Outrageous Predictions
Révolution Verte en Suisse : un projet de CHF 30 milliards d’ici 2050
Katrin Wagner
Head of Investment Content Switzerland
Investment and Options Strategist
A four-day week defined by a single variable: will Trump end the war with Iran?
The trading week of 30 March to 2 April 2026 played out almost entirely around one question: the trajectory of the US military campaign against Iran and its consequences for the Strait of Hormuz. Equity markets swung sharply on every headline – the S&P 500 slipped Monday as a fresh Iranian tanker strike in Dubai reinforced the oil shock, surged 2.9% Tuesday on ceasefire signals from Washington, and added 0.7% Thursday when Trump’s address stopped short of a clear exit timeline. The week closed with the S&P 500 at 6,575, WTI crude above USD 105 per barrel, gold pulling back from its mid-week high near USD 4,759 to USD 4,664, and the VIX declining from 30 to 24 – elevated, but no longer accelerating. Options flow was broadly defensive throughout, with only selective pockets of constructive positioning in metals mid-week and isolated upside expressions in mega-cap tech.
A volatile week ends net higher, driven by ceasefire headlines, but underlying defensiveness persists.
Market pulse: Equities closed the week net positive, but the gains were ceasefire-dependent; without conflict resolution, the fragility of the rally remains evident in options positioning and the absence of broad participation in upside flow.
Q1 earnings season begins in earnest next week, with JP Morgan, Wells Fargo, Citigroup, and BlackRock all reporting from Monday 14 April. Guidance from energy and consumer-facing companies will be scrutinised for early signals of margin compression from elevated oil prices. The geopolitical backdrop remains the dominant overlay: a resolution on the Iran situation would likely trigger a sharp short-covering rally, while renewed escalation could erase the week’s gains rapidly.
VIX fell sharply from its spike high, but the market is not yet calm.
Market pulse: Volatility is cooling but not resolved; a VIX re-expansion toward 28–30 remains the primary tail risk if Iran headlines reverse direction.
At the time of publication on Tuesday 7 April, the VIX is already trading up 11% to 26.92 as President Trump’s Iran deadline expires today. The Iran outcome tonight is now the primary volatility event – ahead of CPI on Thursday. If escalation materialises, expect VIX to re-test or exceed 30. A ceasefire tonight could compress VIX rapidly toward 20. Thursday’s CPI then becomes the vol event for the second half of the week: a hot print keeps VIX elevated; a soft reading extends the compression.
Broadly defensive across all four sessions, with selective constructive signals emerging in metals mid-week.
Options flow across all major categories signalled broad defensiveness throughout the four-day week. In broad equities, put-heavy flow in index products dominated all four sessions, with positioning concentrated in downside protection rather than directional bets – even on Tuesday’s sharp equity recovery. Mega-cap technology names were consistently defensive, with protective structures in Microsoft across every session; the only notable exception was isolated call-spread activity in NVIDIA. Crypto-related flow was net defensive for three of the four sessions, with put-heavy positioning in bitcoin-linked equities and ETFs reflecting caution about the macro-driven price action.
Energy options evolved from defensive and hedging early in the week toward selective income strategies and tactical upside expressions as WTI held elevated levels. Metals showed the most constructive flow of the week: notable call-spread activity in gold mid-week positioned for continued upside, consistent with the metal’s four-session advance. That bullish bid eased by Thursday as gold retreated from its peak near USD 4,759, with flow reverting to a more two-sided, directionally neutral tone in the final session.
Crypto stabilised alongside equities but remains macro-dependent, not yet a leading risk signal.
Market pulse: Crypto is holding up but not leading; its next directional move will likely be determined by this week’s CPI outcome and any ceasefire developments.
US March CPI on Thursday 10 April is a binary catalyst for digital assets. A hot inflation print reinforcing stagflationary concerns could pressure Bitcoin toward the USD 64,000–65,000 range. A softer reading, particularly if accompanied by ceasefire progress, could unlock the next leg higher and reignite ETF inflow momentum.
Bonds tried to rally on de-escalation signals but ultimately resumed their role as an inflation vehicle rather than a safe haven.
Market pulse: Fixed income is caught between growth-shock fears and oil-driven inflation; resolution of the Iran conflict is the cleanest path to yield compression and a more conventional bond-equity relationship.
Thursday’s US March CPI is the pivot event for bonds this week. With WTI averaging around USD 100–105 for much of March, a hot headline print (consensus ~3.4–3.5% year-on-year) would likely push the 10-year yield toward 4.6% and above. A surprise undershoot could trigger meaningful yield compression and provide the bond market with a genuine relief trade heading into Q1 earnings season.
Oil remained the dominant commodity story; gold’s mid-week rally faded on a stronger dollar and rising yields.
Market pulse: Oil is the primary inflation transmission mechanism; its trajectory is almost entirely a function of the Iran war outcome. Gold and copper will take their directional cues from what happens to the dollar and yields after Thursday’s CPI release.
The IEA supply warning for April suggests that oil’s elevated levels are not purely a geopolitical premium – the physical tightness in European diesel and jet fuel markets is real. Gold faces a key test: a soft CPI print and a softer dollar could push it back toward USD 4,759 resistance, while a hot print would likely extend Thursday’s decline toward the USD 4,500–4,550 range. Agricultural markets remain sensitive to any further USDA updates on US and Southern Hemisphere planting conditions.
The dollar closed March near four-month highs but showed brief vulnerability to peace-deal speculation mid-week.
Market pulse: The dollar’s direction remains oil-and-yield-driven; peace-deal progress is the primary catalyst for a potential sustained softening in the DXY from current elevated levels.
Thursday’s US CPI is the dominant FX catalyst of the week. A hot print would likely push USDJPY through 160 and intensify Bank of Japan intervention pressure; a softer reading could provide yen relief and broader dollar softening across G10. EURUSD remains rangebound, defined by the war outcome and the US–eurozone relative growth differential – a ceasefire announcement would likely be a bigger mover than any single data print.
The most consequential event of the week is not on any calendar. President Trump’s self-imposed deadline to Iran expires today, Tuesday 7 April. With Trump having threatened to “wipe out an entire civilization” if demands are not met, and the VIX already trading up 11% to 26.92 at the time of publication, the potential for an overnight or pre-market shock is live. Escalation tonight or tomorrow morning could send oil sharply higher and equities sharply lower; a surprise ceasefire agreement would have the opposite effect across virtually every asset class simultaneously. This single event makes the risk environment for the rest of the week impossible to forecast with any confidence.
Against that backdrop, Thursday 10 April’s US March CPI is the standout scheduled economic release. With WTI elevated throughout March, the headline figure is expected to show upward pressure; consensus sits around 3.4–3.5% year-on-year. A print above 3.7% would materially reset rate-cut expectations for 2026, likely pushing the 10-year yield through 4.6%. A softer reading would provide meaningful cross-asset relief. Note that major US bank earnings – JP Morgan, Wells Fargo, Citigroup, BlackRock – begin the following week on Monday 14 April, not this Friday.
For most participants, the sequencing is straightforward: the Iran headline tonight comes first and could reset the entire context for CPI. A defined-risk posture ahead of both events is the only framework that survives either outcome.
Tue 7 Apr – Trump-Iran deadline (today); European markets reopen after Easter Monday
Wed 8 Apr – US February wholesale inventories; Fed speakers
Thu 10 Apr – US March CPI (consensus ~3.4–3.5% YoY); US weekly initial jobless claims
Fri 11 Apr – US March PPI; University of Michigan April Consumer Sentiment
Mon 14 Apr – JP Morgan, Wells Fargo, Citigroup, BlackRock Q1 earnings (Q1 earnings season opens)
The week of 30 March to 2 April 2026 confirmed that the Iran conflict has fundamentally reshaped the cross-asset correlation regime. Equities and bonds moved against conventional safe-haven logic on multiple occasions; oil drove yields higher even as equities rallied on peace signals; and gold ultimately succumbed to dollar and yield pressure despite its geopolitical-haven reputation. The options flow data – broadly defensive throughout, even as equity indices pushed higher – suggests that professional participants are treating this rally as something to hedge rather than chase. As of publication on Tuesday 7 April, the Iran deadline expires today – making this Compass live into one of the highest binary-risk moments of the year. Defined-risk structures are not a conservative choice right now; they are the only rational one.
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