Saxo Weekly Market Compass – 4 May 2026


Markets navigated a dense mix of earnings, central bank decisions, and geopolitical tension, with oil acting as the dominant macro driver throughout the week.

US equities oscillated early before finishing the week firmly higher, with the S&P 500 reaching 7,230 by 1 May, as strong Big Tech earnings – led by Alphabet’s 10% surge – offset macro headwinds from surging oil prices and Meta’s capex-driven 8.6% decline. The VIX moved between 16.99 and 18.81, signalling controlled rather than stressed conditions, while options flow shifted from early-week defensive positioning toward selective accumulation across energy, metals, and individual earnings names.

By week’s end, sentiment stabilised as earnings delivered and oil briefly eased, but underlying uncertainty remains tied to energy markets and policy direction.


Equities

Earnings resilience offsets macro noise, but leadership remains narrow.

  • US – earnings resilience offsets macro noise: US equities oscillated early in the week before finishing strong, with the S&P 500 moving from 7,138 (28 April) to 7,209 (30 April) and 7,230 (1 May). Big Tech dominated: Alphabet surged 10.0% (30 April) on cloud strength, while Meta dropped 8.6% (30 April) on capex concerns. Nvidia’s earlier record high (27 April) highlighted continued AI momentum, though sentiment briefly softened mid-week.
  • Europe & Asia – energy pressure vs selective strength: European equities struggled mid-week as oil surged and rate-hike expectations resurfaced, before rebounding into month-end. Local markets showed dispersion, with healthcare and industrials mixed, while Asia remained led by Korea’s AI-driven rally and more uneven performance in China and Japan.

Market pulse: Earnings remain supportive, but leadership is narrow and sensitive to macro inputs.

Looking ahead – equities

Focus shifts from Big Tech to consumer-facing earnings and macro validation. US earnings from Disney, Airbnb, and McDonald’s will test demand resilience, while the US jobs report will determine whether strong growth can sustain current equity levels.


Volatility

Event risk priced, but not feared.

  • VIX range – controlled conditions: Volatility remained contained despite heavy catalysts. The VIX moved between 18.02 (27 April), 17.83 (28 April), and peaked at 18.81 (29 April) before easing to 16.99 (1 May). Short-term measures spiked around key events but quickly normalised, signalling controlled rather than stressed conditions.
  • Implied moves and skew: Options pricing implied weekly moves around ±1.0–1.35%, while skew shifted between neutral and defensive, ending the week with a downside bias.

Market pulse: Volatility is stable, but hedging demand remains persistent.

Looking ahead – volatility

The April US jobs report and ongoing oil developments are the next volatility catalysts. Any upside surprise in inflation or labour strength could push implied volatility higher again, particularly in short-dated options.


Options sentiment

Selective upside returns, but hedging remains embedded.

The options market shifted from early-week protection toward more selective accumulation, though conviction never fully broadened. Initial positioning was defensive, with index hedging and sector-level protection dominating, particularly in financials and metals.

That stance evolved into a more balanced setup, with investors expressing views through income strategies, volatility trades, and paired hedges. Energy and metals both transitioned toward cautiously bullish positioning, while equities showed selective upside participation alongside continued protection.

Market pulse: Investors leaned into upside selectively, but maintained protection as conviction remained narrow.

Looking ahead – options sentiment

Options flow will likely remain dispersion-driven, with investors targeting individual earnings names rather than broad index exposure. Watch for increased short-dated activity around consumer earnings and macro releases.


Digital assets

Stable price action, selective institutional flows.

  • Bitcoin and Ethereum: Crypto markets tracked macro sentiment but showed resilience. Bitcoin traded between USD 75,700 and USD 80,000, while Ethereum held near USD 2,200–2,380. ETF flows were mixed mid-week before turning positive into Friday, reflecting improving sentiment.
  • Options and altcoins: Options activity remained balanced, combining downside hedging with selective upside positioning, while altcoins followed broader risk trends.

Market pulse: Crypto is constructive, but still dependent on macro direction and liquidity.

Looking ahead – digital assets

ETF flows and macro data will remain key drivers. A stable or softer rates outlook could support further upside, while renewed volatility in equities or yields may quickly feed into crypto positioning.


Fixed income

Yields rise on oil, then stabilise.

  • US Treasuries: Bond markets reflected the week’s macro tension. US 10-year yields climbed toward 4.43% mid-week on oil-driven inflation concerns, while the 2-year approached 3.95%. By Friday, yields eased slightly as oil corrected and policy expectations stabilised.
  • European bonds: European yields followed a similar pattern, rising sharply before pulling back into month-end.

Market pulse: Rates are increasingly driven by energy-linked inflation rather than growth expectations.

Looking ahead – fixed income

The US jobs report and Treasury issuance will shape rate expectations. Strong data could reinforce higher-for-longer narratives, while weaker prints may ease pressure on the front end.


Commodities

Oil dominates, reshaping the macro backdrop.

  • Oil – Strait of Hormuz driver: Oil remained the central driver, with Brent rising toward wartime highs before easing slightly. The Strait of Hormuz disruption tightened supply and drove inflation concerns across markets.
  • Gold and broader commodities: Gold initially weakened under rising yields but later stabilised as geopolitical risks intensified. Broader commodities posted strong gains in April, led by energy.

Market pulse: Oil continues to dictate inflation expectations and cross-asset behaviour.

Looking ahead – commodities

Any progress on reopening shipping routes will be the key swing factor. A resolution could trigger a sharp pullback in oil and ease inflation fears, while continued disruption would keep upward pressure on prices.


Currencies

Yen volatility and USD strength define the week.

  • USDJPY – intervention risk: FX markets were dominated by yen volatility and a firm US dollar. USDJPY surged above 160 before dropping sharply below 156 on intervention threats, highlighting extreme positioning.
  • USD and commodity currencies: The dollar strengthened mid-week on yields and oil before stabilising, while commodity-linked currencies remained supported.

Market pulse: FX is highly reactive to policy divergence and energy dynamics.

Looking ahead – currencies

Yen intervention risk remains elevated, while US data will guide USD direction. Commodity currencies will continue to track oil, making energy markets a key FX driver.


Key takeaways

  • Equities: Earnings support holds, but leadership remains narrow.
  • Volatility: Contained, with persistent demand for hedging.
  • Options: Selective upside with protection still embedded.
  • Digital assets: Stable, supported by ETF flows and macro tone.
  • Fixed income: Yields driven by oil and inflation expectations.
  • Commodities: Oil remains the dominant macro force.
  • Currencies: Yen volatility and USD direction in focus.

Looking ahead – week of 4 to 8 May 2026

The coming week arrives with oil still elevated, yen intervention risk unresolved, and equities trading near recent highs on the back of narrow earnings-driven leadership. Macro conditions remain fragile beneath the surface, and the data calendar is dense enough to test whether the current equity resilience is justified.

Consumer-facing earnings take centre stage. Disney, Airbnb, and McDonald’s will collectively test whether demand at the consumer level is holding, or beginning to soften under the weight of elevated energy prices and persistent inflation. Meanwhile, the April US jobs report represents the defining macro input of the week – a strong reading would reinforce higher-for-longer rate expectations and pressure the front end of the Treasury curve, while any softness could ease rate anxiety and support risk assets broadly.

Oil remains the wild card. Any signal of progress in reopening the Strait of Hormuz shipping lanes could trigger a sharp reversal in crude, easing inflation fears across fixed income and FX simultaneously. Conversely, continued disruption keeps cross-asset volatility elevated and hedging demand intact.

Calendar highlights (times in GMT)

Mon 4 May – Strait of Hormuz supply developments; options flow into consumer earnings week begins
Tue 5 May – Airbnb Q1 2026 earnings (after close)
Wed 6 May – Walt Disney Q2 2026 earnings (after close); US Treasury auction
Thu 7 May – McDonald’s Q1 2026 earnings; US weekly jobless claims
Fri 8 May – US non-farm payrolls (April); University of Michigan consumer sentiment (preliminary)


Concluding remarks

Markets ended the week resilient, supported by earnings and selective risk-taking, but underlying conditions remain fragile. Oil-driven inflation, central bank uncertainty, and geopolitical risk continue to shape cross-asset behaviour.

The coming week’s labour and consumer data will be critical in determining whether markets can extend gains or face renewed macro pressure.


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