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IBM is working with Nvidia on data processing. $IBM $NVDA
Collaboration between IBM and Nvidia on data processing is a moderately bullish signal for AI infrastructure and enterprise AI adoption. It supports demand for Nvidia GPUs and software ecosystem adoption (benefiting NVDA) while reinforcing IBM’s push into hybrid-cloud, AI services and on-prem/edge AI solutions (benefiting IBM). Relevant segments: AI infrastructure (GPUs, accelerators), enterprise software/services, data-center operators and managed cloud services. Near-term upside: incremental orders for GPU hardware, higher software/recurring services revenue for IBM, and positive sentiment around AI capex. Constraints/risks: NVDA’s large market cap mutes the absolute impact on the S&P; valuations are already stretched and sensitive to earnings misses, supply-chain limits or AI-export regulatory actions could curb upside. Watchables: deal details (hardware vs. software/service revenue split), timing of deployments, chip supply and any regulatory export controls. Given the current high-valuation, interest-rate-sensitive market, this is a constructive but not market-moving development.
NVIDIA unveils the NVIDIA DLSS 5, delivering an AI-powered breakthrough in visual fidelity for games. $NVDA
NVIDIA's DLSS 5 announcement is a clear product-cycle positive: it strengthens NVIDIA's competitive moat in real-time AI-driven image reconstruction, should boost demand for GeForce RTX GPUs (consumer gaming) and increase uptake of RTX-capable instances in cloud gaming and GPU-accelerated streaming. Near term expect upside to gaming GPU ASPs and incremental GPU unit demand as gamers and developers prioritize visual fidelity. Medium term it reinforces software lock-in (developer toolchains, engine integrations) and could expand NVIDIA's leverage into edge/consumer inference use cases. Competitive effects: downside pressure on AMD and Intel discrete GPU ambitions unless they match feature parity quickly; potential upside for cloud providers and game-engine vendors if they support NVIDIA’s tech. Risks/limitations: much of this may already be priced into NVIDIA shares given frothy valuations and recent run; monetization depends on developer adoption and OEM/cloud deployment; macro backdrop (high valuations, Fed “higher-for-longer,” oil-driven inflation risks) could cap multiple expansion. Overall a moderately bullish, company-specific catalyst for NVIDIA with spillovers to GPU competitors and cloud/gaming ecosystem.
Expected numbers for $SMTC (Semtech) earnings today after close: https://t.co/3OO7muWt0z
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Abu Dhabi is responding to a fire at the Shah Oil Field.
A fire at Abu Dhabi's Shah oil field risks a temporary production outage from a significant UAE hydrocarbon asset. In the current backdrop — Brent already elevated amid Strait of Hormuz disruptions and headline inflation concerns — any supply hit in the Gulf is likely to push crude prices higher and re-ignite stagflation fears. Near-term market moves: oil and integrated/production energy names should rally on tighter supply expectations, while broad equity indices (already sensitive given stretched valuations and a higher-for-longer Fed) would likely see modest downward pressure. Bond yields could tick up on higher inflation expectations, exacerbating pressure on growth and long-duration tech. FX: oil-producer currencies (CAD, NOK) typically strengthen on a crude spike, while safe-haven flows could support the USD initially. Key uncertainties: extent and duration of the outage, ADNOC’s production-offtake/repair timeline, spare capacity available from other Gulf producers, and whether OPEC/partners respond with releases. Watch ADNOC statements, Brent moves, and downstream indicators (shipping/insurance notices). Overall this is a moderate, risk-amplifying supply shock with asymmetric downside for risk assets and upside for energy/energy-services in the near term.
Intel Xeon 6 used as host CPUs in NVIDIA DGX Rubin NVL8 systems. $INTC $NVDA
Headline: Intel Xeon 6 chosen as host CPUs in NVIDIA DGX Rubin NVL8 systems. Impact summary: Small positive for Intel — validation that Xeon remains the preferred x86 host CPU in high-end AI appliances. This is a modest revenue and positioning win for INTC in the AI/datacenter segment and reinforces Intel’s OEM relationships with a marquee AI systems buyer. For NVIDIA the news is largely neutral: DGX systems are GPU-led products and host-CPU choice is peripheral to NVIDIA’s GPU TAM, though continuing reliance on x86 partners (vs. in‑house Grace or Arm alternatives) signals customer preference for established x86 server stacks. The item is likely to be low‑signal for the broader market but could support incremental buying interest in Intel shares and slightly lower upside for AMD/Arm server-CPU narratives. Affected segments: data-center AI infrastructure, server CPUs (x86), OEM system integration, competitive dynamics between Intel and AMD/Arm for AI appliance host CPUs. No direct FX impact. Near-term market effect: muted — a product-sourcing/partnership detail rather than a large contract or volume guidance change. Watch for follow-up commentary on volumes, pricing or longer-term commitments (e.g., exclusivity or multi-year supply), which would raise the impact.
Iran’s Foreign Minister Araghchi and US Envoy Witkoff have been in contact via text messages these days - Channel 12, citing a well-informed source
Reports that Iran’s FM Araghchi and US envoy Witkoff have exchanged text messages point to at least a limited diplomatic backchannel between Tehran and Washington. In the current backdrop—where Brent spiked on Strait of Hormuz tensions and markets are highly valuation-sensitive—any sign of de‑escalation would be a modest tailwind for risk assets, easing near‑term oil and safe‑haven pressures. Expected near-term effects: downward pressure on Brent and gold, negative sentiment for defense and shipping/insurance exposures that rallied on escalation fears, and mild relief for stretched US equities (but sensitivity remains high given elevated CAPE and macro risks). Risk: messages may be exploratory only and not deliver substantive de‑escalation, so the market reaction could be fleeting and volatility may persist. Watch oil prices, shipping/transit headlines, and subsequent official statements for confirmation.
Afghanistan: The Pakistani military violated the airspace again.
Localized military airspace violation by Pakistan over Afghanistan. Market implications are limited and primarily regional: raises political and security risk for Pakistan and Afghanistan, likely pressuring Pakistani assets (equities, bonds, and the PKR) and prompting short-lived risk-off flows into safe-haven assets (USD, gold) among EM-focused investors. Unlikely to affect global oil markets, US equities, or major FX beyond brief volatility, absent escalation or disruption to trade routes. Given stretched valuations and elevated sensitivity to news, regional risk assets could see outsized short-term moves, but sustained impact requires further escalation or cross-border military action. Watch PKR moves, Pakistani equity/bond spreads, and any spillover into larger South Asia geopolitical tensions.
Italy, France and other seven Mediterranean states say to EU Commission that adrift Russian tanker represents imminent and serious risk of major ecological disaster
An adrift Russian tanker in the Mediterranean flagged as an imminent ecological disaster is a sector-specific negative shock. Immediate losers: cruise operators and Mediterranean tourism-facing businesses (itinerary cancellations, bookings risk), tanker owners and ship-operators exposed to salvage/liability, and insurers/reinsurers facing potentially large claims and reserve volatility. There is also a modest upward pressure on Brent and regional shipping insurance (P&I) costs if the cargo is oil, which would slightly help oil producers but is unlikely to materially change global supply. Market-wide impact should be limited — a localized event — but will raise risk-aversion for coastal European names and hit insurer/share price volatility; euro could see small near-term weakness on regional economic disruption and cleanup costs. Watch sovereign/port operators in Italy, France and nearby tourism regions for first-order moves.
Iraq Oil Ministry: Majnoon oil field targeted.
Attack reported on Iraq's Majnoon oil field increases near‑term supply risk for crude and is likely to add upside pressure to Brent already elevated by Strait of Hormuz tensions. Immediate market impact is concentrated in energy: higher oil prices would boost integrated oil majors and E&P names and benefit oilfield services, while re‑igniting inflation concerns that could weigh on rate‑sensitive, richly valued equities. The size of the move will depend on damage/production outages and whether this is an isolated incident or part of a broader escalation in Iraq/Middle East transit routes. Watch Brent and prompt physical flows out of southern Iraq, along with headline risk that could push safe‑haven flows into USD and embolden moves in oil‑linked currencies (CAD, NOK). Near term: bullish for energy stocks and oil producers; marginally bearish for high‑multiple growth names if oil spikes feed into core inflation and Fed rate‑path fears.
LME electronic trading resumes
Resumption of LME electronic trading removes an operational overhang and restores continuous price discovery for base metals (copper, aluminum, nickel, zinc, lead). That should reduce short-term risk premia and counterparty uncertainty, allowing pent‑up orders to be executed and volatility to reprice — often leading to near‑term directional moves in metal prices as the backlog clears. Net effect is modestly positive for miners and commodity traders (improved liquidity, clearer marks) and for HKEX as the exchange operator, but also raises the risk of a volatile washout if large forced liquidations surface. Relevant segments: base metals market, global miners/smelters, metal‑intensive manufacturing (steel, auto/EV battery supply chain), exchange/brokerage operations. Possible FX nuance: a small supportive impulse to commodity‑linked currencies (e.g., AUD) if metal prices tick up. Overall this is an operational-stability event with limited but positive market implications unless order imbalances trigger sharp price moves.
Trump ends remarks to reporters at the White House.
Headline simply notes that former President Trump ended remarks to reporters at the White House with no substantive content provided. By itself this carries no actionable market information and should have negligible direct impact on equities, FX or commodities. Given current market sensitivity (stretched valuations, higher-for-longer Fed stance, and geopolitical risks in the Middle East), markets could move if the remarks had contained policy announcements (eg. on tariffs, the OBBBA, trade, sanctions, energy or appointments) or unexpectedly material legal or geopolitical comments. In that case, likely-to-be-affected segments would include defense and energy names (geopolitical risk), banks and fiscal-sensitive sectors (policy/tax talk), and USD/FX pairs if comments touched trade or monetary policy. Because the item reports only the end of remarks with no content, expected impact is neutral.
LME set to resume electronic trading at 5:30 PM London time (1:30 PM ET)
LME's planned resumption of electronic trading restores core price discovery and liquidity in base metals after a disruption, likely reducing intraday volatility and dislocation in futures/warehouse spreads. That should be a modest near-term positive for miners, metal producers and commodity trading firms (eases funding/hedging frictions and normalizes benchmark pricing), and for ETFs/portfolios exposed to copper, aluminum and other LME-traded contracts. Broader macro impact is limited — this is market-structure/operational relief rather than a fundamentals shift — and high-level risks (energy-driven inflation, geopolitical strain in the Middle East, and stretched equity valuations) remain key drivers for risk assets. Watch for any lingering backlog in warehouse movements or basis effects that could still influence metal prices short term.
Trump on Iran: We still have some missiles left.
Headline signals escalatory rhetoric toward Iran that heightens short-term geopolitical risk. Immediate market response is likely risk-off: safe-haven bids (Treasuries, JPY, gold), downward pressure on equities—especially rate-sensitive/high-valuation US tech—and upward pressure on oil. That re-introduces stagflation fears in an already stretched market (high CAPE, Brent already elevated), increasing sensitivity to earnings misses and Fed policy signalling. Sector winners: defense contractors and oil & integrated energy majors on prospect of higher military spending and near-term oil-price support. Sector losers: airlines, cruise/shipping, tourism and other flow-sensitive travel names; also high-valuation cyclicals that suffer from yield compression if Treasuries rally. FX: expect flows into safe havens—JPY likely to appreciate vs the dollar (USD/JPY down) and potential upside for USD initially but JPY is the key safe-haven here. Near-term effect likely short-lived absent kinetic escalation; sustained conflict would materially raise the downside risk to equities and push oil/ inflation higher, amplifying the negative impact.
Trump: UK's PM Starmer told me he'd ask advisers about sending help.
Headline is political/commentary with no clear economic or policy action attached. Absent details on what kind of “help” is being discussed (military, legal, intelligence or otherwise), this is unlikely to move markets materially on its own. Markets already sensitive to geopolitical headlines and stretched valuations — any escalation tied to foreign policy or conflict could boost defense names and push GBP/USD and safe‑haven FX (USD, JPY) around, but that would require follow‑up reports. For now treat as low‑signal political noise; monitor for specifics that would affect defense contractors, energy (if linked to Middle East), or sterling risk premia.
Trump on gas prices: When this is over, oil prices and inflation will decrease rapidly
Headline is political rhetoric suggesting a rapid fall in oil prices and inflation “when this is over.” If markets interpret it as signalling an imminent de‑escalation of Middle East risk or forthcoming policy moves that ease energy costs, the likely transmission would be lower oil risk premia, reduced headline inflation expectations and a small relief rally in cyclical and consumer‑facing equities. However, credibility and timing are uncertain: Brent is trading elevated (~low‑$80s to $90) because of Strait of Hormuz transit risk, and geopolitics — not a single soundbite — will drive near‑term energy prices. Given stretched equity valuations and sensitivity to inflation surprises (high Shiller CAPE), any real evidence of lower energy risk would be modestly market‑positive, but the initial reaction is likely muted until corroborating developments (military de‑escalation, supply reopening, or clear policy action) emerge. Sector/asset implications: negative for integrated oil & gas producers and energy services (pressure on margins and cash flows if oil falls); positive for consumer discretionary, retail and airlines (lower fuel costs support margins and real incomes); modestly negative for inflation‑hedges (energy, TIPS) and positive for duration (yields could ease if inflation expectations fall). FX: a meaningful drop in inflation expectations could shift Fed pricing and modestly weaken the dollar; risk assets could see some relief rally. Overall this is a short‑term sentiment event with limited market impact unless followed by concrete developments.
🔴 Trump on Iran: Israel would not use nuclear weapon.
Trump's comment -- that Israel would not use a nuclear weapon -- is a de‑escalatory political signal that should modestly reduce headline tail‑risk around a worst‑case Middle East nuclear scenario. That eases immediate safe‑haven demand (gold, JPY, CHF) and the extreme risk premium that would feed a sharp equity selloff or an outsized spike in oil. Markets are already sensitive (S&P near 6,733 with high CAPE; Brent recently spiked toward ~$90 on Strait of Hormuz risks), so the effect is likely limited and short‑lived: it nudges sentiment toward risk‑on but does not remove other material drivers (ongoing transit disruptions, drone attacks, OBBBA inflation implications, and trade fragmentation). Expected flows: slight relief for US equities/tech (marginally positive), modest downside for oil and gold, and small negative for defense contractors. FX: reduced safe‑haven bid likely keeps USD/JPY/CHF a touch softer for JPY/CHF (i.e., USD/JPY may tick up on reduced JPY demand) but moves should be muted unless followed by concrete on‑the‑ground de‑escalation.
Trump: We could open Strait of Hormuz, but it takes two to tango.
Trump's comment that the U.S. “could open” the Strait of Hormuz but that “it takes two to tango” raises geopolitical risk rather than resolving it outright. Market reaction is likely to be short-term risk-off: higher oil-risk premia if investors price a greater chance of military escalation, which supports energy producers and defense contractors while pressuring airlines, shipping and cyclical, oil-importing sectors. Given the Fed’s sensitivity to energy-driven inflation and the already elevated Brent level, any renewed price spike would exacerbate inflation fears and add downside pressure to richly valued equities (S&P sensitive with high CAPE). Conversely, if the remark is interpreted as a possible coordinated de-escalation, oil could retreat — but the headline is ambiguous and therefore likely to produce immediate volatility, uplift defence and insurance/shipping-risk sectors, and drive safe-haven flows into USD/JPY and gold. Overall impact is modestly negative for risk assets but supportive for energy and defence in the near term.
Volland SPX Greek Hedging Greek Hedging (SPX) estimates the direction and size of daily dealer rebalancing flows implied by the options market. Delta hedging (~$13.37B): suggests dealers may need to buy underlying (or futures) to stay hedged against price moves. Vega hedging https://t.co/ZJYsPw5uz4
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Trump on Iran war: They want to make a deal. They are talking to our people.
Trump saying Iran “wants to make a deal” and is talking to U.S. counterparts is a de‑escalation signal that should remove some near‑term Middle East risk premium. With Brent crude recently spiking on Strait of Hormuz transit risks, any credible progress toward talks reduces the probability of further supply shocks and headline inflation scares. Market-level effects are likely modest but positive: risk assets (cyclicals, airlines, travel) would be supported by lower oil and lower geopolitical risk; energy producers and oil services would face downward pressure on margins/prices; defense contractors and safe‑haven assets (gold, sovereign bonds, JPY) would likely retrace some recent gains. Given stretched equity valuations and the Fed’s “higher‑for‑longer” stance, the move should be viewed as a near‑term risk‑on catalyst rather than a structural change. The biggest impacts: lower oil price risk (negative for majors, positive for consumers/airlines), weaker safe‑haven flows (negative for gold and defensive sectors), and modest improvement in risk appetite that benefits cyclicals and financials. Watch for follow‑through: confirmation of talks and concrete de‑escalation would amplify this; if talks are opaque or fail, the move could reverse quickly.
Trump on Strait of Hormuz: I think France’s President Macron is going to help.
Trump’s offhand comment that he expects French President Macron to “help” on Strait of Hormuz developments is mildly de‑risking: it signals potential allied diplomatic/military coordination rather than an immediate U.S. unilateral escalation. In the current environment—Brent sharply elevated on transit risks—any credible sign of de‑escalation would trim the oil-risk premium, ease headline inflation worries and modestly relieve pressure on stretched equity valuations. Effects would be small and short‑lived unless followed by concrete, coordinated action; conversely, if the comment is not backed by visible moves, markets will likely ignore it. Key segments: energy/oil majors (price and refining exposure), defense contractors (sensitive to escalation), shipping/insurance, and FX safe‑havens. USD/JPY and other safe‑haven pairs could soften modestly on reduced risk aversion.
Trump: It takes a while to get to Hormuz. Some nations are already getting to the Strait of Hormuz.
Trump's remark referencing the Strait of Hormuz reads as a geopolitical nudge that could reinforce market fears about further escalation in the Gulf and shipping disruptions. Given the market's current sensitivity to Hormuz-related headlines (Brent already elevated), this comment is likely to be modestly risk-off: pushing crude and energy-risk premia higher, supporting oil majors and energy services, and benefiting defense contractors. For macro markets, higher oil would re-ignite headline inflation concerns and add pressure to already-stretched equity valuations (S&P vulnerable to earnings/ macro shocks), increasing volatility and capping risk appetite. FX moves could reflect traditional safe-haven flows and JPY strength vs. risky currencies (USD/JPY likely to move), while oil-linked currencies and EM FX could underperform. Near-term impact is conditional on whether comments escalate into concrete actions; absent further substantive developments the move should be short-lived but notable for energy, defense and inflation-sensitive sectors.
Trump on Strait of Hormuz and potential coalition: Rubio will announce the nations.
Headline signals U.S. political momentum toward forming a coalition related to the Strait of Hormuz. In the current environment—Brent already elevated and equity valuations stretched—any credible move toward coalition/military involvement raises oil risk premia, lifts energy and defense equities, and pressures broader risk assets. Near-term impacts: higher Brent and energy-producer stocks (positive for Exxon Mobil, Chevron, oil services like SLB/Halliburton); upside for defense primes (Raytheon, Lockheed, Northrop) on prospects of increased contracts and spending; negative for cyclical, interest-rate-sensitive and high-valuation tech names as higher energy-driven inflation/flight-to-safety risks feed through to yields and margins. Shipping lines and insurers may face disruption and cost pressure, and airlines face fuel-cost and routing headwinds. FX: risk-off flows and safe-haven demand could move USD and JPY — watch USD/JPY and general USD strength. Overall this is a modestly bearish headline for broad equities due to higher energy and geopolitical risk, but constructive for energy and defense segments.
🔴 Regional emergency plan committee for petroleum products holds urgent meeting to discuss regional developments, maintain continuity of refined product supplies - Saudi State TV.
Saudi state TV saying a regional emergency committee has convened for petroleum products signals heightened concern about refined‑product supply continuity amid Middle East tensions (Strait of Hormuz transit risk). That is likely to keep upside pressure on Brent and refined‑product margins in the near term. Market implications: bullish for oil producers, national oil companies and refiners (higher revenues/margins); positive for oil services if disruption prompts higher activity or strategic stockpiling. Negative for broad equities given stretched valuations (Shiller CAPE ~40) — rising energy costs feed headline/core inflation and stagflation fears, increasing downside risk for rate‑sensitive sectors and cyclical demand (airlines, road freight, consumer discretionary). FX: a sustained oil price re‑acceleration would tend to strengthen commodity‑linked currencies (CAD, NOK, RUB) versus the USD (i.e., lower USD/CAD, USD/NOK), while safe‑haven flows into USD could offset that in a severe escalation. Watch Brent moves, refined product crack spreads, airline/transport earnings revisions, and any Saudi coordination measures. Specific relevance of listed names: Saudi Aramco/ADNOC (national producers/refiners) and majors (Exxon, Chevron, BP, Shell) gain on higher oil; refiners (Valero, Marathon, Phillips 66) stand to benefit from tight refined‑product markets; airlines and shippers would be the most exposed losers. Overall this headline is a near‑term risk shock that is modestly negative for broad risk assets but positive for energy names.
Trump on Fed: We should have special meeting to cut rates right now.
Former President Trump's call for a special Fed meeting to cut rates is a politically charged soundbite more than a credible policy driver in the near term. With the Fed on pause and a "higher‑for‑longer" narrative intact, the comment could nudge markets toward slightly higher risk appetite by raising hopes of easier policy, but is unlikely to force an immediate Fed response. Given stretched valuations and sensitivity to Fed signals (Shiller CAPE ~40), the remark can increase intraday volatility in rates and equities. Expected sector impacts: rate‑sensitive growth and AI/infrastructure names (large cap tech) would benefit from an incremental easing narrative; real estate and utilities similarly gain. Financials, especially large banks, would be pressured by the prospect of narrower net interest margins if cuts were priced in. In FX, a higher probability of Fed easing would weigh on the USD (USD/JPY, EUR/USD moves), and short‑end U.S. Treasury futures could rally modestly, steepening/flattening dynamics depending on repricing. Overall, market reaction is likely muted-to-modest and conditional on follow‑up political pressure or market pricing shifts; the main risk is heightened policy uncertainty and episodic volatility rather than a definitive directional regime change.
Trump: We will step up Venezuela oil production rapidly.
A pledge to rapidly ramp Venezuelan oil production is, if credible, mildly disinflationary — it implies a potential increase in global crude supply that could relieve pressure on Brent (which is already elevated amid Strait of Hormuz risks). That would lower headline energy-driven inflation risks, easing stagflation fears and be a modest positive for cyclical and consumer-exposed sectors (airlines, travel, consumer discretionary) while weighing on high-cost US shale and integrated oil majors. Credibility and timing are key: Venezuela faces sanctions, underinvestment and logistical constraints, so near-term market impact is likely limited and any material effect would be medium-term only. In the current market backdrop (rich equity valuations, Fed “higher-for-longer”, Brent near $80–$90), the announcement is a modest tailwind for risk assets if markets take it as plausible; it is a clear negative for crude and oil-exporter currencies if supply expectations rise.
Average daily Middle East oil exports drop at least 60% in the week to March 15th compared with the February average as Hormuz stays mostly closed, data shows.
A ~60% collapse in average daily Middle East oil exports as the Strait of Hormuz remains mostly closed is a material short-term supply shock for global oil markets. With Brent already elevated in March, this exacerbates energy-driven inflationary pressures, increases recession/stagflation risk and raises the probability of a renewed ‘higher-for-longer’ Fed policy. Market implications: bullish for upstream oil producers, oilfield services and insurers tied to shipping/tanker risk; bearish for rate-sensitive/high-valuation equities (mega-cap growth, consumer discretionary) and sectors vulnerable to higher input costs (airlines, transport, some industrials). FX implications: oil exporters’ currencies (CAD, NOK, RUB) are likely to firm while risk-off flows could boost the USD and safe-haven JPY; elevated energy prices could widen EM stress. Expect near-term volatility in commodities, equities and FX, widening oil differentials and higher insurance/tanker freight rates. Watch flows through alternative routes, OPEC+ response, and any escalation that further constrains crude shipments.
Trump I also urges China and Japan to help with Hormuz.
Headline: Trump urges China and Japan to help with Strait of Hormuz. Market implication: modestly positive (risk-on) because a coordinated diplomatic/security push from major regional powers could lower the oil-risk premium tied to transit disruptions and reduce immediate escalation risk. In current environment (Brent near $80–90, headline-driven inflation fears, stretched equity valuations), any credible sign that key states will help stabilize shipping lanes is likely to ease headline-driven volatility and be supportive for cyclical/risk assets — though the move is unlikely to be decisive without follow-through. Sector/stock implications: - Energy/oil producers (Exxon, Chevron, Shell): potential near-term downside pressure if risk premia in Brent fall. - Airlines/shipping/logistics: lower disruption risk is positive for transport names (Maersk/large carriers), and for insurers; fewer freight disruptions should help margins. - Defense contractors (Lockheed Martin, Raytheon Technologies): reduced near-term upside from defense-spend re-pricing if geopolitical risk eases. - Equities/overall risk assets: small supportive effect because it removes one headline tail-risk that’s been pushing Brent and headline inflation fears higher. FX: USD/JPY — easing tensions could reduce safe-haven demand for JPY (and possibly the USD), creating modest JPY weakness; FX impact is secondary and dependent on risk sentiment and Fed stance. Overall this is a modestly constructive headline for risk assets but not market-moving absent concrete multilateral commitments or escalation.
Trump: We knocked Kharg Island and destroyed except for the oil pipes area.
Headline signals a direct strike on Kharg Island — Iran’s key oil export terminal — which materially raises the risk of disrupted crude flows and a broader Middle East escalation. In the current market backdrop (Brent already elevated, Fed on pause, stretched equity valuations), this is a clear risk-off shock: upward pressure on oil and inflation expectations, renewed safe-haven flows, and downside risk to growth-sensitive and richly valued equities. Likely market moves: Brent/WTI prices would spike further; oil producers and oilfield-services firms should see positive reactions. Defense contractors would likely rally on higher military/geopolitical spending expectations. Broad risk assets (S&P 500, cyclicals, small caps) should weaken, with high‑valuation tech names especially vulnerable given stretched multiples and sensitivity to any earnings growth slowdown. Short-term volatility and flight-to-quality flows would boost gold and safe-haven FX and push rates in safe assets lower while risk premia widen on credit spreads. Affected segments: Up — upstream oil majors, oilfield services, shipping/insurance, defense contractors, commodity traders. Down — broad equities (especially growth/tech), EM currencies and assets, travel/transport stocks, regional banks exposed to trade disruption. Macro implications include renewed headline inflation upside, potential for steeper near-term yields if inflation reprices, and an increased chance of central-bank caution if energy-driven inflation persists. Specific assets of note (impacted names/pairs): Exxon Mobil, Chevron, Schlumberger, Halliburton, BP, Shell (energy/upstream & services); Lockheed Martin, Raytheon Technologies, Northrop Grumman (defense); Brent and WTI (crude benchmarks) — direct drivers of energy-sector moves; USD/JPY and XAU/USD (gold) — likely to strengthen/benefit from safe‑haven flows; USD/CAD (commodity‑linked FX) and NOK/SEK‑USD crosses — likely to weaken on higher oil volatility and risk‑off. Time horizon and risks: Immediate price shock and volatility; if escalation is contained, a partial retracement is possible. If retaliation or broader disruptions occur (Strait of Hormuz transit risk rises), expect a more persistent oil shock, stagflationary pressure and deeper drawdown in cyclical and growth assets. Monitor confirmation of supply damage, shipping insurance (war-risk) moves, and central-bank commentary on energy-driven inflation for next-leg market direction.
Trump on Iran war: US has struck more than 7,000 targets.
Major escalation risk: an assertion that US has struck 7,000+ targets against Iran signals a sharp rise in geopolitical risk that should push markets into risk‑off. Immediate winners: defense contractors and energy suppliers as military spending and oil risk premia increase. Immediate losers: cyclical / leisure sectors (airlines, cruise, tourism), shipping/ports, and high‑multiple growth/AI names that are most sensitive to a jump in yields or a drop in risk appetite. Safe‑haven flows into Treasuries, gold and defensive FX (USD, JPY, CHF) are likely; oil (Brent) should spike further, re‑igniting headline inflation fears and increasing the odds the Fed stays “higher‑for‑longer,” which is a negative for stretched equity valuations (Shiller CAPE ~40). Near term expect equity volatility, potential weakness in S&P 500, relief rallies in defense and energy, and pressure on consumer‑cyclical earnings and travel demand if the conflict broadens or disrupts shipping in the Gulf of Oman/Strait of Hormuz.
Trump: Iran's anti-aircraft equipment is decimated.
Trump's comment that "Iran's anti-aircraft equipment is decimated" increases near-term geopolitical risk and market uncertainty. In the current backdrop—Brent already elevated on Strait of Hormuz tensions and headline-driven inflation fears—the statement can be read two ways: as a removal of some Iranian capability (which could ease immediate shipping risk) or as an escalation that raises the probability of Iranian retaliation and wider regional conflict. Markets typically price the latter more aggressively. Expected near-term effects: risk-off moves in equities (given high valuations and sensitivity to shocks), a further spike in oil prices on concerns about supply disruptions, safe-haven demand for gold and certain currencies, and upside for defense/defense-supply names. Sectors likely affected: energy (higher crude prices, benefiting integrated producers and oil services), defense/aerospace (positive on potential higher government defence spending and contractors’ direct relevance), airlines/transportation and shipping (negative via higher fuel costs and route disruption/insurance costs), commodities (gold up), and FX (safe-haven flows). With the Fed on pause and markets sensitive to inflation, a renewed oil/geo risk shock could reinforce “higher-for-longer” real-rate expectations and weigh on richly valued growth names. Key tail risks: retaliatory strikes or escalation that would materially widen oil supply risk and amplify equity drawdowns.
Trump on Iran war: We continued at full force over the past few days.
Trump's comment that US operations in/against Iran “continued at full force” signals an escalation or sustained kinetic engagement in the Middle East. In the current environment (already stretched equity valuations, Brent spiking, Fed on a higher-for-longer pause), that raises near-term risk-off pressure: oil and gas prices are likely to jump further, headline inflation fears and term-premium risk rise, and risk assets (especially cyclicals and carry-sensitive EM) are vulnerable. Market implications: defense contractors and energy producers should see near-term upside; airlines, shipping and tourism-exposed names and emerging-market assets face downside; broader US equities (S&P 500) are exposed given high CAPE and sensitivity to earnings surprises, so volatility and a pullback are likely. Safe-haven flows should lift JPY and CHF versus risk currencies while the USD may also be supported by higher US real rates — expect moves in USD/JPY and USD/CHF. Overall this is a net negative for risk assets and inflationary for energy, reinforcing stagflation concerns and keeping rates/yields volatile.
Trump: We will discuss the Middle East.
Very short, ambiguous comment but signals White House engagement with a geopolitically sensitive region. Given elevated Middle East risks and Brent already high, markets may tilt slightly risk-off: oil prices could rise further, boosting energy and defense names while pressuring equities (S&P 500 is vulnerable given stretched valuations). Safe-haven FX (USD, JPY) and gold could see modest appreciation; Treasuries may receive safe-haven flows if rhetoric escalates. Overall this is a low-confidence, short-duration headline — downside is limited unless followed by concrete actions or escalation.
Germany's Chancellor Merz: We will not participate in securing the Strait of Hormuz and we do not know a concept for doing so.
Germany's Chancellor Merz saying Berlin will not participate in securing the Strait of Hormuz raises near-term geopolitical risk that can keep an upside risk premium on oil and gas prices. With Brent already elevated on transit disruption fears, the announced German abstention increases the probability that multinational naval/security efforts are thinner or slower, which pushes energy-price and shipping-insurance volatility higher. Market segments most directly affected: energy producers/refiners (short-term revenue support from higher oil), defense contractors (potentially positive as governments seek alternative security arrangements), European airlines and shipping/shipping-insurers (higher fuel costs and insurance premiums are negative), and European equities overall (political fragmentation and higher energy/import costs are a drag). FX and safe-haven flows: elevated Middle East risk tends to support USD and safe assets and can weigh on EUR/USD. Likely timing: immediate to weeks for oil/volatility reaction; a sustained move depends on whether other partners step up or if attacks/insurgency escalate. Given current market backdrop (stretched equity valuations, Brent already elevated, and Fed on pause), this is a modest incremental negative for risk assets and modestly positive for energy and defense names. The effect is asymmetric — it can amplify downside risk if followed by further security incidents, but by itself is unlikely to trigger a major market dislocation unless accompanied by attacks on oil infrastructure or a broader coalition breakdown.
EU's Von der Leyen: EU will eliminate barriers to the use of power purchase agreements and combine them with contracts for difference.
Von der Leyen's announcement to remove barriers to power purchase agreements (PPAs) and pair them with contracts for difference (CfDs) is a constructive policy step to accelerate renewable project financing and corporate offtake in the EU. Immediate effects are sector-specific and medium-term: it lowers transaction/frictional risk for corporate buyers and project developers, improves revenue certainty for new wind/solar/storage builds, and should speed permitting of offtake-backed projects (including green hydrogen feedstock). Beneficiaries include renewable developers and operators (onshore/offshore wind, utility-scale solar), engineering/EPC and equipment suppliers (turbines, inverters, grid/storages), and businesses involved in corporate energy procurement. The move can, over time, alleviate some energy-cost pressure that has been amplified by recent Strait of Hormuz disruptions and Brent strength, which eases headline-inflation risks—helpful in a market with stretched equity valuations and sensitivity to earnings. Impact is likely gradual (medium-term), while near-term volatility tied to commodity shocks or macro policy remains. Potential secondary effects: modest support to euro area energy security sentiment (small positive for EUR), and pressure on fossil-fuel generators’ margins. Overall market implication is supportive for “clean energy/transition” names and installers, neutral-to-negative for legacy fossil generators; materialization depends on implementation details and speed of rollout.
EC Pres. von der Leyen: Prolonged disruption to Gulf oil and gas could have a significant impact on the EU economy.
Von der Leyen’s warning raises the risk that further or prolonged disruptions to Gulf oil & gas flows will push European energy prices materially higher, amplifying headline inflation and slowing growth in an already rate-sensitive, high-valuation environment. With Brent already elevated and transit risks in the Strait of Hormuz having pushed crude into the low-$80s–$90s, a sustained disruption is stagflationary for the euro area: negative for consumer spending, industrial activity and corporate margins across energy-importing sectors, and positive for upstream oil producers and energy exporters. Market implications: (1) European equities (esp. cyclicals, autos, airlines, chemicals, travel & leisure) would be pressured; (2) core inflation and sovereign yields could rise, tightening financial conditions and weighing on banks and real-economy-sensitive names; (3) commodity/energy names and certain oil services/defense contractors would likely rally; (4) FX: EUR would likely weaken vs safe-haven USD and CHF, while commodity-linked currencies (NOK) could strengthen. Specific segments at risk: European industrials, autos, airlines, consumer discretionary, chemical producers, utilities (higher input costs), insurers (higher claims/operational disruption risks). Beneficiaries: integrated oil majors, oil & gas producers, some energy services and defense/security contractors. This escalation increases downside tail risk to European growth and raises the odds of a more hawkish ECB stance or a longer period of higher-for-longer real rates relative to current pricing.
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LME intends to restore trading after the closing price window
This is an operational/market-structure development: LME signalling it will restore trading after a previously halted or disrupted closing price window reduces uncertainty around price discovery, settlement and hedging for base metals. Short-term effects are likely limited but positive — restoring the venue allows physical market participants, miners, smelters, fabricators and hedgers to complete end-of-day trades and close exposures, which should narrow intraday spreads and remove a near-term liquidity/operational overhang. Impact is concentrated in base metals and commodity-related financial firms rather than broad risk assets. Beneficiaries: listed miners and metal producers (improved ability to hedge and mark inventories), commodity traders and exchanges (operational continuity), and downstream industrials that rely on transparent LME pricing. Market-wide macro drivers (Brent spike, Fed pause, stretched equity valuations) remain dominant, so this is a modest, localized positive rather than a catalyst for broader risk-on moves. Potential secondary effects: slightly reduced volatility in metal cash and forward curves, minor support to commodity-linked FX (AUD, CAD) as liquidity returns to price formation. Risk: if restoration reveals large imbalances or triggers catch-up flows, brief volatility could follow at reopen. Overall expected magnitude is small and short-lived given the larger macro headwinds noted in the current market backdrop.
LME: The electronic market is currently in a technical halt. Exchange intends to restore trading on the secondary instance.
LME electronic market entered a technical halt with the exchange saying it intends to restore trading on a secondary instance. This is an operational/market-structure disruption rather than a fundamental shock to metal demand or supply. Near-term consequences are likely limited to heightened volatility, temporary liquidity squeezes and wider bid/ask spreads in base-metal contracts (copper, aluminum, nickel) as desks and hedgers scramble to re-route flow or use alternative venues (CME, SHFE, bilateral OTC). Producers, smelters and ETFs may see price gaps or delayed hedges; broker-dealer and prime-broker risk teams could be forced to widen margins or pause activity until the primary platform is stable. Monitor duration of the outage, whether the primary instance is fully restored, and any knock-on effects on metal swaps, physical delivery notices and inventories — prolonged disruptions would raise the risk to metal producers and to metal-intensive sectors (autos, construction) and could feed through to broader risk sentiment if volatility spills into commodity-funded positions.
UAE's Fujairah Resumes Oil Loading After Drone Strike - WSJ.
The restart of oil loading at Fujairah after a drone strike removes an immediate supply-disruption risk and should trim the short-term geopolitical risk premium that had pushed Brent sharply higher. Near-term this is likely to put modest downward pressure on crude benchmarks (reducing a near-term flight-to-safety in energy) and ease headline inflation fears that had briefly re‑ignited after the Strait of Hormuz/Red Sea transit disruptions. Given the broader market backdrop (stretched equity valuations, Fed on pause, and heightened sensitivity to inflation and growth shocks), this is relieving but not resolutionary: risks in the Middle East remain elevated and further incidents could re-intensify the premium. Affected segments: global oil markets and energy producers (marginally negative), oilfield services and insurers (mixed; lower disruption risk reduces short-term insurance/shipping claims risk), airlines and other energy-sensitive sectors (modestly positive), and regional Gulf market sentiment (positive recovery). The move reduces one near-term tail risk for inflation and growth, offering slight relief to risk assets, but does not materially change the structural upside risk to energy prices from sustained regional escalation. Expected magnitude: modest and temporary. If loading continues without further attacks, Brent/WTI could retrace some of the recent spike; conversely, any repeat strikes would quickly reverse this relief. Relevance to current macro: with S&P valuations stretched and the Fed watching inflation, lower near-term energy risk slightly reduces the chance of an outsized market shock tied to oil; however, the longer-term influence depends on whether this incident was isolated.
Iran's Revolutionary Guards: Will target US industries in the region in the coming hours, ask people to evacuate nearby areas - Tasnim News Agency
Direct threats from Iran’s Revolutionary Guards to target US industries in the region constitute a near-term geopolitical escalation that pushes the market toward risk-off. Expect prompt upside pressure on oil and energy stocks (higher Brent/WTI risk premia), outperformance of defense contractors, and meaningful near-term strain on airlines and logistics/shipping names because of airspace/route disruptions and insurance costs. Safe-haven flows should lift bullion and haven FX (JPY, CHF) while pressuring risk assets — a meaningful negative for richly valued U.S. equities given high CAPE and sensitivity to earnings/ macro shocks. Policy risk rises for inflation and yields if oil spikes are sustained, increasing volatility and downside for cyclical and rate-sensitive sectors; winners will be energy and defense names, while travel, commercial transport, and broad risk assets are vulnerable.
China and US agree to properly manage differences - Xinhua.
Headline signals a de‑escalation in bilateral rhetoric and a willingness by both capitals to manage disputes. That lowers the near‑term tail risk of sudden trade/tech‑export escalations and tariffs, which is constructive for risk assets — especially China‑exposed equities, cyclicals (industrials, materials) and multinational tech/semiconductor firms with China revenue. It also reduces the premium in commodity markets tied to geopolitical risk (modest downward pressure on Brent) and should support a firmer onshore/offshore CNY (USD/CNH softer). Given the stretched valuations in U.S. markets and the Fed’s higher‑for‑longer stance, the positive is likely modest and confidence‑restoring rather than a major catalyst: expect reduced volatility and incremental upside for China reopening/consumption plays and for AI/semiconductor names if it lowers the chance of new export controls. Key risks: agreement may be only rhetorical (limited policy follow‑through), and other macro drivers (Fed, OBBBA fiscal effects, Strait of Hormuz) could dominate markets in the near term.
China and the US agree to strengthen dialogue - Xinhua
A formal agreement to ‘strengthen dialogue’ between China and the US is a risk-on development that should modestly reduce geopolitical/trade tail risk. Key channels: it can ease prospects for tariffs and export curbs (benefiting Chinese large-caps and US firms with China supply chains), support capital flows back into China/EM and pressure safe-haven FX and bonds, and lower risk premia on cyclical industrials, shipping and commodity exporters. Near-term gains are likely to be modest and conditional — dialogue is not the same as concrete policy rollbacks — and the effect will be tempered by bigger drivers flagged in the current market backdrop (stretched US valuations, Fed “higher-for-longer,” and renewed oil/Strait of Hormuz risks). Watch for: stronger CNY/shore-liquidity inflows if the talks reduce the probability of tariffs or export controls; potential upside for China ADRs, semiconductor supply-chain names if export restrictions are eased; and a modest risk-on lift for MSCI EM and cyclical sectors. Overall a positive but limited shock given other dominant macro/geopolitical risks.
US 6 Month Bill Auction High rate 3.570% Bid-to-cover ratio 2.64 Awards 71.14% of bids at high Sells $77 bln
6-month Treasury auction came in with a high yield of 3.57%, a healthy bid-to-cover of 2.64 and $77bn offered (71.14% awarded at the high). That mix points to adequate demand for front-end supply but confirms that short-term yields remain near the top of the Fed funds range, reinforcing a "higher-for-longer" short-end rate backdrop. Market implications: modest upward pressure on short-term yields and money-market rates (supporting cash returns), a small headwind for stretched equity valuations that are sensitive to discount-rate moves, and marginally tighter funding conditions for rate-sensitive sectors. No signs of demand stress, so this is not crisis-risk but a reaffirmation of attractive short-rate alternatives to risk assets. FX relevance: modest support for the USD vs funding-sensitive currencies (e.g., USD/JPY) as higher short-term US yields keep dollar funding relatively attractive.
US 6 Month Bill Auction
Routine US 6‑month Treasury bill auction — by itself this is usually a neutral market event unless the auction prints a surprising stop‑out yield or weak demand. Primary channels: short‑end Treasury yields and money‑market funding rates (T‑bills, repo), USD strength, and bank/financials’ short‑term funding costs. In the current environment (high valuations, ‘higher‑for‑longer’ Fed), a notably weak auction (low bid‑to‑cover or materially higher stop‑out yield vs. recent bills) would push short yields up, lift the dollar and money‑market rates, and be modestly negative for risk assets and rate‑sensitive growth names; a strong auction would have the opposite, modestly supportive effect for risk appetite. Key auction prints to watch: stop‑out yield vs. OIS/futures-implied short rates, bid‑to‑cover, indirect bidder participation. Overall expected market impact is limited unless results deviate from expectations.
US 3-Month Bill Auctions High Yield 3.16% Bid-to-cover 2.94 Sells $89bln Awards 39.81% of bids at high
3-month T-bill stop-out at 3.16% with a healthy bid-to-cover (2.94) on $89bn offered signals strong demand for short-term Treasuries but also reinforces elevated short-term rates. Awarding ~39.8% of bids at the high/stop-out suggests meaningful take-up at the top of the auction, not a disorderly tail but also not a rally-clearing bid — the market is content to hold higher short yields. Market implications: marginal tightening of financial conditions (higher discount rates) that is slightly negative for richly valued equities and duration-sensitive growth names, while being positive for money-market funds, short-duration bank NII and asset managers with large cash products. FX: elevated US short rates support USD versus majors, so potential near-term upside to USD/JPY and downside pressure on EUR/USD. Overall the print is not crisis-level but leans modestly bearish for risk assets and modestly constructive for financials and cash-yield products.
Israel's Cohen: Israel to create Lebanon buffer zone up to Litani River.
Israel saying it will create a buffer zone up to the Litani River signals a widening of military operations in Lebanon. Direct hit to regional stability raises geopolitical risk premia: oil and shipping insurance costs can tick higher (adding to already-elevated Brent), defence contractors tend to rally, while Israeli equities, regional EM assets and tourism-related sectors will be hit. Given stretched US equity valuations and a “higher-for-longer” Fed backdrop, this kind of escalation is likely to amplify risk-off flows—pressure on high-multiple growth names and credit spreads may widen. Near-term moves to expect: Brent/energy prices and large oil majors up; defence names bid; Israeli stocks and the shekel underperform; safe-haven FX (USD, JPY, CHF) and gold receive inflows. Overall this is a short-to-medium-term volatility and risk-off shock rather than an immediate systemic shock (impact moderate but meaningful in a fragile, high-valuation market).
LME Spokesperson: LME aware of the issue and working to resolve it.
Brief operational issue at the London Metal Exchange (LME) increases near-term uncertainty for base-metals price discovery and trading. Immediate effects: potential intra-day volatility, wider bid/ask spreads and dislocated cash/forward/base spreads (especially in more illiquid metals like nickel and aluminium), disrupted hedging for producers/consumers, and possible margin calls or forced liquidations for leveraged positions. Primary affected segments are base metals producers/traders, metal-intensive manufacturers (auto/EV and industrials), commodity funds and clearing members. If resolved quickly, market impact should be transitory; if the outage persists or forces a trading suspension, expect bigger price dislocations, short-term risk premia on metal prices and pressure on miners’ share prices and companies reliant on timely hedging. Given current market sensitivity (high valuations, headline commodity risks), even a short LME disruption can amplify volatility in resource names and metal-dependent supply chains. Listed companies most directly exposed include major miners and metal producers, and large metal consumers/EV makers that rely on nickel/copper for batteries and electrification: ["Rio Tinto", "BHP", "Glencore", "Anglo American", "Freeport-McMoRan", "Alcoa", "Norsk Hydro", "Vedanta"].
Fed bids for 6-Month bills total $6.2 bln.
Headline reports a small-scale Fed bid for 6‑month Treasury bills ($6.2bn). Such operations affect money markets and the very short end of the Treasury curve — modestly supporting short‑term liquidity and placing slight downward pressure on 6‑month yields — but the size is small relative to overall Treasury market activity. Given the Fed’s pause and “higher‑for‑longer” stance, and stretched equity valuations, this isolated bid is unlikely to move broader markets or materially change risk sentiment. Primary drill‑downs: money‑market rates, short‑dated Treasury yields, banks and other cash‑management heavy institutions; negligible direct equity or FX impact from this single action.
The Fed bids for 3-month bills total $7.1 bln.
Fed bids of $7.1bn for 3‑month bills is a small-scale liquidity/portfolio action and is unlikely to move broader markets. In a higher‑for‑longer rate environment (Fed paused), such bids are typically part of routine cash management and would nudge 3‑month bill yields marginally lower, modestly easing short‑term money‑market strains and repo pressures. The move has limited direct implications for equities or commodities; any benefit is via slightly easier short‑term funding costs (minor positive for risk assets and money‑market funds) and a very small downward bias to the front end of the Treasury curve. FX and cross‑asset effects should be negligible unless this is the start of a persistent pattern of larger purchases. No specific stocks or FX pairs are directly implicated by this single, small bid total.
Trading in copper, zinc, aluminium and other contracts has been halted on the LME.
A halt of trading in core LME base-metal contracts (copper, zinc, aluminium) is a negative liquidity/shock event for commodity markets and firms tied to industrial metals. Immediate effects: price discovery is suspended, order accumulation raises the risk of large gap moves and volatility on re-opening, margin calls for commodity traders, and potential settlement/counterparty stress. Sector impact concentrates on miners and metal producers (copper-focused names and diversified miners), smelters/consumers (auto, construction, electronics supply chains), and commodity-focused funds; it also has FX relevance for commodity-linked currencies (AUD, CLP, CAD). In the current market backdrop—high equity valuations and headline-driven sensitivity—this event raises short-term risk‑off pressures and could boost input‑cost inflation concerns if the halt reflects physical/logistics or market‑structure stress rather than a technical glitch. Watch for the LME’s explanation (technical vs. market order flow), the timing and mechanics of re-opening, spreads/contango/backwardation moves, and any knock‑on margin or credit events among commodity counterparties.
🔴 Trading halted in key contracts on the LME.
A halt in trading of key LME contracts is a negative signal for base metals market liquidity and price discovery—it typically reflects extreme price moves, technical/operational problems, or delivery/stock dislocations. Near-term effects: higher volatility in copper, aluminum, nickel and related spreads, potential margin calls and disorderly price moves that hurt metal-intensive sectors (industrials, construction, autos) and create downside pressure on miners’ equities. Miners and metal producers could see share-price weakness on uncertainty about realized prices and sales; manufacturers who hedge metal exposure may face re‑pricing and funding stress. Broader market impact is likely contained unless the halt is prolonged or tied to a fundamental supply shock; however, in the current stretched equity environment a pronounced metals shock could amplify risk‑off flows. Key things to watch: duration and reason for the halt, which LME contracts are affected (copper/nickel/aluminum), inventory/warehouse flows, LME public statements, and any spillover into commodity‑linked FX and earnings guidance from major miners.
IEA Executive Director Birol: We must be prepared if conflict continues for a while longer
IEA chief warning of being ‘prepared’ for a prolonged conflict is a negative shock for risk assets and a positive shock for energy prices. In the current March 2026 backdrop—Brent already up into the $80–90s on Strait of Hormuz risks—an extended conflict raises supply-risk premia, pushing oil and energy names higher, increasing headline inflation risk, and keeping real policy rates and risk premia elevated. Market implications: energy producers and oilfield services (higher revenues, stronger cash flow/capex outlook) are likely beneficiaries; airlines, shipping, travel-related names and EMs that are large oil importers face margin and growth headwinds; richly valued growth/AI names are vulnerable as higher energy-driven inflation and bond yields increase downside to stretched multiples. FX: safe-haven and oil-linked currencies are likely to move — expect volatile USD/JPY (safe-haven flows), and strength in oil-exporter currencies (NOK, CAD) vs the dollar (pressures on USD/CAD, USD/NOK). Watch oil price trajectory, shipping/transit incidents in the Gulf, and any Fed commentary on inflation that could translate higher energy into a ‘higher-for-longer’ rates narrative.
IEA Executive Director Birol: We can do more later as and if needed
IEA Executive Director Birol's line — “We can do more later as and if needed” — signals that the IEA is prepared to provide additional policy support (e.g., coordinated SPR releases or other supply measures) if energy-market stress persists. In the current backdrop (Brent spiking due to Strait of Hormuz tensions and headline inflation fears), that conditional readiness acts as a cap on further oil-price upside, lowering the risk of a sustained stagflation shock. Immediate market effect is likely limited because the comment is non-committal and contingent on future developments; however, it reduces tail-risk for oil and inflation and is therefore modestly supportive for risk assets overall. A clear implication: downside pressure for oil producers and energy names if the IEA follows through with releases, and a modest positive for energy-intensive sectors (airlines, transport) and growth-sensitive equities if crude eases. FX relevance: a lower oil trajectory would be mildly negative for commodity/currency pairs tied to oil exporters (CAD, NOK) — expect potential USD strength vs CAD/NOK if oil falls. Near-term watch: whether the IEA specifies timing/size of interventions or coordinates with major consuming nations (this would increase negative pressure on oil); absent concrete action, impact should remain muted. Given high market sensitivity (stretched valuations, Fed “higher-for-longer”), even small moves in oil/inflation expectations could shift volatility; but this specific headline is a modest de-risking signal rather than an immediate market mover.
IEA Chief Birol: Despite huge release, we still have a lot of stocks left
IEA comment that ‘‘despite a huge release, we still have a lot of stocks left’’ signals that the recent strategic release may not materially tighten global oil inventories. That removes some of the supply-driven upside in Brent which has been trading with a geopolitical risk premium after Strait of Hormuz tensions. Near term this is bearish for crude prices and therefore negative for oil producers and E&P names (weaker revenue, margin and near‑term cashflow outlooks) as well as oilfield services that trade on activity expectations. Conversely, it alleviates some headline inflation risk, offering a modest tailwind to rate-sensitive equities, bond market sentiment and consumers, but that positive is likely small given ongoing OBBBA inflation pressures and geopolitical upside risk. Commodity‑currency pairs correlated with oil (CAD, NOK, RUB) would likely weaken if prices fall — hence USD/CAD and USD/NOK are likely to move higher. Overall: near‑term downward pressure on energy complex, limited spillover upside for broader indices unless oil weakness is sustained and not offset by other inflation drivers; watch geopolitical developments which could re-tighten the market fast.
IEA Executive Director Birol: The IEA's quick action had a 'calming' impact on markets
Birol's comment that the IEA's rapid intervention 'calmed' markets implies the agency's actions (likely coordinated supply reassurance or releases) trimmed the oil risk premium. In the current backdrop of a recent Brent spike, 'higher-for-longer' Fed messaging and stretched equity valuations, reduced energy volatility is modestly positive for risk assets and cyclicals by lowering near-term inflation/stagflation fears. That should help airlines and consumer-exposed names and remove some near-term upside in oil prices, weighing on integrated oil majors. The effect looks short-to-medium term and conditional on the durability of the IEA's measures and any further Strait of Hormuz escalation. Also implies a modest risk-on FX response (weaker safe-havens), e.g., JPY depreciation (USD/JPY higher). Monitor actual inventory flows and subsequent oil-price moves; if geopolitics re-escalate the calming effect may reverse.
Global AI plans to deploy the NVIDIA Vera Rubin platform across the US. $NVDA
NVIDIA’s Vera Rubin platform being deployed across the U.S. is a clear commercial win for NVDA and the broader AI infra ecosystem. Near-term effects: accelerates enterprise adoption of NVIDIA’s full-stack inference/serving software and GPU hardware, boosts durable demand for data‑center GPUs and related software/services, and increases visibility into recurring software/hardware revenue. Beneficiaries include cloud providers that will see higher paid GPU-instance usage (Microsoft, Google/Alphabet, Amazon) and OEMs/infrastructure vendors selling validated systems (Supermicro, Dell/HP). Competitors (AMD, Intel) face greater pressure to match NVIDIA’s software+hardware ecosystem but could see incremental demand for alternative accelerators. Risks/offsets: stretched equity valuations and a sensitive market (high Shiller CAPE) mean strong fundamentals could be partially priced in and any execution or supply hiccups would be punished; macro risks (Strait of Hormuz oil shocks, Fed “higher‑for‑longer”) could cap multiple expansion. Geopolitical/tech‑policy risks (AI export restrictions, procurement curbs) could constrain international upside. Overall this is a positive, company‑specific catalyst for NVDA and supportive for AI-infrastructure and cloud names, though market‑level volatility and valuation sensitivity may limit the immediate impact on broad indices.
US NAHB Housing Market Index Actual 38 (Forecast 37, Previous 36)
NAHB index rose to 38 (vs. 37 f/c, 36 prior) — a small beat that signals modestly improved builder sentiment but remains well below the 50 boom/bust threshold. That implies housing activity is still soft overall, but demand/backlog or buyer traffic showed a slight improvement versus expectations. Market implications are limited and short-term: positive for homebuilders, building-materials retailers and mortgage originators/reits as sentiment and potential demand pick up, but the reading is far from a full recovery and should not shift the Fed’s higher-for-longer stance. A sustained improvement in housing would be more meaningful because it could lift goods demand, nudge inflation and push yields higher (which would help banks but hurt long-duration growth names). Given stretched equity valuations, expect only a modest, sector-focused lift rather than broad market re-rating.
US Trade Representative Greer: The US and China agreed on a work plan for potential deliverables for Trump and Xi.
A bilateral "work plan for potential deliverables" signals de‑escalation and a roadmap toward concrete US‑China outcomes ahead of any Trump–Xi engagements. That should reduce trade/tariff tail‑risk and support risk‑assets tied to global trade and the tech supply chain. Most directly helped: large US multinationals with China exposure (Apple), semiconductor exporters and equipment suppliers (Nvidia, AMD, ASML) if the plan eases tech frictions; industrial/capital‑goods names (Caterpillar, Boeing) that depend on Chinese demand and orders; and Chinese tech/platform names (Alibaba, Tencent) which would re‑rate on improved policy visibility. FX: improved US‑China relations typically eases safe‑haven flows and can strengthen the yuan vs the dollar (USD/CNH lower), supporting EM risk appetite. Caveats: this is a "work plan" not final agreements — execution risk is material and markets remain vulnerable given elevated valuations and macro/energy risks. Expect a modest, risk‑on tilt if the news is confirmed and followed by concrete deliverables; absent follow‑through the move could fade quickly.
OpenAI offers preferred equity in a joint venture, Anthropic proposes common equity - Sources
Headline describes a governance/structuring disagreement in talks around an AI joint venture: OpenAI is offering preferred equity (seniority and downside protection), while Anthropic is pushing for common equity (more upside and control). This is primarily private-capital, governance news but has market relevance because it affects how value and economics from large-scale AI deployments will be shared between platform owners, model providers and investors. Immediate impact is limited: the firms are private and deal terms are negotiated, so there is no direct cashflow shock to public markets. However, the story raises execution and partnership risk around commercialisation of foundational models, which can increase investor uncertainty for richly valued AI-exposed public names. A cautious/defensive preferred-equity approach by OpenAI could signal investor concern about near-term economics or the need to protect legacy investors, while Anthropic’s push for common equity signals appetite for growth upside — both outcomes could alter revenue-sharing, margin outlooks and timing of monetisation. A small negative tone is likely for high-PE AI beneficiaries given current market sensitivity (stretched valuations, high CAPE): any heightened uncertainty or slower monetisation could pressure multiples for cloud providers and AI infrastructure firms. Monitor for: MSFT/OpenAI JV disclosures, deal economics (royalties, revenue splits), how terms affect cloud hosting demand, and whether competitors accelerate direct product monetisation.
US Treasury Secretary Bessent: China visit postponement would be because Trump wants to
Treasury Secretary Bessent's comment that any postponement of a China visit would be driven by former President Trump signals elevated political risk around US–China engagement. Markets interpret this as increased likelihood of politicized diplomacy, which raises the odds of disruptions to trade talks, tariff/ export-control headlines, and coordination on supply‑chain or tech issues. Near term this tends to pressure China‑exposed equities and any US tech names with significant revenue or supply‑chain links to China, and to put modest downward pressure on the onshore/offshore yuan (USD/CNH) as investors seek safety. Given current market conditions — high equity valuations, sensitivity to headline risk, and already elevated energy‑led inflation concerns — the shock is likely to be a short‑lived risk‑off move unless followed by concrete policy actions (new tariffs, export restrictions, or canceled official visits). Sectors most affected: China internet/consumer, semiconductors and AI‑infrastructure suppliers, industrial exporters and shipping. Potential market moves: knee‑jerk underperformance in China ADRs/H‑shares, modest widening of risk premia for US tech with China exposure, and slight USD‑strength vs CNY.
US Capacity Utilization Actual 76.3% (Forecast 76.2%, Previous 76.2%)
Capacity utilization rose to 76.3% (vs 76.2 expected), a very small upside that signals marginally firmer factory demand and slightly higher spare-capacity absorption. That is modestly positive for industrials, materials and commodity demand (supports volumes/pricing), but the beat is too small to move policy expectations materially—if anything it reinforces the data-dependent ‘higher-for-longer’ Fed narrative and keeps pressure on rate-sensitive growth/long-duration names. Overall impact is limited and idiosyncratic: watch industrial cyclicals, commodity producers and input-cost-sensitive manufacturers for modest upside to near-term revenue and pricing power.
US Industrial Production MoM Actual 0.2% (Forecast 0.1%, Previous 0.7%)
Monthly US industrial production rose 0.2% vs 0.1% expected (prior +0.7%), a small upside surprise that signals continued underlying industrial resilience but at a slower pace than the prior month. The print is modestly positive for cyclical, capex and commodity-linked sectors (industrial machinery, construction equipment, transports, basic materials and miners) because stronger factory output supports revenue and freight volumes. On macro markets the surprise is too small to materially change Fed policy odds but reinforces the case for a ‘higher-for-longer’ rate backdrop if the trend persists, which could keep upward pressure on yields and weigh on richly valued growth/AI names. Near-term effects: mild positive for cyclical equities and commodity prices, mild negative for long-duration growth stocks; negligible but slightly dollar-supportive move in FX. Given stretched equity valuations, market reaction may be muted and sensitive to follow-through in upcoming data and earnings.
US Manufacturing Output MoM Actual 0.2% (Forecast 0.1%, Previous 0.6%)
US manufacturing output rose 0.2% month-on-month, beating the 0.1% forecast but slowing from February's 0.6% gain. The print signals continued factory-sector resilience but at a softer pace — a modest positive for cyclicals (industrial machinery, aerospace, heavy equipment, capital goods) and commodity demand, while not strong enough to materially shift the Fed outlook. Given stretched equity valuations and sensitivity to macro surprises, this should provide only a small boost to riskier cyclical names and slight upward pressure on Treasury yields and the dollar. Key near-term watch: follow-up data (industrial production, ISM/manufacturing PMIs, capex surveys) to see if this is a pause or the start of a broader cooling in activity.
Iran asks for the release of three tankers seized by India in February as part of talks on the safe passage of Indian vessels via the Strait of Hormuz - Sources
Headline signals diplomatic engagement between Iran and India over seized tankers and safe passage through the Strait of Hormuz. In the current market backdrop — Brent has recently spiked toward ~$90 on transit risks and headline inflation concerns — any credible signs of de‑escalation reduce near‑term tail risk to energy supply and global trade. That should ease immediate upward pressure on oil prices and relieve a stagflationary headline risk premium, which is modestly positive for broad equity risk appetite (given stretched valuations and sensitivity to shocks). Likely near‑term effects: lower risk premium on Brent/physical tanker freight, modest downward pressure on oil producers and tanker owners, and modest upward pressure on cyclical and high‑beta equities that suffer when energy/geo risk rises. Shipping insurers and tanker freight rates are directly exposed; container carriers are less sensitive but could see relief if broader regional tensions ease. FX: oil‑linked currencies (e.g., NOK, CAD, RUB) could weaken slightly if oil price risk recedes; safe‑haven flows to USD might retreat marginally. The situation remains binary — a breakdown in talks would re‑inflate oil/shipping premiums quickly — so market impact is likely small and short‑lived unless followed by further escalations or concrete concessions.
Effective fed funds rate: 3.64% March 13th vs 3.64% March 12th
The effective federal funds rate being unchanged day-over-day (3.64% on March 13 vs 3.64% on March 12) is a largely neutral data point: it confirms the Fed’s current stance has not shifted and that short-term money-market rates are stable. In the current environment—high equity valuations, a Fed on pause and "higher-for-longer" messaging, and elevated oil-driven inflation risks—this reinforces that monetary policy is not yet easing. Market reaction is likely muted: short-end yields and money-market rates stay anchored, reducing immediate volatility in rate-sensitive fixed-income instruments. Sector impacts are small but directional: banks/financials see stable funding-cost/backdrop for NIM (neutral-to-slightly-positive), rate-sensitive growth/long-duration equities remain exposed to valuation sensitivity (neutral-to-slightly-negative if the Fed signals no easing), and REITs/mortgage-sensitive names stay pressured by elevated real rates. FX impact is minimal day-to-day, though a persistent unchanged/higher-for-longer Fed tilt supports the USD versus peers (watch pairs like USD/JPY). Overall this headline is a non-surprise that maintains the status quo rather than prompting a market re-rate.
Chinese Trade Negotiator Li: China and the US to maintain negotiations
Li's comment that China and the US will maintain negotiations is a modestly positive developments for risk assets because it reduces the near-term probability of a large escalation in tariffs or abrupt export restrictions. That lowers downside tail risk for export-oriented Chinese industry, global manufacturing supply chains and trade-sensitive cyclicals (shipping, ports, industrials), and eases pressure on Chinese equities and the CNH/CNY. It is also mildly supportive for semiconductors and AI hardware firms that face export-control uncertainty — sustained talks make additional unilateral restrictions slightly less likely, though nothing here signals a breakthrough. Given stretched US equity valuations, elevated Brent and the Fed’s “higher-for-longer” stance, the upside is limited: markets are more likely to see relief rallies in China-tech, export-oriented plays and shipping, but persistent macro risks (energy-driven inflation, OBBBA-driven tariffs, or further geopolitical shocks) mean any positive impact should be seen as incremental rather than market-changing.
Chinese Trade Negotiator Li: China expresses serious concerns about the US' recent 301 probes
China's public rebuke of recent US Section 301 probes raises the risk of an escalation in trade frictions (tariffs, countermeasures or tighter export controls). That is negative for sectors tied to cross‑border technology flows and supply chains — notably semiconductors, chip equipment, AI infrastructure vendors, large US tech firms with heavy China exposure, and Chinese exporters. With US equities already at elevated valuations and sensitive to earnings/AI capex revisions, renewed trade tensions could prompt near‑term risk‑off moves, weigh on semiconductor capital expenditure plans and slow revenue growth for China‑exposed names. FX flows would likely put pressure on the yuan (USD/CNH strength) as investors seek dollar safe havens. The hit is likely to be uneven — defense and onshore domestic suppliers could see relative support — and the main impact will be in the near term through higher volatility and downward revisions to demand forecasts if probes lead to concrete restrictions.
Chinese Trade Negotiator Li, on talks with the US: both sides agreed to maintain the stability of tariff levels
Li's comment signals a status‑quo outcome on tariffs — no new escalation but also no rollback. That removes a near‑term tail‑risk of sudden tariff hikes, which is modestly supportive for global risk assets and trade‑sensitive sectors (consumer electronics, autos, industrial supply chains, shipping). At the same time, the lack of tariff relief is a constraint for exporters and firms hoping for lower trade costs, making the net effect mixed. Expect modest supportive sentiment for Chinese equities and risk FX (offshore CNY) and muted immediate reaction in AI/semiconductor names unless paired with separate export‑control moves. Given stretched US valuations, the market will treat this as a small reduction in geopolitical risk rather than a catalyst for a broad rally.
WH Press Sec. Leavitt: Trump will launch a task force against fraud today
Mostly a domestic political/administrative move with limited direct market impact. A presidential “task force against fraud” increases regulatory and enforcement focus — implications are sector-specific: potential modest headwinds for banks and consumer-facing fintechs (higher compliance costs, operational scrutiny) and potential tailwinds for payments processors and anti‑fraud/cybersecurity vendors that sell detection and compliance solutions. Scope, targets and enforcement intensity will determine any material effect; absent details this is unlikely to move broad markets but could cause volatility in names tied to payments, consumer credit or fraud‑prevention services. Watch announcements on which programs or industries are targeted, any subpoenas/fines, and procurement plans (which would benefit vendors). No clear FX channel expected.
Chinese Trade Negotiator Li, on talks with the US: We talked about bilateral tariffs under new circumstances
Statement from China’s trade negotiator that talks covered “bilateral tariffs under new circumstances” signals ongoing negotiation — not a resolution — around tariff policy. In the current environment (stretched US equity valuations, elevated oil and headline-inflation risks, and sensitivity to earnings), this raises modest downside risk: renewed or adjusted tariffs would weigh on China-exposed exporters, global supply chains and trade volumes, and could boost near-term policy uncertainty. Likely near-term market reaction is mild risk-off: pressure on China/EM equities and specific exporters/industrial names, uplift in safe-haven flows and potential CNY weakness versus the dollar. Offsets: any move toward managed tariff rollbacks or clear rules could be constructive for trade-linked cyclicals, and US domestic producers potentially gain from protection. Overall this is an incremental trade-friction noise item rather than a market shock by itself, but it reinforces the market’s sensitivity to trade fragmentation and potential stagflationary upside risks.
WH Press Sec. Leavitt: If the China meeting is delayed, we will provide new dates soon
A scheduling note that a US-China meeting may be delayed. On its own this is low-impact news, but in the current environment—high valuations, sensitivity to trade/tech policy and recent concerns about AI export restrictions and tariffs—any uncertainty around high-level US-China engagement increases geopolitical and policy risk. Relevant segments: US and global technology/AI supply-chain names (semiconductors, AI-chipmakers, equipment suppliers) and China-exposed consumer/Internet names. A delay can widen risk premia, prompt modest risk-off flows into the dollar and safe-haven assets, and keep headlines around trade/friction alive (which could exacerbate market volatility if followed by substantive policy moves). Unless the delay signals escalation or cancellation, expect only a short-lived effect; a larger market reaction would require concrete policy changes or rhetoric. Also monitor USD/CNY/CNH for near-term FX moves if sentiment turns risk-off.
White House: Trump-Xi meeting could be delayed - Fox News interview
A potential delay to a Trump–Xi meeting raises the risk of renewed U.S.–China diplomatic friction and slower progress on trade, investment and export-control negotiations. Given the current market backdrop—high equity valuations and sensitivity to geopolitical and trade shocks—this increases risk-off pressure on China-exposed and global cyclical names and could boost safe-haven flows. Key affected segments: Chinese tech and internet ADRs, semiconductors and AI-supply-chain names (sensitive to export controls and market access), global industrials and shipping (trade volumes/uncertainty), and commodity-linked cyclicals. Market responses likely include modest weakness in risk assets, modest gains for safe-haven assets (U.S. Treasuries, gold) and a weaker CNY/CNH versus the dollar; limited immediate policy action is likely if the meeting is only delayed, but the headline elevates the probability of slower détente and potential future tariffs/export restrictions. Given stretched valuations, even a small increase in trade tension could amplify volatility and prompt re-pricing of growth-sensitive stocks.
WH Press Sec. Leavitt: Trump spoke with many countries in the last days, speaking with allies in Europe and the Gulf
WH press secretary says Trump has been in contact with multiple countries, including allies in Europe and the Gulf. In the current macro backdrop—elevated Brent (~low $80s–$90), high equity valuations, and a Fed on pause—any signal of diplomatic de‑escalation in the Middle East is mildly market‑positive. Lower perceived geopolitical risk would reduce the risk premium in oil (easing headline inflation fears), relieve safe‑haven flows into USD/JPY and Treasuries, and support risk assets and cyclicals that have been sensitive to energy and supply‑chain shock fears. Conversely, reduced tensions would be modestly negative for defense contractors and oil majors’ near‑term risk premia. Impact is likely small and conditional (dependent on follow‑through and concrete de‑escalation), so expect short‑term relief in energy prices and a modest positive tilt for broad equities, with potential rotational weakness in defense and oil stocks.
Canadian CPI Common Actual 2.4% (Forecast -, Previous 2.7%)
Canada’s ‘CPI Common’ slowing to 2.4% from 2.7% signals disinflation in the core trend and reduces near‑term pressure on the Bank of Canada to tighten further. That should be modestly supportive for rate‑sensitive Canadian assets (equities, real estate, consumer discretionary) and government bonds (10s likely to drift lower), while weighing on net interest margins for big banks over time. FX implications: a softer Canadian inflation print increases the odds of policy divergence with the U.S. (Fed on pause) and typically puts downward pressure on the loonie, so USD/CAD is likely to move higher absent offsetting drivers (notably oil). Cross‑currents: with Brent elevated in the $80–90s, commodity strength could limit CAD weakness and cushion energy names, so the net market impact is moderate. Given stretched global valuations and sensitivity to inflation surprises, this release is likely to reduce near‑term recession/hike risk priced into Canadian rates and be mildly bullish for domestic equities overall, but bearish for bank profitability and neutral-to-mixed for energy names depending on oil moves.
Canadian Core CPI MoM Actual 0.2% (Forecast -, Previous 0.2%)
Canadian core CPI (MoM) at 0.2% matches the prior print, implying no surprise in the underlying inflation trend. With no upside surprise, the release is unlikely to materially change the Bank of Canada’s path in the near term — it keeps the case for a steady policy rate unless subsequent prints or wage data deteriorate. Market implications are muted: short-term Canadian yields should be little changed, leaving limited directional pressure on rate-sensitive Canadian financials. FX: a neutral print gives the Canadian dollar a slightly softer bias versus the US dollar (market participants typically need upside surprises to bolster CAD), so USD/CAD could drift higher on marginal flows, but any move should be small absent follow-on data. Commodity-linked sectors (energy, materials) will remain driven more by global oil prices and trade/tension developments than by this print. Overall, this is a non-event for equities and fixed income absent a series of surprises in coming months.
BoC Core CPI MoM Actual 0.4% (Forecast -, Previous 0.2%)
Canadian core CPI (MoM) accelerating to 0.4% from 0.2% signals underlying inflation momentum is firmer than recent prints. That raises the bar for the Bank of Canada to remain on a hawkish or 'higher-for-longer' stance, supporting Canadian yields and the loonie and increasing policy-rate risk to rate-sensitive assets. Near-term market implications: Canadian government bond yields likely to tick up (steeper curve), CAD strength vs. USD (USD/CAD down), pressure on Canadian and global equities — especially housing, consumer discretionary and REITs — while domestic banks and insurance names could benefit from higher net interest margins if the yield curve steepens. In the current environment of already-stretched equity valuations and a US Fed on pause, a domestic inflation uptick increases tail risk for equities and could widen cross-border rate differentials, supporting CAD outperformance. Watch BoC communications and market-implied rate paths; a persistence of monthly prints at this pace would be materially negative for rate-sensitive sectors and for US/Global risk appetite. FX relevance: USD/CAD is likely to move materially as Canadian rate expectations adjust, so FX pairs are included in the affected list.
BoC Core CPI YoY Actual 2.3% (Forecast -, Previous 2.6%)
Canada core CPI eased to 2.3% YoY from 2.6% (actual vs prior), signaling continued disinflation toward the BoC’s 2% goal. Smaller-than-expected core inflation reduces the odds of further BoC tightening and should be modestly supportive for Canadian government bonds (yields lower). That dynamic is typically negative for the Canadian dollar (USD/CAD likely to drift higher) and creates modest headwinds for Canadian banks (pressure on NIMs) while being neutral-to-positive for rate-sensitive growth names. Offset risk: elevated Brent crude and Strait of Hormuz tensions (global oil nearer $80–90) provide some support to Canada’s terms of trade and the CAD, so the net market effect is small. Given the narrow move (2.6%→2.3%) this is likely a low-volatility, short-lived market impulse unless followed by further soft prints or a shock to oil prices. In the current market backdrop (Fed pause, stretched equity valuations, headline oil risk), expect a modest CAD weakening, slight Canadian curve flattening (or lower short-end yields), and mixed effects across Canadian cyclicals vs. exporters.
Canadian CPI Median Actual 2.3% (Forecast 2.4%, Previous 2.5%)
Canadian median CPI came in at 2.3% vs 2.4% expected and 2.5% prior — a small undershoot that suggests inflation pressure is cooling modestly but not collapsing. Near-term market implication: reduces odds of further BoC hawkish surprises, which should be modestly supportive for Canadian duration (yields down) and rate-sensitive equities (REITs, utilities, consumer discretionary), while weighing on bank NIM/delivery of higher-for-longer rate premiums. FX: a softer print tends to weaken the CAD vs the USD as BoC rate expectations ease relative to the Fed. Broader context: the signal is small and may be offset by global drivers (Brent spike, supply shocks, and US policy), so expect limited immediate market reaction but a tilt toward risk assets with sensitivity to lower rates in Canada.
Canadian CPI Trim Actual 2.3% (Forecast 2.3%, Previous 2.4%)
Trimmed Canadian CPI printed 2.3% vs. 2.3% forecast and down from 2.4% prior. The print is essentially in-line with expectations and only modestly softer than the previous reading — a signal of stable but still-elevated underlying inflation. Near-term market reaction is likely muted: the result slightly reduces near-term upside pressure on Bank of Canada tightening relative to the prior month, supporting Canadian government bonds and domestically-focused equities in a small way, while exerting mild downward pressure on the Canadian dollar (i.e., USD/CAD slightly higher). Rate-sensitive sectors (banks, real estate) stand to benefit modestly from a lower probability of additional hikes; energy and commodity names will be more influenced by ongoing global supply/news (Strait of Hormuz) than by this CPI print. Given the print was in line with consensus and the broader backdrop of elevated global risks and sticky headline energy prices, the overall market impact is very limited.
Canadian CPI YoY Actual 1.8% (Forecast 1.9%, Previous 2.3%)
Canadian CPI y/y softened to 1.8% (vs 1.9% f/c and 2.3% prior), signalling continued disinflation. That lowers near‑term odds of further BoC tightening and should put downward pressure on CAD yields and lift Canadian bond prices. FX: USD/CAD likely to firm (CAD weaker) on the miss. Equities: modestly supportive for rate‑sensitive and growth names and for the broader TSX as real burden of inflation eases, but a negative for Canadian banks and other financials reliant on higher short‑term rates and wider NIMs. Impact is mostly domestic and small in absolute terms — limited spillover to global risk assets. Watch BoC forward guidance, Canada 2‑10y yields, and USD/CAD moves for confirmation.
NY Fed Manufacturing Actual -0.2 (Forecast 3.9, Previous 7.10)
NY Fed Manufacturing survey plunged to -0.2 (forecast 3.9, prior 7.1), a sharp regional cooling in activity. This is a negative signal for US cyclical demand and capex in the near term — likely to weigh on industrials, materials and capital-goods suppliers, and raise downside risk to small-cap and regional earnings. Because headline US growth/inflation risks are already mixed (high valuations, oil spike), this weak data increases market sensitivity to further downside surprises and could modestly trim bond yields and USD if confirmed by other regional prints. Mega-cap tech and AI-infrastructure names are less directly affected, but the print raises recession/earnings-risk headlines that could amplify volatility across risk assets.
Canadian CPI MoM Actual 0.5% (Forecast 0.7%, Previous 0.0%)
Canada's headline CPI rose 0.5% MoM vs a 0.7% forecast (previous 0.0%), a cooler-than-expected print that reduces near-term upside pressure on Bank of Canada rate expectations. The result is modestly dovish for CAD and Canadian nominal yields, which should weigh on banks/financials (beneficiaries of higher rates) and help rate-sensitive sectors like REITs and utilities. Energy names may be less affected or supported independently by elevated global oil prices and Strait of Hormuz supply risks. Overall this is a limited, data-point-driven move—not a regime change—so market reaction should be contained unless followed by weaker wage/employment data or a clear shift in BoC guidance. Key risks that could offset this are persistent core inflation, USD/JPY/ global energy shocks, or hawkish central bank communication.
China-US trade talks last about three hours on Monday - Official
A brief three-hour bilateral meeting signals continued engagement but provides no details on concessions or concrete outcomes—so immediate market reaction should be limited. Relevant sectors include China-exposed exporters, technology and semiconductor supply chains (where export controls and tariffs could materially alter revenues), and industrials tied to cross-border trade. FX moves could arise if negotiations are perceived as easing/fraying relations: RMB (USD/CNH, USD/CNY) and risk-sensitive currencies such as AUD would be most sensitive. Given stretched equity valuations and headline-risk from trade/friction, markets are likely to wait for follow-up talks or concrete policy steps before re-pricing risk; watch for any shifts in tariffs, export-control language, or timelines for further meetings.
Canadian House Starts, Annualized Actual 250.9k (Forecast 255k, Previous 238.0k)
Canadian housing starts came in at an annualized 250.9k vs a 255k consensus and 238.0k prior — a small miss relative to expectations but still higher than the previous reading. The headline soft beat vs prior suggests ongoing activity, but the miss vs forecast signals a modest cooling vs market expectations. Implications: weaker-than-expected starts are mildly negative for the Canadian housing/construction complex, residential builders, mortgage lenders and housing-related consumer spending. They also tend to be USD/CAD negative (i.e., push CAD slightly weaker) since softer domestic activity reduces BoC tightening pressure. Magnitude is limited — the surprise is small and global drivers (oil, geopolitics, Fed direction) and BoC commentary will dominate near-term FX and equity moves. Watch follow-up data (permits, resale activity, mortgage flows) and BoC guidance for any amplification.
Secured overnight financing rate: 3.65% March 13th vs 3.65% March 12th
SOFR unchanged at 3.65% on March 13 vs March 12 indicates stable overnight secured funding conditions and no new stress or tightening in the repo/money markets. That level sits squarely inside the Fed’s current effective policy range (3.50%–3.75%) and is consistent with the Fed’s pause and “higher-for-longer” messaging. Practical implications: liquidity and short-term funding costs are steady, reducing the chance of a repo-driven shock to banks or money-market-sensitive instruments. This is mildly supportive for financial-sector funding spreads and liquidity-sensitive trading desks, but the move (or lack of it) is routine and unlikely to move equities or FX materially in isolation given stretched equity valuations and larger macro drivers (energy risks, fiscal policy, AI/tech earnings). Watch for any sustained drift in SOFR relative to the fed funds and OIS curves — that would signal either policy tightening expectations or funding stress. No immediate FX impact is implied by a one-day unchanged SOFR.
Hamas held talks with Trump-led 'board of peace' in bid to safeguard Gaza ceasefire under strain of Iran war - Sources
Diplomatic engagement between Hamas and a Trump-led mediation panel reduces, but does not eliminate, near-term risk of a wider Middle East escalation. That should modestly relieve the geopolitical risk premium in oil (Brent) and lower immediate headline-inflation fears that have been keeping energy prices elevated and pressuring risk assets. Given stretched equity valuations and a ‘higher-for-longer’ Fed, the market reaction is likely muted — a small risk-on impulse that favors cyclicals/quality growth over pure defensive trades. Conversely, defense contractors and oil producers could see modest downside if the ceasefire holds; safe-haven FX and gold may fade slightly. The move is conditional and fragile: any breakdown in talks or renewed Iran-linked attacks would quickly reverse this impact.
US Treasury Secretary Bessent: Inflation expectations are well anchored
Treasury Secretary Bessent saying inflation expectations are "well anchored" is a modestly positive, calming signal for markets. It reduces near-term odds of surprise Fed tightening and eases inflation risk premia, which should help rate‑sensitive, long‑duration assets (large-cap growth and AI‑infrastructure names) and equities generally. The comment also leans toward a softer USD impulse (lower safe‑haven demand and reduced risk of policy tightening), supporting risk appetite; however, the constructive effect is limited by still‑elevated energy prices and stretched equity valuations. Key segments to watch: mega‑cap tech and AI beneficiaries (benefit from lower discount‑rate pressure), high‑duration growth names and REITs (positive), and government bond markets (potential modest decline in nominal yields if term premium eases). Risks that mute the bullishness include ongoing Strait of Hormuz tensions and oil price upside, incoming US PCE/CPI prints, and the Fed’s reaction function. Overall this is a near‑term positive sentiment cue but not a game‑changer given broader macro cross‑currents.
US Treasury Secretary Bessent, on whether they could intervene in oil markets: Have not done that - CNBC
Treasury Secretary Bessent saying the U.S. has not intervened in oil markets implies no immediate policy backstop for supply-driven oil moves. That leaves Brent vulnerable to further spikes from Strait of Hormuz disruptions, which would be supportive for energy producers and oilfield services but inflationary for the broader economy — a headwind for richly valued US growth names and duration-sensitive equities given the Fed's 'higher-for-longer' stance. FX/commodity effects: higher oil typically strengthens oil-exporting currencies (CAD, NOK) and pressures consumer-facing sectors. The comment is not a definitive refusal to act in future, so market reaction should be measured but slightly risk-off.
US Treasury Secretary Bessent: Putin would get even more money if oil spiked to $150
Headline underscores that a sharp jump in oil toward $150 would materially boost revenues to Russia, raising the probability of prolonged or intensified geopolitical conflict. For markets this is stagflationary: it would push headline inflation and bond yields higher, strain consumer pockets, and force more hawkish Fed rhetoric — negatives for richly valued growth and consumer-exposed sectors. Segment impacts: energy producers and oil-services stand to gain (higher margins, cash flow); defense and security names could see constructive sentiment amid higher geopolitical risk; airlines, transport, logistics and consumer discretionary would suffer from higher fuel costs and weaker demand; commodity-linked FX (CAD, NOK) would typically strengthen while safe-haven FX and USD flows could be mixed depending on risk-off dynamics; Russia-linked assets remain geopolitically constrained but conceptually would benefit from higher hydrocarbon receipts. Given current elevated equity valuations and Fed ‘higher-for-longer’ stance, a large oil spike is a net negative for broad risk assets even as it helps energy/defense pockets.
US Treasury Secretary Bessent, on oil supply: The deficit is somewhere between 10 and 14 million barrels
Treasury Secretary Bessent saying there is a 10–14m barrel supply deficit is a clear tightening signal for oil markets. With Brent already elevated after Strait of Hormuz tensions, this suggests additional upside for crude prices — boosting energy producers and services while re‑igniting headline inflation risks. Higher oil would put upward pressure on bond yields and deepen the “higher‑for‑longer” Fed narrative, a negative for richly‑valued, long‑duration growth names and consumer discretionary (higher input/fuel costs). Near‑term market impact is asymmetric: oil and energy equities should benefit, while broader risk assets (S&P) face modest downside pressure amid stretched valuations and sensitivity to earnings/macro surprises. Impact is tempered by uncertainty around the time frame and source of the deficit (strategic stock draws vs. production outages) and by the Fed/OBBBA backdrop. FX: oil exporters’ currencies (CAD, NOK) would likely strengthen vs the USD if prices move higher; EM oil importers and consumer sectors would feel the squeeze. Sectors benefitting: Integrated oil & gas producers, E&P, oilfield services. Sectors hurt: Airlines, consumer discretionary, long-duration tech, and inflation‑sensitive fixed income.
US Treasury Secretary Bessent, on the Strait of Hormuz: We believe Chinese ships have gone out
Treasury Secretary Bessent's comment that Chinese ships "have gone out" around the Strait of Hormuz reads as confirmation of an increased Chinese naval presence in a strategically sensitive shipping lane. That raises short-term geopolitically driven risk premia: higher oil/energy price risk (Brent already volatile), upward pressure on shipping and marine insurance costs, and a classic risk‑off impulse that hits richly valued equities given the market's stretched valuations. Beneficiaries likely include energy producers and defense contractors; losers are broad risk assets (S&P downside) and cyclical/import‑exposed EMs. FX moves would likely show safe‑haven bids (USD, JPY, CHF) and potential near-term CNY pressure if trade/shipments are disrupted. Monitor Brent, shipping/insurance spreads, and any escalation or de‑escalation signals — sustained naval deployments would amplify the negative equity impulse and raise oil-driven inflation fears, putting further upward pressure on yields and the Fed’s higher‑for‑longer calculus.
US Treasury Secretary Bessent: It's very likely to assume successful completion of 301.
Treasury Secretary Bessent saying it’s “very likely to assume successful completion of 301” points to an expectation that the Section 301 trade process (tariff/investigation actions) will reach its intended conclusion. In the current macro setup—stretched equity valuations, higher-for-longer Fed, and energy-driven inflation risks—renewed clarity that 301 actions will be completed is slightly negative for risk assets because it raises the odds of sustained trade frictions and higher input costs. Market implications: 1) Industrials and domestic basic-materials names (steel, aluminum, heavy machinery) could see relative upside from protection or tariff-driven reshoring; 2) Retailers, consumer electronics and supply-chain-exposed semiconductors could face margin pressure and revenue disruption from higher tariff costs or retaliatory measures; 3) The news is mild pro-risk-off for FX: trade escalation expectations typically weaken CNY/CNH and support the USD as a safe/flight-to-quality currency; 4) Overall the announcement reduces policy uncertainty in the narrow sense (the market can “price in” an outcome), so the immediate shock is limited, but it biases stagflationary risk higher if tariffs are implemented or prolonged. Given stretched equity valuations, even a modest increase in trade/headline risk is likely to be a small negative for the S&P.
US Treasury Secretary Bessent on Iran and oil: Any actions to address prices depend on duration of war - CNBC interview
Treasury Secretary Bessent’s comment that any steps to address oil prices will depend on the duration of the Iran conflict raises the prospect that U.S. policy intervention may be conditional and not immediate. Given Brent is already elevated (~$80–90) and markets are sensitive to energy-driven inflation, a prolonged disruption would push oil higher, add to headline/core inflation risks, keep the Fed on a higher-for-longer stance and pressure stretched equity valuations. Short-term this is a risk-off signal: beneficiaries would be integrated oil producers and oilfield services; losers would be airlines, consumer discretionary and long-duration/valuation-sensitive tech names. Also raises FX volatility — a prolonged escalation tends to drive safe-haven flows and JPY weakness vs the dollar. Monitoring duration and any concrete policy actions (SPR releases, coordination with allies) will determine whether effects are transitory or more damaging to growth and risk assets.
US Treasury Secretary Bessent, on Trump-Xi meeting: We will see if the visit takes place as scheduled -CNBC interview
Treasury Secretary Bessent's non-committal comment on whether a planned Trump–Xi meeting will take place introduces modest political uncertainty into markets. In the current environment—high equity valuations, stretched sentiment and heightened sensitivity to geopolitical risks—any ambiguity around a high‑profile bilateral visit can tilt risk appetite. If the visit is delayed or canceled, expect a small risk‑off reaction: pressure on China‑listed equities and other China‑exposed global cyclicals, modest safe‑haven flows into USD/JPY, JPY and U.S. Treasuries, and downside pressure on the Chinese yuan (onshore and offshore). If the visit proceeds as scheduled, it would be a mild positive for risk assets and trade‑sensitive sectors. Given the comment’s tentative tone, the likely market effect is limited but skewed slightly bearish until clarity is provided. Key segments to watch: China tech and consumer names, global exporters tied to China trade, FX (CNY/CNH, AUD) and safe‑haven assets.
Israel: To treat Lebanon border towns like Gaza combat zone
Headline indicates an escalation in Israel-Lebanon frontier operations — treating Lebanon border towns like Gaza combat zones raises the probability of broader Hezbollah involvement or spillover. Near-term market response should be risk-off: S&P 500 downside pressure given stretched valuations and sensitivity to shocks; safe-haven flows into USD, JPY and CHF and into gold; Treasuries likely to rally initially (yields down) before any oil-driven inflation repricing. Key sector impacts: energy — Brent upside risk as Strait of Hormuz/transit tensions already elevated, supporting oil majors; defense — higher near-term demand/sentiment boost for defense contractors and local defense suppliers; airlines, travel & tourism, and regional EM equities — immediate downside from flight cancellations, travel headaches and investor risk aversion; Israeli equities and regional banks — elevated volatility and potential local selling. Macro knock-on: renewed oil-driven inflation fears could re-introduce upside risk to headline CPI, complicating the Fed’s “higher-for-longer” messaging and keeping markets sensitive to yields and growth expectations. If escalation stays localized, effects should be contained; if it broadens to Iran or Gulf shipping, impact could move to severe. FX relevance: safe-haven pairs (USD/JPY, USD/CHF) likely to show JPY/CHF strength (i.e., USD/JPY down, USD/CHF down); XAU/USD (gold) likely to rise as a hedge. Overall negative for risk assets but positive for energy, defense, and safe-haven assets.
L&T Tech launches NVIDIA-powered AI lung digital twin platform. $NVDA
Product launch ties an AI healthcare solution to NVIDIA compute — positive for both AI infrastructure (GPU demand/cloud GPU hours) and the systems integrator/healthcare-software vendor. For NVIDIA, continued wins embedding its stack into vertical AI solutions support sustained demand for data-center GPUs and software ecosystem leverage, reinforcing the company’s secular AI-revenue runway. For L&T Technology Services (L&T Tech/ LTTS) the launch demonstrates go-to-market traction in a healthcare vertical that can generate recurring services, SaaS/managed-cloud revenues, and higher-margin professional services. Market nuance: this is an incremental, executional win rather than a capital-markets game changer — NVDA is a very large, already richly valued constituent, so the near-term market reaction may be muted unless adoption signals or commercial deals (large customers, cloud commitments) follow. Given stretched valuations and sensitivity to earnings, investors may treat this as confirmation of the AI narrative (supportive) but not material upside to consensus near-term. Watch for follow-on indicators: customer wins, revenue-share/consumption metrics, cloud-provider support, and regulatory/clinical approvals for the digital-twin medical product. Affected segments: AI data-center hardware (GPUs), AI software/platforms, healthcare digital twin/medical-image analytics, cloud providers hosting GPU workloads, and professional services/healthcare IT outsourcing.
UK PM Starmer: We are giving a legal direction to energy companies to ensure savings are passed to consumers.
UK PM Starmer directing energy companies by legal means to pass savings to consumers is a negative regulatory shock for UK retail energy suppliers and domestic utility profit margins. Immediate pressure falls on consumer-facing suppliers (Centrica/British Gas, SSE’s retail units) whose ability to retain spreads between wholesale and retail prices is constrained; this raises near-term margin and earnings risk, could force price resets, margin compression, and higher politicised regulatory oversight. Larger integrated oil majors (BP, Shell) have more diversified, global earnings and exposure is likely limited to downstream/UK retail operations, though investor sentiment toward UK-listed energy names could be damped. Transmission/network operators (National Grid) are less directly affected but may face increased scrutiny on price controls and regulatory reviews. Policy intervention also raises broader political/regulatory risk for the UK corporate environment and could modestly weigh on the pound (GBP/USD) if markets see increased interventionism or profit downshifts for large listed companies. Overall this is a sector-specific negative for UK energy retailers and consumer-facing utility units, with limited systemic market impact unless followed by further price controls or broader regulatory measures.
UK's PM Starmer: We need a negotiated solution to the Iran conflict
UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer calling for a negotiated solution to the Iran conflict is a de‑escalatory political signal that, if followed by diplomatic progress, would remove some near‑term geopolitical risk premia. In practice this is likely to put modest downward pressure on Brent crude and other energy risk premia that spiked after recent Strait of Hormuz incidents, easing headline inflation fears. That would be marginally positive for risk assets (cyclicals, travel, shipping, industrials) and negative for pure defense plays and some energy producers. Given stretched equity valuations and sensitivity to earnings and inflation surprises, the market reaction is likely to be muted and conditional on follow‑through (diplomatic engagement vs. continued proxy attacks). FX/safe‑haven pairs (e.g., USD/JPY) would likely see some JPY strengthening unwind (JPY weaker, USD softer) as geopolitical risk fades. Offsetting macro drivers—OBBBA fiscal/inflationary impulses, Fed “higher‑for‑longer” stance, and supply‑side energy risks—mean any positive impact is limited unless sustained de‑escalation occurs.
UK's PM Starmer: Will work toward a swift end to the Iran war
UK PM Starmer saying he will work toward a swift end to the Iran war is de‑escalatory and reduces a near‑term geopolitical risk premium. In the current market backdrop — where Brent had recently spiked on Strait of Hormuz transit risks and headline inflation fears — credible moves toward ending hostilities would ease energy‑price tail risk, lower safe‑haven demand and support risk assets. Expect relative weakness in oil producers and commodity‑linked FX on an easing, and modest support for cyclicals (airlines, shipping, travel) and broader equity indices as risk appetite returns. Fixed income could see a slight rally (lower yields) on reduced risk premia, though much depends on credibility and follow‑through; a single political pledge is likely to have only muted immediate impact unless paired with concrete diplomatic developments. Key affected segments: upstream energy (producers, service firms), airlines & travel, shipping/logistics, risk‑sensitive equity sectors and EM assets. Potential FX moves include a firmer GBP and weaker USD on a general risk‑on tilt, and downside pressure on CAD/NOK if oil falls. Overall this is mildly positive for risk assets but limited in magnitude absent more concrete de‑escalation.
$DLTR (Dollar Tree) #earnings are out: https://t.co/qKSm3EwuMo
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