Summary
- Energy prices are re injecting inflation risk into the macro picture, pushing yields higher and reinforcing a defensive tone across risk assets.
- Base metals are responding to tighter financial conditions, with FX and rates pressure triggering position driven selling after key levels gave way.
- Gold is losing its defensive appeal as real yields rise, while oil continues to trade on supply durability and constrained flows.
Macro
US equities opened mixed as investors headed into a pivotal session shaped by the Fed decision and major earnings releases later today. Positioning looks cautious, with markets showing limited appetite to take risk ahead of outcomes. After the close, results are due from Alphabet, Microsoft, Amazon and Meta, four names that are set to define near term equity direction.
Geopolitics continue to sit firmly in focus. The White House has asked officials to prepare contingency plans consistent with an extended effort to constrain Iran’s ability to export oil. Conditions in the Strait of Hormuz remain impaired, with shipping flows still restricted. Markets are increasingly treating the disruption as persistent, keeping energy risk embedded in pricing.
The Fed is expected to keep rates unchanged today, with forward swaps signalling no cuts and no hikes priced through 2026. In contrast, expectations for rate increases from both the ECB and the BoE later this year continue to support the dollar, with DXY holding near 98.8. The rebound in oil prices has revived inflation concerns, pushing the US 10 year Treasury yield up to around 4.4%.
Base metals
Strength in the dollar weighed on base metals across the board.
Aluminium slipped below $3,500/t, with heavier volumes traded near the lows but no sustained rebound. This pattern typically points to stop loss selling and macro driven liquidation, while demand remains inactive. The cash to three month spread continues to hold close to $60/t backwardation, showing nearby tightness persists even as price momentum weakens.
Copper moved lower but managed to stay above the $13,000/t level, keeping the broader range intact for now.
Nickel failed again to hold above $19,500/t, sliding back toward $19,255/t. As prices push higher, the risk profile deteriorates. Levels approaching $20,000/t increase the likelihood of additional supply being approved or reactivated. Higher prices also encourage producer hedging, which adds selling pressure into rallies and limits upside traction.
Precious metals and oil
Precious metals weakened as the stronger dollar and a sharp rise in yields tightened financial conditions. Higher yields raise the opportunity cost of holding non yielding assets, while dollar strength compresses demand outside the US. Gold fell to its lowest level since March, touching $4,510/oz and struggling to regain ground above $4,550/oz. Silver dropped below $72/oz.
Oil continued to surge, with Brent trading near $118/bbl and WTI around $106/bbl, as markets price sustained disruption through the Strait of Hormuz and limited near term relief.
All price data is from 29.04.2026 as of 17:30