QT_QuickTake

Market Quick Take - Chips steady the tape - 10 July 2026

Macro 3 minutes to read

Market drivers and catalysts

  • Equities: Chipmakers powered rebounds in the US, Europe and Asia.
  • Volatility: Equities rebounded on renewed AI-demand optimism, VIX slid back toward year lows with CPI and bank earnings ahead
  • Digital Assets: Crypto steadied as risk appetite returned, ETF flows favoured Ether over Bitcoin, with market-structure legislation advancing
  • Commodities: Broad recovery follows May–June correction, led by softs
  • Fixed Income: JGBs rally, US Treasuries rebound as oil prices soften
  • Currencies: Yen jumps as Finance minister call on pension funds to invest in domestic assets
  • Macro: June CPI (final) from France and Germany

Macro

  • US–Iran talks, albeit only at a technical level, continue despite a flare-up in fighting this week, with Washington saying it remains committed to finding a solution. With oil prices softening following the mid-week spike, traders appear to view the latest tensions as a challenge to the ceasefire rather than a complete breakdown, as Trump’s comments earlier in the week briefly led markets to fear. Traffic through the Strait of Hormuz remains low, with no large commodity-laden vessels seen transiting.
  • Japan’s long-term bond yields and the yen strengthened after Finance Minister Katayama said the government wants to encourage pension funds to increase investment in domestic financial assets. The comments fueled speculation that pension funds could shift allocations towards Japanese assets and away from overseas securities, supporting the domestic sovereign bond market while reducing selling pressure on the yen, which hit a 40-year low against the dollar this week.
  • German exports unexpectedly rose 0.9% in May, defying expectations for a 0.4% decline, driven by a 23.1% surge in shipments to the US and a 7.1% increase to China.
  • Japan’s producer prices rose 7.1% year-on-year in June, up from 6.6% and above the 6.8% forecast, marking the fastest increase since March 2023. The rise was driven mainly by higher energy and input costs. Month-on-month, prices increased 0.4%, down from 1.1% in May.
  • More in our Macro Analysis & Macroeconomic News

Macro calendar highlights (times in GMT)

  • 0600 – Germany June CPI (final)
  • 0645 – France June CPI (final)
  • 0645 – EU June Harmonised CPI (final)
  • 1230 – Canada June Unemployment Rate

Earnings events

  • Thursday: Pepsico, Fast Retailing, Progressive, Cintas, Seven and I Holdings
  • Friday: Delta Airlines

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


Equities

  • USA: The S&P 500 rose 0.8%, the Nasdaq Composite gained 1.3% and the Dow added 0.3% as semiconductor stocks recovered from this week’s sharp sell-off. The Philadelphia Semiconductor Index climbed 3.1%, with Micron jumping 4.5% after announcing plans to invest more than $250 billion in US production through 2035 to meet artificial intelligence demand. Optical-networking stocks also rallied, while McKesson and Cencora fell as FedEx launched a competing life-sciences logistics business. Investors now turn toward earnings season for evidence that heavy artificial intelligence spending is still producing equally impressive revenue.
  • Europe: The Stoxx 600 rose 0.8% and the Euro Stoxx 50 gained 1.3%, ending a three-day decline as technology and mining stocks rebounded. ASML climbed 4.8% as confidence returned to the semiconductor trade, while Computacenter surged 7.2% after raising its full-year outlook on strong US data-centre demand. Ericsson gained 6.7%, supporting Stockholm’s outperformance. AstraZeneca dropped 6.2% after Wainua failed a late-stage trial, dragging the heavily weighted FTSE 100 down 0.2%. Markets now look toward earnings and further signals on whether artificial intelligence investment can offset geopolitical and interest-rate pressure.
  • Asia: Asian equities advanced on Friday, with the Nikkei 225 up around 1.5%, the Kospi gaining 4.5% and the Hang Seng rising 1.4% as chipmakers followed Wall Street higher. SK Hynix climbed 5.3% after its US depositary-share offering raised $26.5 billion and attracted demand more than seven times the available shares, providing a useful vote of confidence after Korea’s violent technology sell-off. Fast Retailing fell as much as 5.1% despite raising its profit forecast, after warning that the weak yen could hurt domestic margins. SK Hynix’s US trading debut will provide the next test of investor appetite.
  • More in our Equity Trading - Stock Market Analysis & News

Volatility

VIX 15.84 | VIX FUTURES: 17.45 | TERM STRUCTURE: CONTANGO | SKEW: ELEVATED (144.67) | MARKET REGIME: LOW-VOLATILITY BULL

  • US equities rebounded as renewed AI-demand optimism drew buyers back to technology. The S&P 500 closed Thursday up 0.81% at 7,543.64 and the Nasdaq 100 rose 1.62%, led by a 2.5% gain in semiconductors. VIX fell 6.3% to 15.84 and VIX1D dropped 20% to 10.13, pricing minimal near-term risk.
  • The term structure held in contango, from VIX9D at 12.50 to VIX3M 18.99, while SKEW stayed elevated at 144.67 and MOVE eased to 68.89. Pre-market SPXW pricing implies a weekly expected move of about 96 points (1.27%) into the 17 July expiry, with June CPI Tuesday the primary catalyst.
  • For a more detailed view on volatility, check our Options Briefs in the Options Insights

Digital Assets

BITCOIN ~63,900 +1.2% | ETHEREUM ~1,775 +1.8% | IBIT 35.81 +1.65% | ETHA 13.19 +0.61%

  • Digital assets steadied into Friday as risk appetite returned, tracking the broader rebound in technology. ETF flows told a divergent story: Bitcoin funds saw net outflows of about $85 million on Wednesday, while Ether funds extended a fifth straight day of inflows, led by Fidelity's FETH.
  • On the structural front, momentum built behind US market-structure legislation: reports indicated the CLARITY Act draft could reach the Senate as soon as this month, after the CFTC chair urged Congress to advance the bill.

Commodities

  • The Bloomberg Commodity Index is showing signs of stabilising following a 15% decline from May to June. So far this month, the index has gained 3.4%, with all sectors and individual commodities trading higher except US natural gas.
  • Leading the rebound, cocoa and coffee have both jumped on adverse weather concerns, followed by the two diesel contracts amid Russia’s export ban and renewed risks to supply from Middle Eastern refiners. Together with higher crude oil prices, and despite a 7% slump in natural gas, these gains have lifted the energy sector by 3.2%.
  • Holding just above water, industrial and especially precious metals remain weighed down by renewed US rate-hike fears but are finding support from signs of demand returning following a month-long capitulation and correction phase.
  • More in our Commodity News, Analysis & Commentary

Fixed Income

  • US 30-year auction cleared at 5.058%, the highest yield since 2007 but through the 5.061% when-issued level, signalling stronger-than-expected demand. Indirect bidders took 77.7% of the issue, among record highs, capping a week that saw supply of through 3y/10y/30y.
  • US treasuries rallied as oil fell, with the 10-year yield easing to 4.54% from near 4.60% earlier in the week, while the 2-year softened 4.16% from a midweek high of 4.23%.
  • Japanese government bond yields fell after the government said it is encouraging pension funds to increase holdings of domestic financial assets, with the ten-year tenor falling 10 bps to 2.77% after topping 2.9% on Thursday, a 30-year high.

Currencies

  • USDJPY, which hit a near 40-year high earlier in the week, fell from around 162.40 towards 161, with traders citing GPIF-linked flows after Finance Minister Katayama said the government wants to encourage pension funds to increase investment in domestic financial assets. Focus now turns to sizeable option strike clusters around 160.50 expiring on 13 and 15 July, which until recently had been viewed as comfortably out of the money.
  • G10 FX saw mild, broad-based USD softness into Friday’s session, with the DXY trading below 101. Overall, the dollar is little changed on the week after the latest flare-up in geopolitical tensions and renewed rate-hike speculation failed to provide further support, potentially signalling some buying fatigue among speculators already holding elevated long positions. Modest USD gains against CHF and JPY have been offset by weakness elsewhere, most notably against CAD and GBP, as well as smaller currencies such as NOK and NZD.
  • More on currencies in our dedicated section: Forex Trading News & Analysis
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