QT_QuickTake

Market Quick Take - 17 April 2026

Macro 3 minutes to read
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Market Quick Take – 17 April 2026


Market drivers and catalysts

  • Equities: Global equities extended their rebound as Wall Street hit records, Europe stayed mixed, and Asia rallied on peace hopes.
  • Volatility: VIX subdued, geopolitics supportive, Nasdaq streak
  • Digital Assets: Selective strength, BTC stable, ETH lagging, IBIT outperforming ETHA
  • Fixed Income: Yields steady, limited easing priced
  • Currencies: USD stabilising, softer trend, JPY weak
  • Commodities: Oil easing, supply tight, gold holding, silver firm, copper consolidates
  • Macro events: Markets remain caught between fragile hopes for fresh US-Iran talks and a still-closed Strait of Hormuz.

Macro headlines

  • Oil eased in early Friday trade, but the market is still trading on diplomacy headlines rather than calm nerves. Brent near USD 98 and West Texas Intermediate near USD 93 as traders reacted to hopes for weekend US-Iran talks, even though the Strait of Hormuz has been shut for seven weeks and supply disruption remains severe.
  • The dollar is heading for a second straight weekly loss as investors unwind some safe-haven positioning. Reuters said the euro and sterling have recovered most of their Iran-war losses, while markets wait for a fresh catalyst from weekend diplomacy.
  • The Federal Reserve’s Beige Book says the Iran war is a major source of uncertainty for US firms, complicating hiring, pricing and capital spending decisions. At the same time, weekly jobless claims fell to 207,000, which suggests the labor market is still holding up, even if confidence is not exactly doing cartwheels.
  • Central banks are still leaning cautious rather than heroic. Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey said the Bank is in no rush to raise rates, European Central Bank officials have played down the chance of an April hike, and the International Monetary Fund said its reference scenario still implies about 50 basis points of European Central Bank tightening this year.
  • In Japan, Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda avoided signaling an April rate hike, and Reuters said market pricing for such a move has dropped to around 10%. That keeps the yen and Japan policy outlook firmly in the market conversation.
  • The International Monetary Fund also warned European governments not to overuse broad energy support, arguing that blanket subsidies distort price signals and can become very costly, while targeted support for vulnerable households is the better option.

Macro calendar highlights (times in GMT)

09:00 – Euro area February trade balance.
10:00 – International Monetary Fund meetings continue.
12:00 – Bank of England Chief Economist Huw Pill speaks.
17:00 – US Baker Hughes oil rig count and total rig count.

Earnings next week

  • Monday: Cleveland-Cliffs, Steel Dynamics, Alaska Air
  • Tuesday: UnitedHealth, GE Aerospace, RTX, 3M, Danaher, D.R. Horton
  • Wednesday: Boeing, Tesla, IBM, Texas Instruments, ServiceNow, Lam Research, Vertiv, AT&T, Boston Scientific
  • Thursday: American Express, Intel, Lockheed Martin, Honeywell, Blackstone, Comcast, Nokia, NextEra
  • Friday: Procter & Gamble, SLB, Charter, HCA Healthcare, AB Volvo

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


Equities

  • USA: The S&P 500 rose 0.3% to 7,041.28, the Nasdaq Composite gained 0.4% to 24,102.70, and the Dow added 0.2% to 48,578.72 as hopes for fresh U.S.-Iran talks and a temporary Israel-Lebanon ceasefire kept risk appetite alive. Earnings still did some of the heavy lifting: PepsiCo rose 2.3% after beating estimates, Microsoft added 2.0% to cap a 13.3% four-day rebound ahead of results later this month, and AMD jumped 7.8% to a record high as AI optimism and a price-target increase kept chip momentum hot. The weaker side was less glamorous, with Charles Schwab down 7.6% after results, Abbott off 6.0% on a guidance cut, and Netflix down almost 10% after hours on soft second-quarter guidance and Reed Hastings’ planned June exit as chairman.
  • Europe: The Stoxx Europe 600 was essentially flat at 616.95, while the DAX rose 0.4% to 24,154.47 and the FTSE 100 added 0.3% to 10,589.99 as investors balanced hopes for de-escalation in the Middle East against still-high energy costs and a weaker German growth outlook. UK sentiment got a lift from February GDP, which rose a better-than-expected 0.5% month on month, but the market tone stayed selective rather than cheerful. Technology helped, with SAP up 3.5%, and Intertek jumped 9.0% after rejecting EQT’s bid, while Barry Callebaut sank 15.6% after cutting its full-year profit outlook and travel names stayed under pressure, with Ryanair down 6.4% and easyJet off 5.0%. Europe now looks like a market waiting for oil to calm down before it gets properly optimistic.
  • Asia: Asia led the move higher on Thursday. Japan’s Nikkei 225 jumped 2.4% to 59,518.34, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng rose 1.7% to 26,394.26, South Korea’s Kospi gained 2.2% to 6,226.05, and Shanghai added 0.7%, as peace hopes met stronger-than-expected China data, with first-quarter gross domestic product growth reported at 5.0%. Taiwan stayed at the centre of the AI story after TSMC reported a 58% profit jump to a record T$572.5 billion, raised its 2026 revenue outlook, and signalled capital spending at the high end of guidance. TSMC’s Taipei shares had already closed 0.2% higher at a record before the release, which told investors that the AI buildout still has real receipts behind it, not just very expensive excitement.

Volatility

  • Volatility remains contained, even as equities continue to grind higher, with the VIX closing at 17.94 (-1.27%) while the S&P 500 rose to 7,041, supported by the Nasdaq extending its 12-day winning streak. The main driver remains geopolitics: easing tensions and ongoing U.S.–Iran diplomacy are keeping risk sentiment stable, but this also leaves markets sensitive to any negative headlines. The current setup suggests investors are comfortable with the rally, but still keeping protection in place rather than fully embracing risk.
  • Expected move for SPX this week: options pricing implied a move of about 108.5 points (1.59%) into today’s expiry, with roughly 34.5 points (0.49%) expected for today alone.
  • For today’s expiry, there is still a modest downside skew, with near-the-money puts priced at higher implied volatility than calls (around 16.6% vs 14.5%), indicating investors continue to favour downside protection over upside participation.

Digital Assets

  • Digital assets are holding a constructive tone, but participation remains selective rather than broad-based. Bitcoin is trading near $74,700 (-0.6%), while Ethereum is softer around $2,320 (-1.1%), suggesting the move higher in crypto is losing some momentum beneath the surface. The broader macro backdrop remains supportive, with easing geopolitical tensions and steady equity markets helping stabilise sentiment, but flows indicate investors are not fully committing to the rally.
  • This divergence is also visible in ETFs, where IBIT is holding firmer around $42.73 (+0.4%), while ETHA is weaker near $17.82 (-0.8%), reinforcing that bitcoin exposure continues to attract stronger demand than ether. In crypto-related equities, the tone is more constructive, with COIN (+2.0%), MSTR (+3.8%), and MARA (+10.3%) showing clear upside participation. Options flow adds another layer to the story: upside positioning remains visible in bitcoin proxies, but it is offset by more defensive or income-style structures elsewhere. Overall, the trend remains positive, but conviction is still lacking.

Fixed Income

  • U.S. Treasuries are broadly steady after recent moves higher in yields, with the 2-year yield near 3.77% and the 10-year yield around 4.32%, as markets balance resilient economic data with slightly calmer geopolitical conditions. The overall message remains that investors are not pricing a sharp slowdown, but also see limited scope for near-term rate cuts.
  • Demand for Treasuries remains solid in the background, with foreign holdings rising to a record USD 9.49 trillion in February (fact, Reuters). In Japan, expectations for policy tightening remain uncertain, with markets still watching closely whether the Bank of Japan will move at its upcoming meeting, while yields remain elevated.

Commodities

  • Oil has eased, with Brent trading near USD 98.7 and WTI around USD 90.1, as hopes for renewed U.S.–Iran talks and the Israel–Lebanon ceasefire have reduced some of the immediate panic premium. That said, the broader supply story has not gone away, with disruptions to Middle East production still feeding into the physical market, suggesting prices may remain elevated even if diplomacy progresses.
  • Gold is holding close to USD 4,800, trading around USD 4,786, supported by a softer dollar and expectations that easing tensions could reduce inflation pressure. Silver remains firm near USD 78.7, continuing to benefit from the same macro backdrop. Copper has edged lower on the day, but the broader trend remains supported by tight supply conditions and returning demand from China.

Currencies

  • The U.S. dollar is stabilising after its recent decline, with the DXY near 98.2, as easing geopolitical tensions reduce some of the safe-haven demand that had supported it. The broader tone, however, remains softer, with investors gradually rotating back into risk-sensitive currencies.
  • The euro is trading around USD 1.177, while the Australian dollar is holding near USD 0.716, close to multi-year highs. The Japanese yen remains weak near 159.4 per dollar, reflecting ongoing uncertainty around Bank of Japan policy. Commodity-linked currencies continue to find support from elevated energy prices, leaving FX markets balanced between fading risk aversion and still-tight commodity supply.

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