Daily Market Outlook, April 29, 2026
Daily Market Outlook, April 29, 2026
Patrick Munnelly, Partner: Market Strategy, Tickmill Group
US equity futures are firmer into a pivotal macro/micro catalyst day, with Nasdaq 100 futures at +0.2% as investors position for results from Alphabet, Microsoft, Amazon and Meta after the close, followed by the Fed policy decision. The earnings backdrop has remained broadly supportive, and tech continues to drive global equities, helping offset the drag from Middle East risk and the renewed energy shock. Asia extended the constructive tone, with MSCI Asia Pacific up +0.3% and now up roughly 14% MTD, on track for its strongest month since November 2022 and outperforming the S&P 500’s c.9% gain. The key question for today is whether the megacap “generals” can validate the recent rebound after a sharp reset in risk premia and positioning. Oil remains the main macro overhang. Brent briefly approached $112/bbl on reports of preparations for a potential long-term blockade of Iran that could effectively close the Strait of Hormuz before easing to $111.19, still leaving the market exposed to a larger inflation impulse. Treasury futures are steady after yesterday’s selloff, with cash trading delayed by the Japan holiday before reopening in London, while gold is near $4,600/oz and Bitcoin trades close to $77,275. For now, markets are looking through the geopolitical shock as long as AI-led earnings momentum holds; but with the Fed set to speak into higher oil and firmer inflation expectations, the hurdle for dovish validation is higher and the equity tape needs clean guidance from tech to keep the risk-on rotation intact.
Australia’s March CPI print was softer than the headline suggested: annual inflation rose 0.9ppts to 4.6% y/y, but that was 0.2ppts below consensus, while the trimmed mean held steady at 3.3% y/y. That composition mattered for rates, with the market reading the data as insufficient to force a more aggressive RBA response and Australian bond yields dropping after the release. The print keeps the RBA on alert, but it does not significantly raise the threshold for imminent tightening, particularly given the need to assess the lagged impact of the energy shock. The overnight session was otherwise quiet, helped by the Showa Day holiday closure in Japan and investor reluctance to add risk ahead of the Fed decision and a heavy megacap earnings slate. Today’s FOMC is unusual given it is likely to be Powell’s final meeting as Chair, which may reduce the market value of any forward guidance in the press conference. The statement is likely to see modest refreshes to the economic description, including language around the labour market, where the current phrase that “job gains have remained low” looks increasingly stale after the latest 178k payroll print.
There is a growing confidence gap between the US and the euro area. In April, the US Conference Board index rose to a neutral level, despite concerns over energy prices. In contrast, consumer confidence in the euro area fell sharply from -0.9 to -1.7 standard deviations, indicating a higher sensitivity to energy shocks. The recent US equity rebound likely bolstered sentiment, while euro area households are more affected by rising energy costs. This situation poses challenges for the European Central Bank (ECB). While weakening confidence typically calls for caution, a significant rise in inflation expectations for the euro area from 2.5% to 4.0% complicates the policy landscape. The US appears better positioned to withstand these shocks, with stable household confidence and recovering financial conditions. Consequently, markets are favouring US resilience over euro area vulnerabilities, leading investors to be more cautious about euro strength.
Overnight Headlines
ECB Set To Hold Rates As War Fans Inflation, Growth Fears
Fed Set On Hold As Policymakers Retain Cautious Stance
BoC To Keep Rates Steady; Focus Shifts To Energy Crisis Fallout
Canada FY25/26 Deficit Less Than Expected Trims Forecasts
Australian Prices Stay Above-Target Before RBA Rate Decision
Trump Tells Aides To Prepare For Extended Blockade Of Iran
Trsy Sec Bessent Targets Iran’s Shadow Banking, Crypto Access
US Warns Of Sanctions Risks For Chinese Refiners Of Iranian Oil
Oil Holds Gains As Traders Focus On Next Steps For Peace Talks
Gold Steady After Two-Day Drop As Iran War Fans Inflation Fears
Asian Currencies Consolidate Ahead Of FOMC Decision
China, US Tensions Build Over Iran And AI Before Trump Meets Xi
OpenAI Expands Amazon Deal After Microsoft Loosens Exclusivity Terms
Visa Profit Beats, Revenue Posts Biggest Increase Since 2022
Booking’s Q2 Guidance Misses On Middle East Impact, Shares Slide
Mondelez Chief Sees US Consumer Confidence Weakening On Iran War
KPMG Shuts US Govt Audit Practice After Losing Army Contract
Citadel Securities Expands In Asia With Big Hires, Block Trades
FX Options Expiries For 10am New York Cut
(1BLN+ represents larger expiries and is more magnetic when trading within the daily ATR.)
EUR/USD: 1.2500 (EU1.77b), 1.1850 (EU1.67b), 1.1650 (EU1.6b)
AUD/USD: 0.7150 (AUD1.03b), 0.7120 (AUD703.7m), 0.6940 (AUD619.7m)
USD/JPY: 154.00 ($527.8m), 158.50 ($500.3m), 157.00 ($497.8m)
USD/BRL: 5.3000 ($549.9m), 5.0000 ($506m), 5.2200 ($337.5m)
USD/CNY: 6.8000 ($1.36b), 6.9000 ($714.7m), 6.7500 ($620m)
USD/CAD: 1.3150 ($640m), 1.3350 ($357m), 1.4100 ($349.6m)
GBP/USD: 1.3525 (GBP565.6m), 1.3275 (GBP396.3m), 1. 3490 (GBP363m)
NZD/USD: 0.5730 (NZD619.3m), 0.5850 (NZD555.8m), 0.5950 (NZD452m)
USD/MXN: 17.40 ($982.2m), 17.25 ($390.4m)
CFTC Positions as of April 24, 2026:
Equity fund speculators cut their CME S&P 500 net short by 12,644 contracts, bringing it to 402,253.
Equity fund managers increased their CME S&P 500 net long by 9,443 contracts to 1,020,550.
Speculators reduced their CBOT U.S. 5-year Treasury futures net short by 92,995 contracts to 1,532,750.
Speculators also trimmed their CBOT U.S. 10-year Treasury futures net short by 9,394 contracts to 790,971.
Meanwhile, speculators expanded their CBOT U.S. 2-year Treasury futures net short by 39,547 contracts to 1,743,353.
Their CBOT U.S. UltraBond Treasury futures net short was lowered by 536 contracts to 300,287.
At the same time, speculators raised their CBOT U.S. Treasury bond futures net short by 9,670 contracts to 83,786.
Bitcoin showed a net long position of 2,071 contracts.
The Swiss franc recorded a net short of 33,273 contracts.
The British pound remained net short at 52,039 contracts.
The euro posted a net long position of 41,324 contracts.
The Japanese yen showed a net short position of 94,460 contracts.
Technical & Trade Views
SP500
Daily VWAP Bullish
Weekly VWAP Bullish
Above 7050 Target 7300
Below 6950 Target 6850
DXY
Daily VWAP Bullish
Weekly VWAP Bearish
Above 98 Target 99
Below 97.80 Target 97
EURUSD
Daily VWAP Bearish
Weekly VWAP Bullish
Above 1.1760 Target 1.19
Below 1.1750 Target 1.1590
GBPUSD
Daily VWAP Bullish
Weekly VWAP Bullish
Above 1.3430 Target 1.3610
Below 1.34 Target 1.3290
USDJPY
Daily VWAP Bullish
Weekly VWAP Bearish
Above 158.50 Target 161
Below 157.30 Target 156.50
XAUUSD
Daily VWAP Bearish
Weekly VWAP Bullish
Above 4600 Target 5000
Below 4500 Target 4350
BTCUSD
Daily VWAP Bearish
Weekly VWAP Bullish
Above 73.5k Target 80k
Below 72.6k Target 70.5k
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Patrick has been involved in the financial markets for well over a decade as a self-educated professional trader and money manager. Flitting between the roles of market commentator, analyst and mentor, Patrick has improved the technical skills and psychological stance of literally hundreds of traders – coaching them to become savvy market operators!