Summary
Escalating Middle East tensions and various market indicators are signaling extreme bearishness and potential for a market crisis, with possible implications for global oil supply, prices, and overall market volatility.
Market Volatility and Positioning
VIX spiked to 27 (highest in almost a year) with put/call ratio elevated, signaling fear and bearishness in S&P 500 markets while remaining below historical extremes.
Dollar index broke above 100 despite low sentiment and positioning, with rapid dollar spikes capable of causing havoc in fragile markets as gold surged above $5,000 signaling global instability.
Dow, S&P, and Russell 2000 are testing 200-day moving averages while UK, DAX, and Euro stocks broke below key support levels with previous support now acting as resistance.
Geopolitical Risks and Commodities
Oil prices surged above $100 per barrel after Iran’s new supreme leader declared the Strait of Hormuz closed, creating significant geopolitical risk for global energy markets with US better prepared than Asia or Europe to handle shortages.
Wheat and corn prices are trending higher, potentially triggering a food crisis in 6 months if energy and fertilizer shortages from Strait of Hormuz disruptions persist and constrain food supply.
Credit Markets and Yields
Option-adjusted spreads jumped 30% year-to-date while high yield and investment grade credit default swaps broke through resistance levels, indicating increased volatility and potential market stress alongside rising yields.
Currency and Metals Positioning
US dollar is breaking through resistance levels while euro, pound, and yen show weakness, with yen’s stochastics at 98 and RSI entering overbought territory.
Copper remains strong despite increasing commercial short positions, setting up potential for short squeeze and higher prices, while gold and silver rallied on central bank buying with decreasing commercial shorts.