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For the week ended Mar 20, 2026, Markets
endured another choppy week as the Iran conflict kept oil near recent highs,
with Brent flirting with USD120 and WTI nearing USD100. U.S. equities slipped
while Treasury yields edged higher, as investors weighed the growth hit from
energy against still‑solid fundamentals and a cautious Fed
that left rates unchanged and signalled only one cut this year. Energy stocks
outperformed on the back of higher crude, while most other sectors struggled
under rising inflation worries. In Asia, Chinese and Hong Kong markets stayed
sensitive to oil swings and tech earnings, with better‑than‑expected
China activity data only partly offsetting concerns over imported inflation and
policy uncertainty.
U.S. Stocks – Weekly Wrap
Market Overview
U.S. equities closed lower in a volatile
week shaped by oil price swings, rising inflation concerns, and hawkish
interpretation of the Fed’s latest signals. The Dow Jones Industrial Average(DJI)
fared worst, declining 2.11%, followed by the Nasdaq Composite(COMP), which
shed 2.07%, the S&P 500(SPX) also fell 1.90%.
(Refer to the major indices’ weekly
performance tables below.)
Major Indices – Weekly Performance
· Dow Jones: -2.11%
· S&P 500: -1.90%
· Nasdaq Composite: -2.07%
Key Highlights for the Week and Outlook
1️⃣ Fed- On Hold, But
Watching Inflation Expectations
The Federal Reserve left rates unchanged at 3.50%–3.75%, as expected. The Fed’s
overall tone was cautious. Policymakers did not make major changes to their
outlook, but they acknowledged that the Middle East conflict and higher oil
prices create additional uncertainty.
2️⃣ Economic Data – Mixed but
Still Holding Up
Recent data suggests the economy is slowing only modestly, not collapsing.
· Producer Price Index (PPI) rose 0.7% m/m in February, stronger than expected
· Annual PPI accelerated to 3.4%
· Homebuilder sentiment improved slightly in March
· Pending home sales rose 1.8%
· New home sales fell sharply to the lowest since 2022
This paints a mixed picture: inflation
is still sticky, but the economy has not rolled over.
3️⃣ This Oil Shock ≠ the 1970s
While headlines are alarming, today’s oil shock is not a replay of 1970s‑style
stagflation. Energy is only about 2% of U.S. consumer spending versus roughly
6% back then, so the hit to household wallets is smaller. The U.S. is now a net
oil exporter, with domestic gas prices relatively shielded even as Europe and
Asia face tighter supply, and shale producers benefit from higher crude.
Globally, the economy is far less oil‑intensive, with much less energy needed
per unit of GDP thanks to efficiency gains and the shift to services. Overall,
this shock is growth‑negative and inflation‑positive,
but the underlying fundamentals are stronger than in past oil panics.
S&P 500 Sectors in Focus
S&P 500 sectors posted a clear
risk-off week, with only Energy closing higher (+2.8%) amid elevated crude
prices and rotation into oil names. Every other sector declined, led by
Utilities (-4.9%) and Consumer Staples (-4.1%)—defensives that offered no
refuge. Cyclicals and growth struggled too: Tech (-1.5%), Consumer
Discretionary (-3.1%), Industrials (-2.9%), and Communication Services (-2.2%).
The broad market (SPY) fell ~2.1%, with leadership narrowing sharply into
Energy as the only bright spot.
(Refer to the SPX sector ETF weekly
performance table below.)
Technical snapshot – major U.S. indices
U.S. three major indices confirmed
heightened risk-off pressure: all three—SPX, DJI, and Nasdaq—broke their
200-day moving averages this week, a major bearish signal alarming bulls. SPX
closed below its 200dma (~6,594) for the first time since last May and also
snapped key support at ~6,550 on Friday, with Dow -2.1%, SPX -1.9%, COMP -2.1%.
Bears now firmly in charge as rallies look capped until oil volatility eases.
π Weekly charts:
π¨π³ China / ππ° Hong Kong Markets
Market Overview
China equities fell this week as rising
energy prices tied to Middle East tensions added to persistent concerns over
weak domestic demand and limited policy support. The blue chip benchmark CSI
300 Index fell 2.19%, and the Shanghai Composite Index(SSE) dropped 3.38%. In
Hong Kong, the benchmark Hang Seng Index edged down 0.74%.
·
CSI 300: -2.19%
· Shanghai Composite: -3.38%
· Hang Seng Index: -0.74%
Key Highlights – China & Hong Kong
1️⃣ Activity data modestly beat
expectations
China’s January–February activity data came in slightly better than expected,
pointing to some early-year stabilization. Industrial production rose 6.3% y/y
and retail sales increased 2.8%, both ahead of forecasts. Fixed asset
investment grew 1.8%, supported mainly by infrastructure spending, though
property investment remained weak.
2️⃣ Property market shows
tentative stabilization
China’s property sector showed early signs of stabilizing in February. New home
prices in 70 cities fell 0.28% m/m, improving from January’s 0.37% decline,
while resale home prices saw the smallest drop in 10 months. Authorities
continue to roll out selective support measures, including easing homebuying
rules for non-residents in major cities.
3️⃣ Trade tensions resurface
U.S.-China trade tensions have
resurfaced after Washington launched new Section 301 investigations into
manufacturing policies and excess capacity in strategic sectors. The probe
could lead to fresh tariffs on imports from China and several other economies
as early as this summer. Beijing has urged dialogue but signaled it will defend
its interests if needed.
4️⃣ Hong Kong faces oil shock and market
volatility risks
Hong Kong could face higher oil-related
inflation and increased market volatility if the Middle East conflict escalates
further. As an import-dependent economy, the city is more exposed to energy
supply disruptions and rising fuel costs. This may add pressure on sentiment,
household spending, and broader financial markets.
(Refer to the Hang Seng Index
constituents’ weekly performance table below.)
π Weekly charts:
πΈπ¬ Singapore Market – Weekly Wrap
Market Overview
The Straits Times Index (STI) outperformed regional peers in Week 12, rising
2.2% to 4,948.87, even as most other benchmarks drifted lower amid oil-driven
volatility and broader geopolitical uncertainty. The resilience was led by
strength in Sembcorp Industries (+6.6%), Singtel (+5.0%), SGX (+4.8%) and the
local banks — DBS (+3.8%), OCBC (+3.6%) and UOB (+2.8%). This reflects the
STI’s relatively defensive market mix, with support from energy, telcos and
financials, which helped cushion the broader market weakness. In short, it was
a classic rotation trade: Singapore held up better thanks to sector leadership,
while broader regional sentiment remained capped until crude price volatility
eases.
Market Leaders
Outperformers:
- SCI:
+6.59%
- SingTel:
+5.04%
(Refer to the STI weekly performance
table below.)
Technical Snapshot – STI
The STI registered a bullish crossover against its key moving averages during
the week and closed above all major trend lines, suggesting bulls remain firmly
in control for now. Technically, the setup stays constructive, but with
regional markets turning weaker, investors should monitor the 50-day moving
average near 4,863 as an important near-term support level in the coming week.
π Weekly chart:
Source: Some content and data are
excerpted from publicly available market reports. Please comment to claim
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