QT_QuickTake

Market Quick Take - 21 May 2026

Macro 3 minutes to read
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Market Quick Take – 21 May 2026


Market drivers and catalysts

  • Equities: US and Europe rallied on easing oil stress, while Asia lagged before Nvidia reignited the chip trade.
  • Volatility: VIX falls, Nvidia supports AI sentiment, KOSPI jumps 8%, bond yields elevated
  • Digital Assets: Bitcoin stabilises near USD 77k, IBIT and ETHA rebound despite ETF outflows, miners outperform
  • Fixed Income: Global yields punched lower on big drop in crude oil prices
  • Currencies: USD eases off recent highs amidst low volatility, AUD lower on weak April employment data
  • Commodities: Oil tumbles, gold rebounds as Trump once again raises hopes for Iran deal
  • Macro events: Eurozone and US preliminary PMIs for May

Macro headlines

  • Oil fell, easing inflation and rate hike fears, helping bonds and stocks rebound, on renewed optimism over a US–Iran peace deal, after Trump said talks are in their “final stages” and the Strait of Hormuz may soon reopen.
  • Fed minutes still flagged a possible rate hike this year if inflation stays above 2%, leaving markets divided on whether the Fed will move by December.
  • Australia April Employment data was far softer than expected, with a -18k drop in Employment vs. +15k expected and a sharp rise in the Unemployment Rate to 4.5% versus 4.3% expected and 4.3% in March.
  • Australia’s composite PMI fell to 47.8 in May from 50.4, signaling renewed contraction as both services and manufacturing weakened amid the Middle East conflict. New orders dropped at the fastest pace since September 2021, and employment fell for the first time in 18 months, with the sharpest job losses in nearly six years. Input costs rose sharply on higher fuel, raw materials, and transport, while business confidence hit a record low on rising costs, rate-hike risks, and tough market conditions.
  • The average US 30-year fixed mortgage rate rose 10 bps to 6.56% in the week ending May 15, 2026, the highest in seven weeks, per the MBA. Rates climbed for a fourth straight week on higher Treasury yields amid inflation and debt concerns. Total mortgage applications fell 2.3%, with purchase applications down 4.1% and refis down 0.1%, pushing overall activity to a five-week low.
  • Japan's April exports rose 14.8% year-over-year, beating the estimated 9.2% increase, with exports to the US up 9.5% and exports to the EU rising 26.9%.

Macro calendar highlights (times in GMT)

0800 – Eurozone May Manufacturing and Services PMI
1230 – US Weekly Initial Jobless Claims
1230 – April Housing Starts
1345 – US May Manufacturing and Services PMI
1400 – Eurozone May Consumer Confidence
1430 – EIA’s Weekly Natural Gas Storage Change
1700 – US to sell USD 19 billion 10-year TIPS

Earnings events

  • Wednesday (yesterday): Nvidia, Analog Devices, TJX Companies, Lowe’s, Intuit, Tokio Marine Holdings, Target, Hasbro
  • Thursday (today): Walmart, Deere, Ross Stores, Take-Two, Workday
  • Friday: Richemont

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


Equities

  • USA: The S&P 500 rose 1.1%, the Nasdaq 100 gained 1.7%, and the Dow advanced 1.3% as lower oil prices eased inflation worries and lifted risk appetite. Consumer discretionary led, with cruise and travel names helped by lower fuel-cost pressure, while homebuilders rose after Toll Brothers reported better-than-expected results. Nvidia gained 1.3% in the regular session ahead of earnings, but its strong sales outlook drew a muted after-hours reaction, reminding investors that very high expectations are not easily fed. Markets now watch whether lower oil and resilient artificial intelligence demand can keep the rebound alive.
  • Europe: European equities advanced for a third day, with the Stoxx Europe 600 up 1.5% to 620.29, the FTSE 100 rising 1.0%, the DAX gaining 1.4%, and the CAC 40 climbing 1.7%. The move was broad, with banks leading gains across sectors, while technology also helped after chip optimism returned. ASML rose 6.7% on stronger semiconductor sentiment, Infineon gained 5.1%, and HSBC helped lift the UK market. Marks & Spencer added 6.6% after profit growth forecasts, despite cyberattack disruption. Europe’s next test is whether earnings can keep carrying the market if yields stay uncomfortable.
  • Asia: Asian equities fell for a fourth straight session in the latest completed trading day, with the MSCI Asia Pacific Index down 0.8% as inflation concerns and higher yields pressured growth-heavy markets. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng fell 0.6% to 25,651.12, Japan’s benchmark dropped 1.5%, and South Korea weakened for a second day as foreign selling hit technology shares. TSMC and SoftBank were among the main regional drags, while AIA weighed on Hong Kong. The tone changed sharply in early Thursday trade after Nvidia’s results and Samsung’s strike relief, a reminder that Asia’s chip trade can still turn faster than a crowded airport queue.

Volatility

  • Volatility eased after a strong rebound in global equities, with the VIX closing at 17.44, down 3.4%, as lower oil prices and a partial pullback in Treasury yields helped calm inflation concerns. Nvidia’s earnings beat supported the broader AI theme, although the reaction was more measured than euphoric, suggesting investors still want confirmation that AI-driven growth can continue justifying elevated valuations. The improvement in sentiment spilled into Asia, where South Korea’s KOSPI surged more than 8%, driven by semiconductor and AI-linked optimism after Samsung avoided a strike and investors rotated back into chip exposure.
  • SPX options pricing currently implies a move of roughly 73 points, or 0.98%, through Friday’s expiry, while today’s expiry alone implies about 57 points, or 0.77%.
  • Meanwhile, today’s 0DTE SPX options chain still shows a noticeable defensive skew: near the 25-delta area, put implied volatility remains materially higher than call implied volatility, indicating that investors continue paying more for short-term downside protection than upside participation.

Digital Assets

  • Digital assets are stabilising after a difficult stretch earlier this week, with Bitcoin trading near USD 77,700 and Ether around USD 2,130 as broader market sentiment improves alongside equities and AI-linked assets. The easing in oil prices and recovery in global risk appetite helped crypto sentiment, although investors remain cautious after several sessions of ETF outflows, rising bond yields and renewed concerns that central banks may keep interest rates elevated for longer.
  • Spot Bitcoin ETFs continued to see net outflows on 20 May, with Farside data showing approximately USD 70.5 million leaving US-listed products, including roughly USD 61.5 million from IBIT alone. Ether ETFs also remained under pressure, with around USD 28.1 million in net outflows led by ETHA, even as both ETFs traded firmer in the latest session. Crypto-linked equities reflected a more constructive tone, with miners such as MARA and CLSK outperforming Bitcoin itself.
  • Under the surface, options positioning still paints a nuanced picture. Flow data showed investors continuing to buy upside exposure in crypto-related equities such as IREN, CLSK and MSTR, but hedging activity remained elevated through puts in products such as IBIT, ETHA and MSTR. Among major altcoins, Solana, XRP and Dogecoin traded modestly higher, while stablecoin and blockchain-payment adoption themes remained in focus after European banking consortium Qivalis expanded its euro stablecoin initiative to 37 financial institutions.

Commodities

  • Oil prices are edging higher after plunging on Wednesday when Trump once again signalled that negotiations with Iran were in the “final stages,” raising hopes for a resumption of energy flows from the Persian Gulf. Ahead of those comments, the EIA reported the largest weekly decline on record in US crude inventories. While a reopening of the Strait of Hormuz could initially unleash a wave of supply from vessels already loaded and waiting to depart, broader market normalization would likely take months given disrupted logistics, displaced shipping and depleted inventories. Goldman Sachs notes that global crude and refined product inventories are currently being drawn down at a record pace this month.
  • Gold is holding above USD 4,500 after receiving a boost from a sharp decline in oil prices, which helped ease inflation, rate-hike concerns, and bond yields. Bullion is currently showing unusually elevated inverse correlations with bond yields, the dollar and crude oil, highlighting the reaction function driving current price action. For gold to regain upside momentum and avoid a retest of the important 200-day moving average support at USD 4,365, the market likely needs to see a further easing in oil-driven inflation pressures or renewed evidence that slowing growth risks are beginning to outweigh inflation concerns.
  • Grains remained under pressure with the BCOM Grains Index falling for a third consecutive session, led by declines in corn and soybeans. The market continued to unwind earlier gains driven by hopes for increased Chinese purchases of US farm goods, with focus shifting back to more immediate fundamentals. Lower oil prices reduced support for biofuel-linked demand expectations, while recent Midwest rainfall improved soil moisture conditions and supported a favorable early outlook for crop development. For now, weather and the scope of any potential Chinese buying remain the key drivers to watch.

Fixed Income

  • US Treasuries rallied as crude oil prices dropped sharply Wednesday, with the benchmark US 10-year treasury yield reversing the prior day’s yield jump, dropping eight basis points and trading below 4.60% early Thursday. The benchmark 2-year treasury yield likewise reversed course and dropped back as much as eleven basis points at one point before rebounding six basis points to just below 4.07%.
  • European bonds rallied hard on the fall in crude oil prices, with the German benchmark 2-year Schatz yield dropping over ten basis points to 2.66% and the benchmark 10-year Bund yield dropping nearly ten basis points to 3.10%.
  • Japan’s short-dated government bond yields steady, longest-dated yield drop. Japan’s government bond yields were steady at the short end of the yield curve and out to the 10-year tenor, but at the longer end of the curve, 30-year and 40-year JGB yields fell 4-5 basis points as the BoJ announced plans to discuss its bond purchase tapering schedule with market participants through Friday.

Currencies

  • The US dollar eased slightly lower on the sell-off in crude oil but remains near the top of the recent range. The EURUSD move below 1.1600 failed and the price action rebounded toward 1.1625. implied volatility in the options market has moved below 6% in recent days, at the low end of the range of the last 10 years. USDJPY price action is sticky near 159.00 as traders are reluctant to challenge Japan’s Ministry of Finance, which has pushed back against JPY weakness recently, most firmly when the USDJPY price action rallied above 160.00
  • The Australian dollar rallied and then reversed sharply on weak employment data. On Wednesday, AUDUSD rebounded from fresh local lows below the key 0.7100 area to as high as 0.7174, only to reverse hard to as low as 0.7100 again early Thursday on the release of weak employment and PMI services data (see above) that have lowered expectations of further RBA rate hikes. By early European hours Thursday, AUDUSD rebounded toward 0.7125. In other crosses, the Aussie is also traded weaker, with AUDNZD back near 1.2150 after recently trading north of 1.2200.

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