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Sunday, May 3, 2026

Earnings Hold the Line: Profits Anchor April's Best Monthly Rally Since 2020

Global equity markets closed April with broad-based gains as strong corporate earnings more than offset higher oil prices, a more hawkish Federal Reserve, and lingering Middle East uncertainty. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq both advanced on the week and delivered their strongest monthly gains since November 2020 and April 2020, respectively, helped by a resilient earnings season and continued mega-cap leadership. Chinese mainland markets posted modest gains on the back of Moody's upgrade of China's sovereign outlook to "stable" and the fastest industrial profit growth since 2017, while Hong Kong slipped as offshore risk appetite softened ahead of the Labour Day break. Singapore's STI edged lower, with REIT and property weakness outweighing a solid week from the three local banks.

 

πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ United States

Market Overview

The S&P 500, Nasdaq, and Dow all finished the week higher, with the S&P 500 and Nasdaq ending April at record closing highs. The month’s advance was driven primarily by earnings strength, while crude’s earlier spike and geopolitical risk proved important but ultimately secondary over the full month. The FOMC held the fed funds rate steady at 3.50%–3.75% for a third consecutive meeting, but three dissents against the easing language — the most under Powell's tenure — sent a clear hawkish signal; Powell also confirmed he will remain on the Board of Governors after his chairmanship ends. 

(Refer to the major indices’ weekly performance tables below.)

Major Indices – Weekly Performance

·       Dow Jones: +0.55%

·       S&P 500: +0.91%

·       Nasdaq: +1.12% 

April was a standout month across global equities. The Nasdaq surged +15.29% to lead all major indices, followed by the S&P 500 at +10.42% and the Dow at +7.14% — the strongest U.S. monthly sweep in years. Asian markets also participated, with the SSE gaining +5.66% and the HSI recovering +3.99% for the month, while the STI posted a more modest +0.56%.

(Refer to the major indices' monthly performance table below.)



Key Highlights and Outlook

1️⃣ Magnificent 7 largely clear the bar; Alphabet up, Meta punished

Five of the seven reported — Alphabet, Amazon, Apple, Meta, and Microsoft — and all beat earnings expectations. Alphabet jumped after strong AI and cloud demand validated its heavy infrastructure spend. Meta was the outlier, falling sharply after announcing a further capex increase and issuing $25 billion in new corporate bonds. Despite the divergent stock reactions, the cohort reinforced the technology sector's ~45% Q1 earnings growth outlook, sharply revised from roughly 26% six months ago. 

2️⃣ Q1 earnings tracking 14%-plus — sixth straight double-digit quarter

With more than half the S&P 500 reported, first-quarter earnings growth is tracking above 14%, extending an unbroken run of double-digit quarterly profit growth. Strength is broad-based: technology, materials, financials, and industrials all posting solid double-digit gains. Health care and energy are the only two sectors with year-over-year profit declines, though both are expected to recover. All 11 sectors are projected to contribute to full-year 2026 earnings growth, now seen exceeding 18%. 

3️⃣ AI capex accelerating — $700 billion collective cloud spend this year

The five largest cloud platforms — Amazon, Alphabet, Microsoft, Meta, and Oracle — are on track to invest roughly $700 billion in AI infrastructure in 2026, up around 80% year over year. The spend provides a direct earnings tailwind for semiconductor companies and data-centre equipment suppliers, with productivity benefits expected to eventually reach sectors like industrials as AI adoption broadens. 

4️⃣ Fed holds, hawkish dissents change the tone

Three FOMC members dissented against the easing language — the most under Powell's tenure — with the direction of dissent clearly hawkish. Core PCE rose 3.2% in March, moving further from the 2% target, while December oil futures pushed to new post-conflict highs near $80 per barrel. Initial jobless claims fell to 189,000, one of the lowest readings on record, removing any urgency to ease. 

5️⃣ Economy solid: GDP +2.0%, business investment the standout

Real GDP grew at a 2.0% annualised pace in Q1, rebounding from last year's government shutdown drag. Final sales to private domestic purchasers rose 2.5%, reflecting healthy underlying private-sector momentum. Business investment was the clear standout, with IT equipment and software spending alone contributing roughly 1.5 percentage points to GDP growth. Consumer spending slowed modestly but held firm despite climbing fuel costs. 

6️⃣ Outlook: Balanced risk/reward after a sharp monthly advance

After April's 10%-plus surge, upside and downside risks look more symmetrical. The earnings backdrop remains the primary anchor — as long as corporate profits continue to accelerate, investors have reason to stay constructive. But with the Fed firmly on hold, energy prices elevated, and bond markets pricing in more inflation persistence than equities appear to be, a pause or consolidation from here is the more likely near-term path. 

S&P 500 Sectors in Focus

Energy (XLE +3.48%) was the clear weekly winner, with WTI crude's 7%-plus gain lifting integrated majors and E&P names; the sector is now up +31.63% YTD, the best-performing sector by a wide margin. Consumer Staples (XLP +1.13%), Technology (XLK +1.03%), and Communication Services (XLC +1.02%) all closed above the SPY benchmark of +0.94%. Financials (XLF +0.97%) continued to benefit from solid earnings across the sector. The lone laggard was Materials (XLB -1.10%), while Consumer Discretionary (XLY -0.05%) was flat as higher energy costs continued to weigh on spending sentiment.

(Refer to the SPX sector ETF weekly performance table below.)



Technical Snapshot

The S&P 500 reclaimed all of its Iran-conflict losses and closed at a new record; RSI is approaching 65, leaving upside momentum intact but room narrowing. Support sits in the 6,900–7,000 zone, with prior highs now acting as a floor. The Nasdaq's MACD remains firmly bullish off the back of the semiconductor surge. The Dow remains range-bound between 48,000 and 50,000, lagging the broader rally as software and industrial weakness drags.

πŸ“Š Weekly charts:


πŸ‡¨πŸ‡³ China / Hong Kong

Market Overview

Mainland Chinese equities ended the week modestly higher, supported by Moody’s decision to revise China’s sovereign outlook to stable from negative while affirming the A1 rating. Sentiment also improved after industrial profits rose 15.8% year over year in March, the fastest pace in half a year, led by equipment and high-tech manufacturing. The blue chip benchmark CSI 300 Index edged up 0.80%, the Shanghai Composite Index(SSE) added 0.79%, and the Hang Seng Index slipped 0.78% for the week, as softer offshore risk appetite and cautious positioning ahead of the extended Labour Day break weighed on Hong Kong. Mainland markets are closed from May 1 to May 5 and resume on May 6; Hong Kong closed May 1 and reopens May 4.

·       CSI 300: +0.8%

·       Shanghai Composite: +0.79%

·       Hang Seng Index: -0.78%

 

Key Highlights and outlook

1️⃣ Moody's upgrades China's outlook to "stable" — first in years

Moody's revised China's sovereign credit outlook from "negative" to "stable" while affirming its A1 rating, citing resilience in growth and fiscal capacity despite external headwinds. The agency acknowledged rising government debt but argued that low interest rates and high domestic savings will contain debt-servicing costs. It also highlighted China's diversified economy and rising competitiveness in higher-value manufacturing as structural offsets to demographic pressures. 

2️⃣ Industrial profits +15.8% YoY in March — fastest Q1 pace since 2017

Industrial profits rose 15.8% year over year in March, accelerating from the 15.2% gain in the January–February period, with Q1 as a whole up 15.5% year over year. Gains were concentrated in equipment manufacturing, high-tech industries, and AI-linked electronics — reflected in SMIC surging +10.26% and WuXi AppTec jumping +9.94% on the week. Businesses exposed to rising raw material costs saw margins squeezed, widening the divergence across sectors. 

3️⃣ Politburo signals steady hand — targeted support, no broad stimulus pivot

The Politburo acknowledged a solid start to 2026 but noted that the foundation for sustained recovery still needs reinforcing. The tone was targeted support rather than broad-based stimulus: continued backing for domestic demand, employment, and strategic industries, with emphasis on energy security, AI adoption, and supply chain self-reliance. The directive to accelerate a "modern industrial system" keeps policy-favoured advanced manufacturing and semiconductors in focus. 

4️⃣ HSI constituents sharply bifurcated — tech leads, heavyweights drag

PetroChina (+6.18%) and energy names benefited from elevated oil prices, while Haier (+5.59%) and China Life (+5.38%) also outperformed. On the other side, China Hongqiao (-10.22%), WH Group (-10.10%), Xiaomi (-6.99%), and CM Bank (-6.55%) were the heaviest drags, reflecting commodity cost pressures and sector-specific headwinds rather than a broad market move. 

5️⃣ Outlook — first post-holiday sessions will set the tone for May

Mainland markets reopen on May 6 and those initial sessions will be a clean read on how institutional investors interpret the Moody's upgrade and industrial profit data against any global developments over the break. The medium-term thesis — manufacturing-led recovery, targeted policy support, AI investment expansion — is intact, but near-term upside may be capped without a meaningful broadening of consumer or property stimulus. 

Technical Snapshot

The SSE held above 4,100 through the holiday-shortened week, maintaining its recent consolidation range; the first two sessions after the May 6 reopening will be the key directional signal. The HSI remains in a sideways range, with support near 25,400 and resistance around 26,200. A firm open on the mainland would validate the cautiously constructive view heading into Q2; a weak open alongside a soft Caixin PMI would raise questions about whether onshore markets are adequately pricing current risks.

(Refer to the Hang Seng Index constituents’ weekly performance table below.)

πŸ“Š Weekly charts:


πŸ‡ΈπŸ‡¬ Singapore

Market Overview

The Straits Times Index edged lower on the week as REIT, property, and industrial weakness outweighed a solid showing from the three local banks. DBS remained the standout, while OCBC and UOB were steadier and are now the next earnings catalysts for income-focused investors. 

Key Highlights and Outlook

1️⃣ Banks were the week's bright spot — DBS leads with +2.81%

The three local banks were the primary positive contributors this week. DBS rose +2.81% to $58.50, OCBC gained +0.88% to $21.90, and UOB edged up +0.42% to $36.15. DBS reported Q1 results on April 30, with the stock's strong weekly performance suggesting the market was satisfied with the outcome. UOB (May 7) and OCBC (May 8) are the next catalysts, with NIM guidance and dividend declarations the key items for income investors.

2️⃣ REITs broadly under pressure as rate-cut expectations fade

The REIT sector was the week's clearest drag. Mapletree PACT dropped -7.86%, CapCom Trust fell -4.84%, Frasers L&C Trust declined -2.54%, and CapitaLand Ascendas REIT slipped -2.35%. With the Fed turning more hawkish and core PCE holding above 3%, the near-term case for meaningful rate relief has weakened, keeping rate-sensitive yield instruments under pressure. Keppel DC REIT (-0.84%) held up comparatively well given its data-centre positioning. 

3️⃣ Industrials and conglomerates soften on global uncertainty

Keppel Ltd fell -5.89%, Jardine Matheson dropped -4.30%, ST Engineering declined -2.72%, and Sembcorp Industries slipped -2.35%. The weakness appears sentiment-driven rather than fundamental, tied to broader uncertainty around energy prices and the pace of Fed easing. Wilmar's -6.96% decline stood out as a commodity-linked name responding to softer agricultural pricing and lingering concerns over Chinese consumer demand. 

4️⃣Outlook — YTD cushion holds, but REIT overhang and bank results are the near-term binary

The broader STI still has a reasonable year-to-date cushion versus several global peers, but the market’s near-term direction is likely to be shaped by bank earnings and the persistence of higher-for-longer rates. If UOB and OCBC deliver stable net interest margins and dividends, the index should remain relatively well supported.

Technical Snapshot

The STI's -0.21% weekly dip was contained, holding well above the 4,850 support level. The index has traded in a 4,830–5,000 range in recent weeks, and a sustained close above 4,950 would improve the near-term picture. Bank stocks remain the primary upward force; REIT weakness is the structural headwind. Momentum indicators are mildly negative but not oversold, pointing to consolidation rather than a meaningful breakdown.

(Refer to the STI weekly performance table below.)

πŸ“Š Weekly chart:

 

πŸ“… Week Ahead (4-8 May 2026)

The biggest binary this week is China’s reopening on May 6, which will show whether onshore investors treat the Moody’s upgrade and industrial profit data as durable positives. In the U.S., ISM Services and the University of Michigan sentiment reading will be the key macro releases, while earnings remain the main support for risk assets.

In Singapore, UOB on May 7 and OCBC on May 8 are the main local catalysts. For the STI, the combination of bank guidance and REIT sensitivity to rates should remain the main near-term market theme.

 

πŸ—“️ Overarching Watchpoint

China's market reopening on May 6 is the single biggest binary of the week. A firm open would validate the cautiously constructive view built on Moody's and the industrial profit momentum; a weak open — particularly alongside a soft Caixin Services PMI — would signal that onshore investors are reassessing macro and geopolitical risk, and could reset sentiment across Asian markets heading into the second half of Q2.

Source: Some content and data are excerpted from publicly available market reports.

 

Saturday, April 25, 2026

Records Despite Rockets: Semis Surge as Ceasefire Holds

Global equity markets broadly held their nerve this week as a U.S.-Iran ceasefire extension and a historic semiconductor surge powered Wall Street to fresh record highs, even as the Dow lagged on industrial and software weakness. Chinese mainland markets held steady on the back of firm Q1 GDP data and an 11th consecutive PBOC rate hold, while Hong Kong slipped modestly as geopolitical caution kept Hang Seng sentiment in check. Singapore's STI pulled back from the psychologically significant 5,000 level, weighed by a stronger Singapore dollar following MAS's earlier tightening, though the market retained its safe-haven edge amid continued Middle East uncertainty.

πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ United States

Market Overview

The S&P 500(SPX) and Nasdaq Composite(COMP) both closed at record highs this week, driven by a ceasefire extension between the U.S. and Iran, a blowout earnings season, and the most explosive semiconductor rally in years. The Dow Jones Industrial Average(DJI) bucked the trend, slipping on weakness in select industrials and pharma names, while the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index(SOX) extended its winning streak to 18 consecutive sessions and is up approximately 50% in April alone.

(Refer to the major indices’ weekly performance tables below.)

Major Indices – Weekly Performance

·       Dow Jones: -0.44%

·       S&P 500: +0.55%

·       Nasdaq Composite: +1.50%


Key Highlights and Outlook

1️⃣ Semis Steal the Week: Intel Surges to All-Time Record
Intel jumped approximately 25% to a historic high after first-quarter results sharply beat consensus on both earnings and revenue, with data centre and AI revenue up 22% year on year. AMD climbed 12% in sympathy; Arm Holdings, ASML, and TSMC each rallied 3.5% or more. The Philadelphia Semiconductor Index is now up roughly 50% in April—one of the strongest monthly moves in its history.

2️⃣ Earnings Running Hot: 80%+ Beat Rate with 15.1% EPS Growth
With about a quarter of S&P 500 companies having reported, over 80% beat both EPS and revenue estimates. The blended year-on-year earnings growth rate sits at 15.1%—on pace for a sixth consecutive quarter of double-digit growth. Strength is concentrated in technology, but consumer staples and energy results have also held up better than feared given oil price pressures.
 

3️⃣ Retail Sales Jump 1.7%: Consumers Holding Firm
March retail sales rose 1.7%, the strongest monthly gain since early 2023, led by a 15.5% surge at gas stations. Excluding gas, sales still rose a healthy 0.6%. The control group measure—the one that feeds directly into GDP—was up 0.7%, and prior months were revised higher. The picture is of a consumer that is spending, not retreating, despite higher pump prices.
 

4️⃣ Flash PMI at 52.0: Growth, but Inflation Biting

S&P Global's April Flash Composite PMI rebounded to a three-month high of 52.0, with manufacturing reaching a near four-year high. The catch: output prices rose at their fastest pace since mid-2022. Services demand remained subdued, with new business growth near two-year lows. The economy is growing, but the inflation side of that equation is getting harder to ignore. 

5️⃣ Powell's Probable Last Meeting; Warsh Path Clears

The Fed is widely expected to hold rates at coming week's FOMC meeting (Apr 28-29). Chair Powell will likely reiterate significant uncertainty rather than signal any imminent moves. The bigger story is the path clearing for Kevin Warsh as nominee for Fed chair, after the Justice Department dropped its investigation into Powell. Markets have already begun pricing in a slightly more dovish Fed under Warsh—rate cut expectations for late 2026 firmed. 

6️⃣ Consumer Sentiment Soft; Inflation Expectations Climb

The University of Michigan's April Consumer Sentiment Index fell to 49.8—a 3.5-point drop from March—though the reading beat its preliminary estimate after the ceasefire announcement provided some mid-month relief. One-year inflation expectations jumped to 4.7% from 3.8%, and long-run expectations hit 3.5%, the highest since October 2025. The gap between resilient spending data and deteriorating sentiment is one of the more peculiar macro features of this environment.


S&P 500 Sectors in Focus

Semiconductors led by a wide margin, with AI infrastructure spending narratives driving continued earnings upgrades across the chip complex. Technology overall was the week's standout, though software saw turbulence after IBM and ServiceNow missed expectations, ending an eight-session winning streak for the sub-sector. Consumer staples held up defensively. Industrial names softened on mixed outlooks. Energy remained in focus—Brent crude near $95/barrel with the Strait of Hormuz still closed keeps the sector in the spotlight heading into big-name earnings.

(Refer to the SPX sector ETF weekly performance table below.)



Technical Snapshot

The S&P 500 reclaimed all of its Iran-conflict losses and closed at a new record; RSI is approaching 65, leaving upside momentum intact but room narrowing. Support sits in the 6,900–7,000 zone, with prior highs now acting as a floor. The Nasdaq's MACD remains firmly bullish off the back of the semiconductor surge; the 25,000 level is the next resistance to watch. The Dow remains range-bound between 48,000 and 50,000, lagging the broader rally as software and industrial weakness drags.

πŸ“Š Weekly charts:


πŸ‡¨πŸ‡³ China / Hong Kong

Market Overview

Mainland Chinese equities consolidated quietly this week, as investors absorbed last week's strong Q1 GDP print (+5.0% year on year) in the absence of major new domestic catalysts. The blue chip benchmark CSI 300 Index edged up 0.86%, the Shanghai Composite Index(SSE) added 0.7%, and the Hang Seng Index declined 0.7% for the week, as continued geopolitical caution weighed even as Stock Connect southbound flows remained elevated and H-share tech leaders attracted strong global capital interest.

·       CSI 300: +0.86%

·       Shanghai Composite: +0.7%

·       Hang Seng Index: -0.7%

 

Key Highlights and outlook

1️⃣ PBOC Holds for the 11th Consecutive Month
The People’s Bank of China kept the one-year LPR at 3.0% and the five-year LPR at 3.5%, matching expectations. With Q1 growth at 5.0%, policymakers appear content to wait and assess the impact of external shocks before easing further.
 

2️⃣ Xi Calls for Hormuz Reopening in Saudi Outreach
President Xi Jinping called for an immediate and comprehensive ceasefire between the U.S., Israel, and Iran—and specifically for the Strait of Hormuz to reopen—in a phone call with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. The move signals Beijing's significant economic stake in resolving the energy disruption and its intent to position itself as a credible diplomatic broker, adding a geopolitical dimension to China's market narrative.
 

3️⃣ DeepSeek V4 Raises the Open-Source AI Bar

Chinese AI startup DeepSeek rolled out preview versions of its V4 Flash and V4 Pro series this week, adapted specifically for Huawei Ascend chip technology. Benchmark scores lead all open-source models, and the models feature a 1-million-token context window enabling entire codebases to be processed in a single prompt. The launch is another concrete milestone in China's semiconductor and AI self-sufficiency drive—and adds fuel to the SMIC thesis. 

4️⃣ HK Labour Market Improves; Financial Sector Overtakes Manufacturing

Hong Kong's jobless rate dipped for a second consecutive period, reflecting a labour market that is grinding higher despite the geopolitical backdrop. On the mainland, financial sector activity gained momentum, overtaking manufacturing growth as a buoyant IPO market took hold. Southbound Stock Connect flows remained elevated, with global capital continuing to favour H-share hardware and technology names over broader index exposure.

5️⃣ Hong Kong top picks remain defensive with structural tailwinds

Broker interest continues to favor names with quality earnings and long-duration themes. China Life, China Tower, SMIC, and ANTA Sports remain among the cleaner ways to express the current mix of defensiveness and domestic-tech exposure.(MSSG HK Research)

 

Technical Snapshot

4,000 on the SSE Composite serving as a key support level. The Hang Seng Index has been in a sideway consolidation range between around 27,200-25,000.

(Refer to the Hang Seng Index constituents’ weekly performance table below.)

πŸ“Š Weekly charts:


πŸ‡ΈπŸ‡¬ Singapore

Market Overview

The Straits Times Index retreated 1.50% this week, slipping from the 5,000-area to close around 4,922, as a firmer Singapore dollar following MAS's April tightening and softer sequential GDP data dampened near-term sentiment. Despite the pullback, Singapore equities retained relative appeal—safe-haven inflows from Middle East-based clients continued flowing into local banks and private banking platforms, providing a cushion beneath the headline weakness.

Key Highlights and Outlook

1️⃣ MAS tightening continues to work through markets

MAS’s April policy move, which raised the slope of the S$NEER band, is still being absorbed by the market. It supports the inflation outlook, but a firmer Singapore dollar is a headwind for exporters and regionally exposed earnings.

2️⃣ Q1 GDP: Solid Year-on-Year, Soft Sequentially

Singapore's advance Q1 2026 GDP estimate showed 4.6% growth year on year, underpinned by manufacturing and AI-linked services clusters. However, the economy contracted 0.3% quarter on quarter on a seasonally adjusted basis—an expected moderation after Q4's strong performance but still softer than some hoped. MTI will provide an updated full-year growth forecast in May; the current 2%–4% range is under review given ongoing Strait of Hormuz uncertainty. 

3️⃣ Safe-haven flows still support banks

Geopolitical uncertainty continues to reinforce Singapore’s appeal as a financial hub. That has helped support bank inflows and private banking activity, even as net interest margins remain under some pressure. 

4️⃣ REITs and Infrastructure Names See Selective Accumulation

With bond yields easing from recent peaks, rate-sensitive sectors got some relief this week. Data centre-focused REITs and logistics trusts attracted selective buying interest. Sembcorp Industries and CapitaLand Investment also drew attention as infrastructure plays with sustained exposure to the AI capex cycle and a government pipeline of public construction investment supporting activity. 

5️⃣Banks Q1 2026 Preview: Earnings Season Opens April 30

Singapore's bank earnings season kicks off with DBS reporting on 30 April, followed by UOB on 7 May and OCBC on 8 May. Analysts expect DBS Q1 net profit of approximately S$2.83 billion—down modestly year on year but up sharply from Q4 2025—as elevated market volatility, strong wealth management inflows, and treasury activity help offset any NIM compression. All three banks are expected to show better-than-feared fee income; dividend outlooks will be the key focus for income investors.

 

Technical Snapshot

The STI’s pullback has brought it back toward near-term support, but the medium-term trend remains intact. A move back above 5,000 would likely need either better bank results or a calmer external backdrop

(Refer to the STI weekly performance table below.)

πŸ“Š Weekly chart:

 

πŸ“… Week Ahead (27 Apr–1 May 2026)

The key event is the FOMC decision on Wednesday, followed by the April PCE inflation print and U.S. ISM manufacturing on Friday. Markets will also watch the next round of mega-cap earnings and any fresh guidance around rates, inflation, and AI capex.

For China, the main focus is the April PMI, while Hong Kong and mainland markets are closed for Labour Day later in the week. In Singapore, DBS kicks off bank earnings on 30 April, making financials the most important local catalyst.

πŸ—“️ Overarching Watchpoint The FOMC meeting on Wednesday is the week's biggest binary. A hold is priced in—but any tilt toward more explicit rate cut guidance, or a more hawkish read on inflation, could reset risk appetite materially heading into May.

 

Source: Some content and data are excerpted from publicly available market reports. Please comment to claim copyright ownership of any material, and it will be removed if necessary.

 

Sunday, April 19, 2026

Strait of Hormuz Reopens — Record Highs and What Comes Next

LATEST: As of April 19, 2026, the Strait of Hormuz has re-closed to commercial shipping, reversing a brief temporary reopening announced on April 17. Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) reimposed the closure in response to an ongoing US naval blockade of Iranian ports.

Global equity markets closed out a third consecutive week of gains as Iran's declaration that the Strait of Hormuz was fully open for commercial shipping swept away the stagflation fears that had gripped markets since early April. U.S. indexes surged to fresh all-time highs, led by a Nasdaq on its longest winning streak since 1992, as AI-linked technology names and strong bank earnings powered the advance. China and Hong Kong posted more measured gains following a better-than-expected Q1 GDP print, though uneven domestic demand kept the rally contained. Singapore's STI ended the week broadly flat, consolidating within striking distance of the 5,000 level.

πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ United States

Market Overview

U.S. equities extended their gains for a third straight week, with several major indexes finishing at record highs as Middle East de-escalation, strong bank earnings, and softer wholesale inflation supported risk appetite. The Nasdaq Composite rose for a 13th consecutive session on Friday, while the S&P 500 and Dow also pushed to new highs.

(Refer to the major indices’ weekly performance tables below.)

Major Indices – Weekly Performance

·       Dow Jones: +3.19%

·       S&P 500: +4.54%

·       Nasdaq Composite: +6.84%


Key Highlights and Outlook

1️⃣ Strait of Hormuz reopens, risk appetite surges
Iran said the Strait of Hormuz was fully open to commercial shipping, easing supply disruption fears and sending crude sharply lower on Friday. The move boosted travel and leisure stocks while weighing on energy names, and helped markets rotate back into cyclicals and growth.

 

2️⃣ Bank earnings reinforce a resilient economic backdrop
Major U.S. banks beat expectations, led by JPMorgan’s $5.94 EPS and Goldman Sachs’ strong investment banking revenue and fees. Management commentary pointed to healthy consumer and corporate activity despite softer survey sentiment.

 

3️⃣ Earnings growth remains firmly positive
With a modest share of S&P 500 companies reported, blended Q1 earnings growth remains solid and the beat rate is running above historical averages. Technology is still the standout, and full-year 2026 earnings expectations continue to support the bull case.

 

4️⃣ Inflation data stayed market-friendly

March PPI came in softer than expected, helping ease rate fears, while jobless claims remained low and regional manufacturing surveys improved. Input-cost pressures are still present, but the data mix was broadly supportive for equities.

 

5️⃣ Housing remains the weak spot

Existing home sales were softer in March, and the April housing sentiment survey slipped again, showing that high mortgage rates continue to constrain activity. A clearer housing recovery still depends on lower rates and more durable easing from the Fed.

 

6️⃣ Tax refunds help cushion consumers

Household cash flow should remain supported by tax refund season, which can help offset some of the hit from higher fuel costs. That helps explain why actual spending has held up better than survey sentiment in recent weeks.

 

S&P 500 Sectors in Focus

Energy led to the downside as WTI cratered on the Strait of Hormuz news — APA Corp., Valero, Occidental, Exxon, and Chevron each fell between 4% and 9%. Travel and leisure were standout gainers, with Royal Caribbean, United Airlines, and Expedia surging 5–10%. Technology extended multi-week leadership, though Netflix dropped 10% after Q2 guidance disappointed despite a Q1 beat. Financials outperformed on strong bank results; healthcare lagged amid energy-related downward EPS revisions.

(Refer to the SPX sector ETF weekly performance table below.)



Technical Snapshot

The S&P 500 closed at 7,126 — above all major moving averages and at a new all-time high — completing one of the fastest correction-to-record-high rebounds on record (11 trading days). The VIX eased to 17.48, reflecting meaningfully improved risk appetite. However, market breadth remains a caution flag: just 56.7% of S&P 500 members trade above their 200-day SMAs, below January highs, suggesting the rally remains top-heavy. The 10-year Treasury yield settled near 4.23%, and the market-implied probability of a December 2026 Fed cut rose to 66% from 26%.

πŸ“Š Weekly charts:


πŸ‡¨πŸ‡³ China / Hong Kong

Market Overview

China and Hong Kong ended the week with modest gains as stronger-than-expected Q1 GDP provided support, though softer consumption and property data kept enthusiasm contained. The CSI 300, Shanghai Composite, and Hang Seng all moved higher, but the move was more of a relief rally than a breakout. The blue chip benchmark CSI 300 Index rose 1.99%, the Shanghai Composite Index(SSE) gained 1.64%, and the Hang Seng Index advanced 1.03% for the week.

·       CSI 300: +1.99%

·       Shanghai Composite: +1.64%

·       Hang Seng Index: +1.03%

 

Key Highlights and outlook

1️⃣ Q1 2026 GDP beats expectations at 5.0%
China’s economy grew 5.0% year on year in Q1, slightly above expectations and ahead of Q4’s pace. The headline was constructive, but the composition was uneven, with industrial production stronger than retail demand.

 

2️⃣ PPI turns positive for first time in three years
Producer price data improved and suggested some easing in deflationary pressure. That is supportive for cyclical and reflation-sensitive sectors, but it does not yet signal a broad demand recovery. Rising commodity prices, partly driven by geopolitical tensions, support reflation-linked sectors — energy, materials, and financials. Structurally, the market remains constructive on China's energy transition, with HSBC, CATL-H, Zijin Mining, and PetroChina cited as top regional picks.

 

3️⃣ Export growth slowed sharply in March

March exports cooled markedly from the strong start to the year, highlighting the drag from weaker external demand and tariff-related disruption. Imports were firmer, but the trade data still points to a less favorable Q2 backdrop.

 

4️⃣ Credit and investment remain soft

Bank lending improved in March, but private demand stayed cautious and property investment remained a drag. The data still point to a fragile domestic rebound rather than a self-sustaining expansion.

 

5️⃣ Hong Kong tourism improved

Tourist arrivals in Hong Kong rose 14% YoY in March, boosted by major cultural events including Art Basel, providing a lift to retail, hospitality, and broader services activity. The recovery supports a cautiously constructive stance on Hong Kong-listed consumer and hospitality names, and signals improving momentum in the city's services sector alongside continued Greater Bay Area development tailwinds.

 

Technical Snapshot

The Hang Seng finished near 26,160, still below its January highs and stuck in consolidation. The CSI 300’s move was positive but lacked strong breakout momentum, so investors are still waiting for clearer policy follow-through and stronger domestic demand.

(Refer to the Hang Seng Index constituents’ weekly performance table below.)

πŸ“Š Weekly charts:


πŸ‡ΈπŸ‡¬ Singapore

Market Overview

The STI ended the week essentially flat near 4,998, consolidating just below the 5,000 level. That was broadly in line with its sector mix and the market’s cautious stance toward rates, oil, and regional risk.

 

Key Highlights and Outlook

1️⃣ STI holds near 5,000

Singapore equities paused after recent gains, with financials and industrials helping offset weakness in rate-sensitive names. The index remains constructive, but buyers are waiting for a cleaner catalyst before pushing through 5,000 decisively.

 

2️⃣ Lower oil prices help the Singapore economy

The drop in crude prices is a clear net positive for an oil-importing economy like Singapore. It should help ease cost pressure across transport, logistics, aviation, and consumer sectors if the decline holds.

 

3️⃣ AI spillover remains selective

The global AI rally continues to benefit a narrow set of Singapore-listed names tied to data centers, connectivity, and precision engineering. The spillover is real, but still much smaller than in the U.S. mega-cap complex.


4️⃣ S-REITs benefit from lower rate expectations

The likelihood of a December 2026 Fed cut rose to 66% from 26% this week — incrementally supportive for S-REIT valuations and distribution sustainability. The sector remains sensitive to any shift in the Fed's rate path, and the April 29 FOMC decision will be closely watched for concrete guidance on the pace of potential easing and its implications for Singapore dollar interest rates.

 

Technical Snapshot

The STI is still in a constructive medium-term uptrend, with support holding in the recent pullback zone. A clean break above 5,000 would be the next important technical signal, while oil, rates, and global risk appetite remain the main near-term drivers.

(Refer to the STI weekly performance table below.)

πŸ“Š Weekly chart:

 

πŸ“… Week Ahead (20–24 April 2026)

The main focus is mega-cap technology earnings, led by Tesla. Markets will use those results to test whether the AI-led rally is being supported by actual earnings delivery. The other key event is the Fed-related policy backdrop, including the Kevin Warsh hearing and the market’s run-up to the April 29 FOMC decision. On the data side, durable goods and weekly jobless claims will be watched for confirmation that growth is holding up while inflation pressures stay contained.

Tuesday, 21 Apr — Core Retail Sales, Earnings: 3M, IBKR

Wednesday, 22 Apr Tesla Q1 2026 earnings (after close): Delivery volumes, auto gross margins, and any robotaxi timeline update will be the primary focus. Kevin Warsh Senate Banking Committee hearing: Warsh's tone on central bank independence and rate policy could move rates markets. IBM, BA, NOW

China: No major scheduled data releases for the week of April 20. Markets will monitor PBOC commentary and any fiscal stimulus signals in light of the Q1 GDP release's mixed consumption and property data.

 

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