after US strikes in Iran
  • Fixed Income: Treasuries hover in a range as US May CPI was in line with expectations.
  • Currencies: USD frozen in the local range since its recent break higher, may be taking its lead from US treasury yields.
  • Macro: ECB rate decision

Macro

  • The US launched a second day of strikes on Iran, raising fears that peace efforts could collapse and the conflict could drag on. Trump accused Tehran of stalling on an interim deal, while Iran vowed to stand firm. Earlier, the US carried out “self-defense strikes” after an American helicopter was downed, and Iran hit US facilities in Bahrain, Jordan, and Kuwait in response.
  • US annual inflation rose to 4.2% in May 2026, the highest since April 2023 and third straight increase, driven by a 23.5% jump in energy costs amid the Iran conflict. Gasoline rose 40.5% and fuel oil 58.9%. Monthly CPI was up 0.5%, with energy over 60% of the gain. Core inflation reached 2.9% year-on-year as expected, while month-on-month core CPI slowed to 0.2%, the only number that surprised versus expectations, which were for a +0.3% rise.
  • The Bank of Canada kept its key overnight rate at 2.25% for a fifth straight meeting in June 2026, as expected, and left the Bank Rate and deposit rate at 2.5% and 2.20%. It sees limited spillover from higher energy prices, expects inflation near 3% before easing toward 2%, and notes weak economic activity and ongoing US trade policy uncertainty.
  • The European Central Bank look set to raise interest rates for the first time since 2023 due the energy-related rise in inflation. The deposit rate is expected to be lifted by a quarter point to 2.25%, with new quarterly forecasts likely to suggest inflation will quicken further. The ECB's decision must balance the need to address rising inflation with the risk of sparking a recession, as economic expansion is already sagging.
  • Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda was hospitalized Wednesday for treatment of an issue that will see him miss next Monday-Tuesday’s Bank of Japan meeting, though officials said he would likely make a statement in conjunction with the meeting. The market is pricing more than 90% likelihood that the BoJ will hike the policy rate 25 basis points to 1.00%, which would be the first hike since December of last year and bring the rate to its highest level since 1995.

Macro calendar highlights (times in GMT)

  • 1215 – ECB Rate Decision
  • 1230 – US May PPI
  • 1230 – US Weekly Initial Jobless Claims
  • 1245 – ECB's Lagarde Press Conference
  • 1700 – US to sell USD 22 billion 30-year bonds

Earnings events

  • Wednesday (yesterday): Oracle
  • Thursday (today): Adobe, Dollarama

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


Equities

  • USA: The S&P 500 fell 1.6% to 7,267, the Nasdaq 100 lost 2.0%, and the Dow dropped 1.9% as US-Iran tensions and another technology unwind hit risk appetite. Chipmakers led the pressure, with Qualcomm down 6.9%, AMD off 4.9% and Nvidia lower by 3.7%, while Super Micro Computer plunged 28.0% after unveiling plans to raise $7 billion through equity financing. Cracker Barrel bucked the selloff, surging 22.6% after raising revenue guidance, while Oracle fell 8.9% after hours as heavy AI capital spending overshadowed strong cloud growth.
  • Europe: Europe was steadier, with the Stoxx 600 down 0.1%, the DAX falling 1.0% to 24,195, the Euro Stoxx 50 losing 0.7%, and the FTSE 100 rising 0.3%. The region was caught between softer US core inflation signals and higher oil prices, so defensives and energy held up better than cyclical and technology shares. Siemens Energy dropped 6.5% as investors cut exposure to high-growth industrial names, Soitec fell around 10.6% after a broker downgrade, while Shell gained 1.9% on stronger crude and Nestlé rose 2.6% as investors rotated into staples.
  • Asia: Asian equities extended losses this morning, with MSCI Asia Pacific ex-Japan down around 1.0%, Japan’s Nikkei 225 lower by 1.5%, South Korea’s Kospi down around 1.2%, and Taiwan also falling 1.5%. The selling followed Wall Street’s tech-led decline and fresh US strikes on Iran, which pushed Brent crude close to $95 and kept the yen near 160.5 per dollar. Chip-heavy markets stayed vulnerable after SK Hynix fell 7.5% and Samsung Electronics dropped 6.1% on Wednesday, while HSBC and Standard Chartered remained in focus after renewed China-related regulatory concerns. Markets now watch oil, currencies and whether Asia’s AI trade can settle after this week’s sharp swings.

Volatility

  • Volatility surged on Wednesday as investors weighed inflation data, escalating US-Iran tensions, and another round of weakness in technology stocks. The S&P 500 fell 1.62%, while the VIX rose to 22.22, its highest close since April. Although headline CPI accelerated to 4.2% year-on-year, much of the increase was driven by higher energy prices, while core inflation came in at a softer-than-expected 2.9%.
  • Options markets suggest volatility is likely to remain elevated through the end of the week. Based on current SPX pricing, traders are pricing in an expected move of approximately 110 points, or 1.5%, between Wednesday's close and Friday's expiration. Today's option chain also reveals a modest defensive bias, with near-the-money puts trading at higher premiums than equivalent calls. Investors continue to pay more for downside protection than upside exposure, although positioning remains far from panic levels. Attention now turns to US producer prices, jobless claims, the ECB rate decision and press conference, and Adobe's earnings release after the close.
  • Volatility indicator of the day: SPX options for today's expiration show a mild downside skew, with put premiums richer than comparable calls around the current market level.

Digital Assets

  • Digital assets steadied overnight as investors cautiously returned to risk assets following Wednesday's inflation report.
  • Bitcoin rose 2.2% to $62,569, while Ethereum gained 1.7% to $1,648. Solana outperformed with a 3.0% advance and XRP added 1.7%, pointing to a broader recovery across major cryptocurrencies. Crypto-related equities were less enthusiastic. IBIT slipped 0.2% and ETHA fell 1.6%, suggesting traditional market participants remain cautious despite the rebound in underlying digital assets.
  • Options activity reinforced that message, with institutional investors continuing to favour protective positions in IBIT, COIN and MSTR ahead of next week's Federal Reserve meeting. For now, crypto markets are stabilising, but sentiment remains highly sensitive to developments in the Middle East, broader equity market volatility and the outlook for interest rates.

Commodities

  • Gold’s weeklong slump extended in Asia, with prices tumbling towards USD 4,000 - a seven-month low - before rebounding into the European session. Selling accelerated last week after gold broke below its 200-day moving average, currently at USD 4,442, triggering technical momentum selling and forcing some long liquidation. The decline gathered further pace on Wednesday following the strong US inflation print and renewed gains in oil prices after fresh attacks in the Middle East. Bullion has now corrected 38.2% of the 2022–2026 rally, with a sustained break below USD 4,000 potentially opening the way towards USD 3,600, the 50% retracement.
  • Gold’s USD 1,570 tumble from the January peak, and not least its weakness during the Middle East conflict, has by now triggered a near-complete reset in investor sentiment. This is reflected in falling futures open interest, ETF outflows, and a slowdown in physical demand. While the longer-term supportive themes are likely to reassert themselves once the inflation outlook stabilises, the near-term outlook remains clouded by speculative selling, long liquidation, and rate hike fears.
  • Oil traded higher, albeit at a relatively modest pace so far, after US forces struck targets in Iran for a second consecutive day. Renewed hostilities threaten to prolong the near-total closure of the Strait of Hormuz, which has severely disrupted flows of crude oil, refined fuels, and natural gas since the conflict escalated in late February. Meanwhile, US strategic and commercial crude inventories declined for a second straight week, despite indications that the recent record pace of crude and fuel exports is beginning to ease.
  • CBOT soybean futures rose for first time in nine sessions, rebounding from multi-month lows as traders shifted their focus to today’s updated crop forecasts from the USDA. Analysts expect the report to show lower U.S. wheat production estimates, while raising forecasts for corn and soybean output in Brazil and Argentina following favourable growing conditions and strong harvest results.

Fixed Income

  • US Treasury yields were not very reactive to the US May CPI release, as the data was largely in line with expectations. At the front-end of the US treasury yield curve, the benchmark 2-year yield bottomed at a three-day low near 4.10% before rising to 4.15% and then easing back toward 4.13% as the market awaits the first FOMC meeting chaired by Kevin Warsh next Wednesday. At the longer end of the curve, the US 10-year treasury yield continues to chop around in the range above 4.50% to 4.56%, trading near 4.54% early Thursday after Wednesday’s auction of 10-year treasury notes saw the best demand metrics of 2026.
  • Further weakness in risk sentiment Thursday saw a modest widening of high yield credit spreads to a new high since mid-April, as the Bloomberg measure we track of the high yield bond spread to US treasuries widened two basis points to 275 basis points.
  • Ahead of today’s (Thursday’s) ECB meeting and nearly universal expectations for a 25 basis point rate hike, Eurozone government bond yield rose close to local highs, with the benchmark 2-year German Schatz closing some five basis points higher at 2.72% Wednesday, about five basis points below the cycle highs this year. The market will look for guidance on the level of the ECB’s determination to continue its new hiking path if inflation levels don’t subside, even as the growth outlook has dimmed. Forward expectations suggest the next hike will most likely come in September, with a slight bias in favour of yet another hike through the December meeting.

Currencies

  • The US dollar trades with very low beta to risk sentiment, seemingly having its eye more on US treasury yields, which were little changed yesterday after the release of the US May CPI data (see above). EURUSD seems frozen in its new range after breaking below 1.1575, hardly straying away from the 1.1550 area over the last 24 hours, while USDJPY continues to dribble a bit higher above 160.50 as everyone wonders what Japan’s recently very quiet Ministry of Finance is thinking after its quite heavy handed market intervention starting in late April from very near current levels. As well, it emerged late Wednesday in Tokyo that BoJ Governor Ueda was hospitalized and will not attend next week’s BoJ meeting, though apparently likely to issue a statement. Elsewhere, AUDUSD has so far survived an assault on the psychologically important 0.7000 level, dipping as low as 0.6988 early Thursday before trading back near 0.7010 by early European hours.
  • CAD was unreactive to the Bank of Canada rate announcement and policy statement, which brought no new guidance of note as the key USDCAD exchange rate hovers near the top of the range of the last several months near 1.3950.

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