Macro news · Sentiment · Morning briefing
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Overall read: Neutral. Moves do not point to clear risk-taking or risk-avoiding. Day trading likely driven by headlines rather than one big macro theme.
VIX (the volatility index, which measures how much traders expect the S&P 500 to swing over the next 30 days; below 15 is calm, above 25 is stressed) is near 15.8. Option markets are not paying up for protection, so a surprise headline can cause sharp moves.
S&P 500 futures (a pre-market contract that tracks where the S&P 500 stock index may open) are down about 0.2%, pointing to a slightly weaker US equity open.
DXY (the US Dollar Index, which tracks the USD against six major currencies) is down about 0.2%. USD (the US dollar) softness hints that earlier safety flows are easing.
The US 10-year yield (the interest rate the US government pays to borrow for 10 years) is around 4.54%, steady on the week. Without a bond move, equities and commodities will key off headlines.
Gold is down about 0.1%. Oil is down about 0.3% despite Middle East tension. The market is not signaling an immediate supply shock.
Bitcoin is up about 2.6%, showing appetite for higher-volatility assets. Crypto strength can lift tech mood if it holds into the US open.
The CNN Fear and Greed Index (a composite gauge of US stock market mood from 0 very fearful to 100 very greedy) sits near 47 for stocks, which is neutral. A separate crypto fear-greed gauge is near 23 for crypto, which is fearful. Cross-asset mood is split, so sector leadership may rotate during the session.
Base case for today: ranges likely hold unless a geopolitical headline hits. Liquidity could thin into the afternoon ahead of Canadian data, which can amplify moves.
US and Iran exchanged strikes during the burial of Iran’s Supreme Leader. US Central Command reported 90 targets hit. Iranian officials reported casualties. This keeps energy shipping and regional security in focus and can cap equity rallies until there is a clear cooling signal.
Shipping through the Strait of Hormuz (a narrow waterway between Iran and Oman that carries a large share of global oil and gas flows) fell sharply after the latest attacks. If traffic drops further, crude and refined product prices can rise quickly, and airline and trucking stocks can come under pressure.
Reports point to a growing diesel supply pinch as Russia cuts exports and refineries face disruptions tied to the war in Ukraine. Tighter diesel supply can support refinery profits and stocks, while lifting costs for transport and industrial companies.
Ukraine increased strikes on Russian military and fuel assets around Crimea. A UN agency reported high civilian casualties from Russian strikes in June. Escalation risk supports event-driven spikes in oil and gold and can weigh on European equities during headline windows.
North Korea signaled plans to expand its nuclear forces, according to state media. Direct market impact is usually limited, but it can add to flows into US government bonds during risk flashes.
17:30 UTC. CAD Unemployment Rate. High importance. Forecast 6.6%, previous 6.6%. A drop below 6.6% would likely push the Canadian dollar higher, lift Canadian government bond yields, and support Canadian growth-sensitive stocks. A rise above 6.6% would likely have the opposite effect.
17:30 UTC. CAD Employment Change. High importance. Forecast +11.2K, previous +87.8K. A strong number well above forecast would reinforce Canadian dollar strength and could nudge North American bond yields up. A weak number would tend to pull the Canadian dollar lower and support bonds on growth concerns.
"Priced in." This means the market has already adjusted to a widely expected outcome, so prices reflect it before the news happens.
Why it matters. When the outcome matches expectations, the move after the event is often small or can reverse. If the outcome is even slightly different, the move can be large because the baseline assumption was wrong.
How to spot it. High-probability expectations, tight trading ranges into an event, and calm volatility measures like a low VIX all suggest a lot is priced in. Wide ranges and jumpy volatility suggest uncertainty and less is priced in.
Application today. Expectations point to no change from the Federal Reserve, and volatility is calm. A routine message may have limited impact, while a surprise hint of a hike could move US government bond yields and the US dollar more. On geopolitics, when the crowd treats outcomes as nearly certain, the main risk is a sharp move if headlines differ.
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